a pon . si » “calamity howlers’’ from their hiding fearful predictions. Suicidal war, man-made deserts, plagues and blights which will sure- ly bring devastation to all farm lands—these have always been among the favorite topics of the skilled and unskilled prophets. To- day, the bombing raids and the un- giving an added note the old familiar war songs. It is yet too soon to tell whether rect, but only the booming of can- non and the whine of shells could ture halls and before microphones. According United States is being reduced at such a rapid rate that the country will some day reach the status of food being available for every per- son in the country, there will be only about $15 worth. Most widely spread of all the pres- ent-day calamity-howling is the om- inous prediction that the ‘‘dust bowl” will emerge as an American Sahara where only one-fifth of the present population of could possibly exist. Few, today, raise the cry that the end of the world is coming, as they frequently used to. The end of the world! That cry that once struck terror into the hearts of men, and which is still re- membered when bombs and shells to mind the fear-stricken days of Mother Shipton. Phoney Prophetess. She not only predicted of the world, but foresaw the Great Fire of London, the deaths of kings and princes, the invention of auto- mobiles and steamships, the Amer- ican Revolution and hundreds of other world-shaking events. The only trouble with Mother Ship- ton was that she never existed, for her famous prophecy was later proved only a clever forgery, writ- ten and supposedly discovered after the described events had passed into history. Nevertheless, for one breathless night in 1879, nearly ev- ery church in England was jammed to the doors with the faithful, who confidently awaited the end of the world, as the non-existent prophet- ess had foretold. When William Miller shouted “Doom” in the autumn of 1843, thou- sands of America’s believers in the Second Advent trembled, went home, and prayed-—while taking the last stitches and tucks in the res- urraction gowns they were to don that night. At 12 o'clock they went out on the hilltops to await the end of the world. They waited until morning. Then the Rev. Mr. Miller ex- plained that his calculation—de- rived from an assumption that the 2,300 Biblical days from the time Ezra went into Jerusalem signified 2,300 modern years—was in error, because of the time lost in the change from Julian to Gregorian ~ He announced that the | passed since 1844, and with them, | the Millerites. Another Doom Proves Dud, In 1925 Robert Reidt of Freeport, | Long Island, made Page One of most world would end February 26, 1926. Collision with a c« ish this planet, he said more was heard of Mr. Reidt until 1932, when he ‘revealed’ that New York City would be destroyed at 11 o'clock Sunday night, October 8. The appointed time came—and room. The cry of ‘Doom up again in 1933 by Arthur B. Ware, re lets and announcements that the earth would cease to exist on June 12. Two years later Wilbur Glenn Vo- liva, cult leader of Zion, took up the torch of prophecy. Voliva wasn't sure whether world would end in 1935 or 19386. The second group of calamity- howlers—those who try to shake the faith of pioneers with the cry: “It can't be done!''—have pretty gen- erally suffered the same disappoint- ment that overtook those who pre- | dicted the end of the world. Calamity-Howlers Still Wail, Even Columbus, who had to con- tend with his share of scoffers, did not envision the day when ships with a net tonnage of 130,717,015 would cross between the Old World and the New, as they did in 1936. Nor did the Wright brothers foresee the time when glistening liners of the airlanes would chalk up a record of 439,000,000 passenger miles in one year, as they are doing now. There are still many calamity- howlers who defy history with pre- dictions of dire happenings about to occur, In 1934 Professor Gustave Meyer said that there would be an epi- demic of scarlet fever of terrible proportions in the United States navy. Nothing to confirm this can be found in navy medical records, however, and the 103,000 men in the navy rolls are ample evidence of another prediction that went wrong. A modern pioneer in the predic- tion of calamitous events was R. P. Hearne, noted British economist. Writing for the London pictorial magazine, The Sphere, he said in the issue of October 10, 1920: “Within ten years the power mon- opoly of coal will be broken and it will be broken not by political and economic methods but by the ar- rival of a new fuel which will re- place coal! Long before our coal measures are exhausted, coal min- ing as we know it today will have ceased, and the coal strike will be- come as obsolete as coal itself.” Some calamity-howlers arouse the country with forecasts of slow and horrible annihilation, A moderate warning, which was taken up and distorted with fear- some results, was issued by Dr. Mr. the Jacob G. Lipman. After exhaustive studies with the aid of a corps of 30 WPA engineers and statisticians, Dr. Lipman submitted a report last June, which said, in part: Warns of Soil Destruction. “We have about 200 years to go unless we start seriously conserving our soil and renewing it where it has been destroyed or impoverished. The six most vital elements of the soil, essential for our food supply, phosphorus, potash, and sulphur. calcium, magnesium up at the rate of many million tons Granted that the American farm- er has dissipated his resources, that is not to say that behind the scenes science is not perpetually on guard floods and drouths nagnified the devastation, but constantly developed and improved. Dr. P. D. Peterson, agricultural expert for the Freeport Sulphur company, is one of those who de- bunks the terror of the dying soil ‘‘History, if nothing else, should teach that dire predictions of soil exhaustion are risky,’ he says, “‘be- cause the same acres have been farmed and refarmed for centuries in Europe and are still producing abundant crops." He declares that American acres should be more productive rather tific prescriptions in the form of bal- anced fertilizers and chemical com- pounds which enrich the soil are being added to the century-old prac- tice of crop rotation. nitrogen, phosphorus and potash, and animals, Dr. Peterson explains; soils deficient in sulphur will not such deficiencies are being met by adding sulphur to the soil, either alone or in fertilizer mixtures. Fungicides and insecticides, the situation, he says. Still other modern “‘wolf’’ criers point out that in 1936 nearly 100,000,- 000 bushels of wheat were “burned away'' as great, stifling clouds arose from the Dust Bowl. Farmers of the great wheat belt, however, have refused to yield to panic, and they are giving the most effective answer yet devised to the calamity-howlers, by taking the steps necessary to overcome the dif- ficulties in their path. They are using such simple and logical de- fenses as picket windbreaks and ranks of trees. They are plowing furrows at right angles to the pre- vailing winds, so that the sweep of the storms will be broken up, Incidents such as these may com- bine to prove that calamity-howlers do have a value in dramatizing the menaces which threaten mankind. While whole countries are mentally thrown off balance by their fulmi- nations, enough heat is generated to weld together the constructive ele- ments in the community. This was seen in large-scale enterprises for reclaiming the soil, and may be repeated if the howl becomes loud enough, so that new measures for healing other ills will be forth coming. © Western Newspaper Union, Bl FoR RA of dre koh kA oN DUST Movie « Radio %k%k By VIRGINIA VALE kk *% ARY GRANT is all set to be the busiest actor in Holly- wood for the next year. Now working with Katherine Hep- burn in “Bringing Up Baby,” 3 2 2 20 26 2 26 2 2 20 2 2 to ‘Love on Parole,” with Miriam Hopkins, after which he will support Ruby Keeler in her first R. K. O. picture. Columbia pictures hold a contract with him also, and will have sev- eral stories ready for him just as soon as he finishes his stint on the R.K.O. lot. And somehow or other, Cary expects to find time to play one of the leads in Pe duction of the ever- popular romance, “Graustark.” If you heard him on the air recently with Irene Dunne, giving ex- “The Awful Truth,” Cary Grant you don't need to be told that it is anf Practically all of the motion-pie- Twentieth Century-Fox have the Ritz brothers with their hilarious antics, and Paramount has signed up the Yacht Club boys to sor Phones Hollywood producers wish that plump girls were fashionable. In- sistence streamlined figures causes them no end of worry. Many of the stars noted for their beauty and chic have to live on strict diets in order to stay slim, and when they are working on a strenuous sched- ule they get so run down that they have no resistance to colds Re. on Lombard, Alice Faye, Joan Craw- ford, Virginia Bruce, Simone Simon, and Zorina, the lovely Russian danc- er who is soon to make her debut in Goldwyn pictures. anil Bing Crosby, who always Insists that he doesn't know anything about music, or about anything, in fact, but race horses, received an hono- rary degree from Gonzaga college in Spokane, Wash. He was a stu- dent there before he joined Paul Whiteman's rhythm boys and got launched on a radio career. Inci- dentally, Bing gets so much fun out of his radio appearances that he would like to be on the air more than once a week. we Radio and picture stars have their favorite performers, just like the rest of us. 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Beverly to play a part. wn Penn Closest friends of Douglas Fair. banks, Jr., thought that his great in “The Prisoner of had cured hiin of all ambitions to be a producer in England. Douglas says they are wrong. As soon as he fin- ishes playing oppo- site Ginger Rogers in “Having a Won- derful Time,” he will be off to London again to be the big boss of a production company. In the fu- ture he will spend six months of tL i § : T & i { ! I ¥ £ i : : i i i i iN i Remember, please~when you take a Smith Brothers Cough Drop (Two kinds—Black or Menthol-5¢), you get an extra beoefit:— Smith Bros. Cough Drops are the only drops containing VITAMIN A This is the vitamin that raises the resistance of the mucous membranes of the nose and throat to cold and cough infections. LIFE'S LIKE THAT By Fred Neher