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ONLY A DOCTOR KNOWS ]
WHAT A LAXATIVE J
SHOULD BE
^'*(l
Danger lies in careless selection
of laxatives! By taking the first
thing that comes to mind when bad
breath, headaches, dizziness, nausea,
biliousness, gas on stomach and
bowels, lack of appetite or energy
warns of constipation, you risk
forming the laxative habit.
Depend on a doctor’s judgment
in choosing your laxative. Here’s
one made from the prescription of
a specialist in bowel and stomach
disorders. Its originator tried it
in thousands of cases; found it safe
for women, children and old folks;
thoroughly effective for the most
robust man. Today, Dr. Caldwell’s
Syrup Pepsin, as it is called, is the
world's most popular laxative. It
is composed of fresh herbs and
other pure ingredients. You can
get it, in generous bottles and ready
for use, at any drugstore.
For Barbed Wire Cuts
Try HANFORD’S
Balsam of Myrrh
AU duhn are authoriz'd to reload your money
for the fint bottle if not inited.
A “choke circuit” devised by an .
engineer in France silences arc
lamps, so that they can lie used in
the production of talking pictures.
Many of us would try oftener to
cheer up the suffering if we only
knew how.
K-ft-Ocan be uned about the borne,bam or pouf
try yard with absolute safety as it contains no
deadly poison. K-R-O is made ofSquill.ae
recommended byU.S. Dept.ofAgrleulture,under
the Connable process which insures maximum
strength. Two cane killed 578 rats at Arkaneac
State Farm. Hundreds of other testimonials.
SoM on a Money-Back Guarantee.
Insist on K-R-O, the original Squill exter
minator. All druggists, 75c. Large sire (tout
^imes as much) $2.00. Direct if dealer cannot
•apply you. K-R-O Co.. Springfield, O.
K-R-O
KILLS-RATS-ONLY
Oddities in Mishap
An automobile driven by a Nor
way (Maine) man sideswiped anoth
er car, cutting off the mudguards and
running board, shot through a fence,
plunged down a ten-foot embankment
to the covering of a lake, tipped
over and was bent and twisted be
yond repair. But neither the wind
shield nor a headlight or window
was broken; the driver was not in
jured and not a drop of coffee filling
Ihe bottom of a dinner bucket was
spilled.
A dog doesn’t pretend; but a cat
does.
Be careful. A hint is sometimes
an insult.
Upset Not Serious if
Bowels Get This Help
When you're out-of-sorts, headachy,
dizzy, bilious, with coated tongue, bad
breath, no appetite or energy—don’t
worry. It’s probably constipation.
Take a candy Cascaret tonight and
see how quickly your trouble clears
up. No more headache; no gas on
stomach or bowels. Appetite im
proves ; digestion is encouraged. Take
another tomorrow night apd the next
night Get every bit of the souring
waste out of your system. Then see
how bowel action Is regular and com
plete.
Cascarets are made from cascara,
Which doctors agree actually strength
ens bowel muscles. Ten cents at all
drug stores.
C^BOILS
I (SR AND CARBUNCLES FLY AWAY
I Nothing like this specialist's
■ sX salve. Car boil. Instantly stops
■■■Tffr&r pain. Heals overnight Get
I’M Car boil from druggist. End
■ ™ IftjL trouble in 24 hours. Amazingl
R Quickest relief ever known.
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Removes Dandruff-Stop, Bair Falling
Imports Color and
Beauty “d Faded Hair
Druggist,.
Hlueox Chern, Wia.,Patchogu«,N.Tj
FLORESTON SHAMPOO — Ideal for use in
connection with Parker’, Hair Balsam. Makes the
hair soft and fluffy. 50 cents by mail or at drug-
Cieta. Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchogue, N. Y.
■ •.... a x ._ .. ■
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Wry ■■■l “•* W
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f" “ißr iW y —-— z ’ - -
£ mV Jw . -——-
I—Senate committee probes unemployment situation. 2 —Edward L. Doheny with his wife and lawyer leaving
court after his acquittal on charge of attempting to bribe Former Secretary of the Interior Fall. 3—Helen Hull,
author of “The Asking Price,” who won the Guggenheim fellowship.
NEWS REVIEW OF
CURRENTEVENTS
Tariff Bill Passed by Senate
After Months of Heated
Controversy.
AFTER months of heated and acri
monious controversy the senate
passed the tariff bill by a vote of 53
to 31. It goes back to the house which
passed it last May and will be thrashed
over in conference committees of the
two houses. The result will be a
compromise bill which may be ex
pected in about six weeks.
The bill as passed by the senate
represents a higher degree of protec
tion than that afforded under the
present law, but provides duties on a
somewhat lower level than the bill
passed by the house.
Senator Reed Smoot (Rep., Utah)
told the senate that the dutiable items
in the bill as passed represent the
equivalent of an average ad valorem
rate of 38.99 per cent, as compared
with 40.54 per cent as reported from
the finance committee, 43.15 per cent
as passed by the house, 34,61 per cent
bU^ar^inciuae^manT^iicreasS^T!^
rates on agricultural products over
those granted in the house bill, a
somewhat smaller increase in the duty
on sugar than in the house bill, im
position of duties on cement and brick
as in the house bill, a new duty on
soft wood lumber, elimination of duties
on shingles and hardwood lumber as
proposed in the house bill, lower duties
than in the house on aluminum, pig
Iron, watches and clocks, and on
many chemicals and other manufac
tured articles.
Bitter contests in the deliberations
of the conference committees of the
two houses are expected over the ex
port debenture farm relief provision
and repeal of the flexible tariff which
are in -the senate bill. Senator Borah,
who voted for the bill, indicated that
he did so chiefly because of his sup
port of these two provisions, and in
timated that he would vote against
any conference report that eliminated
them.
On the final vote on the bill 46 Re
publicans and 7 Democrats voted for
the bill, while 26 Democrats and 5
Republicans voted against it. The rad
icals split, seven of them voting for
the bill and one being paired for the
bill while five voted in the negative.
THE question of paying the price
which France demands for joining
a five-power navy reduction treaty has
been passed up to Great Britain by
the United States delegation. If the
British government offers a security
guarantee acceptable to France, the
American delegation may favorably
consider America's commitment to a
consultative pact.
Under this plan Great Britain would
be pledged to protect France against
aggression. America would be pledged
to consult with European powers in
the event of a European war, but
would not be bound to employ armed
force against the aggressor. It is not
clear whether the United States would
be committed by implication to take
sides in a European quarrel, and join
any boycott proclaimed by the League
of Nations: Whether the Britisli gov
ernment will make a concession in line
with a security guarantee acceptable
to France is the big question of the
moment, and one MacDonald’s cabinet
must soon decide.
Since the beginning of the confer
ence France has been trying to induce
Great Britain to underwrite French
security. Hitherto the British have
refused to give France security guar
antees, declaring against entangling
military alliances. But both France
and Great Britain would Hk6 to com
mit the United States to an under
standing by which this country would
not be neutral in case of a European
war, but would respect any blockade
declared by the League of Nations.
Now the American delegation holds out j
THE BULLETIN, IRWINTON, GEORGIA.
promise of such an approach to com
mitment of a character represented
by a consultative pact on the condition
Great Britain will give France an ac
ceptable guarantee.
Foreign Minister Briand of France
has returned to the conference and.
is happy in seeing what he believes
Is a surrender by Great Britain and
the United States to the French de
mand for a security pact.
THAT France lias reduced her army
by 44 per cent since 1913 was
claimed by Senator Albert Mahieu as
the senate approved the 1930 army
budget. Expenditure, however, in
creased, owing to a boost in war ma
terial. This year France will begin
the application of the one-year service
act, practically all conditions now be
ing fulfilled. One of these conditions
is that a force of 106,000 permanently
enlisted men should be maintained.
RT. REV. James De Wolf Perry,
bishop of Rhode Island, was
elected primate of the Episcopal
church at a session of the house of
bishops in Chicago. He succeeds the
late Bishop Charles P. Anderson of
Chicago. Bishop Perry as primate or
presiding bishop occupies a position
in the United States comparable to
that of the archbishop of Canterbury
in England. Bishop Perry is a great
cates in cash received a death blow
in a letter from Secretary Mellon to
Representative Hawley, chairman of
the house ways and means committee.
Under a bill fathered by Representa
tive Cochran the §635,000,060 now held
to the credit of the adjusted compen
sation fund would be made available
for the payment to certificate holders
of 25 per cent of the face value of the
certificates.
In his letter Secretary Mellon point
ed out that the Cochran proposal is
based on the false assumption that
all of the .$635,000,000 reserve Is im
mediately available.
The fact is that in order to finance
the scheme it would be necessary to
increase taxes or authorize a hond
issue for the purpose, he wrote, there
by increasing the public debt with "a
consequent disruption of the orderly
program upon which the government
is proceeding.” •
THE Department of Agriculture an
nounces that a 2.8 per cent in
crease in the acreage of corn this
year, a 15 per cent decrease in that
of durum wheat, and a .1 per cent in
crease in the acreage of all other
spring wheat, as compared with last
year’s harvest acreages, were indicated
by farmers' intentions on March 1 to
plant this spring.
The report was based on returns
from about 50,006 farmers and was in
tended to furnish information which
would enable farmers to make such
adjustments in their plans for this
year's plantings as may seem de
sirable.
THE Canadian house of commons,
by a vote of 173 to 11, passed
Prime- Minister King’s bill to ban
liquor exports to the United States.
The galleries were crowded for the
final commons scene in connection
with the bill. Senators, who will now
have the bill in hand in the upper
chamber, crowded their railed sanc
tum overlooking the commons floor,
following the vote with keen interest.
The 173 to 11 majority recorded for
the bill is one of the largest on com
mons’ records, and the total vote of
184 out of a possible 244 votes in
dicates a remarkably large attendance
of members.
HIGH treasury officials express con
fidence that the 1 per cent in
come tax reduction granted by con
gress for the year 1929 can be con
tinued this calendar year. Income tax
collections for March have exceeded
expectations thus far, and the finan
cial outlook for the ..government for
the remainder of the fiscal year 1930
at least Is bright.
Revenues from income taxes for the
fiscal year th At ends June 30 now
[ total $1,785,282,857, or $134,000,000
more than was collected for the cor
responding period last year. This col
lection has given the treasury books a
paper surplus of $101,957,270, despite
a falling off of customs receipts for
the year of $26,000,000.
Treasury experts hold that with set
tlement of the pending tariff bill the
custom duty collections will expand.
Federal actuaries believe the heav
iest drain on the treasury will come
from the federal farm board. Con
gress has just appropriated an addi
tional $100,000,000 for the board. How
much the board will be forced to draw
from the fund is dependent upon the
agriculture situation.
THE great North German Lloyd
liner Europa broke the world’s
record on her maiden trip to the
United States. She smashed the rec
ord held by her sister ship, the Bre
men, by 18. minutes, and could easily
have bettered the mark by several
hours. The official time from Cher
bourg breakwater to Ambrose light
ship was 4 days, 17 hours and 6 min
utes. It took the Bremen 18 minutes
longer. So the crown of the fast
est liner in the world goes to the
Europa.
CHAIRMAN ALEXANDER LEGGE
of the federal farm relief board
has put himself emphatically on rec-
surpi use^^^unwarrante^an^aos^
lutely contrary to common sense,” Mr.
Legge asserted. He added that be
has had conversations with Interior
department officials on the subject and
that more active steps by the board
may follow.
“Certainly,” the farm board chair
man continued, “we will stand square
ly aginst all bills in congress that
would give us more farms and farmers
at this time.”
THE national business survey con
ference has received reports from
27 lines of business for the four
months following the stock market
crash which indicate that American
business, in general, is firm and show
ing steady improvement.
Although the reports “indicate both
strong and weak spots" some of the
early retarding factors, partly psycho
logical, “appear to have been gradu
ally overcome,” according to Julius
11. Barnes, chairman of the confer
ence, who made public a summary of
the reports. This view was borne out
by the reports themselves, three
fourths of which were optimistic.
“The reports indicate that the im
portance laid upon construction as an
influence in restoring industrial bal
ance has not been over emphasized,”
Mr. Barnes asserted. “They show that
for a revival of construction in its
manifold forms a first requirement Is
adequate and reasonably priced credit.”
There is no cause whatever for
alarm over the country's construction
program, according to Mr. Barnes, as
utilities of all kinds contemplate such
expenditures this year as to aggre
gate $3,250,000,000, as against $2,863-
000,000 last year.
REPORTS made to William Green,
president of the American Feder
ation of Labor, show that unemploy
ment decreased slightly in the first
two weeks of March for the first time
since August.
Reports from trade unions in 24
cities for the first half of the month
indicated that 21 per cent of their
membership was unemployed, as com
pared to 22 per cent in February.
Based on these statistics, Mr. Green
declared definitely that “the rise in
unemployment has been checked.”
AWARDS of fellowships amounting
to more than $200,000, which will
enable their recipients to carry or.
research and creative work on four
continents, have been announced by the
John Simon Guggenheim Memorial
foundation in New York.
The recipients are 85 scholars, nov
elists, poets, composers, sculptors,
painters, and other creative workers
resident in 23 states and Mexico. They
were chosen from among more than
700 applicants.
(©. 1930. Western Newspaper Union.)
Russian Soviet Puts Ban
on Time-Honored Kissing
Moscow's latest edict is “Thou
shalt not kiss!” according to travel
ers recently returned from Russia,
who relate that the Soviet chiefs, not
content with abolishing church,
crown, marriage—and other institu
tions beloved of man and woman —
are now conducting a furious cam
paign against the kiss. The cam
paign will come as a shock to those
who knew Russia in the good old
days before the war, when friends,
relations, comrades, and countrymen
embraced each other whenever and
wherever they met —sometimes as
many as twenty times a day. A kiss
approximated to a handshake or to
a lifted bat then. “In no land,” de
clared Alexandre Dumas pere in one
of ills travel books, “have I seen peo
ple embrace each other so much as
in Russia.” Now propaganda has in
vaded literature, and the latest novel
from Moscow ends with ttiis last
page advice: Eighteen-year-old hero
ine to her lover: “A kiss? Young
man, do you realize what a kiss
means?”
Historian Must Have
Overlooked This Fact
The erection of a statue in France
to the woman inventor of Camem
bert cheese led Judge Otto Rosalsky
of New York to say:
“Nobody will dispute the invention
of Camembert, but the French have
a bad habit of claiming all inven
tions, all. Did you know that they
claim to have invented the airplane,
the phonograph, the telephone, the
submarine and the locomotive? Well,
they do.
“The French remind me of the
town of Peebles. A visitor said to
his Peebles host:
“‘Fine town, Peebles.’
“ ‘Yes,’ said his host, ‘yes, you bet
Peebles is a fine town.’
“‘What statue’s that?’
‘“That? Why, that’s William the
Conqueror, a Peebles man.’ ”—De
troit Free Press.
No Laughing Matter
Admiral Hugh Rodman, who com
manded the American battleship
squadron witli the grand fleet during
the World war. tells this in his book,
“Yarns of a Kentucky Admiral”:
“I had on my staff during the
World war a British officer who
adored London Punch. One day one
of my aids said to him jokingly:
“‘Captain, don't you think that
British jokes are so obscure that one
needs an interpreter to explain
them?’
|‘‘‘M^^^^i^-eDlie<^^anf
Early Sailing Vetsela
The earliest depicted sailing ves
sels are those of the middle pre
dynastic era of Egypt, found on vases
dating from 7000 to 5000 B. C.
Advice to the Lovelorn
Keep your eyes wide open before
marriage, half shut afterwards. —:
Franklin.
All children are subject to little
upsets. They come at unexpected
times. They seem twice as serious
in the dead of night But there’s
one form of comfort on which a
mother can always rely; good old
Castoria. This pure vegetable
preparation can’t harm the tiniest
infant. Yet mild as it is, it soothes
a restless, fretful baby like nothing
else. Its quick relief soon sees the
youngster comfortable once more,
back to sleep. Even an attack of
Best Laxative
I HITCHCOCK MEPKINf CO n Iff/
Headache, Biliousness,
Indigestion. Hitchcock’s Laxative Powder.
Large yellow tin box 25c at all drug stores.
Only one oil is good
enough for household
equipment, says chemist
Chemists, mechanics and lubrica
tion experts say only one kind of oil
Is good enough for your expensive
mechanical devices—the best. To get
best results from your sewing ma
chine, vacuum cleaner, lawn mower,
washer, electric fan, refrigerator and
other household appliances, you
should use an oil that not only lubri
cates, but also cleans and protects.
3-in-one Oil is different from all
others, because it is a scientific blend
of animal, mineral and vegetable oils.
It gives you the best properties of
each. It dissolves and works out dirt,
protects against rust and wear and
gives the most efficient lubrication,
thus eliminating unnecessary repairs
and replacements.
Naturally such oh costs more to
make, but it really costs less to use.
Play safe; insist on 3-in-One Oil. At
good stores everywhere, 15c and 30c
sizes. For your protection, look for
the trade mark “3-in-One” printed
in Red on every package.
Saleslady Wonted— Each locality. Sell qual
ity toilet preparations, flavorings, special
ties.etc..direct to homes. Selling outfit fur
nished. Willard Products Co.,Greeneville,N.C.
Some Beauty Secrets. Is life cheating you.
Why girls fail to attract. Art of makeup,
personality. We show you. NOELL SUP
PLY CO.. Box 102, Fredericksburg. Va.
Ladles. Make your own necklaces: charm
ing styles; small cost; sell everywhere: in
struction free. Write Nat’l Bead and Art
Silk Co.. 61 N. Bth St.. Phila.. Pa.
Let’s Swap. What’ve got? Whatd’ye want?
Trial two dimes. Swap Bulletin, Detroit.
Record Body of Pitch
Pitch lake in Trinidad is the larg
est exposed body of asphaltum in the
world.
If troubled with backache. ■
bladder irritations, and getting I
up at night, don’t take chances! ■
Help your kidneys at the first I
sign of disorder. Use Doan’s Pills. I
; Praised for 50 years. Endorsed, I
| by thousands of gratefulusers. ■
Get Doan’s today. S
DOANS!
| A DIURETIC
FOR XtWiF
THE KIDNEYS
piPFc Permanent Relie^Guaranteedß)^^^
* money refunded. A Process that
Produces Results. Postpaid anywhere, sl.
Harry Furness. 707 West 180 St.. N. Y.City.
Pyorrhea. Save yourself from its ravages.
Lavita prevents and corrects. 6 mo. treat
ment $2.50. Money back if not satisfactory
-10 days.Lavita.43o Diversey Pkwy.,Chicago.
W. N. U., ATLANTA, NO. 14-1930.
It is better to be right than Presi
jdent; and yet it is almost impos
sible to be right.
colic, or diarrhea, yields to the
soothing influence of Castoria.
Keep Castoria in mind, and keep
a bottle in the house—always.
Give a few drops to any child
whose tongue is coated, or whose
breath is bad. Continue with
Castoria until the child is grown 1
Every drugstore has Castoria; the
genuine has Chas. H. Fletcher’s
signature on the wrapper.