Fliers Swoop Over Battlegrounds of Ancient Kingdoms Cross in Few Minutes Waste less Tract Over Which Camels Plod for Weary Days. By U>\VELL THOMAS. “On the morning of July 10 we mo tored from the Syrian hotel to the French aerodrome beyond the north i wall of Salad in's city of Aleppo. It was just as dawn and this pictur esque metropolis of 200,000 people which lies mid way between the Orient and Occi dent was just coming to life. Camels were burbling anti complaining as their drivers load ed them. Mer chants were on their way to the bazars, and nearly every native we passed sat astride a diminutive don key. Tt. looked like a scene from an oriental comic opera. “Many of the natives who passed us were swarthy, bulky fellows with fierce upturned mustachios. To make the picture all the more incongruous and full of color each wore a tall red fez like the Shriners wear at home. To protect his portly body he wore a * long Mother Hubbard robe of many colors such as Joseph must have had on the day his brothers threw him into the well. On his feet were red slippers with upturned toes dangling in the dust. “To see one of these pompous busi ness men of Aleppo jogging along on his little Syrian ass was quite enough to put all of us in a good humor for the day.” remarked Leigh Wade. Off to Early Start. “Just at 6 o'clock, as the sun came up over the rim of the desert, we took off for our 600-mile flight across Asia Minor. It was a glorious, siwrkhing desert morning with perfect visibility. And as we circled around before leaving this ancient capitol of the Saracens, I couldn’t help but think of all ihe historic lands that lay spread out around us. “Ever since we reached southern Asia it has seemed that each day has brought us to a region steeped deeper in history and tradition. When we arrived at Bagdad it seemed as though we had reached the climax But here at Aleppo, as our world cruisers swept at the rat'1 of a hun dred miles an hour toward the Tarns 'mountains, we looked down over the fuselage at the plains where the ancient armies of Babylon and Egypt met. and where the Persian hordes of Xerxes marched on their way to do battle with the Spartans and Athenians. We were flying over bat tlefields where Alexander and hi.^ .Macedonian phalanx defeated the armies of Asia, where Rome came with her legions to fight at Armaged don, to destroy Jerusalem, and Yc build the cities of the Decapolis. and where the armies of the Crusackr fought the fanatical warriors of the Saracens. “Shades of Peter the Hermit, Rich | srd the Lion Hcaited, and Saint . George, who slew the dragon, must hive been watching us as we roared through the skv over these scenes of their triumphs. Over Desert Again. “At first we passed over miles of cultivated lands, and then we came t" another stretch of desert. Far be 1 *w us a long camel caravan was 1 roc .--dinit in the direction of Urfa. i ancient Edessn of the Gre*4tn. We were just about to leave the re • mi v, li re since the dawn of Mine l! • B<‘ amixis of the desert have ii \k'd l» ck and forth across Arabia vith the r camel-*, and the tribes have t " Mu with each other for posses 1 of them. Twenty miles a day is . cut II that such a caravan as we « 'U make when on a long jour i When i he airplane comes into i <• v'i within a few years as it is to do, one wonders what will I ome of that mist picturesque of i i i. the deceit Ai ib. Journeys tba» t *. » ldm two months can now be i• i 'ip by airplane between sunrise m l sun t. Within a short t me limes wi'l be cheap enough so that rv'n the IWlouin sheik can afford to I ive one. When that happens the ii iv of i-fsert raids on fleet Arabian horses end racing dromedaries will hive passed, here use the sheik with sn airplane will bo able to overtake and wipe out his enemy within a few minute*. Both the Br'ilsh in Mesopo 1 iiniri and the French at Aleppo told ns that the Arabs were wild about flying. When they me taken up they I cop begging the pilot to go higher u nd faster. Over t hy of A in tab. “Forty minutes north of Aleppo we crossed the Anianus mountains and passed Just to the left of the city of Aintah, where in 1638 the Crusadei Knights of Ht. John made one of their last stands against trie Trtrke, and where there U an American girls a* hoot. On our left ns we crossed the A man us range we could see the plain of Issus near the Mediterranean, where lust *ry tells us that Darius, the per sian king of Babylon, was overwhelm ingly defeated by Alexander the Great when the young Macedonian was set ting forth to conquer the world. “Turning a little to the east we hnaJed toward the main range of tin* Tturus mountains and flew Just to lb* right of the ancient town «if Tar sus, birthplace of Haul «»f T-',,su«t who afterwards became Hi I’uul, the great apistle.' * We thought we bad Keen rugged mountain* on our wav up the Pacific coast from Galifornla to Oregon, along g tin* shores of Alaska and Kamchatka, and especially In crossing southern Baltichlston from India to Persia, but ♦ he roughest country of all that we passed «»n our way round tin* globe lay between Aleppo and Constanti nople. The snow capped peaks of the Taurus range tower from 7.000 to 10.000 feet into the sky. They extend • II the way from the Mediterranean in the little known highlands of Kurd Istan. Everywhere we saw the crum bling fortresses of the ancient Armen Isn kings who once ruled as far south • s this. In the valleys are mounds I said ta cover cities of that strange race called the Hittites. of whom so little is known. See Snow Caps Again. "The snow on th»se mountains, which form the boundary between Adana and the province of Konieh, was the first we had seen since we caught a glimpse of the highest peaks In the world, the ice capped Himalayas, near Ambala, India. Both in the Amanus and Taurus mountains we flew over the far famed cedars nf Lebanan of which there are more here than in the Lebanan mountains on the Mediterranean coast back of the ancient Phonecian cities of Tyre and Sidon several hundred miles to the south of U9. On these mountains we also saw forests of the fafnous Asian balsam trees, many of them covered with mistletoe. “We were now following the Ber lin to Bagdad railway and at one place in ihe Vaunts mountains we found ourselves in a narrow gorge where the tip.* of our wings nearly touched the walls on both sides. It was on this flight that we experienc ed the first intense cold that we had encountered since leaving the Kurile islands to the north of Japan. “As w> flew over the salt desert of Konia, just a little to the right ofj us was the country of the troglodyte.? of Cappadocia, a race of the strang est people in the whole world, whom we would have liked to have visited. A French archeologist in Aleppo told us a little «V»ut them and pointed rut where they lived on my map. They dwell around the highest peak in Asia Minor, the famous extinct volcano of Argaeug, which we kept in sight for hours. Over Ancient Cliff Dwellers. “Tiles'* troglodytes live in natural skyscrapers, some of them almost as high as the skyscrapers of New’ York city. Their homes are in cur ous lava cones hundreds of feet high. The name of these people comes from the Greek and means to dive into a hole. We flew over several colonies in midst of the Taurus mountains, where instead of making their homes in vol canic cones they are cliff dwellers. But the cones are the weirdest and consist of pumice stone covered over with a layer of much harder lava. “The people have changed very lit tle since the days when Strabo and Herodotus wrote about them and called them the Ethiopians who live in holes. The pumice stone in which the habitations are cut is so soft that a large room can be hollowed out in a few weeks’ time. It is estimated that there are more than 50.000 of these pumice cones inhabited by the troglodytes of Cappadocia, who live today just as they did 4,000 years 1*50. “Flying on over the fertile plains of centra! Asia Minor past the city of A flu m Karahissar, where so many British soldiers were imprisoned by the Turks during the world war. wc looked down on towns and villages still in ruins from the more recent fighting between the Greeks and Turks, and at 1 o’clock we reached the shores of the Sea of Marmora. Ir. a few minutes more w'e knew that we would he flying over Constantinople and landing at last on the continent of Europe.” A D V EK TISFM F> T. ! Beauty A Gleamv Mass of Hair ¥_ 3^c “Danderine” doe? Wonders for Any Girl's Hair Girl*! Try thin! When combing anil dressing your hair, just moisten your hair-hrush with a little "Danderlne" and brush it through your hair. The effect is startling! You can do your hair up Immediately and it will ap pear twice as thick and heavy—a mass of gleamv hair, sparkling with life and possessing that Incomparable softness freshness and luxuriance. While beautifying the hair " I tan derlne" |s also toning and stimulating each single hair to grow thick, long and slron- Hair slops falling out and dandruff disappears, tiet a bottle of "IMnderine" at any drug or toilet counter and Just see how healthy ami youthful your hair appears after this delightful, refreshing dressing. ~ r'reI-tTLvMtKT. Break a Cold Right Up with “Pape’s Cold Compound" Tnka two tablets every flireu hours until three doses • t e take n. The first dose alwnys gives relief. The second and thud dose* completely break tip the cold I* I e a * a n t anil safe to take. Con tains no quinine or opiates. Millions Itss "Pipe'll Cold Compound.” 1‘rlre thirty-five cents rnrugg'sta ( u ■ i sntee It. Today What Women Teaeh. Wall Street's Maelstrom. He's Really President. The Kansas Mr. Davis. By ARTHUR BRIBANE. \--■ ■ ■ J H. G. Wells worried about the American system of public school education. He was much, afraid that our manhood will be damaged because our school boys are edu cated largely by women, whereas British hoys are educated by men. It is kind of Wells to worry, but. he is wasting time and energy in this case. If he will look into his own book of history, at some of his ancestors with the big teeth, low forehead and heavy jaw, he will find that, human beings have changed. And he ought to know they have changed, thanks to the fact that men have been educated by their mothers. Women have educated, not only the boys, but also the men, gradual ly taking the brutality out of them. And that’s what they need. On the lap of his mother, and at her knee, man has been changed from the troglodyte that used to crack his neighbor’s thigh bone/to get at the marrow, into our present imitation of civilization. Women can teach the school boy justice, kindness, courage, patience and concentration. What other manly characteristics does the man teach? , The only teacher that Abraham Lincoln ever had was a woman, his stepmother. She did pretty well. The right woman for a mother, and the right woman for a teacher will turn out men sufficiently manly, as Wells will learn from Lincoln’s his tory. Wheat went to a new high price again yesterday. Its upward climb was not merely a “temporary fea ture of the Coolidge campaign.’’ Conservative gentlemen, power ful in politics, welcome the higher wheat prices. Radicalism among farmers goes down, while wheat goes up. By and by, however, of course, something will happen. Then wheat will come down tnd radical ism will go up again. Stocks were cheerful today also. The predicted 1925 drop is still missing. If you have good nerves, you can last a long while in Wall street’s maelstrom of finance. Last night New York bankers gave a dinner in honor of George F. Baker. That gentleman, who is the third or fourth, possibly the second, richest man in the world, is hard at work and S5 years old. But it takes strength to keep going in that gr.me. Jay Gould, E. H. Harriman and dozens of others, have died young because they got rich very fast. In Kansas there is excitement about Governor Davis, accused of selling pardons and paroles of pris oners. The governor's son, ac cused with him, confessed to ac cepting $1,250 as a bribe, after de tectives trapped and caught him. Governor Davis, who now leaves the governorship, has an unusual record in the way of pardons, in cluding murderers, bank thieves and others. The charge is made by the local officials that sjjch pardons were bought and paid for. Proof, of course, has not been given. This interests people outside of Kansas. You will remember that Governor Davis was a very promi nent candidate for the democratic nomination for president last time. He ran ahead of John IV. Davis for 50 ballots. You realize how well our great democracy works, when you see that, instead of Davis who will be arrested, charged with taking bribes as soon as he leaves office, the democracy accepted for its candi date John W. Davis, a lawyer, of the Standard Oil company, the Telephone company and J. P. Mor gan & Co. Whatever the cause for Hughes' resignation, this is certain. Presi dent Coolidge intends to take care of the entire job to which the peo ple elected him, not merely onf small end of it. He studied the American Con stitution inside a New' England farmhouse long, and knows that he is the man in charge. He is head of the army and navy and proposes to have that understood. (Copyright. 1925.) Old Settlor. Past 90. Dies. Pawnee City. Jan, IS.—James Mc Carthy, an old settler, died, at his home the latter part of last week. Mr. McCarthy was past On years of age. Funeral services will be held Wednesday. Solution of yesterday's puzzle. The Daily Cross Word Puzzle -—— —-^ By Rl< HARD II. TINGI.EY. Horizontal. 1—Weeps. 6—Hurried lunch. 11—Church festival day. 13— Coin. 14— In place. 15— Lame person. 17— Out (prefix). 18— Final result. ID—Diminutive rndlntr. 21— Girl's name. 22— Tip of a pen. 24—One (Scot.). 23— Abuses. 27—Door handles. 29— Part of "to he." 30— Referring to. 31— Fool. 34—Song of praise. 37—Any. 33—Proclaim. 39— Sharp tool. 4d—The morning. .42—A fruit. 44 Exclamation. 40— A vessel. 4S—Toward. 49—Obligations. 51—Small rocks. 53— (lives forth. 54— A kind of tea cake baked on a griddle. Vertical. 1— Stop. 2— A rodent. 3— Part of "to he." 4— And so forth. 5— Continued story. 6— Spitefulnese. 7— Born. S—Pertaining to (sulTlx). 9—Renowned Spanish hero. 10—Barge vat. 12— Elevates. 13— Mettle. 10—An afterthought. 20— Measure of type. / 21— "Concord of sweet sounds.” »3—Violent north wind in the Adri atic sea (adjective). 24—Like. 2*—Help. 23—Babylonian god. 51— Enclosed. 32—Lordly talking. S3—Olassei. 34— Tropical tree*. 35— Confections. * 36— Mother. ST—Positive electrical pole. 41—Wild animal. 43—Father. 45— Sing quietly. 46— Rest. 47— Mythical bird of prey, 43—X. 50—Musical note. 52— -Negation. The solution will appear tomorrow. < To Cure a Cold In One Itay Take Laxative BROMO Qn.VIXE Tabets. (The First anti Original Cold and (irip Tablet ! A Safe and Proven Remedy. The box befits signature of E. VV. Rrnve. 30c.—Advertisement. VE ■ V PENCIL 17 Black degrees The Urge,„ellmg 3 Copying . 1'^iq r™f in the world cAt dll _____________ ^Ca * S~{\0 you realize what b4Jl7 VENUS Pencil degrees really mean? VENUS 6B is as soft as crayon —while VENUS 9H is so hard it will write on stone! The intermediate 15 degrees meet every other pencil purpose. Plain End*, per dor. . . $1.00 Rubber Ends, per dor. . . 1.20 American Lead Pencil Co., 2 20 Fifth Ave., N. Y. ■ ? ■ '..'-V'; ■ ’ k^_XsnK3B8EBliaw9MH9&t Eg—————————8BW———■ Announcement The Office of the NEBRASKA ! 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