Newspaper Page Text
News Review of Current
Events the World Over
J. D. Rockefeller, Jr., Comes Out for Prohibition Repeal
—Republicans Fashion Moist Plank—Shouse Is
Democratic Bone of Contention.
By EDWARD W. PICKARD
JOHN threw D. man-sized ROCKEFELLER. bomb into JR., the
a
camp of the prohibition forces with
Ms announcement that he had come to
John D. Rocke¬
feller, Jr.
and Democratic parties in their na¬
tional conventions. He declared the
aims of prohibition had not been
achieved and said that “drinking gen¬
erally has increased; tbnt the speak¬
easy has replaced the saloon and
that a vast army of lawbreakers has
been recruited and financed on a co¬
lossal scale."
Upon these reasons of ‘‘unprecedent¬
ed crime increase and the open dis¬
regard of the eighteenth amendment
which 1 have slowly and reluctantly
come to believe,’’ Mr. Rockefeller
based his present stand. He declared
that "the benefits of prohibition are
more than outweighed by its evils."
After approving in detail Doctor
Butler’s proposal for repeal and state
control of the liquor traffic, Mr. Rocke¬
feller expressed a hope that the “mil¬
lions of earnest workers in behalf of
the eighteenth amendment” would con¬
tinue their efforts in support of “prac¬
tical measures for the promotion of
genuine temperance.”
Of course the wets were jubilant
over Mr. Rockefeller’s statement, and
the drys tried without much success
to minimize its effect by contradicting
tiis assertions concerning the success
•f the prohibition legislation.
J IpNOOURAGED *-' by the Rockefeller
pronouncement, leaders of six na¬
tional antiprobibition organizations
met in New York and formed a “unit¬
ed repeal council” with the purpose of
placing in both the Republican and
Democratic platforms planks calling
definitely for the repeal of prohibi¬
tion. Rierre S. du Pont was elected
chairman of the council.
V(f ANY anxious hours were spent
by administration chiefs and
James R. Garfield over the form in
which the Republican prohibition
plank should be cast,
and a conference par¬
ticipated in by Post¬
master General Wal¬
ter Brown, the Presi¬
dent’s political advis¬
er, and a dozen sena¬
tors finally approved
a resolution which
states that, while the
Republican party
stands for enforce¬
ment of all laws and
abhors the saloon, it
recognizes the
of tile people to pass upon any por¬
tion of the Constitution and therefore
■Savors the prompt re-submission of the
eighteenth amendment to the people
,«f the several states acting through
nonpartisan conventions.
This naturally did not at all suit
the wet Republicans and they prom¬
ised that the issue would be fought
•»ut in the convention. The tentative
plank was derided as utterly evasive
and deplorably weak. On the senate
floor Senator Borah, dry, and Sena¬
tor Tydings of Maryland, wet Demo¬
crat, took turns poking fun at the
proposed resolution. Borah said it
was “the rarest combination of hypoc¬
risy and insincerity ever heard of,"
and Tydings called it “the biggest
piece of sham, bunk and camoutlage
ever seen assembled in t50 words.”
INDIANA Republicans In state con
a vention went wet despite the
agonized pleadings of the prohibition¬
ists. A plank was adopted calling for
submission to the people of a repeal
proposition on both the national and
state dry laws. It was not a strong
declaration in favor of such repeal,
but it sufficed. Raymond Springer
wa3 nominated for governor and Sen¬
ator Jim Watson was renominated by
acclamation.
1171IEN President Hoover signed
* v ttie new revenue bill, be said
many of the taxes imposed by it were
no! as he desired, which mildly ex¬
pressed the opinion of countless Amer¬
icans concerning that hodge-podge
measure. However, bad as it is in
many respects, the act will, under cer¬
tain conditions and within certain lim¬
itations, balance the federal budget at
She end of the fiscal year 1033, provid¬
ed congress enacts the necessary econ¬
omy legislation. The senate almost re¬
jected tlie conference report on the
revenue bill bcause the tax on elec¬
tricity was made to fall on the con¬
sumer instead of on the companies.
One economy bill cutting the costs
«f government was passed by the sen¬
the conclusion that
the eighteenth amend¬
ment is a failure and
should be repealed.
Himself a teetotaler
and, with his father,
a liberal supporter of
the Anti-Saloon
league for years, Mr.
Rockefeller in a let¬
ter to Nicholas Mur¬
ray Butler commend¬
ed the Satter’s ami
prohibition plank and
urged its adoption by
both
Senator Borah
ate after it had been mangled. De¬
signed at first to save $238,000,000, it
was amended so the saving will be
only $126,000 000. An important
change was tin- substitution of the en¬
forced furlough plan for federal em¬
ployees for the 10 per cent pay cuts
previously adopted. This was reject¬
ed by the house.
CPEAKER ^ GARNER’S $2,300,000,000
relief hill was rushed through the
house by an almost solid Democratic
vote aided by twenty-one Republicans.
The rest of the Republican members
paid heed to President Hoover’s de¬
nunciation of tlie measure as a gigan¬
tic pork barrel and voted in tlie nega¬
tive. It is hard to understand how
Garner and his associates can justify
spending so much time and effort on
this measure in the face of their ex¬
pressed conviction that it would never
get through the senate or past tlie
presidential veto. The senate, indeed,
showed at once that it intended to
smother the bill. Leaders of both par¬
ties in the upper house prepared to
pusli through a noncontroversial bill
permitting the Reconstruction Finance
corporation to lend up to $300,000,000
to states for relief purposes. This
was just one section of tlie senate
Democratic relief program, the re¬
mainder, Involving a $500,000,000 bond
issue for public works and a $1,000,
000,000 expansion of the reconstruc¬
tion unit’s capital, being left for later
consideration.
rpRANKLIN' t 1 having ROOSEVELT’S decided the support
ers, to run Dem¬
ocratic national convention to suit
themselves, announced that Jouett
■
■k 1 H!
Jouett Shouse
ever, made it known that he and his
friends would fight to the last ditch,
so there is a prospect of a first-day
battle in the convention that will pro¬
vide for a test of strength between the
Roosevelt and anti-Roosevelt forces.
Mr. Shouse said that Governor
Roosevelt expressly consented to the
plan to make him permanent chair-,
man.
“Not even remotely was any kind
of condition attached to the governor’s
assent; otherwise I should not have
been a party to it,” said he. “Any
speed! I may make before tlie conven¬
tion will be my own and will not be
censored or inspired by any candidate.
Tlie presiding officer of the conven¬
tion should represent no faction and
should decline to assist or obstruct
the fortunes of any candidate.”
lVy| ORE seriously affecting Roose
kvi veit’s chances was the problem
of Mayor Jimmy Walker of New York,
put up to him by the Hofstadter in¬
vestigating committee
and its counsel, Sam¬
uel Seabury, the gov¬
ernor’s inveterate foe.
The report of the
committee makes it
necessary for tlie gov¬
ernor to decide wheth¬
er or not the mayor
shall be removed from
office, and it is be¬
lieved he will take
some action a day or
so before the Demo¬
crat i c convention
meets. Presumably, if he ousts the
mayor he will rouse the wrath of
Tammany Hall—which might cost him
tlie vote of New York in the election
but undoubtedly would add to his
strength elsewhere, for Tammany is
not admired outside of the metropolis.
Governor Roosevelt made a strate¬
gic move when he demanded that Sea¬
bury quit talking and submit to him
the charges and evidence against
Walker at once. He let it be known
that lie would give the mayor unlim¬
ited opportunity to defend himself and
tiis administration, hut said he would
demand that Walker prove himself fit
to be mayor of New York. Walker en¬
gaged Dudley Field Malone as his
chief counsel.
r^EN. CHARLES GATES DAWES
suddenly and unexpectedly sent
to President Hoover his resignation as
president of the Reconstruction Fi¬
nance corporation, to take effect June
15. He denied rumors that there had
been any friction between him and
Eugene Meyer, Jr., chairman of the
board of the corporation, and averred
he was quitting the post merely be¬
cause he wished to resume his bank¬
ing business in Chicago. In his letter
to the President General Dawes said
he felt he could do this now that the
budget had been balanced and “the
turning point toward eventual prosper¬
ity seeing to have been reached.”
Shouse wouldn’t do.
as permanent chair¬
man, though he had
been selected by the
Smith-Raskob faction
and presumably had
been accepted b y
Roosevelt. They de¬
clared Instead that
they would try to put
® enator Thomas J.
Walsh of Montana
in that position, which
he held eight years
ago. Mr. Shouse, how¬
~"’ I::':5.\':;'::'::'5':' “3 ""5252
5592?5:».‘.:~:~iz-:e:<:»‘='::--' v. .- .4555“ 573: 1'
5 , 5““...15555353533351;:35;E=§=E'§:55-'§3535153:E3:3§ “.4... ,--;-...:;:1:;.-;:_:;:;;;;.-:;:::;:5:5-::::.=:::I::.=:-':f‘ r;.;.;.;.;.;.+.-56t-Z‘iv‘ _v,_-.-.-:-:-:r:»:-,4
5:29:35; ‘ :53:g;3:325;5;:a:5:;:s:;’:::3553-3513335:
.5.:5§§:::s;t="5" 53:32:53: ----5.,'.1_:I;535;'..-- '.I:s:s:;:si;=33=i*'"5* ‘ :
- 5;;2,‘_Hm:-1:5>::Eauu o; 24"
.' ». 3;: .;;;._.;;:3;:-:;:f;' 3:1} V ’3 .
;, :" 45:335:55:15: #:2553323; :15: "53 5:523:53” 5353-5553:"?
5:;1.‘.=::asa.x :.;
5:151:34 15:5,"w.”5"-.1:3;'551.«':i31:""‘3":"':'7"E-'“:::::'- :-_=:_ M’ i ‘.
5:353:55; 95555.3-_._':::§§g-g:_::;:g:';?;:';£:5:3:331:35! -.=E§- 3:;g;_';5g:g;;£;§;§:.'¢€6,:5:5:332'35555t ’3 31
;, ;.;'5_ - 5; -:-:-. “rd-kin” um" 5
.‘_ W4, o ' i'
{:33 . _"-'-jg:9‘fv,‘.v.};:f:
5 ,1 . 5 N
. >
: . »,:.;:_..;:;sg..;s5:_:§¢.:;:5-2.:§5;=§:5
S. Seabury
C'lGHT thousand of the “bonus
marchers” who had gathered in
Washington to demand immediate pay¬
ment of tlie bonus to veterans held their
first parade down Pennsylvania avenue
to the capitol, and there was not the
slightest disorder despite rumops
that the communists would stage an
outbreak. As a matter of fact, the
reds who ried to stir the veterans up
to violence were roughly treated by
the ex-soldiers.
The marchers carried many Ameri¬
can flags and had three bands. Swarms
of police were on hand but had little
to do. The paraders broke ranks at
the Peace monument and returned to
the various camps established for
them. Every day the number of vet¬
erans in those camps was augmented
by arrivals from all parts of the
country.
Senator Lewis of Illinois had a run
in with the bonus seekers and came
off with flying colors. They resented
his Memorial day reproof to them and
threatened to “tell him where he got
off,” whereupon the courtly senator
calmly told them to "go to hell” and
walked through them to tlie senate
chamber.
T OWA Republicans at last have
1 grown weary of Senator Smith D.
Brookhart and have put an end, at
least for the present, to his political
Sen. Brookhart
duties to make Chautauqua lectures and
for nepotism. He pledged himself not
to take any of his family to Washing¬
ton and fasten them on the federal
pay rolls.
Brookhart, a radical who never has
hesitated to vote against Republican
measures, refused to comment on his
defeat, which was attributed by some
observers partly to the fact that many
voters hithero Republicans had desert¬
ed that party and cast their ballots
as Democrats.
The Democratic senatorial nominee
was Louis Murphy, who defeated for¬
mer Senator Daniel Steck.
In North Carolina the Democrats
turned against one of their long-time
leaders, Senator Cameron Morrison,
who was defeated for the nomination
by Robert R. Reynolds, almost a new¬
comer in politics. Morrison is bone
dry and Reynolds is an advocate of
prohibition repeal. Neither of them
had a majority of votes cast, so l)oth
will be candidates again in the run¬
off primary on July 2. Two others
who polled a considerable vote prom¬
ised to throw their support to Reyn¬
olds.
Franklin Roosevelt won a sweeping
victory in the Florida Democratic pri¬
mary, “Alfalfa Bill" Murray getting
only a small vote. Mark Wilcox of
West Palm Beach, running on an anti¬
prohibition platform, apparently de¬
feated Ruth Bryan Owen for the con¬
gressional nomination in the Fourth
district.
tl/TSCONSIN’S W conservative Repub
licans in convention at Madison
nominated a ticket with the purpose
of putting a crimp in the regime of the
La Follette dynasty. John B. Chappie
of Ashland was put up for the United
States senate in opposition to Senator
Blaine; and former Gov. Walter J.
Kohler was nominated for governjr
to run against Gov. Phil La Follette
who seeks to succeed himself.
O AMUELINSULL of Chicago, who for
^ many years has been one of the
country’s leading public utilities mag¬
nates, has finally fallen under finan¬
cial stress and has been forced to re¬
sign as head of his great utilities con¬
cerns and also as officer or director of
many other corporations with which
he has been associated. Besides his
money troubles Mr. Insull is in poor
health. He is soon to sail for Europe
and it is understood he wil! reside in
England, where he owns a home.
Three of the big corporations he built
up, it is said, will unite in paying
him an annua! pension of $18,000.
OHILE lias become a “socialistic re
republic.” The government of
President Montero was overthrown by
a military and socialistic junta in a
coup d’etat that was
almost bloodless, and
tlie leader of the
movement, Carlos Da¬
vila, former ambassa¬
dor to the United
States; was installed
as provisional presi¬
dent. Col. Marmaduke
Grove w T as made min¬
ister of defense and
immediately had to
get busy suppressing
a counter-revolution
in the southern part of the country.
It was authoritati ely stated in San¬
tiago that the establishment of the so¬
cialist regime created no immediate
danger for American investments in
Chile except those tied up in tlie $375,
000,000 Cosach nitrate combine which,
it was understood, would be nation¬
alized.
President Davila said one of the
main purposes of the government
would be to remove the burdens on
workers and the unemployed.
(©, 1932, Western Newspaper Union.)
CLEVELAND COURIER
career. In the pri¬
maries they decisive¬
ly rejected him, se¬
lecting as his succes¬
sor Henry Field of
Shenandoah, a nurs¬
eryman and a novice
in politics who owns
a radio station. Field
had been making a
vigorous speaking
campaign in which lie
attacked Brookhart
especially for neglect
i n g his senatorial
Carlos Davila
GEORGIA
NEWS
Happenings Over
the State
The farmers of Hancock county are
harvesting the largest crop of wheat
that has been grown in that section
since ante-bellum days.
The Georgia Ice Cream Manufac¬
turers’ Association convention, sched¬
uled to open last week at Savannah,
Beach, has been indefinitely post¬
poned.
Postal receipts at Valdosta for the
month of May were greater than for
any month in the history of the of¬
fice, according to C. W. Barnes, post¬
master.
An invitation was recently extend¬
ed the Georgia Jersey Cattle Club to
hold their next meeting and sale in
Milledgeville by the Baldwin County
Jersey Club.
A ten-month pay plan instead of
twelve months for principals and
teachers of the county school sys¬
tem was recently adopted by the Ful¬
ton county board of education.
Discontinuance of several local
trains operating in Georgia has been
authorized by the Georgia public
service commission, it was recently
announced by Chairman James A.
Perry.
Six cars of cucumbers were ship¬
ped from Valdosta to various mar¬
kets recently by one packing con¬
cern. This was the largest single
movement of the season, it was un¬
derstood.
W. D. Anderson, Macon, Ga., man¬
ufacturer, recently resigned his posi¬
tion as chairman of the board of re¬
gents of the University of Georgia.
No successor was appointed by the
governor.
Spanish war veterans, in their an¬
nual meeting at Augusta, elected Wal¬
ter F. Hill, Albany, as department
comipandar, succeeding Barney Ber¬
nard, Atlanta. Albany was selected
for next year’s convention.
The Collins and Glennville railroad
company has been granted permis¬
sion by the Georgia Public Service
Commission to operate a motor bus
line between Reidsville, Ga., and the
site of the new prison farm.
The Georgia State Bar Association,
in recent annual session at Albany,
adopted a resolution recommending
‘That a better method of selecting
judges so as to free them from po¬
litical influence” be established in the
state.
Improvements have been completed
at the city reservoir in Barnesville. A
high wire fence has been built around
the reservoir, protecting ’the water.
Reports from the state board of health
show that Bariiesville’s water supply
is pure.
W. E. Boatwright, who has been
editor of the Swainsboro Forest Blade
at Statesboro for more than a quar¬
ter of a century, and who has been
away from his business about a year
due to illness, has resumed the edito¬
rial work on his paper.
New construction, represented for
the most part by the highway work
and public buildings such as schools
and postoffices, amounting to close
to twenty million dollars, is now un¬
der way, or is assured for the near
future in the state of Georgia.
Georgia sheriffs and chiefs of po¬
lice, in recent annual session at Sa¬
vannah, have expressed themselves as
favoring a state criminal identifica¬
tion bureau, and will request the next
legislature to make appropriation for
the establishment of the above plan.
The executive board of the Georgia
Federation of Labor, which recently
met in Savannah, prepared question¬
naires which are to be presented to
all candidates for state offices and
to candidates for congress and the
senate. The board will pass on in¬
formation as to those acceptable to
labor.
Several speakers, among them Gov.
Richard B. Russell, Jr., told the As¬
sociation of Railway Employes of
Georgia at a mass meeting held in
Atlanta recently, that the railroads
are having to meet unfair competi¬
tion from motor carriers who use the
public highways without bearing a
fair share of the tax burden.
Asserting that Oglethorpe Univer¬
sity is the only educational institu¬
tion in Georgia which has been in¬
spected and accredited by the state
board of education, the executive
committee of Oglethorpe University
recently answered Dr. Noah Baird,
member of the Atlanta board of edu¬
cation, who seeks to disqualify Ogle¬
thorpe credits until the state depart¬
ment sets up an accredited system.
The city school system of Roswell
is to be merged with Fulton county
school system as soon as possible, as
the result of a school election held at
Roswell recently, according to Jere
Wells, county school superintend¬
ent.
In the interest of safety and the
city treasury, the police department
has launched an active campaign to
see that children under 16 years of
age refrain from driving automobiles
in Waycross, and that every driver
of an automobile buy a drivers’ li
cense
’"*"™' 1 MPR 0VED
UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
Dchool CUNDAy Lesson I
(By REV. P. B. FITZ WATER, D. D„ Mem¬
ber of Faculty. Moody Bible
Institute of Chicago.)
(©, 1932. Western Newspaper Union.)
Lesson for June 26
REVIEW: WHAT Wt HAVE
LEARNED FROM GENESIS.
GOLDEN TEXT—And we know that
all things work together for good to
them that love God, to them who are
the called according to his purpose.
PRIMARY TOPIC—Some Friends We
Have Made.
JUNIOR TOPIC—What We Have
Learned in Genesis.
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOP¬
IC —Favorite Characters in Genesis:
YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP¬
IC—What Genesis Teaches About God
and Human Relationships.
Genesis, the book from which tlie
lessons of the quarter are taken, as
its name indicates, is a book of be¬
ginnings. It contains the only re¬
liable information we have of the
of the heavens and tlie earth,
and animal life, human life, in¬
and relations.
Lesson for April 3.
God was before ail things. Every¬
thing but God had a beginning. The
which are came to be by the
creative act of a personal God. Man
himself came into being by tlie crea¬
tive act of God.
Lesson for April 10.
An explanation of the ills and sor¬
rows of the world can be made only
on tlie basis of tlie historic fall of
man as recorded in the Bible. Man is
not what be was when he came from
the Creator’s hand. The prime actor
in this tragedy was the personal, cun¬
ning, and malicious being called “tlie
Devil.” Because man is a free being,
possessing the power of choice, sin en¬
tered through the act of man’s will In
believing the Devil instead of God.
Lesson for April 17.
Following man’s fall, God gave the
promise of a redeemer. God chose
Abraham to he tlie head of the new
race through which this gracious prom¬
ise was to be realized. Tlie failure
of this new race to carry out God’s
plan is the explanation of the dis¬
ordered world.
Lesson for April 24.
Dot's prosperity was due to his
relationship to his uncle, Abram. In
spite of this fact, he selfishly grasped
for the best'. Abram, to avert possible
strife between Lot and himself, ac¬
corded to Lot the choice of the best of
the land. Though Lot’s choice in¬
volved him in trouble, Abram gracious¬
ly went to his rescue, delivering liim
from bis oppressor, thus being a fine
example of the art of living In peace.
Lesson for May 1.
Isaac was a child of the covenant,
gentle and peace-loving. Though a
lover of peace, he had enemies. His
very prosperity incited the envy of
the Philistines. His peaceable with¬
drawal from them gave him increased
influence.
Lesson for May 8.
Esau sold his birthright for a bowl
of pottage. The birthright was the
right of being at the head of the
patriarchal family. In a time of
physical exhaustion he relinquished
his claim to the future in order to
gratify a present desire.
Lesson for May 15.
Jacob’s scheming involved him in
trouble. On his flight from an out¬
raged brother he was overtaken by
night and obliged to sleep in a field
with a stone for his pillow. It was
under such circumstances that God
gave him the vision at Bethel.
Lesson for May 22.
On Jacob’s return to Canaan t'o
meet Esau, the Angel of the Lord
wrestled with him at the ford of
.Tabbok. Jacob’s self-will needed to be
broken before he could enter Canaan.
He was humbled by the dislocation of
his thigh. When thus humbled, he quit
wrestling and clung to God. Jacob
did not get the blessing through
wrestling, but because of his clinging
to God. It was easy for Jacob to be
reconciled to his brother because he
was now right with God.
Lesson for May 29.
Joseph was hated by bis brethren.
The father's favoritism fanned this
hatred into a flame, and resulted in
his being sold into slavery.
Lesson for June 5.
Joseph’s success was not primarily
due to the fact that he was a good
worker, but to the fact that the good
hand of his God was upon him. Jo¬
seph was not a self-made, but a God
made man.
Lesson for June 12.
Though Joseph severely tested his
brethren, he graciously forgave them
and nourished them through the years
of famine. He knew that God had
sent him to be their deliverer.
Lesson for June 19.
In old age after many years of sor¬
row for the loss of Joseph, Jacob goes
to Egypt and is there nourished
through the famine by Joseph. After
Jacob’s death, Joseph continues his
gracious attitude to his brethren.
Three Kinds of People
There are three kinds of people in
the world, the wills, the won’ts and the
can’ts. The first accomplish every¬
thing; the second oppose everything;
the third fail in everything.—Se¬
lected.
He Is the Loser
It has been said that certain insects
which sting, lose their lives when they
sting. A man who uses his tongue to
express tiie venom of his hate loses
that which to him is better than life
MercolizedWax
Keeps Skin Young
Qet an ounce and use as directed. lirectod. Fino Fino particles particles- of aged
skin pool off f until until all defects di iofectn disfl such such Bkiu as as as pimples, pimplei pimples, liver liver
;s, tan and frcckios eckios disappear, is then soft
and velvety. Your • face face 1ooi looki vean» beauty younger. Meroolized
Wax brings wrinkle: out the .he hidd< hidde of your skin. Saxolite T»
>ve wrinkles use one ounoo Powdered Powdo:
dissolved in ono-hulf pint witch hazel. At drug stores.
Robin Had Business There
Some time during the winter a
pane of glass was broken in the
clubhouse of tlie Batli (Maine) Coun¬
try club and an early arrival from
the south decided that was a good
place to build a nest and rear her
young. As the clubhouse had not.
been kept open during Hie winter no
one knew about tlie feathered visitor
and recently the glass was reset.
Then it was noticed that a robin kept
Hying against the glass and pecking
at it. Inside tlie clubhouse was
found a nest with two blue eggs in it.
The Largest Selling
Aspirin in the World
For 10c
(Why Pay More?)
St. GENUINE Jo sepIt's.
PURE ASPIRIN
Busy Airway
On the San Francisco-New York
airway, 2,766 miles long, longest im¬
proved airway in the world, there
are 161 Department of Commerce
lighted emergency fields, with per¬
manent caretakers. Supplementing
these are the weather bureau observ¬
ers and hundreds of beacons and
two-way radio-phone stations.
For Emergencies
B. &. M.
THE PENETRATING GERMICIDE
i s a standard! tem i n many thousands
of family medicine cabinets, safe¬
guarding grownups and children
agains (coughs and colds. No other
treatment si ike i t. Large size $1.25
at your drug store.
F.E.R0LUNSC0.iaSa
Harnessing Hot Springs
Gardeners in Iceland are using the
hot springs for horticultural purposes
with such good results that they
claim that Iceland need import no
more foreign vegetables—they can
grow sufficient to supply the whole
island. The islanders are starting a
campaign with the slogan: “Buy
Icelandic.”
Tiy Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
She’s Up in the Ailr Again
Those she loves . . . are first to suf¬
fer when monthly pains shatter her
nerves. Compound Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
would ease that awful agony.
Yea, Many!
The Toledo Blade says that a man
must be either a hammer or an an¬
vil. Shucks, we know some who are
bellows.
HAVEI
Beautiful Skin
— soft, smooth, clear, “pink and
white”—the matchless complexion of
youth. Sulphur purifies,
clears and refreshes the
skin. For beautifying the
face and arms use
—Glenn’s
Sulphur Soap
Contains 33^^ Pure Sulphur. At Dragcists.
Accounting for It?
Jimmy—Well, I will say I have a
pretty good opinion of myself.
Bertie—Yes; you never studied
yourself very much, I suppose.
IOILSsTOPSI No matter how large or sensitive,
CARBC1L quickly stops throb¬
bing pain, ripens and often heals
worst boil overnight. Get CAR
BOIL today from druggist.
Soothes pain, heals bolls, sores, .
bites, etc. Generous box 50c.
Spurlock-Neal Co. Nashvllle.Tenn.
Goldfish Long Pets
Goldfish were domesticated as pets
In China as long ago as the Tenth or
Eleventh century A. D.
For lazy liver, stomach and
kidneys, biliousness, indi¬
gestion, ache, constipation, head¬
colds and fever.
100 and 35# at dealers.
W. N. U.. ATLANTA, NO. 25-1932.