Newspaper Page Text
What Will
do
i
/ 4
J
When your
Children Ciy
for It
There Is hardly a household that
hasn’t heard of Castoria I At least five
million homes are never without it. Xi
there are children in your family,
there’s almost daily need of its com
fort And any night may find you very
thankful there’s a bottle in the house.
Just a few drops, and that colic or
constipation is relieved; or diarrhea
checked. A vegetable product; a baby
remedy meant for young folks. Castoria
is about the only thing you have ever
heard doctors advise giving to infants.
Stronger medicines are dangerous to a
tiny baby, however harmless they may
be to grown-ups. Good old Castoria!
Remember the name, and remember
to buy it It may spare you a sleep
less, anxious night It is always ready,
always safe to use; in emergencies, or
for everyday ailments. Any hour of the
day or night that Baby becomes fret
ful, or restless. Castoria was never
more popular with mothers than it is
today. Every druggist has it
■■AE&panflß Or all skin eruptions
IF I* * leld to SaveU oint-
BL fesLSL BvEh ment; stops pain or
wtanavaHH itching at once. De
stroys the germ yet harmless to the most
Inflamed tissue. Send 4c postage for sample.
SAVELL CO., 5453 Broadway, Chicago, 111.
French Customs Men
Move to Police Air
Convinced that smuggling of for
bidden articles into France is being
carried on by means of airplane and
increasing at a rate which cannot
be coped with by the ordinary per
sonnel of the airport customs offices,
the finance department lias received
a request that a fleet of contraband
chasers be created by the air authori
ties. The chaser planes would be au
thorized to order by signals the de
scent of the incoming airplane at the
nearest landing field - and its contents
closely inspected. One estimate is that,
more than 3,000,000,000 francs’ worth
of material brought into France in
this manner pays no duty—gems from
Holland and Belgium; securities from
England and Germany, and works of
arts from the countries of south and
central Europe.
Engine Cab in Front
So that the engine men can more
easily control It, the cab of a huge
rebuilt locomotive on a Western line
nas been placed in front, directly over
the cowcatcher, says Popular Mechan
ics Magazine. The engine and tender
together are rppre than 104 feet long,
weigh over 322 tons, and a tracti^
effort of 105,340 pounds is possible.
As girls grow older they think less
of love and more of money.
UN NOW DO “
MOORK
Thanks to Lyu*a E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound
Denison, Texas. —“I think there is
do tonic equal to Lydia. E. Pinkham s
in the future. I can do any kind of
work now and when women ask me
what has helped me I recommend
vour medicines. I wall answer any
letters I receive asking about them.
—Mrs. Emma Grego, Route 3, Boz
53, Denison, Texas.
mi r a Savel* Ointment successful
OR m for 20 years, no other like
■ M ■ it- Stops pain or itching at
■ once. Destroys the germ, yet
harmless to all inflamed tissue. Send 4 cents
postage for large sample to
SAVELL CO.. 5453 Broadway. Chicago, 111.
SOREEYES Eye Lotion
relieves and cores sore and inflamed eyes in 24 to *8
hours. Helps the weak eyed, cures without pain.
Ask your druggist or dealer for SALTER’S. Only
from Reform Dispensaiy P. O. Box 161. Atlanta, Ga.
WATCHWORK. JEWELRY WORK AND
Engraving taught at Bradley Polytechnic In
i stitute, Peoria. 111. Catalogue free. Address
Bradley Watch School, Peoria, HL, Dept. 21.
Grocery, Vegetable Store. One of best in
Stockton, Established 6 years. $8,250 and in
voice. Money maker. Western Brokerage,
1612 W. Pico, Dos Angeles, Calif.
j We Buy Old Furniture; Cherry preferred
Side-boards, Desks, Tables. Beds, Chairs.
Lamps, Old Silver. Cups, China, Glass
WILDERNESS TRAIL SHOP, Frankfort, Ky.
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I—Aimee Semple McPherson, California evangelist, In London for the purpose of reforming that metropolis.
2 —Airplane view of the destructive forest fire in the Palomar mountains near San Diego, Calif. 3—Battlefield
of Salem Church, part of the Fredericksburg National Battlefield park In Virginia, dedicated on October 9,
with President Coolidge delivering an address.
NEWS REVIEW OF
CURRENTEVENTS
New York Democrats Draft
Roosevelt —Religion in
National Campaign.
By EDWARD W. PICKARD
NO BETTER illustration of the Im
personal cruelty of politics could
be found than the nomination of
Franklin D. Roosevelt for governor
of New York by the Democrats of
that state. Those who have seen Mr.
Roosevelt in recent years and know
of his dogged struggle to recover from
his physical disability realize that the
requirements of the campaign and the
fulfillment of his official duties if he
Is elected are likely to retard seriously
his recovery. The New York Democrat
ic leaders knew this, for Mr. Roosevelt
had told Governor Smith of It in seek
ing to avoid the nomination, but his
popularity and high character are such
that they Insisted on drafting him in
order to give strength to their ticket.
Smith himself told the convention
managers to go ahead and nominate
Roosevelt, and then, defending him
self against the charge of unfeeling
ness, said to the reporters:
“There is a story going around that
I want you to get right on—to the
effect that Roosevelt, as governor,
would not have to do the work. Os
course, that is on its face an absurdity.
The real fact is this: Frank Roose
velt today, mentally, is as good as he
ever was in his life. Physically, he's
as good as he ever was in his life. His
whole trouble is in his lack of mus
'cular control of his lower limbs, owing
to the infantile paralysis he caught
in an epidemic. But the answer to
that is that a governor does not have
to be an acrobat. We do not elect
him for his ability to do a double-back
flip or a handspring.
“Politically, I mean physically, the
work of the governorship is brain
work. Ninety-five per cent of It is ac
complished sitting at a desk. There
Is no doubt about Frank’s ability to
do it.”
Senator Royal Copeland was renom
inated without much opposition. His
Republican opponent is Alanson B.
Houghton, former ambassador to
Great Britain. The G. O. P. nominee
for governor is Albert Ottinger, now
attorney general of the state.
DESPITE the more or less genuine
efforts of campaign managers and
the earnest protests of liberal-minded
gentlemen of both parties, the relig
ious issue is being pushed more and
more to the front. Indeed, in many
localities it has become the chief issue
of the political battle. This is notably
true in Texas, where Protestants and
Catholics are violently and openly de
nouncing each other and circulating
the ridiculous and fanciful stories that
always originate in such religious
quarrels. In most other parts of the
country this issue is kept somewhat
under cover but it Is becoming none
the less potent. However, it works
both ways and so its ultimate effect
on the result at the polls is highly
problematical. Both Mr. Hoover and
Governor Smith have reiterated their
pleas for religious tolerance, and they
have been ably seconded by the em
inent Dr. Henry van Dyke, former
moderator of the general assembly of
the Presbyterian church. Doctor van
Dyke asserts that the election of Mr.
Eloover, even in part, by anti-Catholic
votes, would be a misfortune for him
and a calamity for the country, and
then he takes a whack at Mabel Wille
brandt.
Following his speech at Elizabeth,
Tenn., on Saturday, Mr. Hoover will
make five addresses before leaving for
California to vote. Among his dates
are Boston, October 15, and New York,
October 22. It was thought he might
also speak in Baltimore. Senator
Custis, cruising through the Middle
West, spoke on the tariff in Chicago
and then toured Indiana. Senator
Borah continued to attack Smith on
the farm relief Issue, and the gov
ernor retaliated in kind in Interviews.
Later on Al plans a speaking trip in
he East and Into the Southern, border
states
Vegetable Com
pound for nerv
ousness and I
have used Lydia
E. Pinkham’s
Sanative Wash
and the Pills for
Constipation. I
can certainly
praiso your medi
cines for what
they have done
for me and I
wish you success
THE BULLETIN. IRWINTON. GEnPGTA
JAMES JOSEPH TUNNEY, better
known as “Gene,” and Josephine
Lauder, heiress, were duly married In
a hotel in Rome, and in the process
the retired champion heavyweight did
not add anything to his popularity. So
much public interest attached to the
pair that the news photographers were
on hand by the score, but Mr. Tunney
absolutely refused to permit any pic
tures to be made, nor would he let
any reporters witness the ceremony.
Both Ambassador Fletcher and the
Italian ministry of the interior re
quested consideration for the camera
men, but Gene was adamant. The
civil marriage service was performed
by Commendator Brofferio, represent
ing the governor of Rome, and the re
ligious ceremony was conducted by
Mgr. Breslin, vice rector of the Amer
ican Ecclesiastical college and one
time Tunney’s parish priest in New
York. The bride and groom departed
for a honeymoon in the vicinity of
Florence.
GERMANY’S new dirigible, the
Count Zeppelin, largest airship in
the world, completed its test flights
last week in preparation for the flight
across the Atlantic to the United
States, the start of which was sched
uled for October 9. The huge ship—
it is nearly three city blocks long—
made a most successful flight over
Holland and England, remaining in
the air 35 hours and carrying 70 pas
sengers.
PROGRESS made by naval avia
tion since the passage of the five
year air expansion bill in 1926 was
outlined in a statement made public
by Rear Admiral W. A. Moffett, chief
of the bureau of aeronautics. Some of
the principal accomplishments listed
are replacement of obsolete planes
with modern equipment, doubling of
the facilities for training aviators at
Pensacola, use of a greater number
of airplanes with the fleet, winning of
15 world’s records by service type
planes and the Improvement of the air
cooled engine.
Field marshal viscount al-
LENBY, who conquered the Turks
in Palestine in the World war, has
come to America to be the guest of
honor of the American Legian at its
convention in San Antonio. He is ac
companied by Lady Allenby. New
York gave the famous British soldier
a great reception in Carnegie hall.
After he had listened to much praise
of his military achievements, he said:
“I hope that the move that you
here have made for peace—the Kel
logg pact—grows into faith which will
do away with the miserable myth
which we now have of ending disputes
by cutting each other’s throats. There
is no reason why nations should be
allowed to behave more brutally to
each other than individuals are al
lowed to behave. I am not a pacifist,,
for I do believe that to insure our own
protection we must trust to ourselves
for our own defense. That doesn’t
mean that if we see a man looking at
us we have to shoot him.”
Foreign minister briand, with
the approval of Premier Poincare
and the rest of the French cabinet,
has set forth France’s position con
cerning the evacuation of the Rhine
land and related questions. She is
ready to fix ten billions of dollars as
the reparations total which Germany
must pay as compensation for prelim
inary evacuation of the Rhineland, if
the relch mobilizes the debt. France
insists on obtaining $7,500,000,000,
and experts figure the other allies’
claims can be compressed into the re
maining $2,500,000,000, In view of
Great Britain’s pronouncement that it
only claims sufficient payments to
meet its obligations to the United
States.
M. Briand announces that a finance
conference is scheduled to meet in
Paris early in December, with France,
Great Britain, Belgium, Italy, Japan
and Germany represented, to draft a
plan for fiscal liquidation of war in
demnities and debts as a preliminary
to withdrawing the allied garrison on
the Rhine. Experts believe the debt
can be mobilized within six or eight
years through international loans in
annual sections of $500,000,000 to sl,-
250,000,000.
Representative Fred Britten of Illi
nois, chairman of the house naval af
fairs committee, on his return from
Europe predicted that both the land
and naval disarmament agreements
reached by Great Britain and France
would fall through because the United
States had refused to be “entrapped"
into approving the naval compromise
plan. That scheme, he asserted, would
have left France supreme ashore and
England supreme afloat
FORMAL notice that the United
States will not participate in the
selection of a permanent central
board to investigate ways and means
of controlling the traffic in narcotic
drugs has been transmitted to the
secretary general of the League of
nations.
KING ZOGU’S newly crowned head
is not being permitted to lie easy
in Albania. Dispatches that have
leaked across the border say that an
uprising started recently in the north
ern part of the country as the result
of the assassination of a mountain
chieftain. The killing was attributed
to the king and a blood feud against
him was declared. The country is in
a state of alarm. Eleven persons were
executed in one day at Durazzo and
200 others arrested. Zogu, it is stated,
is barricaded in the old Presidential
palace at Tirana.
JAMES A. GARFIELD, president of
the Roosevelt Memorial associa
tion, announces that the Roosevelt
medals for distinguished service this :
year are to be presented on October
27 to Col. Charles A. Lindbergh,
Charles Evans Hughes and Dr. Frank
M. Chapman, ornithologist. Lindbergh ,
is to be honored for the example he
has given American youth ; Mr. Hughes
for ids work in administering public
office and in developing public and in
ternational law, and Doctor Chapman
for studies of American bird life.
PAN AMERICA honored the memory
of the late Gen. William C. Gor- :
gas last week on the seventy-fourth
anniversary of his birth. In the cap
itals of 21 American republics the ave
nues and boulevards were gay with
flowers and flags, and in Washington
there was a great banquet at which
the principal guests were diplomatic
representatives of these republics.
The scientific board of the Gorgas
Memorial institute was busy through
out the week arranging for the estab
lishment of the Gorgas Memorial lab
oratory in Panama for the study of
tropical diseases, which was created
by congress. The congressional act
grants an annuity of $50,000 for its
maintenance, and the other 20 Ameri
can republics together provide $37,500
annually. The laboratory will be a
lasting monument to the man whose
work in disease control brought him
honors from many governments and
made possible the building of the Pan
ama canal.
FOR two hundred years the Ancient
and Honorable Artillery Company
of Massachusetts has gathered annual
ly for a feast at which the members
drank in port wine the health of the
king of England and. since the Revo
lution, of the President of the United
States. This year the company held
its banquet in Toronto, and persuaded
Sir Henry Drayton, liquor commis- I
sioner, to lift Ontario’s liquor restric
tions so they could continue their old
custom. But Premier Ferguson heard
of it and countermanded the order.
Said he: “They’ll have to drink the
king’s health in water. I am not al
lowed to have wines at my banquets.”
So the Ancient and Honorables drank
the toasts in soda water, with many j
a wry face. And their friends back ।
heme had a good laugh.
TWO new air mail routes from Chi
cago were opened last week. One
is to Mexico City byway of Kansas ■
City, Dallas and Laredo. The other Is
to Montreal via Cleveland and New
York city. Service started simultane
ously from both ends of the routes
and will be daily.
MAE WEST, actress and play
wright, seems determined to
force filthy plays on New York city.
Not long ago she served a short term
In prison for the offense, and last
week she put on the stage another and
dirtier play. Mae and all the mem
bers of the cast were arrested twict
and Mayor Walker ordered the show
permanently closed.
As PHUn
SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSISTI
Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for
Colds Headache Neuritis Lumbago
Pain Neuralgia Toothache Rheumatism
DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART |
Accept only “Bayer 0 package
which contains proven directions.;
• Handv “Baver” boxes of 12 tablet!
/ Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggist*.
Asoirln Is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetlcacldester of SafleyllcacM
Exceptional Man
“He’s the kind of a fellow who saves
his straw hat with the idea of wear
ing it next season.”
“But lots of fellows do that.”
“I know; but he wears his.”
The counterfeiter’s motto does not
seem to be, “Try not the pass."
ws——■aamcrnu । j
tiffin I
Kill Rats )/
K Without Danger u
A New Exterminator that is &
Wonderfully Effective yet Safe to Use!
R-O is relatively harm- Many letters testify to the great merit at
less to human beings, live- K-R-O. ’• I fed K-R-O to three rats, two of tur
Btock, dogs, cats, poultry, yet is guaranteed wife’s hens and the neighbor’s cat. Tl»e ty
to kill rata and mice every time. ^.o” H o”“
Avoid Dangerous Polsons have ever seen.—Fred V. Bors. Wilber, Nebs."
K-R-O does not contain arsenic, phosphor-
’ ous, barium carbonate or any other deadly SOLD ON MONET-BACK GXJARAM*
poison. Its active ingredient is squill as rec- TLE. 75c at your druggist or directfran us
ommended by the U. S. Dept, of Agricul- at SI.OO delivered. Large size (four
tore in their latest bulletinon “Rat Control.** much) $2.00. K-R-O Co., cpnagheW, uui<k
K-B-©
KILLS-RATS-ONLY
A Sweet Outlook
Friend —I am sorry to hear you are
In financial trouble.
Perfume Manufacturer —Yes, but
ni never give up so long as I am
able to make a scent.
Spinsterhood is often the flirt’s pun
: Ishment for contempt of court.
PEXEL is the quickest way
to get jelly like this
t
PEXEL will surprise you with its speed /T'X
in making jelly jell. It never fails. ill}
What’s more, repays 30c it costs— j
more jelly because it cuts down boil
ing time, saves fuel. Fruit juice, sugar
and flavor aren’t boiled off as by the
old-fashioned way. Jelly sets as soon fIH
as it cools.
Pexel is a 100% pure-fruit product.
Tasteless, colorless, odorless. A pow
der, not a liquid. Keeps indefinitely.
Get Pexel at your grocer’s. Recipe y z /\
booklet with complete recipes and
accurate tables in each package. 30c.
• The Pexel Company, Chicago, 111. xA/
peXel J,
never this
nTOUGH BEARDSO
Shave like magic with this cool, smooth Shaving Razor
^Crncj T - *//
Ls;
_, , „ X z SEE SPECIAL
Snfedge Razor offer below
$ * J, Combines the fine shaving
r qualities of the old fash
ioned razor with all the advan
tages of the safety razor.
GENEVA CUTLERY, lac.. Geneva, N. T.
Gentlemen:—Enclosed find remittance for $6.00 for one Safedge Rarer with privilege of returning
a* often as desired within three yeax« to be reconditioned without charge.
Name
Address • *****
. A Fine Tonic,
ttfe* Y - u p
Prevents and Relieves
Malaria-Chills and Fever-DenGuo
! * i .
Relations Strained
“You and Thompson don’t seem to
be so friendly as you were. Does he
owe you any money?” “No; he wants
to.’’ —Stray Stories.
When we say that wisdom Is bet
ter than riches, we always mean ear
wisdom and other people’s riches.
Qualifying
“Can I rent a flat? I have threa
fretful children.”
“That part will be all right How;
loud is your loud speaker?”
Some men say worse things
they mean and some mean wont
things than they say.