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PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bis- as second ciass mai D. Mann ..... 1 matter, President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year ....... paiy by mail, per ~ear, (in Bismarce) lly by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck) ...... Daily dy mail, outside of North Dakota Weekly by fm state, per year . 2 Weekly by in state, three years for . Weekly by outside of North Dakota. per year 1.50 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other mat- ter herein are also reserved. 5 ha ie cake ash ti hon Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK --- Fifth Ave. sai CHICAGO ETROIT Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) THE MYSTERY OF LIFE \ From the time when people lived in caves, there have always been certain men who chose to cut loose from all divine writings and revelations and seek, for them- Selves, the secret of the origin and purpose of life. ‘Their searchings have added a good deal to the sum total of human knowledge, to be sure. But the plain, matter of fact explanation they seek has always eluded them. Now comes Professor C. Lovatt Evans, one of Eng- Jand’s foremost scientists, to announce that the mystery of life’s origin and purpose will never be solved by any is not going to take his licking lying down. Isn’t he going to demand that the government do something? Is the Kansas farmer losing his cud, his kick and his cunning all at once, and that just before a congressional election?” i This rare bit of journalistic satire is the more sig- nificant because its author was formerly a progressive who once enthusiastically riished with the crowd to Washington for congressional cure-alls for the country’s ills and ailments. Equally impossible things have been advocated by the self-styled progressives, and with such frequency that they have made “Progressive” the name of one who be- lieves in the omnipotence of legislation. THE HIT-AND-RUN MENACE It is ha:dly necessary to say that every cffort should be made to apprehend motorists who flee from the scene lof an accident leaving a victim helpless in the road. Such a person offends all sense of decency and every dictate of civilization. One appreciates that for a moment a motorist might be panic-striclen when he realizes he has struck down a fellow-being. But he who yields to fear and flees the scene cenvicts himself; of cowardice. But he, who, actuated only by cunning, leaves a human being in dis- tress, is worse than a coward. An appeal to manhocd where there is no manhood is futile. So long as there is a possilility of escaping the conscquences of carclestness there will be those who will attempt it. The only effective check against the hit-and-run driver is increased efficiency of the police in ferreting out such offenders and severity of the courts that will make an attempted escape a greater hazard than stop- ping after an accident to render assistance to the in- jured and face the consequences. For people who are actuated by fear make the consequences of abandoning a victim a cause for greater fear. Make it clear to the cunning that their greater advantage lics in admitting responsibility for the accident if the fault is theirs, And the public can help abolish the hit-and-run driver, by letting the motorist know that should he stop his machine he will not become the victim of mob violence. scientist. Always, he says, there will remain an ulti- mate riddle that no laboratory worker can answer. Perhaps this is because people, after all, aren’t really matter of fact or commonplace at all, Study your fellow man in the mass, day by day, and you may see nothing extraordinary about him. He is, at times, quite mean and blind and selfish and ignorant and cowardly. You are almost persuaded that there is no trace of divinity in him—that he is, after all, only an animated clod. Then, if you look closely, you begin to see things. You see, beside the ignoble qualities, strange ca- Pacities for sacrifice, endprance, courage, fidelity, hope. You see a mother in the slums, starving herself to Provide a little extra food for the child. You see an underpaid factory drudge working his life way so that people who depend on him may live. You see a man with a vision giving up riches and honor in order to make the world a better place for men and women who are not yet born. You see men fighting poverty, sickness and hunger in order to pursue some glimpse of truth, You see men weaving songs and snaring beauty in a net of words while cities go down in flames about their ears, And, now and then, you hear battle trumpets and see flags waving, and thousands upon thousands of: men | ‘ step up, without hesitation, to die at someone else’s bidding, in the vague hope that somehow the world will be made a bit better thereby. Will you keep. on looking, then, for a matter of fact explanation? You will not—not if you are wise. You will recognize, instead, a great mystery, made radiant by distant flames. MODERN CAINS The crimes of violence that in increasing numbers, are Tecorded inthe daily news columns are a commentary on the imitativeness of the criminal. Prompted by greed or revenge or lust, the killers go about their business in the same old way. While death-dealing agencies have been modernized and novelties in killing have been in- ‘troduced in the latest records, this is merely a detail. The man who uses an automatic for his work differs only‘in dress from. Cain—the great prototype of the : murderer. Cain was a man who had some claim on sympathy— by way, not of lessening or extenuat ing his defense, but ef creating pity for the feelings that followed his deed. Then the world was young. All around was teeming life. Death had not come to raise its mysteries, When the first murderer struck, he must have known that he was effending against man and God—but he could not have fealized the full result of his act. He could not have mown in advance the horror of seeing life go out under his blow, of seeing a living being sink into dead clay. But those who have followed Cain have known what flo expect. They have killed, knowing what death means. And they are still.killing. That horror which Cain must have experienced is not theirs. They slay be- @ause they are willing to bear the horror for the sake pf gratifying evil passion. ‘They have even less claim to _ Sympathy than had C: H GOLDING ‘IN PHILADELPHIA Does it occur to: gous re is anything in the least FIGURE IT OUT YOURSELF THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE oll Jail inmates at Millersburg, O., are marched ina body to church every Sunday. “People have a right to know what jailbirds look like,” says Sheriff J. V. Gray. But the jailbirds object. When they enter the church, they say, they are the objects of so many stares from the congregation that they grow embarrassed. They have asked the sheriff to discontinue the practice, al- though he refuses to do so. if We're not quite clear just what moral ought to be drawn from all of this. Does the fault, if any, lie with sheriff, congregation or prisoners? Figure it out for yourself and see how you feel about it. Editorial Comment | A GIRL’S KEY TO FORTUNE (Andrew S. Wing in Farm and Fireside) Evelyn Smith, daughter of Maj. Orlando Jay Smith, founder of the “boiler plate” or “patent insides” for newspapers, is making her fortune raising big trees at Amawalk, N. Y. Miss Smith inherited a 249-acre farm, the soil of which ‘was so barren that.it would not produce crops and has procéeded to establish a business which is mak- ing her $250,000 annually. The Amawalk nursery is the only teat g in which full grown trees, in perfect con- dition, can be purchased and replanted by a scientific method invented by Miss Smith. She inherited her love of trees from her father, but he had never been able to make them pay. Among the specimens on her farm are some 166 years old from George Washington’s manor. She has brought other trees to her estate from long distances as well as transplanted them to grounds in all parts of the East. Among her jobs was that of moving to Stonington, Conn., thirteen elms averaging twenty-two inches in thickness and fifty feet in height. Red cedars, forty- eight feet high, the hardest of all trees to transplant, often cost as muth as $450. Others range downward to $50. If ey tree is not perfect, Miss Smith’s experts work upon it until it has outgrown its impeSfections. In this manner her trees command the highest prices in all markets, A PASSING RELIC (Christian Science Monitor) Within another decade, perhaps less, the covered wooden bridge, with its atmosphere of charm and ro- mance, will probably be a thing-of the past. Like Old Dobbin, it has seen its best days, has done its work faithfully in the service of mankind, and is now pre- pared to give way completely before the demands of progréss which nece: ite more durable and stronger materials in bridge and highway construction. Last November's flood took heavy toll of the wooden arches in Vermont. This has resulted in an active sea- son of bridge building. Under normal conditions the old bridges would probably have been displaced sooner or later by modern structures. But the process would ave been a slow and easy one, for the covered wooden bridges, although sending out more than the usual number of creaks and rattles, were for the most part, good for many more years. " As the motorist speeds along the roads of the Green Mountain state he notes reconstruction going on every- where. There is no need to argue the advantages of steel and concrete in the building of roads and high- ways in that state. Everyone will admit them, even those who take the greatest delight in all things per- taining to the old-fashioned. Bumping through or over the old structures has a fascination, to be sure, but the enjoyment of speeding over smooth, safer, well surfaced and more substantial crossings is far more in keeping with an advancing age. 2 BY RODNEY DUTCHER (NEA Service Writer) Washington, Sept. 19.—Of all the unusual angles in the current pres- idential campaign, there is probably no more curious spectacle than that of each major party being forced to carry water on both shoulders while walking the same tightrope, with penalties for awkwardness. While large numbers of voters are undoubtedly perplexed at the spec-| tacle and many are as yet unable to decide how to vote, it is rather to be feared that some persons who do not take their politics very seriously are finding the campaign a source} of amusement. The lay citizen might feel some- what embarrassed if he were to find himself in the seemingly awkward situation of either party, but suc- cessful politicians are notoriously and necessarily thiek-skinned, and also experienced in the art of mak- ing one appeal to one segment of the electorate and an exactly opposite apeal to the rest. eee There is a touch of the bizarre in a situation which finds the Republi- can vice presidential candidate and a large:number. of eastern: Republi- ¢an newspapers and politicians in the east urging the voters to defeat Smith because he can’t change the prohibition laws and at the same time reveals many Democratic spell- binders assuring voters that they can afford to vote for Smith—because he can’t change the prohibition laws! , The answer is, of course, that it is good police: for the Republicans to tell the wets that Al offers no hope, and to tell the drys that he’s a serious menace. It is equally good politics for the Democrats to tell the wets that Al will lead them out of the desert and to tell the drys that he would be hogtied. None of Al’s followers is trying to prove that he is actually a dry, ‘ater his unequivocal acceptance ‘speech, but some of Herbert’s wt friendt have certainly tried to prove that he was one ot them. 3 But if Al’s forthrightness should seem to give him any moral edge on the prohibition issue, it may be off- set. by the fact that the Demo- crats who have had to hedge on farm relief. For, while the Republican leaders have boldly and unequivocal. ly eschewed the McNary-Haugen bill and although that measure’s strong- est Republican nie? among office-holders have fallen back into the regular lines with promises to the farmers that Hoover can be depended on to help them, Smith and National Chairman Raskob have seemed to be flirting with the equal- ization fee as much as they dared. The trouble is, of course, that while the Democrats are anxious to break into the agricultural states, any outright espousal of the Mc- Nary-Haugen plan wo@)d probably. be ruinous in the large eastem cities, where Smith is especially strong. At the same time it is good politics fcr both parties to promise the farmers all they can afford to promise them. Mindful of 1932, it is safe to bet that whichever party is elected will un- dertake to effeet: some sort of farm relief, ee @ In 1860 and the years leading up to the campaign of that , poor Stephen A. Douglas was sunk as he tried to straddle the slavery issue. The modern presidential candidate has a variety of issues on which he must hedge. His consolation is that his opponent is similarly afflicted. It may be significant that the So- cialists, the only ones to tackle is- sues with entire fearlessness, never get any votes. Meanwhile they haven’t anything to lose by their bravery. o-——_ aes | IN NEW YORK °— O New York, Sept. 19.—At Varick and Dominic streets, where Green- wich Village comes to a jagged end just before it gives way to the scraper is rising. That’s hardly _what you'd call news. Another skyscraper is just another skyscraper. But to build a steel giant you have to tear down another building. And that’s where my story begins. a “Mama” Rabinowitz had lived on “Ss ( + f ‘Not Responsible for Hats, Coats, Umbrellas, Ete.!’ ECE fete hrc rrr het eierbt Maeehaebckeneb gr ea / o “Mama” Rabinowitz is no longer young. And yet time has not played so many tricks on her memory a it might. She can remember, for instance, when the grocery on the ground floor of what once was her home had no paper bags or wrapping paper for its wares. One had to go with a market basket or with the family plates and bowls and carry away the day’s purchases. She remembers when paper bags were for the “car- riage trade.” Poor folk, who could not drive up in carriages, had to carry their goods as best they might. se 8 “Mama” Rabinowitz came from Russia. She was a baby then, in the arms of a mother who had escaped a Jewish pogrom and made her pre- carious way tothe free country. When scarce able to stand on tiptoes she had seen New York from the second floor (front) of Varick and Dominic streets. There was a big triaggular window from which to peer. She had played as a child on the fire escapes. And when she was old enough to listen, she was told of her mother’s flight to this country. “There were many others in our family,” her mother would tell her. “And I do not know what has hap- ned to them.” There are sisters and rothers, uncles and aunts and cous- ins. Maybe they all died. Maybe, some day they will come. When you grow up you must wait for them to come and welcome them. You must send back word where they can find you. I soon shall die, and then there will be but you.” . The child grew to a girl and the girl to a woman. Through the tri- angled windows of Varick and Dom- inic streets the eyes of girl and wom- an looked out upon a changing world. They saw a quaint old sec- tion turn into a busy thoroughfare and ahectic city swirl all around. But the old place managed always to escape. “Mama” Rabinowitz has seen three generations of children come and go from that corner and that room. She has seen them born; she has watched ie seen some die. And always she has watched from the window for ome of “those others” who never came. She always thot would come from Russ: V3 some one who represented the old line. <7. Well, they asked “Mama” Rabin- the second floor corner (front) for more years than she can remember. STR scala vestments cece ed a a A SEES Rite AE ANS, | OUR BOARDING HOUSE : By Ahern owitz to move—just a few months back. The place was condemned. It was going to be torn down. Of course {culation do not suffer much from % Ta Aiki paid them grow, marry and reproduce.’ ‘down-town” district, anew sky-|She ha A BLACK EYE A black eye, to a person who has not a sense of humor, is an unfor- tunate affliction, and is apt to be a subject of jest at the hands of friends. The best thing to do under these circumstances is to grin and admit the worst. Doctors have termed this condi- tion “echymosis palpebrae,” which means a discoloration of the skin of the eyelids by a bruise, which allows the escape of blood from the small blood vessels into the tissues of the eyelids. 4 The tissues about the’ eye are par- ticularly susceptible to | bruit since they are very soft and have hard bones of the cheek and the ridge bone of the eye socket just beneath. Anything that strikes this area crushes the flesh and causes a se- vere bruise. Individuals having high cheek bones are more apt to receive a black eye from a blow than those without the prominent bony ridge formation. A black eye usually requires from one to two weeks for the absorption of most of the blood, and usually some discoloration remains from three weeks to a month longer, but there is much difference between in- dividuals. Those having a good cir- | puffiness and the discoloration does not last long. Others, with poorer circulations, may have badly swollen eyelids that remain difcolored for a much longer time. When you fre first struck in the eye by the “doorknob” or “golf ball,” it is advisable to apply cold com- Presses immediately and continue to do so for at ledst an hour. Ice water is the most satisfactory, since it will greatly retard the flow of blood into the tissues, The good old-fash- ioned remedy of applying raw steak to the eye had its virtue largely in the fact that it was cool and moist. After two or three days, when all danger of increasing the hemorrhage of the blood under the skin is over, you may begin a gentle massage about the eye to assist in the ab- sorption of the blood. Warm applica- tions and gently rubbing in cold cream are also helpful. I do not ad- vise peneane the skin to drain away the blood unless the case is very severe, and then it should be performed by a doctor, as otherwise a serious infection might result. If you are a lady, and do not wish your husband to be accused of beat- ing you-up, you can apply a flesh- colored theatrical make-up stick to the bruised area. When this is Powdered it will almost completely hide the discoloration. You can buy this theatrical preparation at almost any drugstore. If you are a man, the best thing to do is to broadly grin and say, “You should have seen the other fellow.” QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: Mrs. R. W. writes: “Three years ago my little girl had —yes, she would understand! ‘The city was growing all around. Things had to change. She must go. Now “Mama” Rabinowitz has gone from her window. She has disappeared somewhere into the great East Side, into a section as strange to her as a foreign land. The corner had always been her home and her children’s home. was like an old family estate to her. Uncomprehending, a bit dazed by the change, she has gone. And they’re putting up a sky- scraper where the room stood—sec- ond floor (front), But, then, a skyscraper isn’t news. |: i GILBERT SWAN. (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) [Our Yesterdays | TEN YEARS AGO Mr. and Mrs. E. V. Lahr and Mr. and Mrs, Harold Welschonse and! families attended the Indian fair at Fort Yates. Gen. E. A. Williams announced that Bismarck people need not feel badly about the city of Bismarck being named for a German _noble- man. The Northern Pacific changed the name of the city from Edwinton. to Bismarck. The Sioux Indians of Standing Rock celebrated giving 200 sons to Itlo. infantile paralysis which left hea right arm quite less. She can, with a struggle, move some of the Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal get st on health tare of the Tribune, ie “*Enclose a stamped addressed erivelope for reply. As list wants to op- fingers. orate and graft muscle into the arm. T would like your advice about this.” Answer: Your child’s arm can be developed through proper treatments with electro-therapy. Certain cur- rents can be Mala to the arm mus- cles which will bring abont a nor- mal development. She has all of the muscle cells which are necessary to move the arm if they are only de- veloped. This treatment is far su- perior to any surgical attempt to graft on another muscle. Question: Miss D. M. writes: “I. have been drinking milk to gain weight, a pint for breakfast, a pint at ten o'clock, at three o'clock and before retiring. Have been drinking it this way for two months but do not seem to gain much. Do I drink enough? Do I drink it at the right hours?” Answer: If you take your milk along with other foods you will only bring on some disorder because of this over-feeding. If you want to try to gain weight through taking the milk diet it is necessary to give up all other foods. ‘Then take a glass of milk every half hour during the. day which will give you about six quarts daily. If you can drink this much you are bound to gain weight, but it might not be good weight, and may leave you after you have stopped taking thegmilk as fast as you put it on during the milk diet. Question: Mrs. J. L. asks: “Is it all right to eat cucumbers and ice cream at the same meal?” Answer: Cucumbers and ice cream!’ make a gogd combination, providing the cucumbers are not flavored with dressing and the ice cream is made of real cream and does not contain any cornstarch, ‘teen cretand rcerpeiis massaging the legs every night wi hot live oil tend to fatten them? Would the oil oops the growth of hair on the le, little can be done shape of the body through massage. The thighs can be developed to some extent through exercise, but the calves of the le ; do not respond as readily and usually become thinner and the muscles more bunchy through exercise. Very tittle oil is absorbed through the skin, and even when it is absorbed it does not remain in that part but is taken up by the blood or Imyphatics. If the skin becomes healthier by massage there is more liability that the hair will grow longer. The oil has noth- ing to do with this, made his kome for the last few years. Governor Church left Bismarck for i extended trip to the east coast — 2 BARBS Sir Oliver says the hu- man race still is in its infancy. It seems to us he is a little late. Di- rectors of motion pictures found that out years ago. _* ° A man in Oklahoma state prison is serving two life sentences. In lots of states that would keep @ man confined for at least three or four years. 3 eee A singing lizard has been to America. imitators for brought After hearing its radio ' Several years, it will be entertaining to hear the real thing. eee John Coolidge, working as a rail- road clerk, has ‘a bederaera: We were just trying to connect that up with the fact that John toots the saxophone occasionally, se © .Y Those who have found themselves able to answer the question of why a chicken crosses the road can sit down now and figure out why woman likes to drive on the left 0 the United Bias rey ie special! ne ey ee ae aaa {peculiar about this that federal prohibition A MORAL GUARANTEE Zz, 7 = Zz EM. greenies at the close of the In- like to ‘fi sl ha an ould fhees are abowt to make in Philadelphia? new York Tinos 7 No KiDpia’ MAdSoR, IM “GZ WeLe PARDON AHEM-- Your, citizen, here for vite erat? This man Golding, sent there to take personal charge,| Admittedly those legal analysts are right who see in A, A LOLLNPaP “THAT KNOWS §& You THis TIME FoR ( CONGRATULATIONS) «Ted Cook won the caddies’ golf|naughty fellow! Beate Sines. ht en Benes | eee wet rates cade | PUNEN 11 Lickempan T SAM En “Yocputa, Youn) ARE As. RID. | | oferta Milf Cred la ea snc) | Bitnent ot more than 300 persone ins vas ee ving gett yo anhig ince ot aan Je Aneel SENBOARD [ Hose ABOVE SEA ) AS IEW ARE | [ativan Gite tang Bist — > ——* ‘eenspiracy in Cleveland, Unquestionably, he's an able| Yet all Europe is hailing it as © “moral guatuntes, I OPERATION YESTERDAY, B feVeLtunYour / RARE,“ AND j| | folnese ant gual eoameence eect corporations — | ian. 2) which the United States has joined. Especially in AN’ (T- WET OVER BIG T “THANK Nou ! eh : e Grain company, Lowton, . Minno, H. J. Hall and ick, Minneapolis. “TALKING SIGN 15 KETRACTING MoRE ) ““EOAD, “He ~ ATTENTION “THAN ¥ FLUSH OF Success ; France the belief is strong, and is not dissipated by any- When he went to Cleveland no one knew it until the thing which the Amernean Government has said, or left Yadictments were returned. Similarly, when he went, to | w |, that the signing of the peace treaty definitely ‘New York he entered thé'town quietly and said nothing } brings America out of its attitude of diplomatic aloof- TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO Business along the Washburn line was booming. A train of 40 cars LIKE: A BARA IN A Federated 000; P. CYCLONE ! ~+ on “TH! Stor Ho: ‘ CL ; Rough Riders HNtel, Medora, $50,- famtil he had all the evidence. ~}ness and once more links her fortunes definitely with LEVEL, I TAKE OFF KNEES AT A CAUSES, ME as Pecuaht an a large portion of] go. Lester cas Wee ge ty But he goes to Philadelphia with a fanfare of | those of Europe and the rest of the world. One French MWY ANTLERS To = Hf: PAIAFUL Harding, Dickinson, and Clifford “3 rs trum-| newspaper’ of large cireulation, Le Petit Journal, goes TENNIS MATCH? EMBARRASSMEAT, The Dakota Telephone: company| Rte. Fryberg. | pets. His arrival is blazoned all over the front pages. | so far as to say that “Kellogg came almost to complete You § wee Now ? planned to extend the jine from Lin-|\_ Johnson Hardware company, Cas- gives profuse interviews announcing that he will| the work which Wilson left unfinished a decade ago. ih 1 BECAUSE OF MY ton to Hazelton, and possibly to Me-} S¢lton, $25,000; Oil Johnson and L.C, ive out all bootleggers. A brass band wouldn’t have re Ey oaier give thone ii vette the widertee er te Vou've HiT rr! SHY, RETIRING Kenzie in another year, seat Bgatselton and H. A. Sedge- 7 ur ~» a inn, drawn more attention. If there is a single liquor seller treaty. The passions and-spectres of 1919 will be ex- 3 A shi in Philadelphia who doesn’t know Golding is in town he ‘Must be deaf, dumb and blind—especially dumb. So, we ask you: does it strike you tht there is any- — about the gentleman’s visit to Phila- hibited again. It will be remembered that when Sen- ators pressed President Wilson in regard to the legal effect of the famous Article 10 to the Covenant of the League of Nations, he stated that the ‘United States would retain its freedom to act: under it or not, as it chose, but frankly admitted that it imposed a “ioral bey ccna join with the other nations in carrying out its intent. If now we are to have a moral guarantee, in pines of a moral obligation, there is danger that the old Si Independent Grai y- berg, $10,000; Sn Erickion A'S, a and Clara. Beaudin, all of The highest temperature reported: for of Riche of ‘eptember <s 80) degrees and tho lowest was 28, FORTY YEARS AGO Justice Hare reported that the immense floating tion in the city kept him busy, dealing out jus- tice to the “drunks and disorderlies” and other offenders in this lively By —— TEACH BOAT BUILDING Miami, Because Miami boat policars find a2 difficult to Obtain | rr, of labor, Dade county board boat A WANING DELUSION will be lighted again in the Senate of the United tates. The doubts and differences may all be.smoothed out the event. That would \be the case if American jought were to be turned away from legal hair-split- ting and nice interpretations of the treaty to considera. tion of the largest and most substantial American inter- ests. These, as our correspondent, Mr, James, . . mt saint's ‘day tch 2 4 able 1 ‘ sooth th ae verdays & 7 : : of” her. Bismarck ° resi confreres 8, to preserve the the sishltinent of = Seprtnend : , CUBAN CHIEF CELEBRATES Havana—Gen. Gerardo Machado, president of Cubs, will yr Serre Sel rn portion of the state the strong winds often wheat, out: of the ground. Some ingenius have evolved a preventive measure which it is will remove the threat. Their method is to plant, the wheat drills, rows of kafir as a windbreak family A destitute family was discovered rthwest f Slau,