NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS Huge Crop Losses Due to Drought Boost Prices and Rouse Government. By EDWARD W. PICKARD ROTRACTED drought and exces- sively hot weather brought to the farmers of the United States a mix- ture of good and evil and aroused the administration to the consideration of relief measures beyond those templated by the act creating the eral farm board. Poth ‘government snd private crop reports led to estimates that the pew COn- fed coin crop had been damaged to the ex tent of at 00 000,000 and the that fell throug! much of the corn belt during the week "were sald to have late to have much influence on the yield since pollination had failed. Private reports by Ing experts of the Middle West cated that a large part of the was beyond any material recovery. In Ohio the corn was deteriorating rapidly, and In southern Indiana it was badly damaged. In Illinois situation was at its worst In the southern part of the state. The crop in northern and western Kentucky was sald to be entirely ruined, and the condition In Missouri and lowa was not much better. Throughout the whole drought region, also, pasturage and all fodder crops were burned up to an alarming extent. On the other hand, these bad crop prospects led to a sensational rise in the prices of grain on the exchanges, and within a few days there was an estimated increase of about $6850.000.- 000 in the theoretical value of farm- ers’ products. The market in Chicago went wild and corn led In the swift advance, followed by wheat and the other grains. For the first time in five years the public came in on a big scale, and there were heavy buying orders from foreign countries. It was believed there would be a heavy sub- stitution of wheat, oats, rye and bar- ley for corn as live stock feed, and consequently the demand for those graing was large. Also the estimates of the Canadian wheat crop were slashed as a result of damage by drought, heat and black rust. The yield of rye in Europe, exclusive of Russia, will be far below normal, and the Prussian oats crop Is greatly reduced. least bushels, rains come too one of the lead- indi- crop the PRESIDENT HOOVER conferred with Secretary of Agriculture Hyde (0 plans for a government pro- gram, % aid the farmers threatened with ruin by the drought, and he asked both Mr. Hyde and Chairman Legge of the farm board to make ree- ommendations within a few days. It was stated at the White House that the President had received prompt and favorable response to his appeal to railrond executives for co-operation in reducing rail rates for the emer. gency movement of live stock and feed in the stricken areas, The farm loan board said it was willing to do all possible to extend credit through the intermediate eredit banks, the farm land banka and Joint stock land banks. From congression- al quarters came many requests for help, and to those was added the of- fer of Senator Robinson of Arkansas, the Democratic leader. to undertake a refund by congress to the farm board if the latter would divert all its available funds to drought relief. “The measures of assistance that the farm board and the other agencies of the federal government ean and should undertake are being deter. mined” said Mr, Hoover. “It is too early to determine the precise charac ter of relief; much depends upon the further spread of the drought: but no stone will be left unturned hy the federal government in giving assist. ance to beal authorities” N OTHER ways the drought had serious results. There were no- merous destructive forest fires In both the West and the East: the milk shortage in many regions was serious; and the water In the Mississippi river was so low barges and towboats were stuck on sandbars and mud flats all along the Father of Waters, At the same time the levels of Lakes Michigan, Supe rior and Huron were higher: whieh led commentators on the lake di- version controvérsy to think that the policy of the government has resulted in giving the citizens who use the Great Lakes more water than they need, at the same time depriving the manufacturers and farmers of the Mississippl valley of sufficient water to float their cargoes to the sea. \ JHEAT prices and drought did '¥ not have much effect on the Re. publican primaries in Kansas as many persons had expected. Gov, Clyde M Reed, who the cause of the severely criticized the farm board, was defeated for renom nation by Frank Haucke, farmer, World war veteran, and former state commander of the American Senator Henry J. Alien, who was aj pointed by Reed and staunch of the nominated for 15633, and unopposed for re sought {to 3 on farmers policies of the federal Leg On. Governor supporter Hoover ministration, was senate term ending In Sen- ator Capper was nomination for long term. On the Democratic ticket Harry H Woodring will oppose Haucke for the governorship, and Jonathan M. Davis, former governor, will try to defeat Senator Capper. the § YUTHERNERS who voted for Hoo ver In 1028, through Horace Mann, formally announced their rebellion against the administration of southern federal patronage and political affairs generally by Postmaster Walter H. Brown, Mr. Mann's statement, which was issued on the eve of a meeting of the Republican national executive committee in Washington, outlined plans adopted by a group of promi. nent southern Hoovercrats to incor. porate in “all-southern™ Republican organization and throw off the yoke of northern “patronage carpet-baggers™ as well as of “designing political hi jackers.” Hoovercrats representing ten south- ern states had met in conference In Savannah and adopted resolutions ex- pressing resentment at the refusal of the administration to recognize Mann's services and leadership. They agreed to meet again In Atlanta on August 15 to perfect their organization. Because of the heavy Hoover vote In the South in 1928, the ten states represented in the Savannah conference will be en- titled to 207 delegates in the 1932 Re publican convention, 100 more than they were allowed In the Kansas City convention, The Republican executive committee accepted the resignation of Clandius M. Huston as national chairman and elected Senator Fess as his successor, Robert H, Lucas was made executive director, and he quits his post as In- ternal revenue commissioner to give his full time to the work. REAT interest was felt in a con- ference which Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt of New York held with John J. Raskob, former Gov. Al Smith and other party leaders. It was un- derstood that Mr. Roosevelt would seek re-election on a “dripping wet” platform and would make a leading issue of public electricity rates. The belief was that Mr. Smith would place Mr. Roosevelt In nomination at the state convention. Republicans of New York state seem badly split as to the liquor ques- tion. The wets, led by former Sen- ator James W, Wadsworth, Insist up- on a declaration for repeal of the Eighteenth amendment, declaring they will accept no compromise. The drys, on the other hand, are as firm in thelr stand and threaten to form a new dry party if the wet plank Is adopted. EFORE a crowd of 5,000 persons, two negroes were lynched by a mob in Marion, Ind. They had been arrested for murdering a white man and attacking his girl companion, and were sald to have confessed. The sheriff, police and fire department, tried In vain to seatter the Iynchers with tear bombs and fire hose streams, RESIDENT HOOVER announced the appointment of Maj Gen, Douglas MacArthur to be chief of staff of the army to succeed Ma), Gen, November. General MacAr- head of the army partment in the Philippines, Is now on temporary duty in China, He Is fifty yeurs old, the youngest army offi cer of his rark In active service, and was advanced over the heads of sev eral older officers, the President said, because he is the senlor major gen- eral whose age would permit him to serve the full four-year term as chief of staff. He graduated from West Point in 1903 and his career, especlal- ly In the World war, was brilliant. At the same time the President ap- pointed Brig. Gen. Ben H. Fuller to be edmmandant of the marine corps to fill left by the death of General R FAL forelgn Intervention in China may soon result from the bloody » Communists in ! tires in thur, who Is de- ngs of the Ch province, {f it wt. The eyelins * senaing a of soldiers up the which is not already Diritish are leading the number angtze to Hankow, by the Reds, placed of a iser ready to be landed If necessary British property. The American gunboat Tutuila left for up- Palos, and the 1 of the Asiatic fleet, with a destroyer division, was on the way from Shanghal, Ja- pan salfo was in action, sending & num- ber of destroyers with landing parties of marines to Hankow, Klukiang and other river ports threatened by Com- munist invasion, The Nationalist government had ad- mitted its Inability to guarantee pro- tection for foreign residents of Han- kow, though It was sending additional troops to that region and had reoc- cupied Changsha. The Communists were still entrenched in the hills about the city and were continuing their sanguinary course, having already siain two thousand Chinese residents of the place and captured four thon sand. Outrages against British Na- tionals included the sending of a se- vered finger of Miss Edith Nettleton, missionary, with a demand for $50,000 ransom for herself and Miss Edith Harrison, held captive a month, to the British legation. iderable was threatened pg were (oo be io protect river to reinforce the $ flagship Pitisbur Tsingtao to NEMPLOYMENT dn Great Rrit- ain has reached the Wighest point since July, 1921, the number regis. tered as out of work being 2.011.467. Last week hundreds of rallway em- ployees were laid off because of the falling off In traffic. Official reports show that unemployment in Germany Is decreasing slightly, in France is negligible, and has decreased in Den- mark, Sweden, Holland, Italy and Aus. tria. In the United States the situation was brightened somewhat by resump- tion of work in the automobile fae tories of the Detroit area and other places and by several of the biggest railway shops. The Chicago region saw good prospects for a revival of the building industry, OHN HENRY MEARS and his pl lot, H. J. Brown, who intended to make a record-breaking airplane flight around the world, have had to post. pone it, for their plane was wrecked as it was leaving the runway at Har. bor Grace, Newfoundland. The German aviators, Hirth and Weller, who were on their way from Berlin to Chicago by way of Iceland and Greenland, reached Reykjavik, Iceland, safely, but abandoned their project for want of a suitable landing place in Greenland and because their supply of gas did not arrive, Capt. Frank Hawks set a new ree ord for flight from New York to Los Angeles, making the distance In » swift little monoplane in 14 hours, 50 minutes and 43 seconds, with five stops for refueling. His average speed was about 170 miles an hour. FFICIAL buat unrevised census figures give the total population of continental United States as 122. T0472. The outlying possessions bring the grand total to 187.501.501, this including an estimate for the Philippine Islands where an enumer- ation has not been made for several years. The proportions of population east and west. of the Missiseippl have shifted less than one-half of 1 per cent In ten years, being respectively 60.0 per cent and 304 per cent. (0. 1920, Western Newspaper Union.) MorHER PROBLEMS - ST © 2 Ly Mrs. Dorothy Coffeen Cultivating Insincerity “HERE is a The looks sa wham ve all vou persan Know, oie Who tells well sirazss hair Yar) re con tishevel “ih, when scious it is the dear, 1 wonld tove to go to your purty,’ und then wt the that Is so the very utterance : ling In tent one who sauys¢ Inst minute eX CUse feeble it one of “those first row; paid to go to and ut the front und profess vel heltind our back eter or condemns it with faint praise Ingincerity—there is no sling” sits In claims the opportunity the one who friendship more other so widely aracticed Hunted In a other day, seed] of It child's only the Gertie and Helen were playing hap pily Helen's “Helen now, Gertle together when into hier run Cie the room, fist you'd said Helen ‘Why do | have my supper now Mother? It isn't dark yet,” “Oh, you aren't polng to Helen Mother just wanted tay quietly alone for awhile, told Gertie that hve better Noa SUpper along tome,” he Gertie ran home und used have ft you to I just Just told Gertie that, when she could huve heen Just us tid not honest und not! You sincere well us gee, she to adult small tie Helen herself would later use the sume und for than ut Mother had show n them to her. Another example woeurresd example even In such Ways as speech or munners. LI no other reason today mothers to have iwi, Thelr el, of nul listen {ween ile He most Atter children them, und moved on Thought they bh sincerely enough each pair Nn critical tinent of . betray her confi hem Individually The children andy although net Ht pre 1s rhed prob why they did quite understand and quite another be hind thelr backs, they naturally felt the same despicable practice, fening to grown ups, insincerity will avoid it, too, « oo» Teaching Orderliness Avoid and every 1 now pick up the dolls ’ orderly is eventually and of the prodders, however, isn't 11? around and around Robin Hood's barn Funny, time We be over by the think about it. may nag done? Shall order to save our dispositions? Shall onr energy? If we do, well and we'll also help will never be able to overcome. age for habit formation. problem is divided into two equally important parts, The first has to do with the elimination of our loquacious. ness, our liberality in the use of just plain chatter, our persuasions. our pleadings and our threats which we never bother to carry out. Few words are needed when one wishes to be most convincing and never more true is this than in dealing with children. Have you ever tried the experiment of looking a dangerous animal straight in the eye to keep him from attack. ing you? Probably not, but try it on Jour six-yearolds. Look squarely in. to those teasing young eyes and say, “Son, daughter (whichever the case way be), pick up your toys, Nothing else can he done until they are all buck in their places.” And mean it! The second part has to do with hon. esty in our demands. If we're going to insist upon order, we'd better not be too insistent unless our own bu rea drawers will bear Inspection, We huve no right to pose as dictators of a principal which we do not practice und children are quick to observe this form of hypocrisy, If we ure convincing and honest, we will have Hrile trouble In obtain. ing uot only order, but any other gual ity desirable. The reason why we have to pag so much Is usually » nck of one or the other of these neces syry nitributes of discipline, HB. 1030 Western Newsunper Unions.) The cars have accommodat] ” ice, over to the curb to discha SUDDEN STOP IS Expert Suggests That Driv- ers Use Their Brakes With Moderation. How long would your present auto mobile last if installed a 350 horsepower engine in the chassis and drove it wide open? isn’t a the uld impose such a load on an hecause every driver you motorist in world ordinary chassis, knows that no standard terrific siresses could withstand the imposed by so powerful an engine, Stresses motorists habit their fact impose Equal Nevertheless, many siresseos on y impose equal " 1 er § : without realzing it. a manager of 3 ' a Detroit ut hile concern, in of brakes and broking persons realize must be dissipated to stop a said. drivers who know that it requires tremendous i iS CusKion “Few how much energy car,” he “Motor-wise horsepower to give rapid acceleration never seem to think of braking in similar terms, “With hydraulic four-wheel brakes, a car running at any speed ean be brought to a dead stop in one-fifth the time that it takes to attain that speed, A 2000-pound car, there. fore, would require an engine of 350 horsepower to accelerate to 30 miles an hour in the same time that it may be stopped when going at that speed. “Some drivers who would not ex- pect a standard chassis to stand up with a 350 horsepower engine make It a practice to use the brakes to their full power for every stop. That is, they maintain speed to the last possi ble moment even when they know long in advance that they must come to 8 standstill, and then bring the car to a sudden bait Advantage in Making Stop. “It is a great advantage to have the ability to make. sudden stops in emergencies, but it 18 a gross abuse of a car to use this power harshly every time, “Drivers should use their moderately for all service stops When they see a red light a block a head they should let the car slow down gradually, bringing it to a stand. still finally with gentle brake pres sure, "This practice, if followed regu- larly, not only saves the tires and brake linings, but guards the whole chassis from undue stresses” Check Up Repairs After Car Has Been to a Shop After the car has been to a repair shop always cheek over some of the things that have nothing to do with the trouble that occasioned the serv. fcing. This is Important where cars are taken to shops that do not spe. clalize in the particular make. What happens in many cases is that mechanics disconnect things and loosen parts that do not need to be touched. They are not quite familiar with the preliminaries to the real work and are obliged to éxperiment a little. The things that are disturbed in this way are not likely to be thought of when they come to finish the work. Where the authorized service sta- tion does the work it is seldom that anything is disturbed unnecessarily. Any mechanic prefers to check over his work a little but often he Is rushed by the impatient owner. brakes Great Britain Clings to “Keep to Left” Great Britain still clings to the “keep to the left” rule of the road, despite the fact that the “right” is generally accepted throughout the world, according to the foreign trav- el division of the American Automo bile association, Aside from Great Britain, other countries which have the left rule are: Alderney, Czechoslovakia, Gold Coast, Guernsey, Hungary, India, Irish Free State, Jersey. Malta, Northern Ireland, Rhodesia end Sweden, Bool edt ood oot Bord Pod ) lr lp lp nd od pol dd THE MOTOR QUIZ {How Many 1 SP oo On vn, , POOLOL POPPI PISOOSIIOON Joel an arin Can You A Q. What effect on encine per- » a » eee Wh pod Xe » formance is produced by Improp er spacing of spark plug gaps? Ans. Too close spacing causes the ear to jerk at low too wide spacing will cause the high Pr, speed ; Pood v sngine to miss at hills, speed or vo in climbing spacing engines is for high econ 020 Inches compression (25 inches Q. What is » Ans, Fif Q. Hown "rs are tl AR Teale percentage Id on time? v.plohe y-eight wales N per cent Me » » poe) » » while deal United ae Sih A was “nad Prd ! ¥ Male Sealidtedd yd WRT [kaate ai ah pated Qrdad i nate PP - va dd pled average jife i A Ans. About six dng < ter “< v , sn. ond wp Cri i rr Years POO « Wire Useful to Remove Broken End of an Axle With some types of rear axies it is difficult to the broken end without taking the differential housing cover. The picture shows how this without turbing the cover. A loop is formed on end of the wire as shown. The wire. of course, should be so stiff that remove off to accomplish Job dis. fa MALL TYE FORMED ON wile A Loop in a Piece of Stiff Wire Used to Remove Broken Axle Without Disturbing Cover. the loop can be slipped down over the end of the axle. The slip noose ar. rangement will afford a sufficiently good purchase on the end of the axle to pull It out—Popular Science Monthiy. Jay Walking Barred by Authorities of Paris The authorities of Paris have adopt- ed American methods for the protec tion of pedestrians. Large brass studs have been placed in the pavements to show the pedestrian where he may safely make a dash to the other side of the street, and pedestrians are ex. pected to use this space and no other. The century-old-custom in France of allowing persons to cross the road where and when they will has been abandoned, much to the disgust of 30.- 000 Parisians, who paid fines for cross: ing the highways in the old-fashioned way. AUTOMOBILE FACTS The Wisconsin traffic code gives a cow in the road the right-of-way over an automobile. The pedestrian gets his under It. . . 5 » “Fading” Is the term’ that describes the lowered efficiency of the brakes after they have been “on” some time. Heat causes it. - . - Rust on the rims is hard on the rubber of the tires. It should be re moved and the spot covered with an aluminum paint. “0 With the average car speeds going up, designers are making every eof. fort to raise the point at which gaso- line consumption is lowest, La Successful two-way radio demonstra. tions are slightly reminiscent of the early days of the automobile, when proud owners bragged of “getting there and back” In their machines,