Newspaper Page Text
Summer
COLDS
Almost everybody knows how
Bayer Aspirin breaks up a Take cold—
but why not prevent it? a
tablet or two when you first feel
the cold coming on. Spare yourself
the discomfort of a summer cold.
Read the proven directions in every
package for headaches, pain, etc.
KP) f
fL
I
CHILDREN WITH WORMS
NEED HELP QUICKLY
Don’t delay a minute if your
child has worms. They will
destroy his health. If he grits
his teeth, picks his nostrils—
beware! These are worm
symptoms. Disordered stom¬
ach is another.
Immediately give him Frey’s Ver¬
mifuge. It has been the safe, vege¬
table worm medicine for 75 years.
Don't waitl Buy Frey’s Vermifuge
at your druggist s today.
Frey’s Vermifuge
Expels Worms
I
Soap you II all need
fOT Keep free of vour blemishes, complexion
your
v* skin clear, to ft, hair smooth
and white, your silky
Bath ZltWAir
Shampoo Use
Glenn’s
Sulphur Soap
Contain! 33V1% Pure Salptor. At dntjfiili Mc^4j /
b Rohland’s Styptic Cotton,
For over 5 0 Malaria
years ithasbeen
the household Chills
remedy fo r all
forms of -JWL and
It is a Reliable, Fever
General Invig¬ Dengue
orating Tonic.
BOILS
HEALED OVERNIGHT
Specialist’s salve, Carboil*
stops pain instantly. Heals
worst boil overnight. Get
Carboil from druggist. End
pain quick. Boils vanish in
quickest time ever known.
“Houiei" of Red Indians
American Indians did not build
log houses before the coming of the
white man. That is, they did not
build log houses in the sense that
the settlers did later. But many
tribes built wooden houses, com¬
posed of poles for framework, and
walls and roofs of bark and thatch
work. A few tribes even put logs to¬
gether for their habitations, but they
did not put them together after the
fashion of the regular log house.
Think It Over
The great man is he who in the
midst of the crowd keeps with per¬
fect sweetness the Independence of
solitude.
Get poisons out
of system. . . .
Doctors know that
this modern scientific laxative
works efficiently in smaller
doses because you chew it.
Safe and mild for old and young.
Feenamint
POR CONSTIPATION
AUGUST f LOWER
-^-brings almost instant relief from
terrible colic pains. Banishes heart¬
burn, nausea, sick headache, bilious¬
ness, sluggish liver, good constipation.
Promptly restores appetite and
C » digestion, and regular,
CnCsS f . thorough elimination.
GUARANTEED.
DYSPEPSIA/
Sold at all Quickly!
good
drug stores.
vW'/l^W/V 1 ! -’
K
11 i*
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Um W
LJ-Jf-ie \' s q
.......
:-y
j_S cene on the deck of the whaler C. A. Larsen at New York, which brought back the dogs and some of the
men of the Byrd Antarctic expedition. 2—Enterprise, contender for place of defender of the America’s cup, having
Its first spin under command of Commodore Vanderbilt. 11—Mrs. Leila Morse Hummel placing wreath at statue of
her father, Samuel Morse, Inventor of the telegraph, ou one hundred thirty-ninth anniversary of big birth.
NEWS REVIEW OF
CURRENT EVENTS
Farm Board and Chamber of
Commerce of U. S. in
Open Warfare.
By EDWARD W. PICKARD
A XTAUFARE between the federal
VV farm board and business us rep¬
resented by the Chamber of Commerce
of the United States reached its climax
at Hie annual meeting of the chamber
in Washington. Stung by bitter crit¬
icism of the board’s! policies, Alexan¬
der Legge, its chairman, retored
scathingly. As a member of the board
lie uttered a challenge to match any
other member “dollar for dollar”
in financing a permanent nonprofit
making organization to work for farm
betterment, a challenge that was later
accepted by Julius ii. Barnes, chair¬
man of the board of the chamber and
wheat director under Herbert Hoover
during tlie war.
Mr. Legge indulged freely in sar¬
casm in his address.
‘‘I am sure that, most of you will
agree that you know more about (lie
agricultural situation and how to meet
it than I do,” lie said. “A considerable
percentage of your membership have
made that quite clear, and perhaps the
best answer I can make is the state¬
ment that if tiiis is true, and you
really know so much about it, the sit¬
uation presents a very severe indict¬
ment of the organization which, hav¬
ing full-information of the facts, has
made so little effort to remedy the
situation.
“When it became apparent that a
means had been provided that really
would help the farmer get organized
co-operatively so that he, like other
producers, would have some voice in
determining the sale price of ids com¬
modity, the effort was branded as gov¬
ernment price fixing, putting the gov¬
ernment in business, etc.
“I do not recall in years gone by
of hearing you business men making
any such complaint against govern¬
ment aid that was extended to the
manufacturing industry, to transpor¬
tation, and to finance.”
Daniel A. Millett, an Investment
banker and stock man of Denver, made
the chief speech in criticism of the
policies of the-farm hoard as fan¬
tastic attempts at stabilization with¬
out regard for the law of supply and
demand and was loudly applauded. His
own formula, "in the interest of the
farmer and business man alike,” he
said was:
"1. Repeal the agricultural market¬
ing act and cease any such govern¬
mental attempts, and
“2. Revise our tariff downward, not
upward, with its elimination, save in
a few respects, as speedily as possible,
as our idea.”
Secretary of Agriculture Hyde, an
ex-officio member of the farm board,
defended its actions, and the discus¬
sion became general.
W. C. McCabe of Duluth, represent¬
ing the grain exchanges and dealers,
contended that the independent grain
merchant cannot hope to meet the
situation created by the farm board.
"It is the ruination of his busi¬
ness,” he said. “It is unfair and un
American, and we demand that the
marketing act he modified.”
Harrison Jones of Chicago said he
represented a four-billion-dollar poul¬
try, butter and egg merchandising in¬
dustry. He demanded a “policy of
modification, whereby American citi¬
zens may remain in business without
outlawry by government interference.”
The chamber, at Us closing session,
adopted a resolution condemning the
policies of the farm board and urging
repeal of provisions of the agricultur¬
al marketing act which authorize the
use of public funds "for the purpose
I of participation in business in compe
| tition with established agencies." The
resolution advocated continuance of
the farm board as a proper agency for
gathering information and for advice
and assistance toward the solution of
the farmer's business problems.
President Hoover, speaking at the
chamber's banquet, said the country
had passed through the worst of its
CLEVELAND COURIER.
trade slump and, with continued unity
of effort, would rapidly recover.
SECRETARY of State Stirnson, ac
^ cornpunied by two of his colleagues
in the London conference, arrived in
Washington and were received by
President Hoover. In a brief ceremony^
on the lawn of the Executive mansion
Mr. Stirnson handed to the President
a certified copy of the naval treaty
and was formally thanked for the ef¬
forts of the delegation. Save for the
President’s aides, the only spectators
at tlii.s affair were the operators of
talking picture machines. The London
agreement is now in the hands of the
senate for ratification or rejection.
Mr. Hoover expressed the desire that
it tie acted on at tins session.
.Senator Joseph T. Robinson of Ar¬
kansas, the only Democratic member
of the delegation, was given a hearty
reception by the senate, which recessed
so that he might lie greeted and con¬
gratulated upon his services in Lon¬
don. Speaking informally, he said ^iie
treaty marks a distinct advance in
world relations. He advocated a build¬
ing program calling for the construc¬
tion of all the warships necessary to
give tlie United States a navy built
up to the tonnage limits set by the
pact, asserting that $100,000,000 a
year should be expended for this pur¬
pose during tlie life of the treaty, if
such ti sum is necessary. To stop
building now, the senator said, would
place tlie United States at a distinct
disadvantage in tlie next naval con¬
ference five or six years hence.
ITALY, always rather contemptuous
* of the efforts to conclude a naval
reduction treaty, has embarked on a
building program that seems to make
likely a navy construction race with
France. A'few days after launching
four cruisers and one submarine, tlie
council of ministers decreed tlie pro¬
gram for 1930. It comprises 29 units,
totaling 42,900 tons, all to be laid
down within a year.
The warships to lie built embrace
one 10,000 ton cruiser, two 5,000 ton
scout cruisers, four destroyers, and 22
submarines. A feature of this pro¬
gram is tlie large number of subma¬
rines, in which arm the Italian navy is
especially deficient ns compared with
France. Four of the submarines are to
he of 1,400 tons, six of S00 tons, and
12 of 600 tons, and adapted for coastal
activities in home waters.
T> EVOLT of the Indian Nationalists
-L'- lias assumed such threatening
proportions that the British govern¬
ment lias agreed to back the govern¬
ment of India in any action it may
deem necessary to suppress tlie move¬
ment. It was reported In London that
the arrest of Mahatma Gandhi was
imminent, although influential native
leaders have urged upon Viceroy Lord
Irwin tlie view that this step would
render the situation much graver. They
thought a reapproaehment might be
reached if both sides retraced their
steps. Lord Irwin replied that “as long
as the law is openly defied, neither the
viceroy nor his government can do
anything but resist its subversion by
whatever means may lie in their pow¬
er and in whatever way may seem
appropriate."
Meanwhile the clashes between the
natives and the police and troops are
becoming more numerous and a num¬
ber of deaths have resulted. Despite
the censorship, rumors have come of
the virtual mutiny of some of the
Sikh troops. Two platoons of the
Eighteenth Royal Garhwal Rifles re¬
fused to fire on a mob at Peshawar
and were removed to Abbotfabad. In¬
cidentally, the revived censorship law
caused the suspension of twelve news¬
papers in Delhi. Tlie editors refused
to put up the cash security of $15,000
which tlie law provides every paper
must deposit as a guarantee to re¬
frain from publication of seditious
matter.
Gandhi's campaign, an important
feature of which is propaganda against
foreign cloth, is having important
economic effect. The cotton manufac¬
turers of Manchester are especially
concerned.
/"i ONVICTS in the Ohio penitentiary
U at Columbus, who had been in a
state of more or less passive rebellion
since the tire that killed 320 of their
fellow inmates, broke out into revolt
last week. They made a massed at¬
tack on the barred doors and the
QUEER TALE OF
LOVE AND HATE
COMES TO LIGHT
Wife Kills Mate Rather
Than Continue Attempts
to Restore Life.
Tashkent, Turkestan.—Seven famous months Prof, j j
the death of the
M. Michaelovsky, who a year ago
the world with his success¬
experiments in injecting new life
dead creatures, nis youthful wife,
protegee and helpmate in ah his re
work, will tie tried for “responsi
for his death.”
Madame Michaelovsky will go on
shortly. If convicted, she faces
penalty of death.
Tangle of Hatred.
Tiie case presents a tangle of emo¬
tions of love, nate and devotion to
and religion. If is known that
tiie professor, who was sixty-five, had
pledged his wife, forty years his
junior, to attempt the restoration of
life process on him in case of natural
death Hint entailed no destruction of
any vital organ.
Tlie district attorney now charges
that he has come into tiie possession
of information that this pledge was
misused to explain the professors
|
; ill JO.
A
!
Poured the Blood Into the Sink.
dentil os suicide, lie was actually
simt in the left temple with a revolver,
a method of death the professor would
not have used, ihe district attorney
avers, in case he actually would have
wished to risk his own life that his
experiments might bo attempted on a
human being.
j Widow Religious.
Furthermore, the state’s attorney j
declares. Madame Michaelovsky is de- ;
voutly religious and as such was en ;
tirely out of sympathy with her hits j
hand’s labors toward restoring the
dead.
On July 30, 1029, Michaelovsky was
performing one of tlie greatest experi¬
ments of his life, lie had killed a
dog hy poisoning, drained out its blood,
j put it through a purification process,
and just before reinjecting tlie blood
into the animal to see whether life
j could t>e restored, he left the labora¬
tory.
He returned five minutes later to
find'thar his wife had poured the
blood Inro a sink. Though enraged
and depressed, he resolved to begin
the experiment anew. Four days later
he was dead.
; Portugal Bans Foreign
: Names Its Stores
on
Lisbon.—Business houses, bakeries,
dressmaking establishments and what¬
nots, which formerly adopted some
high sounding foreign name, are not
permitted to do so from now on un¬
less they are hona fide branch houses
of some foreign concern.
All Portuguese establishments must
have only Portuguese names in their
j signs and advertising, the minister of
j public instruction, Senhor Cnrdeiro
Ramos, has ruled. The municipal
j council of Lisbon had tried to reduce
: Die practice by charging a tax of 50
escudos per foreign word on a bill¬
board. but the new measure seeks 'to
eliminate the "evil” at its root.
Such names as those of important
concerns. "Palais de Crystal,” “Park
Royal.” “Au Petit Peinfre,” "Bijou de
I’Avenue.” "Bijou des Gourmets.”
"English Bakery,” etc., must disappear
and be substituted hy names in the
Portuguese language.
Flying Wooer in Jail;
Stole Tuition Money
Rio de Janeiro.—Wooing by airplane
j may come to be the fashion, with Rio
as its precursor, if Humberto de Car¬
valho has any followers.
Humberto knew that Laura, the aim
of his affections, preferred audacious
admirers to the sidewalk and window
gazing variety. So he took lessons in
flying and shortly began swooping over
bis sweetheart's house in an airplane,
dropping flowers and verses. This
was the daily neighborhood attraction
until some one investigated and found
that the money to pay for the flying
lessons and the hire of the airplane
had been taken from the coffers of the
firm which Carvalho worked. This
unfortunate incident led to the ama¬
teur pilot's arrest and now he is be¬
hind bars.
, Live and Die by Law
; Jackson, Miss.—Mississippians
j and die by law. It’s a violation live of ;
j state law to be born or die without
I the event being duly recorded.
gflards opened fire on them, wounding
two. A detachment of the state troops
was then called in and machine guns
were mounted. Six hundred of I he
worst men were put in a barbed wire
stockade where tents were placed and
will be confined there until the burned
part of the buildings has been re¬
paired. Several others were trans¬
ferred to other state prisons. The
convicts had refused to work since
the conflagration, hut it was stated
tlie prison workshops would soon lie
reopened.
s PEEDY action on the law enforce¬
ment legislation recommended and the by j
tiie AVickersharn commission
Department of Justice was asked of 1
congress by President Hoover, and
there were indications that ins appeal
would be heeded. 1
The President enumerated the pro
hibition bureau transfer hill, which
has been passed by the house and re¬
cently was approved by the senate
judiciary committee; bills for the relief
of congestion in the courts, which
have become involved in controversy
in the house judiciary committee; tiie
prison bills, which have been passed
by tbe house and approved by the sen¬
ate judiciary committee; the border
commenced patrol bill, before on which the hearings house commit- were J j
tee on interstate and foreign com¬
merce, and tlie District of Columbia :
prohibition enforcement hill, on which
hearings have been held before the j
senate district committee.
Senator Jones of Washington, a
leader of the drys, called at the White j
House to urge that tbe President cull
a special session of congress if nee- j
essttry, to get action on the admtnis- i
tration’s program of law enforcement j
legislation.
n UTH HANNA McCORMICK, ap i
lx penring before the senate cam
paign funds committee, testified that .
she spent $252,572 from her own pock¬
et in her successful campaign for tho
Republican senatorial nomination in j
Illinois. She said she received no con¬
tributions except from some members
of her family. She added that site
was supported by only two organiza¬
tions in Cook county, the Voters* Prog¬
ress club and the Ruth Hanna McCor¬
mick volunteers.
Senator Deneen informed the com
mitfee that his losing campaign
against Mrs. -McCormick cost him a
total of $24,403.21.
Airs. McCormick read a statement
in which she urged that legislation
be enacted to provide a closer scru¬
tiny of all campaign activities by sen¬
atorial candidates.
\ | AV DAY demonstrations were of
ivl various kinds in tlie various
great cities of tbe world. In Moscow,
as might be expected, tbe Iteds put
on an immense parade, nearly a mil
lion proletarians following the army
through Red Square singing revoiu
tionary hymns. All buildings were dec¬
orated and the marchers were re¬
viewed by the highest officials of the
Soviet Union. Theatrical companies
gave free open air performances, and
bands were everywhere. Next day the
Soviet government demonstrated its
technical achievements with a parade
of automobiles, motorcycles, armored
motor cars, fire engines, tractors,
busses and tanks.
In Paris tlie radicals were kept front
disorders by the activities of tlie po¬
lice, and in Berlin they had parades
a^id a huge meeting but refrained from
all violence. Tiie same was true of
American cities. Japanese officials
forestalled trouble by making hundreds
of arrests, but tlie demonstrations
were notable for their size and en¬
thusiasm.
\ fISS Belle Sherwin of Cleveland.
1' 1 Ohio, was re-elected president of
the League of AYoman A'oters at its
convention in Louisville. This was ar¬
ranged under a leave of absence plan
under which all the vice presidents
will take turns at the headquarters in
Washington. Miss Marguerite M. AY ells
of Minneapolis becomes fifth vice
president in place of Mrs. AV. W.
Ramsey of Chicago. AU the other vice
presidents were re-elected. They are
Miss Katharine Ludington of Lyme,
Conn.; Airs. Roseoe Anderson of St.
Louis, AIo.; Miss Ruth Alorgan of New
York city, and Aiiss Elizabeth J. Haus
er of Girard, Ohio.
itE). 1930, Western Newspaper Union.)
Neal’s Mother
Has Right Idea
: v: . ”3:532:37;
herself how quickly, easily-, and harm¬
lessly the bowels of babies and chil¬
dren are cleansed, regulated, given
tone and strength by a product which
has proved its merit and reliability
to do what is claimed for it to mil¬
lions of mothers in over fifty years
of Steadily increasing use.
As mothers find out from using It
how children respond to the gentle
influence of California Fig Syrup by
growing stronger, sturdier and more
active daily they simply have to tell
other mothers about it. That’s one of
the reasons for its overwhelming
sales of over four million bottles a
year. Airs. Neal >L
A AA’estern mother,
Todd, 1701 AA'est 27th St., Oklahoma
City, Okla., says: “When my son,
Neal, was three years old he began
having constipation. 1 derided to
give him California Fig Syrup and in
a few- days he was all right and
looked fine again. This pleased me
so much that I have used Fig Syrup
ever since for all his colds or little
upset spells. It always stops his
trouble quick, strengthens him, makes
him eat.”
Always ask for California Fig
Syrup by the full name and see that
the carton bears the word “Califor¬
nia." Then you’ll get the genuine.
For Galled Horses
Hanford’s Balsam of Myrrh
AB dealer! ere enlborireii to rtfuud your money for
tbe fint bottle if Bot suited.
Self Preservation
Alagistrate—But if you were doin*
nothing wrong, why did you run
when the officer approached yon?
Prisoner—I thought tiiat he want¬
ed to try to sell me a ticket for tlie
policeman’s annual concert '.—The
Humorist.
It T/TONSTIPATiD? Take M?—NATURE’S REMEDY
t
m —tonight. Your eliminative |
I i organs will be functioning prop- S
erly by morning and your con- £
^ stipation will end with a bowel
3 action as free and easy as na-
3 ture at her best—positively no
J pain, no griping. Try it.
I Mild, safe, purely vegetable—
at druggists—only 25c
FEEL LIKE A MILLION, TAKE
TO-NIGHT
TOMORROW ALRIGHT
He’d Swallow Them
Senator Sackett of Kentucky was
criticizing a financier.
"Power iias made him ruthless,”
said Senator Sackett. "lie thinks he
can ride down everybody. He lias
thrown caution to tiie four winds.
“A friend of his was advising him
in go slow in his dealings with a
certain great industrial leader whose
affiliations were wide.
“ ‘Remember,’ his friend cautioned
him—‘remember on which side your
bread is buttered.’
" ‘Bosh,’ said tie. ‘Don’t I always
eat both sides?' ”
A loafer finds so many public
places to lounge, while a man who
has retired from business can’t find
even a place to sit down.
WhenFbod
Sours
Lots of folks who think they have
“indigestion" have only an arid
condition which could be corrected
in five or ten minutes. An effec¬
tive anti-acid like Phillips Milk of
Magnesia soon restores digestion
to normal.
Phillips does away with all that
sourness and gas right after meals.
It prevents the distress so apt to
occur two hours after eating. AYhat
a pleasant preparation to take! And
how good it is for the system 1 Un¬
like a burning dose of soda—which
is but temporary relief at best—
Phillips Milk of Magnesia neutral¬
izes many times its volume in acid.
Next time a hearty meal, or too
rich a diet has brought on the
least discomfort, try—
Phillips *
of Magnesia Milk .
w. N. U., ATLANTA, NO. 19-1930.
AVithin a few
months there will be
no more feverish, bil¬
ious, headachy, con¬
stipated, pale and.
puny children. That
prophecy would sure¬
ly come true if every
mother could see for