OCR Text |
Show CACHE AMERICAN'. LOCAN. UTAH ram and SEEN- -' HEARD fr round th National Capital awD CARTER fiaPWBM bop of Federal Housing Admliilstr th tlon fur li home renovation riu 111 U that 111 campaign provide srtltlty from now until nnt March. Then, It la hoped, th new bom building campaign at III txslO la earnest Actually the "drlre," If one could Cali It "drhe," li belli left lit th largely I companies hat something to sell. Ver lltti la being dub b th government, and tl banha, ibough friendly bar not o far been rushing out to get Uila business. Hut eiperta her figure Hut thla type of business at ill be ter profit hi, and rmlnentl oaf for the la th Drat loaning Instllutluns, place, th government guarantee full 20 per cent of all th loan mad b an on Institution. lh!a phis ha been ter generall ml understood. Th popular belief haa been, men among banker, that the government guaranteed out 20 per cent of each loan. Bo that the bank, loaning a man $5t)0 to Inatall a new heating plant In hla houae, or to put on new roof, would aland to loa K)0 If tha owner proved able to pa nothing. Th 20 per cent doea not nppl to arb loan. It appllea to all tha loana of thla character made l ach Inailtutlon. Thus, If a bank loana a total of 100,000. and the net losses on those loana amount to 10,019, tha bank will ba In full, for lit losses. In tba aecond placa, tha Interest rata, from the bank' standpoint la fair! good. On a loan na small aa 100, paable In ona ear, the bank earns about D 8 per cent Interest Noma of thla would be eaten up In service, of course, receiving twelve monthl payments, entering them os th hooka, etc. Against thla might ba credited the point that thla loan might torn out to be tn entering wedge for what might easily become a profitable account for the bank. WsablfigUiB. TliS Chief relm-hurae- Interest Not High Hut while thla 9 per. cent odd aounda like a high Interest rate for tha householder to pa, actually It docs not work out that way. On a loan of $100 $93 cash In hand he 3 Interest for tha year. The pay rata rises over 0 per cent because the bank begins to have the principal of the debt reduced at the end of the first month, and toward th end of the twelve-montperiod la actually owed only a small fraction of tha total. Hut the point here Is that while the bank earns more than 9 per cent on such a small loan, there la no way the borrower could get anything like that rate on hla monthly 12 at payments. When he pays the end of a month the bank has that amount, to put with others, which It can loan out at the high rata Hut the best the borrower could do on his money would be to get 3 per ceut ssvlngs bank Interest, and probably not that Many savings banks have reduced their Interest rate below 3 per cent, and virtually no Institutions are now paying Interest on checking accounts. So In fact the borrower Is not penalised by the high Interest rate produced by bis payments on the principal before the end of the year. The bank actually gains, but the borrower does not really lose. Faith in President ' President Roosevelt Is still profiting, and to a really enormous extent, from the fact that a great many people who actually are desperately opposed to his policies simply persist In believing that the President really agrees with them, Instead of with his own frequently spoken words. On his return from his vacation trip, he found himself obliged to knock down a great many stories which had their Inspiration in that sort of reasoning. People who did not believe and for that matter still de not believe In any of these "radical" policies, were responsible for all the stories about his "turning to the right. They were somewhat rudely jarred by his discussion of private profits in bis Green Bay (Wls.) speech. But no amount of reiteration on tha part of President Roosevelt seems to jar these followers loose. They take their venom out on Under Secretary Tugwell, or some other of the Presidents many appointees. They never hold him responsible. They constantly believe that tomorrow, or next week at the latest, Mr. Roosevelt will step In and save the country by throwing these fa'se advisers overboard, and reverting to what they regard as his normal conservative attitude. Not Lika Mussolini He does not even seek to placate them as does MussolinL II Duce, very familiar with the old principle that "loyalty lies only to the king, not to worries only about Ms ministers, loyalty to himself. Some bitter critics say he Is not willing to permit anyone else to have any glory. Maybe so, but It Is not only the lieutenants who become popular, or threaten to become popular who are thrown overboard. There Is a slow but Inevitable changing of all his subordinate officers. Signor Grande Famished Cattle Find Water and Grass to thl country on a mts-Joa big Int. He flourished a tsliile, lul iio ran rriiii-iu-- I r uffhnud lb ubariir p.i( hl.b be Is now occupying? All fhroug's bl Vint It has bn-lb king ministers and r Wlm betaine uiijmjnil.ir, It I slut true of Roosevelt a sdniliiMrmli.n. But Him OlftVri-li'between R.n.wnelt a lid premier Mu aullnl )a tb it tlie president due n d throw bla a'hlver Suniellim-they jet In quoin la , a In Him rat of atliung Sccreiary of mUi Hull and Chief Brain 1 rosier Midi-y- , rid Hilng ba to happi n. Till ability of pfevMellt by no tlill.1i imii in, to i..l J lb support of those olio actually d.aacri with blm. but will hot admit It, I especially remarkable In contrail with other puhlc wa who Everybody figure. against any ohm thing that Mr. Hoover did oiin-- to lorn against him. w bo era enthusiastic Beuplo about Wll'laiu Jennings Bryan turned against blm every time be announced a new pulley. A for example government ownership of ni'fc Tr.TT" The Country e. Il.ll ItsSInste By ED IPwi-fel- me.-- ! y Suit . HOWS life- - I have known a telegraph Uncover Will Drawn IS Year Before Revolution Belt of Trees to Help Drouth Area Sycamore, I1L A 11 will and testament, drawn IS year before the outbreak of the Revolutionary war hut still legible, was uncovered among the heirlooms of Emerson Andrew here. Th parchment document, penned and sealed on August n, 1757, by Samuel Davis at Massachusetts Bay, Is now more thsn 177 years old. Pavlss bequeathed his home property, a horse and cat-li- e to hi wife. He gave each of three daughters a share In other land holdings and stock. To ona surviving son he left 23 pounds of "lawful silver money." and to a kinsman left 20 pound providing he behaved well. lished for growing of seedlings to he planted. About S.Vm.mio.iKX) tree are ex peeled to be raised In tba uur-e- r Washington. Initial steps hare ies before tbe project la completed. beer taken to launch work In the Illustrative of Hie volume of work United Stales great plains area on Involved, estimates for Hie first tha largest reforestation project six months' oeratloni rail for about ever undertaken outside of Soviet 520,000 men days. The total area Russia, an experiment in ellmate Involved I placed at 100, OnO square control to combat the ravages of mile, or 04.ooo.oil0 acres, tm hiddrouth. ing land to be cleared of present Under direction of Hie United growth. State forest service it I proposed within the next ten yeara to build a I75.0UO.OOO forest belt a hundred Save Rare Chinese Tree Big Tarpon Leaps Into miles wide and extending more by a Major Operation Boat in Lap of Angler than 1,000 miles through Hie heart Bilgarlow n, Mas. To save It Beach, Fla. And then. In of Hie droulh area from the Cans-dlaPayton worms of mid from the ravages an emergency you could use your border to Hie Texas pnuhnn rot, the most famous tree on M to catch a tarpon. die. Vineyard Island one of the lap Mrs. Bob rncettl, a recent bride, few of Its spet ies In the United Twenty Million Acres. relates how she was with a party ha undergone a major opThe project will embrace a total State a Chinese pagoda fishing from a small boat at the It of 20,000,000 acres, of which l.S.'O eration. tree whb-l000 will be actually planted to trees, Oapt. Thomas Milton Bonce de I.eon Inlet. She hooked tarpon, which leaped and will provide a hundred parallel brought from I lilna In a dower pot a over the end of the boat and landed home new Ills and alongside or planted trees of with windbreaks, strips a mile of farm land between each 07 venr ago. Now It towers 70 squarely In her lap. With the aid of companions, she atrip. Between each of the breaks feet, with a 00 foot spread, and quickly pinned It down. tba most Ideal farming conditions eaeb year bears yellow blossoms. are expected to be created. The hundred mile licit of trees will run through (he Dakotas, Nebraska, Kansas, and well into the Texas panhandle, "as a means of ameliorating drouth conditions. The plan Is a modification of one devised by 1resldent Roosevelt In San Francisco had placed on her and .Mennderlngs himself, and in which no prov Isoin was made for the intervening areas Broadway crowds moving along as arm when she was a baby. . , . MidWith the statement that If it was between the parallel strips of trees slowly as cattle grazing. . . . Reworn until she made ho. first stage The modification, suggested by the summer a lwn.is does that. . . . tards the rushing tempo . . and appearance she would be a success. forest service, Is calculated to preA midget . . . No matter how young a prune chues the theaters. wastvent more effectively further with a heavy cane and a big black may he, It always has wrinkles." ing away of rich agricultural lands . . . Fred Stone said that after he . . . Those Broadway clothes through erosion by wind and rain cigar. and to alleviate the extremely high shops that foal lire the mode of the had severed the gold band. . . . moment . . . Any new idea seized Those movie baikers have cinch temperatures accompanying lack of and exaggerated. . . .Windows of Jobs these days. . . . They get paid precipitation. for standing In the cool breath that florists' shops still attractive. . Each of the hundred windbreaks Though roses may he bought on conies from the theaters. . . . But will be about seven reds wide, covthe streets for a penny apiece. Jack It Isn't so good In winter . . . and ering 14 acres out of each square Dempsey looking as big as a mounsalaries aren't high. mile. A tain in a white linen suit Russia Trying It. taxi driver who is going to say Imported Scotch, 15 cents He a Sign, Good morning, Judge. Although forestry officials were drink." . . . Basement lee dealHits Customer originally of the opinion that the sassed the officer who bawled him ers with their little carts all load. So that the customer may be project would be the largest of out for making a wrong turn. . . . Waiting a hurry call. . . . ed. Frazier Hunt who's just haik from cheated and fooled, or, even worse Its kind ever undertaken, recent reprotects the perishable carBurlap alif as he's from the standpoint of the brewer search disclosed that a similar Europe. . . . Seems go from the sun. . . . Three hay Involving 109,000,000 ways going somewhere or coming fever victims In one block. . . . Ou of the more expensive beverage, undertaking hack. Paul Blanshnrd, city contheir way to a nearby clinic . . . may come to the conclusion that acres has been under way for some troller. hoarding a taxi. . . . Wontime In Russia. what he hnd thought his favorite and a fisherman with a trout outfit more for if der hes looking More than 00 pet cent of the es graft? . . . Maybe hes going down to the beer had deteriorated, and hence tinmted ultimate outlay on the . . . After all the revelations, seems aquarium to gaze at the pale specistop ordering It will go to farmers, largely strange that theres any city left. men there. A junk wagon As the brewers of more expensive project . . But the disclosures don't seem for employment o. labor for plowdrawn by a horse that looks as If beers see It their only protection . . . much. to the excite citizenry and for ing, fencing, planting caring It were about to fall to pieces. . . . against this sort of thing Is to have the trees. Of the total $75,000,000 to Even though the millions came out But the cowbells clatter gaily. a number of outlets which dispense of of the be expended, about 25 per cent Is taxpayers. pockets their beer exclusively. If the reexpected to he spent during the Kids splashing In the fountain In tailers have no other draught beer next twelve to eighteen months. A soda fountain on wheels. . . . Green . . . Staid burghto sell, there Is no temptation to Bowling Drawn by a dappled pony with a ers used to Fencing of each of the windsubstitute a cheaper variety. play nine pins there . . breaks Is planned as a protection In . all servitor white. grinning . . . and the militia of RevolutionOne of the ways to induce these A . from cattle. to . . against thirsty kids, Serving drinks ary days drilled there. . , . Now retailers to sell only one variety, chain of damage nurseries will be estab At from one cent up to three. . . . Its only a bit of open space that and that higher priced, is to make A pitchman selling diamond" rings marks the end of Broadway. Such as some other concessions. at a dime each. . . . The salt watdr, Q, Bell Syndicate. WNU Service. the furnishings of an expensive timber smell of piers . . . rotting which the retailer electric sign Lucky Prize Was and a quick surge of the wanderwould not be apt to purchase for lust . . . Colonel Stoopnagle, of SEEKS AMERICAS CUP for Negro Unlucky himself a sign stating not only the Stoopnagle and Budd, who has A one Ala. Pecatur, name of the establishment, but the turned nautical. . . . Even goes ten cent on piece, beer sale. of draught variety of the way to the studio In his part to Its token luck a owner, There Is no doubt that pressure new boat . . . Sailors rolling along In misfortune the great brought on the part of the breweries to obSouth street and stopping at a place form of a Jail sentence tain the maximum number of outwith a sign, Beer, 5 cents. . . . In the to Willie Shaw, negro, lets led to terrific abuses In the stores that sell equipment Those Circuit court here. past And the same goes for presfor men of the sea. . . . Everything C. P. robbed Two negroes to a much sure from the distilleries, from slickers to snappy uniforms. Madry of bis purse, which consmaller extent One of the famous . . . Why can't I quit thinking of In reporting his loss tained $23. old bars of Washington avoided all ships and far countries? . . . Must to police, Madry mentioned such entanglements, In the be the time of the year. . . . No, a dime small change including days, by simply declining those postcards that come from it's made In 1S32, which he carried to sell draught beer at all. This points ranging from Baris to Vicluck. for now one was Shoemakers, of the toria, B. C. . . . and notes from When police found a dime of old traditions. friends who have gone bark to nadate same the among possessions Meanwhile, the electric companies In camps fitted with ture. of a negro woman, they quesare wondering If this "fair trade electric baths, etc. lights, on the theory that tioned her practices drive of the government few dimes of that age still will lead eventually to forbidding Dorothy Stone, who has taken should be In circulation. Tbe of all electric light signs furnished Marilyn Miller's part In "As Thouhad Shaw recalled woman given to retailers by manufacturers aa T. O. M. Sopwlth, owner of tbe sands Cheer." . . . Seems like only her the dime. He readily adthe result of exclusive sale conyacht Endeavor, with which English a other slim youngthe night when, mitted guilt and named an actracts. Just another attempt, they ster of seventeen, she made her be will try to capture the famous confronted when with complice say, to skim the cream off their debut . . . and her father, Fred Americas cup off Newport In the evidence. profits. Stone, cut the gold bracelet gypsies Oopjrljht. WNU Itrv'oc Vast Scheme Proposed to Rescue Parched Land. I i ... . ... ... .. ... . r ... 1 t ? r. V t tf'vu i ,fc. fra T iatM opera- cam out of the confmdon. So a man constantly In the babble of conversation may pay mile attention to It until something of Intercut attracts him; a hit of wisdom, new, or a Jest he has md heard. Oscar Wild left In books as great a numU-- of br'ght sayings aa any Englishman. All of them wer suggested from mingling with men, first used lit conversation, and th best of them later transferred to print Men acquire education laboriously from books Uiry ar rompelled to aludy aa a duty, but easily out In tbe world, where every one baa a Utile, and la busy distributing It j ,. g . , : jv:-.' Cacao Baan Ar W Aai , ai Cltaned by Shuffling ! C U.M,' (ivic9 Ft In v e, Cs . v. Crazd. only the rich roud afford, for It sold for as much as $3 a pound. Today good chocolate can be purchased for a few ceid s pound, and It consumed In on form or another by millions of people the world over. Modern methods of cocoa and chocolate manufacture differ Util from those used by primitive peo pie centuries ago. In Mexico th native roasted the beans snd then ground them between two warm fist stones until s fire paste was obtained. Tbit was sometimes mixed with maize (corn) and flavored with vanilla and spices. The paste was molded Into forms desired and allowed lo cooL Modern preparaUon of the commodity Is more sclenUflc snd thorough, but Hie principal steps taken are much Hie same. Cocoa butter Is an Important byproduct of the cacao bean, which contains 50 per ceut fats. Tbe batter, removed by crushing the beans under hydraulic pressure, Is extensively used la confectionery, and In Alpharmaceutical preparation!. most every household has some commodity that contains this vegetable fat Cocoa butter Is sn Ingredient of many soas, pomades, perfumes, ointments, plasters, sad wblt-- Utihittcioii, re i. h VoU like but chocolate cand! Chocolate cake! Ur hocolule Ice cream sodas? Then you'll ba Interested In the new that science U waging a determined fight to sate the famous cacao plantation of Trinidad, an island In the Wei-- t Indies, from destruelhe plant disease. Trinidad Is one of the principal source of the bean which furnishes the makings" for a hot bererag surpassed In world Importance only "Because a man loses Ida Job.1 I by coffee and tea, as well at fur read aomewhere, "it doea not fol- candles, sweetmeats, etc. Chocolate was a gift to man's pallow be should quit work." That Is good sense. I know a ate from the western hemisphere. man who lost hla Job aa a maker I. Ike tobacco, the potato, and a number of othpr plant products. It waa of radio parts. Thla morning taken back to Europe by explorers conba bought vegetable of him; tinued work on some land a neigh- soon after Columbus opened tbe bor let him use, and ha haa not suf- road to the new world, and launched fered th humiliation of calling on on the way that has led to world tb 8alvatlon army, tha Red Cross, market. In trade circles today three terms the county commissioners, or con are used: chocolate, cocoa and cagross. I have another neighbor who lost cao. The tropical tree which Is Hie cabla Job In a machine shop. lie did source of chocolute Is called tbe not quit work, elUier; be Is now cao. In Its leathery, cucumberllke fruit are cacao pods which contain operaUng a laundry In bis borne. In cacao beans. But when tbe beans rase I am able to chnnge shirts this are roasted and ground, and much week, I shall certainly arrange cosmetic. rewith Uds man to wash my old one. of the fat la pressed out, the The Cold coast colony In Africa substance brown (ground maining Some of my other neighbors are If the Is normally the world's largest proto a dry powder). Is cocoa. getting 13 a month from the counfat Is not out, tlie darker ducer of cacao. In one recent year ty, and regularly their names ap- substance lapressed the colony shipped 54,000 tons of cachocolate. headIn under the papers, the pear cao. valued at $10,000,000, to the of the tor manufacture Credit ing of Disbursements to the CounUnited Slates ty Boor." I shall make a bard chocolate from tbe hidden seed of While the Gold coast no longer to an unprepossessing fruit belong struggle to keep my name out of Its trust In gold, cacao has disputa the original Inhabitants of Mexico. tha list I know most of the peoplaced the metal only within the InIn Cortex Hernando when 1519, commake read and It, ugly ple last few years. For 400 years gold vaded that country, he discovered ments. was the hope that glittered for white that the cacao tree was widely cul- men on the Gold coast. Gold mines tivated. The native had concoct If the people are starving, what ed built the railroad to Seccondee for or chocolatl" a drink called la to be done about It since nature come which Takoradl Is the porL In which have from cacahuntl, has no more to give! I once lived 1924 gold shipments reached more on a farm, and while I am able to the names chocolate" and cocoa." than $4,000,000, but the mines were of chocolate Frothing pitchers recall some discomforts, I always seem to be nearing exhaustion. A enhad enough to eat Frequently, we served by Montezuma when he geological survey of the Gold coast Cortez. tertained used parched rye for coffee, and colony In 1915 revealed other minLong In Us In Mexico. erals which may themselves relegate sorghum molasses for sweetening. Students of American native cusThe other day I found sorghum mogold to the backgound. Mangalasses on the table, bought from an toms have estimated that the drink nese and bauxite are Important exIn use was before the 1,000 years The first Is used In steel farmer, and thought ports. arrival ol Europeans. According making and the second for alumIt still very good. We grated corn meal for bread, to Mexican mythology, the seed of inum. and always down In tbe feed lot the cacao tree was carried from a Big Industry In Brazil. were pigs coming on to supply New world version of the Garden In the state of Bahia in Brazil are Quetzal-coatl, Mexico Into of Eden by meat when the smoke house began about 80,000,000 cacao trees; this God of Air. The fruit. It We to show signs of emptiness. fruit has been grown here for about was food of favorite a had cattie for plowing, and to sup- Is related, 150 years, and a tiny railway serves Chickens almost took the gods. The great Swedish bot- the heart of the great cacao region. ply milk. care of themselves about the place, anist Linnaeus, christened the fruit It hauls more tons of freight per and supplied eggs In addition to a theobroma cacao, meaning In Greek mile than any other railway line In Food of the Gods." South America. surplus of old roosters which, when Cacao was used as a means of boiled long enough, made fairly Leaving the Coastal plain and enof and the payment tribute tering the foothills, one sees the good eating. We had wild plums, barter tdackberrles, and preserved them by the Aztecs and Mnyans. A mans cacao plantations In long shnded for winter use. There was plenty wealth was often Judged by the groves. Among bigqer, protecting of fuel In the woods, and one man number of cacao beans he pos- trees the small cacao trees are a slave In could Mexico sessed. good In the neighborhood tanned beef planted, thus sheltered from sun and for 100 beans. wind. Twist off a green fruit, break hides, from which another made be purchased food It open and taste the whitish seeds; Its highly concentrated shoes. In almost every house there was a loom, for the manufacture of value, low cost of production, and the flavor Is like watermelon. Barea cloth called Ilnsey woolsey, and numerous uses, have stimulated ca- foot men and women split the pods, cao cultivation to such an extent empty the seeds on a wide platform, this supplied clothing. now It Is grown In practically and tread them free of pulp and that we were a was but poor start, It The wet pith. They call this Dancing the never hungry or naked while wait- all tropical countries. And tropical areas of the West African Cacao. ing for Umes to get better. The seeds are dried by stirring times never did get much better; colonies of Great Britain and Portand Central them in a big flat bin. A wide roof, indeed, I think they are harder now ugal, and the South than I ever knew them to be on Big Americas are especially well suited set on wheels, Is at hand, to be to the cultivation of the trees. hastily hauled over the bln if It Creek. The Introduction of the cacao tree rains. Turning a dark brown when town The people dried, and tasting of unsweetened should remember there is a place In Africa has resulted In a remarkecochocolate when ripe, the beans are where they can at least always get able growth of the Industry and nomic development of the continent packed In bags and sent to Europe enough to eat, and move out Into the country. Pretty much all the The Gold coast has taken first place and the United States. In 30 years In the worlds Bahias export has risen from 0 land will soon be owned by the gov- away from Brazil to 1,200,000 bags a year. Brazil ernment through tax sales, and al- production of cacao. What were once trackless and useless African drinks very little chocolate, but most anyone free to file on It Jungles, inhabited only by savage much coffee. bushmen and wild animals, today Near a station named Lava Pes," In one of the periods of depresare cacao plantations. or Wash Your Feet," the visitor sion In Rome, Silerlus called the America Largest Consumer. may stop to watch a long file of In your meetings, poor together. ants. Each carries a leaf hg If As an International commodity, he said, you make very severe ltwere an umbrella. Many ants are up the cacao bean has grown in imporfeedcharges against those who are tance to such an extent that the In a tree, biting off bits of leaf and ing you. It Is not usual to criticize United States alone, In 1933, Importdropping them to other ants waitthe poor, but many of you have ed 474,270,000 pounds, valued at ing on the ground. This line of very bad habits, and are not doing $18,739,000. The United States Is by marching ants Is often a mile or your part In an emergency all far the largest consumer, cacao more long. Tbe ants carry the -should help. Some of the rioting sixteenth in value on our leaves to .their underground home, ranking reIn has only yon have indulged list of Imports. Germany, Great and store them. On the leaves a sulted In destroying such food sup- Britain and the Netherlands follow fungus forms, and this the Insects plies as we have. I give you frank In the order named. eet. notice this will not be submitted Further up the line one crosses a For many years the Spaniards of to again. If any of yon have not d South America and some of the small stream running among heard of It I announce I am head hills. Long chutes made of West Indies monopolized the cacao of the army, and will not Join you Industry. Chocolate was introduced boards run down the hillsides to the Id unnecessary destruction. waters edge. Down these chutes naInto Spain by Cortez and his about the beginning of tives slide fresh cacao beans, which The world has agreed for thou the Sixteenth century, but the proc- empty Into waiting dngout canoes. rands of years that the most dan- ess of chocolate manufacture was Although cacao has been grown gerous period In the life of men t kept a secret for almost 100 years. here for so long, the methods of harthat of wild oats from sixteen to In 1G06 an Italian discovered the vesting It are still primitive, for huSo of course an au- method of preparation. twenty-six- . Shortly aft- man labor Is cheap. thor appears to say the dangerous erwards, monks White men find life here hard, beand' travelers and sixty-fivage Is between forty-fiv- e spread the news throughout Europe. cause of so many Insects and mawe betbelieve all are I laria. Bugs are a plague; horned The Seventeenth and Eighteenth ter behaved aa adults than we were centuries found the popularity of the tumble-bug- s more than seven Inches as savage children; and probably drink steadily Increasing. Cocoa long larger than many kinds of the most dangerous age of savage bouses were established In England, birds, snails weighing half a pound, children Is between twelve and as well as on the continent. and the fer de lance and other bad Chocolate, however, was a luxury snakes. r Western caltl branded with th letter of the Umergeney Relief a ltululatrailon, after they bad been bought by the government from farmer whose farms ar now almost waterless, ar driven to an Island In acre of pasture land. It must th middle of the Savannah river, near Augusta, Ga, where thera are feel great to Iheiu to get back to water and real green gras again. j Incident. tor to sit Idly for hour In a room full of clattering Inatrimn tils, and suddenly gra.p a Ley when LI call railroad. Pederal Alcohol Controller Joseph II. Choale, Jr., In Ida fight to prevent the return of th brewery controlled saloon, with all It evil ramifications, has struck a heavy blow at the already politically pestered electric companies In winning a court derision preventing tha furnishing of expensive sign to beer dispensaries. Much publicity haa been given to tba derision by the Federal Alcohol administration, putting stress on tha Idea that this giving of 100 sign to Chicago beer parlor, saloons, or whatever, was Just an opening wedge. If the plan bad succeeded, Mr. Cboile believes, tb steps that on Id have followed would have led Inevitably to every pine that sold beer being owned by aom brewery or other; that the brewery would have compelled th sals of Its product exclusively In that establishment; that eventually to make both ends meet Hie saloonkeeper would have been driven to so objectionable In tba practice most old time saloons. There are two angles to the sltu-tlo- n which are not stressed by tha government tn thla Instance. Ona Is that the brewery In this case sells a beer which Is more expensive than most of Its competitors. Unless It does something In addt tlon to consumer advertising, the chancea would favor tha average saloonkeeper or beer parlor proprietor dispensing a beer on draught which he could buy more cheaply. This problem is especially keen In the minds of the brewer Just now because In many states local regulations aimed at preventing the return of the saloon do not permit the customer to seo the beer aetually drawn from the spigot or are Thesu regulations faucet aimed at preventing the return of the bar." So If It happens Hint a beer dispenser has two varieties of beer on draught one costing perhnps BO per cent more than the other, or even twice as much, he Is under constant temptation, when asked for a glass of the higher priced beer, to substitute the cheaper. W.M. met some opposition In ention that a man may learn mutll from convcri-atlugoing on around him; that he may Hiu aa unconacquire sciously at La eats hla tuenls, attend to hi work, or otherirU a ights Saloon Sources 9 Chocolate Conversation On Quitting Work Ihein-u-ltm- Whereas President Roosevelt tl being cntliuslualleatly supported by persons who aetually do not agree with him about any niHirtnnt go ernmental policy. Puture historians will be rather and rotmnenlalor puzzled alout Hurt fart. Howe About:! 150,-00- a cacao-covere- ... ... |