About The Fayetteville news. (Fayetteville, Ga.) 18??-???? | View Entire Issue (April 14, 1922)
’— 1 - J l • " FAYETTEVILLE NEWS, FAYETTEVILLE, GEORGIA. healthy and we are a happy family now* — LouU Gingras { abundant energy, appetites hearty, * ffflllff* M| Dr. Walter Franklin Prince of the American Institute for Scientific Re search, who went to Antigonish, Nova Scotia, to investigate the ghostly vlslta- lmpresarh was takei i up his art anti he has something will require his tlnu ... i of Paderewski is being day of th day of th ids office month gt taking a calendars would be lr relationship to thi be the something o: ’People Hold Sesquicentennial Exposition in 1926 Victor Rosewater has been ap pointed by Major Moore of Philadel phia assistant to the president of the Sesquicentennial Exhibition associa tion and has accepted the position. In short Mr. Rosewater is to be press agent for the Philadelphia celebration of the one hundred and fiftieth anni versary of the Declaration of Inde pendence. The salary is $7,600 and the publicity work will be on a big scale. Mr. Rosewater was formerly editor and publisher of the Omaha Bee. He Is one of the well-known public men of the United States, with a long list of varied services. During the war he was administrator for Ne braska of the paper and pulp section of the war industries board and was a member of the committee on labor of the advisory commission of the council of national defense. He was a delegate at large to the Republican national convention of 1008 and mem ber of the Republican national committee 1908-12. He has been a special lec turer of economic finance at the Universities of Nebraska and Wisconsin. He has done much literary work including ‘‘Special Assessments—a Study in Mu nicipal Finance" (1898). _ , Mr. Rosewater was especially educated for the newspdber business. At Columbia he took three degrees: Ph. B., 1891; A. M., 1892; Ph. D., 1893. Ills personality is pleasing. Altogether he should set a new publicity record. He certainly has an Interesting theme. The first continental congress met In Phil adelphia In 1774 and the second in 1775, In the state house. There, on June 15, Washington was appointed commander In chief. July 4, 1776, congress adopted the Declaration of Independence. At this time Philadelphia was reputed the finest city in America. JUUJ,, ,n ii mini untiliii hi ii 11 ii■ Cook, Peary, North Pole and “Justice” iJJJ ff u i ii in i m i i ii i Red Men Have Occult Sect “Dreamers” of Yakima Tribe Had Gospel Much Like Gandhi in India Today. Dr. Frederick A. Cook has an nounced that lie will seek official and public recognition as the real discov erer of the North Pole. The recent finding of his missing field notes and Instruments in the Arctics seems to strengthen his claim, and he expects before long that the mutter will be brought to the attention of congress, which he hopes will formally credit him with the discovery by voting him a mednl. Newspapers recently carried the story of the finding of Cook’s field notes In a buried Igloo, and the rec ords therein, bearing his signature, showed where Cook had been. It was because he was unable to pro duce these records in 1909 that the world refused to believe his story. Cook snid he had left these records and Instruments with Harry Whltne.' at Etnh, Greenland. Dr. Cook claims to have reached the Pole on April 21, 1908, about a yeur earlier uiun Admiral Peary, ueo graphical societies accepted Peary’s records, and Cook practically had none to offer. After Cook was branded as a faker he roamed all over the world, try ing to hide himself. Cook finally went to Fort Worth, Tex., where for the last few years he has been Interested in oil production. Now he has addressed large gatherings and has been cheered. Dr. Cook blames what he terms “the navy clique" for turning him down and recognizing Peary. He says all he wants now Is justice. Cotsworth, Inventor of New Calendar insumuee companies, whose But at the same time our The Fourth of July would be fourtli nor July. Here’s a photograph of Moses B. Cotsworth of Vancouver, B. C. He’s the man who gets the credit for In venting the new calendar which con gress may—or may not—adopt. The bill of Representative Schall of Min nesota, which would create by legis lation a year of thirteen months, each of precisely 28 days, with New Year’s for the odd day, offers certain ad vantages which will please the seek- for the perfect calendar. A given of the week, for example, would always fall on the same day of the month. Blue Monday and collection could be made to coincide. Fri day would always fall on the thir teenth If we made Sunday the first of the month as well as the first of the week. One could stay the last Saturday of getting out bills Instead of a half holiday. And so on. saving would be made valid year after year, the past would be put all awry, of something else, neither the MYTHS SHOW POETIC QUALITY Yakimas Recently Assured by Federal Authorities They May Fish and Pick Berries for Ten Years More Without Interference. Washington.—As they would put it, the wise men of the Children of the Narrows have been assured by the Great White Father that their tribe may fish, dig roots and pick berries for ten more summers without interfer ence from palefaces. Technically, the Yakima Indians, of Shahaptlan stock, have been granted freedom of their reservation, in Wash ington state, for ten more years, with out acceptance of any duties and priv ileges of American citizenship. “Some 1,300 of the Yakimas thus are assured the untrammeled freedom of their tribal customs,” explains a bulletin from the Washington head quarters of the National Geographic society. “Thus not only are these In dians made happy, but the friends of the Red man will be given further op portunity to study one of the more primitive groups of American abo rigines, who have not been spoiled by a too sudden Imposition of the white man’s civilization. Derisive Name Stuck. “The Yakimas take their name from a derisive nickname, meaning ‘runa ways,’ applied by other tribes; and they have given this name to the Yakima river along which they live. They call themselves ‘Waptallmln,’ meaning ‘Children of the Narrows,’ in reference to the narrows of that river, less poetically designated Union Gap on the maps. “Tribal customs among all the Shahaptians, to which linguistic family the Yakimas belong, are similar, Th,e Shahaptians ranged over what now is northeastern Oregon and southwest Idaho as well as in Washington. “Offshoots of the Shahaptlan stock included, the Nez Perces, the ‘pinched- nose men,’ whose leader, Joseph, won comparison with the march of Xeno phon’s Ten Thousand for his retreat after an attack upon white usurpers of ills ancient home lands in Oregon. “Smohnlla, ‘the preacher,’ founder of that mystic Indian hand known as ‘Dreamers’ also was Shahaptian. In the Columbia river region, near the present-day home of the Yakimas, he preached a gospel strikingly like that of Gandhi, leader of the non-co-op eration movement In British India to day. After wanderings In the deserts south to Mexico, during which he claimed to have visited the spirit world, he returned to counsel that In dians return to their native ways of living, decline Instruction or associa tion with white men, and above all follow their own gods. Chief Joseph embraced this faith, "Disputes over land in the Yakima reservation were made the occasion for a federal military Investigation of this sect In 1884. The salmon thanks giving, the berry festival and the ghost dances were reported upon, and seances marked by trances and bell ringing were found. “Today the Yakimas may roam at will over an area nearly as large as that of Rhode Island. The treaty by which this reservation, within the bend but not bordering the Columbia river, was set aside dates buck to the 1 ’50’s and included among its signa tories representatives of 13 other rem nant tribes of the Shahaptlan family. Myths Show Poetic Quality. "Primitive, without a system of clans or tendency toward agriculture, these tribes have a folk lore which often challenges the myths of Greece or Scandinavia, Where the Columbia now cascades its way through narrow defiles the Klickitats believed a nat ural bridge once spanned its waters. Two sons of their gods, they ex plained, quarreled to possess so fair a land. The two shot arrows to deter mine the land they should occupy. To one son fell the region of the present- day Yakimas and to the other the Willamette valley. “To insure peace between the peo ples the chief god raised high moun tains but, so they might be friendly, he threw a great stone bridge across the ‘Wanna’ (Columbia) river. This bridge the Indians called ‘Tamahna- wos,’ bridge of the gods. A witch woman lived on It and to her was en trusted all the fire in the world. After intercession with the chief of the gods she won permission to build a great fire on the bridge to which both tribes might come and light their fagots. This act so pleased the chief god that he transformed the witch woman Into a beautiful maiden. "No sooner did the two chiefs be hold her than they fell victims to her wondrous charm and set their people to battle so they might win her hand. Then the god was wrathful. He de stroyed the bridge. But so the maid and her lovers might be beautiful In death as In life he created three moun tains with snow-capped peaks. He who doubts tills tale may see these mountains for himself. Are they not beautiful, and are they not perpetu ally snow-crowned, as the god, Sagha- lie, decreed. "The white men call them Mount Hood, Mount St. Helens, and Mount Adams.” WAS SOLD FOR 35 CENTS This girl was sold for thirty-nve cents—but that was eighteen years ago, when she was a child of five; and she was sold to an American mis sionary nnd his wife. She is Kan En Vong, who was "bought" on the streets of Hang Chow by Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Sweet, Baptist missionaries. Later she was adopted by Rev. A. E. Harris of Philadelphia. She is now a music student at Oberlln college and she expects to study child psy chology and teaching at Columbia. For the last three years she has been run ning a kindergarten in Chinn. Paroled Criminals Commit Most Crime Chicago.—Seven out of every ten crimes of violence In Chicago are com mitted by crimlnnls who are out on bond, say police officials. The crooks at liberty on bond are the most vicious of all criminals, authorities declare, nnd some way to curb this evil Is to be sought. Wheat Leads in Farm Exports It Breaks Record in 1921, and for First Time Exceeds Shipments of Cotton. INCREASE IN CORN EXPORTS Pork and Pork Products, Including Lard, Follow Cotxon on the List— Many Commodities Show In crease Over 1920. Washington.—Wheat was king of American agricultural exports in 1921. An analysis of the 1921 exports of 32 of the principal agricultural prod ucts grown In the United States, made public by the Department of Agricul ture, shows that more wheat was ex ported during last year than in any preceding year in history of the coun try, and that for the first time the ex port value of wheat and wheat flour exceeded the value of cotton exports. Exports of corn in 1921, including cornmeal converted Into terms of corn, were larger than in any year since 1900. Since 1919 the United States has become an exporter of rice, the ex ports of 600,050,000 pounds in 1921 Ghost Scare Paderewski Next President of Poland? Is Ignace,. Jan Paderewski to be the next. president of Poland? A well-defined report is In circulation In Polish circles on the Pacific coast that he is about to come out of his political retirement and become a can didate for, the presidency of Poland at the June elections. According to this report something like a triumphal return to his native land is planned by friends of the father of the Polish republic and its first premier. No denial or confirmation of the report has come from the noted pianist at his almond orchard estate near Paso Robles, but Dr. H. W. Tape Pnso Robles is quoted as stating that Paderewski has refused “ “ ““ offer from a New York for a concert tour. This to indicate that the great musician has definitely given up as indicating that elBe In mind which That the return urged by no less a personage than Premier David Lloyd George of Great Britain Is the report current In the West tions that had driven Alexander Macdonald and family from their farm home, has reported that the mischievous pranks of Mary Ellen, adopted daughter of Alexander Macdonald, were responsible for most of the manifestations. The picture shows Dr. Prince and his party in sleighs with Inserts showing Mary Ellen and Alexander Macdonald being more than twenty times the average annual rice exports iu the five-year period, 1910 to 1914. Lxports and Values. The principal agricultural exports during 1021 and their declared values were: Wheat and wheat flour, $551,000,- 000; cotton, $534,000,000; pork and pork products, including lard, $240,- 000,000; leaf tobacco, $205,000,000; corn and cornmeal, $97,000,000; sugar, $49,000,000; rye, $44,000,000; con densed and evaporated milk, $38,000,- 000; cottonseed oil, $24,000,000; rice, $21,000,000, and barley, $21,000,000. Exports which showed an increase in quantity over 1920 were: Wheat, cotton, corn, rice, barley, pork and pork products, except bacon, oleo oil, cottonseed oil and cake, re fined sugar, green apples, eggs, to bacco, dried apples, dried apricots and dried prunes. Exports which showed a decrease In quantity were: Wheat, flour, rye and rye flour, oats, beef, bacon, butter and cheese, condensed milk, potntoes, hops, dried peaches and raisins. Wheat exports totaled 279,949,000 bushels, as compared with 218,287,000 bushels in 1920, but the value was $432,965,000 in 1921, ns compured with ■$596,975,000 in 1020, a decrease of more than $160,000,000. Exports of wheat flour were 16,- 800,000 barrels in 1921, with a de clared value of $117,696,000, as com pared with 19,854,000 barrels, valued at $224,472,000 exported in 1920. Cotton and Corn Exports. Cotton exports In 1921 totaled 6.678, 000 bales of 000 pounds each, with a declared value of $534,242,000, as com pared with 6,359,000 bales valued at $1,136,409,000 exported in 1920. Corn exports, including corn meal i converted into terms of corn, totaled 132,266,000 bushels valued at $96,506,- 000, as compared with 21,230,000 bush els valued at $33,932,000 exported in 1920. Imports of corn dropped from 7.784.- 000 bushels In 1920 to 164,000 bushels in 1921; rice Imports from 142,951,(XK) pounds to S3.S95.000 pounds. Cheese Imports inprensed from 15,994.009 pounds In 1920 to 26,866.000 pounds in 1921. Imports of eggs in the shell jumped from 1,709,000 dozen to 3,063,000 dozen. The department nsserts that an an alysis of American foreign trade is in complete without taking into account both quantity nnd value, for although exports of many lending agricultural products show a large increase in quantity declines in value have greatly offset the possible gain derived from increased quantity. T ingling with strong and steady am* - - ~ of perfect health, the entire family of Louis Gingras, 9 Har- rison Ave., Providence, R. I., are an eloquent tribute to the powers of Tanlac, the greatest family medicine the world has ever known. ' “I’ve put Tanlac to the test four times right in my own family and it hasn’t failed me once," declared Mr. Gingras. “My wife, my son and my daughter, as well as myself, have all been built up from a half-sick, run down, worn-out set of people into a healthy, happy family brimful of new life and energy.” And the experience of this family is only typical of thousands of others whose statements are on file In the Tanlnc offices. Hardly a day passes that does not bring scores of such mes sages of praise from every part of the United States and Canada from fami lies where mother, father, son and daughter have all found health, con tentment and the joys of living through simply taking a course of Tanlac. Take, for Instance, the case of John Wldner, 1571 Roosevelt Ave., Los An geles, Calif., who says: “My wife, my self and little boy ure now as healthy, happy family as you will ever see— and it’s all due to Tanlac.” Or thut of Mrs. John Marquis and her family oft sixteen living in Man chester, N. H., at 292 Belmont St., She says: “Tanlac has been the only medicine used in our house for two years and it has kept every one of the sixteen here in the best of health.” In Chicago, Frank R. Richards, of 441 South Wood St., writes: “We will never be without Tanlac In our house after the remarkable way It has built up my wife, my son and myself to where we are the very picture of health.” Representative of New York Is the case of Chas. E. Van dolt’s family, re siding at 129 Fourtli Ave., Albany. He says: “Every member of our family Is enthusiastic over Tanlac. It's certainly a medicine for all the family.” From far-away Canada comes this message: “My little girl, my son and myself are all enjoying splendid health now and Tanlac brought it all about.” Mrs. Bert Hewer, 193 East Avenue, Toronto, Ontario. “We call Tanlac The Family Medi cine’ here in our Virginia home, be cause It restored my mother and sister to perfect health, just the same as It has done me,” Is the enthusiastic statement of Mrs. J. F. Robertson, Danville, Va. And on through the list, men, women and children from every state In the Union and every province of Canada unhesitatingly come forward and tell In words ringing with sincerity of the wonderful benefits of health and hap piness that Tanlac has brought Into their homes that were formerly dark ened by the gloom of sickness, suffer ing and despair. And should yours be one of those homes where any member of the fam ily Is thin, run down and weakened from loss of appetite, caused by indi gestion and stomach troubles, you have at your very door the means that will no "doubt bring the sunshine of vigor ous health back into their lives and yours, just as it has done In so many thousands of other cases. Do not de lay. Get a bottle of Tanlac from your druggist today. He Knew the Kind. Two men were having a talk at din ner time one day and the health of a fellow workman’s daughter was the subject of the conversation. "Well," said Jack, “if Tom would send his lass up to the hospital on the hill she would be cured In a month." “Ah, hut," says Bob, "Is that a con valescent hospital?" “Oh, no," replied Jack; “it’s a cor rugated Iron one." Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, that famous old remedy for Infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria Honesty the Best. “I’m afraid dad will find out that we disobeyed him Inst night.” “The best way to keep him from finding out is to tell him. He never remembers anything.”—Nashville Ten nesseean. Folks and Flowers. Mrs. Kawler—Those new neighbors of ours must be rich, judging from the -clothes they wear. Mrs. Wyse—That’s a poor way to judge, my dear. Some of the most gorgeous flowers haven’t a scent— Boston Transcript. YOU CANNOT AFFORD To let your little hurts and ail ments get bad. Keep Vacher-Balm handy for Burns, Boils, Cuts, Corns, Piles, or Soreness anywhere. Ask your druggist. Avoid Imitations, —Advertisement. Evident. Ted—Is Tom henpecked? Ned—Judge for yourself. His wife went to the barber’s and left instruc tions as to how his lmlr was to be cut.—New York Sun. There Is a tendency to believe that the farther away apples are raised the better they are. WARNING! Say “Bayer” when you buy Aspirin. Unless you see the name “Bayer” on tablets, you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians over 22 years and proved safe by millions for Headache Colds Rheumatism Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain Accept only “Bayer” package which contains proper directions. Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets—Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. Aspirin U the trade nark of Barer Uannfacture of MonoaceUcacidester of Sallcrllcadd Grocer Shoots Self in Sleep. Emporia, Kan.—John B. Gunderson, a grocer, shot himself in tne chest dur ing the night while he was sleeping with a revolver under Ids pillow.'The sound of a shot awoke Gunderson, who found he had wounded himself. The grocer liad carried the gun tr lied with him to protect his store frmt. burglars. ICARDUI i The Woman’s Tonic * M 4 If 4