Newspaper Page Text
r MANY WORDS
EEDED TO “SAY
IT PERFECTLY”?
It [ledge ish professor says It requires
of 50,000 words to read
Ljon Times Intelligently and
h. [„ t there are 850 words, with
person limited to that num-
fid say anything he would be
[evident London inference newspaper is that employs the
e superfluous,
(words Loess that are At least, that
baggage.
[be the inference if we accept
L d, e theory that the best
L is that which says some-
|n the simplest possible sort of
^Htrue H 0 f course it Is not always Ilt-
that a worthwhile thing
H,,, ^KLrt S aid “perfectly” in the sim the
of way, especially if
writer is to be limited to
^■ or ,is. The perfection than possible what
^^ftlied method is no more
in the statement that a
SK piece of music may be
with eight notes all in one
^Has chief a matter of of fact, living, one though of the
pleasures it consciously,
not realize
^Hn<! jS, In the connotation fine shades of that mean-
id and sep-
ara te nne word from another very
H gtafik - one.
jX,ot London Times, we suspect,
w resent the British profes-
^Breflectlon on content its surplus to leave word- the
^■of will be
simplicity he had In mind
^■liv to the sort of publication
those whose word knowl-
encompasses only 850.—Detroit
IK Ifcitals and doctors have always
^Est liquid laxatives. And the public
Spi returning to laxatives in liquid
Do you know the reasons?
^Bsured. |Al > dose The of a liquid action laxative thus can be be
can
^Elated His habit; to suit individual need not need. take It
no you a
*5|duble dose” a day or two later.
will a mild liquid laxative irritate
thmidrfijs. Hfl laxative
Higs c right dose of a liquid
a more natural movement, and
|Hre is no discomfort at the time, or
The wrong cathartic may often do
ire harm than good.
iA properly prepared liquid laxative
;e Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin
pgs [gently safe relief from constipation,
Iwels helps the average person’s
until nature restores them to
Rularity. Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup
fpsin is an approved liquid laxative
pich It all makes druggists ideal keep family ready laxa- for
le. an
ire; effective for all ages, and may
1 given the youngest child.
Knows His Roads
What is a detour?”
The roughest distance between
5 points.”—Pathfinder Magazine.
fyou tire easily
why not reason out the cause of
this unnatural condition?
Your first thought may be, “I
must eat more.” That’s not alL You
should enjoy what you do eat. Fre¬
quently, and the blood cells are low...
this, perhaps, is what makes
you feel weak. If this is your trou¬
ble the stomach may not be calling
for sufficient food. Zest to eat may
be lacking. But what a difference
S.S.S. makes when taken j ust before
meals. Just try it and notice how
your appetite and digestion improve.
8.S.S. stimulates the flow of gas¬
tric juices and also supplies the
precious mineral elements so neces¬
sary in blood-cell and hemo-glo-bin
the up-building. rainbow Do try it. It may be
you need to brush
away present discouragement over
jour health condition.
F P° few not unethical be blinded dealers by the who efforta of a
may sug¬
gest substitutes. You have a right to
i insist that lnaI - S.S.S. be oe supplied suppueu yoa yo» an an
i f J^. is re <3uest,Ita long years of satisfaction. preference
your guarantee of
^Cvthe great world’s blood
medicine
: «ANTED OLD LETTERS. Written
lamous historical and literary people.Lar
.OMITH. tsL. srnal1 9 collections East of books York. purchasi
57th St.. New
tna Salve—The antiseptic,
•'■ment for Eccema, Itch,
A whin Burns, Leg Sores, Insect Bites
; r affections. Jar fifty cents
• the NORRIS CO.. CLINTON. 8.
Mv Puiiorum Tested Chicks make
Warred, anaing layers, fulomeat broilers Rede,
White Ro*ks, White Leghorns, $8
;* r C. Enclose O. D. 100% $1 with delivery order, bal.
special SALE—Small Farms and
Pulaski price* and terms to people
County. Write or
B. DelaAMAR, Hawkinsville.
F°r Men and Women who will learn
BEAUTY CUtTURE or MEN’S BARBERING.
life. MOLER SYSTEM give you a real Btart
]° Earn while yon learn. Writ* today
T our FREE booklet No. 40 W and learn
now u- e can help you to a good paying P<*i'
or a business of your own. Write
SYSTEM, Mi PckMtm SL, Atlanta, Ca.
World Anxiously Eyes the Saar
And the Saar is German. German
in blood, German in language. German
in habits, German in tastes and tra¬
dition and patriotism. Whether it
wishes to become once more German
in government and exploitation will be
decided January 13, 1935. when 33(1,000
Saarlanders go to the polls in a plebi¬
scite watched with apprehensive eyes
by the entire world.
For the last fifteen years the Saar
has been governed by a commission ap¬
pointed by the council of the League of
Nations. In compensation for losses
sustained by mines destroyed in the
World war France has, during that
time, been allowed to operate the coal
mines of the Saar valley, among the
most Important In all Europe. As set
forth In the oft-lamented Treaty of Ver¬
sailles, the people of the district must
decide January 13 whether they will
reunite with Germany and Adolf Hit¬
ler, ‘‘der feuhrer,” who is new to them;
unite with France, or maintain the
status quo.
There Is hardly an economist of the
present day who doubts for a moment
that the Saar will vote overwhelmingly
for Germany. But that Is by no means
all of the story—for no matter what
happens in the plebiscite, the world
fears International strife may result.
Europe may be headed for another
terrible war.
Must Pay for Mines.
Under the terms of the treaty, more
than simply the balloted sentiments of
the Saarlanders is needed to return the
district to the “fatherland.” Germany
must buy back the mines, at a price
to be set by a committee of three ap¬
pointed by the league. It must
all government loans issued by the
The Saar Basin's Great Mining Center.
Saar to foreigners, chiefly British and
Americans.
Germany must pay for the mines in
gold marks within a year. At the close
of the war they were valued at 300,000,-
000 gold marks, and the amount
accordingly written off the
debt to France. France, who lost
000.000 tons of coal through the
abling of mines In the war, has
taken 166,000,000 tons from the
at what the Germans charge is a
of 145,000.000 marks.
"Furthermore,” say the
“France has not maintained the
properly. Why should she. when
knows that they will no longer
to her after the fifteen years are
She has already far more than
ered her loss. Why should we be
pelled to pay again?”
Anyway, the world's economists
der, where can Germany get
000 gold marks. wtn>n she has
Max Braun, Socialist Leader in
Saar.
defaulted all her international
Germany wants the Saar. She
spent millions upon millions in a
year propaganda campaign
ing the Saarlanders that they are
German*, that their duty and their
vantage 1* to return to the fold as
as they can. The Saar mines are
to Hitler and his program.
does not want the Saar; what
France do with an additional
German-speaking people? Much
for France would be a vote for
status quo, for with that she
continue to operate the mines
having to worry about governing
these Germans. That is what
Is trying to promote.
Active Propaganda.
In the Saar there are
newspapers, not one of them real!;
newspaper, but all actually
organs of one kind or another, all
DADE COUNTY TIMES: NOVEMBER 22, 1924
By WILLIAM C. UTLEY
them trying to Influence the vote.
Saar radios emanate little else in the
workers’ evenings at home but fiery
speeches, stirring their favor this way,
moving it that. The newspapers are
all financed from the outside, one of
them by France, several by anti-Hit¬
ler factions, and all the rest of them
by the supporters of der feuhrer.
Hitler knows that the Nazi sentiment
among the Saarlanders is far In the
majority, but how far, is what he wants
to know. It Is a known fact that ap¬
proximately 05 per cent of the popu¬
lation of the Saar favors reunion with
Germany; 5 per cent does not. There¬
fore, every minority vote over that 5
per cent is a vote against Hitler. This
will be a real test tor support of the
Hitler regime, and no one knows it bet¬
ter than der feuhrer.
Mass meetings and
are being held continually in the
both Nazi and anti-Nazi. The
ites accuse France of using
pressure to get Saarlanders to send
dren to French schools, and
divert them from the Nazi
The anti-Nazis, principally Liberals
Communist-Socialists, and
Roman Catholics, attempt to sway
masses to the side of the status quo.
Logically the status quo is the
course for the economic comfort
the Saarlanders. Before the war
were only a few paved roads In the
tire territory, schools were
behind the times and there wasn't
modern hospital in the land. ^Und
the league's guidance
been paved and made into
highways, all of the
brought so well up to
are among the best on the
the hospitals have been
the railroads made solvent.
Buy German Goods.
In the face of all these
which the Saar has enjoyed for
years, its people still continue to
German goods when they are more
pensive than French. They will
to return to Germany on January
for the simple reason that blood
thicker than water and home ties
precious than gold.
For more than 1,000 years, the
has been German, except for two
periods when the busy valley of
152-mile river which empties into
Moselle in Rhenish Prussia was
tured by France. Once was
Louis XIV and once under the
tionaries; the downfall of Napoleon
fected escape in the latter
Since 1870 the Saar has been an
omic unit with Alsace-Lorraine.
inhabltants are now in a way
without a country.”
Governing them are Geoffrey
Knox, president of the league’s
mission, and his four
sioners, a Frenchman, a
Jugoslav and a Finn. Knox himself
an Englishman, a native of
rt is upon his shoulders that most
(he work falls.
In taking the plebiscite, the
erning commission is being ndvised
a middle-aged woman of
Mass., Miss Sarah Wambaugh, who
already busy at her desk in
eri, capital of the district. A writer
several books on the subject and
various times adviser to several
ernments, Miss Wambaugh is
as the world’s foremost authority
the taking of plebiscites. Her
ence is expected to be invaluable to
plebiscite committee, composed
Baron Pompeo Alois! of Italy,
sador Campilo of the Argentine
Ambassador Lopez of Spain.
Busy With Voters.
All factions are doing
within their power to influence
and to get qualified voters who
left the territory since 1919 to
German consuls, even In the
States, are seeking out persons
lived in the Saar at the time of
treaty. If convinced that a
vote will favor the Nazis, the
will offer him a trip to Europe
all expenses paid and recompense
lost time if he will go back to the
and cast his vote. In that way
is spending hundreds of dollars to
a single vote.
As the date of the plebiscite
proaches, excitement of the
parties reaches fever heat;
accuses France of planning to
the Saar. France retaliates
charges that thousands of Nazi
troops in disguise are crossing the
der lines and terrorizing the
ers. Knox is the man who is “in
middle,” as the Americans might
scribe it, for he is the one who has
preserve order. Finding Nazi
troopers in bis police, who are the
semblance to military organization
the Saar, he has reorganized the
and the Nazis cry out in protest.
puts an Englishman in a position of
thorlty and they cry “Treason !’*
French troops are concentrated In
large numbers at Nancy and Metz on
the Saar frontier. “Just in case the
league needs them to enforce order and
lawful secret balloting,” says France.
“French Attack on the Saar!” read
the headlines in German newspapers,
which are filled with admonishing col¬
umns about French preparation for in¬
vasion. Mr. Knox says that he will
call on French troops should vWlence
mm
J. Pirro, Chief of Nazi Party In the
Saar.
break out. He has to. He has to have
somebody; his police are far from
.though. He would have little chanc<
l^fe-ure aid from than the anything “disinterested’ else tlie>
|jjl%!Wl more
j ^Mkiuabbles. r%itgr ested * n getting into some
ft ILr jQept>rts
K have Defense Min
wk -vjHenri Detain and tin
■ ^■seized members talking o
$1& by the league com
■ c*f " Saar *P eak d ulte
pp iJ & LISHy “putsch.” This der
s e O " denies; but he dis
'*• A of the officers whose
-Effort 'bftfltve away his plans.
to convince the league
A jjfc. ~ gnsn° Yii^ere “putsch,” the reich has
; be no storm troop
vT / .*: uniforms worn within
i' jF* 1 ' ^ aar front,er follow - suit
1°
B Ml, J 'Jl , places eounter-
accusers. Jakob
, V J j j „ - AmP VmIkx* *" German the Saar, front,
I«"’1(1#JHjPis ■ -
V >2-.I.;,‘Winder are planning
comm^Min, the protection
the and protests the
tions of MjT Knox to the signers
tlie Locarno treaty—England,
Belgium, Italy, Poland and
slovakia. He openly warns that
Miss Sarah Wambaugh.
English. The London Daily Mail
ports Germany is building 1,000
planes a week. French
claim that the German army is
than the French, with 2,000,000
men ready to march in the spring.
man newspapers baldly charge that
planning to Invade the 8aar in case
trouble, France Is “playing with
Brave Is the minority who will
against Germany in the plebiscite,
braver are those who campaign
against Hitler in the Saar. For
have everything to lose and
nothing to gain but the satisfaction
standing up for a principle. There
hardly a chance in the world that
district will vote for the status
and none at all that it will Join
Germany wilt not, cannot, pay
full requirements of the treaty.
seems certain. But the league will
let Germany into the Saar or let
Saar into Germany unless the
is made. How is it going to keep
many out? And what is France
to do with all those troops ulong
frontier if Germany moves in?
The world is waiting to see.
©. We»t«rn Newspaper Union.
Georgia News
Happenings Over the State
County Agent W H. Garner, of
Polk County, says farm conditions
in that county are the best in many
years.
S. F. Beers, formerly of the Uni¬
versity of Minnesota, has been ap¬
pointed examiner for the University
System of Georgia.
H. F. Goldstein, Griffin merchant
and son of a former He Ary County
store owner, has opened a depart¬
ment store in McDonough.
The Savannah Port Authority has
purchased the local plant of the
Diamond Match Company for use in
the city’B efforts to obtain new in¬
dustries.
Work has been started on the new
Summerville High School building,
just south of the present building,
and is expected to be completed by
January or February.
The State Highway Department is
advertising for bids for the con¬
struction of three bridges as a part
of the improvement of the Winder-
Gainesville Highway.
^Dedication exercises of James
a girls’ dormitory of the Ethel
^Hffpst Home at Cedartown.' were
held last week. Governor Eugene
Talmadge delivered the principal
address.
Thomas J. Hamilton, editor of the
Augusta Chronicle, delivered the
principal address of the fall meet¬
ing of the First District Press As¬
sociation at Waynesboro on No¬
vember 20.
, J. B. Hutson, chief of the AAA to¬
bacco section, will be the principal
speaker at the annual State Tobacco
Conference to be held at the Coastal
Plain Experiment Station at Tifton
December 7.
The city park at Dalton is being
the center of much planning as
Dalton Garden Club, with the aid
of the FEKA, is going over the park
and old trees are being cut down
and new ones planted.
Truck crops valued at
were produced and sold co-op«K-
ively in Union County during
summer and early fall months, ac¬
cording to report received from
G. Chandler, agent.
For the pu&JPTof carrying
an intensive campaign in
County, looking to terracing
subsoiling as many farms as possi¬
ble, a tractor outfit has been
chased and is already at^vork.
A motorcade of 20 cars from La-
vonia, Carnesville and Itoyston
other sections of Franklin
traveled from Roystoa to
ville, 16 miles west of Royston,
inspect the Sandy Creek soil
project.
The annual chrysanthemum
held at Stilesboro Academy,
tersville, recently, attracted a
ord crowd and some of the
specimens exhibited in years
ed the visitors, who came from
and near.
County registration offices
be opened in 13 counties in the
ens division to aid in finding
ployment for farm tenants, W.
Pittard, director of the
Re-employment Office at
announces.
A delegation of citizens from
southwestern section of
called on the State Highway
partment recently to urge the
ing of an all-paved highway
Columbus and Fort Benning to
Florida line.
Newspaper editors of the
Congressional District, members
the State Highway Boa^l and
State officials have been invited
attend a conference at Waycrosa
November 26 on the proposed
finokee Scenic Highway.
Georgia farmers received
219,364 through October S, as
ward through rental and
payments for co-operating with
New Deal farm program, the
cultural Adjustment
tion has reported at Washington.
For 52 years the Euharlee
ers’ Club has been a live
tion in Bartow County in
modern and improved methods
agriculture and taking part in
erything that pertains to the
building of the county and State.
A total of 2,675 fewer bales
cotton has been ginned to date
Henry County from the 1934
crop than at this time in 1933.
1934, 8,969 bales had been
prior to October 18. In 1933,
were 11,644 bales ginned to
time.
The first step toward what is
pected to develop into a
wide program of soil building
erosion control was made fti a
tor terracing demonstration held
Folyd County recently.
Approximately 2,500 people
Jasper and adjoining
greeted Governor Talmadge
Monticello recently when he
ered an address from the steps
the Monticello District School
ing during a county-wide
tional rally.
Housewife's Idea Box
To Remove Ru»t
If you have had difficulty in re¬
moving rust from steel, this hint
and may help dli> it you: Into Tnke‘T^PT|^r^tiurd turpentk. TBh it-
carefully over the rust. '
Taught Weed Cultivation
Weeds are encouraged to grow In
a garden which is beautifully kept
at an elementary school near Bel¬
fast, Ireland. Under the guidance of
the ministry of education, 25 teach¬
ers are being taught how to teach
horticulture to the pupils In the rural
area. Every sort of weeii is grown
in orderly fashion. There are neat
little rows of regular garden pests
which drive the amateur gardener to
despair. They are fostered and tend¬
ed as if they were orchids. By care¬
ful examination of the specimens, the
students get to know a lot about
weeds, and there will be a great
slaughter when they return to their
own school gardens.
0 YfjRTn u'^gist n authorized to
cheerfu :»»efund your money On the spot
it you air not relieved by Creomuliion.
W^^^pBeaten No Mor e Freckles;
Skin
MBVcnny gatin-like to * loy have * iy
or
Ji, white, flawless new b eauty.
begin tonight t rpty......... Tm $■
using famous \ - *
Be Sure They Properly
Cleanse the Blood
NFOUR kidneys are constantly fll-
JL tering Impurities from the blood
stream. But kidneys get function¬
ally disturbed—lag In their work—
fail to remove the poisonous body
wastes.
Then you may suffer nagging
backache, attacks of dizziness,
burning, scanty or too frequent
urination, getting up at night,
swollen feet and ankles, rheumatic
pains; feel “all worn out.” 1
Don’t delay! For the quicker you
get rid of these poisons, the better
your chances of good health.
Use Doan’s Pins. Doan's are for
the kidneys only. They tend to pro¬
mote normal functioning of the
kidneys; should help them pass off
the irritating poisons. Doan’s are
recommended by users the country
over. Get them from any druggist.
Start the day feeling
FITand ACTIVE!^
Don't let a sluggttli omcmaded L
syitna hold you back. CiEAXSE I V,
IHTEmUT WITH GHHFIEIO
TEH, Bel r )4 ef tlio wastes tool-U\\ Out/—,
slow rmiuooMl keep rou \\
m| rue down and icodlm.
Usually works within 8 to
10 hit. WILD trnl prompt!
itdnigstpm2tcAt0ci
SAMPLE 1
ctftriao TtR co-
i O*®*’ M *_* y.
Broo**"*
GARFIELD TEA
YVNU—7 47—84
Complexions Unsightly
muddy-looking, blotchy improved and
red—relieved and
with safe, medicated Resinol.