Newspaper Page Text
When your
Children Cry
Castoria is a comfort when Raby is
fretful., No sooner taken than the little
one is at ease, If restless, a few drops
soon bring contentment. No harm done,
for Castoria is a baby remedy, meant
for babies. Perfectly safe to give the
youngest infant; you have the doctors’
word for that! It is a vegetable pro
duct and you could use it every day.
But it’s in an emergency that Castoria
means most. Some night when consti
pation must be relieved—or colic paius
—or other suffering. Never be without
it ; some mothers lgeep an extra bottle,
unopened, to make sure there will ale
ways be Castoria in the house. It is
effective for older children, too; rear
the book that comes with it.
4 2
9
Hanford’s Balsam of Myrrb
Since 1846 Has Healed Wounds and
Sores on Man and Beast .
Money back for first bottlo not suited. Alldealers.
T
Going Fishing
“] have my nets and my tackle all
ready.”
“Why the shotgun?” :
“We might sight a few flying fish.”
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Kiil Rats
Without Danger
A New Exterminator thatis
+ Weaderfully Effective yet Sate to Usel
|l)(éß-0 i; rel::glv]:.l;:i hmrmle:c;"s;:l to hmmt?yn
ck, dogs, cata, .
ye;.nigss'gua,ran_ ek teed to fixll rats agg. mice
every time. 4
‘ Aveld Dangerous Poisons
K-R-O does not contain arsenic, phoge
phorus, barium carbonate or any other
} deadly poison. Its active ingredient is
equill as recommended by the U. S.
- Dept. of Agricuiture in their latest bule
i letin oil s ‘RattCmtril‘;"tlhe
Ma tters tes t merit
of IE?R-eO. ¥ pep
*One of oup customers purchased a can ot
s fasct wiched vis &F
deadrats.~—Hays Pharmacy SPhiladelphia.
ONEY.BACK GUAR
rfi‘i’lfig at your druggist or direct.
frorm us at SI.OO delivered. Large size
gg:ft'mes as much) $2.00. The K-R-0
; v ny, Springfield, Ohio..
K=R=o
KILL3-RATS-ONLY
e
Jungle Diving Beauty
Teacher (exhibiting a picture of a
gebra)—What is this?
Pupil—A horse in his bathing suit.
Mrs. Steele Saysof Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound
Pratt, W. Va—“l was so weak
and nervous that I was in bed most
all the time and
couldn’t sit up
and I am onl{ g
30 years old.
saw your adver
tising in a mag
azine and after X
had taken three
doses of Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vege
table Com{)ound
I could feel that
I was better. Af
ter taking two
bottles I began doing my work and
I feel like a new woman. I recom
mend the Vegetable Compound to
my friends and say it will do all it
claims to do and more. I will gladly
answer all letters I recive.”’—Mß&s.
8. E. SteeLE, Pratt, W. Va.
SORE EYES Z.%%
k Eye Lotion
relioves and cures sore and inflamed eyesin 24 to 48
mours. Helps the weak eyed, cures without pain
Ask your dm%::t or dealer for SALTER’S. Only
trom Beform Dispensary. P. 0. Box 151, Atlanta, Ga.
(-*l:l;in‘.:nd Dyeing Plant. One f the best
kunown in Sacramento, Large prosperous
business. $12,000 required. Western Brok
crage, 1612 W, Pico, Los Angeles, Calif,
REMOLA .5
K BLEACH
‘Wonderfa) and sure. Makes your llrg:hnflfuldu
eczome. Price $1,25, Free booklet. Freckle
g 1y TR A
Dr. C. 11, Berry €0.,2975 Michigan Ave,, Chicago
I—Gov. Al Smith and party greeted by Governor Horton of Tennessee at Chattanooga in the Democratic
candidate’s tour of the border states. 2—Graf Zeppelin touching American soil as it landed at Lakehurst, N. J.
3—Rev. Ze Barney Phillips of Washington, who was elected president of the house of deputies of the Protes
tant Episcopal church,
Smith’s Trip Through Bor
der States and to Chicago
—Hoover at Boston.
By EDWARD W. PICKARD
POLITICALLY speaking, the news
of the week centered in Al Smith’s
tour of the border states, which car
ried him as far as Sedalia, Mo,
whence he passed up through north
ern Illinois to Chicago for a stop of
several days. The trip demonstrated
the personal popularity of the Demo
cratic candidate, for everywhere he
was greeted by wildly cheering
throngs. In Louisville he spoke main
ly on the tariff, and the Republicans
asserted that he “ditched” the tradi
tional dogma thereon in that speech.
Next day the governor paid a reverent
visit to the birthplace of Abraham
Lincoln at Hodgenville, Ky., and from
there passed om to St. Louis, which
city gave him what was described as
the biggest and loudest ovation he
had received since his nomination. He
made no set speech there, but moved
onward to Sedalia and there delivered
an address on the topic of “Coolidge
Economy.” He declared the Coolidge
edministration was actually guilty of
willful waste, giving -facts and figures
wupposed to support this assertion,
and attacking the statements made
by Director of the Budget Lord and
Secretary of the Treasury Mellon.
Chicago came next on the itinerary,
though when Smith’s train passed
through Springfield he was induced.to
talk when a loud speaker on wheels
was brought alongside the rear plat
forrt on which he was displaying him
gelf. A tremendous and noisy crowd
welcomed him to Chicago, and after
a day of rest and work on his address
he made a tour of the city, appeared
at banquets and, Friday night, spoke
to an enthusiastic crowd that filled
the One Hundred and Thirty-first In
fanery armory to bursting. i
Hm‘RBEIUI‘ Hoover’s personal con
tribution of the week to the cam
paign was his address in Boston,
where before 9,000 friendly listeners
in the city arena he told of the coun
try’s economic prosperity for. which
the Republican party clalms the cred
it. Continuance of the protective
tarlff, he argued, is necessary for the
continuance of this prosperity, and he
sought to refute Smith’s assertions in
that connection. In replying to the
Democratic attempt to show that
changes in tariff would be made by
them that would hurt business or la
bor, Hoover said that eight months
ago every Democrat in the senate
voted for a resolution designed to re
duce the tariff. In Springfield and
other Massachusetts’ cities through
which he passed Hoover made earn
est pleas that every citizen should
take an active interest in the Presi
dential campaign and that every Re
publican should loyally support his
party.
Senator Borah, big gun of the Re
publican-speaking battery, invaded the
South last week and delivered two
rousing speecnes at Salisbury and
Charlotte, N. C. In the former he
appealed especially to the women vot
ers to help defeat Smith and so pre
vent the overthrow of prohibition. In
Charlotte the senator defended at
length the record of Hoover as food
administrator during the war, assert-
Ing that he always showed himself to
be the friend of the farmer and was
ever vigilant to do the very best for
the protection of the American pro
ducers. Reviewing the agricultural
situation after the armistice, the sen
ator declared that Hoover opposed
the proposal of the agricultural ad
visory committee in 1918 to fix a mini
mum price for wheat of $2.46 a bush
el because it would not “be just to the
consumers.” From North Caroiina
' Senator Borah moved into Tennessee,
speaking at Chattanooga.
EXCEPT for the stupid dnd boorish
L pehavior of the customs official
detailed to Lakehurst, the arrival of
’ the German dirigible Graf Zeppelin
| and the reception accorded its com
mander, crew and passegers, were ail
I
D 0
THE BULLETIN, IRWINTON, GEORGIA.
that could be asked. Before going to
the hangars in New Jersey the huge
airship spent an hour circling over
New York city, and next day Dr.
Hugo Eckener and his *men were re
ceived formally by the metropolis
with the usual accompaniments of
parade through streets filled with con
fetti and ticker tape, speeches at the
city hall and a banquet. On Friday
Doctor Eckener was the guest of Pres
ident Coolidge at breakfast in the
White House.
Meanwhile the injuries sustained by
the Zeppelin just before reaching
America were being repaired and the
airship was being made ready for a
two days’ tour of the Midwest which
would take it over Chicago, Cleveland,
Akron, Cincinnati and Detroit with
probable stop at the last named city,
which has a mooring mast.
While in New York Doctor Eckener
announced tentative plans for the for
mation of a trans-Atlantic Zeppelin
mail and passenger service to be cap
italized for $14,000,000 and discussed
the details with several financiers. He
said to interviewers that he wanted
American capitalists to entrust the
$14,000,000 to him and his German
confreres. The sum would be used
to build four new Zeppelins, each big
ger than the Graf Zeppelin, and to
use them on regular all-year-round
voyages between Germany and. an
American airport near Washington or
Baltimore. If the money can be ob
tained Doctor Eckener said $8,000,000
would be spent on the four new gas
bags and $6,000,000 would be paid out
for new hangars in Germany and the
United States. Two of the dirigibles
would be built in Germany and two
in America.
Dispatches from Buenos Aires sald
the Argentine post-office officials had
signed a contract with a Spanish
Transaerial company for the carrying
of mail monthly between Spain and
the Argentine, and the company
named is.reported to have leased the !
Graf Zeppelin for two years. |
Several delegates to the convention |
of the Investment Bankers’ association
at Atlantic City started for an air- |
plane ride Thursday. The plane went
into a nose dive and crashed and W. O.
Chanute, a banker of Denver and
grandson of Octave Chanute, “the fa
ther of aviation,” was Kkilled, Seven
other men were injured.
Baron von Huenefeld, who was fly
ing from Germany to Tokyo, made a
forcéd landing in a suburb of the lat
ter city and his plane was badly
smashed. The baron and his two com
panions escaped unhurt. They had
lost their way in a rainstorm.
NEW YORK'S big sewer scandal
reached its climax with the con
viction of Maurice E. Connolly, who
resigned under fire as borough presi
dent of Queens last April, and Fred
erick Seely, who was design engineer
in the Queens’ sewer bureau. They
were found guilty by a jury of con
spiring with the late John M. Phillips,
sewer pipe manufacturer, to defraud
the city in contracts for $29,000,000
public sewers. Connolly was given
the maximum sentence of one year in
prison and SSOO fine. The evidence
in the trial indicated that Phillips
grafted more than $10,000,000 in ten
years. It is expected a taxpayers’
suit will be started to recover from
Connolly and the Phillips estate the
money illegally expended.
ANOTHER interesting instance of
fundamentalism in the southern
border states has arisen. Charles
Smith of New York, president of the
| American Association for the Ad
vancement of Atheism, went down to
: Arkansas to work against. a proposed
anti-evolution law to be voted on in
the general election next month. He
was arrested in Little Rock on a
charge of distributing printed mate
rial “calculated to provoke a breach
of the peace” and was fined $25 and
costs, not being permitted to testify
in his own behalf because he refused
to take the customary oath. Smith
decided to serve out his fine in prison
as a protest, he said, against the state
laws that prohibit atheists from tes
tifying in courts or holding public of
fice.
ATTORNEY GENERAL SARGENT
ruled that the coniract of Decem
ber 20, between the United States
government and the Sinclair Crude
Oil Purchasing company, for the sale
of the government’s royalty oil in the
Salt Creek field in Wyoming was in
valid. Mr. Sargent based his decision
on two circumstances: First, that the
contract was not let in a manner re
quired by law, and, second, that the
secretary of the interior did not have
legal power to sign a contract con
taining an option provision in favor
of the Sinclair Oil Purchasing com
pany.
The original award to the Sinclair
concern granted a lease for five years:
with option of renewal for another
five years. The option was renewed
February 20, 1928, by Hubert Work,
secretary of the interior, after con
sulting departmental counsel. Doctor
Work says this renewal was required
by the contract and that -riticism of
his action “is. entirely of campaign
origin.” :
COMMERCIAL and municipal ac
tivities in the city of Lodz, Po
land, were brought to a standstill by
a general strike enforced in behalf of
striking textile workers. City em
ployees were forced to quit work,
street cars and taxis were stopped,
theaters were closed, and even the
members of the municipal -council,
most of them Socialists, closed their
desks. Printers were out only a few
hours, and soldiers kept the telephone
exchanges open. Street riots pro
voked by Communist agitators were
numerous, and later the strike spread
to other cities.
PREMIER MUSSOLINI of Italy in
a radio address informed the
farmers of the country that he intend
ed henceforth to devote the major re
construction efforts of Fascism to ag
riculture and that the government
would place billions of lire at their
disposal. Thousands of acres that
have lain idle since the days of the
old Romans are to be brought under
cultivation, and irrigation and refor
estation are to receive much atten
tion. The duce then distributed about
$85,000 in prizes to grain growers.
Already Italy is growing almost
enough wheat to support its popula
tion.
For the first time since the Italian
kingdom was established in 1870 a
death sentence for murder was passed
and executed the other day in Rome.
Capital punishment for certain de
grees of murder was introduced in
the new Fascist code, and Michele
Maggiora, who murdered two Fascists
for political reasons only, was the
first victim.
STEPHEN BETHLEN, premier of
Hungary, has announced that the
people of that country will soon be
called on to vote for the selection of
a king to sit on the throne that has
been vacant 'since the abdication of
King Charles in 1918. Bethlen sald
he was opposed to the choice of Arch
duke Otto, the sixtéen-year-old son of
Charles, and it appears that Archduke
Albert, son of the Hapsburg Archduke
Frederick, is the leading contender.
Premier Mussolini of Italy has let it
be known that he will oppose the se
lection of any Hapsburg for the Hune
garian throne.
WILLIAM EDWARD HICKMAN,
the youth who kidnaped and
murdered twelve-year-old Marion
Parker, daughter of a Los Angeles
banker, paid for his crime with his
life on Friday. He was hanged at San
Quentin prison, all efforts to save him
from the gallows having failed.
Hickman confessed to many other
crimes “to ease his conscience,” and
after embracing the Roman Catholic
religion said that he was assured of
salvation. ;
DEATHS of the week included
: those of Dowager Empress Marie
of Russia, mother of the last czar;
William J. Flynn, former chief of the
United States secret service, and Bea
jamin Strong, governor of the New
York Federal Reserve bank.
DID you know that there were any
royalists in the United States?
Well, there are, for a meeting of the
“Royalist ‘League of America” was
called for Sunday in the city hall
auditorium of Dallas, Texas. Richard
Potts, secretary-general, who issued
' the call, said “the time has come to
begin active propaganda for the con
version by orderly processes of the
United States government into a mon
archy.” .
Record Rattler Is
Killed in Georgia
Thomasville, Ga.—A rattle
spake killed on Greenweod, es
tdce of Mrs. Payne Whitney,
three miles from Thomasville,
holds the season record for size,
The reptile is 6 feet 61 inches
long and bhas 19 rattles. It was
slain by Carl Hundly.
Several rattlers of unusual
size have been Kkilled around
here this season, though this
section has fewer rattlesnakes
than most of the south Georgla
and north Florida counties, due
to the fact that wealthy north
ern owners of many estates have
for several years paid $1 a head
for each rattlesnake-killed and
brought in, with a grand prize
of SSO to.the person killing the
largest number of these reptiles
during a season.
MOTHER AND TOTS
RESCUED AT SEA
Transferred From Leaky Ship
in Heavy Gale.
New York.—The thrilling rescue in
mountainous seas of a woman and
two children from a leaking and water
logged San Francisco steamer off Cape
Hatteras was told in radio messages
from the liner Guayaquil.
Caught in the terrific West Indian
hurricane, the lumber steamer Willa
babco sprang a leak. On board were
the captain, C. H. McGahan of Brook
lyn, his wife and two small children,
a boy and girl, and his crew of 39
men.
The crew worked night and day at
the pumps, but the water " finally
reached the engine room. With the
gale still raging, the steamer drifted
helpless.
The Willababeo’s S. O. S. was
picked up by the steamship Guayaquil
of the Panama railway line. The
Guayaquil went to the rescue and the
sailor’s family were transferred to her
in the high seas.
Captain McGahan and his men re
fused to leave their ship. A hawser
was made fast to the Mallory tanker
Hoxbar, bound from Cartagena to
Bayonne, N. J., which towed it to
New York.
Aged Feudist Violates
Parole; Back in Prison
Frankfort, Ky.—Tom /White, aged
Kentucky mountain feudist who played
a prominent part in the Hargis-Cock
rell feud which began with a squabble
over hogs and ended only when more
than a score of lives had been taken,
is again in the reformatory here to
serve the remainder of his life.
The mountaineer, who is almost
seventy, was returned to prison for
violation of parole privileges after he
had been convicted of transgressing
a liquor law, -
The return of White to custody re
calls the stirring days of 1903 when
the Hargis-Cockrell feud kept *“Bloody
Breathitt” county in a reign of ter
ror. The feud did not die until 1912
when Jim Hargis was killed by his
own son and Ed Callahan, his ally,
was shot from ambush.
White was convicted of the mur
der in 1903 of J. B. Marcum, an at
torney, leader of the forces opposing
Hargis. Marcum was standing on the
courthouse steps when White passed
by and remarked to a friend, “There’s
a bad man and 1 am afraid of him.”
A few seconds later two shots were
fired and Marcum fell to the ground
mortally wounded. White was ar
rested for the murder and given a
life sentence but was paroled in 1917.
Makes Good on His
Boast, “I'll Escape”
Paris.—Dr. Pierre Bougrat, who de
clared in open court when convicted
of murder, “1 will escape,” has made
good his word in France's penal colony
in the tropical forest of French Guiana.
Doctor Bougrat and two others es
caped from the hospital at St. Louis
Maroni, off which is the notorious
Devil’s island, where incorrigible pris
oners are sent.
The doctor had always maintained
he was innocent and his lawyer was
so convinced _of his client’s blame
lessness that he wrote a book which
caused his disbarment.
Doctor Bougrat, s brilliant Mar
seilles physician, who was decorated
in the war for valor, was sentenced
to the penal settlement for life in
March, 1927, for killing Paul Rumebe,
a war comrade and patient. The body
was found hidden jin a clothes closet
in the doctor’s office.
Rumebe had a large sum ot money,
which Doctor Bougrat said Rumebe
had lost and then committed suicide in
the office. The physician explained
he hid the body because he feared ap
pearances were against him.
Robber’s Shot Proves
Blessing to Victim
Toledo, Ohiv.—A new method of re
moving warts was revealed to Frank
Hindman, thirty, of Chicago, by a rob
ber here.
Hindman was accosted by the robber
and handed over $35. Then he yelled
and started after the robber, who
turned and fired,
The bullet grazed Hindman’s cheek.
removing a wart of long standing.
Police later arrested William Alex
ander, thirty-five, on charges of rob
bery and shooting with intent to kill.
1.4 ; .
-Clean Child's Bowels with
i 8 * "
California Fig Syrup
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Even if cross, feverish, bilious, con
stipated or full of cold, children love
the ‘pleasant taste of “California Fig
Syrup.” A teaspoonful never fails to
clean the liver and bowels.
Ask your druggist for genuine
“California Fig, Syrup” which has di
rections for babies and children of all
ages printed on bottle. Mother! You
must say “California” or you may get
an imitation fig syrup.
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Greatness
“Greatness,” said Hi Ho, the sage
of Chinatown, “consists less in deeds
than in deft appeal to public imagi
nation.”—\Washington Star.
Small favors are always thankfully
received, but often unthankfully re
membered.
P ———————————————————————————
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R E—— =
Lotg of folks who think. they have
sindigestion” have only an acid condi
tion which could be eorrected in five
or ten minutes. An effective anti-acid
like Phillips Milk of Magnesia soon
restores digestion to normal.
Phillips does away ‘with all that
sourness and gas right after meals, It
prevents the distress so apt to occur
two hours after eating. What a pleas
ant preparation to take! And how
good it is for the system! Unlike a
purning dose of soda—which is but
temporary relief at best—Phillips
Milk of Magnesia neutralizes many
times its volume in acid.
Next time a hearty meal, or toorich
a diet has brought on the least dis
comfort, try—
I Milk
of Malgnesia
b————___._____.——-————————————*
/
RELIEF FROM Pl LES
4T CHING
-is so quick when PAZO OINTMENT is
‘applied, 3t will surprise you, Druggists
are keenly interested in the remedy and
are recommending it to their customers.
Ask Jou.r Dniggist about PAZO OINT
MENT. In tubes with pile pipe, 76c; or
in tin box, 60c.
ebe et e A e e, e
Malaria in the Blood
GROVE’S TASTELESS CHILL
TONIC destroys the malarial
germs in the blood and removes
the impurities. It restores Energy
and Vitality by creating new
healthy blood and fortifies the
system agamst Chills. You can
feel its Strengthening, Invigora
ting Effect. It brings Color to
the Cheeks and Improves the
Appetite. Pleasant to take. 60c.
B eovis ok GROVES
with eve ottle. p
TASTEIESS.CI—H[L TONIC for .those
who wish to take a Laxative in connection
with the Tonic.
,_____._____..._———————;—
THE NEW CRAZE
CHOCOLATE or PEANUT SUNDAES and
CONES. Made a new way. The_ Chocolate
or other flavors hardens on the Ice Cream.
It's pure and Nutritious. Serve these at
your next lunch and parties. It's a Treat,
Children go wild over Chocolate Pop Freeze.
Be the first in your town, Full simple di
yectiofis with 25 cent trial package, Chil
dren can make money after school taking
orders, Become agents. Send for 25c pack
age, try it. Be surprised sales you will
malke. Big money. Guerrieri's Ice Cream
Specialty Co., 7301 Stfi'lda.n Rd., Chicago, 111.
Agents Make Over 100% Profit Seiling Big
vacation pacKages at sl, Sample package
and agent's price list sent for 60c. C, H.
RUSSELL, Jobber and Dealer, Freeport, Pa.
Learn Dressmaking. i 5 practical lessous in
dressmaking postpaid on receipt ol sl. Orig
inally sold as corrgspondence course for SSO.
Jos. Brennian Co., 3832 Jasper St., Phila., Pa.
Salesmen to Sell Coveralls, Motor Coats,
Pants, Jackets, full line work clothes direct
facrory to consumer. Most complete line of
fered, Union Joe, Box 359, New Orleans, La
————————————————— e et RAR
WANTED—Names and addresses of Spanish
American war veterans and widows. Service
between April 21, 1898, and July 4, 1902. O.
Anderson, 7 S. Hilliard, Montgomery, Ala.
Zemol, the Remedy of Merit for Eczema and
other skin diseases. Sold on a money back
guarantee. A trial will convince. Samples
free. Zemol Cheifiieal Co., Frement, Ohio.
Cotton and Grain Investors and Those Con
templating Investing. Stocks and Bouds an
alyzed. Guide to safe Invest. Free Pros
pectus. . Raphael Seril, Times Bldg., N. Y.