The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 22 August 1928 — Page 3

Page Three

tJIfflED.ADS

r<Mk>an M bnt.*>M. K SOU BY DRt)GC&IStVUM»*¥

>mat*ea, Eitel Floral Co.

W-tt

i - S:—12*4 ac^s improved nd berry, fruit farm, r 5,, house, 2 wells and ) q. road, 15 minutes "'■j niversity or Hi|

- school, a j ; V. Banner

NOTKE Tt» TAXPAYERS OF OREEXCASTLE SCHOOL TOWNSHIP AND TAXPAYERS OF OREENCASTLE SCHOOL CITY OF INTENTION TO MAKE AN ADDITIONAL APPRO--

PRIATION.

The taxpayers of Ciieencastle School Township and taxpayers of GreencasP' j tie School City, in Putnam County, State of Indiana, are hereby notified j that the School Trustees of -aid School Corporations contemplate the 1 meeting of an emergency now exisTMtg and the making of an ppropriation therefor, on behalf of said

t 00 ™ 1 ® ' School Corporations, in the total sum

twill 1.MMM2 Ford

m Fa-fc O. Cooper, Road 43, j 0 f ^2700 0^, f 0r ^e purchase and in-

I in-tallation of <le-ks, teachers’ ( hairs

o—

21 ‘ 2p

lies ». .and desks, window shades, and necestnp. Ideal modern P*®** sary equipment in and for the new 'tk- »r Hve acre- *? tou,l ' , ’i Secon i Ward School Building it be-thw-c' tern ’ s P rl, ’K an “ J coming necessary to expend aaid sum Aun. arn . t ”‘ e8 > * of money for the current year of 1928, 5ENs » six b ocks rom P| ,, '|h ( ,j nf r more than wa- set out in detail KEF.V ® ht fr .° ] nl ® e ' in the published budget heretofore TTOk j f( , r . ai(| year . such additional

appropi iation to be made out of a sut pi us now existing in the special

school fund.

1

Banner Office, or 14, Greencastle, ind.

21-tf.

LIC!

Birch, 302

■Mi mi j,

liun-

Bloomington 22-St.

y.Am;.

■: or TRADE—90 acre ated, good buildings. 1 ■[SlcFdrey, Reelsville, Ind. 'ft: “-*>•

!I!| lull I O———

• «(- E—Ford Touring car. ck ll "'* at once. Call 361K. 20-$p

l mtdJIIV.

;l ; u...‘ * '

farB1 -

ill I*-

well

improvements. Will

” .dem property in Green-

Newgent, Phone 431.

22-31. e4»sd.

I sl,» .

—0 — “ tor ilent— I ■ . ■M ■ II Hi T:— Furnished rooms. . i !. klin St. *7-2t Hit 11 Q ' i '" IT—6 moiiern rooms on ^ t .Tf double on East WaA* . li Phane 49. 22-3t f (tut o

Sai. Board of School Trustees will, on the 25th day of August, 1928, at 7:3<> P. M., meet at its office in the High School Building, in the City of Greencastle, for the purpose of determining upon and making such additional appropriation, and to hear remonstrances, if any, of taxpayers. Ten or more taxpayers in each of said school coiporation other than those who pay poll tax only and who are affected by such additional appropriations and who may feel aggrieved thereby, may appeal to the Stats Board of Tax Commissioners within ten days after such additional appropriation shall have been determined upon by filing a petition with the Auditor of Putnam County, et-

ting forth their objections thereto arai facts shearing that the proposed %3ditional appropriation uni expan L - tures are necessary, unwise, or ig;cessive, as the case may h«. The Stai.e Tax Board will fix a date for a h>gr-

mg in this County.

Dated this 13th day of Aug. 1028.

HARRY COLLINS

PAUL ALBIN.

CASSELL C. TUCKER.

School Trustees of flreencast Be School City and Greene as 1 VSchool Township, Putn jj n

County, Indiana.

l*-22-2t

♦ • ♦ • S-P-O-R-T-S / « + Of The Day 1 + • Here And There * *• + «*«*• 1+• * YESTERDAYS RESUfLTS American Asaocialiion Ii.dianapcli-, 16; Minncg.potis, 8. Toledo, 8; Milwaukee, rl. St. Paul, 11. Louisville* 1. Columbus, 6; Kansas City, 4. American League New York, 3; St. Louis, 1. Philadelphia, 12; Cleveland, 4. Chicago, 3; Washington, 1. I Detroit, 4; Boston,'3. I National la-ague ’ f Pittsburgh, 6; Bofttou^. f Brooklyn, 6; St. 1 'Louis, 1. Cincinnati, 3; Na-w York, 3. Philadelphia, 3; Chicago, 1. 1 Three. 1, League Quincy, S; Torne Haute, i. ' Peoria, 3; Evaclsville, 2. Decatur, 3; BV>otningU>n, 1. f Springfield, Kit; Danville, 5.

HOOVE! RECALLS ■ BOYHOOD DAYS OH IOWA FARAi

Lava ii waa Ufljgtlefs. bcsauso oag oi 1 my boyhood friends and opponents in battle, who ! expect is In this audience today. Is a descendant of one of those Democrats and has been regenerated ■

only In the last month.

I am proud to have been born In Iowa. 1 have ofttlmes said that tingood lord made It the richest stretch ( of agricultural land that ever blessed •uy one aoverlgn government. It was

Would Not Improve Old Swim- *« t,u '' 1 b >' ,llt ’ adventurous, the con

rageoua, who fought their way across the ever extending frontier; they have budded here In so short a period as 76 years a state with the least pov

minfl Hole. He TeHs Former

Neighbors.

* I

Advance of capital to {liable the agrl cultural Industry to reach a stature of modern business operations by which the farmer will attain his independ ence and maintain his individuality. And upon this whole question 1 should like to repeat from my accept

ance speech that:

"The working out of agricultural re lief constitutes the mo t Important obligation of the next administration The object ot our policies Is to cstali lish for our farmers an Income equal to those of other occupations; for the | farmer's wife the same comforts In her home as women in other groups:

SEES IOWA’S PROBLEMS LIKE THOSE OF NATION

•rty, the highest average Intelligence, for the farm boys and girls the same

Bladder Weakness If Hlaihlt-r Weakness, Getting Up Nights, Backioche. Burning or Itch ing Sensation, leg or groin pains make you feel, old, tired, pepless, and worn out why not make the ( ryatex 48 Hour TeiSt 7 Don’t get up. Get

< rystex today at any drug store, Put i ,. un , .. ,. .... . ._ it to a 48 hour test. Money hack if turnqiQ from time to time that 1 might you don’t s«»on feel like new, full of | p M « respect to their memory, that 1 pep, sleep wvll, with pains alleviated, rvlght express my appreciation ot Try (’ryater today. Only fiOc.-Mul-1 th klndly ftIld ,y ra p tt t, lt -tlc folk lins Drug Company. ( who , boy t0 , helr hMr „, —— _eracr-:r? — . — _i—it. | wip*<i away the one grief of cldld

Will Ask Lowdcn to Assist Him In Carrying Out Cffsctivs Farm Relief ProQram—Showa How Waterways l Will Incrsass Rural Prosperity. I West Branch. la.—Bock again at his birth place, among boyhood friends -aud neighbors. Herbert Hoover apeuk‘Jng here, recalled childhood memories, "paid warm tribute to his former school teacher, who took h'm Into tier home after the death ot hit parents, and told hU hearers that the problems of Iowa's farmers are those of all American agriculture bpaaklng freely and Intimately to an immense throng In which he saw the laces ot many old friends, Mr. Hoover spoko feeling ot hit home ties with Iowa and then passed to the discussion of the problems of his home state and of the nation. Mu speech follows: This Vs a homecoming. It hardly st-i-ius an occasion for a lengthy p >1U1cal speech—rather ts it an opportunity to recall old unsocial ions and renew old friendships. 1 am glad, a son ot lows, to come buck to the place wlu-re 1 was born. Here 1 spent the first ten rears ot my boyhood. Here my pareuts and my graudpareul* tolled, worshipped God, did their part tu bulldluK this community. and now lie In the cemetery

over the hill.

Tribute to Teacher J

During the past 44 yeais 1 have ra-

the most generous education, which ever blessed a single commonwealth

Sees Typical Changes

Here In West Branch can he found all the milestones of the changes which have come to American agriculture. Only a mile from here Is the farm of my Uncle Allen, where 1 spent some years of my boyhood Tiiat was Just at the passing st.'.go of

opportunities In life as other boys and girls. So far as my own abilities may be of service, I dedicate them to help

of hts distribution field: hts business province has shrunk. This development should tend to increase manufacturing industry In the midwest and thereby create u larger diversity of employment and a greater local market for agricultural products. Nor does this development mean the crippling of our railways. The annual increase In railways trntfic will give to them a far more and complete offset to these diversions. Moreover, everything that increases the prosperity of the country also helps the railways. The policy of rapid consummation of this great project will be continued If the Republican administration be continued. We should at the present rate of progress have completed the Mississippi system within the next four years. It Is a vital part of the reha-

secure prosperity and contentment In hllltatlon of the middle west ngrlcul-

that Industry w here 1 and my fore-1 , Mro alu i business,

fathers were horn and nearly all my

family still obtain their livelihood." stMI Nesd t0 ploneer In formulating recommendations for The modernizations of our waterlegislation to carry out tho proposals waja recall again the earlier life of

of the party, 1 trust that we may have Hie full asaistunce of the leaders of

tho great pioneer movement. Many | agricultural thought. 1 am not luscn-

farms were still places where we titled th# soil for the Immediate needs of the families. We ground our wheat and corn on toll at the mill: We slaughtered our hogs for nnat; w<- wove at least a part of our own clothing; we repaired our own machinery; we got our own fuel from the woods; wm erected our own buildings; we made our own soap; wo preserved our own fruit ami grew our own vegetables. Only a unall i art of the family living enmo by purchases from the outside, rerhnp.s JO per ceut of the products were sold In the markets to purchase the small margin of necessities which we could not ouri selves produce, end to pay interest on

the mortgage.

In a half century the whole basts of agriculture has shifted. We have improved soi d and livestock; we have added a long list of mechanical Inventions for saving of labor; we have Increased the productivity of the land. And It has became a highly apnclnlIred business. There Is no longer one Industry called farming, hut In fad a dozen Industries. Drobably over Ml per cent of Its products now go <11* , redly or Indirectly to the markets and probably over 80 per cent of the tumlly living must he purchasi d from outside. In the old dayc when prices ttnduated In the tTiicugn market, ut

slide to the valus of the study which sincere farm leaders have given to this question of farm legislation. They have all contributed to the realisation that the problem must be solved. They will be Invited Into conference. Outstanding farmers such as Governor Lowden will be asked to Join In the search for common ground upon which

nc can act.

Calls Waterways Vital

I had thought today to particularly point out ttie importance ot the (level- | npment of our Interior waterways us bearing on the prosperity not only of | agriculture tint ot the whole ot our j Midwest business and commerce. It is a most Important supplement to agricultural relief. The necessarily largo advances In railway rates from the war militate against the economic sotting of this whole Interior section. This, together with the completion ot tho Banama Canal and the fact Hint ocean rates have Increased hut little since before the war, further disturbs the whole economic relationship of the Midwest. It Is as If a row of toll gales had been placed around tills whole ae<'tlon of our country. It seriously affects tho farmer. 1 think wo can accept It as an economic fact that the farmer on most occasions pays the freight on tils products. It Is a deduction from the ultimate price; you

most they affected only 20 per cent | youiself can nttoxt this. In a general

titlie

n'T—Room ami kitchen-

hood. One of my vivid recollections was my earnest Interest In the debate between neighbors and relatives when they were discussing not who

, j, . . , Was to assume mu as a burden, but Indiana that the proper legal officers of said municipality at their regular vho wag U) takc llie boy „„ tt mem meeting place on the 4lh day of September, 1928., will consider the following! ke r () | t | ie ( r 0WIl That Is the

NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF TAX LEVIES

la the Matter of determining the Tax Rates for Certain Purposes by Floyd Township. Putnam County. Indiana, before the Township Advisory Board Notice is hereby given the taxpayers of Floyd Township, Fiitnutu County,!

J, 1, 2 blocks from square. I franklin St. Phone 235-r-t» 20-3p.

r L

\ NT:—4 unfurnished room* bq, y „f IN Telephone 3tl-Y. 22-lt Kxan ,

’NT— Sept. 1st., West ■d 10 East Walnut, 5 rooms, rch, breakfast nook, gas I gerator, shades and rods

l^iws. J. P. Allen.

I10-e ed tf. LVInT:— 4 room modem suitable for man and water furnished, 812 So. me m-X. 17-4p

o

(JT:—Garage 311 Elm St. i. 21-23p.

-Wanted— a »i—Washing and “ rty St.

ironing

21-3t

: Old reliable honae has good, live salesman, louse proposition. Orders 0% of commission nd~ ress Hox-X, % Banner

21-3t

; o

budget:

BUDGET CLASSIFICATION FOR TOWNSHIPS

TOWNSHIP FUND

Salary of Trustee 1600. Office Rent 6t». Trustee's Expense 126.' liecords and Adv 200. Adv, Board 16. Records 25. Miscellaneous 75 Total Twp. Fund 11100.

ROAD FUND

Slftpr fiooo. Road Tools mid Mach ;, 10O Blidgcs and Culverts 200. Gravel Stone and Other Materials 260. aMneellaneotis 150 Total Hoad Fund 1700

TUITION FUND

Pay of Teachers 1 6600, Mchool Transfers a.3000. Total Tuition Fund 8600.

SPECIAL SCHOOL FUND

llepnir of Building and Ground 150. School Furn. and Equip 100. School Supplies 200. Janitor Supplies -.,.. 76.i |*tlel for Schools 350 Loans, Int. and Insurance joq ■chool Transfers 2000. Teachers Institute 300. Jnn I tor Service • I.., 350. 7-nnsportatlnn of Children ‘ 3500. Miscellaneous 100.

>AI

l_ .

Clinch.

tk!

Total Special School Fuad ESTIMATE OF FUNDS TO BK RAISED Township Road Tuition

Fund Fund

T< tnl Ext. Expenditures 1100. 1700. Picnic!.M,se. Rev. Deducted

■—Lost—

U Penal

Star Shape. Finder Amt. to he raised by Tax II90. 1700. '■>' to Banner Office. Re Balance July 31st 665 48 153.08

17-2p-W-lp. Tax to be Collected 666. 600. IHHln tve IUncollactcd Misc. Rev

,IAt Penal F»r» Picnic Total Revenue 1331,48 663 08 iLbeh, Stax ahnpe. Finder I nexpended Appropriations 532 65 674 21 irn to Banner office. Re- Total Deductions 632.65 674.21

Fund 8600. 1200. 7400. 7163.74 3436.

60.

10692.74 4837.61 4817.61

TT-llp-w.-lp | Difference between Total Revenue and Total Deductions 401.17 1621.13 1544.77 Working Balance 550.00 600.00 4000.00 (Total to be raised by Taxation 951.17 2121.13 6544.77

PROPOSED LEVIES

l*ff- N< t Taxable Propelty 1,243.785.00

Levy on

Foils

N< on* that ice on va North n St., pleas U gn for ser ' start to pave, t Water W«

ffien

U FUNDS

Township Koad Tuition 26 Special School 25 TOTAL COMPARATIVE STATEMENT OF TAXES

COLLECTED

L-vy on Property .06 .17 .63 .62 1.341 COLLECTED

spirit of the people of Iowa. It Is the spirit of the thousands of villages and

tuw (is In all this w ide laud

And I have no apology tor even a more personal note. There Is present hers today a lady who took purl 111 that debate and who wu t for years my teacher In your public school. 8U« embodies the spirit of that vast Ytody of women who not only teach and In- ■ plro our children hut wateb over their wider destinies. You have < oma to do me courtesy as a son of Iowa. I take this occasion to acknowledge my debt to that lady- Mrs. C’lirrnti. There !s no 4mprlut iiiwn our ram da so deep as those of early boyhood— mine are the Joys of I- wa—the glories ot snowy winter, the wonder at the growing crops, the Jolnlne of the neighbors to harvest, tl ■■ gu'lieriug of apples, tho pilgrims* 1 to the rivet woods for the annual fuel and nuts, tho going to school, the Interlude* from work, tn the swimming hole, fishing In creeks, the hunting for prairie chickens and labblts In the hedges and woods It Is the entry to life which 1 could «Nh for every

American boy anil girl

# Again today I havo had refreshmeat of spirit In return to these * senes. The swimming Itole la still In use. It has Uie sann tnndbank. It Is still ImpoMlblij to dress without carrying tniKl home In ones Inner gar ments. As an engineer I could devise Improvements for 'hat swimming hole. But 1 doubt If 'he decrease in mothers' grief ut the homecoming of muddy boys would rompensate the Inherent Joys of getting muddy.

Aunt’a Prophecy True

I have been to see 'he old Quaker meeting house. It has been moved across the aired and replaced by a more modern structure. The old building appears at some time tn have 1 teen turned Into a moving pictur*

8 409 65 hoaac, which reminds ma of the time

’ 1 beard Aunt Hannah, moved in meet lug. bitterly denounce the rise of

4**•'® 1 ^ | modern ways and pi pbesy that If

i they were persisted in. that edifice dedicated to God would tome day be transformed Into n pin * of abomination. f do not place the movies In that class, hut knowing Aunt Hannah s views on any form of human rocreat4oo, evou to th« godlessnesa of slidtag down hill. 1 suspect that It site knew of this she would get great satisfaction at the consummation of her

warnings.

This was always • Republican vll

here that I received my

I well

of the Income of the farm. A violent drop in prices could reduce tliv family income by only four or live per cent. Today the name fluctuation In price, a fleeting ns It does 80 per cent to 100 per cent of ttie products of the Ur m. can take 25 or 60 per cent away from the family net Income and make the difference between comfort nrd freedom from anxiety, or on the oilier band, debts and discouragements. I do not suggest a return to the greater security which agriculture enjoyed In Its earlier days, because with

way, the centerpolnt of markets Is overseas or the Atlantic seaboard, where prices are determined by the meeting of streams of world products. For every hundred miles you are removed from those market centers ttie price of farm products Is lower by tinamount of freight rates. Some calculations which I made a few years ago showed that ttie Increases In railway rales had In effect moved the Mid wt ,-t 200 to 400 miles further from seaboard. Moreover, some of the ( u npctltive agricultural regions sin Ii

that security were lower standards of | al t liu Argentine and Australia are

living, greater toll, less opportunity for leisure and recreation, U-ss of Hie comforts of home, loss of the Joy of

living.

I am often conscious of senlluiental regret for tho passing of those old time conditions. I have sunictimcH been as homesick for the ways of those self contained farm homes of forty years ago us I have been for the kindly folk who lived In them. But I know It i* no more possible to revive those old cuiiiHHons than It is to summon Inn k the relatives 11ml frlouds In the cemetery yonder. Whilo we recognise and bold fast to what Is

( lose to seaboard and w ith sen rates r. bout •'the same as before the war, they ere able to compete with the Arn rVuii farmer In foreign markets to a greater udvnntago than before the w.ir. This Increase In trnnsporla lieu 1.lies also affects the prices of many things which ttie farmer must buy, for much raw material which ( Qiiii s Into the MPIwest pays the Incronicd freight rate and this !u turn Is taken up hy the consumer. We cannot return to pre-war railway rnti without ruin to the railways. Therefore, I have long asserted that tin real hope ot reducing charges

permanent In the old time ronilltloiitt, I upon our hulk goods was through the

7325 Sp School

Fum. 7325. 7325.

5700.65

3769

we must accept what Is Inevitable In the changes that have taken place, it Is fortunate Indeed that the principle* ■ upon which our government was fouuded require no alteration to meet

these changes.

*5

Reveal* Relief Plans Just as there Is transformation In agriculture so Miero In In other Industry; Just as there Is more spei lallnations on the farm, so there is in 1 other Industry. We live today by the exchange of goods among ten thou- ' Hand sorts of producers of specialties.

moilcrnlzntlnn of our great Interior waterways. Hr modernization. I ni>-an Increa Ing depth* to a point where we can handle ten thousand tons tn a line of barges pulled by a tug. This ndmlnkitrntion has authorized the systematic undertaking of this mod crntzallon. Within a few years we will have completed tho deepening ot the Ohio up to Pittsburgh, tho Mis--ourl up to Kun as City, Omaha, atul beyond, the MisaiRslppl to St. Paul and Minneapolis, the Illinois to Chlcsgo. Wo already have experience with results, for with only the main

Iowa. At one time Its transportation was In largo degree over these same rivers and many of our pioneer* reached this state by the old Packet boats and their own rafts. Nor are tho days of the pioneer over. We have to pioneer through economic problems, through scientific development and Invention on to frontiers Just as forbidding, Just ns romantic, and j Just as pregnant of added happlueoa j as our fathers ever knew. Tho test ! of onr generation will ho whether we 1 can overcome these frontiers, whether I wo can hold mastery over the system wo have created, whether wo can maintain the advantage wo have InI herlted, whether wo can hold ourj selves n nation dedicated to equal op-

{ port unity for all.

There are those in tills audience who saw lowu an open prairie. I recall member* of my own family who In my childhood were still Invakiug tho soil tu tho western part of the stall' and were then still living In tho first sod houses of the pioneer funner. Our fathers and grandfathers who poured over tho midwest were self-reliant, rugs -(I, God-fearing people of Indomitable courage. They combined to build the roads, bridges, and towns; they cooperated together to erect their schools, their churches, and to rciso their burns and harvest their fields. They asked only tor freedom of opportunity and an equal chance. In these conceptions lies ttie real hnsls of American democracy. I'hev and their fathers give a genius to American Institutions that distinguished our people from any other in tho world. Their demand for an equal chance l» tho basis of American progress. To those who have by necessity worked In oilier lauds comes this most vivid meaning of America and a deep gratitude for 1 what our fathers have bulldad. Here I there are no limits to hope; no limits 1 upon accomplishment; our obligation 1 today Is to maintain that equal oppor1 tunlty for agricultural ns well ns for

j every other ratling. 6 Pledges Service to Homes

Whan we traverse the memories of Ihoce who have bulltled tills state and tilts nation we recall these acts which are rooted In tho soil of service. When wo rehearse our own memories we find that 110110 give us such comfort uud suttsl'actlon us the reciird of sorvlco we have been able to render. 1 do not believe our people have Inst those finer qualities of tugged character, self reliance, or Initiative, nor have they lost the grei I quality which they Imbedded In American character, the quality of neighborly co-operation and mutual ervlce. It is In this quality that our hopes must lie In ttie solution of our

great problems.

And 1 must say again that the solution of those piohloniH has but nos purpose Mint Is the comfort and welfare of tho American family and the American homo. The family la the unit of American life nud the home Is the sanctuary of moral Iniplration and of American spirit. The true conception of America Is not ik country of no,nun.000 people but a nation of I.Oun.Ooo families living In 23,600,000 homes. 1 pledge my serflees to tlu i - homey.

A large number of occupations which J river from St. Louts to New Orleans

2871.51 3560 00 6371.51

Amount to Me Raised

961.00 2121.00 6544.60

6371.001 1*6*. It was

. first touch of the national life.

AND

1 5987.00| TO BE

I* FOR THE 0— — APOL1S—More • >e been receiv •H the Indiana J| first to eight, ‘cretary, armour ze been j ois, Kentucky, I consin, South L ia, Missouri, ' cl'iiadc, New Y«

Collected FUNDS 1926 Levy jTownHhip 1100. | Road 995.

jlultion 9800. 000 •'special School 7100. 15; TOTAL ..19145.

Collected 1927 Levy 1100. 630. 6300. 6860. 17375.

Collected 1928 Levy 1100. 1200. 6800, 7100. 16200.

recollect the holstln* the Rag at keif mud over my fsther'a blacksmith shop on the assassination of I'resideut Garfield. I also recollect well the torchlight processiofi In the (Jar field election. I was not high enough to be permitted the conduct- of a torch, hut I participated by walking alongside for miles. At that time there were two or three Democrat* I* the town. I do not know today 16987.| whether what seemed to me an enor-

After the| vous torchlight paiade wss Instituted

1 be

To be

Collected 1929 Levy

651.

2121.

t 6544.

6371.

Fair, j Taxpayer* appearing shall have a right to he heard ttuereon.

Bar- ft* levie* have been determined, ten 01 more taxpayers feeling theinaeives lor their conversion or not, but

:o-lay. aggrieved hy Hitch levies, may appeal to the State Board of Tas CunuuiMsionIn- era for further and final action theteon by filing a petltkia therefor with

usee, the County Auditor not later than the fourth Monday of September, and the HANK 18 HEART OF FRANCE -olina, State Board will fixe a dale of hearing In this county. PARKS, Aug. If. (UP)—The Bank

were conducted on the farm tn old d.kys are now conducted In the fac. tory. That Is 0110 reason why we have a decreasing proportion of our people on the farms. By this revolution the American farmer has become enmeshed In powerful and, yet dell cate, economic forces which are work

lug to his disadvantage.

In my acceptance speech ten days ago I made an extended statement up on the legislative proposals for relief to the agricultural industry which the K'-publicsn parly lies put forward In Its platform. You would no« wish me to take your time to review that statement. 1 should, however, like to em plmxlie that the spirit of those legls lativ* proposal* Is to work out a more economical and stahlo marketing *ys tem. A federal farm hoard I* to In set up with the necessary powers and resource* to assist the Industry to meet not alone the varied problems of today, hut those which may arise in the future. My fundamental con- j eept of agriculture ts one eoutrollcd hy Its own members, organised to fight i Its own economic battles and to di termlne Its own destinies. Nor do I speak of organization In tho narrow sense of traditional farm ro-operntivc* or pools, but In the much wider seme ; of a sound m.uketing organization, it is not by these proposals Intended to put the government into the control of the business of agriculture, nor to subsidize the prices of farm products I and pay the Iobhc* thereon either hy the federal treasury or hy a tax or fee on the farmer. We propose with gov-emuu-ntal uudatame and an Initial

ns yet working properly, the rates far transportation of hulk agricultural products through that section Is near pre-war railway rates. We will not have the advantage of full result* ; until the entire Mississippi ami It* tributaries are In one connected trans-

portation rystem.

Assures Lake Gulf Route

We have another great opportunity of relief In the huilillng of u (hlp-viiy Horn the great lake* to the sen. i'ur 1 engineer* have recnnirm-ntli d the St. Lawrence route ns tho preferable outI t. The administration has undertaken m-Kottatloiis with Canada upon the subject. If these negotlationa full we must consider alternative routes. In any event Mm completion of this :ront system of barge Hm-s on tho ilvcrs and connecting the lake* with : the gulf, of opening a shlpwny from the lakes to tho sea, will make an ef fectlve transportation ayateni 12,000 ndlcs In length penetrating twenty midwest states. It will conned tli-(^> states with seaboard at the gulf on one hand and with the North Atlsutlc on the other. And this no mis more than the mere saving upon the actual ( (Oils shipped over these rente*. If puit of our crop* cun move to market at a men to ten cent saving per basliel, the buyeiV cor* tut Hive bidding for this portion of tin- crop will force upward the price ot the whole

crop.

And this development conei-rna not alone ngrU illture, hut every Industry and husiru-Ms In the midwest. The manufacturer nud merchant In this section la suffering from a cuitallmdit

it of Dated AugU»t 20, 1928. , I

HAUL FREDERICK, Trustee it Aug 21-22

of France ha* been much in the limelifflit in connection with the stabiliza-

the really national character of the in of the ahareholder* po e- only from atitution. While foreigners may own ()n e to five shares each. There are share*, they can have no voice in the 11,078 persons with one share and

(’AKA NOMK HAND LOTION

$1.00

J erven’s lotion, Princess Pat, all standa r d cold creams a n d hand lotions for sun burn, tan and insect bites. OWL DRUG STORK

lion of the franc. Few people reallg* ; hank’s affairs. More than 80 |»-r cent 7,216 with two share*.