Cleveland courier. (Cleveland, White County, Ga.) 1896-1975, November 22, 1935, Image 3
TRIES 35,000CASES Camille Kelley, noted woman jur* 1st of Memphis, has tried more than 85,000 cases,. Appointed to the bench In 1920, she became the first woman judge in the South, the second In the United States, She has been re-elect ed continuously since that time, foul times without opposition. ASK YOUR DOCTOR FIRST, MOTHER Before You Give Your Child an Unknown Remedy to Take Every day, advice unthinkingly, mothers take the of unqualified persons — instead of their doctor’s—oo remedies for their child. If they knew what the scientists know, they would never take this chance. Doctors Say PHILLIPS’ For Your Child When “milk it comes magnesia,” to the frequently-used of doctors, for over 50 years, have said "PHILLIPS’ Milk of Magnesia — the safe remedy for your child.” Remember this — And Always Say “ Phillips’ ” When You Buy. Your child deserves it; for your own peace of mind, see that you get it — Gen¬ uine Phillips' Milk of Magnesia. Also in Tablet Forms Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia Tablets are now on sale at all drug stores everywhere. Each tiny tablet is the equivalent of a tea spoonful of Genuine Phillips' Magnesia. Milk, of Phillips’ A/il/i. uf /llayt ieyicL. Metal Covers Books Book covers made of aluminum have been patented in Berlin. Shivering with ChiEIs Burning with Fever Sure Relief for Malaria! Don’t try homemade treatments oi newfangled remedies 1 Take that good old Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic. Soon you will be yourself again, for Grove’s Taste, less Chill Tonic not only relieves the symptoms of Malaria, but destroys the infection itself. The tasteless quinine in Grove’s Taste¬ less Chill Tonic kills the Malarial infec¬ tion in the blood while the iron it con¬ tains builds up the blood to overcome the effects of the disease and fortify against further attack. The ‘wofold effect is ab¬ solutely necessary to the overcoming of Malaria. Besides being a dependable rem¬ edy for Malaria, Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic is also an excellent tonic of general use. Pleasant to take and absolutely harmless. Safe to give children. Get a bottle today at any drug store. Now two sizes—50c and $1. The $1 size contains 2yi times as much as the 50c size and gives you 25% more for your money And Sounds Bad Profanity is coarse; of course, it’, wicked, too. ECZEMA.. To quickly relievo the itching and burning, and help nature restore Gkin comfort, freely apply Resinol Rid Yourself of Kidney. Roisons fNO you suffer burning, scanty or \J too frequent urination; backache, headache, dizziness, swollen feet and ankles? Are you tired, nervous—feel all unstrung and don't know what is WTOng? Then give some thought to your kidneys. Be sure they function proper¬ ly, for functional kidney disorder per¬ j mits excess waste to stay in the blood, ! end to poison and upset the whole system. Use Doan’s Pills. Doan’s are for the kidneys only. They are recommended the world over. You can get the gen¬ time-tested Doan’s at drug ; uine, any store. Doans Pi lls "QUOTES COMMENTS ON CURRENT TOPICS BY NATIONAL CHARACTERS "".... . ........... - ......... 1 M- T — BRAIN OF MAN By PROP. W. W. WATTS British Scientist. ALL the wonders of the V_y universe of which we have present knowledge, from the elec¬ tron. to the atom, from the virus and bacillus to the oak and the elephant, from the tiniest meteor to the most magnificent nebula, surely there is nothing to surpass the brain of man. An instrument capable of controlling every thought and action of the human body, the most intricate and efficient piece of mechanism ever devised; of piercing the secrets and defining the laws of nature; of recording and re¬ calling every adventure of the Indi¬ vidual from his cradle to liis grave; of inspiring or of ruling great masses of mankind; of producing all the gems of speech and song, of poetry and art, that adorn the world, all the thoughts of philosophy and all the triumphs of imagination and insight: it is indeed the greatest marvel of all. —--—- * NO DICTATORSHIP By DR. FRANK P. GRAHAM President, North Carolina University. r f'HE farmers and industrial -I. workers have enough inter¬ ests in common and enough pow¬ er in combination to prevent a Fascist dictatorship. For a communist dic¬ tatorship there appears less chance, even with a change from the tradition¬ al attitude of the American workers. The farmers and the urban middle class overwhelmingly outweigh the pro¬ letariat, who are apt to recede in eco¬ nomic power before the technological advance. Whether either dictatorship Is soon to attempt to rear Us head in America depends on the developments of the New Deal and other resolute and Intel¬ ligent readjustments of our Constitu tional federal republic to the needs of both modern democracy and Industrial society. PLANNED ECONOMY By BERTRAND H. SNEED Representative From New York. r | V HE well-defined purpose of A all the important New Deal legislation since the inauguration of the President lias been to eliminate the element of private resourcefulness and to have ttie government assume the functions heretofore carried on by private enterprise and exercised by the individual. That legislation, collectively known as ‘‘planned economy," attempts to place a whole people in lock-step and deny to the individual the right to ex¬ ercise his own judgment and resource¬ fulness in the management of his own business, farm or factory. It would reduce every citizen to the status of an automaton—taking orders from a government bureaucrat, neither elected by nor accountable to the peo¬ ple. ETHIOPIA FOR PROGRESS By DR. AZAT MARTIN Ethiopian Minister to Britain. ¥ F WORSE comes to worse 1 Ethiopians would much prefer being under the just and consid¬ erate administration of Britain than that of Italy. Bet us have peace for 20 years, and a loan of £20,000,000 to enable us to open schools all over Abyssinia and I assure you we will be as advanced at the end of that time as any nation could desire. Mussolini seems to think the best way to civilize and educate us is to kill most of us. We differ from him. If Italians must have a colony why don’t they go bravely and take one from those who have tjpem to spare? They can’t have Ethiopia. WAR IN AFRICA By GEORGE BERNARD SHAW English Writer, Philosopher. PACIFISTS will exclaim against 1 the horrors of war. Diplomatists will rush about between embas¬ sies and Geneva assuring us they are doing their utmost to secure observ¬ ance of the covenant consistent with the interests of their respective na tions. But the interest obtainable on capital, now a drug on the market, will double; industries will make big profits. Banks will flourish. The heaps of dead in Ethiopia will not Inconvenl ence the owners of heaps of money now on deposit at 1 per cent and hun¬ gering for 5. I have not forgotten how the South African war improved my own financial situation. BOYCOTT URGED By WILLIAM GREEN President, American Federation of Labor. TN BEHALF of the American 1 Federation of Labor I repeat its official protest against the most recent action of the Hitler gov eminent. Surely the governing nations which make up the civilized world cannot longer remaiD indifferent to the action of a tyrant such as Hitler, to his ex¬ celling in brutality and fiendish perse cution the rulers of a bygone pagan age. The time has arrived when Germany ought to be boycotted, not only by la¬ bor and its friends, but by all the people of the United States. WNU Service. CLEVELAND COURIER Tales Told bv a Traveler Possessing a Good Memory. PART ONE S. S. Duchess of Bedford Scotland Bound. A TN THE year 1931, encouraged by Arthur Bartlett Maurice, I was induced to undertake, with him for collaborator, the writing of “The Caliph of Bagdad: The Life of O. Henry,” with whom, jointly, we had maintained an in¬ timate association during ten years of his lifetime. I repaid Arthur by al¬ lowing him to do all of the research and a major share of the actual writ¬ ing. And now who should turn up among the passengers on this Canadian Pa¬ cific liner but m.v old book-bunkie, stocked as usual with interesting mem¬ ories of tlie writer folk gathered dur¬ ing his long editorship of “The Book¬ man.’,’ A casual reference to Rudyard Kipling set .him in motion like a foot racer aquiver for the crack of the starting gun. “t saw the great man but once,” said lie. "That would be in 1020, in j ids country home at Bateman's Bur wash, Sussex, where I spent the day with him. At the Players club a few months prior, Booth Tarkington and I, discussing Kipling, came to the con¬ clusion that physically, at least, he was in tlie sere and yellow, ‘a wizened little man living In retirement,’ as Turk put it. I, too, visualized him as just that. What a misconception of the true Rudyard. He was anything but. Youth is the one word that de¬ scribes him. Garbed in knickerbock¬ ers, pulling at a briar, eyes spark¬ ling, body erect, not, a wrinkle In his face, vibrating with energy, and giv¬ ing every evidence of exuberance and explosive vitality. He quite bowled, me j over. 1 hastened, the next day, to noti¬ j fy Tarkington of our error. Not even Theodore Roosevelt, In his prime as a talker, could have stopped Kipling onee lie got under way. Brilliant, buoyant, spontaneous, he kept up an incessant fire, addressing himself always to themes of current importance and mu¬ tual interest. ‘Honor bright,’ he said at the outset, ‘whatever we talk about Is between ourselves.’ For that reason ! may not quote him even now, after 15 years. Tells of Tarkington. "Speaking of Booth Tarkington; one of the outstanding figures of our own country, destined with tlie accumulat¬ ing years to attain a stature that will place him among America's immortals. A great novelist., a great individual, a profound scholar, who is perhaps one of the world’s greatest letter writers, as those fortunate enough to he in communication with him can testify, Tarkington will ever remain a colos¬ sal figure on the horizon of our lit¬ erature. It is regrettable that his epistles, written in lead pencil on sheets of yellow paper and decorated with illustrations, have not found their way into print. Some day, perhaps—. May I quote one sentence from thou¬ sands equally descriptive. ‘Switzerland is a hoarding house infested by moun¬ tains.’ There is but one such as Tark.” “And the bane of my life is that I never met, or even saw him.’’ “What!” exclaimed Maurice, leaping from his steamer chair; “shame upon you, after traveling 700.000 miles to have never come upon Booth Tark¬ ington. Where in God’s name have you been ?’’ “Probably elsewhere when the In dianian was about town,” I confessed with regret. Frenchman Honors Lewis. “Which reminds me of tlie time,” continued Maurice, returning to his theme, “when on a visit to the hotel quarters of my friend Bill Grant, iri Baris Maurice de Kobra, the French author, stroiied in and declared his Intention to leave the following day for New York for the single purpose of calling upon ‘the man I consider the greatest, of American novelists— Sinclair Lewis.’ At that I stepped to tlie telephone and asked for a connec¬ tion with the apartment on the next floor below. ‘Hello, Red ! . . . Are you engaged? . . . Well, then, slip up to Grant’s apartment anrj meet Maurice de Kobra. who is sailing tomorrow on the France that he may give you the once over in New York. Good. Hustle.’ In a few moments Lewis, no little bewildered by m.v message, stalked in¬ to Grant’s suite, there to meet for the first time the impatient De Kobra." “Quite,” I admitted. “Mayhap Booth Tarkington is occupying a room on the promenade deck of the Duchess of Bedford. Give him a ring, Arthur.” But the tale spinner went right on with his recollections. ‘‘Years ago, with Ned Dodd, her American publisher," he resumed, “I made a formal caJi on Beatrice Harridan at her London res idence. As befits such an occasion, con¬ siderable small talk ensued. When we arose to depart the authoress of ’Ships That Pass in the Night’ turned to me and bestowed the British accolade with the observation that I spoke with a pronounced English accent, whereas Dodd parlayed a la Americano. And then, disturbed that she had made a faux pas, cried, 'Oh, Mr. Ned. 1 have flattered Mr. Maurice, and hurt your feelings.’ Both of ns spilled our sepa¬ rate English and Yankee laughter. Uiss Beatrice was quite shocked.” ©—WNU Service. GERMAN WOMEN LABOR In Germany, women are gradually being taken out of the factory and office to make more jobs for men. Stenographers, salesgirls, servant girls, factory workers are being placed In labor camps to drain marshes, build roads, cultivate the land and harvest crops. Also they are required to do a helpful kind of “Wasn’t I good and glad to discover it!” MRS. K. J. TOBIN. OF BEVERLY HILLS, ILL., WELCOMES Calumet Baking Powder ... a big, in new 10 / can! “WHAT’S THE SENSE in taking chances with sec¬ ond-bests when you can get a good, big can of Cal¬ umet for a dime?” asks Mrs. Tobin. “I’ve never had a bak¬ ing failure with Calumet,” Mrs. Tobin said. And judg¬ ing by the expectant faces of Richard and Patricia, Mrs. Tobin is not the only member of her family who knows how delicious Cal¬ umet cakes always are 1 A SIMPLE TWIST... and the Easy Off Top lifts off. No delay, no spilling, no broken finger-nails! WHY DOES CALUMET give auch astonishing “baking luck”? Why is Calumet different from other baking powders? Because Calumet combines two distinct leavening actions. A \ w quick one for the mixing bowl. A slower one for the oven ... •': and Calumet’s double-action is so perfectly balanced and i . wM:. ' controlled controlled that that it it nroduces produces perfect perfect leavening—every leavening—everv time. time. All Calumet prices are lower! Calumet is now selling at the lowest prices in history ... the regular price of Full-Pound Can is now only 25fS! And be sure to see the new, big 10jz! can —a lot of good baking for a dime, with Calumet, the Double-Acting Baking Powder. A product of General Foods. 1* a runner V CALLING. ALL CARS — CALLING. CAPES I ALL CARS. LIFE CONVICT ES¬ FROM STATE PENITENT¬ IARY. HE'S HEADED NORTH ON ROUTE 31 —IN A BLUE TOURING CAR I GEE, DIZZY, YOU fWELL, SON. VOU WON’T ■ but, how oo you Swell, I EXERCISE i get AND plenty SLEEP. of] CERTAINLY HAO LAST IN THE BIG LEAGUE ■ ■ GET SO MUCH Hand THAT OLD CON¬ WITHOUT CONTROL. 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