Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, April 07, 1929, Page 14, Image 14

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    f
PXTJE BIX
" STEDFOTtT) MXTTi TRTBUyE, SrEDFORTj- OftEfiOX. SUNDAY. A PHIL 7. 102P
fcin.rA G1CU ON THE &A.K.C1&-" ' -
Hunt's CraU-rian th.-a:?r In now J mothTlew children, the olJit a
Hhowing the new part talking pro- tfM her le-nH. played by Mim
. ... ,, m O'Nell. He rule with an Iron
auction. "The Girl on the Barge. , .y turn from hta hr.h-
Jean HenhuU bi the tar, with neju. to the arm, o a handsome
j pretty Kally O'Neil and Malcolm I tugboat pilot, played by Mac
i Mat-Oresor as the featured players. ! Gregor. Thl create havoc In the
The picture is uutanding for targe captain's life. ' Ilia rage
many rcaaons, one of which is the ) againvt the pilot and their physi;
. . , fact that It was photographed with i cal encounters make exciting
of supply for the purchase! ,he ory,he barge canato ln
Upper New York state.
The story concerns a erutrty and
dominant coal harge captain who
liven on his barge with Ms four
SLAVERY RIFE IN
DARK CORNERS OF
ASIA AND AFRICA
WASHINGTON. D. C Persia,
land of Omar Khayyam and the
l!Acvck Throne, has abolished
4ave trading by act of the roajiU,
the Persian national asumiy. Ac
cording to a bulletltn from the
Washington. D. C, head quarters of
the National Geographic society,
this edict reveals that slavery is y't
rife In many Asiatic and African
countries.
. "Inland China with IU huge
population has perhaps the largest
number of slaves of any country.
the bulletin slates, "but Chinese
slave are seldom accorded the
iiarsb treatment once given the
African negro. In China the slaves,
moxtly girls, are 'adopted" when
very young, and are trained In the
cares of the household. Slavery is
"nominally abolished and very little
of It is apparent near the coat
but in some of the more Inaccess
ible parts slave marts do a thriv
ing buftinetgi. In such places the
foundling 'hospitals are
source
of gfr) slaves.
Slaves In Arabia
: The Arabs were historic slave
traders of the past but modern dis
approval has limited their trading.
There arc still slave In Arabia, but
the majority of them were born
Into bondage. They regard them
to Ives as better than the ordinary
tribettinen. Usually they are found
In the household of some emir or
tribal chff-f. well fed. welt pro
tected and loved by their maxtem.
"Slavery Is regarded In a vary
ing light In different parts of the
Arabian peninsula. In the great
desert dUtiict of Jebel. Hhammar
and Nejd any household of any
pretention has Its slaves. They are
reckoned In the wealth of a sheik
along with his horses and his cam
els. In the Hadramaut slaves fol
low the professions of their mas
ters and often rise to positions of
hon or and 'trust.
"Home slave trading is still car
ried on In Haa. now a province
irf the sultan of Nejd. Before the,
war the trade flourished there un-!
ilir Turkish rule and It Is dying j
out gradually. The many negroe-j
to be found In Hawa, Kowelt and
Oman, the Arabian province on
I he Persian gulf, are survivors of j
the days when the gulf sas filled
with boats bearing negroe brought
from Africa by the, Arab trader.
(Mare In Arabia may ride to any
IttitUh outpost and obtain their
freedom, but few avail themselves
of this privilege.
Ms very On the Ilnrhary Coa4
"Gone are the days when Mo
rocco, Tunis and Algiers were slave
marts, not only for negroes but for
fnlr-skinned Circassian and Geor
gian beauties. The famous slave
trade of the Barbary coast Is a
thing of the past. There are still
slaves, but the buying and selling
of human property Is frown 1
upon. In southern Morocco where
some trading yet exists, women are
favored ol th market. They are
more expensive because they are
usful In the household and ran at
tend the women of the harems.
Many boy slaves are given their
liberty when they grow up.
Hlaves may be bought on many
of the oases In the nonh African
desert. In Kufra. In the Libyan
desert, blacks are smuggled In
from Sudan and sold for boodly
sums. In the Hanaro n oases, the
Tuaregs practice slavery. These
Toaregs are an adventurous, war
like people, scornful of domesticity,
so they obtain staven from Ilanwt
land. In the southern Sahara, to do
their menial tasks. ISven here
slave raids and slave earn vans are
growing fewer. The Tuareg make
exacting masters but they allow
their slaves tha freedom of the
household and the serfs appear to
' enjoy their lot. .
Sudan Own a Market for Afrh-a
"Slave traffic for hundreds of
years centered In the area which Ik
now Anglo-Kgyptlan Sudan. It was
from here that the 'splendid Nu
bians of ancient times were pro
cured. Sudan also supplied the
plan t eunuchs, guardians of the
harem from time Immemorial.
Until recent years, Omdurman, a
large city of mud-built structures,
was the principal civic market an
the White Nile was the principal
slave route. Slavery Is disappear
ing In' the Sudan and H Is only In
remote parts that it still exists.
'In Egypt lves may aequtre
enfranchisement by asking for .It.
There are- not many slaves left In
the country and tradnlg has ceased
altogether. In households of the
wealthy slaves remain of their own
volition,
"In nil the lands under Urlilsli
dominion or protection, attempts
have been mudo to wipe nut
Sally O'Neil at Hunt's Craterian
I
POULTRYMEN WILL
HOLD WORLD MEET
LONDON IN 1
! abroad the finest poultry th Unit- jeowiprehensfw erhiblt portraying
1 States can produce. Tli time I the more important features of the
P"unr; uiuui7 ! m.:i
intervening is sufficient to bred
up stock and give the American
industry opportunity to make
1 nc.ntif:c selection of . show ring
funis.
The congreMi is being organized
hi n d"l!r
tiiis country.
As at Ottawa, the American ex
hibit is totjweted to begin With
floiks of laying hens average 200 las an experiment last year on the I
eggs annually per hen. " "lw" 7 1 P
a JI!. .he American exhibits dured twice the ordinary quantity
b a motion picture oi me
! chirk industry from the time when
hens were depended upon iv
huti h young chlt'kens to tne pre-
picture showing Capt. John Kmllhij aKe wj(.n )nubaton annually
bringing the first Kufopeaii iowIh j.j, ,ure than 800,000,000
by the Kfiglbh miiuVlry of agrhuil-: Into the. country in the neventeenth i t.hirkH
and brought four onta a pound
more than other varieties of cot
ton. '
lure and fisheries in conjunction
r with the iHMtrd of agriculture for
i Scotland and the ministry of agri
culture for northern Ireland.
Every branch of the poultry in
dustry in the United State will be
represented. ' It is expected that
century and continue a portray 1
of the evolution that since 1-U
hn kit the poultry population
Increasing faster than the human
1 population.
In 140. when the first govern
ment census of the industry was
BltAJI.IAN COTTON MAV
IJOOST VlKLI IX TK.XAS
drama. The story ries to a stir
ring climax in a strong storm
scene In which the pilot displays
extraordinary heroism and wins
the old bargeman's admiration and
forgiveness.
Coming to Rialto Monday
I 'Z01 --- Y
U A M
3m
3 Jsr
Bt Frnk I. Welkr
.Vociated Prm Frro Editor) j the feOral department of agficul- i mailr. the vulue of poultry wa w?t I on Teia faniut
WAHHINfiTOX vtl The round I ture. tne atate aeparimenu. ana t at tiz.:i.iv. in u-1 Ainrnran
World's Poultry consrcoa at ln- ; collesea pf agriculture, rtate ex-j poultry ai valued at Jl.161.707,
don in July of next year will heal- j periroent Mation and other lntti- j 000. Not only have poultry num
tended by hundred of American i luttona will be represented. i ben. increased, but hens now lay
poultrymen prominent In the Otta- ' There will be national educa- f more and better eKen: The hatched
wa ennerfw last year. - Itional exhibits from practically all r chicks are larger and healthier. In
American interests are prepartne 'countries participating. The Unit-.' 144 a hen did a eood year's work
new for th trip that will take ed States probably wHT have a ' if ihe laid 8ft egg. Today whole
CKNTKR. Texas OP) A species
of Houth American cotton may
brine vant Increases In production
Humus Buys Tractor
NKW YORK t) Haul O. Bron,
.hMlrniun of .the board of directors
leauifiK iirni oi Dw.Ki-nnrenn
trade. sas that 15.000 farm trc.
tors have been Introduced Into
Ruwia d urine the past five years.
Eighty per cent, sutea Mr. Bran, .
were made la the United States.
Three thousand acres of Bralll
cotton, developed by Prof. Thomas
ft. My of Texas agricultural and
mechanical college during his 20
years in South America, will be
planted this year to provide seed
for farmers throughout the state.
Less than an acre was planted
OOPKNllAGBN W The. Danish
steamer Nidaros. Icebound In the
Baltic In the recent cold snap, kept
its boilers going by burning Ha Car
go of fat Russian geese after Hi
coal was exhausted. The vessel
had plenty of power when It cot
free.
GnEJAGARBO amNILS AS THE R WILD. ORCM IDS
eternal triangle, as It has '
so often culled, will be at
Th.
been
the Hlulto theatre tomorrow ln a
new and unuu;il combination, re
volving about Oreta Our bo in one
of the moat powerful roles of the
year. "Wild Orchids" is the pic
ture. MIk Oarbo plays with feeling
and difttm-tlnn us the nculectcd
wife of an American business mun
who unwittingly drives her to the
' urmw of another and unloved man.
lewis Htone, alwavH a competent
player, handles the husband's part
with great skill, iind Nils Anther.
' who seems one of the 'must pro
mising of young leading men. dues
Hplendid work in the part of a
Javanese prince.
New Farm Leader "Small Towner"
T H K X T O N. Mo.-WI "Art"
Hyde Is a inun of simple tastes.
say hiii friends In thislittle country ;
town, not more than two of whom J
knew, when Mr. Hyde returned '
from a conference wth Mr. Hoover'
KWiwul. He had led the Itoosevelt
forces uf t lie I h lid congrcHKlonu I
district through n stormy fight
that ended with the convention at
ICxcehdor Springs.
Of that campaign he remarked.
"I got a worm's eye view of everv
at Miami, that he was to be the ..iteum roller that ran that year."
next secretary of agriculture,
Intensely active. Inclined to
nervousness, he has few hobbles.
He smokes cigars considerably und
has a pronounced fondness fnr
buttermilk. Ho fishes some, und
is adept at playing pitch. It Is not
micomimiti to find hint perched on
the stiMd o a lutu li ciptintt'r. lute
a night, eating Iwcad und milk
with a. friend. Ho has n rare vein
of humor, blended with biting sar
casm. He -refers to himself as a
"curb stone lawyer."
His friends have seen him As n
NUccefHftil attorney, ns the gover-
nor of their Mule, as u dlftrilmtor 1
of automobile, and an the head of '
a life intturuuee company. lie owns ,
und opera ten three farms.
Although born in Princeton. 2fl ;
mllea from here. In 1877, he was
a citizen of Trenton win
n elected master.
Congratulating htm on his mi lec
tion by Mr.- Hoover, the TrcnMm
chamber of commerce wild:
"Your whole llfo giveji yoii a
background for the great work in
behalf of American agriculture."
Others add these comments:
"To the west, hikL Its genii
fat'inlni; Industry, Hyde's Biplnt
nient brlngti new hope." Don C.
McVay, dost political assoriute,
"The farmers limy ret assured
of the f u licit cooperation of tho
agiicutliire depHrlincut'under Kie
rvtary Hyde" Al It. Munsey. dele,
gate to tho national detnocrnttc
convention.
'The iittpolutment of Arthur M.
Hyde assures the farmers of the
entire country a fair und ctiullahle
solution of the agricultural prob
lem (Seoi'Ko H. Carnes, post-
governor. Ho received B9 of the
6S votes cant In the primary by
republican voters .of the town. Ilu
attended Oherlln (ihi) academy,;
received the degree of bachelor if
art from tho I'nlverslty of Mich!-!
gan nnd, later, the degree of;
bachelor of law from the 1'nlver- '.
city of lowu. He wan admitted to
the bar at 1'rlticeton, Mo., in I00. !
in Trenton he conducted n men's ! Missouri Farmers'
i.inte clang at the Methodist (Irumly county.
church. j ( n mun f great charncter
In 1I2 he was the ch'dce of Hum ami uMliiy" tleorge II. Tllcoinb.
pntgreKslvc 1irty for attorney mayor.
"Mr. Hyde's thought has been
devoted to the farm problem ever
since It has been a so-called prob
lem" Mrs. Carrie Hogers Clark,
publisher of the Trenton Republican-Times.
"He known the farm situation
and Its needs nnd will fight for
honest legislation in Its behalf"
Have Lenz, president of the
association of
slavery. In flerra Leone, on the
west coast of Africa, nearly half a
' million slavra have .been liberated
since the World war. It was from
Hlerra lcone that mnny negroes
' were brought to America In colo
nial days.
A Stronghold uf Slavery
1 "The great surviving stronghold
of slavery In Africa Is Kihopln.
'Which lies noutheiist of Anuto
Kgyptlan Sudan. Here the klnir,
Has Taffarl, u trying to abolish
- slavery. Time la needed to edii-
1 rate the Kthopiaus to regard
slavery as an abominable practice.
Hlaves are so plentiful and cheap
In Kthopia Ihta even servants have
their personal attendants. Many
slaves escape through the Hudan
border and these the Hudsnese gov-
ernment helps by lending them
money or offering , them freedom
and work. It Is estimated that
there are still more than 2,000.000
' elsves ln Kthopia.
"Kuropean Turkey was the Issl
' European country In which slavery
existed. Importation of slaves h
been Illegal for many years, but
the very rich for a time held those
they had long possessed. Many of
the negroes, who formerly did
menial tasks aa slaves, formtd
Tough Life in the South Seas
John Holly KnnppJc, a gradtii
ate, of flurvaid ddb-ge and a,Mii
of a prominent IWton luvcntmcnt
broker, j is entering his, tenth year
as a voluntary rei'tutto on the east
ern extremity of Tahiti.', 33-riiile-long
Mnnd in the Kronch, Society
group In tho South Seas.
When the wtr was ended young
Knnpp found himself out of touch
with a life which seemed too com
plex fr him und. posMCMsina suffi
cient means to live in modest cim
fort where he would, he establish
ed himself on the edge of the na
tive Tubman village. Ho has lived
there since in a beautiful thatched
house, well stocked with books.
servants' guilds and have acquired
economic Independence.
"Home of the more progressive
Asiatic rulers have become con
scious of the evils of slavery and
have liberated their slave. lAt
year the mnharajah of Iepal, a
smalt country northeast of India,
emancipated (S.OAu s'aves.'
furniture and porcelain, and close
'by a peaceful In goon. "
He calls himself nn agriculturist,
f ile Is the owner of a cocotinut
plunlation some forty 'mtlea from
tho port of I'lipocte, in the de
iceiintiit history of his class, thM of
, l!H?, this occupation was dcscrH-
d as "wtitchlig encoanuts drop
and bananas grow," w
He speaks Tahltian with fluency,
said sme of the few friends who
have visited him In his South Hea
1 retreat. He still wean the neatly
trimmed Van Dyke beard he had
in college, which' gives even his
face a rest from' the shttve-a-day
; world he left behind,
i His friend added that Knapp,
without csxaylng to be authorita
tive, hnsbecome a sort of village
prittiKrch and counselor In native
affairs. He has a set of elemen
tary medical bmk, and a stock of
simple remedies, among which
hulk huge such materials a iodine
and easlor oil. He lives whole
somely, just as he would al home.
I New folk World )
CIuMlflvd advertising gets results.
Our Fourth Annuals
Tires at lowest prices ever
Crude rubber prices are up 40
Tire prices still at low levels
Now is the time to equip for the year
We are making it possible for hun
dreds of car owners to take im
mediate advantage of this unusual
opportunity, '
During our Trade-in Sale we will
make you special allowances on
your old tires, no matter what
make or how far they have gone.
You can .get started now on Gen
erals at the lowest figure ever
kribwn. -
Never before Has Top'
quality meant so much
With 'the price of crude rubber going
- steadily up, you will probably see a return
engagement of the reclaimed rubber farce.
fieneral'8 policy of never tampering with
quality, regardless of rubber prices, has
won the confidence of car owners through
out the country.. By equipping with
Generals now, you have the positive assur-,
ance of lasting quality that will take you
through season after season of unin
terrupted mileage.
A Trade-in Offer that can'
not he matched anywhere
Once or twice a year we can afford to make
a special Trade-in Offer. This year we are
making it more than special. We want the
greatest number of car owners possible to
learn first hand the advantages of General's
Top-Quality. During this sale we are going
the full limit in allowance and extra service
to make hundreds of new friends for the
General Tire.
Join the big swing
to General
Trade in your old tires now and enjoy the
quality that will carry you safely through
the next high-priced tire period. Get tho
benefit now of the big initial saving plus
the uncqualed satisfaction of trouble-free,
uninterrupted mileage year in and yearout.
Special Bargains in Used Tires
The uitcd tlm go on sale at fast si wc lake them in. Many are
only slight!; worn and many arc brand-new tires of standard
makes. All sizes, all makes, all klndsgoon sale. Select yours early.
COME EARLY BRING YOUR CAR
31X1
' GENERAL
2toalBallooii
nd
Greater mileage at regular bal-'
Inon low-pressure. It com
pletely rcrerres the tendencyof
today toward high-pretsure or
moderate-pressure in tires.
It Introduces new perma
nency of non-skid ... far be
yond the point where you ci
pect to run on smooth rubber.
It r'oes away with the necessity
of running on tires that wear
prematurely "bald."
ln puncfire freedom, too. it I
far ahead. Eren the remote
chance of a puncture It reduced
to the vanishing point.
Our Trade-in Sale includes the
new Duoi-Balloon t and the
regular super-lines of 4-ply,
6-ply and 8-ply Generals.-, - .
Trade In now for General's
Top-Quality (hat meant tea
son after season of trouble
free driving and the economy
of the longest, safest and most
comfortable mileage you hare
ever known. '
LEWIS'
ARGEST
Eighth and Front
OUPER QERVICE .CTATipVr;
ijERVICE : kjTATION IN KJ OREGO 1 M
U.S.L.
BATTERIES
FOR ALL
CARS
KXT8A HELP AMD
SIRTICI FOR ALL
.P. B. LOWU, Manager
WE NEVER CLOSE . "
EXCLUSIVE DISTRIBUTORS OF
goes a long way to make friends
Phone 1300
t ta OuV
General Tire
Acceptance Cor.
PATMXHT PLAIT
It eliminates eioral
tant interest 4 ettmi.
LetTiT.ll Tea IOV
TO OXT OIKXRALfl
05 TOCK HIW CAB
!!s!!l!i!5iP?ifc'5
1