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Show PAGE TWO THE News Review of Current Events the World Over President Roosevelt's Vacation Trip Ends NRA Modification and Drouth Relief Taken Up Von I'apen's Hard Task in Austria. By EDWARD W. PICKARD nnFSIDKNT KOOSEVELT ended ference by a small body of citizens his rather long vacation trip, re known to be Communist agitators turning to Ills liuiiie In Hyde Park, wno are being supported in their agiNew York. During the remainder of tations by the sympathetic attitude the summer and un- of Uov. Floyd 11. Olson." At the end of the statement was til congress meets he will spend a sentence Interpreted as a request some time there for replacement of the federal mediand In Warm ators. Father Frauds J. Haas and Springs, Georgia, K. II. Duunlgan. but most of the The conciliators were authors of time he will be In a peace plan which the union acWashington, busy cepted with alacrity because It granted a maximum of the de" i affairs In his tem mands made before the walkout. porary office which It was turned down by the employestabhas been ers, but mediation proceeded until President lished in the lllue the principal point of difference Roosevelt room of the White now concerns the rehiring ef all IloiiKe. The executive olllces are bethe strikers. The Haas Uunnlgan remodeled of and One ing plan makes that blanket provision. enlarged. the first matters to claim the Pres- The employers do not wish to be ident's attention Is the moditlcation forced to take back men who have of NRA. The secret cabinet comCommunistic sympathies. mittee he appointed to Inquire Into the legality and advisability of conTN GREEN BAY, WIS., the FreM- dent delivered what was considtinuing and extending the price fixing features of NRA has decided ered his principal political address this price fixing should be restrict- of the year. He told his hearers ed and gradually abandoned, and that the New Deal was going ahead e on Its nonpartisan road and that there Is little doubt that this will be followed. Whether or those who support it "do so because not the fixing of prices Is legal. It It Is a square dea and because It lias brought sharp and continuous Is essential to the preservation of criticism from Senator Borah and security and happiness of a free somany others which has not been ciety." relished by the New Dealers. The President's reference, to WisOn his way from the west coast consin political alignments was this the President not only saw some significant remark: of the great public works projects "Your two senators, both old of the Northwest, but also passed friends of mine, and many others through regions that have suffered have worked with me In maintainseverely from the drouth. So he ing excellent beIs backing up the government agentween the executive and legislative cies In their work of hurrying vast branches of the government." sums of government money to the Senator Robert M. LaFollettP Tt. arid regions to ease the human sufpublican independent and sponsor fering and also to lessen the of the new state political party, Is chances of another such catastroup for F. Ryan Duffy, phe. The Public Works admlnlstra-tion- , Democrat, Is the other senator from which had an original approWisconsin, elected In 1032. priation of $3,300,000,000, revealed It had spent about $400,000,000 on 'RANZ VON PAPEN, vice chanprojects to aid Impoverished westcellor of Germany, who wfls ao- ern families. polnted minister to Austria durEmergency Relief administration ing the excitement that followed officials announced they had allotthe assassination sjv ted huge sums to feed men and ,V of Chancellor Doll- women. They also have spent thou- fuss, has been S dn" cattle. reiti t sands to ca vj me Aus trian cabinet after Public Works Administrator Liarconsiderable delay. old L. Ickes, who was on an InspecfcV ' His avowed task tion tour In the drouth area, or- Ki to restore am , dered his forces to expedite all conr, -I icable relations be- struction projects affecting the dry tween the two gov regions. ernments, but this r i wlL, not h- of silver, NATIONALIZATION vnunceiiur ecnusen-Franlast convon ag doter. nlRg , gress, was ordered Into effect by Papen mined to root out the President. This will have little Immediate effect on the average Nazism in Austria as was his predecitizen, though the move Is some- cessor, and at the same time the what inflationary and started prices German Nazis are keeping up their on the Big debtors and press and radio attacks on the Ausowners of silver mines will benefit, trian government In camps around but as the value of the dollar goes .Munich are about 40,000 Austrian down, the holders of securities and Nazi fugitives for whom Von Is expected to obtain amnesty loans suffer loss. so may return to their counthey directs The President's order the surrender to the government of all try; but as they have been hoping 6ilver bullion and bars within 90 to march into Austria under arms to overthrow the government. It days, the price to be paid being C0.01 cents an ounce. Silver coins Isn't likely Schuschnlgg will care and silverware are not included. to let them return. The cabinet In Vienna Is taking Under the silver purchase act the treasury is authorized to value the vigorous action to curb the Nazis, silver It obtains at $1.29 an ounce and it Is reported that the execuand to Issue silver certificates on tive committee of that party had been ordered dissolved, the members that basis. The government proposes to hold enough silver to make being told to take leaves of absence up 25 per cent of the metal backing and to cease activities. of the national currency. No one Chancellor Hitler Is daily solidiknows how much silver bullion fying his power In Germany. The there is In the United States, and latest step Is to require all ProtIt may be necessary to make conestant pastors and church officials siderable purchases In China and to take an oath of fealty to Hitler India. Just as did the Nazi storm troops and members of the regular army. New rules were Imposed by the naOF STATE nULL SECRETARY tional synod that make Reichs-blshoof Agriculture Mueller the supreme lawWallace Joined In a statement conand authority for the church. cerning their efforts to revive Amer- maker Between eight and ten thousand ica's world trade, explaining that the reciprocal trade agreements to political prisoners In concentration camps were given their liberty by be negotiated with foreign countries will be beneficial and not an amnesty decree announced by harmful to American agriculture Hitler In memory of President Von Hindenburg. and manufacturing. The statement pointed out, In anLTEARTY approval was given by swer to criticism from farm organi1 the world Baptist congress. In sations, that farm Interests would session In Berlin, to a proposal that not be sacrificed to aid other a plebiscite be held in 40 countries groups. to determine whether the It also said no sacrifice of any want to fight another war. Thepeople sug major or basic agricultural or mangestlon was made by Rev. Harold ufacturing Industry was planned, Camp of Oakland, Calif., who said although Secretary Wallace told re- the Kellogg pact should be made the porters that some harm might be basis of such a vote, all nations done to a tiny fraction of the prowhich adhered to It taking part. ducers for the greater good of all. like the Arabs ARABS of Algeria, do not love their "NE thousand men and women comprising the Minneapolis Jewish neighbors, so they started riots In Constantine and Protective committee telegraphed n appeal to President Roosevelt surrounding towns. In the course of to protect the constitutional rights which a great many persons were now superseded by martial law In killed or wounded. Nearly all the their city. Copies of the appeal casualties were among Jews. The were sent also to Secretary Per- French military authorities quickly kins and Lloyd Garrison, chairman got control of the situation. Con of the National Labor Relations stantine is In a wheat growing area board. and tue AraD farmers naa a poor "We are satisfied," they wired, crop this year. The rioting gave "that an agreement between em- them a chance to wipe out many ployers and employees could be debts to Jewish bankers and shop reached were It not for the Inter keepers. ad-Tlc- 1 - is J 1 x e. Pa-pe- n p " c Thursday. August 16, 1931 NEPIIL UTAH S. 0oldenIsles ofQuale Interest SHIPPING! and business establish-went urged the of "free porta or foreign trade units at many American sea, lake and river ports, and this la now under consideration by the government, having twen authorized by the lust congress. Trade and shipping experts are preparing Information on how to apply for grants. Some of the cities that have asked how to set up the trade cones, are ' New York, Newark, N. J. ; Provij dence, It. L ; Pittsburgh, Philadelphia; San Diego, Calif.; Miami, Fla., and Hoboken, N. J. Private corporations located on the Great Lakes also are Interested. A barrier would surround the area set off for the trade zone. Into this area, which must be equipped with adequate shipping and warehousing facilities, foreign and domestic merchandise could be brought, without being subject to customs laws, and stored, broken up, repacked, assembled, distribut- ed, sorted, mixed with other for- jrr ffnf mi nn'iii'" ii TTiiwniim milium- utt - eign and domestic goods, and then Native Transportation on the Sea Islands, exported. Or, If desired, the merchandise could be placed In AmerNational hy midst of a cathedral-likOeorraphta SeHatr, bower of ican domestic commerce upon pay- Prepared rica. Wanhlngton. u c. VS'SU ment of customs duties. Atlantic's rolling waves live oaks, with hoary beards of Spanish moss depending from their not break against the outstretched Hubs, stands a majesA startling of Georgia. rpitO.M now on Communists are statement, that Yet It Is true, for tic colonial heme. Projecting from not going to have so pleasant a the portlcoed entrance Is a crucion the smooth time In the United States, and the the surf shatters Islands that form formal pool which catchea of beaches the Hardy destructive doc- str-tispreading of their like a protecting band off and tosses back the reflection of . . , u t . .1,1 mossy oaks and vast white walls. the coast. 'S i so easy. Congres- Since Its reconstruction, two Sea are famed the Islands These L,' tl s 1 o n a 1 Investiga of Presidential have been parties Isles "Golden the of Georgia, te 1 tlons Into this mat- guests at the mansion. One day, Guale" as they were known to Sixwhile one of First Ladles was adteenth Spanish century amounted to a great miring the nearby rock garden, her cicerone was heard to remark, deal, but several of The lumps of land, the country's great "They even used Imported stone winds off tides and the by this rock garden." organizations have spawned e arc of the the Georgia forThe 10 k big house of the South End unuvriaaen y '!1 arouse were once friendly bunting coast, the people tV plantation was first built by ThomIndians where stalked grounds, ?" as Spalding in t0 t,ie danger that after he deer, wild turkeys, raccoons, oposhad returned from England to take tilraten. thslraov- - sums, water-fowl- . as and M. F. Shannon Today, eminent and their up plantation farming on Sapelo. national Institutions. The Order of subtroplc playgrounds and winter As noted a farmer as be was a Elks took cognizance of the Com- retreats of happy Isolation, they builder, Spalding cleared more than become hinting prehave again munist threat In Its convention In a thousand acres on his Island serves and game sanctuaries. Kansas City, and Michael F. Shan kingdom, and raised Indigo, What across has marched history non, Its newly elected grand exalt the savannas cotton, sugar cane, and staple and hammocks and ed ruler, Is now making an airplane foodstuffs. beneath arms the of tour of the country for the purpose He It was. In fact, who Introthe mighty live oaks of these Isof urging every lodge of the order duced cane cultivation and sugar In the nearly lands " to carry on the pro span since white men entered this manufacturing Into Georgia. The live oaks which he cut while cleargram In Its community. He will New world theater! travel 10.000 miles to give what he the forests to make bigger In of the late sixties the ing Here, calls "marching orders" to the 1,400 fields served to fill large timber conSixteenth century, came Spanish Elk lodges. Of the Communists In tracts for the budding United and friars, grandees America, Mr. Shannon says: from their Florida headquarters at States navy. He also supplied the . A vast and formidable organiza St. sword and navy and merchant marine with Augustine, to and hogs. tion has been set up. The United cross among the plant Indians to the beef As a slave owner, however, SpaldStates Is now divided Into twenty "glory of the king." Here, too, districts, each with Its own commit- came ndventurous French voyagers ing came ultimately to suffer, even tee. Each district Is divided Into to trade and to make unsustained though he treated his "helpers" with such kindness that the planttwo sections and subsections, with colonial claims. ers In the South dubbed Sapelo section committees set up In acBold and buccaneers, pirates cordance with the residential loca snch as Argamont (the notorious "Nigger Heaven." Then came the Confederacy, tions of the Communist members. "Abraham") and Blackbeard, after the Spanish Main, against every protest of this aged nlong ormei jllTinderjng man. Sherman's march to. the iea Vonth nrifn nl v.ti I it teach not only disrespect, but hate, brought into the waste the big bouse and the for American Institutions, have ap- of these secluded waterways their plantation Fortudevelopments. cover under Organizations treasure galleons and, peared everywhere. did not live to see nately, Spalding under patriotic nnnies, but designed of the Island oaks, found respite that day of ruin. to destroy confidence In our govern- from their high adventures. Vines and bramble claimed the Here, In the l"30's, came Gen. ment, are meeting nightly. Bureaua tabby walls of the manhis and Edward se.lames Offlethorpe of propaganda are working sion until the present owner cleared a few within who. years, them and rebuilt again In 1925. followers, cretly." The Crusaders, that organization struck blows that helped preserve Modern Improvements. a Anglo-Saxorace large of young business men that was so for the Today, too, the old canals have continent. of the portion influential In bringing about repeal been redred'ged and new ones have Refugee Santo Domingo plantof prohibition, has been reorganized been cut In many places to supplehuFrench royalists, escaped and, under the leadership of Fred ers, ment the drainage of the Island. An "slavman African from cargoes G. Clark, commander In chief, has adequate supply of fresh water Is aristoantebellum ers," wealthy Comthe entered the fight against provided by 38 gushing artesian masters of old the of crats South, munists and other groups that seek wells. More than a thousand beef then Island extensive plantations; to overthrow American institutions. cattle now graze on the luxuriant rehabilifinally, delayed and, Among its national advisers are ruin, carpet grass, Japanese clover, and the mark chapsucceeding Aldrlch Blake, Oklahoma City; tation, Bermuda grass that have been Islands' Sea ters of the history. New Francis II. Brownell, York; e cotton and Inover this sown In the waved have Five flags John W. Davis, New York; Prof. digo fields. where of lands cluster E. W. Kemmerer, Princeton, N. J.; Delightful trails and motor roads of AmerMartin W. Littleton, New York; some of the earliest seeds In many lace the Island retreat. were sown. ican trade Alfred P. Sloan, Jr., New York; places they wind beneath bewhis-kero- d Lesson In Coastal Geography. Charles F. Thwlng, Cleveland; old oaks; elsewhere they the unfolding panoraJames P. Warburg, New York, and maHowever, from skirt the broad savannas and cross the vantage point gained Las-keSewell L. Avery and Albert D. between marshy ponds that teem of an airplane cockpit Is essentialChicago. with ducks, teal, and other waterlesson In coastal geography, a ly The Paul Reveres, a national or- not fowl. Isolated even though history, On the west shore, commanding ganization, was established espe- hits of old Spanish ruins, Oglethe approach to the Florida Pascially to cleanse educational and thorpe's Fort Frederica, and remreligious Institutions of subversive nants from prosperous colonial days sage, stand the tabby ruins of the Influences; and the American Vig- can still be distinguished through octagonal fort built by the Span-lard- s In 10S0. Within Its concenilante Iptelligence federation Is also the foliage. actively combating Communism. Between the leeward side of the tric walls troops were stationed to The Department of Americanizaprotect the friars of the Mission of Islands and the mainland He exThomas tion of the American Legion Is San Jose de Zapala. reaches of salt marshes, pansive built a sugar mill on the working In the same cause. ranging roughly from two to eight Spalding mission foundations, and within reA congressional subcommittee, of miles In width. Generally wide at cent years the "long tabby" has which Representative Charles Kra- the northern end, toward Savanbeen converted Into a guesthouse, mer Is chairman, has been Investi- nah, they narrow at the lower pora portion of which Is now used as gating Communist activities In tion of Cumberland, the southerna schoolroom for the nine white southern California, and also has most member of the Golden Isles. children on the Island. heard a lot of testimony about the As you fly along the chain of IsA short ride farther north brings Silver Shirts, an organiza- lands you can trace a continuous one to the ruins of Le Chatelet. tion with alleged Nazi affiliations serpentine passage In the network and a large membership. An Intel- of sounds, river This old site recalls the colonial ligence service witness who Joined mouths, and meandering creeks. It efforts of five Frenchmen who the Silver Shirts, said members Is the Inside, or Florida, Passage, a bought the Island and settled at were armed and that he was of- portion of that Inside water route several places In their little haven. fered money for stolen government which extends all the way from The agreement which they made In machine guns, rifles and ammuni- New York to the Florida Keys. St. Malo, France, before the betion. He said the declared objecAs you swing to a course over ginning of their venture, Is one of tive of the organization was to take the ocean side of the Islands, an the treasures of the Sapelo library. Soon to disagree, four of them charge of the United States govern- Interesting feature of their formament, by force If necessary. tion Is revealed to advantage. moved to Jekyl Island. Later Le Heavenly wooded areas appear In Ohatelet passed Into the hands of Marquis de Montalct, a French ITIIETnEU or not Japan obtains long bands, stretching In a v direction, and are sep- nobleman who had fled from Santo naval parity with Great Britain and the United States, it pro- arated by slender marshes and Domingo, where his whole family had been massacred In a slave upposes to have a powerful navy. Ad- ponds. Where De Avlles Landed. rising. miral Mineo Osuml, minister of the One cannot visit St. Catherines Many of the descendants of Spaldnavy, submitted to the cabinet the slaves still live on tiny farms largest budget In the country's his- without recalling that April day In ing's de Avlles, on the Island. Of the three settletory. It calls for appropriation of 1500 when Menendez about $214,416,000 for the coming one of Spain's ablest pioneers, and ments Raccoon Bluff, Hog Hamyear. New Items alone total about his party of 50 men dropped an-- ! mock, and Shell Hammock the In the last budget the chor and came ashore on this Is- former Is the largest $00,000,000. At nampton Point and Retreat diet allowed the navy little more land. He had established SL Au than half of what la now asked by gustine, In Florida,, only the year on St. Simon Island the first cotton was grown from seeds Admiral Osuml. before, and was already out to defrom the Island of Introduced of traces the any remaining stroy France has denied Japan her supIn the West Indies. This have port of any steps toward abroga- settlements the French may cotton creatremarkable long-fibe- r tion of the Washington navy treaty founded. One writer pointed out that no- ed much comment among cotton of 1021 by announcing her Intention buyers when the first crop, shipped to adhere to Its provisions pending where else had he seen such a delightful setting for a great house from Hampton Point, reached "some change In the European as that on Sapelo Island. In the H r C by Waatara Nvwapapar Union. aS TIMES-NEW- T 1 1 e THE . h V tt low-lyin- g 100-mll- f t.U lSoO-180- sea-Islan- d moss-scarfe- d four-centur- y black-frocke- d n one-tim- r, d delta-divide- d Care in Feeding Colt Is Advised Guard Against Infection Is Urged by an Authority on Live Stock. Br Trad U. Halt. Awtata Ma IWaaaor. Nurih Carolina Btata Iraa. WNU sea-Isla- a. aorvlca. The feed and management of a colt during the first three year of his life will determine largely the kind of animal he will be in later year. During the first six mouths the foal Uvea mostly on his mother's milk, with a little grain and hay at Drat and more added gradually during the latter part of the To start the foal In full period. health and vigor, Immediately after Its birth. It ahould be given a good draft of its mother's first milk. This milk has regulating properties which tend to clean the alimentary canal. If this cannot be done, a tablespoonful of castor oil should be administered. The mare's udder must be kept clean to prevent Intestinal Infection in the foaL A lukewarm solution of 2 per cent coal tar disinfectant, followed by rinsing with warm water, la good. The bind parts should be washed dally for the Drat week. If necessary, the dam's milk flow can be stimulated with such feed as plenty of pasturage, oata, rolled barley, wheat, bran, and corn. But If the foal suffers from too rich milk, then the dam's daily ration supply ahould be curtailed. The earlier the foal learns to eat solid foods, the better for Itself and Its mother. A mixture with equal parts of oats, bran, and cracked corn Is good. Colts ahould be given clover, alfalfa, or other legume hay as soon as they will eat it Plenty of water la Important When the mare Is worked, the colt should be left In a cool stall, with the mare being brought to the barn to suckle the colt In the middle of the forenoon and afternoon. In weaning, the mare and colt must be kept well separated until the milk has completely stopped, or the process will have to be repeated. The weaning should start when the colt Is six months old, and the mare's ration should be cut down until she has dried off. Grass Holds Soil, Long Fingers Aid Fertility Grass is a miser. Its long fingers hold onto the soil and soil fertility as a miser holds onto money. It not only prevents erosion, but well managed grazing land loses less fertility, because lesa Is taken from the soil by pasture plants and part of that which Is removed Is TestuTe1flVJjougI the " of grazing animals. manure " Land planted to corn on an 8 to 10 per cent slope In Missouri and North Carolina loses 15 to 17 tons Land of soil per acre annually. growing bluegrass or lespedeza loses only 0.8 to 0.9 tons per acre. Similar results were obtained In a comparison of the native grass sod and cleaned tilled kaffir In central Kansas, and of cotton and grassland In southern states. Decaying grass roots keep the soil porous and favorable to the absorption of moisture. Irradiation Improves Milk Among the newest methods of BEVERLY HILLS. I was read-lnan article Just now by some mart aleck, and be was giving bis solution of censorship and movies, and what caused this and g that ttf Ha to bap-pene- d men- tion the "Specialist" by Chick Sales, Watt what In tba world about that little book? One that every man ir (especially If he " ' bad ever been raised in the country or small town) took borne, read to his wife, and to bis Mother, and his Dad, for the older you was the more it appealed to you. Then, to have somebody peak op that never had enough humor to get the Idea that It was a great character study of a man. The story wasent of a building, It was of the mans great pride in his chosea profession. You can make anything you are a mind too out of anything, but that little story that sold over a million copies, and here la a funny thing about It. It was the best people that got It The dumb guy. the cleverness of the whole thing was lost on him. I wish this bird that wrote that knew Chick Salea, he would get the surprise of bis life. He has done for twenty five years the cleanest and most applauded act ever In vaudeville. He la eo clean that he la almost a prude. I remember years ago, long before the publication of the book. Chick told me that story, and I rushed home to repeat all of it I could remember, and 1 could visualize thla old carpenter, an artist to his hammered old finger tips. Reading this little obscure here tonight, brings hack the memory of my first meeting with Chick. We were both on the bill togeather at the Grand Opera House. Pittsburgh, Pa. both doing singles, (that Is I mean both acts were acts where we worked along). Chick was doing those great set of characters that have lived so long till they have become classics. Why the old man with the horn sitting on a stool blowing on It, is as famous as that statue of a fellow sitting ob a rock, called the "Thinker". Then the preacher making the annouce-mentthen the fresh boy, then the girl reciting. He had Just got married, and his wife was a beautiful, lovelv sweet pfe'rt and vqrg nqcmUshed violin piayer. w en i;nieit naa ner or. bill doing a single. I watched his ca reer, and occasionally run into him. He was the biggest hit with an audience, and the biggest hit off stage with all actors, that I can recall In all my years of stage work. He lived at Urbana, the home of the Illinois University. His father was a dentist I played the town, and went out to see his folks, as grand an old couple as ever lived. His Dad used to make him up sets of teeth that he wore In some of his characters, and they are what principally changed his whole n s, looks. Mrs. Rogers and I were up to his rented flat one time when his twins were born. Now here they are grown children, and what fine ones his. children have turned out to be. He lives Bomewhere now, and like many of admiring friends, our trails just dont happen to cross very often. This whole Hollywood and Los Angeles is the darndest places to have friends that you never see. If you dont happen to work at the same studio. I got lota of friends that I havent seen in years, and I would Just love too, but it seems ft Just dont happen so. If I run onto Chick I am going to show him this little article by this squirt who Is Is Old Sheep Industry an authority on what constiThe sheep Industry Is very, very such tutes old. Sacred history tells us the mind". the deoay of the American Its like reading that the Archshepherds and their flocks were 'round about In the hills when bishop of Canterbury had been Christ was born. The industry was caught In a night club. Chick is awful good in pictures. very old in those days and a most He Is a character actor. The rest Important one. As time progressed of us real do Just a character. He lives and civilization spread to the west across Europe, the sheep population him. He is him. In all of the great wars Remember t h e expanded. of history the soldiers wore wool old man "That and ate meat As the civilized na- had talked to tions grew In Importance their sheep Lincoln?" Well that little artiIndustry advanced. cle of this guy did some good treating milk to improve Us quality Irradiation by violet rays is gaining favor. According to work done at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, milk thus treated has a slightly lower bacteria count and lower acidity than ordinary whole milk. It was found at refrigerator temperatures Irradiated milk will keep several hours longer than whole milk not so treated. This added keeping quality Is partly due to a very slight reduction in the development of acidity of the milk after irradiation. Farm Hints Italy's wheat area this year Is less than half of that of 1933. a north-and-sout- h -' St-- m0)(BIEfll a a Dolomitlc limestone has come Into favor as filler material in the manufacture tilizer. of agricultural anyhow. It brought back to my mind fresh memories of one of the finest characters that ever put foot on our stage. A real fine wholesome-man- , that has perhaps got more apPlowing deep furrows both ways plause, given more clean amuseacross sandy fields checks soil ment, got more laughs per minute, drifting. The furrows should be than any vaudeville act In America. two to four rods apart ' Gosh that vaudeville, how we a miss It No class of entertainment The number of beef cattle In has ever approached It for real enFlorida has been estimated at tertainment. The variety, the worlds and pasture land Is fig- various collection of talents, the ured at 25,000.000 acres, years of practice to attain perfeca tion In acts of skill. And to have Practically all of the tobacco been the outstanding figure In that grown in Puerto Rico Is now under parade Is something Chick contract with the secretary of agri- glorious be proud of. culture. Ten thousand growers Salese can 1934, McNngkl Syndic: In. signed. fer |