Ethiopian Army Captain Prepared by the National Geographic Soclety, Washington, D, C—WNU Service, THIOPIA, a familiar name In the headlines these days, boasts a long and imposing history. The kings of this an- clent empire are traced from Orl of 4478 B. C. to Haile Selassie the First of A. D. 1985—with time out, natural ly, from the date of the Deluge until the fall of the Tower of Babel. Ac- cording to tradition the queen of Sheba was an Ethiopian. She may possibly have lived in what we now call Ethiopia, and certainly she In cluded it in her extended domaln, Modern Ethlopla Includes more than 850,000 square miles of the rich and productive northeastern African pla- teau. It is mainly a mountalnous re- gion, much broken by deep valleys Arid, semi-desert country surrounds it on every side. It does not touch the sea, although some Ethiopian feudal chieftains like to grasp a marine tel- escope as they pose for a formal pho- tograph. In the population there are, perhaps, 5,000,000 Christians of the true Ethl- oplan (Hamitic-Semitic) type. They are the inheritors of an ancient civiliza- tion under whose feudal form of gov- ernment are estimated to be 7,000,000 Moslems and pagans. The latter are mainly negroes, The country Is surrounded by Afri- can colonial possessions of Great Britain, France and Italy. As the Ethl- opia of Solomon's time, it probably in- cluded all of these adjacent territories, with an Egyptian frontier, and that part of southwestern Arabia known today as the Yemen and Hadhramaut There is In Ethiopia a very evident mixture of Asia and Africa. Some of the blood came from ancient Pales- tine, some from Arabia, and some from the shores of the Caspian. Authorities do not agree as to the elements in this African melting pot of races. But the Ethiopian claims with pride a strong relation to the Semites, Getting Into Ethiopia. The front door entrance and port to Ethiopia is Djibouti, French Somali- land, The French are commendably responsible for Djiboutl. It is the base of their 500-mile rallway from the coast directly inland to Addis Ababa, the Ethiopian capital This rallway Is Ethiopia's only modern connection with the outside world, Djibouti is, there- fore, very important to Ethiopia. It Is headquarters for an Ethiopian consul who gives Intending visitors their visas, There are two kinds of trains now on the efficient but expensive little Franco-Ethioplan railway. On Sunday and Wednesday mornings a train leaves Djibouti to arrive three days later In Addis Ababa. Each Tuesday evening departs the “through ex. press,” which does the 500 miles in 30 hours. Passengers can sleep on this “fast” train, not In pullmans, but in adjustable seats. On the three-day trains sleeping is done at little way- side hotels the two nights en route, The first day of this rallway jour. ney ends usually at six in the after noon, at Diredawa, the first town of importance after the train enters Ethiopia. It is on the fringe of a plateau 4,000 feet above sea level and ‘a 200-mile climb from the coast. An interesting side trip from Diredawa Is the old Mohammedan walled town of Harar, four hours away by rough mo tor trip or a whole day by muleback. Camels, horses, or mules are available as a means of transportation, but the mule is considered the most appropri ate for one of actual or apparent high station in life, The second night of the three-day train journey is passed on the banks of the Awash river, one of the peculiar streams of the world, At this point It is a swiftly flowing river In a deep canyon. Rising on the Ethiopian pla. teau, it turns northeastward toward the Red sea, but loses itself In the Danakil lowlands short of its natural flestination. Awash consists mainly of a small rallway yard, a onestory brick bullding housing a hotel under guasi-Hellenle management, a scatter ing of native shacks, and many cats Food and accommodations are simple and the most essential thing is a good mosquito net, Addis Ababa, the Capital, The train gets under way again the pext morning at dawn and rolls through lovely grass and forest lands, where gallop many herds of gazelles and antelope. Occasionally one sees the dark blur of a rhino breaktasting on the far side of the Awash River canyon. About four o'clock in the aft poon of this third day the sprawling | elty of Addis Ababa Is sighted In a forest of blue gum trees, across a rolling, grassy plain, in Full Dress Uniform. A ride of 20 minutes on mule or horseback, or five minutes by motor, takes the arriving traveler to the main part of the city. Addis Ababa has good streets and no “across the rail- way tracks” quarter. It has also lega- tions, consulates, hotels, many Ameri- can motor cars, alrplares of sorts, and some presentable business bulldings, On one of the two principal elevations of the city Is the ever-interesting mar. ket place. Here once stood the great tree which served for generations as a gibbet. The other main elevation is crowned by the group of buildings which make up the imperial palace. The most Imposing edifice on this des- ignated “Hill of the Gebbi" is the Audience Hall of the Conquering Lion of the Tribe of Judah, constructed of stone and given its high-sounding title by order of the late Emperor Mene- lik. Menelik claimed his title by vir- tue of his descent from that first Menelik who was born to Sheba after her visit to Solomon, Ethiopia claims to be the oldest Christian sovereign state. The teach- ings of Christ were introduced about A. D. 330 by two shipwrecked Phoenl- cian youths, Before they became Christians, the ruling classes of Ethl- oplans were adherents of Judalsm. Thelr present church ceremonial re- tains many traces of that great and Resources of the Country After the professiens of priest and soldier, agriculture is the principal oe cupation in Ethiopia. The country Is very fertile, though methods of cult vation are still primitive, Many fine beef cattle are produced, and the peo- ple are great meat eaters. They have what might be called a ceremonial cus- tom of eating a bit of raw beef as no sort hors d'ceuvre. In addition to the ordinary kinds of ian farmers In parts of the country ralse civet eats for com- mercial purposes. From these animals they obtain a liquid musk marketable to French and American perfumers at $2 an ounce. The chase is also a com- mercialized Industry in Ethiopla, and naturally ivory heads the list of its products. of Many an Ethioplan leopard involun- tarily contributes his skin to American feminine fashion. As many as 100,000 of these spotted skins have gone to American furriers In a single year. Also monkey furs are an item of prof- itable trade. A shy member of the monkey tribe, called the guereza, lives in the trees of the Ethiopian high- lands, Their long, silky, black-and- white fur was worn by the Ethiopians as capes untill Parisian dressmakers fancied it as a trimming for feminine finery. Lately the Ethiopian govern- ment has decided to protect its wild game by requiring the taking out of licenses and payment of hunters’ fees. Where Fine Coffee Is Grown. The Harar district, town and prov. ince, is the center of production of cultivated coffee in Ethiopia. The bean produced Is of excellent quality and ranks next only to Mocha In world markets. It is called “longberry Mocha™ and Is sold to a discriminat- ing clientele in the United States, Al though the Harar plantations are de. scended from seed Introduced from the Mocha district in Arabia, Ethiopia is the home of coffee. The tree was feund originally by Arab travelers In the Ethiopian province of Kafa, from which It took its name. Seed was taken from Kafa to Arabia, and thence came back to Harar, According to the Arabs, the cultivation of coffee also spread to other parts of the world from the Yemen, in southwestern Arabia, In Kafa and adjoining parts of southwestern Ethiopia may be seen today vast and virgin forests of coffee of the Indigenous variety. It neces. sarily grows without cultivation or care and thousands of tons of the berries fall to the ground In waste each year. The outer fringes of some of these forests are worked by natives in sections not too far from export trading centers, where the market value of coffee Is known. Egypt buys much of this coffee, shipped via Khar. toum, in place of former Lmportations of the Brazilian product. district. They are the fine black. maned fellows so alluring to the big. game hunter, but the Harar fellow Is particularly during which to declalm and aet out the feat. Afterwards he Is privileged to wear the mane and skin as part of his warrior dress, THE No Damaged Trees | Should Be Saved ter Lumber or Fire Wood; Stock Injurious. By L. BE. Sawyer, College of Agriculture, | University of lilinola—WNU Bervice, Few of the many trees damaged by last summer's drouth can be saved. The best procedure In most cases i8 to Where of the top Is may tide only a part careful management over the tree until new top growth and follage are sufficient to support life and growth. The ground onder a good soll muleh and this supplement ed by three or four Inches of barnyard All of the dead wood should be cut out of the top. Where dead trees are removed this summer, plans should be made for re- placements next spring. The trees should be planted after the frost goes out of the ground and before the growing season gets under way In 1886, Damage done by the drouth drove home the fact that live stock should be kept out of the wood lot. Live stock damage to trees Is not apparent In wet years, but the accumulated damage of many seasons shows up In dry years like 1034. In fact, the worst damage last year was Invariably In wood lots used as live stock pasture, Live stock keeps the secondary growth eaten and tramped down, letting winds get a better sweep close to the ground, This causes the ground to dry out rapidly. In addition, the ground Is packed hard by the constant trampling, and organic matter and natural mulch are destroyed. The result is that the rainfall runs off the ground rather than soaking In. Evaporation is speeded up by a lack of mulch. Clover Is Cut for Seed When Heads Are Matured Clover for seed Is cut when the greatest number of mature seed heads are available, If cutting is too early, seed 18 Immatore., If cutting is de- layed, the heads shatter badiy. Clover cut for seed may be cured In the wind. row or in the or it may be stacked and allowed to go through a “sweat.” iy the latter the quality of clover “straw” remalning after threshing 1s not as good as when the clover is threshed from the wind- row, Producers erally belleve that damp, is detrimental But experiments in nal cock, method clover seed gen rainy weather td goed, ture does xl, If pollen plant plant, does, however, insects. After weather, some of i and with les sened Insect activity many flowers are not properly fertilized, of red to of not limit the sett is transferred Excessive molsture mit activities of heavy rains In hot digintegrates from to the the pollen Wood Ashes as Fertilizer Wood ashes vary In composition, There Is considerable difference due to kind of wood from which they come and they may vary, too, due to con- ditions under which they have been collected and kept. There are several constituents of wood ashes that are of importance in agriculture. The most valuable are potash, phosphoric acid and lime. Potash may vary from 2 or 3 per cent to as high as 138 or 14 per cent; phosphoric acld is not usu ally much in evidence but may go as high or higher than 2 per cent, while lime may vary from 30 to 50 per cent. Good unleached soft wood ashes are likely to be of considerable value as a fertilizer for roots and vegetables other than potatoes.—Montreal Herald. Red Clover Roots The roots of red clover extend to a depth of 4 to 6 feet, but much the largest portion is in the upper foot of soll. The proportion of root to top has been variously estimated. The Minnesota and Delaware agricultural experiment stations found nearly half as many pounds of root as of top; the Wisconsin station one-quarter as much; the Central experimental farm at Ot- tawa more than two-thirds as much: while In one-year-old clever in Michi gan the weight of roots nearly equaled that of tops. The percentage of the total fertilizer ingredients in the crop that Is found In stubble and roots Is larger In red clover than In any other legume except alfalfa, though figures Apples Exported The United States produces from 100,000000 to 250,000,000 bushels of apples and, under normal conditions exports from 17 per cent to 20 per cent of the strictly commercial crop. From 1027 to 1082 Inclusive, based on quan. tity or volume exported, apples ranked third among all unmanufactured agri- | cultural products, and based on value | they ranked sixteenth on the lst of all exported commodities for 1081 and 1032. Thus it Is seen that apples are | of major importance as an export com: | modity, Apple Blotch Apple blotch, the well-named star fungus of our orchards, Is separate and distinet from biack seadb on the fruit. The name “star-fungus” Is a good one, says a writer in the Rural New-Yorker, as It characterizes by shape the spot on apples and marks it as different from scabs pot. Moreover, blotch is a disease of twigs and side branches as well as of leaves and fruit. It has been estimated that blotch causes on the average a loss of about § per cent of the apple crop. Many Advantages in Country Life Surrounds Resident of Big City. the summer to remember that have, which is at but this does mean that they are su- What it signifies is that op- tan centers with villagers, necessarily perior, different that each knows a differen world, The person from the cl mental sure, activity and financial It Is not a restful life, ney nres MS a chance to get acquainted which is not available to such a degree in { cold wenther, Vacation time is here. i © Bell Syndicate. What Is Wealth? A woman has sald In court that with $200,000 to her name she would not call herself rich. In another court a bankrupt sald that he did not feel wealthy on £10000 a year and sometimes was very hard up. An actress who had more than £20. O00 a year has told how she had to spend 830,000, These people missed a lot of fun. A man who feels rich becnuse he has a dollar in his pocket is fifty times as well off as any of them. His Is a grand and glorious feeling. — Manchester | (Eng.) Sunday Chronicle, WHR Bervice, Wise Words sitting around Just about and times gone us anywhere In | the direction of the good times that | are to come. —ieorge M. Cohan, the good old that does not pet most part, artificial. That is, they are man made, There are lectures, theaters, concerts and cultural ad- vantages which are possible only where there is sufficlent population to support such ventures, The con- stant contact with history in the making, and with people, glves a wide outlook, or it should, on such matters, and a certain polish which comes with constant association with other persons. They compa These are some of the advantages of city life, have an ease In The person in the country bas nat- ural He has time for rd td thought. He has the opportunity advanta mn watch the seasons change from one beauty to another, to know birds, and lowers, and fruits, The book of 1nture is his to study first hand. He hag the advantages of pure alr, of quiet nights, and of whole range of benefits which the city per- son goes inte the country to get, on vacations. There are many scholarls country people, and real thinkers. From the viewpoint of h roundings natural advantages, f in favor the irees, the : ia of country dweller. It seems a r that there shoul not be each group of song by each group instead rleavage found between city and Each has a AS a8 matter of fact, eac a great deal to other, A a a real mutual appreciation of whic ountry folk little air of superiority Hh BR contribute to the summer gE the THERE'S A LIMIT Good manners do not require thar one be Imposed on, KILL BLACK WIDOW ® The deadly Black Widow spider's bite is decidedly dangerous to people. Kill All Spiders... Watch for them in garages, corners of porches, etc. The minute you see them spray THOROUGHLY | with FLY-TOX. 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