The Syracuse Journal, Volume 28, Number 27, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 31 October 1935 — Page 2
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BRISBANE THIS WEEK The Bonus at Last? A Little on Account Teagle Will Sell Oil The Oceana Are Closer Washington reports “payment of the 83,000,000,000 soldiers’ bonus before
the end of the next session is virtually assured." Good news for soldiers. Do suppose the government will print more of Its "Inflation bonds," and Insist on paying Interest on Its own money, instead of printing new money for the bonus, or do you believe there must be some limits to stupidity? The League of
Artlrnr Briakaa*
Nations wants us to “clarify our position." It would be made clear if the President would write to the league of Nations: “Our position Is this: “We are attending to our business, and advise you to do the same. Also, what about a little cash on account of 110,000,000,000 you owe us on the last war?” Welter Teagle, head of the Standard Oil of New Jersey, disposes sensibly of the suggestion that all Americans should refuse to sell oil to Italy. He aays Standard OH is not in the League of Nations and be will continue selling oil through his Italian subsidiary. This is news. Important especially to California, where real estate prosperity grows with Improved transcontinental trips. The Santa Fe railroad, with a diesel engine, hauling nine steel cars and using 3,000 horsepower, has cut 15 hours from the running time between Los Angeles and Chicago. Queer things happen In Ethiopia. The Daily Express says former War Minister Fltowrary Berru. In disgrace with the emperor because he spent too much money, walked, as a penitent. Into the presence of the emperor, carrying on his back a heavy grindstone, and kneeled down In sign of submission. The emperor rolled the stpue off his back. meaning forgiveness. and Fltowrary Berru is off spending money again. Some of our baked, potato and “little pig” ministers might try, that Here Is war news: England’s soft-voiced Foreign Secretary Hoare begs, implores, beseeches Italy to make peace With Ethiopia while there is still time. “Sanctions” have not yet been applied. England and other countries nre selling goods to Italy. “While the lamp holds out to burn, the vilest alnuer may return." e You may see a new kind of "Olympic game" with long-distance runners wearing gas masks. In future wan soldiers will wear masks and civilians will wear them. Ability to run In gas masks will be Important. Russia knows that,- and “training for the nett war" eight men and women of the Osoavlakhlm (society for aviation and chemical defense) marched SI miles in gas masks tn 10 hours 47 minutes, a world record. General Smuts, minister of justice tn England's Union of South Africa, says: “Annexation of Ethiopia or its domination by a great European power will mean training one of the biggest, most dangerous black armies the world has ever seen." General Smuts worries about the conquering power of such a gigantic “black army” unnecessarily. One pale chemist inventing a better poison gas, or more destructive explosives, and a few first-class pilots could take care of any “black army" that Ethiopia might send forth. The American Federation of Labor asks American athletes not to attend the liras Olympic games. If they are . held in Germany. As a reason for “banning German Olympics," the federation says Hitler 1s crushing labor unions “with blood and fire." There Is a better reason for not holding the lirao Olympics In Germany. The <hlef value of sport is tn the fact that manly exorcise Is supposed, primarily, to develop and Inspire courage. The spectacle of OU.O(MK(MM) Germans cruelly persecuting and suppressing 000.000 German Jews Is not exactly a picture of courage. President Roosevelt. has said that bw; Intends |e keep out of European He will not let Europe conmll<ste pur foreign business, mak Ing J i6 TtnpoMlble for American concerns to operate merely to oblige European competitors. In any case our European friends should at least start paying the ten thousand million dol lars they borrowed before asking the United States to lose more money for their sweet sake. Dr. C H Mayo predicts that drags will cure insanity. With the drag now used experimentally. Doctor Mayo hopes to effect permanent cures, by changing the blood circulation In tbs brain. • Kia* PtaturM Sy»«neai< la*. WNUServtea. Brood Not ea Self Let not the mind brood on self;save It from those stagnant moments la which the awful teachings of the spirit grope Into the unfathomable unknown, and the heart torments Itself with questions which are Insoluble except tn aa active life. Dress* Really Ta* The SB-called talking drum* of naRNmmis Afttoßau* etsn- fait dMMbeft tew WW AinCa WW UJF a wrt st Morw code; they gwfctbe the email produced by the human woke. ■
News Review of Current Events the World Over Hoare Promises Britain Will Not Fight With Italy—Laval's Peace Efforts Continued —President Roosevelt Returns to Washington. By EDWARD W. PICKARD © Wiittra Newspaper Union.
SIR SAMUEL HOARE, British foreign secretary, assured parliament and the world that Great Britain has no Intention of fighting Italy and would
a Sir Samuel Hoar*
not alone apply military sanctions against that nation. He held out strong hopes that the war tn Africa reuld be settled withput resort by the Teague to extreme measures. His speech was plainly an invitation to Italy to talk peace term*. Denying that the government's policy is hostile to Fascism, Sir Samuel said:
“We have not the least Intention of interfering In the domestic affairs of other people." . “The unbroken solidarity of the empire Is behind the government's policy," he said., “Let those prophets of misfortune who have marked the empire down for decay and dissolution observe this fact of overwhelming Importance." Hoare hinted at British isolation from continental affairs if the league collapses. Next day F’rlme Minister Stanley Baldwin warmly endorsed all that Hoare and Capt Anthony Eden have done at Geneva. He deprecated even the use of the word war, but called for a rearming of the empire, saying: “In the interests of world peace It is essential our defensive services should be stronger than they are today." Baldwin announced the adjournment of parliament on October 25 and the election of a new parliament on November 14. The campaign already is under way and Is lively, with the international situation furnishing the main Issues. The party accuses the government of delaying action In the ItaloEthiopian embrogllo until too late, to prove really effective, and impugns its motive in seeking rearmament MUSSOLINI made one conciliatory gesture toward Groat Britain when he agreed to withdraw a division of troops from Libya; and at the same time he urged thaf France and Brita'n make quick reply to his peace conditions. But It became known the troops wet to be moved from Libya to Tri- j pol«, where they would be almost as much a menace to Egypt; and the duce's peace terms were so drastic .; that there was no prospect that they would be accepted by anyone concerned. They Included disarmament i of Ethiopia, an international protec- f torate over the central regions and an ; Italian protectorate over the remainder, ■ Addressing the foreign affairs com- < mlttee of the French chamber of depu- ! ties. Premier Laval promised he would seek only a compromise that would be ' fully acceptable to the League of Nations. He told the committee that France’s battleships would steam Immediately to the assistance of Britain if the latter* fleet was atttacked by Italy. Since the first of the year, Laval dechrod. he had repeatedly called the attention of the Rome government to the stipulation of the league covenant and warned that France could not approve any violation of it — WHILE Premier Pierre Laval of j Franc* was still trying desperately to find away of settling the ' Italo-Ethlopian quarrel that would be
acceptable to both Great Britain and Italy —apparently without regard to Ethiopia's real interests — fiftytwo members of the League of Nations declared a boycott on all Italian goods and an embargo on various key exports to ’ that country. The boycott binds these nations to prohibit importation
I Pl*rre Laval
of “all good* consigned from and grown, produced or manufactured to Italy or to Italian possessions from whatever place they arrive." If rigidly enforced, this would cot off about two-thirds of the export trad* upon which Italy depends to getting funds for prosecution of the war in Africa. Th* countrie* applying the sanctions agree to aid one another to compensating losaea by increased trade facilities, credits, cash and loans if possible, and discriminating against league members such as Austria and Hungary which continue to trade with Italy. Austria. Hungary and Albania spoke against the sanctions, Switzerland, which seeks to preserve her traditional neutrality, was silent Some South American republic* made complicated reservations. It was derided that the sanctions Should ho put to force on October 81. and Laval thus had time to continue his peace efforts. These seemed to center on away to “legalize” Italian occupation of that part Os northern Ethiopia which Mussolini’* troops have seised and to arrange for Italy> partial control oror the antir* empire. Gen. rudolfo Graziani’s forces to southern Ethiopia were reported to have won several important vfctoriea in their advance toward Harrar and the railway. They captured some town* despite desperate resistance by the natives, and took many prisoners. The main movement tn that nglnn w*n «P the Webbe SblbeU river. The Ethiopians were reillarußroiiiT Hw dHnrist Iwsmlwfe *-Tv.** wVw ■. LT®* la Tigre province, on toe north, toe
thrust toward Addis Ababa. Their line there extended nearly 70 mile* from Adigrat through Aduwa to the holy city of Aksum. Italian aviator scouts reported that Ethiopian troops were digging In at Makale, about 60 miles southeast of Aduwa and the next logical objective in the Italian campaign of occupation, forming a major concentration for a desperate effort to frustrate the next attack. IN A long and solemn statement the • Ethiopian legation In London warned Italy that its “ghastly methods” of warfare, the use of poison gas* and dum-dum bullets, would hare dire results. The legation stated that Italy’s use of “unfair and ultra-civilized methods of warfare," of which the legation says It has Impartial substantiation despite public denials by Ambassador Dino Grandl of Italy, “will lead to the most unfortunate consequences, not only to Italians who will, of course, deserve it, but to all white peoples as well." PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT, deeply tanned and in fine spirits, returned to the White House, his holiday tour ended. When he landed from the cruiser Houston at Charleston, S. CL, he told a big crowd gathered to welcome him that the country is on its way back to prosperity under the planned economy of his administration, “and don’t let anybody tell yon differently." At an Informal press conference just before he left the cruiser, the President was asked to comment on the “impending collapse" of his drive to put three and a half million employables on relief to work by November L He replied that November 30 was 31 days off and that November 1 had never been wet as the deadline, and that he had been very careful to say that substantially three and a half million persons would be put to work. If three million are at work by November 30 he said he would be satisfied with the four-billlon-doJlar program, and that It could not then be considered to have fallen down. One of Mr. Roosevelt’s first appointments tn Washington was for a talk with Secretary of State Hull on the European situation. FOR the third time In his career Mackenzie King is now prime minister of Canada, following the victory of the Liberal party at the polls. Rlch-
ard B. Bennett and his Conservative cabinet resigned and King i was called on to form i the new government,* which he did at once. He himself was sworn in as prime minister, president of the privy council and secretary of state for external affairs. Thomas A. Crerar of Winnipeg was made minister of mines, immigration
Sti Mackenzie King
and colonisation,, interior and Indian affairs. Charles A. Dunning of Montreal Is the new minister of finance and W. D. Euler of Kitchener has the trade and commerce portfolio. All the cabinet positions except that of agriculture were fillet! at once. The resignation of W. D. Herridge aa minister to Washington was accepted and became immediately effective. The department of national revenue announced cancellation of dumping duties on the following commodities entering Canada: Plums, prunes, radishes, spinach, and peaches. O X'E of the government's much publicised efforts to punish alleged Income tax evaders of Louisiana failed when a Jury in Federal court at New Orleans brought in a verdict of not guilty in the case of Abraham L. Shushan. one of the done associates of the late Senator Long. The prosecution claimed he owed $71,000 in taxes. The verdict was greeted with loud cheers by the crowd in the courtroom, and In the ensuing confusion several news photographers were beaten up by former members of Loog's bodyguard—which seems to be a habit tn Louisiana. XT EARLY ,5.000 men and women from all parts of the United States gathered io Chicago and held a national convention of the Townsend plan, which, as most people know, would give every person sixty years of age a S2OO per month income if tbe person agreed to spend It all wlthla the month, did not work or have an Income all told of more than $2,400 a year. The elderly California doctor who devised the plan was present, and the delegates seriously undertook the work of formulating a campaign to compel the adoption of the plan at the coming session of- congress. They reported that Townsend plan units are growing rapidly in all the states. FIRST of the big eastern railroads to seek reorganisation under the amended bankruptcy act Is the New York. New Haven and Hartford, which serves one of the most, densely populated sections of the country. Its petition was filed because It was unable to meet taxes of $4,000,000 and interest of KLawinoa The railroad had sought another loan from the government, but the Interstate Commerce commission rejected the plea. The company had cleaned Its treasury of collateral to secure loans of $7,090,000 from the Reconstruction Finance corporation. from the Railroad Credit corporation, and SIS.OUU.UUO from banks. The Pennsylvania system, which controls about 1.5 per cent of New Haven stock, did not appear rendr to guarantee a farther extension of credit
SYRACUSE JOURNAL
*<<"2 ERM ANY Is becoming a barren nation. Intellectually, culturally and scientifically, under Hitler." That was the way Alfred E. Smith opened an appeal for financial aid for nonAryan Christian and political refugees from Germany, at a dinner tn New York held under the joint auspices of the American Christian Committee for German Refugees and the Emergency Committee tn Aid of Political Refugees from Nazi-ism. “I am informed that at this very moment I am speaking, 2,500 German refugees are on the verge of starvation," the former New York governor said. “Centers now operating and serving these refugees in Europe must be supplied quickly with money. They need aid, or will be forced to discontinue «helr work.” Dr. Albert Einstein, the eminent scientist, also was present and said German Fascism is directed mostly “against my Jewish brothers. The reason given Is to purify the Aryan race In Germany. As a matter of fact, no such Aryan race exists and the myth of same has been invented solely to motivate the persecution and robbery of the Jews." ALL states and communities have been asked by Aubrey Williams acting WPA administrator, to make better provisions for the care of “unemployables," for federal aid for the needy will soon be confined to providing Jobs. In an Interview Mr. Williams said that with six states already cut off the dole, progress of the work relief program would bring liquidation of relief administrations in “the great majority of the remaining states” during November. This win leave those physically or mentally unable to work, the aged, mothers with dependent children, and other handicapped families and individuals, dependent upon local efforts. TA IL HUGH S. MAGILL, who as L-' president of the American Federation of Investors has been annoyed by congressional Investigators, has written to all members of congress a letter asking whether American citizens “still have the right to express their approval or disapproval with respect to pending legislation without being harassed by ‘lnquisitors.’” The federation opposed the recent enactment of the “death sentence” for “unnecessary” holding companies and was’ under investigation by the senate lobby committee. In an open letter to senators and representatives, Magill said he had “refused” to permit representatives of the committee “to read my personal and private correspondence.” He asserted the federation “is not a lobbying organization as that term is commonly used.” DEATH came to an eminent American, Maj. Gen. Adolphus \V. Greely, U. 8. A., retired, at the age of ninety-one years. He passed away in Walter Reed hospital, Washington, and was buried in Arlington national cemetery with full honors. General Greely was universally known as the leader of the ili-fatsd expedition into the Arctic regions in 1881 from which only he and seven others returned alive. But he had already served in the Civil war with distinction, and bis later scientific accomplishments won him international fame and recognition. General Greely was one of the original organizers es the National Geographic society, and a member of the board of trustees continuously for 47 years. ARTHUR HENDERSON, president of the world disarmament conference and a most determined foe of war. died In a London nursing home.
He was seventy-two years old and had been ill for a long time, so ill that he had not been permitted to see a newspaper for six weeks and did not know that another war had broken out and that the peace of Europe was threatened. The former iron molder of Glasgow who became a leader of the lujbor party and was
I ■■ Bl ’ . I Arthur Henderson
foreign secretary when It was in power, was awarded the Nobel peace prise in 1934. His crusade for peace and disarmament was inspired by the death of his eldest son to th* World war. He was a gentle, much loved man, a genuine idealist whose latter years were made sorrowful by the repeated failure of the disarmament conference to get results. TJ ELENA, capital of Montana, and all * * the west er n part of that state were terrified by a serie* of earthquake shocks extending through a number of da ya There were only two fatab ities, but numerous buildings were wrecked or so weakened that they had to be razed. Hundreds c os persons were driven from their homes, and the suffering was intensified by a sudden Tall of th* temperature to, below freezing. Fortunately toe gas mains of the city were not broken. National Guardsmen patrolled the business district and all public place* were closed for days. Senator William E. Murray and Representative John P. Monaghan surveyed the damage, and Murray, terming the quake “one of Montana’* worst disasters." said he would go by airplane to Wasbtogtou to ask immediate help. PDWARD HENRY CARSQN. who in 1921 was made Baron Carson of Duncalrn, died to linden at the age of eighty-one year*, ending .* strange and stormy career concerned mainly with Irish politics, a Protestant, he became leader of the Ulster party, organized and led the threatened Ulster rebellion to 1914 against the home rule bill and secured its postponement When the war broke hs turned his army to the battlefields of France and himself entered the British cabinet After the war Carson threw himself Into the sighs again*t the rotabliriiment of the Irish Free State and sue eeeded la securing the partitton. by which the atz Ulster counties separated from the rest of Ireland.
DIGEST/ <T J 11 BY WILLIAM BRUCKART NATIONAL PRESS BLOG. WAGHINGTON?O.C.
Washington.—A friend of mine, • minor official of the government, re-
marked to me the other day that be could find very little Caqse for excitement
TAe African War
tn his own mind about the hostilities between Italy and Ethiopia. The fighting Is so far away, be said, and the nations Involved are of such comparative insignificance in the whole world structure that he found no reason at all to do more that, read the blackfaced headlines about the trouble as they appeared from day to day tn the great metropolitan newspapers. We were, at the time, wending a rather alow way around the golf links of the Congressional Country club. The course is set In the midst of fine farming country and my friend used the situation as a basis for his argument that there was little reason for any of us to take the Italian-Ethiopian trouble seriously. “How can it make very much difference to us.” he asked with a wave of his hand toward the fine farms and splendid homes within sight, “when we have * nation so admirably supplied with resources of which those are typical? We can live even if the trouble broadens. If necessary we can close our shores to foreigners and keep out of the trouble." Unwittingly,, my friend supplied a text In fact he supplied two of them The man In question is able, has a good brain and Is doing his job satis factoriiy, but it is his first connection with the government in an official ca pacity. He has not bad training here . tofore that fits him or equips him to deal with broad international questions. In time bls views will change. Os that I have no doubt, but the fact remains that fils attitude on the Ital lan-Ethloplan situation marks him as one of countless hundreds of govern ment officials, past and present who are brought In and given responsible posts without regard to their under standing of all of the problems wblcthey must meet The other text which my friend’s conversation suggested is "what inter est do we have in the African war?’ Most individuals will agree that ai tte moment we are In no danger and that immediately there is no prospect of any kind of trouble insofar as the United States is concerned but It Is not the Immediate prospect that we must consider. It is not the immediate prospect that caused Secretary Hui) of the State department to declare and to reiterate that the objective of present American policies la to keep this coun try out of war. That was the reason congress enacted the so-called neutral it) resolution and that was the reason President Roosevelt placed an embargo against the shipment of arms and mu nltions of war to the present belllg erents. Again, It is not the present, but where we go from here that con cerns ua. • * • Undoubtedly congress did a popu lar thing when It adopted the resolu
tion designed to pre vent development of circumstances which may place us on the
Europe a Powder Keg
verge of the cataclysm. I say tbe ac tion was popular because there has been no indication from any Important quarter, except from traders whos» business has been handicapped, against the official policy enacted to that res olutlon. But tbe end is not yet In the firs* Instance, all of Europe is virtually a powder keg. Potential dynamite lie* in the differences between Russians and Japanese. Their frontier can be the scene of the fated overt act at any moment And, while the hope la for settlement of al! differences betweer the Japanese and the Russians in a peaceful manner, there is no assur ance that these can be so settled. Since the Italian dictator, Mussolini, brazenly announced that be wanted more territory for his people and pro posed to get It at the expense of the black men in Ethiopia, tension between Great Britain and Italy ba* Increased from day to day. Backing and filling between tbe British and the French have been the regular order because the British and the French have com parable interests InAlrica. Further, a strengthened Italy means a menace oi a continuing character to her neigh bor, France. The British have scores of battle boat* In the Mediterranean sea. Those ship* ar* at anchor from which they can be called into quick use. The Brit lab say tbe fleet la maintained there merely aa a "precaution.'* Mussolini knows better. He knows and even one else will discover after evefi a superficial examination of the ritua tion that dbe British will brook no move* by Italy that threaten British control of the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan nor will the British permit Mussolini to gain control of such Ethiopian ter ritory aa will Jeopardise their super vision over territory through which the waters of toe blue Nile flow. These waters are essential to the British. 8o It takes no stretch of the imag toation to conclude that even a minor Incident, accidental damage to a Brit iah boat or an Injury to a British citl sen—of such things and from such things comes war—will cause trouble. it by any chance one of those “incidents” comes, the British and the Italians will be at each other’s throats. Next, should that break develop, every nation la Europe is compelled for one reason or another to align itself with one side or tbe other. Hitler, for example. would want nottlng better than an opportunity to stir up some trouble among th* other nations in order that he could spread his power over Austria and Hungary and maybe over some of tbe Balkan state*. He wants more territory and If a free-for-all bhould get started Herr Hitlee will
lose no time in subjugating some of the neighboring countries. • • • Even if these conditions obtain, my friend's statement that the war is a
long way off still 1* correct It would be three or four
Would Hit Our Commerce
thousand ml les from American shore* but the point of difference is that we are a commercial nation and I the European powder keg explodes our commerce would be affected. Indeed, it would be virtually destroyed. But, It will be asked, why not live within our own shell? The answer la, we cannot do so. Our ships, carrying the products of our farms and factories, would be plying the seas. Nations at war do not take the time always to learn the character of cargo .aboard a ship, at sea nor do they Inquire its destination or the purpose for which it is to be used. Then, we bear of .the overt act. An American ship with an American crew and an American cargo is sunk. Qr. Ameri-can-owned and manned business units In some one of the belligerent countries suffers from one of the various things that takes place during the war. it may be the act of some hot-headed foreign natonal or it may be a delib erate move by a government, but the die is cast An American citizen Is killed, an American flag is Insulted We are In It' It seems to me. therefore, that we have every reason to watch closely those developments abroad. Our own people are not blameless for some of the conditions that develop For Instance, the following day after Mr Roosevelt Issued his proclamation pro hlbttlng exports of arms and muni tlons and. by inference, prohibiting dealings of any ' kind with itaiy and Ethiopia. New York exporters rose wltrf a mighty howl and the Port Development Authority in New York protested. One group saw all opportunities for profitable business stricken out by the prohibition against exports and the other, with proper civic pride, complainetl that the executive action would wreck New York city as a marl time center. Their complaints were natural, quite human, but their refusal to accept the national policy simply represents one of the many things con -diluting an early step may sub -equently be one of the foundation stones of war. 1 do not mean to say In these columns that we should become a peace d-any-price nation Ot the contrary . think that is position for any nation to take. Wtat I do empha dze. however, is that it we are to have • » internal. ■'« -mHr shrwtld sd here to It. Shoes will pinch in some places under any law or policy but certainly if the United States is to be a world leader, the broader instead of narrower view must be taken in times like these. , Now. let us consider the govern mental problem. I said earlier that
congress undoubtedly had acted in accord ance with the viewsof a majority of onr
Neutrality Edict f
people. President Roosevelt has chosen to accept the neutrality resolution as. i mandate from congress which gives him almost no discretion, ills arms enbargo. his shipping prohibition an<’ tis warning to American citizens that if they travel on boats belonging to the nelllgerent powers they do so at their own risks was the narrowest construe tion possible to. have been placed on the neutrality edict of congress. Congress b not u session and will not be back here agair until January. I'he President's bands are tied unless ne decides to call congress Into extra session and that, of course, will not *ls. done un.es*> sudden flames of war sweep over the whole world. Therefore, if Mr. Roosevelt clings to the policy which he hat adopted In narrowly con the neutrality resolution until the congressional session opens in lanuary. congress ran do no more than commend blm for following its dictates. But If any of the conditions enumer ated above should place the American neutrality position where a test must be had. congress must accep: the ola,me. So. a> long as Mr. Roosevelt follows bls present course and throws nlmself completely on the law, the President ean make short answer to those who would enlist this country :n International action. That position, of course, has its weaknesses because something ma develop overnight with which he eannot deal under an Inflexible law but. on the other hand, the fact that he ran do little without calling congress back, certainly provides a cooling-off period during which the thoughts of a nation may crystallize. g Ww-r-rn Vntoa. Ancient Deeds Thousands of deeds describe a given property as, for example “beginning at a black oak tree with 12 notches, thence so many degrees and minutes north and so many degrees and min ; utes east to a moss-covered rock” . . . . and sc on for many courses, says the Washington Star. Many courses follow streams, which may have altered their beds over the years. In the East it was customary to dig ditches to mark boundary lines. The tenacity of these Is There are line ditches meandering through Maryland and Virginia wood la nds two bund red years old, which still can be traced and which still are used as boundaries. In many coses, these ditches were dug through fields and the forest has grown up Over them. Asbwstos Rivals Latah’s Wool A freak mineral, asbestos rivals lamb's wool In appearance after it has been refined and separated from the ore in which It Is found and to which it gives a bewhlskered look.
THURSDAY. OCTOBER 31, 1935.
QUEEN HAD WOMAN PRINTER Believed to be the only woman printer in the country to hold a Royal Warrant, Miss Marlon Clarke, who t combined printing with a toy and model-boat shop in Bath road. Cowes, died recently at the age of sixty-one, it is recorded in the Lon« don. Daily Telegraph. Miss Clarke, when a girl, was apprenticed to a local printer and afterward began business on her own account, setting up type and having a small printing press in the corner of her shop with which she did private printing for Queen Victoria when the court wa* at Osborne. A Royal Warrant a» printer to her majesty at Cowes was flven in 1900. ' * BOYS! GIRLS! Read the Grape Nuts ad in another column of this paper and learn howto join the Dizzy Dean Winners and win valuable free prizes.—Adv. Fran* Josef Fiord The 25,000 square miles in the region of Franz Josef Fiord of Greenland is reported to be rich in Arctic animals and plant life.
Find Out From Your Doctor if the “Pain” Remedy You Take Is Safe. Don’t Entrust Your Own or Your Family’s Well - Being to Unknown Preparations BEFORE you take any preparation you don’t know all about, for the relief of headaches; or the pains of rheumatism, neuritjs or neuralgia, ask your doctor what he thinks about it —in comparison with Genuine Bayer Aspirin. We say this because, before the discovery of Bayer Aspirin, most so-called “pain” remedies were advised against by physicians as being bad for the stomach; or, often, for the heart. And the discovery of Bayer Aspirin largely changed medical practice. Countless thousands of people who have taken Bayer Aspirin year in and out without ill effect, have proved that the medical findings about its safety were correct. Remember this: Genuine Bayer Aspirin is rated among the fastest methods yet disevrered for the relief of headaches and all common pains . , . and safe for the average person to take regularly. You can get real Bayer Aspirin at any drug store — simply by never asking for it by the name ‘’aspirin’* alone, but always saying BAYER ASPIRIN when you buy. J Bayer Aspirin
Despite It i It is astonishing how some neglected children thrive.
\ WOMAN J ** 9 I^Xrv* H w -I < ) about \\I(TMATBONtrf OLD MOTHER HUBBARD MAS HUED MED BAK CUPBOARD WITH ONIONS AND STEAKS AND CHEESES; HER STOMACH FEELS GRAND SINCE SHE KEEPS TUBS ON HAND... SHE EATS WHAT SME DARN WELL PLEASES! NO ALKALIES FOR ACID INDIGESTION X ZILLIONS have found they do not need to I*L drench their stomachs with strong, caustic alkabes. Physicians have said this habit often brings further acid indigestion. So much morecafe and sensible to simply carry a roll of Turns in your pocket. Mun.-h 3 or 4 after meals —or whenever troubled by heartburn, gas. sour stomach. Try them when you feel the effects of last night's party, or when you smoke too much. Turns contain a wonderful antacid which neu'tralires add in the stomach, but never overalkalixes stomach or blood. As pleasant to eat as candy and only 10c at any drug store. FOg THE TUMM - Y —-x •- . ■ 1 ro CDCC, Tmwwk—atyourdrtiMteCs—Bewr KttS tttuis Cotoe 1935-1936 Calendar Thromometee with tbs purchase of a 10crod otT—s or a Zic bos of NR (The All VeyeONe LaraUve.) Murder Will Out No matter what you want to dodge, the headlines won't Jet you. Beware Coughs from common colds That Hang On No matter how many medidnes you have tried for your cough, chert cold or bronchial irritation, you can get relief now with CreomulsiqO; Serious trouble may be brewing and you cannot afford to take a chaMQ of the trouble to aid nature to soothe and heal the inflamed membranes as the germ-laden phlegm Is loosened and expelled. Even if other remedies have failed, don’t be discouraged, your druggirt is authorized to guarantee Creomulsion and to refund your Get Creomulston right x»W. (AdvJ •ORB* T. O» wri Bottofl.
