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V Air View of Great Stock Yards Fire in Chicago This excellent airplane photograph was taken during the progress of the terrible conflagration that destroyed a considerable part of the Union Stock Tards In Chicago. The damage was about $8,000,000 and many noted buildings In Tgckingtown” were burned. V: . , - _ “All Aboard for the Juvenile Bus Special” Commissioning the Minneapolis YOUNGEST CHAMPION View of the ceremony by which the U. S. S. Minneapolis, latest of the • 10,000-ton treaty cruisers, was commissioned at the Philadelphia navy yard. Greet an Ex-President ■4 A wooden bus, drawn by a tricycle and Jammed with gleeful youngsters, made Its appearance in Central Park West, New York City. The bus was constructed entirely by six and seven-year-old children at the Walden school It has seats for six, straps for “sardines” and a place to hang on behind. -1 Betty Jameson, fifteen-year-old girl of Dallas, Texas, who won the South ern Woman’s golf championship at the tournament in New Orleans. She Is the youngest champion of a major golfing organization In the world. Betty Is a sophomore In Sunset high school, Dallas. At thirteen years of age she won both the Dallas munlci pal and Texas public course titles This spring she won the Dallas city title. Women Wives Good Behai C. BaU Syndicate.—\ By BD HOW1 qpHB roving 1 Kansas City Star oqce called on and said: "The women all are a woman hater. How about Itl . . . I said I wasn’t, and that all women didn’t say so. In support fEGTstatement, I gave him a letter from a woman in Texas, but he made no reference to It In the two columns he wrote about me. The woman said; M J am barely nineteen, and Ji&ve a deformed body. I am familiar with you through the Kansas City Star, and I want to give the devil his due, for you are the writer who has done me most good. Being a cripple, I have a wicked and fast temper, but you have taught me, to control It for my own benefit Your constant teaching that one should be- have tor one’s own sake, as a matter of profit because It Is finally the easiest and best way, 1 have been able to understand and practice with more success than any other.” • • • Early man had a strong disposition to whip his wife, and often did. I have seen a picture In an old book of an angry husband entering the house carrying a switch, and of his wife cringing and begging for mercy, as I did as a child In the presence of an angry father. (In this old picture, also, Is the figure of a woman evident ly the wife’s mother, who begged for mercy, too, as my mother begged for mercy for me). Wives have taken the switch from the hands of brutal husbands. Men have granted equal rights, but the women are still screaming as though regularly whipped. Men of today sub mit to the gross absurdity of police women, stateswomenTbut the women are as busy as ever In telling of wrongs long since remedied. As far back as the time of Sllerlus women Insisted on rights that were actually wrooga^ Sllerlus In bis memoirs tells of one of his wives go ing bare legged, although she was of considerable age-, and K didn’t look well Sllerlus objected to the custom. Any reproof of women today sets them screaming as though the reproof were a beating. • e • Men of the present generation are the heirs of the experience of men of to older time. Thus we have learned of the greater convenience of obtain- I Ing water by turning a tap. Instead of j a more troublesome Journey to a spring. The modern bank, hotel, rail road and school are merely cogs In the wheel of civilization as it goes xound endlessly, and laalowly Improved because of the disposition of men to seek greater conveniences. A clean, dependable man Is a development of good behavior, as Is a useful machine or system lightening our labors and \i: iYi* r 1 m / «• uur w US l IV.D* — see If I should, marry again (I have about as much notion of It as of being born’again) I think I should relieve my friends of the bother of a public ceremony. In our extravagant and wasteful American way, marrying has become more troublesome than a fire. The bride Is worn out, the father bankrupt, and all those who read the : prenuptial notices In the newspapers are disgusted. There Is also the trouble of attendance on the ceremony and reception, to say nothing of pres ents. Men especially do not wish to attend or buy, and for days previously are glowered at by wives who know they are trying to get out of It; for wives love weddings. Why would It not be a good Idea to ;lve half the present amount wasted •m weddings to starving old soldiers, the poor, union labor organizations, railroads and bankers In distress. Alfalfa Seeding ill Exceed 1933 Retired Land in Illinois Is to Be Used for Starting New Meadows. By X. O. HackUmaa. .Crop* Ext anal on Spa WNU Sarviea. A new all-time record for alfalfa growing is expected to be set In Illi nois thir year in spite of the fact that the 1033 crop of 837,000 acres was a d in Itself.—At least part of the ,200 acres. of Illinois land that will be retired from commercial grain production under the various adjust ment programs will be utilized as an Ideal place for starting an alfalfa meadow while at the same time ob taining some Income from £he land In the form of benefit rental payments. Alfalfa may bhrseeded with or with out a nurse crop Use of contracted^ land for alfalfa and other crops is explained In a cir cular; "How Use Contracted Acres," which the college has Just Issued for distribution to Interested farmer*. Record plantings of alfalfa^are only one indication of the extent to which Illinois farmers are carrying out the college’s long-time teaching for the growing of more legumes on Illlno farms. This has been advocated for years not only as a means of adjust Ing production to demand but also of reducing production costs, of con serving land resources as a continu ing source of wealth and of controlling Insects and diseases. As most of one growing season is needed to establish a good alfalfa field, there Is ho better place to start than on the contracted acres. However, alfalfa should be seeded only where OLD TIMERS PASSING OF TWO VILLAGE FORUMS The motor car Is credited with broadening the horizon of whole peo- ples. With all dim respect to bea* fits accrued, tt must-be admitted that soma debits should be charged up to that contraption. Recently the passing of the Uvery , ■table was hymned as as effect of motorizing communities,' With this change must now be considered an other metamorphosis attributable to invention. It Is the change that has come over the barber shop. And that la a product of another Invention— the safety razor. Between the motor car and the safety razor, the man who remembers his oM home town can locate the slump of democracy. It seems ■ se rious charge, but it applies to the de struction of the old-time forums, and aipong these the livery stable and the barber shop wert rivals for first place as the rendezvons of the village debaters. In the more leisurely years, both were scenes of bitter ar gument over the burning Issues, for men were the chief custodians of the country’s political welfare, and the livery stable and the barber shop were essentially masculine. Hence they were Items In the nurture of democracy, since It was In these for ums that the great questions were settled and the preponderance of cm ley or another determined prior to ipna. But now all this is changed. The garage has failed to succeed the liv ery stable, and the barber shop has not only been taken over to some 'ex tent by feminine patronage, but It has fallen away as an essential la tha convenience of shavers, who have M Ramon Urau San Martin* former provisional president of Cubs, was car ried on the shoulders of the welcoming committee as be arrived at Havana from Mexico on the Uner Sierra Vertana. Although he refrained from a formal declaration, ha Intimated that be would accept the nomination of the Revolu tionary party to ran tor the pratodeney In tbe next election. Oven Sen wee ao effected by the reception that be had to have medical treatment It would be a great convenience to me if some of the army of writers now useless would devote their time to reading, and print collections of the occasional good things found In novels, unsays, histories and the mass of writ ing of every kind. I thank'James rruslow Adams for a sentiment he ately buried In a book, and which I happened to encounter: “The wisdom of the past,” be says, "Is not to be undone In the present by a few tele phones, motor cars or radios.” the SOU Is known to be sweet enough ttr produce the crop and where soil tests Indicate that there is sufficient available phosphorus to make produc tion of the crop relatively safe If the alfalfa is to be seeded with a nurse crop, oats probably should be used since this crop Is far lesa attrac tive to chinch bugs than Is barley. Barley near a cornfield would be a worse hazard to tbe corn than would oats. Oats used as a nurse crop for alfalfa should be clipped before they bead out. If the oats grow too fast, they probably should be clipped twice so that no large amount of material will be left on the young alfalfa at any one time and thus endanger the stand. Alfalfa may also be seeded alone, after a thorough preparation of the seed bed If weeds have been kept under control for several years on tbe land. Such seeding will likely requite two or three clippings during the year. The (Inal clipping should be siade about tbe middle of August No bay can be taken from alfalfa seeded on the contracted acres during 1034. Tbe hay can, of course, be used In 1035 If the contracted acres have been released. If summer seeding of alfalfa Is pre ferred, the ground should have been plowed snd prepared this spring. The seed bed should be worked at. fre qnen* 'ntervals, t K, JS Insuring the kill Ing of several crops of weeds. Seed ing should be done In late July er early August so that the crop will be ready for use as hay In H13.V Any contracted w!**nt acreage so handled must be replaced by so equivalent con tracted acreage In 1035. Various Breeds of Sheep Differ in as Many Ways A dozen different breeds of sheep are common, says the New York State College of Agriculture. These breeds d^Ter In body form, weight, age at which they mature, type of fleeces, hardiness, and in other ways. A breed that Is best suited to Individual fancy, to the land, and to market demand can be easily selected. After a suitable breed has been coos en. It Is better to use this breed than to change from one to another .every year or two. Also,important In the breeding program are simple yet ade quate records that aid farmers to cull their flocks Intelligently and to select replacements of their own breeding. turned by millions and self-shaving, the result? May It the safety rasor what baa been t be ventured that some of the Indlf electorate, some of tbe party allegiance—both trlbuted to changes In ode—are due to the dlsai theee community forums of discussions? / In s way, the old-timer of the home town will teH you, the mot car has decentralized community Utet eveo while expanding U. And' tha safety rasor, the same authority will Inform you, has dispersed debaters and made bathroom Introverts of men who nsed to argufy while wait ing* for a shave.—Minneapolis Jour nal Helen/Black, teacher of social sc! ence Jto an Oklahoma City public whose mall supply of hoarded seized by government sgenta. Black’s safety deposit box at a eften after Mto Tbe first writing was on clay tab lets, or on paper laboriously made from marsh plants, and there was far too llttle of IL In these days of paper made by tons from wood pulp, amr of typewriters, stenographers, ovable type and printing presses, there Is far too much of It Tbe old- time men soon settled their differences by resort to fists, battle axes, lances, rocks or spears; there was at least oc casional peace, but owing to the ease of writing the differences of modern men are never settled. <. - .', • see Every one Is entitled to weak mo ments. I do nor greatly criticize them In friends who have treated me as wen as f treat them. ▲ woman who seems to be somewhat elderly writes me: •‘Frequently you give me hard mbs, sad 1 know the^ are deserved: Being a woman, I know's woman can be the most un- rvaaonable thing under the son: I know, because I've been gnllty: One has te get near tha Jumping off place One Exception ▲n that dream, pester you with their dreams except day di MercolizedWax Keeps Skin Young at... -*■ —V-U-~ - ADBOrD DieXTUUlGS Mercolixed Wax d particles of defects aach ah and other Marking Dmoicm k WRITS FOR CATALOG4 DIXIE SEAL A STAMP COMPANY Potatoes Under Straw Growing potatoes under straw Is not practiced as much now as it formerly was. By this method of growing, the atraw or-SomeMaallAr material is scat tered over the ground, usually direct ly after planting, to the depth of five or six Inches. Such a covering pre vents evaporation and keeps the weeds from growing. The practice Is more- - desirable Oh very tight than oh very heavy soils On boils which are af fected by drought, straw can be used to great- advantage not only to Increase the crop but to Improve the soil by In creasing the source of humus. The potatoes come up through the straw and. of course, no cultivation is need ed. At harvest time the straw is raked off and usually the potatoes have formed on or near the surface of the ground.—Indiana Farmer's Guide. Seed Heat Sterilized . Experiments carried on last year have proven the feasibility of sterilis ing seed by a hot-water treatment which kills many of the dlegaes 1 of the plant yet leavee the seed unaf fected to far as germination is con cerned. The tests were carried with cabbage seed with water, at a temperature of 125 degrees used. ~ held submerged la tbe water for 25 minutes sad found to be freed. SORE EYES 1 ■ote Mi leewS fM leSKem —- take. Why sufiec? ITy a Free I U-laedfaeceeriBead. b-J Bei„ _ $100. Mated! upon recef pleofU-Ji THE B-J COMPANY, Dept. J-l ItlMUmsre ssssssssss t 4 My” tea Pt»y— required. Se