Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 21, 1912, Page 15, Image 15

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    THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1912.
15
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azire
SILK HAT HARRY'S DIVORCE SUIT
The Judge is Treated Like a King at Home
Copyright, 1912, National News Asu'n.
Drawn for The Bee by Tad
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Hunting a Husband
The Widow Returns Home in Dr. Haynes' Car and Learn
Something of His Personality. '
I J
By VIRGINIA TERHUNE VAN DEWATER,
As Dr. Haynes, the attractive widow
seated at his side, drove his car toward
the railroad station at Pleafanton, they
met a stream of commuters. Among
i them was Henry Blanchard. He started
jwlth pleased surprise at sight, of Bea
trice and waved his hat gaily. The
'woman felt her cheeks flush as she'
t bowed in "return.
; "That's a funny old chap," laughed
'the doctor as they sped across the tracks
'at the crossing.
"He's a . very good friend of mine,"
Isald Beatrice, stiffly,
j "Surely," agreed the physician, "but
even you must admit that he is old and
'funny."
To which comment the widow made no
reply.
The remainder of the drive home was
(Uneventful, The pleasure of the motion
'roused Beatrice to chat brightly, and,
; although the doctor divided his attention
! between the machine and herself, she
(noted that she received no larger share
'of his notice than had been hers dur
ing the morning.'
The pair had exchanged no speech for
itenmlnutes whftn the "doctor brought "his"
car ; to a stop before his companion's
home. Still silently, he helped her to
alight, and she, spurred to a final effort
to. arouse him, smiled frankly up into
.his 'face and urged him to "come in f.or
;a few momenta"
I The doctor looked at his watch before
replying, the nshook bis head decidedly
"Can't do it," he said. "I'm sorry for j
jl'd like to see the little girl. But these
jare my office hours, and I must go." j
But the widow detained him for a mo
tnent as she held out her hand in bid-
dins him goodbye.
"I . thank you a thousand times. Dr.
Haynes," she said sweetly, "for a lovely
I day. I have enjoyed it ever so much,
and the pleasure is all due to you."
' "And I've, enjoyed' it too," : responded
the physician absently,' his eyes fixed on
; his automobile. "I so seldom get a chanc
j to try out my machine on a country road
that I was glad to do so today."
With which tactful remark he dropped
her hand, turned quickly and "cranked
up" his car, and, lifting his hat, sprang
Into the automobile and drove away with
out so much as a glance in her direc
tlon. ,
"Pig!" was Beatrice's vindictive sotto
voce exclamation as she went into the
"house. .. , . -' . ' . .
The' children received her joyfully and
she forgot for the time her chagrin in the
gratification of the mother love that was.
perhaps, i the only genuine affection she
had ever felt. She answered patiently the
multitude of 'childish questions regard'ng
i the nw summer home, and told of hei
'intention of taking the little ones there
before the next week had passed.
"Did Dr. Haynes like the place?" asked
Jean. ,
"Very njuch, dear," answered th
mother. "He says you will get well fast
In that lovely spot, and just as soon as
you are stronger we'll go.".
, "Are there nice people there, mother?'
queried Jack; dubiously. ' -
"Yes, indeed," declared Beatrice. "There
are Mr. and Mrs. Robbing, and and-
.Mr. Blanchard's going to be there most ol
' the summer."
"Umph!" grunted Jack, discontentedly
"I don't ilke him. He's Jus' tike an old
'goats, 'cept now he's cut off his whisk
ers." For the second time that afternoon
Beatrice found herself contralned to Stand
'up for her potential fiance,
"Do you like him very much, mother?'
queried Jack, with a child's brutal frank
ness. "Very much." replied Beatrice, firmly.
"All right, then, said the boy, re
signedly. "But, honest, mother, he did
used to look just like a old billy goat
and his whiskers flapped up and down
when he talked, and' "
"Jack!" warned the mother, angrily,
and the boy. after one look at her stem
face, said meekly, "Yes'm," and subsided
Into silence. But the lad's att'tude an
jnoyed his mother more than she would
1 have been willing td admit. She ioved het
. little son as a mother only loves her man
'child, and it gave her a sensation of un-
easy compunction to think that she was
' considering as a husband for herself, and
la stepfather for her children, a man fot
whom her boy. had only contempt.
' Jean had a restless nifht, and , the
mother found her feverish' when morn
'Ing came. " Her" heart sank at the re
currence of the child's Indisposition, and
1 after breakfast Bhe telephoned the doc
tor. On hearing of Jean's condition he
'promised to call, but reassured Beatrice i
by the assertion that he expected a re
currence of the malarial trouble, and That
as yet it was nothing that need cause
alarm. He would be In to see the child
later; in the morning.
He, came about noon-time. Beatrice
had looked forward to his arrival as tc
an opportunity for a quiet chat with him.
But he was brusque, businesslike and
evidently hurried. Yet he was, as ever,
gentle with the sick child. In the hall,
after having bade the small patient a
cheery goodbye and promising her that
she would, be. better again soon, he turned
suddenly 'to Beatrice. ;
"Mrs. Minor," he said abruptly, "when
do you mean to go to Pleasanton?"
"I've been thinking of 'leaving next
Thursday or Friday."
"Why not before then?" he demanded.
"Why I haven't thought" began ; the
widow hesitatingly, but he interrupted
her.
"Have you anything to do which could
not be done in a couple of days If abso
lutely necessary?" ,
'"Well, no, not exactly," acknowledged
Beatrice. "But"- ' '
- rnen, ne ; sair curtly," "ma,Ke your
arrangement to get off by Monday at
the latest."
"I have some shopping to do," said the
widow more decidedly. "Unless it is Im
perative"' "It is!" broke In the physician. "Whiie
your child is not seriously 111 the fever
Is sapping her vitality. Every extra
hour you-stay in. town you are depriving
her of fresh country ; air. You told me
Just now that it would be possible for
you to go soon. Then go soon. Good day!"
"I believe he's a brute!" declared Bea
trice at her vexed self as the door slam
med behind him. Yet she was conscious
that In her heart lurked a secret admir
ation for his strength and power.
GENTLEMEN DC SPATE!
TA-tfA-WA-KA -
RUFVS-WSTAH FVfm CAN f OU
TEU MC WHO WAS THE rlftST
BUTCHER f
INTERCOCUTO-CAM I Utl TOUj
WHO WA THE FfRftT UTCWCJ?
NO WHO WAS TME FIRST
BUTCHER, UFUS
RUFUS-ADAM WA, BECAUSE
EVE WA MADE FROM 0B Ot
ADAMS SPARE RIBS
' 1 ' t
GLO0MV GtS, THE UNDERTAKER,
IU RENDER A LITTLE HCLOUi
ENTITLED,
THE HAND THAT KOCK&THC
CRADLE ALWAYS GRABS
POOR FATHERS DOUGH
mir mm m
AT AAAR SmS-'TMfff DAVIS LOST
yOU Prt&S IT WITHOUT WAVIH&LAOOJCO
AT LEAST Q"Q
E. :
UULS I
Jo J J
rue clocFjost STRWCK 11
WMLn rANTStESS PAT, THE
PROPRIETOR OF THE H.LACrC
GIN MILL WAS 6ETTIMG REAOV
TO MUSS 0PTHE FEATHERS.
SUDDENLY HE HEARD A CUM
AT THE REAR &OQR M WENT
BACk' AND OPENED AiO DOOR.
A PEELER WR5 STANDING THC1W
AND & A ID,
'SAW PAT, I MATE TO DIS
TURB WOUP SLfJEPi BUT I
WANT TO KNOW lS THE ICE '
MAN HAFPltfcT WHEN TME
OTHER MAN TAKES THE CAKE
-0
MANNIE grepnberg!
TAKE OFF MY TIE!!
hi boys- back again
IMA CHfttlFFCUR NOW
6ET OP AT 5" INHALE
an e W on two rush
TO THE &ARA6E TAtfE
OUT THECAR THEN
WHEN I COME BACK I
PIC TATE. tOOR
(( .
A Perpetual Clock I
! J
i Tha only piece of machinery in the
world to be operated entirely by elec
trical forces drawn from mother earth Is
now running, at Camp Hill, Pa. It hs
been In, continuous operation since 1870
with the exception of a short period In
olved in its transfer to several different
localities. In the late 60s Daniel Draw
baugh, to whom every one In that local,
ity gives credit for inventing the tele
phone, and who succeeded his Inven
tions In. telephony by constructing hun
dreds of marvelously Ingenious me
ohanical and electrical devices for fur
thering the world's work, conceived the
idea that he could make a perfect clock
operate under the gu'dance of latent
electrical forces In the earth, Time has
shown that Prawbaugh has come closer
to perpetual motion than any other inventor.
in the Drawbaugh timepiece, which
ft
LETTERS TO THE STTNO
P0SHNTO THE PRESI-
LUMBE-R THEN HOME
TO 6UPPEP EAT A
LITTLE FODDEP PUP
MUMBLING M0E.THE OLD HERMIT.
LIVED N HIS QtirET LITTLE
CABIN FAR OOT IN THE ROCKIES
AND hi ADM T SEEN A PERSON IN
ff IMF YEARS. ONE DAY HE AND
Hit OLD DOG R'P WENT HUNTMJ
IN THE WO0D5 NEARBY. Rir
CAUGHT SCENT OF SOMETHING
MOE FOLLOWED HIM FAR INTO
THE WOODS WHEN, SUDDENLY
THEY CAME TO A CARCASS-
NEAT TO IT WAS A NOTE WHICH!
READ.
IF THE EATrriG F ACHICrfM
MCLPfD Fti ATHLETE TO WIN
A RACE WOULD HE BE
GLADIATOR (GLAD HE ATE HERl''
KITH ME!! NOTHING
MAKETH ME THICK
IOMC I . . .
OUT A FEW PEOPOSITOiYa E6MT BflRRtLSOf MWttlH
AT O 30. ANSWER THE
PHONE, FOR 3 HOUR
TAKE A SPIN TO TU
FACTORY WITH
UP IN TME ATTiC THEN
60 HOME WIND THE
CLOfltf FE ED TME CAT
lAND THEN IM DONej
&EE
AMAPPY
VEPNOTIN
TOD0TILL
to-morrow
4
:1y
"More Playgrounds Cure for Bad Boys"
By MARGARET HUBBARD AVER.
What is td be done with the gang?
What can be done for the bad boy who
is a terror both at home and in school;
the leader or member of a gang of small
boys who begins by mischievously de
stroying the property of others, and who,
under the evil Influence of older boys,
acquires the vicious habits which lead
him finally Into the. children's court or in
the reform Bchool?
Wherever the welfare of children Is
discussed Mrs. Clarence Burns' views are
of special importance and significance,
because she" has devoted almost twenty
years of ' her life to the cause of the
child. Now, as the head of the Little
Mothers' association, she has established
a practical method of training small girls
in the art of housekeeping and house-
making.
"As chairman of the playgrounds com
mlttee." said Mrs. Burns, "I had for
merly a great deal of experience with
the so-called bad boys, and most of them
certainly lived up to the'r reputation
until we found an outlet for their ener
gies.
"A good deal of so-called badness or
naughtiness is Just pent-up animal spir
its. If you give the child an outlet for
this energy, something which Is interest
ing at the same time, you will have no
trouble in managing -him. Outdoor exer
cises and gymnastic work which the boy
get in the playgrounds are the very best
thing for this kind of a child, and it Is
because we haven't enough playgrounds
and enouKh interesting gymnastic work
and outdoor game. and especially oe-
cause there aren't sufficient places to
BIO.JIUH HDUUL BIX Xftr in h Pht anri
unlike all other clocks, the pendulum is play In near the congested districts, that
the motor. It is suspended on an edged children of this type get Into mischief.
pivqi or naraenea 'steel in order to re
duce Melon to a minimum. This pen
dulum weighs about forty-flvo poundf,
its centrarrod terminating midway be
tween the ball and the point of suspen
sion, where there Is an ordinary perma
nentf magnet. Fastened against the back
part of the clock base at right singles to
the permanent magnet Is an electro mag
net, the wire of which runs Into the
ground, the earth becoming the. battery
feeding the electro magnet.
When the pendulum Is swung, away
from the perpendicular the opposite
poles of the two magnets first attract
and then repel, thus keeping up the
oscillation. At the top of the case the
wheels are fastened to tubes or hollow
spindles which are suspended In turn
upon steel studs or pins, which In their
turn are securely fastened into a main
metal base or framework. The first
wheel Is a rachet or second hand wheel
which receives Its motion from ; two
pawls pivoted upon the upper crossbar
of the pendulum rods.
One remarkable feature in the con
struction of the clock Is that there are
only four bearings that are subjected to
the Icuat friction. Drawbaugh confi
dently stated that his clock would run
for hundreds of years before any part
would have to be renewed. In making
the clock ready for work it Is necessary
to dig a hole In the earth about three
feet In diameter and six feet deep. Metal
plates are placed In the hole with
enough coke to hold moisture and the
timepiece can be run so that it will not
gain or lose t?e seconds in a year.
'The great trouble is that the child
who Is full of surplus vitality and en
ergy, and who runs about the street, is
apt to come into contract with the child
who has criminal tendencies, who Is
either a moral delinquent " or feeble
minded. "It should be a simple matter to deal
with the child who has criminal or de
generate tendencies, for such children
should be segregated.
"I don't believe in putting children In
homes or Institutions unless it is abso
lutely necessary, but In the case of the
child with criminal instincts It Is neces
sary, and some system must be evolved
which will compel parents of such children
to realize that the children are bstter off
away from their families, where they can
have no chance to harm or to con
taminate the minds of their sisters ant
brothers or playmates.
"Under normal condltlolns the child's
own home is the only real place for a
child to be brought up in; but .It fre
quently happens that a child has no real
home. If the mother Is a widow or a
deserted wife. If she has to work all day
to support ' her children, the latter are
necessarily free to roam the streets and to
seek any kind of associates that chance
throws in their way.
' Now, if the state, . Instead of taking
the children away from the-mother and
putting them Into homes or institutions,
would pay her a pension provided, of
course, she were the right kind of a
mother she would have tlm to look
after her children, and much of the
rowdyism and the so-called badness
would be stopped. . ,
It it V-W-; " 1
9
MRS. CLARENCE BURNS. 1
According to Mrs. Burns, a good deal of so-called badness or naughti
ness Is just pent-up animal spirits. If the child Is given an outlet (or
this energy, she says, it will be easy to manage him.
'The widowed mother's pension lias
been successfully tr'ed In other states;
why can't It be tried here?"
Dr. Edward Louis Blsch, formerly of
Manhattan State hospital and Post
Graduate hospital, has made something
of a specialty of the so-called bad boy,
the feeble-minded nd tha moral delin
quent. ,
Dr. Blsch's advice to parents Is:
"Never beat a child. Within the first
year or two the child is all sensation,
and a slap here and there will do no
harm, but once the emotions come Into
play tha effect of besting a child Is
very harmful.
"First, the effect on the mind Is bad.
The child feels that the parent is taking
advantage of a helpless and weaker be
ing, and such a beating necessarily breed'
a feeling of rowdyism and a desire for
dictatorship over other beings weaker
than himself.
"Then scientists claim that beating a
child arnuves in that child abnormal pas
sion and Instincts, and that It is more
difficult to uplift and control a child that
has been beaten."
"Wr, Birch, will you tell me how science
accounts for certain criminal tendencies
and symptons in children and how they
are going to be cured?"
"Science can't always account for it,"
returned Dr. Blsch. 'Through the pro
cess of psycho-analysis physicians and
psychologists are endeavoring to find out
the original caufe of the abnormal ten
dencies. Frequently the child has re.
celved some terrific shock to the emo
tions, a great fright, perhaps, or his been
suddenly brought to a realization of
things or conditions which the child's
brain Is too undeveloped to grasp prop
erly. "In the congested quarters of the city,
where large families are forced to live
r
Erf ;,
'iI Sj
( t ' I
two I i
ill 1
When a woman said recently that
woman is the first to' fall In. love, there
was a stir of surprise and interest In the
men's camp. Amused silence in the wo
men's. ' "The wo
men had known It
all the tlms. But
they hadn't'ehosen
to take the men
Into their confi
dence In the nut
ter. They never
will so choose, not
at leat, in the case
of the i men to
whom they have a
s p e c la 1 interest,
those men who ars
trying to win them
-trying,
A man wonders
Mindly when he will marry. He may
spare himself the trouble of guessing.
He will marry when the girl who' has
made up her mind to marry him chooses.
A few dreamy-eyed persons still talk
about fats and In fancy see a grave
faced woman spinning and weaving the
web of their future. Bosh! A man's fate
is determined by quite a different person,
a woman not grave of face, but merry,
who weaves his future-not by a spindle,
but with a perfumed fan. Someone dimly
.feeling this truth long ago voiced It by
naming' the girl he was to marry a
man s "fate." " '
Sho, Is his "fata" because she has re
solved to marry him. What he wishes is
a matter of little moment. He must
change his wlphes and she sees to It that
he does.
A woman falls in love first because
she has keener perceptions than man's.
Despite all the slanders of all the men
of all the ag?s, women know what they
want and know It sooner than a man
does.
When they meet the. man they would
like for a husband, the fact Is quickly
apparent to them, though not to the men
A woman has a livelier imagination than
a man. has. If, when a man has twice
danced with a girl, It were suggested to
him that he picture her his wife, he
would laugh at the person who suggested
it and call blm an idiot. The girl who,
with such seeming indifference, floats
about the room In his arms, not only has
a mental picture of herself as the mis
tress of their home, but has already fur-
r J j . . j ;
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; ;
Woman Falls in Love First
By ADA PATTERSON.
.'hi
in onp room, children are frequently
subject to emotional shocks of one kind
or another which unbalance them com
pletoly. Yet it Is very difficult to trace
the symptoms .which develop from '.this.
shock back to the original source. .
"The ! child who has seen his mother
beaten by the father may have received
such a shock, which later may show
itself In the child's extreme cruelty to
animals or amalU-r children, or possibly
he will kick and hit the mother herself."
"What could be done for such a child?"
1 Inquired.
"The original shock oould be discov
ered through a process of psycho-analysts,
or, If the child's mother Is willing,
the' child could be hypnotised. I have
done this often, first finding out Just
what the child considered the most beau
tiful and precious thing In the world or
what was his ideal of beauty.
This Ideal is connected with the mother
while the child Is In a state of hypnosis.
After that whenever the child , looks at
the mother he at once gets the mental
picture which was Impressed upon his
mind angel flower and whatever, jt was
that he liked and It Is Impossible for
him to harm it Of course, the Impres
sion wears away in time, but by that
time the bad habit has been broken.
"Whatever Is. going to be done for the
bad boy or the moral delinquent, physical
exercise and manual training must play
a large part in the work.
"Many of .them who will not .concen
trate on any kind of work will do so
for a reward if the reward Is money. The
desire to earn money Is generally strong
and can be appealed to. ,
"As. conditions are at present, how
ever, unless a child Is bad .enough to
be sent to an Institution of some kind
there Is very little chance for his evil
tendencies to be corrected.
"The school teachers have their hands
full, and as it Is thousands of children
are only in school on half-time.
"If the child is in a graded class, , or
ungraded one, his teacher can do no more
for him after the school period than to
send him home, which usually means out
In the streets, where he Is subject to all
the evil Influences which fasten on the
weak and mentally undeveloped child.
' "The' problem of' the' bad' boy, the
moral delinquent' and the feeble-minded
child is probably the greatest and most
Important one before' the community to
day, for the number of such children Is
constantly increasing, and their influence
Is a menace to every healthy child In
the country." ' " - " ' "
tilahArl All thai riftvnitari rnArtii and Ao
....
elded what, flowers shall grow, on., thb'.
lawn. ..;'''' 1
Therein, Is the explanation for what has
been falsely termed woman's fioklene.i
Woman 'Is not fickle. Bhe i loves trulyT
and ardently for a Whlla! but grows tlrpfl'
of waiting for the slow creature witf;,
cumbersome mental processes to , ovemi.'W
take her. In the love-race, woman is IWeJ
the hare, man ifke the , fabled tortolsej
except that In Cupid's uncertain- country,!
the tortoise does not always overtake the?.,
hare. Many & man loves, a girl becau'
he Is too slow-witted to-catch up, wlts
her before her' quickly bom love for hlni"?
self has turned to scorn for his slow wit?' "
Women, taught that it Is Immodest to
reveal thplr love uhtll it Is asked. havtrV
become : in that respect, mistresses oVV
airalmulatlon. ln the drama of love utt'tir
women are actresses. Every t girl is
Bernhardt and the man with whom shaT;
Is In love, 'her 'blundering, cumberaoms"
minded audience. The man watching.;'!
interested, puailed. wonders what all hefV'.
airs and graces, her odd little humoraV&
her alternate smiles and gravity are"
about. If he finds out In time he will
become her. proud and happy husband,
if she becomes Impatient with his dulU'!'
ness, and her Interest centers In another","
and cleverer man, he will mourn her,',
"fickleness." ...
A girl of 16 Is grown up and has lon('.
gowns and dresses and cupola piled hall
like her mother's. A boy of 18,1s still shjij yi
as a rabbit, and is wondering at the'
strange pranks his up-and-down stalri,..
voice plays him. So ,witb. their falling. In
love, the . girl arrives long before-him.
t?he meets a man and thereafter, his" a
face floats between her and her mother's 'n't
features. The echoes of his voice are",.1 1
louder In her ears than of' her father's n
tones bidding her bring him the evening's"
paper. She knows what this means- the";"?
first age of love.. She begins at once. Vlt
hide It from every one but herself, and-f
usually succeeds, while tbe man later dl-''0'
covers that she is "a very nice little glr,".
Indeed, with a taking way. Taking in,!,,,,, '
deed, for. she has taken htm,, but he losesiMV
his appetite, grows moon-eyed and pre?7'
occupied, talks sentiment and Is pooi'jj
company until every one knows he is tn.Y "
love and with whom every one save hlm''
self. Finally the scales fati from his"'"
eyes and he proposes, and if her pride,
that has . grown while she , hid her love, 9.
and her disgust with his-slow moving 1ni"r4
tellect, .have not conquered- his "fate't' t
becomes his. If not. some other and"A :
quicker man wins her, u'ff.
A woman who has happily niarrled j.f
man of deliberate ( speech' and slow conak
cluslona said she was so piqued by hl8i'3
beginning a proposal one night. and leav'-
ing it unfinished for a, week, that shea
nearly ran' away with a" man whom' shlZ
disliked. A tactful mother left the co
lege professor alone with her daughter!
and told the man with the eloping inai
tent that her daughter was "engaged.ji
When, she- went back to the parlor slwo
saw her words were prophetic. The' eaav-'l
going suitor had captured his "fatej'J'"
while nearly losing It. ' , ,o'
Women know this, ajl , women, ami
Bernard Shaw; If they love at all, they
love first. If they 'don't love .first theghr,
do not love. They only permit them
selves to be won.
((Postal Rates and Zones.- J"
111 - - - ' -. is 1
...). .
. ... , i'JJAV
Zone I-For distances not exceedlnJ
fifty miles, 5 cents for the first pound, 4
and 3 cents for each .additional" pound i
Zone 2 For distances over f ity and less",.
than 150 miles, 7 cents for one pound,' -f
and i cents for each "additional pouncf."-!
Zone 3 For distances over 150 and lesfr;
than 300 miles, 7 cents for . one pounil"
and 5 cents for each additional pound... i
. Zone 4 For distances over 800 and lets"
than 600 miles, - 8 cents for one pound !
and 6 cents for each additional pound;
Zone 5-For distances over 600 and less v
than 1.000 miles, 9 cents .fo rvne opun?,','
and 7 cents for etch additional poundi it
Zone 6-For distances over iW-an "
pound and 9 cents for each
pound, . . ' -
Zone "For distances over' 1,400 and 1 S
less than . 1,800" miles, 11 .cents forv 'One .3
pound and 8 cents '(or each additional 't
pound. ' ' ;.!-' lyi'i
Zone 8-For distances over 1,800 miles''''5J
Including, the Philippine . Islands, , .12-.
cents for each and every pound. mailed; u'
The United States will be mapped into146'
areas, or . units, , approximately ' UiirtS,". -miles
square. AH poinU within one ol""'i
these areas will have their distanced '
from the center of the "quadrangle , 1 11 ''J
which they were located. Tie zones wilfcl"
lie fifty, 150, 3C0. 600, .1,000, 1,400 and 4,804'IK
miles from each of these centers. ; 'J-.
T t
additional -'ti