Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
UNDECLARED WAR IN
ETHIOPIA IS MET BY
WORLD OPPOSITION
(Continuea prom Page One)
their successes, an official com
munique said. ;
Gen. Emilio De Bono, still com
mander-in-chief pending the ar-‘
rival of Marshal Pietro Badoglio,
named to succeed him, reported
that Haile Selassie’'s warriors were
pushed bevond the Takkaze River
by the second Italian army corps,
with the Ethiopians jpuffering
several casualties.
Ras Nasibu, governor of Harar
province and commander of the
‘BEthiopian armies in the south,
was raported to have withdrawn
his forces to the region of the'
city of Harrar, important and
strategic city toward which the
ftalians in the south were point
ing.
Travelers from Jijkga were re
ported in press dispatches to
Rome as saying many Ethiopian
wounded had been deserted in vil
lages of Ogaden province as the
black troops fled. o 8
Fighting Among Selves
Ethiopians were also reported;
fighting among themselves in the|
Assua region along ithe Hawash |
River, where part of the populace'
had gone over to the Italians, It
was said the encounter occured.
ahout 80 miles west of Harar. |
Ttalian. armored . cars, s:tidAun.(]‘
unconfirmed report from Djibouti,
French Somaliland, penetrated even
to Harar, with airplanes, but]
turned back and rejoined ~the
southern columns,
Marshal Badoglo was ready to
sail tonight from Naples, with his
two sons, to assume leadership of
all 11 Duce’s East African treops,
He was named Saturday to .suc
ceed Gen. De Bono, recalled to
Italy where he will be made a
marshal, in a shakeup of the war|
command. e i
Ethiopia’'s King of Kings, said|
authority at Addis Ababa, probably
would go to the northern front
within ten days, after which his
troops would make their first rigid
stand against the invading fassists.
There was another report the em
peror would depart tonight. l
To Receive Chieftains |
It was said Haile Selassie would
receive three of his Northern chlef-i
tains—Ras Seyoum, Ras Kassa|
and Ras Mulgeheta—North of |
Dessye, a point 175 miles north—!
east of Addis Ababa. Then he w()uld‘
review their armies, the authority,
stated, adding that ‘real fight-|
ing may be expected during the |
first ten days of December.” 1
Persons who witnesses a whole
day of fighting between an Eth
iopian force and the Italian Dankil
troops at Ende said at Asmara the
Ethiopians missed their oppor
tunity to come out victorious.
They said the Danakil fighters
repelled the attack of the Ethio
pifins by wusing hand grenades,
B e i
Mothers!
In treating children’s colds,
don’t take Vlc
VvVaroßuß
PROVED BY 2 GENERATIONS
I AIR E
i ST et
e ATSRR AL e
2 DAYS — Today and Tuesday — 2 DAYS
MIGHTIEST OF MELODRAMAS!
A
.» ROCHELLE HUDSON - HENRY FONDA
T ALSO—COLOR CARTOON AND NEWS EVENTS
SPECIAL ADDED ATTRACTION
PARAMOUNT NEWS SNAPSHOTS
GEORGIA VS. L.S.U.
’ FOOTBALL GAME
STRAND—2 DAYS — Teday and Tuesday
e e A— S
CENE STRATTON-PORTER'S Stirring Tale of the Limberiost!
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—ALSO———
LAST CHAPTER FIRST CHAPTER
. “MYSTERY MOUNTAIN” “Adventures of Frex and Rinty”
land that Haile Selassie’'s warjors
p ndde a mistake in charging a
’camel battery, as they were quick
l ly replied.
[ 37 Killed
| The witness said 37 were killea
|on the Italian gide and four fas
cist oficers were wounded. The
Dankil column occupied Azabi,
just east of Makale, after the
fight, it was stated.
Austria, Hungary and Albainia,
all memberg of the League of Na
tions, did not enforce the eccnomic
sanctions against (Italy. Bulgaria
had not made clear its position. ‘
Germany, now outside the League,
had embargoed foodstuffs and;
certain raw materials to all natlons,l
although these did not include
coal, one of Germany's principa]'
exports to Italy. The Reich said|
its embargoes were due to home |
lnecesslty. A
The United States, while not
joining in the League's program,
had deeclared an embargo on arms|
to both belligerents and had|
warned Americans that if they,
carry or business Ww:ith either na- |
tion or travel: on belligerents’ |
ships they are acting at their ownl
risk. !
STATE NEWS BRIEFS
(Continuea From Page One) }
cessively undér the domination of
Indians, Spaiards and Americanl
colonists Friday will become San'ol
Domingo park Friday when «dedica
tory exercises are held at the parkl
site near here. |
The land, which was the strategic‘
center of s:xteenth cenury Spanish
control in this tergitory, was pre-}
sented to the state by, Cator Wool
ford of Alanta, and restored
through work of the Civilian Con
servation Corps and the State and.
Nationa] Park Services. |
The dedica son will include ad
dresses by Governor Talmadge and
Robert Fechner, director of the CCC.
MACON, Ga. —(AP)— The next
. nnual encampment of the United
Spanish-American war ve erans of
GGeorgia will be held in June at
Savannah, it was decided at a coun
cil meeting here Sunday.
VALDOSTA, Ga. —(AP)— J. P.
Kelly, state child wefare chairman
of the American Legion announces
that Legion child welfare workers
from throughout the southeast will
meet in Atlan a February 6-7.
CORDELE, Ga. —(AF)—A man
listed as Bill Jones, about 40, W-us!
‘shot to death by Officer Duffey
Grimsley here yes'erday and Chiet}
of Police A. G. Griffith said today
there would be mo further inves
ttigation since he was convinced
Grimsley fired in self defense after
Jones shot at him.
Chief Griffith said Officers Grims
ley and R. C. Tucker arrested Jones
for creating a disturbance at a
{barbecue stand and that the pris
oner drew a revolver as he was
being searched and fired once, the
bullet lodging in a blackjack in
@Grimsley’s hip pocket. Grimsley
fired three times at Jones and the
latter fell dead.
’ The slain man ig suurvived by a
widow and three children, *©
OPPORTUNITY SCHOOL
i Thursday morning we enjoyed
’hearing Bunice Adams tell us
‘about her trip to London the capi
?m] of England. She showed us
pictures of the interesting places
aned ‘old us of the customs and
pastimes of the different countries
she visited. In England hedges are
used for fences and the flowers are
the most beautful in the world.
Many of our customs and our
speech is derived from the English
people. Miss Adams’ talk was so
interesting that we feel that we
have heen across the ocean too.
We wish all the scehool children of
Athens could hear the account of
this wonderfu] trip. |
KATHRYN CHAFIN.
WORKERS DISPLAYING
ENTHUSIASM AS BIG
CAMPAICN IS BEGUN
(Continued Froom Page One)
lowing ecaptains and teams work
ers:’
Mrs. F. A. Birchmore, Captain
with Mrs. R. T. 'Porter, Mrs. Tom
Gray, Mrs. W. J. Mills and Mrs,
W. O. Collins.
Mrs R. P. Brooks, Captain with
Mrs. Ned Hodgson, Mrs. M. H
Jarnagin, Mrs. /H. J. Stegeman
Mrs., Harry Holt, Mrs. John Drew
ry and Mrs, Percy Hunt.
Mrs. W. H. <Cabaniss, Captail
with Mrs. Dan Dupree, Mrs
Morton Hodgson, Mrs. TUpshav
Bentley and Mrs. L.. S. Bentley.
Mrs. W. W. Clary, Captain
with “Mrs. S.! C. Moon, Mrs.
Herschel Carithers, Mrs. G. C..
MecCarson, Mrs. J. B. Joel, Mrs
C. L. McElroy and Mrs. Carl Save
Mrs. C. H. Harms, Captain with
Mrs. John McNab, Mrs. George
[Story, Mrs. Alvie Hill, Mrs. R.
W. Woods and Mrs. H. W. Bird.
song.
Mrs. M. H. Pittard, Captain
with Mrs. C. T. Crowe and Mrs.
Warren Lanier. Complete team
will be announced later.
Miss Bulah Singleton, Captain
with Mrs. W. G. Tiller, Mrs. M
A. Hubert and Mrs. Charles
Brightwell.
Mrs. Loiss Kenny, Captain with
Mrs. Annie Vie Bullard, Miss Lu
cille Puryear, Miss Fannie Mae
Teat and Miss Alice Burch.
Mrs. A. H. Timm, Captain with
Mrs. Carl Brisendine, Mrs. Ernest
Youngkin, Mrs. Elmer Grummor
and Mrs. Hugar Wilkes.
Mrs. Robert Marbut, Captain
with Mrs. C. A. Daniel, Mrs. Car}
Holliday, Mrs. Pierce Hunter, Mrs
'A. C. Aderhold, Mrs. W. N. Dan
‘ner, and Mrs. W. R. Dunlap.
\ Mrs. Randall Freeman, Captain
with Mrs. Oscar Mcßae, Mrs.
lHaro]d Hulme, Mrs. Lloyd Flor
ence, Mrs. W. O. Bolton and Mrs.
' W. 8. Beckwith.
l Mrs. Abit Nix, Captain with
' Mrs Marion Dußose, Mrs. Ralph
\Goss, Mrs. B. M. Grier, Mrs. Em
| mett Wier and Miss Louona Lit-
I'tle.
Mrs. R. H. Powell will be
|ch'airman of team for Co-Ordi
nate college and the team of Mrs
(yolden Michael will be announced
| Jater.
| The team of Miss Kugenia Ar
| nold will be announced later.
ATHENIAN SERIOUSLY
HURT IN CAR SMASH
(Continuea rrom ¥Page One)
I]u‘atonton. where they had been
spending Sunday with relatives of
Miss Anie Mae Bell. The accident
!took place apout 7 o'clock last
inight.
{ Other accidents were reported
{in and around the city Saturday
night and Sunday. Edna Strokes, a
a Negro woman, wuas hit by an
automobile driven by H., B. Hig
ginbotham on Broad Street, but
iwas not hurt, and was dismissed
from General hospital soon after
‘he was taken there for treatment
{ T. D. Rutledge, of Parig Island.
8, Coand Mps... . H.. Keeler of
{ Athens, were injured slightly in
an accident involving four auto
mobiles Saturday night. Rutledge
was released from General hospi
{tal after he had been treated for a
slightly cut chin, but Mrs. Keeler
sis still in St. Marys hospital,
ithou;:h expected to be dismissed
ishortly. Earnest Fouche suffered
la minor cut on his nose Saturday
!nlght when hit by a passing au
| tomobile while he was changing
|an automobile tire, and was also
Ia few minutes after he was taken
| there. Fouche lives on the Nowhere
[mad.
BOGART NEWS
| BOGART—Mr. and Mrs. G. W.
| Thomas were recent visitor in
Athens,
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Jackson
| were recent guests of Mr. and
| Mrs. W E. Huff. |
| Mr. Thomas Cantrell of Fort
fßonning. spent the week-end here
' with his parents.
| Mr. Chester Malcuom who is hold-|
ing a position in Atlanta .\‘pents
the week-end at his home here. [
Messers. Hardy and Harold Ter-|
ry and Herbert Capes motored ms
Atlanta Tuesday. i
Mr. Alvin Merck of Athens, \\'usi
a recent visitor with relatives here. |
Mr. and C O Birdsong \\‘vrvi
guesis of Mrs. Earl Griffeth re
cently t
________——_..—_____,!
AFTER THE CGAME |
Benson’s Bread will still|
furnish plenty of Sunshine{
and Pep. Eat at least sixl
slices of Benson'’s Vitamin'
D Bread every day. Anoth
er Bicycle will be given,
i
away Saturday Nigkt. ’
' BENSON'S BAKERY
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Oregon Girl and Her Parents Develop
- Record-Breaking Jersey Herd
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AN N NI SIS
Norma Hulbfirt, Independence, Ore., with Sybil Baroness Eileen,
Jersey cow, which set a national breed record for milk yield.. -
ATTRACTIVE young Norma
Hulbuyt of Independence, Ore
gon, is asxstin% her parents, Mr.
and Mrs, L. A, Hulburt so capably
in managing a herd of purebred
Jerseys that veteran dairymen are
watching with growing amazement
the national records the herd is set
ting for I_}:roduction. oy
Miss Hulburt is the only yonng
woman in the country to miik -an
care for a national Jersey produc
tion champion through the official
test. She milked Sybil Baroness
Eileen 914 times of the 915 times
the cow was milked durin; a 305-
day test. In this test “Eileen”
yielded 759.71 lbs, butterfat, 15,696
Ibs. milk, breaking the existing na
tional record for 305-day milk yield
by a junior 4-year-old Jersey cow
set, almost ten years ago. “Eileen”
weighed 950 pounds at the end of
her test, so during the ten months
she yielded over sixteen times her
own weight in milk.
Every morning during the: 305
days “Eileen” was on test Miss Hul
burt was up and milking her around
4:00 o’clock, then milked her again
in the middle of the day and a third
time late in the evening., “I cer
tainly enjoyed milking ‘Eileen’,”
Miss Hulburt said, “as I really like
to milk,” In addition to the three
times-a-day milking routine for the
cows on test the Hulburt family
also milked a fourth time during
the day, Miss Hulburt doing her
share at each milking,
“Eileen” is one of eight daugh
ters of the Jersey bull Sybil’s Ash
burn Baronet which are completing
such high official production test
yields this year that they are bring
ing him more honors for the produc
ing ability of his progeny than any
bull of the Jersey breed has ever
achieved in so short a time. They
are his first daughters to come into
FUNERAL RITES FOR
DR. H. M. FULLILOVE
TO BE HELD TUESDAY
(Continuea ®rom Page One)
uece county near Bishop on August
23, BU.
Outstanding Student
For two years ha attended a
medical college in Atlanta and
then attended the Medical Coilege
of Virginia at Richmond. At both
schools he was an outstanding stu
dent,
Many years ago he and the late
Dr. J. P, Proctor founded St.
Mary’s hospital and were co-own
ers. Originally the hospital was
housed in the old Stovall home on
the hospital's present site. Some
years later the two physicians had
the original building moved to the
rear and erected the modern, brick
building that is now the hospital
Under this capable direction and
progressive methods the hospital
grew from the small affair it was
originally, into one of the most
modern and complete hospitals in
any of the smaller towns of the
South.
{ Upon the death of Dr. Proctor'
[some vears ago, Dr. Fullilove be-]
came owner of the hospital and
‘since that time his has been its!
guiding hand. 1
Born and reared on the large
home plantation in Oconee county |
and, despite a very active profes
sional career, he was never able to
overcome his inherent love of the
soil. Until his last illness he was|
actively engaged in agrarian pur
suits on a large scale.
He had owned the Fullilove
homestead for many years in the
adjoining county where a varied
agricultural program was followed
on many hundreds of acres of fer
tile lands. l
: Stock Fancier
A fancier of purebred jersey cat
tle, his barns house one of the
finest herds in this part of the
state, while the raising and mar
keting of fine swine was anothér
adjunct of his farming activitieg
However, his great inter=st was
medicine. A general practitioner!
of note, he was also a brillian{
surgeon. And Outside his actual
practice, his great consum:ng in
terest was in organized medicine
He gave a great part of his time;
and vitality to it, having servedi
as vice president of the Georgia
State Medical Association, and atl
president o fthe Clarke Countyl
Medical Association and of the
‘Tenth District Medical Associatim.!
For many Yyears he had been|
iCounsellor to the District Associ
‘ation,
Dr. Fullilove was physician for!
[lhe Seaheard Airline railway andi
occupied a similar post with the!
Georgia Railroad. He was a vice§
'p\'enldent in the Seaboard roads|
national. association of surgeons |
' For more than a quarter of a cen
tury he had been Clarke county
physician, f
| Despite the demands made on
his time by a dusy practice and
production, were tested without sel
ection and so far have broken four
national reeords this year.
In addition to the national rec
ord made by “Eileen,” Sybil Tessie
Lorna broke two national records
for-senior 2-year-old- Jersey cows,
one for milk and one for butterfat,
305-day tests, with a yield of 15,357.
Ibs. of milk, 865.07 Ibs. butterfat,
and Sybil Lucky June set a na
tional record for .butterfat produc
tion by a senior 3-year-old Jersey
cow, in a 365-day test, by yielding
‘}6';657 Ibs. milk, 1055.78 Ibs. butter
at.
Sybil's Ashburn Baronet headed
the Hulburt herd for several years
and has lately been sold to F. R.
Angell and F. G. Atkinson, of St.
}’Paul, Minn.
i “Dad %avg me my first Jersey
‘for the Christmas of 1930,” Miss
‘Hulburt says. “She was Sybil’s
'Ashburn Baronet’s first daughter,
Sybil's Little Elsa, which has just
finished an official production rec
ord of 749.54 lbs. butterfat, 14,108
Ibs. milk in 305 days.”
Miss Hulburt takes especial pride’
in feeding and caring for the baby
calves in the Hulburt herd. “The:
job I enjoyed the most is raising
the calves,” she says. “I raised all
the calves sired by Sybil’s Ashburn
Baronet, tending to them from the
time they were born until nearly a
year old. I have tended to all the
cows we had when they were calves
except onme. We have about 18
calves a year.” .
Miss Hulburt also knows how to |
exhibit Jerseys successfully in the
show ring. She is pictured with
“Eileen” at the Oregon State Fair, ,
where “Eileen” placed second in her |
age class, being outranked by one |
of her sisterss At this fair the Hul
burt Jerseys won half a dozen other
blue ribbons.
as the directing genius of the
hospital, Dr. Fullilove found time
to attend the various medical con
ventions and do special observa
tion work at the great hospitals of
the country in order to keep him
self and his hospital abreast of
the times.
Studied At Mayo's
During the past summer, for in
stance, he spent some time at the
famous Mayo Brothers hospital in
Rochester, Minnesota, doing obser
vation work,
Dr. Fullilove was taken sick a
week ago last Thursday. lie had
planned to attend the flower gshow
in Atlanta with friends and had
performed an early morning oper
ation in order to make the trip.
After the operation he com
vlained of feeling ill and went to
bed, thinking he had a touch of
influenza. An examination the
same mnight, showed his condition
to be serious. Hospital attaches
said he had pneumonia, compli
cated with leukemia. A series of
blood tramnsfusions was resorted to
in order to build up his resistance
and after each one he showed
temporay improvement, but each
wlas short lived and he steadily
lost greund until death came last
'nlght.
. Possessed of a genialty that
;was inherent and sincere, he won
the confidence and esteem of his
patients and a large circle of
friends. Keeping pace with the
irapld progress of medicine, Dr.
Fullilove nevertheless maintained
to a large degree the informality
of the family physician of decades
ago with his patients. He supplied
“his patients the modern advances
of his profession in the manner of
an old and valued friend and coun
sellor of the family. Their trou—l
bles and worries, together with
their ailments, were passed on
to him and he did not fail them.
Complete Citizen 1
Civie enterprises for the better-'
ment of his community always
rceived ready response from him,
both financially and with his sup
port. Any movement that would
benefit Athens and this section
was certain to find him whole
heartedly receptive. However, a
man of firm opinions, he was just
as quick to voice opposition to
something he did not believe to
be of benefit as he was to sup
port a worthwhile endeavor,
He was a member of the Masons
and of the Knights Templar, the
Athens Kiwanis club and the First
Christian church.
Seldom- it is that a community
is fortunate enough to have a man|
who can combine the qualities of!
an expert professional character |
with a high sense of civic duty und'
a friendly spirit that I'ecognized!
no obstacles to companionship.
In his passing Athens has Jost
one of its most values figures, and
throughout this section today the
feeling reigns in many, many
home's, that not only an outstand
ing medical counsellor has passed
on, but a friend of true worth and
loyalty. 2
BEING “A GOOD NEIGHBOR” IS
PIONEER AMERICAN SPIRIT
Ida Tarbell Sees Sccial Service as the Outcome
Of Forefathers’ Dispiay of Human Sympathy
“Be a Good Neighbor” is the
apt, meaningful slogan of the
national 1935 Mobilization for
Humah Needs. The penetrat
ing pen of a world-famous
author, Ida M. Tarbell, has gone
deep into that slogan; and, in
the following article which she
has written exclusively for
NEA Service and The Banner-
Herald, you are shown the hu
man, pioneer American spirit
of neighborliness which today
is best expressed in our or
ganizations for human wel
fare.
BY IDA M. TARBELL
(Copyright 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) |
The strongest cement yet deve-!
loped for binding men and women |
together in peaceful relations is|
neighborliness. Nothing else so|
takeg hold, so reaches into society’s
cracks, so ties its fragments into
a whole. It is the world’s most |
effective social force.
All of us with an American back
‘ground are familiar with its prac
‘tical workings. Run back to the:
days of your great, great, etc.,;
grandfather and grandmother in
any pioneer community—New Eng-i
land, Pennsylvania, Ohio, the Mid-I
dle West, the South — and youl
will find that it was meighborliness
which kept people together. . i
In those days as teday there‘
were orphaned children crippledi
men, homeless women, the old, thel
sick: wunable to work they must!
either die or be looked after. Your |
good neighbor among pioneers took
for granted that it was hig business
to see that in some way they were
cared for., Read the early records
of Town Meetings, of Church Con-i
ferences, and you will find a con-{
stant interest in placing those who |
were homeless and helpless. Fami- !
lies in pioneer communities, often |
poor themselves, took in the orph-i
an child, made him one of them- |
selves. There was not always a!
legal binding though sometimes |
that happened, but it was taken!
as a matter of course that the]
orphan was the charge of the good |
neighbor.
There was many a fireside in
those early days by which sat a
crippled or homeless old man or |
woman. I can remember myself |
when in cases of illness either in!
the country or in the town wherei
we alternately spent our time a |
sick person was the care of thol
neighborhood. There were nnl
town hospitals, no trhined m\rse‘
service, few practical nurses, so
if the family was too small or tnul
worn-out you took a night or da.\'i
turn at the bedside. |
Luckless Ones Kept in Mind
As for the poor, the unemployed,
the good neighbor had them always
in his mind. Out of the larder
there went not merely the ten per
cent which the accepted religious
code of the day devoted to the
Lord’s work, but more often it was
twenty.
This neighborliness at the start
was necessary individual, ung
ganized, but it was not long Q
fore it came under the direction
of the church which as we know
wasg the first institution of the
American pioneer. In the church
there was soon set up a collective
neighborliness handling the prob
lems with more system but with
no less individual devotion.
I grew up on the \Vomen‘s‘Aid
society, an institution inherited
from my great, great, grandmoth
er. It had its regular clientele
which it strove to keep at work,
to clothe, feed, nurse, place in
homes as the needs arose, and in
epidemics it guarded- the homes
and tackled the work like a band
of trained nurses, unscientific of
course, but they managed to do
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over two million homes, § 4 i into a Maytag means &XlO
Maytag has proven its S immn i RN, £ years of satisfactory scTUC
ability and stablllty as a ;,, @& It is a favorite both 11 ity
washer. Buy proven value. £, >~ . i and farm homes. May!tae®
Investigate the Maytagand ; 8. may be had equipped ™
the easy payment plan. 2 MODEL 30 W Gasoline Multi-Motor*
. o s
FEDERAL HOUSING ACT + NOW INCLUDES MAYTAG WASHERS ON THE LIST FOR GOVERNMENT AID T 0 BUTER
CHAS. S. MARTIN. Exclusive Dealer
PHONE 1517 FOR DEMONSTRATI 0N—270 NORTH JACKSON ST. .
PHONE 166—163 NORTH JACKSON STREET :
THE MAYTAQ pEyasT?
COMPANY o
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Ida M. Tarbell, noted author
and biographer, has just cele
brated her 78th birthday anni
versary. She interrupted the
writing of a new book, which
is to appear in a series entitled
“The History of American
Civilization,” to pose in her
New Ycrk home for this pic
ture, her most recent one. In
the accompanying excluSive
article, she tells readers of the
Banner-Herald how each may
“be a good neighdor” by sup
porting Athens Red Cross Roll
Call and Y. W. C. A. mainten
ance fund drive,
| their jobs. It was a triumph of
'I volunteer friendliness. :
‘ Servites Replace Individuals
Out of these early forms of nei
ghborliness there have grown®nat
urally and inevitably as society
‘has enlarged, become more compli
{cated, new forms of neighporiiness,
‘Our great institutions for the care
]and training of children, summer
| camps, boys and girls clubs, op
sportunities for work a.d helpful
interests, Y. M. C. A..and Y. W. C.
IA. girl scouts and boy scouts, our
|hospitals, nursing service, homes
lfor the aged—all of these fine lat
{ ter day developments are that nat
!ural outcome of early forms of
‘Amel'icn's neighborliness which to
day have culminated in organiza
ltions for human welfare.
| Wk no longer individually watch
iat night over the bedside of the
| sick and poor, we support and di
rect hospitalg where it is done
more effectively. 1 am told that
nine out. of every ten of the bed
side cases among the poor who re
ceive such care, are now cared for
“B. C.”” Relieves
Periodical Pains
in Three Minutes
Now it is so unnecessary to suffer
month after month from inorganic
pains, because ‘“B. C.” wil] bring
soothing relief in three minutes.
“B. C.” is prepared by a registered
pharmacist, compounded on a dif
ferent principle from most relief
giving agencies in that it contains
several ingredients, used. by many{
physicians, so blended and propor
tioned as to accomplish in a fewl
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1938
ee S e ) !
lby trained visiting nurses vy, ,
'pa!d out of our private fynqs ][“l.'
|vou and T who must see {l, m";
lare supported to do what i,
own individual inherited taq): ,\,']]
what need there is today of ,{M',
nurses. ‘The Children's Burea, y,
ports that the long depression 1
left its mark particularly o,
dren. Thousands of our litt],. folke
have gone through these vear
without having on any day vr.uun[
| Bood nourishing food: they pay,
| been . erowded .into incomforiyy,
‘houses; they have not haq )rope;
| medical care. Nothing hut , .
‘newed effort, a revival of the gy
‘of the good neighbor, is goine ¢
'give them this coming winto, Wha
they need.
| What is true of children is tpy,
{a]l down the line of Human Neeqq
.We have developed institutions t,
gflo the work our grandparenie oneg
gfook care of; we have put our
{?;'nelves into them. We cannot lef
l?'them languish at the moment o
; greatest need any more than those
Vmcestors of ours let people dic yn.
cared, for in time of famine ang
}E'__fistilence. They went in and gj
‘{‘Z:l}eir best whatever the cost That
ig’what we Who carry on the spiy
‘and practices of . neighborlines.
hey left us must do today.
Iz 3. 5 Sy
pil g All Must Contribute
It is not a question of what
government may or may not
‘doing in certain essential ays
l'“‘rhe government cannot do the worg
|of the good neighbor. That i per
| sonal intensive work, your duty ang
(my duty. We must meet the .
| dividual needs of our particuly
community. The commuynity is oy
business. The better and safer ang
happier we make it, the better oy
government will be, for we make
the government; it does not make
jus = RICES s
‘Luckily—and logically given the
evolution of th,e spirit of American
neighborliness—we have developed
splendid organizations for presery
ing it in better times, that grand
Mobilization in the interest of Hy
man Needs which has been held
every fall through &all the vears of
idepression. Devoted men and
women from all parts of the Union
]are.annually giving the best of
;themselves to preserve the tradi
i tion of neighborliness. The annual
Icampaign for the Red Cross and
lothér volunteer welfare funds is
Inow on and if you are true to the
l.x-mirit of your great, greatAmeri
| san ancestors you will do vour part
! whatever vour taxes.
from common colds
That Hang On
No matter how many medicines
you have tried for your cough, ches
cold or bronchial irritation, you can
get relief nmow with Creomulsion.
Serious trouble may be brewing and
you cannot afford to take a chance
with anything less than Creomul
sion, which goes rigg‘t—,m,the seat
of the trouble to 4id mature to
soothe and heal the inflamed mem
branes as the germ-laden -phlegm
is loosened and expelled.
Even if other remedies have
failed, don’t be discouraged, your
druggist is authorized to guarantee
Creomulsion and to refund your
money if you are not satisfied with
results from the ver¥ first bottle.
Get Creomulsion right now. (Adv)
|minuteg what we belieye mno one
jdrug formula can do in so short &
{time. “B. C.” should also be used
for the relief of commen colds,
lheadaches, and neuralgia; muscular
|aches and pains, reducing fever and
for quieting a distressed . nervous
|system without opiates, narcotics of
such habit-forming drugs. Get
I“B. C.” in 10c and 25c packages
wherever drugs are soldi—(Adv.)