The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, May 02, 1922, Image 3
Famous Bea
Health anC
through Iror
"A Wonderful Help in Keeping 1
Perfect" Says Beautiful Elsie L
"IT was by purest accident that I pick?
1 a package of lronized Yeast just as 1
about to give UP stage for a long ne<
rest. The results that it brought in me pr<
that it was just what 1 needed. For tod
actually feel like a new born woman!"
Such is the amazing statement of I
La Bergere, known to vaudeville lo<
all over the continent for the beauty ol
"My stage work," continued Mis* La Berger
severe strain on my nervous system that everj
became a hardship. I lost my appetite, and alv
and worn-out. Then I discovered Ironixed Yeast
cannot give enough praise to it. I find it keeps
tit in every way. and thnt It is a great help ii
shape of iny body in wondfrful condition, lroni
a permanent place of honor in my traveling bag
How New Process Makes ^
Doubly Effective
The reason IRONIZKI) YEAST brings such i
suits is because it embodies a new scientillc i
enables yeast to bring its greut benefits often ii
usual time. Yeast ulone is good, but tests show
soaae other agent in oriler to quickly convert
health-building elements into firm tissue, ros
sparkling vitality.
Everyone knows that iron is of great value
our food into living cells and tissue. So working
lera, our scientists finally discovered the wondei
ironization ? the process through which the O
yeast and iron become* loo per cent efficient.
Do not think, however, that any combinatioi
iron willdo. Yeast brings it*best nndquickestrcsi
it is treated through the scientific process
of ironization And this process is embodied 1
only in illONIZED YEAST, the oue tcien- E
tificuli'j correct yeast treatment. '
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I f you need more flesh?if you are pale, lack- II
inir in energy?or if your complexion isklem- '
islied by humiliating skin eruptions?try 1
I HON I/.El) YEAST at once. Very likely
you will l>c actually astonished at the improvement
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48 hours. Go to your druggist today. Satisfactory
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or money back, fl.00 a package.
W?N?fP VfASf
Tablets
TH? oni y YEAST THAT IS CENlNNCUr M0NI2ED
New Publication on
Soil Building
Clemson College, April 27.?"There c
are five important factors in soil im- t
] rovement and economical crop pro- i
duction; namely, (1) control of soil c
moisture, (2) sufficient organic mat- r
tor, (.'!) deep plowing and thorough t
tillage, (4) systematic use of lime in c
rotation, and (5) intelligent use of ?
commercial fertilizers," says Exten- 1
sion Bulletin 51, entitled "Soil Im- I
provement and Economical Crop Pro- i
duction," by N. E. Winters, Specialist i
in Soil Fertility, which has just come t
from the printer and is ready for dis- c
tribution by the Extension Service, c
Clemson College, S. C., and by the
county agents. 9 t
Moisture and Humus Big Factors. \
In discussing moisture control the j
publication states among other things I
that South Carolina loses annually i
about $9,000,000 worth of soil fertil- 1
ity in the leaching of nitrogen from s
the soil and that the use of cover 1
crops would save most, if not all of
this loss. Regarding organic matter, t
it is sl.own that humus helps to con- s
trol soil moisture, holds plant food 1
makes plant food in the soil more rap- j
idly available, and makes more effici- t
ent the use of commercial fertilizer I c
applied. fc
Commercial Fertilizers Valuable. f
That the South Carolina farmer appreciates
the value of commercial fer- 1
tillzers is proved by the fact that in a
J92Q over one-sixth of the fertilizers t
soil in the United States was bought s
by South Carolina farmers, but. our j
farmers have made their mistake,
says the bulletin, has been in the con- t
tinued use of large amounts of com- j
mercinl fertilizers without regard to t
other factors, which make the use of a
fertilizers more effective and profit- r
able. In short, the use of fertilizers
is beneficial, while the abuse of fer- 1
tilizers is unprofitable and even harmful.
Bulletin 51 is illustrated with four
tables and 11 cuts which aid greatly
in making clear and impressive the
facts and ideas of the publication, j
which should do much to stop soil robbing
and encourage soil building.
New Minister From Colombia '
..New York, April 27.?Enrique Ola- !
ya Herrera, the new minister from 1
t"
Colombia to the United States, who is 1
due to arrive in New York today to 1
lake up his duties in Washington ex- ^
ercised a potent influence in indue- *
ing the Colombian congress to ratify 8
the treaty between the United States
and Colombia under which this coun- c
try paid $25,000,000 as compensation 1
for the loss of Panama. He has always 1
been a friend of the United States r
and supporter of a policy of closer un- c
ion between Colombia and this coun- *
try. t
As vice-president of the foreign affairs
committee of the Colombian sen- 1
ate he defended amendments to the I
treaty with the United States which I
eliminated an expression of American *
regret over the separation of Panama *
from Colombia. When opposition s
arose against its approval as amend- t
ed he became secretary of foreign af- (
fairs to defend the treaty and bring 1
about tis ratification. 1
In the debates over Hie treaty he
warmly defended a policy of friend- i
ship with the United States and urged I
investment of American capital in Co- 1
lombia and an intelectual exchange f
with America. . . 1
Senor Herrera founded in 1915 El i
Diario Naeional, one of the most im- i
portant papers of Colombia. He has 1
served as chief of the diplomatic de- t
partment of the Colombian secretary i
of state, as minister to Chile and Ar- i
gentina and has held other diplomatic
posts. He Is one of the youngest men |
ever appointed minister from Colom- <
bia to the United States. He is con- <
sidered one of Colombia's best orators. 1
uty Regains
I Strength
lized reast
My Figure fk
a Bergere VPH
dup
was *- >. V
IE
e,"putaucha ?&>>>$?! '> V':
' performance '< -A-:
ray* felt tired s ;:; *
:?and I really wZ*'*-.:: ' '
me-absolutely j?5x?^S-~ra
keeping the I
ized Yea*t ha* '. j
'east /
emarkable re- gffijSllu-. J
process which (r?SS?2|V.|
i lust half the
that it needa
ita wonderful
y cheeka and HW|B
in converting
r on thia prob. &. ja. r|
rful proceaa of 4
mubination of
> of yeaat and ^
iltaonly when
jnrri w&iie ironized yeast is
r If r.r.1 "o'd ?t n,l druggists on our
Satisfaction Guaranteed basis,
hoae who wiah may try it atmolutely FREE,
imply mail thecobpon. It will bring you the
imoui Three Day Trial Treatment. The real
ta, even from thia short teat, will very likely
nrpriac you. Send for it now.
74 Free Trial Coupon |
The Ironized Yeaat Co. I
Atlanta, G*? Dept.
Pleaae aend me the famoua Three Day I
Free Trial Treatment of Ironized Yeaat. |
Name - |
Aririrt??n J
City.- State. I
. ON1T onm trial packahi: vo a pamtu: |
Black Cat Causes Trouble
Miami, Fla., April 26.?A black cat
aused abandonment one day recently
if the greyhound race meet being coniucted
here by the Miami Kennels
lub and the dogs now are chasing a
lew mechanical rabbit. A small elecric
trolley is laid in the center of the
:ourse and at the beginning of a race
1 stuffed rabbit, mounted on the troley,
is started from the tape. The
>unny is given a few yards start
ind the greyhounds released, at a sig;al,
do their utmost to catch it. A
ew yards beyond the finish the rabbit
lucks into a trap door while the dogs
ire clocked as they cross the line.
The dogs for five weeks had chased
he rabbit when an inquiring black cat
vandered onto the course. One of the
udges to save the kitty from rough
Landling by the hounds, did 100 vards 1
n ten seconds flat and captured herv.
["he cat was released behind the grand 1
tand with a warning and it was beieved
she would stay out. She didn't. 1
The first race got under way and
he stuffed rabbit was making a
itreak down the course with the grey i
lounds in full tilt after it. At the
>ost marking a sixteenth of a mile
hings began to happen. The casing
>f the trolley flew into the air and 1
tunny came to a halt. Six grey hounds
tounced upon it.
The cat, disregarding the warning, i
lad wandered onto the track again
ind had climbed onto a rafter under
he trolley casing for a siesta. The
wiftly moving bunny struck her and
ammed the mechanism.
The management issued rain checks
o the spectators, sent for several carenters
to repair damages, raided a
axidermist's shop for another stuffed
ibbit, and the races were resumed the
text day.
Ceen Rivalry
m va a vuvriaiiiiniiv^
Prague, April 28.?Keen rivalry
or predominance in the Danube shipping
is developing among the three
and-locked fragments of the disaembered
Hapsburg Empire, Ausria,
Czechoslovakia and Hungary.
?he Danube River is their sea, and
>ort facilities mean traffic and naional
income. Hence one form of
heir competition is to build up their
espective ports?Vienna, Pressburg
now called Bratislava)) and Budapest,
situated close to each other on
i bend of the river.
With the prospect of a connecting
anal system between the Danube and
he Rhine through Bavarian enterprise,
the Danube is coming to be
egarded here as the greatest artery
pf trade in Europe, of tomorrow and
he British were aware of this when
hey founded their River Syndicate.
The first struggle between the
hree ports was to get the Allies'
Danube Commission. Bratislava won
put the term was fixed for five years
ind the Commission will next go;
vhere the biggest traffic is. This is
ipurring the Czechs to increase the
raffic capacity of Bratislava to 1,)0j0,000
tons this year and ultimate
dans call for a capacity of 3,000,000
:ons.
The struggle for trade thus far is
nostly between Bratislava and Buda
>est with Vienna lagging. Hungary
las granted a contract to a French
irm to construct a first class port at
Budapest and the Czechs are preparng
to answer this by equipping Bratslava
at a cost to the government of
228,000,000 Czech crowns. Czechoslovakia
also proposes to build a subsidiary
pjort at Komarno. This work
s to be completed in three years.
A private company hns been organized
to take over the shipping unler
the Czech flag on the Danube and
Czechoslovakia means to keep the
[)anube Commission at Bratislava.
Military School Soon
To Be Abandoned
Charleston, S. C., April 29.Charleston's
historic Citadel which produced
many of the heroes of the Civil Wai
is about to be abandoned as a military
school. The city and the state
have provided new quarters for the
col lei ge at a cost of more than a
million dollars.
About the buildings which have
become known as The Citadel much
history has been wrought. The
main building was used prior to 183C
as a tobacco inspection warehouse
and into it rolled great hogsheads
d-awn by mule, horse and ox from
interior furms. Upper stories were
added from time to time until today
the building is a stalwart structure
four stories high with accommodations
for 325 cadets.
After service as a tobacco inspection
warehouse the Citadel was used
for guards who patrolled the city'r
magazine on the outskirts of Charleston,
and it was during this period
that the name Citadel came into
common use in describing the building.
The guards were called Citadel
Guards.
In 1842 the state decided to convert
the Citadel into a military college,
and on December 20 of that
year the South Carolina military college
had its genesis, the "Arsenal,"
then at Columbia being used as a
preparatory school.
With the outbreak of the war between
the states Citadel cadets joined
the Confederate army and some
of the South's most famous soldiers
developed from among them. Citadel
men are said to have fired the first
shot of the war when the steamer
C*4. - f 4.1 tir 4. 1 1 4- _ 1
oiur ui tue west eiiueavorea to Dnnjr
supplies to beleaguered Fort Sumter.
A piece of wood from the Star
of the West's hull was fashioned into
a star and for upwards of 30 years
a replica has adorned a gold medal
awarded at the school for efficiency
at drill.
The Citadel was occupied by federal
troops during reconstruction days
but war returned to the state and reopened
as a military college in 1882
It is located on Marion Square in the
heart of the city.
Textile Industries in China
Nanking, March 25.? (By Mail).?
In line with the growth of textile
industries in China and the increasing
number of busy spindles in mills of
the country the University of Nanking
plans this year to continue and
to broaden the scope of its work to
improve the quality of cotton produced
by Chinese growers. This effort
is receiving the liberal support
of cotton mill interests of the larger
centers, particularly bhangnai.
'Hie University jilans to carry out
two general purposes, grit to obtain
for Chinese growers an acclimatized
and improved seed supply and second,
to introducet its. use among growers.
Authorities have stated that in other
countries the production of acclimaized
cotton seed has required from
three to five years. With a view to
hastening this stage what is perhaps
the most elaborate and detailed piece
of acclimatization work ever attempted
in the history of cotton
growing is being carried out at Nanking.
The work was begun last year
when the seed fields not only were
severely rogued to discard all plants
i. i. ~ a._ i i A. ii
not true tu type, uut uioukuiiuk ui individual
plants of the Thrice and
Acala varieties were selected and
picked separately. The selecter specimens
of seed cotton from these
plants were studied with exhaustive
detail in the laboratory where all but
a total of about 800 were discarded.
These have been grown in separate
rows and picked separately for further
study in field and laboratorv
with a further discarding of the poorest
and retaining of the best.
As a result of the first year's work
it was possible to announce this
spring that this acclimatization
method can be successfully applied in
China. About a third of the selected
specimens are above the standard of
average Amercian cotton, it is said,
and a tenth are much superior to the
product with which the work was
started.
Decbrated for Signal Service
Leesburg, Va.t April 29.?The
French government has conferred
upon an American, E. B. White of
Leesburg, the order of Officer du
Merite Agrgicole, a decoration in recognition
of signal service to agriculture,
but in this instance awarded
for "service rendered in the improvement
of horses."
Mr. White began to breed horses
20 years ago after returning on the
advice of physicians to his native
home in Virginia from St. Louis,
wnere ne naa Deen active on the grain
exchange. The physicians had given
up hope for his recovery, but the
outdoor work incident to his interest
in horse breeding aided in his recovery.
The particular animal which led tc
the ward of the decoration is the
stallion Laet, bred by Mr. White and
exhibited in Chicago at the last International
Live Stock Show. Laet wan
declared grand champion Percheron
stallion and one of his sons reserve
grand champion, giving Mr. Whit* a
record said to be unprecedented in the
history of the show. Mr. White is a
member of the advisory board of the
Horse Association of Anterica.
Although one oyster produce?
1,000,000 oysters in one year only e
very few of them live, the rest being
destroyed by natural enemies.
Tj
Tastc is a matter of
i tobacco quality
( We etate it aa our hone at
belief that the tobaccoa uaed
in Cheaterfield arc of finer
^ quality (and hence of better
taate) than in any other
cigarette at the price,
j Liggett & Mjtn Tubmen Ct.
r
1
L
*
. W
:
I
i
20 for 18c
X0 for 9?
* Vacuum tint
0( SO - 45c j
i
l
Business Could bo Done
I With Rustia* Provided?
Constantinople, April 30.?Ameri
' can and other business men to whon
the correspondent talked during ai
' eight months stay just completed it
! Russia declared that business couh
' be done with Russians provided th<
1 Soviet government would take dowr
its customs barriers and permit fre<
trade with the outside world in th<
1 same sense that it now permits fre?
trade inside Russia.
1 The problem which is interestim
business men all over the woii<
1 seems to hinge on the attitude of th<
1 Communists. Up to now th?y huv?
! insisted that all foreign trade musi
pass through their hands. This i:
' partly a matter of politics and part
ly a matter of personal compensa
tion. They wish to keep all the pow
er in their hands jn order to main
tain themselves.
The Communists are in a decidet
dilemma. If they insist on control
ling foreign trade, they fear thai
Russia is doomed. If they surrendei
their power and Russia is saved
they believe they will be slowly shov
ed aside.
A second condition outlined to thi
correspondent by these business mer
of the old regime in Russia is a quick
and absolute return to private prop
erty. There are widespread indica
tions that, by the force of circum
stances, private proptrty will be recognized
in every part of Russia. A
Moscow decree to that effect has been
expected for many months.
The question of guarantees is another
point that is constantly raised
in connection with doing business
with Soviet Russia. Old business
men say that this is one of th?
chances that foreigners must take il
they wish to do business with Rus
sia. There is no doubt at the present
time that the Soviet officials art
in a frame of mind to try to upholc
any guarantees they give.
The Italians in ConstantinopU
vered in the Black Sea trade havt
been doing a certain amount of business
every year but they find it ver>
difficult. One of the members of the
Italian Embassy in Constantinople
complained that whenever an Ital
ian cargo went into Russia it always
meant the intervention of diplo
matic agents backed up by warship?
before the final sale was made.
Admiral Mark L. Bristol, Unitee
States High Commissioner here, ha?
claimed for years that if American?
go boldly into Russia and into Turk
ey they will profit by their invest
ments in the end.
British War Base on Suez
Canal Has Been Abandoned
* Cairo,
April 30.?What was once
considered the gr&iest military
dump in the world, El Kantara, the
British army base on the east side
of the Suez Canal, has now almost
entirely reverted to the wilderness
of sand and silence whence it rose
Its passing marks the demise of one
of the most important "war baby'
soldier cities.
In 1914 El Kantara was merely the
name of a "place" on the Suez Canal
45 minutes by train from Port Said
With the beginning of the Palestin
campaign, the transformation began
Pioneers, engineers and army serv
ice corps detachments mapped out
a town.
There they erected enclosures foi
cattle, horses, mules, donkeys, foddei
for great guns and small limbei
carts. Later there appeared en
closures for prisoners and the mis
cellany of canteens, contractors' huts
officers' quarters and barracks thai
made up a great war center.
When the armistice was signed, E
Kantara's stores included quantities
of every appurtenance of war. Its
dismantling began in 1920. Contract
ors rushed in and secured great bar
gains. Gradually the vast accumula
tion dwindled until, a few days ago
the Disposals Board finished its
work and the site was handed ovei
to the Egyptian Labor Corps?a tie
lapidated, empty hulk.
Has Beard Nine Feet Long
Brighton, Mich., April 30.?Th<
long whiskered championship of th<
world is claimed by John J. Tanner
OA iL. k.U
ot, lui muic tiuiii uau n century *
resident of this village.
His beard measures exactly nin<
feet from chin to tip. Ordinarily, Mr
Tanner controls it by thrusting th<
end inside the band of his trousers
More than 50 years ago, when Mr
Tanner's beard was only two or thre<
feet in length, he decided to seek th<
championship. To this end he braid
ed his beard and tucked it inside hi:
1 vest. The whiskers soon attaine:
1 proportions making the braiding im
practicable.
1 Ten years ago Mr. Tanner's bear:
1 was six feet long. Five years agi
' two more feet had been added an:
now it measures nine. The owne
hopes to attain a growth of twelv
feet.
! Secret Proceee For
1 Making Fertilize!
1 Washington, May 1.?Secret pro
1 cess for making cheaper fertilizer
has been discovered and is intende
1 for comercial use at Muscle Shoals
! W. B. Mayo, FQrd engineer, told th
1 senate committee today.
Air breathed daHy by a human be
ing weighs about six times a
1 much as the food and drink he con
1 sumes in the same period.
Printers' ink pays.
A V .
Ten Years to Equip I
All Troops in Khaki
Paris, April 30.?It will require
ten years to clothe all the French
' troops in khaki despite the efforts
I of the Higher Council of War to
equip all branches of the French
: | army with uniforms of that color as
' quickly as possible.
The delay is due to the fact that
' the Ministry of War has enough
' horizon blue and steel gray cloth on
* hand to equip some branches of the
service for ten years and those
stocks must be used up before khaki
can be adopted. Therefore the home
r troops must continue to wear horizon
blue and the unmounted chasseur-.;
1 steel gray while colonial and African
> troops will at once receive khaki uni5
forms.
Life in Russia is Difficult
Moscow, April 28.?Many of the
millions of persons hitherto fed by
' the government and who are now being
thrown upon their own resources
? are finding life in Russia complieatr
ed by depreciation in the value of I
? the paper ruble, growing constantly
> more difficult.
t Only 6,000,000 persons including
i the Red army and navy, are now receiving
government rations, says the
? Moscow Pravda. Last September the
? number was 11,500.000.
Factory workmen government em?
ployees and others cut off the fro?
t ration list receive, in theory, pay increases
supposed to be adequate to
? permit them to buy their food on th
open markets. The pay fixed today.
. however, may be worth actually, in
; purchasing power, only half as much
next week, or ne\t month.
Prices for food and other articles ir
f Moscow follow almost exactly the de,
predating value of the ruble as com.
pared to gold or foreign money. Tf
street brokers pay 250,000 rubles to
the dollar today and 1,000,000 for the
L dollar a week or so hence, bread w;r
cost four times as much a week henc.?
1 A salary of 2,000,000 rubles month
j ly, fixed a month ago, has little pur
ji chasing power today with street cai
- fares fixed at 32.000 rubles, newspa-i
pers 5.000 rubles each and blac1
bread 50,000 rubles a pound.
^ How Russians manage to exist
it through all these difficulties is a puzc
zle to the foreigner; yet Moscow's
H population does not appear to l>-'
greatly underfed. ,
Housewives perhaps tear theii
i hair when they find that varying mai
ket prices disrupt their household
5 budgets. A chicken, say, that wa
3 quoted yesterday at 600,000 rubles,
t may cost 1,000,000 today but many
, Muscovites manage to get the additional
slips of paper called money
3 and buy the chicken, just the same
j Radio Telephone Owners
i; Get Lots of Information
1 ?
I Washington, April 30.? Radio tele
I phone owners throughout the United
^ States who "listen in" each day when
, the government and other agencies
j broadcast information will during the
f first week in May, receive a lot o'
information concerning postal con
j ditions, if a plan evolved by Post
^ master General Work for the utili
j zation of radio telephones is carried
,. out faithfully by postmasters.
P The postmaster general has directed
that during "Postal Improvement
Week," May 1 to 7, postmasters, railway
mail officials and inspectors dis
r seminate all possible information by
radio telephone so that "the prope?
view point of the public may be ob
tained in connection with your ap
j peal for cooperation."
Dr. Work cautioned the posta';
^ workers to remember "that school
boys and girls are 'listening in' on
your message and they are a poten
s tial aid in postal improvement."
g The first message to be sent out
i. will be on "The Travel of a Letter,'"
and will describe all ramifications at
tending the mailing and delivery of
mail matter.
I ' - . r -^ -t ?l
m
A^" jmIi
Chesterfield
CIGARETTES
o/ Turkish and Domestic tobaccos?blended
CAo*W
'Pr__
1H0ME CANNING j
MADE EASY! |
<rr*CM??cnrs ^ *
Food conservation is a mighty factor in the progress
of civilization. With th#? alinvo ?'? *-i -
wvMuio me pruuiem IB
I solved. You can can from your garden all you will need
of fruits, berries and vegetables for the entire year.
Come in and let us demonstrate the value of the wonderful
little machine. No soldering, no standing over a hot
fire. Simple, scientific, sane.
LEWIS M. RICE
At The Union Times Office.
Noted Indian Dead Advertising Clubs to Meet
SauU Ste. Marie, Mich., April 2S. ( Cleveland, April .'!(>.?Because the
I eter Waiska, the last of the \\ ais- t ?nVention sessions of the Adverti kas,
pioudest branch ot toe (hippo jnir Atliliation to be hebl here May
\va tiibe, is dead. o(; an,j will bring up for diseu-Waiska,
who was 7S, carried with sjo!l problems concerning all business
him to his grave the pride ot race ,m,n ;1S well as advertising men, u;that
made his forefathers outstand- ijjngements wil lbe made to admit a
it.g among the vaiious Indian bands limited numher ?>t' business me.t n t
native to the Great hakes district, belonging to the affiliated clubs, it is
His death was caused b> exposuie to anr<>unced by AUard Smith, Cleveth
cold, an element at which he ;.uu| hanker, chairman of the convenscoffed
in foimei yeais. tion coiiimiilee a;n! piesideit of the
The Waiskas inhabited the region Cll,vt.iand Advertising Club. It will
now known as I>a> .dills and thi hrsi atliliation convention to
Waiska river and bay district in adnij( non-members.
Chirpewa county vhon the first white Advertising clubs of Toledo, Clevemissionaries
pushed their way into ,and Cantoll () . an(i Bilffalo, .\. V.;
the wilderness. The tribe, with its om, Hami|to,n 0nt-< belong to th
centuries old pride, looked with dis an\|iation
favor upon the white man. who came ' Many of thc a(1(in SS(>S will he or.
and cleared the lands, then broke ,m)b!t.ms n.|nting to distribution
them with the plow. Peter Waiska ;.0s,s am, thei|. effocts upon a(|vt,r.
rntil the last maintained the sann tjsinp an(| mt,vchandising, Mr. Smith
feeling of hostility, as befitted th sai(| A milllhlM. of prominent speakI'nal
survivor of h.s race. His friends ^ y .]{ {1||tIlV!Sg (ju. convent io?.
say his melancholy increased year by ? . ?
veai as he saw the forest dwindle Safety First Campaign
nid disappear and the face of the
'and change from a wilderness to a . . .. .. , . .
. . . .. . . . iopeka, Kan., April .10.?A safety
manufacturing and^tarming district.
. . , , , . urst campaign ot national scope wni
A four o clock on the morning ot , . ... . ., .
, . . . , ii i i be conducted tor tour months beginhis
last day of life Peter walked alone , .
, . . .. . , , , mm .June 1 aiil continuing until
far into the country until lie reached .#
. October 1. by all Class 1 railroads in
he torest. He sat beneath a tree , . *
. , - . .. . . . the t nited States through the Amend
meditated upon the fate that had ...
, ,, . . . rp, n . . erican Railway association, it has
letaPen his people. The cold final- ,
. . , , i . been announced here bv Isaiah Hale,
'V overcame htm and he sank into ? . , * 0
, , ? , . . * i i^. saietv superintendent of the Santa
n slumber from which he did not ' , , . . .. . *
, fe and chairman ot the information
awaken. ... , ..
... ... * * , , ,. ? ... committee of the campaign.
Peter Waiska, horn an Indian, rear- ............
, . .. * . , |. , , , 1 he satetv first drive will be known
ed an Indian and at Indian at heart . ,
. .. , u i.? >s lbe "Careful Crossing Campaign
until the last, except that he adopt , . ,
, ., ... , ,. . . . ami will have for its chief purpose
ed the white man s religion, went t< , , ? . , . ..
.... .. , . ? the reduction of accidents at railroad
his last resting place, not in the for- ,. . . ...
. i_ * i i crossings. Posters beaiing the sloests
through which he had roamed * _
, , ,. ... , . . ... gan Cross Crossings Cautiously
throughout his life, but in a whit" . . . . . . .f
, . a . i will play an important part in the
man's cemetery. A simple cross 1 . ' ,, T1 ,
, .. campaign, according to Mr. Hale. It
marks the grave. , . , . , . .. j
, m - is proposed to furnish each railroad
Larger Production with ten posters for every mile of
Of Early Cabbage the yatoa. ^ ,
_ . , , , , v ? iv UIUIIIII/.UIIUIIH III Mil puris Ol
Commercial movement of early cab- . ... , , , . . ,
, . . , .v- 'be country will be asked to assist
bage from growers is forecast at I >,- ,. . . .,
? * . .. 1T v . o* ? rv 4 in the drive as well as other trans250
cars bv the United State* Depart- . .. ..... .
, / . .. . ' poitation companies, including eleoment
of Agriculture. This is 4.1 per . . .. . . .
t, ., .... . trie railways, motor and bus lines,
cc i.t more than the quantity harvest- ,, , . ,
inn, u- u r ^'r Dale said,
eu in 1921 which was 17,601 cars of ,, , . . , ..
Complete plans for the campaign
'2Vj tons each. The crop is grown in , * . ' , , . .
..... ~ ? have not heen worked out, he reportVirginia,
South Carolina, Georgia, ... ... . . .. . . ..
-j , ed, but will be decided upon at the
Florida, the Gulf States, and 111 Call- , .. . .. . .
^ . annual convention of the safety sec'
' , . . , . ? tion of the American Railway asProduction
of early cabbage for all ... . _, . ... _ ? * , .
., . , ... so lation in Chicago, May 2, S, and 4.
purposes is usually considerably in ex- . m
cess of the carlot movement. The in Breeding grounds of mosquitoes in
j Jidated acreage of the early cabbage Canadian marshes have recently been
i crop this year is 49,100 acres as com- discovered by means of airplanes.
pared with 95,400 acres last year. The i .
estimated yield per acre also is larger Norway has passed a law prohibitthis
year, with an increase from 0.2 ing the bestowal of ridiculous names
tons to 6.6 tons. on babies.