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|.—Design for American memoriat chapel at Alsne- Marne near Bellean Wood, France, 2.—American embassy
in Parls guarded by gendarmes during the Sacco-Vanzetti demonstrations. B.—Memorial erected by citizens of Day
ton, Ohio, to the late John H. Patterson. manufacturer and philanthropist,
“Air Derby” to Honolulu Is
Won by Art Goebel in
the Plane Woolaroc.
By EDWARD W. PICKARD
S()Mli’l‘lll!\'(} new under the sun—
an “Air Derby” across the Pacific
wocean from Oakland, Calif.,, to Hono
{ulu—was the feature of the week's
news. After a deal of preparation
eight planes started in the race for
the James Dole prize of $35,000, of
which £IO,OOO was for the second to
veach the goal, Four met with disas
ter at the take-off, but the other four
winged their way over the waste of
waters. The Woolaroe, piloted by
Art Goebel, movie stunt flyer, and
with Lieut. William Davis, U, 8. N,,
as navigator, won the race. The
Aloha, with Martin Jensen of Hono
fulu as pilot and Paul Schluter as
navigator, was second.
- At this writing the two other planes
are missing, and are being sought by
airplanes and naval ships. These are
the Miss Doran, with Augie Pedlar as
pilot, Licut. V. R, Knope as navigator
and Miss Mildred Doran of Detroit as
passenger; and the Golden Eagle, of
which Jack Frost was the pilot and
Gordon Scott the navigator.
The Woolaroe made the flight in 26
tours 19 minutes and 33 seconds. The
Aloha took 28 hours 17 minutes,
Liceutenants Maitland and Hagenber
ger of the United States army made
the trip in 25 hours and 50 minutes
several weeks ago, while Ernle Smith
and Emory Bronte, the first civilians
to fly to Hawall from California, land
ed at Molakal Island 25 hours 26 min
utes after leaving the mainland.
Goebel's plane was equipped with a
radio outfit that functioned well and
he was in frequent communication
with ships. The army navigation offi
cers at Honolulu, who charted the
course of the aviators as the radio
reports were recelved, agreed that the
flight of the Woolaree was almost per
sect and was a trilumph of the highest
order for sclentitic practice In alr
pavigation. The plane was kept In
line constantly with the radio beam
beacon at San Francisco,
Pilot Jensen took the Aloha by the
northern route and overshot his mark
somewhat, He sald he skimmed the
surface of the sea nearly all the way,
while the Woolaroe was kept at an
altitude of between 600 and 500 feet,
The successful aviators were given o
warm welcome In Honoluln, but the
<elebration was marred by anxlely
concerning the missing fiyers.
E ARLY In the week two big Junkers
planes, the pride of Germany.
started from Dessau to fly across the
Atlantle. One, the Europa, had New
York as its goal, and the other, the
Bremen, was to fly as far as Chieago
if its gasoline lasted. The Europa
ran Into stormy weather and after
getting over the North sea It devel
oped motor trouble and was forced to
turn back, hinding at Bremen. The
Bremen kept on until It had crossed
Ireland and out over the ocean some
distance. Then the storm grew worse,
the gnsoline was being used up too
fast, and the aviators gave it up and
with great diticulty made thelr way,
back to Dessau. It was thought o
third Junkers plane might attempt the
Atlantie crossing, but on the other
band experts thought the time ‘or
such a flight had passed for this year
Tflt full bench of the Massachn
setts Supreme cour: overruled
the exceptions by Sacco Vanzetti de
sense counsel to decisions by Justice
George A. Sanderson of that court
and by Judge Webster Thayer of the
Superior court and refused to grant
a writ of error
This meant that the two men must
he executed after the tevmination of
thefr respite, midnight of August 22,
unless some further means of saving
their lives were found,
A MERICA’S greatest “captain of
industry,” who might better be
termed a generalissimo, passed with
the death in New York of Judge El
bert H. Gary, chairman of the board
of the United States Steel corporation
Though almost eighty-one years of
age, he was still in active control of
the mighty concern which was the cre
ation of his imagination and genius and
whose destinies he directed from its
beginning, Gary was one of the most
important figures in modern finance
and business, and his part in the af
fairs of the nation, in both peace and
war, had much to do with present in
dustrial conditions. Though long the
advocate of the eight-hour day in the
steel mills and fought for many years
by labor leaders, he was held by many
as a reul friend of humanity, the
masses in particular, and as a philan
throplst and a benefactor of church
and science. During the World war
he was the Indefatigable aid of the
- government. Judge Gary's body was
taken to his old home in Wheaton, a
suburb of Chicago, and the funeral
was held In the beautiful memorial
church which he bullt there. His sue
cessor as chairman of the steel cor
poration has not yet been announced.
J. Ogden Armour of Chicago, anoth
er of America’s leading business men,
died in London after several months'
illness. The son of P, D. Armour,
famous ploneer meat packer, he suc
ceeded his father as head of the busi
ness and expanded it Into a world
wide organization, winning one of the
country's great personal fortunes., In
the period of post-war deflation this
fortune dwindled with astonishing
swiftness, and Mr. Armour withdrew
from active participation in many of
the concerns with which he was con
nected, these Including banks and
railways.
John Oliver, premier of British Co
lumbia, died In Victoria at the age of
seventy-one years. He had been ill
for some time and had been relleved
of his official duties by the naming
of J. D. McClean as a2t'~; premler
and leader of the Liberal party.
Other deaths worthy of note were
those of James Oliver Crrwood, popu
lar American author, and Rhivelander
Waldo, wellknown New Yorler,
FOLI.OWINO a conference with Mr,
Coolldge In Rapid City, Director of
the Budget Lord announced that the
President had approved large iln.
creases In appropriations for both the
~army and the pavy. Among the ex
penditures for national defense au
thorized by the President are: Funds
for completion of the six crulsers au
thorized by congress In the last ses
sion; funds for completion of the re
modeling of the battleships Okla
homa and Nevada: and funds so
1500 first-class planes for the army
and 1,000 planes for the navy. There
was only one naval appropriation
which the President did not approve,
That was for three submarines, asked
for in 1016, on which Investigation
work still Is belng done.
Pessimists at once began fguring
that the Incrensed defense estimates,
together with the necessity of spend.
Nig & lot for farm rellet, would make
impossible any extensive reduction In
taxes by the next congress. lut the
official opinlon n Washington was
that taxes would certainly be cut at
least $300.000.000 during the coming
session. In order to bring this about
the Demoeratic leaders and some Ite
publicans will, If pecessary, combat
the practice of applying all recelpts
from forelgn debts to national debt
HERALD, FOLKSTON, GEORGIA.
reduction, President Coolidge holds
that tax reduction nert year is feasi
ble if congress does not indulge In
excessive money spending.
G ENERAL PERSHING called at the
summer White House anc dis
cussed with Mr, Coolidge conditions of
American cemeteries in France, also
submitting to him the accepted designs
for various memorials and chapels
on the battlefields. The President
went to the Pine Ridge reservation
Wednesday and saw a pageant and
parade in which some ten thousand
Indians participated. He received
from the Sioux national council a
memorial reciting the loyalty and
complaints of the Indians and in re
ply assured them of the government’s
sympathy and close study of their
problems. Next day Mr. Coolidge, ac
companied by Mrs. Coolidge and their
son, John, inspected the government
hospitals for World war veterans at
Hot Springs, S. D. Plans were made
for the Presidential family to spend a
week in Yellowstone National park.
COLLAPSE of the Nanking Nation
alist group in China seems immi
nent. After his armies, which were
advancing on Peking met with severe
defeats and vm';drlm back to the
south of the Yangtse, Gen. Chiang
Kai-shek resigned his leadership and
appealed for unity of action between
the Nanking and Hankow factions.
But the northern troops kept on go
ing south and at last reports had oc
cupled Pukow and were bombarding
Nanking, across the Yangtse. Both
foreign and native residents of that
city were fleeing. Meanwhile the for
eigners In Shanghai were proparing
to defend the place against invasion
by the disorganized hordes of fleeing
Nationalist soldiers, American, Brit
ish and French troops were placed in
strategic positions, the British being
in an advanced line about Shanghal's
environs, outside the International
settlement,
W HAT is denominated an “econom
fe Locarno” In the form of a
commercial treaty was signed by
France and Germany after three years
of dickering. The pact provides for
a mutual favored nation agreement ou
practically all products passing be
tween the two countries and paves
the way for Intertrade such as the
two nations have never experlenced.
French agriculture will receive the
greatest benefit. Practically all the
tariffs are lowered, while Germany
agrees not to increase the existing
ones on cotton, wool, silk, leather
goods and metallurgical products,
soap and perfumery,
Pltlisml-:.\"l’ COSGRAVE'S govern
ment of the Irish Free State nar
rowly escaped overthrow at the hands
of a combine of three parties after De
Valera and his followers had taken
the oath of fealty to the king and oc
cupled their seats in the Dall, A reso
lution of lack of contidence was In
troduced and the vote was a tle which
was broken when the speaker cast
his vote in the negntive, As a mat:
ter of fact, Cosgrave was saved by
Alderman John Jinks of Sligo, a mem
ber of the Redmond party, who slipped
away Just before the vote was taken,
He says he never had any intention of
voling the government out, Cosgrave
Is expected to gain strength in the
genernl elections In October.
Bm.l\'l.\ was greatly alarmed by a
big uprising among the Indians
who largely outnumber the whites In
that country. But quics action by the
government troops isolated the dis
affection in certaln sections of three
departments and gave assurance that
the trouble would soon be culeted
Many chiefs were captured and heavy
penalties were Inflicted, and there
after thousands of Indians returned to
thelr work In the fields,
CT he Kitchen
.
Cabinet
0000000000000000COO00OV000
(©, 194, by Western Newspaper Union.)
Home folks! Well, that-air name,
to me,
Sounds }is the same as poetry—
That is, if poetry is Jis
As sw=3? as I've -hearn tell it is!
SERVING COLD MEATS
So often a few slices of some choice
roast, stew or steak are allowed to
waste because the family
A is tired of it as such. A
,')/'f little different sauce, will
g make over a dish.
222 Mutton on Toast.—
\;fl‘“ Slice some thin pieces of
TER-L] 'W‘ mutton—the rarer the
"~' " better—and place on well
fi}& buttered squares of toast.
o Add a drop of worcester
shire sauce on each and
dot with a spoonful of
currant jelly, Place in a hot oven and
serve as soon as well heated. ' :
Roulade of Beef.—Take a pound of
¢old roast beef, free it from skin and
gristle and put it through the meat
grinder with a third of a pound of
ham, lean and fat. Season highly
with salt, pepper, a teaspoonful of
minced olives, a few drops of tabasco
sauce, a teaspoonful of minced parsley,
a little grated lemon peel and a bit
of nutmeg., Mix all tozether and add
one-half cupful of cooked macaroni,
cut into one inch lengths and tossed
in butter. Add the well beaten yolks
of two eggs and the whites beaten to
a stiff froth, Mix well and roll, cover
with greased paper and bake in a mod
erate oven one-half hour. Serve with
the following sauce: Add salt and
pepper to a pint of tomatoes which
have been put through a sieve. Add a
teaspoonful of suzar, a tablespoonful
of vinegar, a teaspoonful of onion
Juice or half a clove of garlic minced.
Cook until reduced to a thick sauce.
Sardine Salad.—Drain a can of sar
dines, sprinkle with lemon julce and
alternate with hard cooked egg quar
ters on lettuce, Sprinkle with finely
shredded onion and serve with a
French dressing. Some use the oil
from the sardine can with lemon juice
and it is very good, as well as
economical.
Luncheon Dishes.
Myrtle Reed, who did not practice
what she preached, said: “Judging by
the various books on the
subject of luncheons,
people de not eat at noon
unless they have com
pany.” This is probably
true, especially among
women in families where
the man of the house
— takes his noon meal
o downtown. The house
o
wife, even if entirely
alone, should have a hot
dish and sit down to eat it.
Myrtle Reed continnes: “People who
do not take time to eat and sleep,
presently are obliged to take time to
die. Those who from false notions
of economy live upon improper foed,
are shortly put to the greater ex
pense of a funeral. It is better to
spend money on fruits, vegetables,
milk and eggs than upon wreaths and
gates ajar. The one who leads the
procession, with his friends riding be
hind, might better have postpened this
particular entertainment for a few
years and In most cases it could be
done by taking more time to live while
engaged in the business of living”
Tongue.~Tongue makes a most ac
ceptable meat. If lightly corned or
fresh it is equally delicious. 801 lit
tender, then remove the skin and serve
thinly sliced with a tongue sauce or
with a rich brown sauce with a half
cupful of chopped raisins added.
Cooked in the oven covered with
chopped carrot and celery until the
vegetables are tender, using some ot
the broth, is another most deliclous
method, Serve hot with the vege
tables,
Luncheon Dish.—Butter squares of
bread and lay in a baking dish with
a layer of hard cooked eggs cut into
eighths, sprinkle with cheese and
place another layer, Pour ever a cup
ful of milk to which has been added
one egg: beat the egg lightly and
mix with the milk., Bake in a mod
erate oven until the custard Is set.
Serve hot, Cold cooked macaron! is
very nice prepared In this way with
hard cooked eggs and a thick white
sauce or custard,
Rabbit With Vegetables—Cup up
the rabbit in joints and brown In any
sweet fut. Remove to a kettle and
add three small onions, a clove of
garlle, one-half a bay leaf, a bit of
thyme, a teaspoonful of salt, one
fourth teaspoonful of pepper and two
cupfuls of beiling water, Simmer un.
til tender. Add a few potatoes and
cook untll they are done, Serve the
rabbit on a platter with the vegetables
around It as a gurnish,
A 7 Loy ok iy
Lt d Woareorss:
SRR S o FRL F i ;
pl T g‘c?;‘x”tblfl
7 fXin )y quartere
~ Remodel
A L
.
with OAK floors
Make every room like new at slight expense. Oak
Floors are permanent, beautiful, easy to keep cleans
Write for complete free literature.
OAK FLOORING BUREAU
1293 Bullders’ Building CHICAGO
————————
Had Origin in “Netting”
Crocheting, as well as Kknitting, is
believed to have developed from the
ancient art of netting. The word
“crochet” first appeared in the Eng
-lish language in the year 1848,
5 - ;3‘
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system, (#7850
dsf & h
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Hancock
AL e
Sulphur Compound
If you suffer from rheumatism, gout,
eczema or hives, or if troubled with pim=
ples, blackheads, freckles, blotches or
other skin eruptions, your blood and skin
need the purifying and healing effects of
this tried old remedy.
Physicians agree that sulphuris one of
the bestand most effective blood purifiers
known to science. Hancock Sulphur
Compound is the most efficacious way to
use and benefit from Sulphur. Asa lo«
tion, it soothea and heals; taken inter
nally, it gets at the root of the trouble,
60c and $1.20 at your druggist’s, If he
cannot supply you, send his name and
the price in stamps and we will send you
a bottle direct.
HANcock LlQuip SULPHUR COMPANY
Baltimore, Maryland
Haneock Sulphur Compound Ointment — 800
and 60¢ — for use with the Liguid Compound.
N %
MEAA % 1
: %
\ 3 eA vy
Y
Baby Cried and
Fretted Constantly
“My beby was so cross and fretful I
couldn’t do my housework,” writes Mrs,
J. H. Warbington, 513 Sunset Ave., Atlan
ta, Ga. “He was constantly crying and
fretting. I gave him Teethina and now he
is so different you would hardly know him.”
Most of baby’s fretting is due to gas
and indigestion, especially in hot weather
when their food sours so easily. Mother,
to correct this condition, simply admine
ister a dose or two of Teethina, It is
especially prepared to regulate little
bowels by gently, yet safely and thorough
1y expelling all sour bile from the system.
‘* Teethina soothes a fretful child, in
ducing rest and refreshing sleep by re
moving the cause of pains. There is noth
ing else like it—no medicine than can be
given with such perfect safety to tiny,
delicate babies. rhyllchu and nurses
recommend it and all druggists sell it.
Price 30¢c.
Sen sample
FREE! Sedfsosmetabocgonnd
C. J. MOFFETT CO., Dept. WS, Columbus, Georgia
Builds Better Bables
Do e e
Instead of dangerous heart depres
sants take safe, mild and purely vegetable
NATURE'S REMEDY and get rid of the bowel
flmthzuununtrcubb. Nothinglike
for biliousness, sick headaches, and con
stipation. Acts pleasantly, Never gripes.
Make the test tonight—
(R ([0 B
At Druggists — only 25¢
ppe————— i ———— )
Grove’s
Chill Tonic
Restores Health, Energy
and Rosy Cheeks, eoc
Qrboil draws out the core
fi’fiqfomnir
GENEROUS fnlL
A ety = Moneg o Guanee
HANFORD’S
Balsam of Myrrh
For Pgn Corns
Bunions, blains,etc.
All dealers are snthorised to refund money (or the
N iy i