The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, March 30, 1921, Page PAGE SEVEN, Image 7

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GLEAVES SAYS JAPANESE NAVY WILL EQUAL THAT OF AMERICA BY 1928 Baltimore, Md., Mar. 26.?The United States will be matched by that of Japan in 1928 according to Rear ' dmiral Albert vileaves in an inter \iew, who has just returned to Am. t rica after a year and a half as com r-.ander of the Asiatic fleet Admiral Cleaves termed the naval holiday talk "absurd." v "With all her liabilities and the great disparity in wealth as compared with this country," the admiral said, | "Japan is carrying out an '8-8' pro_ ? gram, calling for eight battleships, < eight battle-cruisers and all the sub marines and other vessels which go with them by 1928. No one knows how many submarines she is building that fact is kept secret. Considering the differences in wealth, her '8-8' program is equivalent to one of '64 64' here "'Our 'eleaborate program' is not nearly so elaborate as it is supposed to be. Going at the present rate, our navy in 1928 will only be roughly equal to the Japanese." TWO TRUNK LINES IN S. C. MADE MONEY Southern Earned More Than Four Millions of Dollar*, While Sea board Operated at a Deficit. Columbia, March 26.?Two of the trunk lines operat'ng in South Caro line earned money last year, the <At iantk Coa^t Line, over a quarter of a million, and the Southern, over four million dollars, while the Seaboard Air Line operated at a deficit, of nearly a half million, according to annual reports just filed by the trunk line railroads with the South Caro - lina railroad commission. The annual reports show that the net earnings of the Coast Line for . 1920 were $368,635; the net earnings of the Southern were $4,392,084; < while the Seaboard operated at a de ficit of $438,607, its operating ex. penses in South Carolina exceeding its gross earnings securing in-this ?tate by that amount. The Southern's net earnings in this state for 1920 were nearly four time* what they were in 1919, the Coast Line's earnings were only about twen ty per cent of what they were tne year before. The Seaboard's losseS for 1920, according,to the report, were nearly four times greater than their earnings for 191. . The three trunk lines operating in state spent last year for operat ing expenses in South Carolina in cluding maintenance of ways and structures maintenance of equipment, taffic and transportation expenses and taxes $40,960,858. The Southern and the Coast Line spent approximately fifteen million each. The three trunk lines hauled dur ing 1920 a total tonnage of 16,680, 472 tons within the state, both inter state and intra-state freight. They L/oast i-iine s tonnage was o,^ou,oiij the Southern's was 7,529,890 and the Seaboard's was 3,879,741. Trench-digging machines used during the war are now being em ployed to construct a pipe line from Havre to Paris. Get Out Or i T nnlc hphind the doo some other corner a last summer low shot ?tnuf sed.' CLINKS nt anuL WOMAN SEES NEGRO ELECTROCUTED FOR HUSBAND S MURDER Columbia, March 26.?Mrs. Earl. Wadford of Lone Star, in Calhoun' county, was a witness to the electro cution of Feetie Fogle, negro, who to day paid the death penalty at the Penitentiary for the murder of Wad-j ford on January 12. Before he was! electrocuted Fogle made a statement! to the effect that Harvey Whaley, i r.ow in the death cell and awaiting! electrocution on April 8, as accessory to the^ crime is not guilty. In the trial of the caees Whaley ,vec Qf>r>n?pfi hv Focle of having told Fogle to shoot. Before dieing today? Fogle denied that Whaley was guilty j to this extent and it is probable that his statement will probably bring about some change in the orders for Whaiey's electrocution. At the time Earl Wadford was killed, Mrs. Wadford and her baby and Corbett Zeigler, a neighbor, who was at the Wadford home, were wounded. This is the first time wom en have ever witnessed an electrocu. :on. \ WHITE HOUSE ZOOLOGY | i i President Taft had his famous j cow Pauline, a highly bred Guern- j sey. By accepting the offer of a| Libertyvllle, 111., breeder, as he is in clined to do, President Harding may have a champion Jersey to make her way to milky fame at the White House. Between our latest Republi-. can Presidents there has been Mr. Wilson with his little Democratic flock of sheep. Some day it may occur to some body to write a measurably full story of the White House pets, use ful and otherwise. The man of these is legion, for nearly always there have been the children or the grand children of Presidents in the Execu tive Mansion, and little folk are the true and catholic lovers of animal playfellows. One remembers the pet badger given by a little girl of Sharon Springs, Kan., which became the delight of the young Roosevelts in the Rdugh Rider's administration. Horses there were always at the White House in before-the-motor days and for a few years after, There was a coachman of color, one Albert H&wkins, who in 1890 was able to boast that he had driven spanking teams for six presidents, beginning with Grant. One- of his charges was the gentle bay called John who used to eat sugar from tye frail hand of Mrs. Harrison. And of course there have been ponies. Records at hand show no humble, practical pig among traditional prop erties at the White House. On the other hand, there is no listing of the vain, imperial, peacock. These ex tremes may be reached yet in the process of making complete the zoology of executive Washington.? New York World. A contrivance to deaden the noise of their, aeroplanes has been adopted by the French army. This device is attached to the exhaust pipe and it not only muffles the roar but it also stifles the flames should any petrol explode through the pipe becoming overheated. The Old les r, in the closet on in nd gather up your ;s. Bring them to us , r AIFQ' ! SHOP ODD BELIEFS OF JAPANESE Popular Superstitions Have Mostly Sprung From Moral Precept# and Are Quite Harmless. There are many popular, as distin guished from religious, superstitions m Japan. These originally sprang from mostly moral precepts and are onifp harmless. They prevail more widely among people In the rural and mountain districts than v among city dwellers and among the older and Ig norant classes than among the young and educated groups. Some of these superstitions are: At a marriage ceremony a dress of purple color is taboo, lest the mutual love of the bride and groom be soon ? * 1I?K1a lost, as purpie is a coior musi imuio Jo fade. v If while a person Is very 111 a cup of medicine be upset by accident, it Is a sure sign of his recovery; ht needs medicine no longer. Fire Is the spirit of the god Kojlln. It Is supposed to have a purifying ef fect and must be respected. To step on fire, to throw refuse In It, will cause the wrath of the god and hence a calamity. The bore is not unknown In Japan, and the Japanese are pes tered with visitors who sit their wel come out and drive their hosts into a frenzy of eagerness to get rid of tliem. The Japanese recipe of getting rid of them is as follows: Go 1:0 tne kitchen, turn the broom upside down, put a towel over it and fan it lustily. | The tedious visitors will soon depart. Japanese babies and '-children are not allowed to look Into mirrors, for If they do, when they grow up and marry they will have twins. When monslos, ohlckpnpox or whoop ing cough prevails In a neighborhood and parents do not wish to have their children become infected they put a notice on the front door stating that their children are absent KILL RICH IN HIGH-GRADE ORE Mound in Mexico That Is Said by Ex perts to Be Worth In Nelflhbor hfvoH of S5.000.000.000, Primitive peoples have an uncanny j Instinct for naming things accurate-1 ly. Centuries after the natives had named a hill outside the city of Dur ango, Mexico, "The Devil's Finger Tip," scientists came along and sol emnly announced that It was formed of hematite, and had apparently been Jabbed up through the earth's surface from molten masses far below. " This Iron hill rises for 700 feet sheer above the surrounding plaifi, and Is said to contain 000,000,000 tons of high-grade ore rated at 70 per cent in iron content. In a report made just before the >Vorld war a British expert said that the iron in the hill worth ?5{000,000,000 or would "be k so located as to assure protection In the operation of the property. Puf in another way, Mereado moun tain, for the hill Is so r$m?<l lifter iho Spanish eiqiToref "who was first white rann to see it, Contains iron yhich, if marketed today, would bring more money than the entire sum represented by all of the gold and pllver taken out of Mexico between 1603 and 1803, when the exploitation of Mexican mines was at its peak. True Trachoma Easily Transmitted. At a recent meeting of the Ameri can Medical association Dr. JoJin Mc Mullin, surgeon, IT. S. Public Health service, started a lively debate In the section on preventive medicine by reading a paper in which he asserted that much of the so-called trachoma which afflicted the eyes of American children is not trachoma and not con tagious. The original cause of this Inflamma tion of the eyelids Is unknown, but it Js known with certainty that It Is transmitted with ease from one eye to another. There is another type, called folliculitis, which is not contagious and can easily be cured, while the true trachoma necessitates a slight surgical operation and careful treat ment; and, even with this, It Is by 'no means certain that It Is ever per manently cured. Paderewskl'a Descent in Life. Jo Davidson, the sculptor, who re cently returned to the United States after many months in Europe, where many great men posed for him, relates the1 following passage between Cle menceau and Paderewski, which, Da vidson says, occurred in his presence: "Clemenceau Is a gruff old sort of fellow," Davidson relates. "He was receiving Ignace Paderewski. " 'Are you Paderewski, the great pi anist?' he asked. "'Yes,' replied the artist, bowing. "'And you have just been elected premier of Poland?' "Again Paderewski bowed and an swered In the affirmative. "Clemenceau looked at him a rno mant nnrl fhnn chnnb1 hlo h?orl CQ HI T7 saying: 'My God, what a come down!'" Preserving the Salmon. Completion of an improved $40,000 salmon hatchery at Madison, Conn., for' restocking eastern streams with the valuable food fish that disap peared from that region practically a century ago, is awakening renewed Interest in the cause of that early de pletion, according to Popular Me chanics Magazine. The too common construction of dams without proper fish ladders, blocking the seasonal as cent of the salmon from the sea, ex plains uie unpenning iuss ui una \ f?reat natural resource, a condition j often technically difficult of eorree- i tlon because many of the streams ure not listed as navieable waters. ' KCEKi..*.. TRAVELS 50 YEARS ON PULLMAN CARS Chicago, March 29.?Soon James B. Newsome will receive his tenth silver sleeve stripe which will indi cate fifty years of continuous active service as a Pullman porter. He is the oldest porter in active service with the Pullman company. When Newsome first went into the Pullman service as a young man, he had the Burlington's Omaha-Chi cago run. The trip was a 24 hour one, now it takes 14 hours. \ In those days a train carried only one sleeping coach. Now the fast night trains carry sleeping coaches and diners only. Newsome has ridden approximate lv 1 fl.flAlVflflft flftft Wis mm now is on the Chicago and Alton's fast mail train from Chicago to St. Louis. It has been his experience that: Women tip more liberally than mei^ The richest men are the worst tippers. The unaccustomed? traveler pays what his neighbor tips. The best tippers are the sales men, whose tips go on an expense account. More on Tipper*. "I had rather have, so far as tip ping goes, four women on my car than a train load of bank presidents' says Newsome. The richest men sometime do seem the stingiest men.'I have car ried millionaires and multi-million nvflo w rvcf nf flinm fin a filiflvfiii' Ui VO II1IU WA MlVill U V[WMJ. V\.I or less. One multi-millionaire not long ago tipped me just 18 cents, a dime, a nicket and three pennies. Just to illustrate, one time I car ried twenty-six bank presidents on a run. I collected from those men exactly $5.50. ? "A few days later I carried a car load jof American Legion boys who were getting only a month and they made up a pot of $27.50 for the porter." Distinguished Riders. Newsome has carried many dis tinguished passengers, including Ulysses S. Grant, William WcKinley William Jennings Bryan, Admirals Schley and Samson and Woodrow Wilson. He has carried. generations of the Alvin Saunders, J. Sterling Morton, Edward Rosewater inid jHenr;/ W. Yates families. I He is known to thousands of travellers and he knows by name sev eral thousands. GOOD TO rHCiAsr OffOfi" SEALED TINS ONLY aT VOUft G90CEAS MAXWELL HOUSE I C0TO- -I SEVEN-DA1 , Commencing Sat i $7.00 E THESE tanS PRICES 37.50 E tan s< FOR $8.00 l CASH seat ? ONLY $8-00 l seat ; Supply-Your Wc W. A. STATE FIREMEN WILL MEET JULY THE 14-15 Greenville, March 26.?"the S>outh Carolina Firemen's Association will convene in Greenville July 14 and 15 ( :he dates having been selected here] at a conference between Chief Louis J Behrens of Charleston, president and Mayor Hajrvley and Col. Holmes ~B. Springs, chairman of the convention committee of the Young Men's Busi Why don't A CI you use /\>jJ FERTILE They will; back to pi of production you to sell y , i tobacco, trucl money crops substantial pr< The American Agricn Ashepoo Fertilizer 1 .uilT UP'l SOLD BY R. S. Link, Abbeville, S. C.J Speer & Bond, Fftnpt ttrcie*. Reliable good* I 1 jy " Fresh Ves Lettuce Tomi Candies, Fruits, I< English Walnuts and BrazilfNuts a / Abbevill Kite r srtu l urday, March 26 [igh Back Porch Rocker, eat and Back (green and: [igh Black Porch Rocker, eat and back, (natural co ow. Back Porch Rocker,^ md slat back, (green?and ??" rtlr T)/mi/iU D Anlrrtv t uw jl uiun xiuLaci, i ind back (green and nati mts Now, While Pr ness League. The principal entertai* ment feature will be a luncheon on July 14, and baseball games on botfc convention days between Greenville .nd Charlotte. Because nearly all the fire departments are motorized, it vas decided to abandon the annual ournament. The convention wSt bring between 150 and 200 visitors U Greenville. READ THE .ADVERTISEMENTS HEPOO rrnc for aii jLIYiJ crops? helo vou get e-war costs and enable our cotton, i and other at a more ofit. ltural Chemical Co. . IVorki, Charleston a standard Mot Down to a price . R. Winn, Due West, S. C. Lowndesville, S. C. i. But mochmnieal condition. :: Celery t atoes ;e Cream, Drinks nc CENTS t ? pound \ V with Rat- (h^.50 natural).. *pHre a# with rat-, *?.00 lor) ?pOea. J 1 -M- m f* iT\ B mm cane fl*Ef ?oU natural) a# with cane* ten. 00 iral) iecs Are Lowest , 1 t2? A