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The Alamance gleaner 1 VOL. LV. - GRAHAM, IS, C., THURSDAY JUNE 20, 1929. NO. 20. * ? - v 1 DOINGS OF THE WEEK NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENTEVENTS Ramsay MacDonald Coming to Washington for World Peace Conference. By EDWARD W. PICKARD RAMSAY MACDONALD, new prime minister of Great Britain, is planning to come to the United States to confer with President Hoover, In regard to naval armament re daction and enforcing the Kellogg pact outlawing war by Joint action of the English speaking peoples. In Washington the news of this plan was well received, and it was learned at the White House that Mr. Hoover would be glad to meet Mr. MacDonald and discuss with him questions of mu tural interest to their two countries. American Ambassador Dawes, on his way to England, was apprised of this development by radio and almost im mediately after his arrival in London he went to Scotland for a conference with the prime minister who was tak ing a ten days' vacation at his home in Lossiemouth. Mr. Dawes was ex pected to deliver to Mr. MacDonald an Invitation to visit Washington and hold there a conference with Presi dent Hoover and Prime Minister Mac kenzie King of Canada. The best guess in London was that the trip would be made about the end of July after the session of parliament ad journs. According to London corespond ents, Mr. MacDonald said: "If Presi dent Hoover invites me to Washing ton I am going to answer 1 will go.' 1 shall hope to settle this question of Anglo-American relations once and for all." It was asserted he hopes to carry the discussion much further than naval subjects. He believes the world is entering on an era of great industrial and financial combines whose boundaries will cat across all national frontiers, and he is desirous ?f a discussion on economic co-opera tion and avoidance of cut throat com petition In foreign markets. Mr. Mac Donald, as a Socialist, welcomes the welding of Industry Into trusts and sees no objection to the spread of trusts in the international field nnder proper governmental control. JUST when It appeared that the farm relief bill as doctored np by the honse and senate conferees and approved by the President had clear tailing, the senate messed things all op by rejecting the conference report by a vote of 43 to 46 because the ex port debenture feature had been elim inated. In this step the Democrats were joined by 13 Republicans, all Usted as radicals except Couzens of Michigan. The debenture advocates not only stood by their scheme, but they were especially determined to force the bouse to go on record on this feature of the measure. President Hoover Immediately called leaders of the house and senate to the White House and a program was agreed upon. This was to send the Mil back to conference as the senate asked, and to have the conferees agree on their original report, after which It was expected the honse would reject the debenture plan by a comfortable margin and accept the conference report. There appeared to be no doubt that the senate also would adopt the report of the conference after the honse had rejected the de benture by a vote of 250 to 113. The most Interesting feature of the affair was the outspoken threat of 8enator Brookbart of Iowa that a third or "progressive" party wonld enter Into the congressional campaign aext year and the Presidential cam paign of 1932 If the debenture were not Included In either the farm bill or the new tariff bill. He asserted the President rather than the senate was to blame for delays In obtaining farm legislation. Tariff hearings were begun by the aenate finance committee, and Senator Wealey Jones told the senate this work should be speeded up with a view to completing the enactment of the legislation early In the fall, and there fore congress should recess for only ? brief time. Bat Senator Wataon, majority leader, expreased the belief that the tariff bill could not be Anally acted upon until J oat before the reg ular December session. OIGNATURE of the Toung plan for ^ German reparation! payment! by the aeren Interested nations la baring speedy result In the way of settling other post-war problems The coun cil of the League of Nations met In Madrid, and the Germans carried out their plan of bringing before It the matter of early eraeuatlon of the Rhlneland. Arlstlde Brland, French foreign minister, proposed that an In ternational conference be held this summer for the handling of all out standing questions left orer from the war, and this was agreed to by Dr. Gustav Sireaemann, German minister of foreign affairs. Prime Minister MacDonald of Great Britain already had Intimated that he was willing to participate In such a meeting. It was generally believed that the conference would be held In July, probably In London or The Hague. It had been supposed that the coun cil at this Madrid session would take up the vexatious question of national minorities, but 8tresemann insisted It should be referred to the World Court at The Hague. This was strongly op poged by Briand and the representa tives of the secession states, and a compromise was reached by which the matter eras held over for the Septem ber session of the League assembly. French Socialists in convention at Nancy declared in favor of the Toung reparations plan, evacuation of the Rh$ieland and Immediate ratlflsatlon of the Mellon-Be ranger accord tgr the payment of the French debt to the United States. Certain of the United States senators led by Howell of Ne braska have attacked the Toung plan ss "another move by the allies and the International bankers" to cancel not only the war debts but also the In terest on the allied obligations to Amqdca. Administration leaders and State department officials asserted nothing In the Toung settlement would affeft the war debts owed the United Stares. J. P. Morgan, one of tbe American experts, declared on arrival In Ntw York that the bank for Inter national settlements, to be established under the Toung plan, would be the greatest Instrument for tbe preserva tion of world peace yet devised. PRESIDENT HOOVER, because be used to be secretary of commerce, was especially Interested la the cere mony of laying the cornerstone of the magnificent new Department of Com merce building. Surrounded by many other high government officials, he wielded the trowel that was used by President Washington In laying the cornerstone of the Capitol 136 years ago, and In his address he said the etent marked (he emergence of the Commerce department Into full ma turity and service. The building will be the largest single public structure in Washington and In its actual floor space will be the largest office build ing In the world. It Is to be the most Important structure In the gov ernment's $115,000,000 program for public buildings In the city of Wash ington. NEARLY every day the quick shooting enforcers of prohibition furnish more ammunition for the foes of Volsteadlsm. Last week they killed an apparently Innocent dtlxen at In ternational Falls, Minn., and a young man at Detroit whose companions ad mit he.and they had been trying to run a boatload of liquor from Can ada. tbys In congress took the op portunity to denounce the activities of prohibition officers and Representa tive Clancy of Michigan demanded an Investigation of the Detroit case, bnt after a trip to that dty he said the shooting was Justified. Representa tive Florence Kahn of California In troduced a bill In the house directing the treasury to pay $23,000 to the dependents of every person "wanton ly or negligently killed by any pro hibition officer not acting In self de fense." Other congressmen urged that the treasury forbid the nse of firearms by dry agents, but 8eymour Lowman. assistant secretary of the treasny In charge of all prohibition enforcement ageodes, said this could not be done. He declared that agents "T bad been cautioned for more than a year against reckleaa use of 11 rearms, and that he did not see what more coold be done to prevent killing# without crippling enforcement. Two offlcers of HopUnsvllle, Ky., who were convicted for killing a man In a prohibition raid were denied a new trial by Federal Judge Dawson In Louisville. In 8ilver City, N. M.. a dry agent Induced a bootlegger to sell him liquor and the latter was shot by other agents as he wns making the delivery. Angered by the dry raid at Rlpon, Wis., daring the celebra tion of the Republican party's sev enty-flfth birthday. Assemblyman La moreaux of Ashland county Introduced a resolution asking the federal gov ernment ito desist from attempting to enforce the Eighteenth amendment In the Badger state. About the same time dry; agents raided the favorite drug store of Wisconsin's wet legisla tors In Ifadlson. Ur. Lowman has ordered heavy re inforcements for the dry enforcers of the Detroit area. In the way of both men and boats. In response to this the big rum runners of the Oreat Lakes met In Ecorse and laid plans to operate in unison. They adopted a shuttle system whereby truffle will be diverted to Lake Erie or Lake Huron when the enforcers are concentrated on the Detroit river, and they, also have devised an elab orate intelligence system and began buying larger and better boats. These are just a few of the wet and dry developments that take up vast space In the columns of the metro politan dallies. T TNLESS all lndlcatlona are wrong, peace between Mexico'* government and the Bqman Catholic church will be declared; In the near future. Arch blahop Ruiz of Mlchoacan and Blahop Pascual Diaz of Tabaaco held confer ence* with' President Portes Gil In Chapultepec castle as the climax of long negotiations, and there was good reason to believe they arrived at an understanding which would need only the approval of the Pope. In well Informed quarters In Mexico City it was asserted the basis of the agreement was mutual consent for a broad Interpretation of the country's religious laws, both sides making con cessions. THREE United States district judges sitting en banc In Chicago found the Standard Oil Company of Indiana and fifty-one associated con cerns guilty of violating the Sherman antitrust act by pooling their so called "oil cracking" processes. The decision wlflch granted the govern ment a permanent Injunction restrain lng the defendant companies from fur ther violations of the law, came after more than four years' litigation. In the original suit, filed In 1925, the government claimed the defendants conspired to restrain trade and cre ate a monopoly by refusing lndepend ent concerns' the right to use their Burton "cratklflg" process, used tc extract gasoline from crude oil. In defense the Standard of Indiana held that the profess had been of vast benefit to consumers and had mate rlally lowered the price of gasoline THREE Swedish aviators started to fly from Stockholm to New York but a broken gas feed pipe forced them to land on the coast of Ice land. They got their plane to Reyk Javik and last week made three at tempts to fly from there to Green land but were driven back each time by rough weather. The aviators Ahrenburg, Floden and Ljunglund are trying to establish a new all trade routs between Europe and America. GALVESTON'S International "pag eant of pulchritude" came to at end with the awarding of the title "Miss Universe^ to Frauleln Llsl. Gold arbelter of Vienna, Austria, the yoon* governess being adjudged the most beautiful of all the contestants. MIsi Irene A hi berg of New York wai named "Miss United States." The af fair did not come off without a smaL scandal, for Tfeeda Ddrey, "Miss Tul ?a," who was selected for ninth prize was accused of being really the "Miss Houston" of two years ago and therefore Ineligible as a former con testant Macaws Given as Proof of Columbus' Discovery When Christopher Columbus re turned in triumphs! procession to Bar eel on a. in the spring of 1403. the (old which be brought from his "India" was of greatest Interest to Ferdinand and Isabella. They laughed at the ahrleks and antics of bis 40 parrots, but it was these birds which aided in latter-day proof that Columbus had in reality galled to a new world. The gold piece* which meant nothing, now are museum *hxh I bits. The Department of Agriculture would like to add a rep resentattte of the race of parrota to lt( museum lore, bat the birds hare vanished. They were known to orni thologist! of later years as Cuban macaw* and were to be found no where In the world except In eastern Cabs and In a few of the other West Indies. The historians of the day cited these Cuban macaws as proof that Cotum bos had discovered a western toota to India. Pletro Martlre d'Anghlera. Ital las humanist at the court or Castile loot a doubter of Columbus' claims, waa coDTtnced by the parrots. "These parrots brought from there," ho wrote, "show that either by pro plnqulty or nature the Islands are a port of India. They nourish popinjays, of which some aro green, some yellow and some like those of India with yel low rings about their seeks as Pliny describes them." Records show no Cuban macaws bars bean seen tor half a century. II 111 11 I I I I IHI 11 I I I I IIII I V THE OLD i! JAPANESE CABINET M 11111111111111111111111- ? (? by O. J. WaUh.) SALLIB stood at tbe end of the long winding drive uncertainly. After all, why should she go up there to that boose on the side of the hlUT She was not on calling terms with Mrs. Frazler. Indeed, the only time she had ever been within the house was tbe day that there bad been a parent-teachers' meeting there. And as for Mrs. Frazler's son. Rod Frazler?well, Saiile's cheeks burned even now as she thought of him! Horrible boor I True, be didn't look like a boor, nor yet did be act like one to anyone else. Bnt with her? Bailie shrugged and walked on two or three steps. After reaching the end of tbe grounds, though, she turned back res olutely. After all, pettiness or being "little" about things was something that Sallle despised, and what differ ence did It make bow polite or oth erwise Rod Frazler might bel But as she climbed the steep path to the hillside house she could not help remembering the way be bad acted about the party. All the teach ers bad been asked to attend tbe party. "Rod, you can take Sallle Piper," Marjorle Gray had said when they bad been planning who should go with whom. "That'll fix us all up flnel" And Sallle bad waited for Rod to apeak to her about going wltb him, had waited one day, two days, three days?a week I As the time for the party came near ahe wondered wheth er or not be had meant Marjorle Gray's words to stand aa an Invita tion. That might be the strange cus tom out In this little town where she had come to teach the kindergarten 1 If It were the custom. Sallle thought wryly. It was not to ber liking at all I But when the evening of the party arrived Sallle bad beard nothing from Rod. It was well along after eight o'clock that be rang the bell where she bearded and bronght with him a beautiful five-pound box of candy, tied wltb gay red ribbons and sealed with gold seals. Nonchalantly be bad sat down and they had talked of ev erything, It seemed to Sallle. under the sun moon?except the party. And to that he made no reference. And because she had not gone to the party, none of the other teachers In the school talked of It to ber, al though she saw much leas of those other teachers than they saw of one another, and this was because her little youngsters were dismissed at eleven o'clock Instead of twelve and at the hour of three Instead of four. Time bad passed since this party, but Sallle's face yet flamed when she thought about It I "I saw the notice, Mrs. Frailer," she said, when she sat wltb Rod's mother In the long living room, "about the selling of your household furni ture. lou're not going to part with that Japanese cabinet, are you?" Mrs. Frailer nodded without speak ing for a moment Then she replied: "Everything Is to be sold, my dear. The house has already been sold and we are moving to the cltyl" "Oh!" sad Sallle. "I'm sorry!" "And I, too," said Mrs. Frailer, wltb a smile that seemed Infinitely sad to Sallle. "The truth Is, my dear," she said with a little rush of words that seemed to surprise even herself, "some Investments have turned out miserably and Rod can earn a great deal more In the dry, and so?we're going there, you see. Were you Inter ested in buying that Japanese cabi net?" she asked merrily. "Ah, no!" said Sallle. "There Is nothing I should love to have more than that My uncle, you know, was the head of the anthropology depart ment at the university and he went to Japan every year. Twice he took me with blm when I was In my 'teens and I wondered?It Is probably pre sumptions of me to question your knowledge on things Japanese?If you realised the great value of that cab uiei i Mrs. Frazler shrugged: "I know lit tle about anything In the house. Sal lie. The honae belonged to my grand father and when It came down to my mother and then to me, ererythlng waa Joat na It la now. It'a a pretty enongh cabinet, but?" with a frank langb. "I hate dueling all that earr ing I Old Mr. Jenklna haa made an offer of tlS. but the auctioneer aaked roe to leare ererythlng aa It atood un til the day of the auction and ao I aball do that If you want the cabi net. though?" "Fifteen dollare!" echoed Sallle. "Ill be glad to put In any bid you wanted to make If It la auctioned off la school hours," continued Mrs. Fra aler. "But It la worth well up Into the thousands." aald Sallle. aghast. "If yon want me to hare Uncle Tom's friend come out to appraise It he could come and perhaps could get a buyer (or It who will pay something approximating tti worth." "Thousands 1" repeated Mrs. Fra iler. "Why grandfather was eery well oft financially, but 1 bad uo Idea be would pay anything like tbat?" And In the end they telephoned long distance to the friend of ber nncle and be promised to come out on the evening train. "Rod has gone Into the city to see about a position with one of the banks there. The position he has here pays so very little"?Mrs. Frailer broke oft with a little slgb?"and now I shan't hare to eat my dinner alone, for, of course, you'll stay with me until your uncle's friend comes." And when Exeter Mills arrlred It took him but little time to seek out the Japanese cabinet. Adjusting bis glasses he examined It silently, while Mrs. Frailer and Sallle looked on anx iously. When Rod came In quietly with downcast face Mrs. Frailer put ber fingers to ber lips. "Came out on the night train," Rod explained, and then was silent. Of a sudden the white-haired man bending over the Japanese cabinet made a little sound, an Inward hiss ing of breath. Standing well forward on the balls of his feet, he pressed the thumbs of bis bands on two of the protruding bits of carving which Mrs. Frailer bad so resented having to dust. Because It had not opened for so many years the piece of wood moved but slowly. Finally, though, there was revealed to their amaxed eyes a bit of Japanese brush work tbat even to an amateur was the ex quisite work of an artist. "Kanaoka?a Japanese artist who lived In the Ninth century?ab I" mur mured Exeter Mills swaying from left to right to get the full value of the picture. "Ton are willing to part with this, from what Sallle told me over the , telephone?" he said to Mrs. Frailer. Mrs. Frailer nodded. i "I am chairman of the purchasing i committee for the museum," said Exeter Mills, not taking bis eyes from I the picture tbat the Japanese cabinet i had so surprisingly revealed to them, i "I can't make a definite offer tonight 1 ?I must talk with the committee, of I course, but will you place a price on I this. If yon please?" be said, drawing i bis eyes with great effort from the picture to look directly at Mrs. Fra- ? iter. < "She doesn't know the value of It, Mr. Mills," cut In Sallle. "If you will c appraise It?that would be best, Mrs. < Frailer?" 1 Mrm. Frazler nodded. -If $15,000 will be satisfactory." be gan Sir. Mills. "And 1 very nearly took $15!" said Mrs. Frazler, both laughing and cry ing at once. "Why, we needn't leave at all. Rod I We can stay here?oh, Sallle knows of onr financial difficul ties. 1 told her this afternoon I" "Ab, yon did I" said Rod slowly. And while Mr. Mills and Mrs. Fra zler talked of the Chinese cabinet Sal lle was listening to Rod: "I knew you'd wonder about that party," he hnrrled to explain. "Ion see. the moths got Into my only decent suit and the party Is so formal 1 t?1 couldn't got" be ended with a laugh. "And I couldn't ask you to go!" And Sallle was suddenly glod that she had not let a misunderstanding deter her from speaking of the value of the Japanese cabinet "And you'll go with me next time?" said Rod. 'Tour hoose Is already sold!" coun tered Sallle. "The man will be glad to sell It to ns again. Fie bought It to rent not to live In. Oh. we'll be here all right" said Rod. i "Well. If I'm here," Sallle said slow ly. "Oh. youll be here all right I" re turned Rod. Someway or other Sallle knew that she would be, tool ' a Leaving Periods It Is believed by most authorities ' that the custom of making ground u leases for ninety-nine years started " after the passage of an old English c law providing that leases for 100 years " or more were to be regarded by coorts 11 as a sale. The law wan evaded by b drawing leases for ninety-nine years. " In Massachusetts a ground lease Is n dealt with lu the law ns a purchase, ft but In most states there Is no limit n on the period of a lease. a Th Favorite a According to a poll taken recently 1 by a musical magazine, "Abide With 0 Me." la the favorite hymn both here and In America. It was written by a ' clergyman an hour or so before he 8 died.?London Tlt-Blts. " t' World Listens to Critics * The opinion of the great body of the '' reading public la very materially In- 1 flnenced even by the oniuptmrted as- * aertlon of those who assume to crltldae.?Macaulay. " _____________ b Not Eaactly ' "1 wasn't exactly hazed." remarked c a prominent fnllback. home from col lege for a holiday, "but they made me study."?Detroit Newt. f Mrens?/Burma Bre Girl* of the Burma Highland*. (Prepared by the National Oeotrraphlo 8oclety. Washington. D. C.) ALTHOUGH the majority of the Burmese have a well-developed civilization, there are hill trlhea la Burma whose members are strikingly primitive. Most of tbera are classed as Bed or White Karens. In the old days the Red Karen sever went out without dha (sword) >nd gun. and In addition had a small iheaf of spears or rather Javelins. Sow, the guns remain at home, only :o be used when there Is a death In he Tillage. They are fired then to icare away the disembodied spirit. All the dead are looked upon as evil nlnded or, at all events, malevolent iharacters, best driven away. The Karen spears have vanished so tompletely that the hunter nfter ?urlos has difficulty In getting them. They are of a very distinctive charac er, sharpened on one side only, like a rnlfe-blade, with a male bamboo shaft hat had a spike at the butt, so that he owner could stick It In the ground chen he was hoeing his fields or cut Ing his crops, and be ready for uny it ranger. Itut the Bed Karen remains a heavy Irlnker. liarly prospectors for teak orests user) to sny that a genuine \aren-nl never went abroad without aklng a hamhoo on his hnck. from vhlrh a tube led to his mouth. Ap parently they could carry their liquor ;hen, Inside and out. In addition to their liking for spirits From the still, the Red Karens are de rot ees of the spirits of the air, the loot! and the fell. Latterly a few have >eeome nominal Buddhists, and some rave even founded monasteries and rullt pagodas, but none of them give ip their belief In nnts, to use the Dormese word for spirits. urnamente or Hriu. The Karen's Idea of ornamentation teems to Western eyes to make for tnythlng but comfort. Thejr wear treat colls of brass wire and brass ods on their arms and legs. The cngtb of these colls seems only Uni ted by the space available or the abll ly of the household to pay for the rod, or brass Is very expensive. The total weight carried by the aver ge woman Is SO or 00 pounds, and 1 ere and there some manage as much s 70 or even 80. Rurdcned with this weight, they ho# he flelni, carry water for domestic se. and go long distances to village larkets to sell liquor. They brew a rest deal of very fiery stuff and sell t to most of their neighbors, carrying I In flagons made of woven strips of amhoo lacquered over with wood-oil, nd dispensed In goblets of the same lanufncturo. The cups are of most cnerous sire. They hold about half pint, and those not trained to It usu lly become noisy after one. Tho brass-collar fashion does not ecm to affect the women's health, 'her# are plenty of active old crones mong them and families of eight or en are qulto common. The only no Iceable effect Is that the women speak a If some one had them tight around he neck. They wear colored scarfs wisted Into the hair, jumper coots rhlch slip over the head, have a fash ir.oble V-shnped front and back, nnd ery short sleeves, with occasionally little embroidery. The skirts are like kilts, stopping hove the knee and striped red and lue. The necklaces are of the usual ind. with cornelians and other stones, oins and heads. Ons Clsn of Good Farmers. The Kekawngdu clsn occupies a tract overlng, perhaps, 150 square miles. ' They are zealous agriculturists. Every available nook ot the valley Is ter raced for Irrigation, which Is carried out with great skill and eye for con tour. They grow a good deal of cot ton and make their clothes of U. The overage height of their country Is be tween 3,000 and 4,000 feet, with peaks rising to S.00U. Their roads are well aligned, rairly broad, and mucb used, and are considered very good by tbose who have traveled over bill-roads, though a bicycle would bave to be car ried for three miles In every four. Pack bullocks are kept and caravans go down to Toungoo on the railway. On the whole, they may be said to be the best of the bill races In this neigh borhood. and they have great gams drives with trained dogs. Some authorities have doubts as to whether they are Karens and want to place them in the Uon-bkmer group. Their language, however, has many similarities with Taungthu. Some distance to the north of the Padaung country?with the small Red Karen State of Nawngpalal interven ing?Is the Ere tract. Their country Is of a different char acter from that of the Padaungs. It Is a much more emphatic Jumble of hills, very high and steep, with exceed ingly narrow valleys In between. The dress of the Bre men Is more distinctive than that of the Padaungs. They wear a pair of very short trou sers, striped red and white, and tied ot the waist with a bit of string. A blanket of coarse cotton serves for a coat, and their long block hair Is tied into a knot. Just over the right temple, and the rest, apparently never combed, hongs over the shonlders and face. On their legs they wear cotton cir clets below tbe knee, with brass rings to keep the colls apart. Many of them also wear necklets or torques of Dm.**. The dress of the women varies for the three croups, but the differences are not great. The chief garment Is s gaberdine called thlndalng by the Bur mese, perhaps more like a poncho, since It Is slipped over the head, and has either rudimentary sleeves or none at all. They also wear a short klrtle which reoches within a hand's breadth of the knee, but some dispense with this. It Is red and blue In stripes. Decorations of the Bre People. |> i The women In the northern section] of the Bre tract have brass tubing J colled round Ihe leg from the ankle to the knee, and from above the knee to half way up the thigh. The south ern Bre women have to content them selves with cotton colls Instead of brass. Both wear large brass hooks or torques round the neck, and enor mous earplugs are fixed through the lobes of the ears. They have no head-dress, and their hair, which Is unkempt as that of the men. Is tied In a knot at the back of the head. They marry very early?the girls at about thirteen, the youths at fifteen wears of age. ? It Is an easy matter to determine whether or not a man has a wife. The onmarrled wear pebble necklaces which have been banded down from father to son for generations. Some of them are valued at r>0 rupees, which Is wealth for these hills. Besides these, large brass rings en circle the man's neck, bang from the ears, and are Inserted In tltp cotton garters on his legs. The northern Bre bachelor adds to these ornaments a twister) bamboo hand round the bead, studded with mother-of-pearl shirt buttons or small red and green beads, as a sort of setting to the shards at large green beetle* " * ,
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
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June 20, 1929, edition 1
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