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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 20

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 20

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Brooklyn, New York
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20
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THE BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE, NEW YORK, TUESDAY; AUGUST 20, 1929. Ml 20 developed system of mutual savings banks in the A LESSON FROM THE SKIES ucts, 0 one may reason from the foreign case against the wisdom of paying domestic growers an indemnity for blighted fruit excluded from BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE ircuodtd ty Isaac Van Anden In 1841.1 iTTale HtrS "Eigle" Union. Those who enjoy the benefits of this system probably know, and may well In any case bear In mind, that the New York system exists T'JSSDAY EVENING, AUGUST 20, 1929. under State law and that the several States vary widely in the provisions that they make for the protection of deposits of savings. Some interstate commerce.

If the United States owes the Florida grower an indemnity, it owes one to the growers of every country of which it excludes any products for similar reasons. Justice Is even, or It is not Justice, PRANK F. GANNETT, President HB5St)T f. OUNNTSON. FRANK B.

TRIPP, Cos rmau Board Truetec Vice President MADDEN, HARRIS M. CRIST. Secretary Treasurer have mutual savings banks, some private company savings banks, some special deposit ac But no one dreams of reimbursing every for eign grower whose product is excluded In order counts and some a combination of two or more of these systems. MAIN OFFICE: Buildlnp. Washlnpton and Johnson Streets.

1F.LEPIIONE MAIN 6200 to protect this country from an animal or plant The mutual savings banks, generally speak pest. The idea that a foreigner should even ask Manhattan, 13 W. 44th 8t. Chicago, 00 Ncrth Michigan Ave. Francisco.

Claus Spreckies Building, raris, Engle Bureiui, 53 Rue Cambon. ing, have reached their highest development In the Northeastern States; nowhere do their combined importance and legal security rank so high as in the State of New York. The provisions as to the nature of the! investments of indemnity for the exclusion of a noxious product appears fantastic. Only when an Interest with a vote makes such pleas do the heart strings of a sympathetic Congress show any appreciable reaction. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Cents Dally.

Five Cents Sunday. By Mall Postpaid (Outside Brooklyn. 1 sr. 6 mo. 1 mo.

$1.20 and Sunday $12.00 6 SO 4.50 2.00 .60 savings banks in New York render them the last of institutions to be shaken by any sort of financial commotion whatever. They weathered Impressively the crises of 1893, 1907 and 1.00 .35 15 Daily 8.00 S-mday 4.00 Monday (Sermon Paget 1.00 Sane Long-Distance Flying. While the Zeppelin's trip to Japan and other air exploits are getting greater prominence 15 .15 .15 m.so 1914, when many other banks suffered. Their power to postpone payments for a period of in the headlines, the shuttle flight of the Sun Thursday (Chess Newsi 1.50 .75 (Church Notices! 1.50 .15 Tuesday, Wednesday or Friday 1.50 .15 Foreign Rates Postpaid: Ua.ly ar.d Sunday $26.00 $14.00 Daily only 19.00 10.00 Sunday enly 8.00 4 00 Monday 300 1.50 God across the country and back is giving sixty days has rarely been Invoked, but It lends performance that may have real significance 2.00 .75 .25 At any rate, this latest of endurance flights points the way to safe and sane tests of both them an element of strength not possessed by banks of any other type. They have on occasion lent one another such aid as some might seek In order to meet a temporary drain on resources.

They possess In the aggregate an enor planes and fliers. Enteral at Brooklyn Postofflca as Second Class Mail Matter. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NEWS. Ever since the overseas flying mania de THe Associated Press la exclusively entitled to the use republication of all news dispatchea credited to tt or veloped, following Lindbergh's great achieve i.et ctnerwlse credited In this paper, and also the local ment, and it became apparent that the risk was far greater than it should be, The Eagle has mous surplus of resources over liabilities, the fruit of many years of returns moderately Ic excess of the Increments credited to their of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights republication of special dispatchea herein are also reserved.

urged that long-distance flights be made over land instead of over the ocean. It was pointed The New York public has been fortunate In Upsetting Europe's Applecart. the possession of the facilities thus offered for out that a flight from coast to coast and back, without stopping, would be equivalent to an air a thoroughly safe placement for savings. It trip to Rome and prove quite as much, with Tt Is not a mere coincidence that critics who reviewed the first presentation of Shaw's new play, "The Applecart," should have made refer undoubtedly realizes, but cannot realize too clearly, the advantage that it thus possesses. much less danger to the pilots.

The big handicap In overseas flying lies In ences to The Hague crisis In connection with Uie latest Shavian treatise on international af the fact that seaplanes are heavier than land machines. This has led to the use of land airs. With uncanny prescience Shaw found In A Post-Centenarian in the Air. Thomas Gallagher, Flushing's oldest citizen, planes for overseas stunts where It was neces sary to carry the largest possible supply of fuel. landed in New York from Ireland In 1849, at This has made the great overseas flights verita advance the perfect simile for what Is happen ing Just now in Great Britain and in Europe.

The Young Plan represented a strenuous ef' fort on the part of the Powers to get their apple' cart loaded so that, in the words of Jan ChrlS' ble death-defying exploits and has caused far too many tragedies. the age of 21, and found a home In the then uncongested section around the present Manhattan foundations of the Brooklyn Bridge. Old New York had then about 510,000 population and Brooklyn 135,000. William F. Have-meyer was Mayor of New York.

Edward Cope- It Is hardly necessary for an aviator to prove his daring by taking unnecessary risks. He tian Smuts, civilization might resume its march toward peace. At the opening of The Hague Conference, which was called to give the final indorsement of the Young Plan, Mr. Snowden land was Mayor of Brooklyn. Zachary Taylor was President of the United States.

brought the applecart to a full halt by his dra can prove his skill and stamina quite as readily over land as over water. So far as the planes go It should be much more practical to learn from such tests as that of the Sun God than from hops made In overloaded machines. By refueling In the air it should be possible to find out what real power planes and engines are On Sunday Thomas Gallagher celebrated his matio announcement that Great Britain de manded a new reparations adjustment one hundred and first birthday by an airplane flight from Roosevelt Field over lower Manhattan and Brooklyn. If he recalled the skyline There was much ado over this rude develop capable of under given conditions. of 1849, the transformation must have Impressed him deeply.

But he has steadily kept in touch ment, and the end of the pother is not yet. Meanwhile, today's news that Great Britain will begin the evacuation of the Rhineland next month, without waiting for the French and with the processes of that transformation. Discourtesy to Trade Envoys. without reference to the Young Plan ratinca tion, has created a new sensation not less sig This man was forty-seven years In the employ of the Long Island Railroad Company. Before that he had been in the service of an express company, guarding the "money wagon," and niflcant than the first.

It seems clear that the Manufacturers and exporters who are anxious to extend our trade the world over are not likely to read without resentment of the singular treatment of a commercial delegation from Hungary by the Immigration authorities British are not satisfied with stopping the apple cart. They plan deliberately to upset it. recalls one or two attempted holdups of those Attempts to explain Philip Snowden's first will be largely the result of mechan at this port. This delegation, numbering sixty- flare-up merely as an exhibition of bad temper Land and Population ics and not the result of more careful attention to the work. by a highly irritable gentleman fall down com one, came in on the Vulcanla.

The demand for a deposit of $50 per person "to Insure their leaving the country" was promptly made. One need not be an agricultural pletely in the light of this later development. earlier days. He has lived a temperate life but has been always a moderate drinker, not caring much for potheen or other whisky but being partial to gin. He has lived largely on red meat and potatoes and cabbage.

He now sleeps nineteen hours a day but Is very much alive for five hours. He chews tobacco. He smokes a black pipe. Altogether Thomas Gallagher is engineer to appreciate good work in Washington Star.) Man must eat to live. Tho single important source of There were ten delegates who, though they had The break with France over evacuation of the Rhineland is of a piece with the break over the the fields when a master Dlowman does it.

The picture may be enjoyed food is productive land. apportionment of reparations. Both are Ira ample letters of credit, did not have $50 apiece in cash. They were segregated and ordered sent to Ellis Island, choosing to refuse assist by the untrained visitor. There is a Hence the maximum number of beautiy in the clean cut furrow, In the past.

Immigration has been reduced greatly and there is a nar-. rowing margin between birth and death rates, which is calculated to result in a stationary population long before there is any strain on agricultural production to feed the increasing millions. From present indications there is little likelihood that the census of 2000 A.D. will record an American population human beings who can live In the portant. Together they represent a startling change in the aspect of the European situation rather a hard-boiled ance from their colleagues.

The president of straight across the field, the plow moving steadily, the turned erounrl Which will cause real concern. world, or any circumscribed part of the is limited by the amount of food the land will produce. Popu the American-Hungarian Chamber of Commerce of the United States had personally laid over smoothly, the plow set at DiaghalefT of the Ballet Russe. Since the failure of the tripartite agreement between the United States, Great Britain and guaranteed their good faith. The greatest ballet master of our time, perhaps the greatest of all time, passes In the France, which was doomed by the opponents It Is not by methods like these that the cne proper depth, the new soil brought up to be exposed to sur and air and lend Its urge to the growing crop.

There Is no beauty in a crooked furrow, with the plow held by unsteady or careless hands, set business men of Hungary are to be persuaded to order American goods while France and much in excess of 200,000.000. The probability Is that it will fall somewhat below this say 180,000,000. At the same time there are unde death of Serge DiaghalefT In Venice. Appearing a hundred years after Gaetano Vestrls (1729-1808), whom Paris and Berlin hailed as of President Wilson in the United States Senate, the major diplomatic problem In Europe has been to provide France with security against possible future aggression by Germany and to Germany and England are polite to their rep at a Shallow DOint. tha turnnrl "Le Dleu de la Danse," and who used to say, resentatives.

An adverse psychology Is easily created. Competition is fierce. Common sense niable possibilities of increased agri ground tumbled about, the furrow disorderly and unattractive. No "there are but three great men in Europe the King of Prussia, Voltaire and myself" Diagha- is greatly to be preferred. The Russians may go to the other extrem master plowman was handling the leff's career stangely paralleled that of Jean ity in the unlimited kindliness and courtesy cultural efficiency whereby more food will be produced on less 'tnd.

Food habits at changing. Scientific methods of packing and refrigerating are eliminating much of the scandalous waste of the past. The committee feels that it may not be necessary even to add another they show to trade delegations from this coun try, a country which has refused their ten- Georges Noverre (1727-1810), who under Louis XVI flourished as finely as Vestrls, his contemporary. The French Revolution reduced Noverre to poverty. The Russian revolution did the same thing for DiaghalefT.

Revolutions may Fifteen Years After First Shot in the War (Newark Evening News. Taking account of stock 15 years after the firing of the first shot in the World War helps activities for the maintenance of permanent peace to keep their momentum. There has been practically no let-up In these activities since the war ended. One accomplishment has led to another. Each advance has become the starting point for another move.

The result Is a network of organizations and machinery to keep war from starting. The creation of this machinery has been paralleled by natural changes which act as deterrents. The dynastic system has been practically destroyed. Feudalism, which had survived in Eastern Europe, has disappeared. Economic interdependence has Increased.

Democratic governments have been set up which may be no less quarrelsome than the old monarchical governments, but they are less capable of exploiting local quarrels Into international catastrophes, The assassination of a radical leader In Jugo-Slavla Is not as portentous of calamity as the assassination of an archduke in Serajevo, although the loss of a Stephen Raditch may be greater than the loss of a Franz Ferdinand. Ferdinand's crowd had a habit of force and was better organized to use it. Far from perfect though the peace settlement is, it did correct some historic wrongs which were bound to be provocative as long as they stood. The machinery the world has set up offers opportunity for the correction of others with Justice to those who are injured. The need to resort to force has been greatly reduced, if not entirely eliminated.

Still another grent factor Is the plunge of the Uni'e4 States Into the affairs of the world. Prior to the piow in that field and the crop yield will reflect the degree of carelessness. Crops do not merely grow; they must be planted, the field must be made ready, they must be cultivated. Poor plowing means poor crops. Good plowing is attractive and a great aid to crop production.

year-old government recognition as a nation. But they are wiser in their generation than we acre to produce food enough for are. They know that politeness always pays in revel In tragedy, may even take kindly to melo the long run. drama or horse play, but they do not care for the ballet at all. Noverre was, it may be, more lation always must be relative to food supply.

When the balance Is disturbed seriously the result Is war, pestilence and starvation. There Is no occasion for concern in the United States at present. The American food consumption habits admittedly are wasteful In the extreme, but still the populal Is not great enough to eat all the food produced from the land under cultivation. There is c'ways a surplusone of the chief causes of farm distress. But what will be the condition of a century hence? The population is increasing.

If it increases without interruption it is reasonable to presume that eventually a point will be reached where the food-producing capacity of the land will not be sufficient to feed all the people. Such a condition would result Inevitably first in a lowering of the standard of living and eventually In actual famine. It Is well to keep a close check on this balance between land production possibilities and population. A committee of economists and scientists, headed by Frederic A. Delano, president of the American Civic Association, has Just completed a preliminary study to -determine the probable state of this balance in the year 2000.

The result is reassuring. In the first place, the population will not Increase so rapidly as It has India and the War of the Books. fortunate in his music, using the ballets of Gluck and PicclnnL Yet Prokofleff and Stravln Kanhaya Lai Gauba's book, printed In Lahore, ski, who collaborated with DiaghalefT, were no "Uncle Sham," Is finally admitted to America mean composers. by the customs censorship, though It was tern porarlly held up. It Is an unsavory production But DiaghalefT In the selection of never danced himself had an intuition that which is still likely to face State prosecutions.

was almost second sight And in the organlza' Yet it is perhaps no more unsavory, tested 000,000 largely concentrated in enormous cities. Ultimate prospects also are reassuring. Japan supports its population In comparative comfort on ft quarter acre per Individual. True, the standard of living Is not as high as In the United States but people live and prosper. Allowing four times as much land to produce food for each Individual, the United States if pushed to the limit could support a population of 973,000,000.

But there is scant likelihood that this enormous figure ever will be reache; the committee, In fact, sees a stationary population at about th 225,000,000 mark. So there seems no need to worry over any widespread lack of food In the United States at any time In the future. by American taste, than "Mother India" was, tlon of the mise en scene, In sumptuousness of fittings and costumes, In apparently absolute satisfy the French demands against the Germans. The withdrawal of the United Stakes from participation in the war settlement shifted the burden of working out such a policy to the thoulders of Great Britain. With few exceptions, British statesmen have worked diligently to placate France and smooth the way toward a real war settlement.

It cannot be denied that in the main most of the compromising that has been done has been by the British. This Is no reflection on Premier Brland, who lias gone along with the other 'good Europeans" from one conference to another, always working for peace, often at great risk to Ills political fortunes. But Brland has been less successful than British statesmen in moving public opinion along the path. What has happened since the Labor Government returned to power In Great Britain is that smoldering criticism of French policy has come to the surface. The British have seen both Germany and France outstrip her in recovering from the economic depression following the Armistice.

Unemployment and trade depression had much to do with the return of MacDonald to the Premiership. The same forces have inspired and are supporting a radical change of policy in foreign affairs. Where this will lead no one can foresee. But tt Is Important for Americans to understand Rhat is taking place and the causes of It. One of those causes has been the failure of this country to play her proper role in the pence settlement.

If it is not too late we may jet find a way to help. Certainly this Government, Instead of maintaining its negative, detached attitude, should determine upon some definite and constructive line of action that nTlght be of service In the crisis that seems to be rapidly developing In Europe. tested by Brahmin taste. In essence it Is di disregard of costs, the Russian never had an equal. "Scheherezade" took Paris by storm In 1910.

London was almost as enthusiastic, and New York welcomed most warmly the inimitable Ballet Russe. The impresario's last visit here was In 1917. The World War had been going on almost three years. The tour was not a The Next Generation (Montreal Star.) It is a commonplace nowadays to hear elderly people bewailing the ways and standards of the new ecu-eratlon. They see nothing but blue rula ahead.

But so did our fathers, and their fathers before them. It is the habit of humanity to regard with misgiving anything that savors of a radical change from established conventions. Those who have been giving themselves nervous gastritis by anticipating the com-pleto collapse of our present civilization under the regime of the com-lng generation may take what comfort they can, however, from the opinions of Miss Evelyn Bcott, a writer who led the rebellion against convention In fiction a few years ago, and who cannot, by any stretch of the Imagination, be conceived as having any old-fashioned ideas. Miss Scott is strangely unimpressed by the present attitude towards the life of the rebels. They will, she believes, grow up sophisticated, but religious; they will be religious, but tolerant; they will be tolerant, but disillusioned; they will be a trifle smug, more than a little cautious, entirely too comfortable, spiritually, and, as a result, a potential menace to the dignity of their elders.

There you have It in a nutshell But does not the forecast sound strangely like that made for the present generation by its elders and, success. Men's minds were otherwise engaged and women's minds. Otto H. Kahn generously made up a very large deficit. war it kept out of the quarrels of other peoples.

Now it is using Its Prosperity never returned to DiaghalclT after the war. He was broken In spirit. Though he force, unofficially for the most part, to help compose the quarrels of others and to solve problems which, admired the Romanoffs only as patrons of his art, he had no heart to return to Russia. Like if left unsolved, might lead to trou Noverre he found the revolutionary spirit, and Indeed the war spirit generally, a wet blanket ble. Acting In co-operation with other nations Intent on peace, it on spectacular art.

Which was one of the In makes a group whoso will for peace rected against the United States as the mother country of "Mother India's" author, Katherlne Mayo. The "War of the Books" over India would be amusing If it were not so serious in Its corollaries. The latest real answer to Miss Mayo, also printed In Lahore, though from an American pen, has caused the actual arrest and Incarceration of two Hindoo thinkers who caused Its publication, and they are languishing In Jail as sedltlonlsts. Dr. J.

T. Sunderland, the author, lives In Poughkeepsle. He Is not well known in America, and the assumption that he was one of our younger hopefuls In the literary field was perhaps natural enough. Dr. Jabez Thomas Sunderland, as a matter of fact.

Is a Unitarian clergyman, 87 years old, who has spent many years of his life In India and was president of the All-India TheUtlo Conference of 1913. He is quoted as saying: If Chatterjee and Das are guilty of sedition for publishing my book, then Ramsay MacDonald, the British Premier, Colonel Wedgewood, Dr. V. H. Rutherford and other members of the British Parliament are also guilty.

For the extremist and the most seditious passages in the book are quotations from these great and honored Englishmen. Mr. MacDonald was quoted In the London Daily Herald of October 17, 1027, as declaring of India, "Nobody can Imagine that any harm will come from Independence. Let Independence be granted." But MacDonald out of power and MacDonald as Prime Minister are very, very distinct entities. evitabilities of Fate.

could not safely be thwarted. Such a nucleus only needs to strengthen Its will for peace to make unthink nant to employ a laborer In the flower garden only once a week and a maximum sum for the purchase of bulbs and roots, jyhich In no case would be exceeded. We would exact a pledgj of Mr. Jones and ourself to work in the garden only two afternoons a week and under no circumstances after dinner. This would Include watering the lawn.

Finally, we would Invite the Joneses to our house for a formal celebration of the signing of the pact, preceding the momentous event by a declaration that we have not and never have had any Intention of trying to keep up with them. And as a tangible token of our sincerity we would scrap the obsolescent lawn mower before their very eyes. Probably the North Carolina Federation of able war which, only 13 years ajo, Labor was wise in denying a hearing to the Gas was freely discussed as inevitable. tonla radicals, though expressing its sympathy with the textile strikers. The persons indicted for murder are not helped but hurt by violent verbal assault on the Judiciary of the Tar Heel Good Plowing, a Lost Art lOh.o Sum Journal.) Visits to the farm always are In tcrcsting If made durinj the spring State.

To be saved from their friends should mutatis mutandis, like the previous be the fervent prayer of the prisoners. generation for that which is now the older generation? Miss Scott may be a trifle epigrammatic, but she Is not at all original Nor Is 1 The relation between the Baumes Law and the desirability of paying policemen more may not be clear to the average citizen, but it is clear enough to the police. They know that their lives are more In peril than ever before when plowing Is under way and tho fields are being made ready lo-planting. Those who know aaricul-ture apprecate the Importance of good plowing and understand Its relation to successful farming. There are sections were many farms must be visited before good plowing is Optimism.

Disarmament Baltimore Ivenlnf Bun.) Now, If neighbors were nations, we would go to the Joneses and tell them that we have ordered a new six-cylinder car and are contemplating an electric refrigerator, but are ready to cancel the orders if they will do the same with their proposed vacuum cleaner and electric washing machine. We would inform them that while Mrs. Jones appears to have more evening gowns than are essential to her needs we are content to let her havo them in View of the fact that her arjument to the effect that she has more invitations to dinner than we have fairly reasonable, on the other hand, we would maintain that our wife ha a right to an equivalent In sports clothes. All that seems necessary to this areemciit would be the finding of a suitable yardstick by which to measure evening gowns against sports dothe, which mattr might bo left to the technicians to wit, Mrs. Jones and our wife.

We aould propose to the Joneses that formal dinners consist of three emirses and that if soup ii served salad may be omitted; if salad 1 served, that soup bo omitted. We would siiKgcst the appointment of a committee to discuss the advisability of mixing peanuts with the almonds. We would urga the llmltlnj of drinks to one round for the ladles rnd two for the men, these measurements to be ma'da without taking into account the Increased volume of liquid due to the melting of the lce. and absolutely nothing to be served after dinner. We would suggest a solemn cove there anything alarming In the picture she paints.

As humanity progresses, slowly, there must of necessity be changes; but Itself does not change in Its elemental principles, and the old foundations stand. and any occupation's hazard la an element In fixing remuneration. found. There are other sections where careless plowers ore rare, Embargoed Products. Secretary SMmson, who views the diplomatic representations of a number of foreign governments on the subject of our tariff changes as simple statistical exercises and not as protests, might say that Argentina has made no com-r'aint as to what La Prcnsa of Buenos Aires tails a campaign against the admission Into the United S'ates of Argentine beef.

La Prensa, nevertheless, voices dissatisfaction. It finds evidence of efforts not only to exclude Argtntlne beef from the United States as likely to spread the hoof and mouth disease in this country, but of campaigns against the admittance cf Argentine fruit and of alialfa seed from the pumpas. The liability of agricultural uid atock imports to Introduce animal and plant utMasr no doubt lends those seeking the ex-iluMon of such Imports the opportunity to play up tcare now and then. Perhaps the best In-dlrattcn of good faith in cmburgoes on this sort of products lies in the domestic embargo iwently Imposed SRalnst some of the products nf Klrida on acrount of infection by the fruit fly. Florida grow em, mho have suffered heavily, tiemtni trait the Federal Government reimburse thriii for the losses that the embargo has brought.

But Just at one may reason from that tti domestic embargo lend likelihood of laith to cmbargoet on foreign fuod p.ud- Striking coolies at Apia Illustrate the resent where each field shows the goo work done. Unless plowing Is done properly the field will not be in A First-Class Idea (Detroit News. I Wo are considering having to do with the Chinese-Russian readiness for producing the beit re ment over the British transfer of the Samoa "mandate" to New Zealand. Coolies do not prefer dnitts to drink, but something to soften their hard fate Is essential. What makes them furious is the most wretched form of dissipation.

dispatches until they number the players. By John Alden. That Nature ha a purpose fine, With use for everything Mosquitoes, snakes and poisoned wine Borne poets say or sing; And there is no exception in The case of rank synthetic gin. A courtroom down in Washington, Where seized are many Jugs, Is using this, worse drugs to shun, Exterminating bugs Which caves some men from parlous sin In drinking this synthetic glo Yei. Nature has a purpose for The vermin and the dope; And optimism seems to score Two points to bolster hope Weak humans on reform beglnf Bugs die from this synthetic Burkesvllle, which claims to be the oldest Sav ings Here and Elsewhere.

Deposit In the Postal Savings system Jumped by some four millions In July, gaining by nearly 3 percent in a single month, and reached their highest recent total. This showing suggests a decrease Of confidence in other repositories for savings, a feeling In which the public of New York State are not involved. The greater part of the Increase In Postal Savings deposits was scored In Florida, where banks have lately supcnded payment In considerable number. A suspension in New Jersey, appears also to have prompted a considerable 6wltch of deposits to the Postal rystem In a limited area in New Jersey. New York has fortunately the must highly That's So (Philadelphia Inquirer.) You have probably noticed, as we English-speaking settlement in Illinois, has Just suits.

Good plowing is the first step In successful crop production. Good plowing is very much of a lost art, according to E. A. Silver, agricultural engineer at Ohio State University, who has been studying work on the farms for many year, lie has found an abundance of work done by those who hand! the plow, as an englnrer he know? the value of good plowing and hit urged It to the attention of farmer consistently. He sees in Hie tractor an improvement In plowing, but 1' hve, that nearly ail of these filers gone out of business as a town and sold Its Jail and town hull at auction.

It had only 30 houses who stay In the air a long time are married. and 63 Inhabitants. Other settlements of non English-speaking In the same State mill tlply, replenish the earth and are prosperous. The birth rate counts for something even In Old Stuff fOreland Plain Dealer 1 Money hard to get. wiys the flnan puc.

Is that news? the Sucks State, i.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

Pages Available:
1,426,564
Years Available:
1841-1963