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JltSUl^>soine Women
Are Always Admired W
You too want to be lovely and admired W
You can have a radiant complexion W
Hf and the charm of youth If you use w
W MARCELLE Face Powder. I
MARCELLE Face Powder
V Quickly tnatche* your complexion TOB
V and bring* out the sweet charm that jgj
every woman has. s6s
MARCELLE Face Powder makes Wn
MT your skin feel younger and you your- w®
■UL self look younger. Wj
Then people will admire you and ™
say— “ What lovely skin you have/”
Popular size packages at 25c and 50c, wall
ML all shades —at all dealers. wO
HA Send for free liberal sample
■0 and complexion chart
» MARCELLE LABORATORIES W
Mr c. W. BEGGS SONS & CO., Chicago, Illinois WH
Beautifying the Aaericu Woman for
Children Like Own Church
Children of Bournemouth, Eng
land, have taken to the Idea of re
placing the Sunday school by a spe
cial afternoon service of their own
at St. Michael’s church. The little
ones are supplying their own readers
of lessons, choir, organist and ward
en. The church at Kew has also es
tablished a special chapel for the use
of children under eight years of age.
Shutting the Shutter
"Willie, didn’t I tell you to shut
that shutter?” said Willie’s mother.
"The shutter’s shut,” replied Wil
lie, “and I can’t shut it any shutter!”
—Montreal Star.
You Remember the Latter
Yon often see a girl with a month
you would like to kiss, but you’ll also
often see a member of the gentler
sex with a mouth you’d like to slap.
—Cincinnati Enquirer.
Oil should clean and protect
as well as lubricate —
says household expert
The oiling of household devices
presents a problem different from
that of factory equipment, says a
nationally known housekeeping ex
pert. Household appliances are not
used constantly and therefore collect
dirt and rust when idle. Conse-
su^ou^mucrnes^c^tse^on^wiri
save you many dollars in repairs
and replacements on sewing ma
chines, vacuum cleaners, lawn mow
ers, washers, the electric motors of
fans, refrigerators, ironers and simi
lar household devices. At good stores
everywhere, in 15c and 30c sizes. For
your protection, look for the trade
mark “3-in-One” printed in Red on
every package.
The Stowaways
“Let’s stow away on that air liner
for America,” suggested the would
be emigrant.
"Not that one,” objected the other.
“The captain always ties the stow
aways to parachutes and drops them
in Iceland.”—Montreal New Goblin.
Lot of Them Like That
“Come back next week,” said the
man at the door.
“Say,” growled the collector, “you
gotta get over the big idea that stall
is all there is to these installments.”
—Cincinnati Enquirer.
Uncle Eben
"When you forgive an enemy,”
said Uncle Eben, “mebbe it’s best to
keep away f’um him so’s you won’t
be tempted to forget your forgive
ness.” —Washington Star.
The kind of lawns people have in
small towns are worth pushing a
lawn mower over.
If you just must have a hobby,
make your work that.
J HEADACHE?
3 * Instead of dangerous heart de- J
J * pressants take safe, mild, purely £
fg Vegetable NATURE'S REMEDY K
' g and get rid of ths bowel poisons K
g that cause the trouble. Noth
g Ing like N? for biliousness, sick
■ headache and constipation. Acts
1 pleasantly. Never gripes.
Mild, safe, purely vegetable
At druggists—only 25c. Make the test tonight.
FEEL LIKE A MILLION. TAKE
HESS?*
[Malaria
the household
remedy for all V4ILIIS
forms of •W'. and
It is a Reliable, Fever
General Invig-
orating Tonic. VengUC
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I— People in old-time frontier garb and covered wagons taking part in the journey over the Oregon Trail in
celebration of the Covered Wagon centennial. 2 —Gen. Jolin J. Pershing being given the honorary degree of “Doc.
tor of Military Science” by Chancellor Brown of the New York university. 3 —Ten-million-dollar light cruiser, Chi
cago, launched at Mare Island navy yard, California.
NEWS REVIEW OF
CURRENTEVENTS
Legge Says Export Deben
ture Would Bring on a
Foreign Embargo.
By EDWARD W. PICKARD
PRESIDENT HOOVER’S opposition
to the export debenture plan as
a means of solving the wheat problem,
now incorporated in the pending tariff
bill, has received the support of
Chairman Alexander Legge of the fed
eral farm board. In a radio address
broadcast by the National Farmers’
union, Mr. Legge predicted the adop
tion of this plan would have dire re
sults.
“Some persons think away should
be found so that the world market
price would apply only to the surplus
production and have the tariff effec
tive on the wheat sold at-home,” Mr.
Legge declared. “To my mind this is
impractical.”
“At the present time you see the sit
uation of France paying a bounty of
20 cents a bushel on the export of cer-
domestic price levels lie would not be
satisfied with a duty, but that the
remedy should be an embargo prohib
iting the importation of any wheat
from this country.
“All of the consuming countries of
the world are watching us closely. I
am satisfied that they would take
prompt measures to retaliate in the
event exporting was done on a basis
which they believe would be unfair
to their growers, just as we do in
this country under such circum
stances.’’
Defending the board's setup of cen
tral marketing associations, Mr. Legge
stressed the point that these “are not
government agencies, as some critics
who cry ‘Socialism’ would have the
country believe, but, instead, are the
instrumentalities of the producers,
who grow crops, to market these crops
to their best advantage.”
William G. Kellogg has resigned as
general manager of the Farmers’ Na
tional Grain corporation and vice
president of the Grain Stabilization
corporation, both of which are spon
sored by the federal farm board.
Mr. Legge says he believes the farm
board is meeting with success in its
wheat acreage reduction program. In
formation received by the board is that
in the West and Northwest the farm
leaders and farmers themselves are in
dorsing the plan.
REPLYING to an inquiry from Sen
ator McNary, the chairman of the
farm board said that body does not
favor the abolition of grain and cotton
exchanges by act of congress, as pro
posed by Senator Caraway, although
it does favor better supervision of
them.
As for cotton, it appears that the
farmers’ co-operatives have been turn
ing the tables on the traders and
put them into a “squeeze play” that has
cost the shorts millions of dollars.
The co-operatives, it was estimated,
held in May and July contracts or in
spot cotton unsold in the South more
than a million bales, and it was con
ceded that the big operators who will
have to put up actual cotton will have
to pay fancy prices for these bales.
SPEAKING to some six thousand
Daughters of the American Revolu
tion gathered in Washington for their
thirty-ninth continental congress, Pres
ident Hoover earnestly argued in be
half of American entry into the World
court and said he had no doubt that
the United States would soon find a
way for such action. He declared
American adherence would not consti
tute an “entangling alliance” and that
it had been recommended “by every
one of our Presidents and every one
of our secretaries of state living since
its inception.”
The Daughters, who as a body have
evidenced their opposition to Ameri
can participation in the World court,
duly applauded Mr. Hoover. He was
THE BULLETIN, IRWINTON, GEORGIA.
more warmly cheered when he advo
cated national defense forces strong
enough to prevent invasion of Ameri
can shores, when he pledged that dur
ing his administration the United
States would refrain from entangle
ments in European diplomacy, and
when he praised the results of the
London naval conference.
Two days later the Daughters
adopted reports demanding the main
tenance of suflicient military and naval
equipment to meet any emergency
that may face the United States in the
future, and opposing the scrapping of
American ships until the major pow
ers sign a limitation treaty. They
evinced dislike for the three-power
agreement concluded in London by
the United States, Great Britain and
Japan.
WHILE many of the delegates to
the London conference were scat
tering for the Easter holidays, the
drafting committee was hustling to
complete the proposed treaty in time
for the five nations to approve and
sign it at a plenary session set for
April 22. The chief difficulty that
arose in connection with the three
power agreement was the wording of
an "escape” clause allowing any one
of the three powers which have agreed
on a limitation in all categories of
! agreement” withßeijirc^Vaklusukq
s head of the Japanese delegation, and
Admiral Takarabe that the United
States would not build during the
life of this treaty the additional ton
’ nage of light cruisers to which it is
entitled if it should decide not a build
1 the last three of the IS heavy cruisers
allowed by the pact. Consequently,
until the next arms conference, Japan
is allowed 74 per cent of America's
aggregate tonnage in cruisers, destroy
ers and submarines.
President Hoover lias said that the
United States will save a billion dol
lars as a result of the three-power
pact. Others estimate the saving in
naval construction at half that amount.
Great Britain will save $300,000,00
and Japan $200,000,000. Information
in Washington is that the pacifist
groups will work for ratification of
the treaty and then will campaign
against the appropriation of funds to
keep it in operation. The pact prob
ably will not be submitted to the sen
ate until next December during the
short session.
WHEN it comes to voting on a ques
tion that may affect their chances
of re-election many of our senators are
not very brave. Which explains the
long delay in acting on the appoint
ment of Judge John J. Parker of
North Carolina as an associate justice
of the Supreme court. The opposition
to Parker was found mainly in or
ganized labor and among the negroes,
because of two decisions handed down
by him some time ago. The senators
were much concerned and one of them
even asked President Hoover to with
draw the nomination. The President
flatly refused to do this, and finally
Senator Overmrtn announced he would
try to get the judiciary committee to
take action on April 21. It was said
most of the Southern senators would
vote for confirmation of the appoint
ment, knowing that if Judge Parker
were rejected the vacancy would be
filled by some one from another sec
tion of the country.
The President has appointed Roland
W. Boyden to succeed Charles Evans
Hughes as American member of the
permanent court of arbitration at The
Hague.
Representative tinkham of
Massachusetts completed his
presentation of evidence and argu
ments against the Anti-Saloon league
and ecclesiastical lobbies before the
senate committee on lobbying. Tink
ham devoted most of his attention
last week to Bishop James Cannon,
Jr., of the Methodist Church, South.
He was followed by Henry H. Curran,
president of the Association Against
the Prohibition Amendment, who al
ready had refused to surrender that
organization’s files "except under com
pulsion of subpoena.”
Sharply quizzed by Senators Caraway,
Robinson and Walsh, Mr. Curran told
in considerable detail of the opera
tions of his association, its growth
and resources, and of its plans to op
pose at the polls drys who seek elec
tion to congress. He said the associa
tion spent nothing for lobbying and
periodically filed reports of its ex
penditures and contributors as re
quired by law.
Attorney General Mitchell, appear
ing before the senate judiciary com
mittee to oppose the resolution for a
senate investigation of prohibition,
gave warning that the prison popula
tion of the country is so great today
that it is inexpedient to stimulate any
further prosecutions. He said the
federal prisoners had increased during
the last nine months by 0,277, includ
ing those confined in county, city and
state institutions, and that every fed
eral institution was overcrowded. He
attributed most of the new prisoners
to the prohibition law prosecutions.
“It makes me feel,” he said, “that
we ought to get our house in order
and increase our facilities for handling
the criminal business we already have
before we start passing any more
federal statutes that make things fed
eral crimes that are not at present.”
The attorney general proposed in
creased pay and numbers of district
attorneys as a step in improving en
forcement.
PLANS were announced last week
whereby the Radio Corporation of
America would acquire the radio man
ufacturing activities and facilities of
the General Electric and Westinghouse
Electric companies, and official Wash
ington sat up and took notice. Sen
ator Dill of Washington, who has long
been interested in radio legislation,
called the attention of the senate to
the proposed combination, terming it
“a new trust monopoly.” At the same
time the Department of Justice an
nounced that it was “fully advised
regarding the proposed affiliation,”
was “investigating it fully” and was
“considerablj- concerned about it.”
Meanwhile, David Sarnoff, the presi
dent of the Radio corporation, issued
a statement in New York giving the
details of the proposed consolidation.
He said the authorized common Radio
stock would be increased from 7,500,-
000 shares to 15,000,000 shares, with
0,580,375.1 issued to General Electric
and Westinghouse in return for royal
ties, manufacturing rights and tan
gible assets.
An increase in the B preferred
Radio stock from 813,365 to 1,500,000
shares also is planned, he said, with a
part of the increased stock being given
over to Westinghouse and General
Electric.
FOR three days Washington was
sw’arming with editors, for the an
nual meeting of the American Society
of Newspaper Editors was taking place
and members were there from all parts
of the country. President Walter M.
Harrison of the Oklahoma City Times
called the first session to order and
Norman Baxter, president of the Na
tional Press club, made an address of
welcome. The meeting closed Satur
day night with a banquet at which
President Hoover, 11. Wickham Steed,
formerly of the London Times, and
Andre Geraud (Pertinax), political
editor of the Echo de Paris, were the
speakers. As is customary in such
cases, the remarks of the President
were not made public.
REFUSING requests of both sides
for modifications, the Supreme
court of the United States announced
terms of its final decree in the lake
levels case, following substantially the
recommendations of Charles E. Hughes
as special master.
The Chicago sanitary district, under
the terms of the decree, must complete
its $175,000,000 sewage treatment pro
gram within nine years.
Diversion of water from Lake Mich
igan at Chicago, which now averages
7,250 cubic feet per second under a
War department permit, must be cut
to an ultimate annual average of 1.500
cubic feet per second on December 31.
1938. The diversion must be reduced
to 6,500 feet next July 1, and to 5,000
feet on December 31, 1935.
(©. 1930. Western Newspaper Union.)
R Flit is sold only
I * in this yellow
rhes carry jjgg£
sickness BTrI
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smelh n gj /M |
km m MUMihhl I
Mr LI
1/ \ \ Jlie Worlds t
V ^ e st Selling lnsect^ u
“"to* C 1930 Stance Inc.
Cleanliness, but Hard
on Rest of the Outfit
After a 12-day voyage we arrived
at Brest, France, in July, 1918. We
marched to the Pontanazan barracks
that afternoon. Our outfit was as
signed to two barracks, with a prom
ise of a bath on Wednesday.
Water was very scarce there, and
at each end of the barracks assigned
ta us was a barrel of water for
drinking purposes.
I happened to get up about two
o’clock in the morning and leave the
barracks. On my return I saw Mike
Connors in the barrel taking a bath.
I told him that he should have known
better, as the water was very scarce
there. He said he knew that, but he
really did need the bath and couldn’t
wait any longer.
"We’ll drink out of the other barrel
at the other end of the barracks,
then,” I commented.
“I got my clothes in that one,”
Mike assured me.—John J. Boyle in
New York Telegram.
Denver Boy
is a Winner
Every mother real
izes how important
it is to teach chil
dren good habits of
conduct but many of
them fail to realize
the importance of
teaching their chil
dren good bowel hab-
I its until the poisons from decaying
drives away those distressing ail
ments, such as headaches, bad breath,
coated tongue, biliousness, feverish
ness, fretfulness, etc. It gives them a
hearty appetite, regulates their stom
ach and bowels and gives tone and
strength to these organs so they con- ’
tinue to act normally, of their own |
accord. For over fifty years, lead
ing physicians have prescribed it for
half-sick, bilious, constipated chil
dren. More than 4 million bottles
used a year shows how mothers de
pend on it <
Mrs. C. G. Wilcox, 3855% Wolff
St., Denver, Colorado, says: “My son,
Jackie, is a prize winner for health,
now, but we had a lot of trouble with
him before we found his trouble was
constipation and began giving him
California Fig Syrup. It fixed him
up quick, gave him a good appetite,
made him sleep fine and he’s been
gaining in weight right along since
the first few days, taking it.”
To avoid inferior imitations of
California Fig Syrup, always look for
the word “California” on the carton.
Miniature Farms
Government officials estimate that
there are 5,000 farms of less than
three acres in this country to which
individuals gave their entire time
last year. In taking the 1930 agri
cultural census, areas of less than
three acres will not be listed as
farms unless they produced as much
as $250 worth of farm products in
1929. Small areas of more than
three acres will be classed as farms
regardless of the value of products
if the land is actually being farmed.
Amusing
W—Every time I shake my head
the baby laughs.
X —Yes; she was always fond of
rattles. —London Answers.
Platonic love is a dinner at which
nothing but soup is served.
Would you like to try
this doctor’s laxative
free of charge? i Q J
Every family has occasional need of a laxative, 1
but it should be a family laxative. One that can’t 1
form a habit, but can be taken as often as needed. I
When breath is bad or tongue coated. Or appetite I SYRUPPEPSH if
fails. Only a doctor knows the right ingredients. aiMiiMEiiwmi E
Dr. Caldwell discovered the correct combination I LAXATIVE S
years ago. Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin combines senna Ompoimi I
harmless herbs and pure senna. It starts muscular |
action and soon corrects constipation. Gently, but i obstipation |
surely, it relieves a bilious or sluggish condition. It |
is mild. Delicious. Effective. All druggists keep pepsin stropo! §
this famous prescription ready, in big bottles. Or |
turite Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, Monticello, 111., y
for a free trial bottle postpaid, —Jr
I LEARN TO ENTERTAIN
FREE INFORMATION
i P. O. Box 792, West Los Angeles, Calif.
SKINNY? UNDERWEIGHT? KORNO, the
perfect food, adds pounds. Endorsed by
physicians. 2 weeks treatment, $3 postpaid.
Korno Products, Box 105, Rochester. Ind.
Cabbage Plants $1 1,000: Tomato plant*
$1.50 I,ooo.Stone Mountain Watermelon seed
$1 lb. Watsons 60c. Hieh Quality, prompt
shipment. Fanners Exchange. Pavo. Ga.
SALESMEN WANTED
Right out of the factory. New and differ
ent. Two necessities made into one novelty
that every man will want. Attractive deal
er proposition. Big, easy money for full
time or side line salesmen. R. E. Hopson,
Dept. A, Box 285, Morristown, Tenn.
MR. AGENT
Sell Sta-Shine to car owners. Waterproof,
Dustproof. Free from oil and grease. For
Duco and all finely finished surfaces. Leavea
dry, mirror-like finish. Guaranteed most
durable polish on market. $lO a day easy.
Details free. Write STA-SHINE CO.. 821
JAMISON AVE., ROANOKE. VIRGINIA.
ForGalledHorses
Hanford’s Balsam of Myrrh
AH dealers are authorized to refund your aeaey for
the first bottle if not suited.
AGENTSFWANTED
Men, women, beys and girls in every town
in U. S. to sell the most unique yet simple
product ever offered. It may save auto
owner thousands of dollars yet he pays you
only 35c. You can tnake $3.00 per hour
easily. Be the one in your town to make
big money. Additional territory to hustlers.
25c in coin or stamps brings you sample
and sales plan. Act now. Address
“WARNING”
308 Superior Building, Cleveland. Ohio.
Imported 100% I
GUARANTEED I
Cats K een.TamesGrixly Beards. Sooths Tender I
Skin. Celebrated Worcstenholme Shetrieldmeel |
Bators. hollow G round .hand Forged and honed. 1
This Basor cannot be Duplicated elsewhere ■
under 54.50. Our 30 day special gl-^postoge ^re- |
, ripens and heals worst boil |
or carbuncle often overnight Get Car boil I
today from druggist Pain ends like magic. I
Boils vanish in amazingly short time. |
DON’T LET WORMS
TORTURE CHILDREN
Children who have worms
have not a chance of being
healthy. Watch for the symp
toms. Gritting the teeth, pick
ing the nostrils, disordered
stomach.
Rid your child’s body of these ruin
ous parasites. Give him Frey’s Ver
mifuge—America’s safe, vegetable
worm medicine for 75 years. Buy it
today. At all drug stores.
Frey’s Vermifuge
Expels Worms
W. N. U., ATLANTA, NO. 17-1930-
Pianos to Fit Horses
In order to transport pianos over
mountain trails or difficult roads, an
enterprising German manufacturer
has constructed a special type of the
instrument, which permits it to be
carried on horseback. The piano has
a U-shaped lower section which fits
the animal. Other pianos are made
dismountable so that they can be
transported in several packing eases
on the backs of mules, and assembled
on delivery, because the instrument
would be ruined were it to be hauled
over many of the trails for hours,
and often days, in a cart drawn by
oxen.
So Why Borrow It?
Another thing about borrowing
trouble —it puts you under obligation
to yourself.—Toledo Blade.
Most grown people wish they had
the nerve to walk down the street
sucking on a lollipop.