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TAT IR i R S SA R s janitnr -el
I—View of the commencement exercises at West Point while Secretary of War Hurley was presenting commis
sions to the 241 members of the graduating class. 2—Parade of the last French troops of the Army of Occupation
gradu g ¢ ]
through the streets of Trier before their return to France. 3—Col. Sir Henry Cole of England arriving at New York
to take charge of European exhibits for the Century of Progress exposition in Chicago.
NEWS REVIEW OF
Ambassador Morrow’s Vic
tory in New Jersey and
What Jt May Mean.
By EDWARD W. PICKARD
NE\V JERSEY’S Republican pri
mary was the most interesting
event of the week, and its repercus
sions will continue to be felt for many
months. Dwight W. Morrow’s victory
in the contest for the senatorial nom
ination was more than decisive—it was
overwhelming. The ambassador to
Mexico had a plurality over Franklin
Fort and Joseph S. Freylinghuysen of
approximately 300.000. There was a
fourth candidate for the short and
Jong terms, as was Mr. Morrow—John
A. Kelley—but his vote was negligible.
Morrow’s tremendous showing nat
urally stirred up immediate specula
tion as to whether he would be Mr.
Hoover’s rival for the Republican
Presidential nomination in 1932, which
Ead been more than suggested sev
ral weeks previously by Governor
uldtely aiter te resurt of one prijary.
was known, President Hoover caused
this official announcement to be issued:
“The White House will give every
possible support to the Republican
nominee for the senate from New
Jersey. The President and the ad
ministration have every -confidence
that Mr. Dwight Morrow will be the
next senator from New Jersey.”
Some Republican leaders inter
preted the President’s move as a cor
dial gesture, intended to cause Mr.
Morrow to feel so friendly to Mr.
Hoover that he will discourage the
activity of admirers booming him for
the Presidency. Senator Blaine of
Wisconsin, however, voicing the views
of the wet leaders, said “it indicates a
cautious step in the direction of a
liberal attitude on the Eighteenth
amendment.”
\/IORROW made his campaign as an
1 advocate of repeal of the
Eighteenth amendment and the return
of liquor control to the individual
states. Fort, who was so badly heaten,
ran as .a pronounced dry. But the
wets, in their rejoicing, should take
into consideration the facts that New
Jersey is admittedly a wringing wet
state, and that Morrow probably would
have been victorious even if he had
not said a word on the liquor ques
tion. The Anti-Saloon league said the
nomination of a wet in New Jersey
was no more significant than the nom
fnation in Maine. “The phenomenal
interest in the nomination of one wet
to replace another,” said the league,
“js probably on the theory that Mr.
Morrow may become the national wet
leader to restore thediquor traffic. If
so, it is a vain wet hope. because Mr.
Morrow has no plans to solve the
liquor problem.”
In this connection it is interesting
to read that Gov. Franklin D. Roose
velt of New York will run for re-elec
tion on a wet platform and that the
Democratic party’s state liquor plank
will be much stronger than a mere
declaration for light wines and beer.
Democrats of New Jersey nominated
State Senator Alexander C. Simpson
as Mr. Morrow’s opponent and "feel
that he has some chance of success.
In Minnesota the senatorial fight
among the Republicans was rather
warm, but Thomas D. Schall, the blind
senator, easily defeated Gov. Theodore
Christianson and John F. Selb. Einar
Hoidale was the unopposed Democratic
nominee.
Maine Republicans nominated Con
gressman Wallace H. White, Jr., for
senator, giving him about 9,000 more
votes than former Gov. Ralph M.
Brewster received.
Prohibition was not an important
factor in either of these primaries.
PRESIDENT HOOVER signed the
tariff bill on Tuesday, and the new
duties went into effect at midnight.
No pictures were made of the Chief
Executive affixing his name to the act,
and no cheers were heard anywhere
over this culmination of many months
of work by congress. The plain truth
is that the tariff measure does not
please anyone in or out of congress,
and it is especially obnoxious to nearly
all foreign nations. Maybe it was the
best compromise that could be fixed
up, and if there is a rebirth of pros
perity in the United States during the
next twe years the Republican party
may not suffer from the act. Os
course the Democrats and the radical
Republicans who opposed the measure
think otherwise.
Senator Borah started out immedi
ately to force the President to make
use of the flexible tariff provision
which Mr. Hoover had indorsed. He
introduced a resolution, which was
adopted by the senate, directing the
tariff commission to investigate dif
ferences in cost of production and
report at the earliest practicable date
on shoes, furniture, cement, and a
number of agricultural implements.
To this list Senator Hiram Bingham
(Conn.) by an amendment added bells,
wire fence, and wire netting.
Protests of foreign nations against
the new tariff continued to pour into
Washington, coming last week from
Germans, Czechs, Spaniards and Cu
bans. The French are very indignant
E the new tariff bill came a tre
mendous slump in prices on the stock
exchanges and serious declines in the
prices of grains, cotton and live stick.
With slight recoveries, the slump con
tinued for several days. Whether this
was a genuine result of the new tariff
rates or due to manipulation was a
question, but generally the victims
were assured by their brokers that the
tafiff was to blame. Congressman
Wood of Indiana, chairman of the
house appropriations committee, said
the selling movement was staged by
moneyed interests and importers who
wished to make a political play against
the tariff. He said he was making an
investigation and expected te be able
to prove what interests and what in
dividuals promoted the downward
manipulation.
A NY doubt that the senate foreizn
relations committee would report
favorably on the London naval treaty
was removed when that body, by a
vote of 4 to 14 defeated Senator Hiram
Johnson'’s motion that the committee
withhold disposition of the treaty until
the President should submit all the
correspondence and other documents
pertaining to the negotiations which
the committee had requested und the
President had refused to furnish.
Johnson, Moses, Shipstead and .Robin
son of Indiana voted for the motion.
Chairman Borah said he would report
the treaty with the simple recom
mendation that it be ratified, without
giving reasons therefor. It was un
derstood Reed and Robinson of Ar
kansas, who were delegates to the
London conference, would submit an
other report telling why the pact
should be ratified. Senator Johnson
made use of a nation-wide radio hook
up to present to the country his rea
sons for opposing the treaty. (
REAR ADMIRAL RICHARD E.
Byrd came home last week to re
ceive the plaudits of his fellow coun
trymen for his achievements in Ant
arctic exploration. The bark City of
New York brought him to the metrop
olis where the Eleanor Bolling, the
other ship of his expedition, was wait
ing at quarantine, and the two vessels
were escorted up the bay by innumer
able craft and many airplanes. The
welcome to New York was character
istic of that city—Grover Whalen and
the mayor's committee, a marine
pageant, a procession up Broadway
with soldiers, sailors and marines, an
address by Mayor Walker at the city
hall and a presentation of medals.
And all of it nearly smothered in
ticker tape. With Admiral Byrd rode
his wife, who had gone out in a tug
to meet him. After the official doings
Chancellor Brown of New York umi
versity conferred an honorary degree
on the explorer.
THE BULLETIN, IRWINTON, GEORGIA.
Next day Admiral Byrd journeyved to
Washington to be the center of even
more imposing ceremonies.. President
Hoover received the entire party at
the White House, and then the trustees
of the National Geographic society
gave a luncheon. After an official ecall
on the secretary of the navy there
were ceremonies at Arlington Na
tional cemetery where Byrd placed
wreaths on the grave of Admiral
Peary, Admiral - Wilkes and Floyd
Bennett. In the evening at the Wash
ington auditorium President Hoover
pinned on Byrd’s breast the . gold
medal of the National Geographic -
eiety. In all these events the admiral
was accompanied by the members of
his Antarctic expedition and they were
acclaimed almost as loudly as was
their chief,
FI{EDERIC M. SACKETT. American
. ambassador to Berlin, created some
thing of a sensation in his own coun
try by an address before the world
power conference in which he at
tacked American power companies for
their high charges to the consumer.
He said “I know of no other manu
facturing industry where thessale price
of the product to the great mass of
consumers is fifteen times the actual
cost of production.” Samuel Insull of
Chicago, the utilities magnate, was in
Mr, Insull severely.
CHAIRI\IAN ALEXANDER LEGGE
and Charles C. Teague of the fed
eral farm board, reappointed by the
President, were confirmed by the sen
ate without opposition. Samuel R.
McKelvie, wheat member of the board,
is expected to resign on or about July
1, although his term runs for another
year. It was said to have been un
derstood at the time of his appoint
ment that he might choose to retire at
the end of his first year.
OU'I‘STANI)ING among the deaths
of the week is that of Dr. Elmer
Ambrose Sperry of New York, inventor
of the gyroscope and world-famed
scientist. Although responsible for
the development and perfection of
many inventions, Doctor Sperry' was
best known for his gyroscopic compass
and the application of the gyroscope
for the stablization of steamships and
airplanes, This device was perfected
after many years of experiment,
CHINA‘S internecine war i{s running
true to form. According to the
dispatches from the Orient, the Na
tionalists are winning one day and the
northern alliance of rebels the next.
Anyhow, they are doing a lot of fight
ing and the casualties are heavy. The
rebels have seized the customs house
at Tientsin and have appointed as cus
toms commissioner Lennox Simp
son, an English writer better krown
by his pen name of “Putnam Weale.”
The government at Nanking was try
ing to divert imports from Tientsin to
ports under its control.
WITH Juliu Maniu again the pre
mier, the government of Ru
mania under King Carol seems to be
solidly established. Maniu now says
he and the regency knew in advance
that Carol was to return and gave con
sent, and indeed he claims that the
coup was engineered by him. The
voung king is planning his coronation
in October and has sent invitations to
all the crowned heads and presidents
of Rumania’s World war allies to at
tend the event.
WILLIAM S. BROCK and Edward
F. Schlee, two of America's best
known aviators, established a new
cross-continent non-stop record last
week by flying from Jacksonville,
Fla., to San Diego, Calif., in 13 hours,
55 minutes and 30 seconds. They
started the return trip almost imme
diately and landed at Jacksonvilla
with an elapsed time for the rounA
trip of 31 hours and 58 minutes, This
latter record was clouded by the fact
that on the eastward flight they had
to stop at Tallulah, La., for fuel.
(@. 1930, Western Newspaper Union.)
:****************ma@****:
i Hanging Only Makes i
¥ His Headache Worse I
i Vienna.—Because of a head- i
i ache Adolph Schuler, a Vien i
i nese locksmith, tried to hang g
himself, but gucceeded only in i
i making the headache worse, sk
i The rope broke and on recov- i
t mg consciousness Franz found
himself in the hospital with 1
% bandages around an ear which %
in the future will make many i
a prize fighter’s “cauliflower” 3k
ashamed of itself. i
i************************32
Mg o R E
STEERER STEERS
BANDIT TO COP
Brooklyn Taxi Driver Lives Up
to His Name.
New York.—Steerer is the name—
David Steerer, Brooklyn, taxi cab
driver. He has a good one to tell the
boys.
It seems he was cruising around up
near One Hundred and Eighth street
and Manhattan avenue one night re
cently when Edward Donahue hailed
him and directed him to drive down
town. Steerer got the name later
when it was all over and Donahue
was in jail.
"~ So along about the middle of Cen
tral park Steerer heard the glass panel
behind him slide back and be lovked
over his shoulder to see Donahue with
something bulging in his coat pocket,
where Donahue held his bhand. It
looked like a gun.
“Stick ‘em up,” said Donahue, as
well as Steerer could remember. He
stopped the cab.
“You're wasting your time, fellow,”
sald Steerer. *“Al) I've got is about
$lB, and nart of that is for the wife
ahd kids. If you were wise, now,
you'd go down to the Village Nut club
in Barrow street. You can pick up a
couple of grand there.”
Well, they went on down to the
night ¢lub and Donahue told Steerer
to wait for him.
But as soon as Donahue was inside,
Steerer called a cop. It was Patrol
man Finn, who went in and found
Donahue just inside the door, appar
ently undecided what he should do
next. He had no gun.
Steerer took them both around to
the police station, where he wuitea
until Finn persuaded Donahue to pay
the $1.40 which had clicked out on the
cab meter. Donahue will have to ex
plain away a charge of attempted rob-
'so Miss Joan Stampien, the object of
his tempestuous affections, has ob
tained an injunction.
Charles, Miss Stampien told the
court, was very tactfully “given the
gate” once, but that didn’t seem to
make much of an impression. He
came buck the next night, broke up
a lot of furniture and beat up Miss
Stampien’'s mother Miss Stampien
was not impressed, and called the
police.
After Charles got out of jail he
mude another call (uninvited) and
beat up Miss Stampien. Two days la
ter he followed her to the home ot
friends and refused to leave. Again
the police were called and again
Charles was hauled away to jail.
“He’s out again,” Miss Stampien fold
Judge Clyde Webster in Cireuit court.
“and something is liable to happen any
minute.” So Judge Webhster granted
an injunction restraining Charles from
interfering with Miss Stampein in any
manner,
Motorist Helps Hiker
Who Then Steals Car
Porterville, Calif.—The generosity
of J. B. Collagy of Bakersfield in giv
ing a lift to a pert young hitch hiker
cost him his automobile and most ot
his faith in the essential goodness ot
women, it was indicated in court here.
The revelation came at the trial of
Miss Hazel Tacket, eighteen, and
blond.
Miss Tacket admitted in court that
Collagy gave her a lift near Tulare.
about 25 miles distant. [n Porter
ville, she admitted, he went.on a busl
ness errand and left her in the car
and gave her permission to drive
around a bit while waiting for him.
She took him at his word and even
stretched his intention a little, she ad
mitted. and drove to Tiajuana, about
4(X) miles south of here, bhefore law
officers were able to locate her and
the car.
Fleeing Band:it Stopped
by a Well-Aimed Rock
New York.—A bandit entered Max
Schulman’s drug store and robbed the
owner of SSO while two pals waited
outside. \When the robber emerged
from the store he discovered that his
accomplices had decamped.
The gunman leaped on the running
board of a passing car, ordering the
driver to “step on it.” He pulled his
gun and threatened to shoot him.
James FKFleming, a pedestrian, ob
served the approaching car with the
bandit pointing his gun at the driver.
Picking up a stone, Fleming threw it
with a sure aim, and the bandit, struck
in the back of the head, dropped the
gun and fell to the street. He was a
prisoner in a hospital cot when he re
covered consciousness,
Relativity
Professor Einstein is said to have
hired a secretary to give the follow-}
ing explanation of Relativity to his
visitors: “When a pretty girl sits
on your lap for an hour, it seems like
a minvte. When you sit on a hot
stove for a minute it seems like an
hour,”—American Magazine, i
Where They Get It |
Construction Foreman—Boss, we
need another ten o' sand to finish
this job.
Contractor—All right. Boy, run
down to the store and get a nickel's
worth of spinach.—Chicago Daily
News.
Eskime Seeks Working Mate
The Eskimo bride is chosen, not
for her looks, but mainly because
she is good at making clothing, a re
sourceful cook, and a handy worker
around the camp. The girl who is
unable or unwilling to do her share
of the work, even if she possesses
the beauty of a venus, has a poor
chance of finding a mate.
Harsh Colonial Rule
Whipping was one of the most com
mon of punishments and a severe
one, in Colonial times. Men were
whipped for all sorts of offenses. In
1643 a man was severely whipped
in Salem for sleeping during the min
ister’s sermon and for taking a pass
at the man who woke him up. An
other man was whipped for travel
ing unnecessarily on the sabbath.
ONE PRESCRIPTION
MADE FAMILY DOCTOR
FAMOUS
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Seldom has any single act been
of greater benefit to mankind than
that of Dr. Caldwell in 1885, when
he wrote the prescription which has
biliousness, no energy, lack of appe
tite, and similar things.
Demand for this prescription
grew so fast, because of the pleas
ant, quick way it relieved such
symptoms of constipation, that by
1888 Dr. Caldwell was forced to
have it put up ready for use. To
day, Dr. Caldwell’'s Syrup Pepsin,
as it is called, is always ready at
any drugstore. :
Fight That Made History '
There were 130 Spanish vessels in |
the Spanish armada that undertook |
the invasion of England under Queen
Elizabeth. The English had 197 boats
that took part during the battle.
However, many were small boats and
of little use. The fighting was done
almost entirely by the large boats
on both sides.
That’s Easy
“What's in a name?” the school
master asked.
“Why, I can answer that,” said
Tommy. “Just consonants dnd
vowels.” l
Honey Production |
The average production of a colony |
of bees is about 50 pounds, but un
der favorable conditions 100 pounds
might be produced.
Immense Slice of Earth
Europe and Africa could both be
placed within the boundaries of Asia,
with about 2,000,000 square miles to
spare.
It is the committee on refresh
ments that can put the whole enter
prise financially in the hole.
Flie is_soldm
in this ye
Keep Insects . ride
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Away Outdoors! T
Flit \contains a special insect repellant. \IT -
X SPI ay -fiil}f 45‘] ;é
OSquitoey \“W' ) i 3
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VimsFOclean smelling :{-;"s}‘2 ’fé
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ARG U.S.PAT.OFF o‘s“:@ / 5
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‘ s “Ugest Selling Insect 1S © 1930 Stanco logs
Feenarmint
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SAFE SCIENTIFIC
s s<A s e e e eee et A A
Y ettt
A woman often can’t get a new
hat out of her head until it's on it.
———————————————————————————
HANFORD'S
Money back for first bottle if not suited. All dealers.
e et
Seeing may be believing; but we
see some people every day.
i ————e e st
T amy, —omseams
7 B
/‘; 59 W- 2o R
5.1/ Y A x
O Y
e
X 52>
- r .
PES Kill Rats
S a
P o
= Without Poison
A New Exterminator that
Won’t Kiii Livestock, Poultry,
Bogs, Cats, or even Baby Chicks
K-R-Ocanbeused about the home,barn or poul
try yard with absolute safety as it contains no
deadly poison. K-R-O is made of Squill,as
recommended by U.S.Dept.ofAgriculture,under
the Connable process which insures maximum
strength. Two cans killed 578 rats at Arkansas
State Farm. Hundreds of other testimonials.
Sold on a Money-Back Guarantee.
Insist on K-R-00, the original Squill exter
minator. All druggists, 75c. Large size (four
times as much) $2.00. Direct if dealer cannot
supply you. K-R-O Co., Springfield, O.
K R
KILLS"RATS-ONLY
e b et sastilog
You may feel for others, but you
must think for yourself.
—————————————————————————
> .
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| Proud!
RICHARD Dunham, 6, of 128
Clay St., Topeka, Kansas, is
the picture of health. No wonder his
mother says: “I’m proud as can be
of my little boy. He’s always bright
l and active.
“I give California Fi% Syrup a lot
of credit for his wonderful condition,
‘ He has always been properly fed and
" I have given Fig Syrup whenever his
appetite was poor or he seemed
constipated.”
You can easily tell when a child’s
bowels are clo%ged. Bad breath,
coated tongue, listlessness, bilious
ness, feverishness, etc. tell the story.
Heed these signs. Give your child
a good bowel cleansing with ‘eure
vegetable California Fig Syrup. Weak
bowels are toned by its use; appetite
is increased; the whole digestive
system benefits.
Look for the word California when
buying. That marks the genuine.
CALIFORNIA
LAXATIVE-TONIC & CHILDREN
ASAFOETIDA was well known to your
grandparents. Doctors prescribed it in
liquid form for baby’s cramps. Grown-ups
took it In pills as a LAXATIVE and
NERVINE with good results RUPANER
TABLETS contain ASAFOETIDA.Mixed
with other good drugs they give relief
to those who suffer with GAS on the
STOMACH AND CONSTIPATION.They
wilinot gripe. To introduce RUPANER
TABLETS we will send a FULL 25¢c box
for 10c. Write your name and address
plainly and mail dime to
SMILE REMEDY CO., ST. LOUIS, MO.