The Syracuse Journal, Volume 28, Number 42, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 13 February 1936 — Page 2
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BRISBANE THIS WEEK Divide and Rule Big Men, Light Eyes Why Go Naked? ' Borrowing a Blimp Mr. Green, American Federation of Labor bead, warns the miners' union
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▲r<h.r Brtakaa* aratel y f b Ut could not break them when all were tied together. Louis Xi’s motto. Divide et tmpera ("Divide and rule"), in dealing with powerful nobles. Is not unknown to the enemies of . onion labor, or Goethe’s Divide apd A rtle! Powerful word. Unite and lead! Better word. A lonely English soldier living on an Island In the Indian ocean wrote that be wanted a wife, saying. "I have hazel eyes." nothing else about himself. Already 230 English girls have offered to marry him. The 240 disappointed may find comfort In a better marriage, picking out somebody with blue eyes. It annoys many, but it must be said . that practically all the great men in history bad blue or gray eyes. even men from dark-eyed races, like Napoleon from Corsica. Caesar from Rome. To save answering questions, here is a short list: Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln, ; Roosevelt. Edison, Henry Ford. Look up "the others. "" — Near Tampa, Fla., a schooner loaded with men, women, children, on the way to establish a nudist colony In the Virgin islands, ran aground. Navigators were unwilling to sign for a nudist enterprise, afraid, perhaps, of catching cold, so the ship ran ashore. Nudism Is a queer atavistic craving. The human race began that way In the Garden of Eden, and each of us •tarts out as a nudist at birth. The struggle Is to keep clothed thereafter. It Is a strange demoralization that makes some long to run about undressed: the more strange because they look so hideously ugly. Discouraged by Incompetence that wrecked two dirigibles, this country .decided that lighter than air machined are not necessary. It was necessary to borrow a small privately owned blimp to take food to 3.000 Tangier Islanders, cut off from relief by Ice. No heavier than air plane could land there before the blimp, which landed ensfy. A, . p v '• i Mussolini threatens to- leave the league If It Includes a ban on oil In Its sanctions. In modern' war. no oil, no war. Mussolini may buy old American ships to use as floating gasoline "storage tanka Had be coma a little sooner be could have had plenty of them at a bargain, about one thousand million dollars’ Worth of expensive steel floating "J|ink,” built when this country’s foolish entrance into the World war found It unprepared. England and Russia were getting •long nicely, and now the Russian envoy, Litvinoff, attending the late King's funeral, commits the British unpardonable sin After talking with the new king. Llt- * vtnoff, instead of expressing admlra* * tlon for the overwhelming royal Intellect. remarkeiL_that the new king. Edward VI fl. was “Just a mediocre Englishman" and repeated what ~ the young king had said to him, something "not done.” ■ Mr. Norman Thomas of the Social--Ist left wing runs for President aome- *■ times and says the "New Deal" Is leading to Fascism, a dictator. In Italy Socialism, and doctrines even more radical, led to the rise of Mussolini. aided by castor oil and other methods, if our dictatorship come*, some radicals will look back sadly to the good old days when yon could •peak your mind without being shot or put to work. One man's frostbite Is another man’s food news.. New Jersey fruit growers •ay the extreme cold, freezing the ground two feet deep, will destroy orchard pests, including the gypsy and coddling moths. The cold, which has not Injured trees. Is expected to discourage larvae of the Japanese beetle. Some day .scientist* will show fruit farmer*, including thia writer, how to penetrate the earth by radioactivity, dr otherwise, to the necessary depth and kill the hibernating pests. A rem edy for borer* would be welcome. Radio power should solve the insect prob Jem. CoL Cbariea A. Lindbergh spent his thirty-fourth birthday In Wale*, his wife and one son with him. He must bare felt as though toe bad already lived 100 years, and have wished, almost, that be bad been content to remain In the airmail service, apart from the limelight • KlaeFMitßraa VradtratK too. w WXVServIM. < -K a parhelion Is called a sun dog beeauaa It follows the cun. This particular effect I* similar In nature to th< halos occasionally seen around the • moon. It is doe to the refraction of light by tine snow crystal* to the air. MAd«l ComMunitv ». . * — - » In we seventeenth century a French
not to split up rhe federation. Mr. LewI is. leader of the miners, tells Mr. Green, in substance, "You mind your own business." A labor split seems Dear. Union labor should consider the l fable of the dying peasant who summoned his sons and showed them how they could break small sticks sep-
WILLIAM E. BORAH, the liberal Republican senator from Idaho, Is now a fun fledged candidate for the Republican Presidential nomination.
Senator Borah
“After a thorough survey of the Ohio situation I am convinced that the people of that state should be given an opportunity to express their choice In the Presidential primary on May 12. Under the so-called ‘favorite son' plan this privilege Is denied them. “To obtain an expression of popular will it Is my Intention to place at least eight candidates or delegates at large In the field. "I shall make a number of speeches tn Ohio and present the issues as I see them.” It Is understood by his friends that the senator will make a contest for delegates In almost every state having a preference primary. He says the G. O. P. conventions have been dominated by the old conservative leaders through the operations of the “favorite son” scheme and this control he Intends to destroy If possible. It Is bls opinion that only a liberal Republican can defeat President Roosevelt next fall, and few will deny that he Is the outstanding liberal in bls party. IN HIS press conference President Roosevelt announced that a billion dollars* worth of lending authorized by acts of congress would not be carried out. For example, the Home Owners’ l-oan corporation has passed on nearly all proposed loans and will not need between 500 million and a billion dollars, the President declared. Applications for HOLQ. loans closed last June 27. of the agency amount to near*’-’ billion 900 million dollars. • HEADS of various government agencies concerned with bousing have submitted to the President • nationwide, low cost program based on cheap federal loans to local according to authoritative sources, this undertaking would contemplate: L A long-range building program. 2. Interest rates perhaps ar low as 1 per cent on federal loans. 3. Construction of facilities for as many as one million families. Full control of management and condemnation proceeding* would be lodged with local officials under the plan, the alm being to decentralize activities from Washington.! /CONFORMING to the request of the v-/ President, both senate and house passed measures repealing the cotton, tobacco and potato control acts. In the house nine radicals and John J. O’Connor of New York voted “no” a* a protest against the Supreme court after Marcaotonlo of New York had delivered a violent attack on that tribunal Following this action, the senate agriculture committee rewrote and Introduced the administration’s substitute farm MH. The revamped measure provides that the federal government would make grants to the state* just as Is done now under the roads act. The States In turn would designate tome agency, to be approved by the secretary of agriculture, to dis tribute the money to Individual farmer*. This money would be distributed on a formula taking Into consideration: Acreage of crops. w Acreage of soil Improving or erosion preventing crops. Changes In fanning practice*. Percentage of the normal production of any one or more agriculture commodities designated by the secretary of agriculture, which equals that percentage of the normal national production of the commodity. EVERY Presidential possibility these day* must have some plan for the salvation ot the American farmer. Sen-; ator L. J. Dickinson ot lowa, often
mentioned for the Republican nomination, now brings out bi* permanent farm program which th aay* would divorca the farm problem from "bureaucratic control” in Washington. His plan would embrace erosion control, soli conservation, and restoration of fertility of lands. Administration would be handled
jointly by the Mates and the federal government in a manner similar to highway construction. \ The Dickinson program, similar to that advocated by former Gov. Frank O. Lowden of Illinois, Includes payment of the balance due signers of AAA contracts, a higher tariff on farm products, continued corn loans, and extension of farm mortgages at a low rata of interest INFLATIONISTS la congress, led by Senator Thomas of Oklahoma and Representative Patman of Texas, were all prepared to wage a great battle to ■ force the printing of new money. They were just waiting for the introduction «T • new tax program, declaring they would try to block such lagiriatloQ if t» were attemuted. It wm •A \innm saw ji m
News Review of Current * Events the World Over ‘ - I Senator Borah Throws His Hat in the Republican Ring Revamped Farm Bill Introduced —Farley Assails Liberty League. By EDWARD W. PICKARD g Western Union.
He formally put himself In the running by announcing that he would enter the primary In Ohio which will be held May 12. That state requires that the candidate shall declare himself In writing, and this Mr. Borah said he would do. The senator’s statement follows:
Senator Dickinson
soon, the fight would start over the Era zier-Lemke farm mortgaging refinancing MIL The force* behind thia bilL which calls for the refinancing of farm Indebtedness on easy terms through the Issuance of up to $3,000,000,000 in new money, had succeeded in getting 215 signatures on a petition to force a vote In the house. Only 218 were needed and Its backers were pressing for the three names. Administration leaders were confident they could defeat the inflationists by a wide margin. SENATOR VANDENBERG of Michlgan has grave doubts of the economic necessity or value of .the ship canal that Is being dug across central Florida, and offered to the senate commerce committee a resolution for Investigation by a special committee. In support of bls move he produced letters from eleven companies operating steamships saying they would not use the canal even If no tolls were charged. They asserted the expense of employing canal pilots added to the risk of damage to ships would offset saving In navigation costs. Work was started some time ago on the canal, which. If completed, will -cost between $140,000,000 and $200,000.000. TWO attacks on the American Liberty league were made tn one day. The strongest was by Postmaster General Farley who spoke at a Roosevelt
$ J. A. Farley
the sorry business of the Mellons and the Mofgans In reducing 95 per cent 6f the, people to the status of serfs at the mercy of the exploiters at the top. “The American Liberty league speaks as conclusively for the reactionaries and their party as do Mr. Hoover, the United States Chamber of Commerce’" and the National Manufacturers’ association. "Its program Is frankly plutocratic and asks for the rule of money over men, as during the 12 year* before Roosevelt's administration. “It demands that worker* and farmer* be ’put In their places* and made to understand tbit they are mere hewers of wood and carriers of water. "Its Idea of the ’American way*. Is to maintain a system under which all the wealth of the nation was being concentrated In tbe hands of a very few—s per cent of lhe people." At their convention In Washington the United Mine Workers also took a crack at the Liberty league, adopting a resolution denouncing the organization as “inimical to the Interests and people of the edited States.” FIVE of the members of the new federal reserve board were Inducted Into office with due ceremony. A sixth, Ralph W. Morrison of Texas, was to
it and cod-
arrive later and be sworn in. The seventh member had not yet been named by Pnssident R«xwevelt Marriner 8. Eccles, ap pointed chairman, i nd M. S. Szymczak of Chicago. were hoidovers. The others besides Morrison are Ronald Ransom, Atlanta banker; John McKee of Ohio, former chief bank examiner for the
Reconstruction Finance Corporation, and Joseph A. Broderick of New fork. The reserve board, which has been called “a supreme court of banking.” has powers unparalleled tn American financial history. Among these is authority to double present margins that member banks are required to main* tain against deposits; the dominant voice on the open-market committee—which charts the system's participation in the government bond market and over which It bad no authority under the former law; power of veto over the beads of the various reserve banks which insures the selection of a president who will cooperate with tbe board, and the power to fix margins governing relations between banks and brokers. ENCOURAGEMENT was given opponents of the administration neutrality bill by the levere castigation of the measure by John Bassett Moore, former member oil the World court. His statement was presented st a secret meeting of the senate foreign relations committee hut was made public by Senator Johnson of California, who doesn't like tbe MIL Calling it "a curious blend of teal* ddat with suicidal toania,” Mr. Moore caustically denounced the bill, which would continue the present mandatory embargo on arms and munitions shipments to belligerents, but give the President discretion In limiting certain other exports to praco-tiaM levels. -The homicidal mania.** Moore said, "glares in tbe proposal to try to starve other peoples who engage in war; the suicidal mania gleams la tbe proposal to demoralise and destroy our commerce in order tba . peoples at war may not be nourished by what we produce/* Specially veherjent was bis attwek «n tbe section giving the President fitscrotton to curb tie shipment of such war materials as nteel. oil and cotton m £ CT -
SYRACUSE JOURNAL
dinner In Miami, Fla. “The Liberty league.” said Farley, “would rule America. It would squeeze the worker dry In his old age and cast him like an orange rind Into the refuse pall. It would continue the Infamous policy of using the agencies of government to create a plutocracy that would perpetuate
Marrinar 8. Eeciea
UNITED Mine Work* of America, to convention to Washington, shouted boisterous defiance at William Green’s plea that they drop their campaign for Industrial organization. The a. F. of L. president’opened bls speech before the 1,700 delegates from the coal pits with a plea for co-opera-tion to prevent a split in the ranks of American labor. The A. F. of U, which favors the craft (or skilled worker) unions, had ordered the miners, led by John L. Lewis, to abandon their committee working for Industrial unions. But as he warmed up to his subject, Mr. Green clashed more directly with the views of the miner* and the scattered applause which had greeted bls remarks changed to boos and shouts of opposition. When Lewis arose to reply to Green fie was given the support of almost every delegate In the halt JOSEPH B. EASTMAN, co-ordinator of transportation, is trying to wipe out an estimated annual waste of $50,000.600 in railroad terminal operations.
and announced that he would soon order the unification of terminal facilities in eleven cities. This, he figures, will save the affected railroads at least SBOO,OOO annually. Mr. Eastuyin had tried unsuccessfully to have the carriers mfike the changes voluntarily. The unifications will be ordered at Worces-
t I J. B. Eastman
ter. Mass.; Mechanicsville, N. Y.; Grand Rapids, Mich.; Jacksonville, Fla.; Montgomery, Ala.; Meridian, Miss.; Freeport. Ill.; Des Moines, and Council Bluffs, Iowa; Beaumont, Texas, and Ogden, Utah. After the first group of orders, Eastman said that. If necessary, be was prepared to compel “other steps of Increasing magnitude,” but would "stand aside If railroads are able to produce their own momentum.” Unless extended by congress. Eastman’s office will expire in June. He has recommended that it be continued at least five years. ON ORDERS from Gov. Harold G. Hoffman of New Jersey, further Investigation of the Lindbergh kidnaping and murder case has been started. Col. H. Norman Schwarzkopf, head of the state police, assigned two of his star detectives for the inquiry, and has enlisted the aid of federal Investigating agencies and the New York police. The governor wants the investigation to be painstaking and thorough. The reprieve which he granted Hauptmann will expire on February 15. After that Mate at least four weeks, and perhaps five, will elapse before the date for the execution which will be ordered by Justice Thomas W. Trenchard, who presided over the trial. The governor believes that by that time his power of reprieve will expired In this case, and he will not grant another unless Attorney General David T. Wlientz concurs. Unless new developments warraM It, the attorney general will not agree to further delay In the execution.
OAVID LLOYD GEORGE, former British prime minister who, together with President Wilson and Clemenceau, was largely responsible for the re-making of the map of the world after the war, now admits that work was not wisely done. Rising In parliament to support a resolution by Lansburg, Laborite, urging Britain to call a world conference to deal with the causes of war. Lloyd George said: "I do not believe there will be peace in the world until you consider the colonial mandates granted at the conclusion of the World war, when Germany’s colonies were split up, Belgium got the best part of German East Africa and the whole of the Congo. Portugal and Holland each got millions of square miles. These countries have tropical territories. On the othCr hand you have Germany with none, Italy with practically none.” The house of commons rejected the proposal, however, passing Instead an amendment expressing confidence that the national government is taking all practical steps possible for the promotion of International prosperity and a better understanding among all peoples. WILHELM GUSTLOFF. Nazi leader in Switzerland, was assassinated in Davos by David Frankfurter, son of a rabbi and a native of Jugoslavia who told tbe police he acted on no one’s order* and was not connected with any poliUcsl group. The German government immediately sent to Switzerland a strong protest, stressing that Berlin has often warned the Swiss government of the “dangers of *nti-Nazl agitation by the liberal and Marxist press." The net result of the murder 11 likely to be bad for the Jews, for they may find that Switzerland will not be the hospitable haven for refugees that It ha* been In the past. To reduce the danger of clashes between Jews and militant Nazis, Dr. Paul Joaepb Goebbels. German minister of propaganda, prohibited all meetings of Jewish cultural associations until further notice. WHETHER an oil embargo against Italy could be made effective was the knotty problem confronting a League of Nations committee of experts that met in Geneva. About a dozen countries were represented, but Poland refused to take part on the ground that it exports no oil to Italy, but only to Czechoslovakia. League authorities saULthe investigation into practiALnogflmlltles of enforcing an oil addition to tbe present war penalties, was likely to eenter to a targe degree <m the attitude of tbe United States. RECENT heavy fighting in tbe Tembien mountains In Ethiopia resulted in tbe death or wounding of some six hundred Italians, but Rome announced that the natives were finally completely rooted. In the aotohern sector tbe invaders with their swift the force* of Ras Desta Demtu 80 mile* further beet along the Ganale Doria river toward Alatt*. The ItaL
Washington Digest National Topics Interpreted By WILLIAM BRUCKART • national press 3ldg Washington, o c ;
Washington.—ls ever there were a time other than when the nation was - at war when money Money dominated the situaDominateo tlon at Washington, it assuredly Is now. One can go where he chooses about the government departments, to the White House or to Capitol Hill and the subject under discussion is or soon will be money. A year or so ago, we heard a great deal about money. We heard of It in connection with an appropriation of $4,880,000,000 — the greatest single peace-time voting of money in our history. And, likewise, we heard money discussed when the President used his power to devaluate the dollar in its relation to gold. Now, however, the subject of money is discussed in a slightly different vein. The question that Is paramount is how can the government get the money It needs. In other words, we are now getting around to the question of taxation, and it is a question that neither the President nor his lieutenants in congress like to face. It Is an election year and a tax Increase In election year is not what the politicians would call smoothing the highway of a campaign. Passage of the legislation providing immediate payment of the veterans’ bonus brought conditions to a head. The President vetoed the bonus bill and congress promptly overrode that veto. So the President promptly told congress that something had to be done about It; that the only funds the treasury could muster would be by borrowing and that since congress had yielded to the vocal minority represented by the greatest lobby ever to populate the Capitol, It thereby captured for itself a problem of raising the money. Os course, the President must assume some responsibility even though he vetoed the bonus for the reason that some of the funds which must be raised will go to pay the crop control benefits or bonus resulting from invalidation of the processing taxes and the, Agricultural Adjustment act. The President, as well as the political leaders in congress, want to continue that payment and they also want to pay farmers on commitments previously made because they regard them as moral obligations under the AAA contracts, Yet the country is likely tn think In terms of the bonus for the war veterans and pay little attention to the smaller amount scheduled to go to the farmers and. Indeed, the veterans* bonus is almost tax times that which the administration desires to pay to the farmers. • • • There was In this situation a development to which I believe attention should be called, “ft’s Up Through many years to Henry” congress has bten an easy spender. Through the same years It has avoided at every turn laying taxes to offset the money It voted out of the treasury. Under the Roosevelt administration the peak of easy spending has been reached and congress has gone along with a vociferous “aye” on every spending proposal sent to the Capitol from the White House. The congressional attitude to which I have referred came up In bulk at the time of the bonus vote. Every time a bonus opponent inquired where the government would get the money to pay the two and onehalf billion to the veterans, the answer from the bonus supporters was, in effect, “It’s up to Henry.” I can recall a familiar slogan, current when I was a boy, that was used always when some one desired to shift reaponsbllity—to pass the buck. It was "let George do It" In the bonus controversy, Senator Bankhead, Democrat of Alabama, was the first member of congress whom I heard say “It’s up to Henry.” He meant that the job of raising the money belonged to Henry Morgenthau, secretary of the treasury, but Senator Bankhead spoke more than his own feelings when he made the statement He put Into words a thought which permeated the minds of a vast majority of unthinking representatives and senators. Perhaps I should say unthinking because those men were, in truth, thinking very deeply. Their thoughts, instead of turning to song In the spring, were turning to vote* in November. That was the reason for passage of the bonus. Senator* and representatives seeking re-election were afraid to go Into the battle for nomination and re-election this summer •nd have war veterans drag out the skeleton of a vote in opposition to immediate payment of the bonus. It will be a long time before those who voted for the bonus can live it down. A keen political maneuver has something to It that calls for admiration but as obvious political maneuver such as was the passage of the bonus did not give any reason for commendation except, perhaps, the justification that if the Roosevelt administration was committed to passing out hundreds of millions of dollars on boondoggling and other more or less useless projects, then the war veterans were entitled to be paid now the sums which congress promised them would be paid to 1947. That really Is a powerful argument but if Roosevelt supporters make that argument they are at the same time damning the New Deal spending policies, so I fancy that such an argument wiß.be rarely advanced. • • ■ • It la entirely probable that there win be no tax bill this year unless the
President's letter to Speaker Byrns pointing out the necessity for raising revenue
May Be No Tax BUI
lur rawing causes an unheard of number of senators and representatives to do a flipflop. No imagination is required to see that a representative or senator is > a tough spot when be goes back
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1936.
home asking the suffrage of his constituents and must tell them at the same time that he added to the tax burden which they must pay. Well, If that be true, how is “Henry” going to get the money? It will have to be borrowed and It will have to be borrowed on government bonds which add up into an Increasing government deficit It means that instead of a deficit of around three billions in the next fiscal year, the treasury will be confronted with a deficit of more t han five billions and the public debt in the meantime, will have been correspondingly increased. It means, in addition, that the banks of the country will have to pile more government bonds on top of the government bonds they have thus far absorbed in financing a policy of spending our way out of the depres-" slon. The tragedy of the situation in .congress that brought about Senator Bankhead’s remark of “it’s up to Henry” is that it Indicates that congress has been looking upon the treasury as a source of revenue. It is not and it never has been. Government is nonproductive. It can get funds only by taxation, by taking them away from (he people—or by borrowing and if It borrows it has to pay back. In either event, new taxation must come and if congress doesn’t have the nerve to pass tax legislation in this session, it must lay taxes in the next session. • • • The newspapers throughout the country have been full of reports concerning the early start of Campaign the political camStarte Early palgn- The Al Smith speech, coming from the man who made it, brought about a sudden expansion in the political fire. It really opened up the fight and henceforth we are due to be surfeited with this claim or that, this charge and that denial or countercharge, as the various leaders marshal their forces. Thus far, In addition to President Roosevelt’s Jackson day speech to the SSO-a-plate diners and Mr. Smith's Liberty league dinner outburst, we have had active campaigning by former President Hoover, by Governor Talmadge of Georgia, by Senator Borah, the Idaho Republican; by Governor Landon, the Kansas Republican, and by Senator Robinson of Arkansas, the Democratic leader in the senate, who stroke in reply to Mr. Smith. Others are In the offing for the Republican and Democratic national committees are engaging radio times in a big way.
As speeches and statements increase in number, and as fanfare grows louder, I find myself getting a bit callous to them all. 1 have been wondering whether the American people have lost their sense of humor completely, because the situation really has a humorous side. Unless the people's sense of humor has been dreadfully seared, it seems to me they ought to bejiighly amused over ridiculous statements now being made on one side of the fence or <»n the other. Take, for instance. Mr. Roosevelt’s handwritten bonus veto message. It presented something a bit unusual because in my time In Washington it had happened only once before that a President vetoed a bill with a handwritten message to congress Os course, it was Intended to be dramatic —and it was. But the point is this: A year ago when congress passed the bonus the President made a personal appearance in the halls of congress and read his own veto message. He made his vigorous fight and lie rallied his supporters in line to sustain his veto. There has been so much talk around Washington since the handwritten message went to congress that the President really was not vigorously opjrosing passage of the bill over his veto that 1 am coming to believe that was true In other words, he thought that immediate payment of the bonus was wrong but he had a weather eye out for the forthcoming campaign and the votes the bonus might bring. Then consider the activity of Senator Borah. I believe the Idaho senator Is toe smart to feel that he can be the Republican nominee against Mr. Roosevelt, but he Is going through all manner of gyrations Just the same. He has purposes and objectives in mind, obviously, but they are not the Republican Presidential nomination as he leads his various audiences to infer. It is to be recalled that Senator Borah has not at any time actually said he was a candidate. We hav<» also the circumstance of Senator Robinson replying to Al Smith over the same radio and through substantially the same number of broadcasting stations. Anyone who knows Senator Robinson well knows that bls attack on Mr. Smith, with whom he ran as Vice Presidential candidate in 1928. was merely one that he read —let me quote the line used by the Herald-News of Passaic. N. J.: ‘The voice on the radio was the voice of Senator Robinson but the words were the words of (Charlie Michelson. publicity director for the Democratic national committee.” I am very fond of Senator Robinson but I believe he slipped when he did not write his own speech. Mr. Smith’s attacks on the administration can be answered and Senator Robinson can answer them —but he did not. g) Western Newapaper Ulloa. Forerunner of Red Cron The distinction of organising the first aid society in the country for soldiers of the Civil war was claimed by a group of Cleveland e women. On April 20. 1861. this group formed the organization, which later became a unit of the entire relief setup fmr the North, and this latter organisation, known as the United States Sanitary com mission, wits the forerunner of th* Red Cross of today.
Week’s Supply of Postum Free Read the offer made by the Postum Company in another part of this paper. They will send a full week’s supply of health giving Postum free to anyone who writes for It.—Adv. h - When It’» Unnatural It’s rather trying to be expected to set a good example. The Man Who Knows Whether the Remedy You are taking for Headaches, Neuralgia or Rheumatism Pains is SAFE is Your Doctor. Ask Him 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, neuritis 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 stomacn; 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, nave proved that the medical findings about its safety were correct. Remember this: Genuine Bayer Aspirin is rated among the fastest methods yet discovered 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. Bayer Aspirin Mercifully Love your fellowman; but judge him.
VEGETABLE CORRECTIVE DID TRICK KMi They were getting on each other’s nerves. Intestinal sluggishness was really the cause —made them ■ tired with frequent bead- • -MgHg aches, bilious spells. But DsS&, S||j that is all changed now. For they discovered, like , millions of others, that k MW/ nature provided the correct laxatives in planta tant—you do not have to increase the don. Theycontainno phenol or mineral derivatives. ■J • JUhsMbUaMMV Only 25c — all druggists. BACKACHES caused by MOTHERHOOD Maternity puts a terrible strain on a woman’s back muscles frequently causes years of suffering. Allcoek’s Porous Plaster does wonders for such backaches. Draws the blood to painful spot. Pain goes quickly. Insist on Ailcock’s, the original. Lasts longer, comes off easily. 25# at druggists or WWXWm •Allcock. Ossining, N.Y.” linWillrl gis skin deep Ask your doctor. Ask the beauty expert. GARFIELD TEA—a cup nightly — often does more for your skin and complexion than mrr costly cosmetics. Expels poisonFREE OUS body wastes that dog the Xi „m •- Pores and eventually cause mudSAMPLE dy, blotchy, runted skin. A week CAPFKLDTEA of this internal beauty treatment On Past. 115 will astonish you. Began tonight. Brooklyn. IL Y. (Ar year Arwssnrs) A SpleuMi Laxative Dri»h FALLING HAIR DANDRUFF—BALD SPOTS? a Save your hair by regular use o£ Glover’s Mange Medicine, followed by a shampoowithGlover’s Medicated Soap. Rids you of DanAt all I druggists WNU—A 7—86 IW /HEN kidneys function badly and vv you suffer a nagging backache, with dizziness, burning, scanty or too frequent urination end getting up st night; when you feel tired, nervous, air upset... use Dora’s nils. working kidneys. Millions of boxes btc ttscti cvwy yosTe ibcy irccowi* mended the country over. Ask yoiw Vk vf* w a Mb M gfl I M IMt | •
