The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, September 23, 1921, Image 3

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YEAST SOON BANISH ' - . I ^ When Taken *With Iron in Convenient Tablet Form. Everyone ia now familiar with the splendid results -brought about by yoast in treating such skin troubles ay pimples, boils, black-heads, etc. But there were thousands of people who cculdn't eat common baking yeast, tlue to its disagreeable taste. So it remained to certain prominent scientists to find a way in which yeast could be taken in pleasant and convenient tablet form. The result of their research is Ironized Yeast, which is now the approved vitamine tonic treatment. People everywhere are now taking , lionized Yeast and the results reported are almost unbelievable. Not only is Ironized Yeast fine for clearing up the complexion; it brings equally remarkable results in treating thinness, low vitality, nervousness, weakness, poor appetite and other symptoms of run down condition. Even after the first few days people say they notice decidedly beneficial effects from Ironized Yeast. This is because tfonized Yeast is rich in vitafnines, which have been Self Government for the Bar Dayton, 0., Sept. 14.?The voluntary state bar association of today is due to give way to an association created under state statute to which every lawyer is required to belong, according to Daniel W. Iddinfis of this city, president of the Ohio State Bar Association. The object sought is protection of the public hnd the legal profession from the unscrupulous lawyer. The associations would have disciplinary powers. A definite movement to this end which has already made considerable progress is reported by Mr. Iddings. He noted that North Dakota has made all lawyers of the state members of an association which is given broad pow ers to evolve such organization as it sees fit. The law went into effect July 1. In Florida, a more comprehensive bill recently passed the state senate. The Michigan senate has passed a similar bill and in Ohio one wa3 introduced in the Senate but failed to pass. The president of the Ohio Bar Association added that tho Nebraska, Maryland, Minnesota, Kansas, Idaho. I Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, and North Carolina associations were studying the sulyect. 1 The plan of self government for the bar is not new on this continent, according to Mr. Iddings. It is in effect in Canada, he said, while the Inns of Court of England, which serve as a - x model, hifve been in existence for centuries.. "Only 17 per cent of the work of a lawyer is done in court, the other 83 per cent of his liveHhnod is earned away from the 'all seeing eye' of the judge," he said. "Self discipline and self-government are required now as never before." The wife of Signor Mascagni, the! famous Italian composer, wears a - most curious watch fob. It consists of an Italian silver piece punctured with six round holes, In which are hung six pearly first teeth of her little daughter. Montreal is planning a new hotel, costing $9,000,000. 1 ? ^ ~ """" I THE W Present in their r ment an extensive e SMART FALL DRESS snir lilf ^ fi New Fall models for MknAi* rlonro nr AVAfilnc uvi y yunvv v* v t | smart lines of the n which include Silk C Messaline, Tricotine, S * Each Dress and S touches that place tl Sizes 16 to 46, in all lei THE W ^ S. KRASS, Prop. isUGLY SKIN BLEMISHES lid absolutely essential to goci ^alth. Modern cooking robs evei >ur best foods of these all-importan' I dements, and as a result we become un-down, sickly, nervous aiui thin. ] Irorrised Yeaet. Contains highly eon- 1 entratod brewer's yeast, which is far ] -icher in Yita'mlnes than baking yeast ( nd in endititfn contains org >n!c o~ . "egetablo iron, the great blood-build- j >r. So, if you are run-down, or if you , 'ff<>r with humiliating skin blom . dies, you owe it to yourself to tr; 'rouizod Yeast. j Ironized Yeast is pleasant to takr '*reps indefinitely, and costs' abou< So s^me to the dose as common y?as+ 'vit is much more effective. Ear1 'L wckage contains 10 days' trcatmen' j ?nd costs only a dollar, or just 10' t i day. Special directions for childrer ? n each package. Sold at good drug 1 r'sts everywhere. Made by the Iron- ' zed Yeast Company, Atlanta, Ga. t HIGHLY CONCENTRATE!) VITAMINS TONIC 1 I , I 700,000 People in All Palestine \ a London, Sept. 22.?There are now ' barely 700,000 people in all Palestine. v a population much less than that of t Galilee alone in the time of Christ, a says Sir Herbert Samuel, the British High Commissioner there, In a report 11 just made public. ? Ten thousand immigrants arrived in a Palestine in the seven months between 1 September, 1920, and May, 1921, he a reports. * Sir Samuel attributes the scarcity 1 of the population to lack of develop- a ment. . c The financial condition of Eastern * arid Central Eurore, and internal dif- 0 ficulties within the Zionist organiza- P tion of the United States, says the report, have prevented the Zionist move- y ment from providing, as yet, any " large sumes for enterprises of devel- v op ment or colonization. As a conse- 15 quence, while there had been much v pressure to admit Jewish immigrants, ? there had been little expansion in the opportunities for employment, he de- h claved. * " The water supply for Jerusalem o having been found to be insufficient, s the government is bringing into use s some ancient resewoires of vast ca- t pacity, named the pools of Solomon, d but of unknown date, possible Herodi- k an. situated eight miles away. o The garrisn of the country has c buen reduced to 6.000 combatant e troops,, imposing a charge of ?2,500,- k 000 on the British exchequer, or at the rate of ?500 for every fighting u man. - v y The wildest jungles of Africa are P safer for women than the streets of v most American cities, in the opinion t of Mrs. J. W. Dunn, who has just re- t turned from two years in the "Dark v Continent." ? > . n In Budapest women guides and in- a 1 lerpreters wear a different colored rib- v ! ben for each language which they a I speak. Some have two or three rib- t ! bona, and others have four, five or six. In the seven years that the Panama Cnnal has been in use, 13,416 vessels, carrying 51,000,000" tons of cargo, have passed through the waterway. f EMHEHEBBBHEBH^ESnEKilBESKiEHSHHB a UNDER!: eady-to-wear depart- g Jj nsemble of Women's a t! ES AND COAT SUITS ? ti lur prices reflect the c it of the times?de- < a id moderation. ?j )resses I .98 to $35.00 Suits ! 2.00 to $35.00 : ^ street, atternoon, din- I? ' wear. Fashioned in 11 Ut tost exquisite fabrics, I; anton Crepe, Taffeta, R ? Serges and others. Suit is beautiful with ? kern above the usual. aiding colors. ONDER !| !i 1 | 1 '-Jm*. Mayo Scores Nursing Union ?? # Dr. Charles H. Mayo of the foraov dayo Clinic at Rochester, Minnesot ays "the nursing union t^as come t ms the most autocratic closed shop ii the country." In an authorized interview in the Pictorial Review for October* in whioii to calls for 100,000 sub-nurses to relieve the ucute shortage, Dr. Mayc :hurgea that the leaders of organized mrsing "have carried their methodi :oo far and with too high a hand, and n doing this have defeated their own mrpose, for they have lost sight of he real impulse of their profession? -he alleviation of the pain of the .v?.rld. Ministration to the sick and the lying can not be bound by liard-and.'ast laws. They are the divine right >f the poor as well as the rich. A prohibitive price can not be put upon ,hom. And that is what the nurses me doing. Too great a commercialzation of their services is making iropcr care of the sick impossible for hose in moderate circumstances. In iddition, their demands as to hours md regulations can not be met in hosritals if the hospitals are to m * itain .heir high standards of service. I mderstand that in some hospitals the mrses have even resorted to strikes. This is a shocking indictment of the nofession, and I t an not believe that he nurses involved were heartily in lympathy with them. They must have >een misled by the agitation of one or ,wo malcontents and incompetents. Supposing that doctors should go on trike! The thought is no less appallng than a nurses' strike 1 Therefore vith the union becoming a menace it is ime for the public to co-operate gainst it. "The educational standards for regstration of nurses as set down by the tursing boards of the various states mvo gone beyond all reason. Any indigent girl can acquire in two years .11 tfta knowledge necesaary for the horoughly competent nuraa. 1 know hat in my work I never have to ask ny nurse to do anything which she ould not have learned how to do in wo years' training. But as the laws f most states demand high-school ire-education and three years' trainlg for the registered nurse, the only /ay to circumvent them is by trainog sub-nurses or nursing aids who /ill accept smaller pay, whose delands are not so exacting, and who .'ill be proficient enough to take hold f almost any case presented to them. "Seven dollars a day for an eight our day is more than exorbitant; it i prohibitive. It means that in cities f dangerous disease where constant kilful care and watching are neceaary to save the life of the patients, hree nurses must be employed at a aily cost of twenty-one dollars a day. Low, I ask, can the man and woman f aveiage means "afford to pay such harges? They can not do it. Neithr can the hospitals if they wish to eep open their doors. "Good nurses are born. They, are ot made, any more than good stenogaphers or good writers or good lawers are made. Educatin helps, but C a girl has all the education in the /orld and the beat of secretarial raining, and yet lacks manual dexerity and sound business sense, she /ill not make a good stenographer, ill the training in the world will not [lake a good nurse of a girl who is dways thinking about herself and /hose heart does not go out toward uffering humanity in a desire to ease hat pain by self-sacrificing service." Fate of Exiled Army Athens, Sept. 22.?The ultimate ate of General '"Wtatigel's Russian imy in exile of whom 20,000 officers nd men still are encamped on the rallipoli Peninsula still continues one f the unsolved puzzles of the Near last. General Wrangel has held together be best of his officers and men from mong the refugee army which fled com Russia before the victorious Bolheviki. lie has hoped that his forces rould be again needed in Russia to laintain a new government "when he Soviet regime collapsed." But this is a hope deferred and ^rangel's best fighting men wait in heir tents and huts on Gallipoli. Major Jean de Roover, chairman of he League of Nations commission for no excnunge 01 populations uevweuu Greece and Bulgaria, has visited the Russian camp and brought away a ery favorable impression of the ofRers and men. He knows something bout the Russian fighting man for he fas formerly the Belgian representaive with Wrangel's army when it was he bulwark of the anti-Bolshevik tienglh in the Crimea. He says: "In this camp, besides 1,500 women nd children, there are 8,000 officers, 0,000 soldiers and 2,000 cadets in tin lilitary schools. These troops have c-pt their military organization. Their lorale is of the highest and they volntarily submit to the most stern disiplfne; for in all-their hardships they re buoyed up by an unquestioning aith in their chief, General Wrangel, nd in the greatness of their mission. "They are encamped under canvas, r in old huts that have no?doors or windows, but are always in an irreroachable state of cleanness. "They are fed by France. In addiion, General Wrangel is paying them, rom the little money he still has? bout a dollar a month. "Wrangel, who succeeded in getting rnployment as labor corps in Serbia nd Bulgaria for nearly all his Cosack troops, is trying to get Serbia o receive his Gallipoli Army Corps, "ive thousand of them are going to be ned by Jugoslavia as a frontieruard. "As for the other regiments, the overnment at Belgrade is prepared r> offer them its hospitality if funds re put at its disposal which will over their upkeep for two years. The lussian ambassador at Washington as still several tens of millions of lollars, the remains of funds that irere sent him from Russia before the lolshevik coup d'etat, to pay for the rders for war material. Wrangel is naking every effort to get the few nillion dollars necessary for the carying out of his scheme raised out of hese funds and transmitted to the Serbian government. "If he succeeds, what will be the iltimate role of this legion? Will it ight again as an army? Probably lot. The general opinion in Russian :ircles is that Bolshevism must go inder in an internal convulsion of the lountry, and that the tyranny of BoW thevism will be succeeded by anarchy. .t will be then that elements of order, i framework of administrative and >olice organization will he needed by he new government to restore calm for the convocation of the Cnstituent Assembly. This is where the surninm. i^f tfas National Russian Army lope to be of service .coyntry." nWttin . 'ijiji ' Moral Standards Changing i London, Sept. 14.?Moral standards of the present day, changing from the simple code of our forefathers, are "excreBcenceB growing out of the war," declared Rev. Dr. Elbert ltobb Zaring, editor of the NorUiwe.su.. Christian Advocate, Chicago, befon ' the tifth Ecumenical Mathodijrt Con 1 ference here today. "It is a. passing wave from which," he said, "we arc 1 slowly but surely emerging/' Dr. Zaring, in h:s address, "referred 1 to the pleasantry which passed between a Chicago and a New Voi k daily paper many years ago when! Chicago was developing the sky-! scraping habit. Chicago twiued Now I York on the fact and the Heia.d oi ! that city replied there was no city on! the Western Hemisphere that needed j its sky scraped worse than Chicag >.' "Since then scores of cities have gone j into the sky-scraping business," eoa-j tinued the speaker. "In the spiritual meaning of that term we must aii scrape the sky to get a correct idea j of moral -standards. "The true moral standard is ur changeable. It lies like A great snow-capped mountain range aoi- . s ihe horizon. It cannot change, 'lhisj moral mountain range which has sc.! * the standard for all time sustains til. same relation to the moral world that the Himalayas do to the .physical * earth. t "Attempts have been made to sub- > stitute, but to no avail. Ever yoncc* : in a while you hear of a new set ot j Commandments. Men of different * professions have issued Tef! Com- i niandments. I have read of Ten Con.- 3 mandments for husbandd, for wi.es for students and even school chi.dren. Revisers have even gone into the lie d of the New Testament and proposed beatitudes different from) those laid down by our Lord. All J these *aempts are futile and insignificant . compared to the mountain lango formed by the first Ten Commandments lot down out of Heaven through the medium of Moses, i no cannot be improved upon. "Our conception of moral stand- c ?rds is changing. Wo are today in 1 the trough of a wave. The war upset everything, toppled our morals as > well as our intellectual and ph.v icul .standards. We have not recomi mc- 1 ed to keep house. Thus there a-c certain retrogressions that are g.t-a - 1 jy deplored and which some fancy are * permanent lowering of the mo al 1 standards. These are but excrescences growing out of the war. Su h a ' horrible program as was projected upon the world could pot but leave in its trail a sordid conception of nn> al. . i'hus, in the matter of family ti . , o /hvsienl hnhifs ..f ?n? we find people indulging as th y have! not done for many years past. "This is but a passing wave. liven ! now we are merging therefrom. Our conception of the moral st?nua.d .s t lifting. One of the most hopeful t phases of this development of a moral * .dea is the application* of the principle ; of Christianity to the great world of v industry about us. There is no ques- t don but that we have a larger out- i look in this field than ever before. "But the world has become compli- * cated. There is no simplicity. Everything is interwoven, enmeshed. 'No 1 man liveth to himself adn no- man 1 dieth to himself' in any sense what- 1 ever. Once upon a time wt did not J car how la man made his money just * so he distributed it properly. Now we are not so anxious about the dis- J tribution of his money as how he made it; I have great hopes for the , future. The moral standard is lifting gradually. The line mnrkd upon* the side of the great and eternal standard j, set by Christ Himself is gradually mounting. Some day?but not now? s we may reach the tip of the stand- \ ard." ^ < p Land Sale ? a State of South Carolina, !, Union County. * Court of Common Pleas. Manly J. Harris, et al., Plaintiffs, against Fred Harris, et al., Defendant's. ( Pursuant to an order of the Court .j of Common Pleas for the County \ aforesaid, heretofore made in the above stated case, I will sell, on Mon- j day, October 3, 1921, (being salesday) ' during legal hours of sale, at auction before the court house door in Union, [ S. C., the following lands and premises, to wit: All that certain tract or plantation * of land, containing seventy-threo (73) acres, more or less, lying and bein; in Pinckney township, County and State aforesaid, and bounded by lands . of E. V. Going, Jack Faucett, John Cnllmnn and rkt.Viars nrwl Koi ncr same tract of land conveyed to .1. Ed. Harris by J. D. Harris, by deed recorded in Bo6k of Deeds P. 34. page v (.52, office of the Clerk of Court for c said County. Terms of sale: One-hr.lf cash, balance in one year from date of sale, J credit portion to be secured by bond \ of the pui*ehaser-and mortgage of th premises, said bond to provide for , payment of interest from date of sale , at the rate of eight (8) per cent per annum, and for ten^.(10) per cent at- ' torney's fee, if not paid at maturity, the purchaser to have the option of . paying all cash. W. W. Johnson, Ex-officio Master for Union County. , Sept. 16, 1021.. 0-16-23-30 J On the island of Jersey there is n very curious but pretty marriage cus- , toxn. As soon as the ceremony is over, and when the happy couple are enter- , ing into occupation of their house, th<* large granite slab over the porch is inscribed with the initials of tn?? brid 1 and bridegroom, and between the two ' a rough representation of two hearts is entwined, the whole thus forming a ' unique marriage certificate for all the j world to see. _ ^ In occupational life, Protestant clergymen and gentlemen farmers 1 J 4.1 1 4. M iruu wie um&esi lives. Notice of Final Discharge , i State of South Carolina, County of Union. 1 Court of Probate Notice is hereby given that on the 1st day of October, 19*21, at llfo>clock, a. m., in the Court of Probate for said 1 county, the undersigned will-make his 1 final settlement as administrator of ' I the estate of Jno. RopeT Betenrbaugh, and that thereupon he will appfy to ' i the Judge of said Court, for his final ; discharge as Ruch administrator. J. S. Betenbaugh. ' This 31st day of August^ 1921; Published in The Union Times for ^days. ? 9-9-16-28 J j r itlf "* Ttfinl T COTTON IS AbVfi NO BETTER Tift S * $, Realizing as w also, how much eve that I will sell you any one who trie PLAN No. 1?P; ? Plan No. 2?One-t i montMy payironts wi Think this over ; oncl plan with you a think you will see h Yc j. w. mm ioo Many Varieties of Churches in Americi Pittsburgh, Sept. 22.?One of th Neatest uifiicultics confronting u. kurcn lies in tue .ad ma* there ai ii> varieties o ehurenos in Anurie ^r. Ba:.cer i\ i-'uilerion, of St. Louie old the Worlds Ah.ance of Pi/s.;, jiian a:ul iieiormed Churches nor ociay. Dr. Fullcrton is ret votary of th "Vesbytevian Board of Home Mission 11<i was telling of the dilUcuitie-; ?? r me mission work in the Unitei i .us. Di in.niina1 ionalism, he sa i as one of tho greatest of these. Eaci the 1< "> lcinos of churches was on Icavoriug to promote it own war K>th in tho city and the countvj nnong nati o and immigrant alik ind. consequently, there was not <;n.; ivei lapping but a overlooking -.in hero had bet n no con:-oral.on in tk ocaiion and development of t..es r.rins local churches. Continuing ho said that the great st problem before the agencies of th hr.stinn church is to "Christianiz ho church itself.' He declared th here are communities m Amorievhere four or fr e diiferent dc.iommu ions are at work, each church recoiv ng home mission aid, when one o wo churches could be both s elf . a* aining and self-re peeling. ElTorts had been made, he said, t ban ire this "shameful situation" b :U to tho me (ail. it ovisterl "t.^ t mibarrassment of the work and icorn of the ungodly." An attemp wot-been made to unite denominn ions having similar doctrine and gov rement into one larger unit and i his way unite the local chinches i..n no for hotter service for '.he com nunity, hut l")r. Fullcrton said tha xireiue denominotionaliun prevent i:y very large application of tiii rinciplo and strong peoples reniaii part: because of some unimportant o uhsidiavy question on which the sal atiou of no soul or community de loads. "It is apparent, therefore," he wen n, "that this larger union will neve; 0 accomplished until the kingdom . !od hulks larger in the minds o ieoplo than the church, until the sal ation and service of mankind be omes a gn rdcr concern than the es nbkshment. of a -pocilic church. "This duplicati n of churches is no nly harmful to th ? ca .se but is a!si 1 useless waste of both money an ten." Dr. Fullertoii said it was heart sn r.g to know t'a; t this cc nrlitio i o hings was heiii'V con id Ted v.o-iousl >y churches and missionary agencic ind pointed oh1 that the orgnnizatio f a Homo Missions Council and C n n il of Women for Home 1 mars ago had become an nutst'". !i 1 vidence of a spirit cooperation pre .dling in the rhuvches. He pointed to the condition in U . is an illustration of what had bee ccrmolished by the Home Mission Council and said th.At today t'v v cere no communities in that. slat \liere two o* more ClonMlo chare! rnre at work except in the cities 'alt Lake and Ogden. Similar orj zntiors ' >' 'a'''rd'uomi.iat icial ] nission work had been made ir ?vado, Montai a, Porto Rico, Cub) Ufi?lta a d sV- do Domi u*o. Despite the hindrance of denomina ionallsm Dr. illcrton reported he spirit of evangelism prevailing i v me vie > ore of thm mo banc" urns of Mv time. Never in th? course of a year ha here been such an interest in Ivine ng men into tho church, he said. TTo recounted the difficulties in o' .emoting to C f'stinize and Ameri s?n\7.o too noiv lo'" peonies n ;n ifloR and held if frv he tV missi on r h'? chnreh '.veil r.s of the ?;ff?? t olve the problems of sanitation a 1 lousincr. Tie sni'l that. neeordiner to host i" 'ornvation there arc now 18.500 me md women eivaored 'n feme form r nfssionary work in this co"n!ry rn eore than 000 oa inverted in tb niAtness of making and keenin \mertcn Christian fov the redomf ion of mankind and the friendly set rice of the woiM. Tt. Pays To Advertise. * DRYHcLEANiNG7 Eliminates ti e soil from the fine? ind most delicate garments withoi 6s3 of color or shrinkage and cle:?ri pouf garments clean. We have tt inuinment and I he know how, that tvhat counts in cleaning clothes. ,vill appreciate your business as mac anyone. Special attention to Pa .el Post. We will call and deliver in :lust-proof motorcycle. Nicholson Bank Building, Phone Ifi Agent for two of the largest D] (louses in the South. Hames* Pressing an Repair Shep ? - a >7' -:ly. -I /, vuu liJUlltJ y O LI i HUIbCS. Every necessary adjustment can be made n ! from the iv --'s -eat, which also saves time and ma? e:> the vr !i . Titer. T hese are some of the | Decrinr* fr - '.hat enable you to do a better day's veil.. in and see us about it. There is a eke to rnce': y nuv requirements. We nb.o have a complete hue of International hayinq mac Wc?, including Ede-delivery rakes, selr-clum^ ec, hay lor d em, sweep rakes and 11 stackers. ? * ?av? tration 3Ion . .*s arc: . ?" > ren.tl v Reduced si 'S'>3 ur'sn :Dr~:^are Company I hur. nrs' headquarters h? Th'hOX, S. C. -I . j 5 _ ^ ... .. ?? ts ft, ?i. Ci?, [ im-SATURDAY, 24 I ect a most com- I . \:x.\ -k.o f-Ahest Woolen*. 1 i:,"j i-o'.v g:i cli Jy a., c- re. iais is a return 1 j ch":e :: r 1 L.A bauliiul fit guar- | jy r.B.*.eci m every Qcrrneai. I ij GIARK-WE 0TH1NG CO. 16 | J== is Public Schools I this year, is a model flat, filling the i ... . ,T . . space 01 one ordinary schoolroom ami h ieacll llousekcep'nr; including u kitchen, living room, dinr !ng ren m, hall bedroom and bath. ft XT ,, , r. , 0, ~ .. Adjining the model flat is a large New hoik, ...opt. a... On ohe as cooking room and three small kltch- s. 7, sumption that mo-i girl pupils some ens, separated by railings, the entire ti. day n a ry and make tacit humes in unit providing for the instruction of small city apartments, publk schools 40 pupils at nee. .. j here are being equipped to tor ch them ' . * . :-v dhow to keej) house economically and Scrap leather from Naw England efficiently under those cohditi s. shoe factories is shipped south far use Part of the equipment of the ionics- !,i- fertilizer. . tic tfeienco department of each of thcl A new standard school buildings opened j Subscribo to The Uaiaa Times. ^ ? i' _m -jjj jji 1 g???p?w hiiiwm w^i^mmmmwwmm .NCING. FORDS HAVE DROPPED IN 1 ^ IE THAN THE PRESENT TO BUY A G lL*sm ' ' r I" P-V , ?* ijj I t " ,a v v ? _ , * \ j " i^y ;>/ t ell as you do how hard it is to get money, and ! srybody wants a FO'D, I have two plana now a FORD on v nd ' V < scond one is so easy that s ca.u own a FO: v a* d pay for it as he rides. ay cash \v) en ; ?n ; - deuvered the FORD. ^Ird civ1! -;t ' i?u divHed into ten equal n '"'ivf' w - - XVrred payments. and 1 will i ;.p. ?0 over the sec,nd if you wi- ;rdy < > /'ist a little figuring I ow liberal rr.v a rs are. >urs for move FORDS, 1MB, Dealer, Oriasville, S. C. | ???????k?n ga? jum ???? ??^1 * ? -f'^r W 4MB ^fim? '-r A Be I Day's Work AS a time saver during the haying ?j' * ^ season, the Deering Mower has earned a high reputation. Its ease of operation and a'.solute dependability make possible steady work without delays. Light draft is one big advantage. Ro'Lr and ball bearings reduce friction v'v hc.o t. i e i o ci i.; is greatest, and an adjustable pinion and : .'ernal gear deliver power to the cutter bar v-dtli liic least loss. More work I : fan i /-] o i r: I , i c\i 11