To Mark 300th Year of Boston Common Pageant Next Summer to Depict Historic Events. Boston.—Saved from modern road builders and street wideners only bj the high-powered Indigna tion of the Boston Common society, the tercentenary ot fifty acres of cowpaths, lawns and shrubbery, un crossed by rapid transit line or highway, will be celebrated next summer. Of course, thousands of persons are Inconvenienced each day be cause of the disinclination of Bos ton antiquarians to let go another foot of land from the Common for needed street widenlngs or permit the building of roads across It, but other thousands revere It for Its place In American history and the breathing space It affords In the heart of downtown Boston. For this renson, a committee Is now raising a fund, tentatively placed at $300,000, to reconstruct the scenes and homes of vanished days, the duels, ducking stools and hangings, during the 193ft celebra tion of Its three hundredth anni versary. As It Was 300 Years Ago. With the help of the Emergency Belief administration, the commit tee, headed by Everett B. Mero, hopes to draw from the past a rep resentation of three hundred years of history—to show the plot as It was when Quakers and pirates dangled from Its elms, ns It was when young Woodbrldge and his rival dueled at forty pacea for the favors of a Boston belle. The committee, If sufficient funds are raised, hopes to reproduce the Common’s ducking stool; show the smoker's circle where "henpecked” devotees of nicotine repaired when driven from the home; reproduce the spinning bee of 17ft3 when young ladles revealed theli matronly traltB for the edification of iheir swains. The anti-slavery meeting of the 'ROs, Earl Percy and his Itedcoats before the Revolution; William Blaxton (or Blackstone), Boston’s first set tler who sold his land, now the Common, to u community which he found too crowded and moved to Rhode Island; Beacon Btreet "when respectability stalked unchecked"; the coming of the railroad In 1830; the water celebration In 1848, when a public system was first Installed; the nrrlvnl of Lafayette on the Com mon, June 17, 182ft, when he came to attend the Bunker Hill exercises; Metoposaurus Is Back After 140,000,000 Years Berkeley, Calif.—After an absence of qome 140,(XX),000 years the metop osaurus has returned—but he Isn’t his old self. In fact, the miniature amphibian In the University of California Mu seum of Paleontology Is only a clny model of the extinct creature, which, scientists say, was n distant relative of the present-day salamander. The model was constructed by sculptors, Adele Stnckpole and Au drey Horn. It was modeled from a skull and »ther skeleton remains dug up In the Painted Desert of Arizona recently. Paleontologists estimated from the fossil remains that the metoposaurus was about eight to ten feet long. Lake Erie Is Prolific Source of Peat Moss fJrndusky, Ohio.—What has been Identitied as “peat moss” has been coming from ljtke Erie recently In large quantities. Its source Is a mystery. Never until this year has there been more than a little of It. Now tons are available. The moss, when bleached and treated, mny la* used In beautify ing rock gardens. It commands high prices. V recruiting for the Civil war In tents near Tremont street—all this and much more Is In the scope of a celebration which could almost de pict a nation's history and progress as well ns a city’s. First Woman In Boston. Anna Pollard, a woman noted for her plain face, her fine tavern on Beacon street, and the fact that she was the first woman In Boston, may well find some mention In the ceremonies. She was a favorite of the Harvard class of 1688 as well ns of 10fJS> and 16-40, and others who loved her entertainment until at last she went to her reward. In those days Beacon Hill, according to a recent description, was "the tenderloin district.” More than sixty of America’s great—soldiers, poets, statesmen. Presidents, preachers, architects— were wont to roam In leisure hours the routes that criss-cross this patch of tree-studded green in the heart of a city. Old Alphabet Aid to Language Study - <&— Canaan Cuneiform Writing Important Discovery. New Haven, Conn.—Discovery of a hitherto unknown preblbllcal Semitic language, rcvcnllng the source of the undent and modern alphabets and offering a new key to controversial passages In the Bible, was announced by Dr. Julian J. Obern-ann, visiting professor of Se mitic languages nt Yale. Cuneiform tablets, found at Rns Sharnra, near Antioch, In northern Syria, disclosed the language of Canaan, and, according to Doctor Obermann, "are written In a new MANY-WAY LACE HAT By CIIICIll K Nil HOl.AH All credit to Worth for the tricki est hat of the year. It solves the problem for a hat thut can be worn In the evening, for dress-up occasions In the afternoon and the cocktail hour, for the movies and theater, and for tucking away In one’s suitcase for a trip. Made of five seven-inch squares of lace, with french seams to the right side, and folding down like a pocket handkerchief, It Is the simplest little affair possible. The Finds Men Prefer Their Co-Eds Dumb Evanston, 111. — Co-eds of Northwestern university were ac cused of making low scholastic grades to attract the men. Prof. John J. B. Morgan, of the psychology department, said girl students "proceed on the theory that men like them dumb.” He suggested that men submit the co-eds to Intelligence tests before dating them. "If they were required by prospective escorts to establish high Intelligence quotients be fore dates, the university’s schol astic record would soar like n rocket,” Professor Morgan added. Largett Prime Number Chicago.—Dr. Samuel I. Krleger wore out six pencils, used 72 sheets of legal size note paper and fraz zled his nerves quite badly but he was able to announce that 231,584, 178,474, <132,390,847,141,970,017.375, 815,700,539,909,331,281,128,978,915, 820,259,279,871 Is the largest known prime number. A prime number Is any figure di visible only by Itself or 1. alphabet that proves to be the oldest known.” He termed the find “an epoch making discovery In the field of Semitic antiquities and the most Important find since the Babylon ian cuneiforms have come to light.” The tablets, he said, were In scribed during or before the Fif teenth century, II. C., and offer a previously unkuown link between techniques of cuneiform and the principles of alphabetic script. The Itas Shamra tablets, he said, al though written In cuneiform charac ters, employ only 30 signs, using them as alphabetic letetrs, whereas other systems known consisted of hundreds of signs representing syl lnhles of Ideogram.. The new Semitic dialects of Itas •Shamru promise to throw light on tie evolution of the letters com mon to ancient and modern alpha bets, revealing how the various let came to have their Individual shape, and how they came to he ar ranged In their traditional order. As a result of the discovery, he said, Itlldlcnl literature and antiqui ties will he better understood. Neither the language nor script was understood when the tablets first were found by an archeologi cal expedition of the French Acad emy of Inscriptions and Belles-Let tres, he said. The decipherment was by French nnd German schol ars, “opening a door to the under standing of Semitic lore and civ ilization which scholars only a few years ago did not know existed.” surprise conies when you put It on, for there are more ways of wear ing the hnt than the five squares of which It Is made. Recently n whole bridal party np penred wearing these hnts. The bridesmaid. In a silver and pale blue lace frock, wore a matching hat of the lace. The maid of honor’s dress and hat were in deep blue nnd silver lace. The bride's mother. In black nnd silver lace, wore fhe very black lace hnt from which these sketches were made. The fun of It Is that one can take a half dozen such hats on a week-end nnd hnve a matching or contrasting one for every occasion. A novice can make one In no time at all. As for the cost, three hats can be made from one yard of lnce. Gold in Chicken*! Craw Sitka, Alaska.—Millions of dol lars’ worth of gokl has been shipped from Alnska to Seattle. Some of it apparently is going back. As Mrs. Josephine Brojack dressed a chick en shlpi>ed from Seattle, she found in Its craw a gold nugget worth $2.50. Uses “Rainbow” to Speed Seed Germination Dr. Lewis 11. Flint of the Department of Agriculture is pictured in the “rainbow room" of his laboratory where colored lights bring "dead" lettuce seeds back to life. Seeds which fall to grow under ordinary condi tions will germinate In 24 hours If soaked for an hour or so and then exposed for a few seconds to sunlight or the proper kind of artificial light. Ills discovery will save millions of dollars to growers throughout the country. SEEN-" HEARD wound the National Capital g—■—By CARTER FIELDS-—SS Washington.—Cotton is admitted ! ly one of the most serious problems In the whole New Deal set-up. High officials will admit it confiden tially, though their public utter ances are very different, indeed. The whole question, of course, is whether the United States can go I on exporting enough cotton to keep ■ the cotton acreage now being farmed busy, and yet maintain the world price of American cotton at high enough levels to make raising the cotton profitable. Enthusiasts about the AAA pro gram talk vociferously about the natural advantages of America with regurd to cotton. They refuse to see any cloud on the horizon. They Insist that there is no other local ity In the world where cotton as good as that raised in America can be produced except at costs exceed ing American costs. As a general proposition, this is correct. Most countries that can produce cotton at lower costs than the United States have a product which compares most unfavorably with that grown In America. The few places that can produce equally good cotton have very high costs. B»it—the whole world Is looking for a cheaper substitute for high grnde cotton, and generally, where such a quest persists long enough, the goal is found. The Germans have been experimenting with wood pulp. They do not claim to have gotten very far. At present they are In about the stage of American production of rubber from golden rod. It can be done successfully, but there is no particular point In doing it. The costs actually ex ceed the cost of good imported rub ber. The search for a substitute Is by no means over. Incidentally, the Germans have had fair success In the last few months, producing a substitute for rubber from rye flour. They buy the rye flour from Poland. As long as America produced cotton without restrictions, there was not much point to looking for a substitute, because any given year there might be a big cotton crop, and price would fall off, and anyone financially interested in the substi tute would take a terrible beating that year. Keep Price Up Now, however, the definite aim of AAA Is to keep the price of cot ton up all the time, regardless of weather and other crop conditions, by the simple expedient of restrict ing acreage and governing the carry over each year. Which sets up a real prize for the discovery of a good substitute. So actually the cotton program is In the same position as a com pany making a patent article, which it is selling at a nice profit. Al ways there is the fear that some Inventor will come along with some thing either Just ns good or better, which will destroy the market for the patent article. A second and entirely different problem concerns the people who earned their living by working in cotton fields up to the time of AAA restrictions, but now have no work. At the moment the federal govern ment is taking care of them on relief. They are part of the 20, 000,000 now estimated to be sup ported thus. They are also, of course, part of the explanation of the fact that the number of people on relief Is not diminishing, despite the fact that business is getting better. While the same problem applies to other crops than cotton, the sit uation with respect to the others is not nearly so serious. Cotton is the big export crop, and always has been. Moreover, there has not beeu much change in that situation as the country grew bigger in pop ulation. Exports of wheat and other farm products have slowly declined as the population of the cities in America consumed larger and larger percentages of the total crop. But cotton maintained about the same ratio as between domestic consumption and export right up to the time when AAA restrictions began to operate. About 60 per cent of the total crop was exported. Which explains some of the gray hairs in the Department of Agri culture. Tax Increases Seen Not only are there to be no tax reductions by congress, even on lev ies which there is very good reason for removing or lowering, but tax Increases are almost certain before adjournment. This will not appear early in the session, as the administration is counting on a lot of maneuvering about taxes in its fight to hold down the soldier bonus disbursements. But before the final taps of the gavels of the Vice President In the senate and of the speaker in the house new taxes will have been lev ied, or old ones boosted. Because the treasury needs the money, and needs it badly. There has been a vigorous check ing over of old Income tax returns, ns many citizens have discovered, some to their sorrow. But the to tal amount of money realized by the treasury In this endeavor has been disappointing. Official figures are not available, but there Is no doubt as to the accuracy of this statement For strangely enough, much as most people would love to dodge and evade Income taxes, when It comes to writing down the figures on the return blanks they have a wave of honesty, or fear, whichever you prefer to be lieve. So with the prospect of larger appropriations than ever, there must be new taxes, while the fight for lower tobacco and liquor taxes has been lost before the convening of congress—lost In Secretary Mor genthau’s office. The trouble is that even figuring on an extraordinary budget, In ad dition to the regular budget of nor mal governmental expenditures, will not Justify the administration In not raising taxes. For while It Is an easy bookkeeping method to say that this or that item, say of pub lic works or relief, Is extraordinary, nnd therefore should be financed by the sale of bonds Instead of by taxes, there are other complica tions. In the rule laid down by Presi dent Roosevelt, when he sent his first budget message. Interest and sinking fund must be counted In the regular budget, though the sum on which they are calculated may be regarded as belonging in the extraordinary budget. Total Is Mounting Although there has been consider able saving In Interest charges, due to the low rnte of Interest the gov ernment has had to pay, the total is mounting, and it will be recalled that up to now the budgets of this administration have elminated sink ing funds. This was done on the theory that during an emergency there was no point in saving up to pay off debt. But it is obvious now that the appropriations for public works, to prime the pump of business recov ery, and of relief to keep people from starving and freezing, are not going to decrease in the coming session. In all human probability they must be increased. And while they are still regardec. as emergen cy appropriations, and therefore to be financed by bonds instead of taxes, there is a growing belief that the relief appropriations are never going to shrink to any figure which was thought normal a few years back—even two years back. For it is now clear that relief is to he with the federal government always, the effort to make the local political units, states, counties and cities, take over their own problems to the contrary notwithstanding. And It is plain to the experts who have been working on budget figures under Morgenthau’s direc tion that the present flow of re ceipts from taxes is not sufficient to carry what cannot much longer be regarded as an emergency load, but which must soon be classified as a normal load. In addition, there is fast ap proaching a time when sinking fund requirements can no longer be de ferred. It has been hoped that a sufficient revival of business would result in boosting tax receipts to a sufficient extent to take care of this. But hardly to take care of the increased normal load. About Public Lands The old public lands question has been completely reversed apparent ly since the dawn of the New Deal. In former administrations senators from the western states com plained bitterly and often about the fact that the federal government owned vast tracts of their land, which as a result were undeveloped, produced no taxes, and therefore added to the burden of the state government. Now It is a southern 6tate which protests—not against the fed eral government land now held, but against the acquisition of govern ment land, which will thereupon pass out of the taxing base of the state. In a recent telegram to Forestry News Digest, Governor Talmadge of Georgia says: “The federal government, accord ing to reports, Is optioning large areas of land In Georgia for pur chase, the areas reaching into hun dreds of thousands of acres. If any of the agencies of the state are consulted about much of this fed eral land acquisition program, it is not known to me. From such information ns drifts In, it seems that options are being taken on submarginal lands, largely forest land and abandoned farms that are now in condition to use only for growing trees. If this land goes to federal government ownership It is removed from state taxation, re moved without the state being con sulted. “I certainly do not want land owners of Georgia to have to com pete with the federal government in growing timber or in producing naval stores, with the federal gov ernment using tax-free and subsi dized lands and not obliged to make a profit. Georgia has long been getting a lot of wealth from its forests and it looks as if a lot more is coming from our woods. Georgians, and not the federal gov ernment, should get it. It seems to me that the federal government should at least co-ordinate its land purchase activities with some con sideration for the rights of the state.” Oopyricht.—WNU 8«rflc«. Ontonc} Java Copra Is Food, Currency and Chief Article of Trade. Prepared by National Geographic Society, Washington, D C.—WNU Service. () THE natives of Ontong Java, a group of isles lying In the island-besprinkled sea off the northwest coast of New Guinea, coconuts are synonymous with money, for copra (dried coconut meats) serves as currency. Five pieces of tobucco represent one hundred copra; a bolt of calico, a number of thousand copra accord ing to Its quality, and so on. The growing coconuts on the pnlms are spoken of ns “green," although they may be either green or yellow In color. At this stage they are full of the delicious sweet milk, thirst-quenching as 'amonade, and the tlesh they contain Is very thin. When the nuts are ripe, the flesh Is of maximum thickness, and they fall to the ground. Then they are gathered and the thick husks are removed, the nuts emerging ns they are sold in European and American shops. They are split in halves, the milk being now more or less sour, and are placed open end downward on the drying frame, a stand sup ported on legs about four feet high. Mats are put over the nuts, and a tire lighted beneath the frame is allowed to burn for about twelve hours. The dried flesh then is read ily removed from the shell with the aid of a porpoise bone or sharp ened stick. This operation over, the dried flesh, or copra, as it is called, is taken to the trading sta tion in baskets and exchanged for goods. When a ship calls, the copra is put into bags and weighed and then carried by natives into flat bottomed punts, which are towed off to the ship by a motor launch. The copra goes to Tulagi, on Florida island of the Solomon group, where it Is trans-shipped to Sydney. The oil extracted from copra is used in making soaps, candles, and butter substitutes; the pulp becomes cattle feed. The other and far less Important item of exchange at Ontong Java is trochus shell. Tills shell, like the copra, is shipped. It usually finds its way to Japan or Belgium, where it is cut and polished into “pearl" buttons. The cone-shaped, reddish shell (sometimes the red shows out side If the button has been imper fectly cut) is washed up into shal low water of the reefs where it is collected by the natives. Trepang and Ivory Nuts. The lagoon abounds with beche demer. the trepang or sea slug, a food delicacy of the East. It is col lected by Japanese, who come out from Tulagi In special luggers. From dinghies they look out for the slugs below. When a suitable spec imen is sighted, the diver goes over the side, sinks about a fathom, then transfixes his prey with the end of a sort of weighted harpoon, which he might be said to let fall upon it. The slugs are cleaned, boiled, and dried. A full cargo for a lug g»r, about five tons, usually takes tPree months to collect. Although, of course, the price varies, it is normally $4,000 to $">,000. Ivory nuts, the products of a graceful palm, are used chiefly for making buttons, knife handles and similar articles. The nuts are crushed and the objects molded from the paste made from them. A native home on the islands is rectangular. It has a framework of poles, tied in position with rope made from the liber of the coconut husk. No nails are used. The oeaked roof is thatched with pan danus-palm leaf, the leaves bent iver and made fast to a stick about four or five feet long. These sticks, tied to the roof pedes so that they overlap, make a virtually rain proof roof. The walls of the house are inane of mats of plaited coconut leaf tied to the upright sticks. The floor is also covered with these mats, Na tives use these mats as beds. Oth er mats are used for blankets, and pieces of wo,id ns pillows. Clean, Charming Natives. The natives are a clean, friend ly, and altogether charming people. Fond of swimming, they always bathe at least once a day. They are well-built and handsome, many reaching 5 feet 0 Inches in height and some (1 feet or more. Their complexion, of a light coffee color, is similar to that of the Hawalians. Boys from about fourteen years of age to twenty wear their hair cut fairly close. From then until V they are married men with small families, they allow It to grow long. They resume hair-cutting at the be ginning of middle age and continue the practice until they are old. For mature men, custom favors a rather close crop over most of the head, with a bushy tuft left at each side. There are, however, many excep tions to this rule. Girls wear their hair in the two tufts until they become mothers, and from then on keep their heads fairly closely shaved—a style dis couraging to lice. The hair is usu ally black, though at the ends it may bleach to a reddish brown, and it may be straight, wavy, or, in a few cases, distinctly woolly. Hands and feet of both men and women are frequently small and often delicately shaped, but the in step is rarely high and some na tives are almost flat-footed. How ever, the legs are straight and beautiful, and many of the men have a grace and beauty that might be the envy of an ancient Greek. Virtually every woman wears as a skirt a fathom of canvas, kept in place by a belt of woven pandanns leaf or plaited human hair. Tho upper part of the body is left bare. For a man’s attire a strip of calico passing around the waist and be tween the legs and tied back and front suffices. Children of both sexes go naked till they are about eleven or twelve. Elaborate Tattooing. Both men and women are tat tooed. The decoration Is begun in early childhood and with the fore head and nose. The forehead pat tern resembles an open book. At the age of twelve or so, when the girls first wear skirts permanently, they receive suits of tattooing from waist to knee that look from a dis tance like close-fitting, figured black bloomers. Only on close in spection can the actual pattern be discerned. The pattern is made up of fish and geometrical designs. As the girl grows older, fish are added around the hips and on the stom ach. Later still when she becomes pregnant for the first time, the tat tooing Is finished by the covering of the breasts, chest, back, arms, and even the cheeks and chin lines of the face with fish design. The men have far less tattoo than the women. Except on the fore head and nose, they have none un til they are about twenty years of age. Then two broad bands are added, extending from the shoulder around the back to the thighs and in front terminating in two arrows on the chest. The arm Is tattooed either with fish or a geometrical de sign. A row of dots just below the eye gives exactly the effect that a woman seeks when she darkens her lids; it makes the eyes stand out and appear to be much larger than they are. When a man is the father of a family, he may have a few fish added on his back and hips and thighs; but many forego this right Coconut Palm Most UsefuL It would be impossible to flnfii any other single tree which serves such a variety of ends as the coco nut palm, especially os Leuaniua island. It gives food and drink— the latter particularly important on smaller islands where there are no water holes. Visitors have gone for ten days with nothing to drink but coconut milk. Also, it furnishes, besides the copra of commerce, a strongly alcoholic toddy and a sticky sirup resembling treacle. The husks and shells provide fuel, and the dried spathe is excel lent tinder. The shells serve as plates, spoons and water bottles. The wats for walls and for beds are made from the leaves; the dried leaves, tied into bundles, give light as torches and flares. The spines of the leaves are made int© brooms, and the central stalk provides a weak timber which is put to a num ber of uses. The outer skin of this stalk is useful where a strong, tough rope is required, as in lash ing the gunwale of the canoe to the dugout log. The rope made from the husk fiber serves all general purposes from house ties to fish line. A conrse covering at the base of the leaf, which at a first glance looks like a roughly woven fabric, is made into Strainers and sieves. The actual trunk of the palm, although not very durable, is made into spears and walking sticks, or cut Into logs for sitting platforms.