BRISBANE
THIS WEEK
Land Ho!
The Changing Ocean
Safety and Speed
Much for Science
< *n Board Steamship Normnndle.?
Four from New York and th<
ship is at South
Arthur l!ri?bonr S r {to
Lake Forest, or
from Wall street to Fortv second
Street h v siii?\vay. Yon .ire in Europe
before you realize that yoti have carted.
The poetry of travel has departed
with last ships on the ocean and
atitoniol iios it,-j. id of camels ? the
No matter lew oftw you cross this
Atl-i* - " ? in, r the North Ameriran
< ortjir. ru. the crossing is always diff
ere id and interes'it.::. I he ocean,
lik? he wide plains. , - forever chancing.
w. ? -Ha> > ;cgij inrasrr-s iookou UKO
{ laytilings for children I.nsi night
the :iti changed it- mind ami rolled
tho waves up high xvllh a shrieking
Pwind. i'ho steward saiil. "We shall
have to fasion tin* arm chairs tomorrow.
hut tlio ln-avy ship paid no attention
to the uavo> The ocean
changed it-- miml again ami calmed
dow n.
A sjtt <! iiimtor telling how fast the
ship mint's ? operated by a mechanism
below the keel that records the
speed of tlie rushing water. Iturning
oil produces steam. steam power is
converted into electric power, and that
drives the ship. The captain always
knows how deep the ocean is beneath
him; an electric contrivance sends a
sound wave dow n through the water
to the bottom, which sends back an
echo.
Knowing the speed at which sound
travels through water. It is easy to
calculate the depth. The machine does
it for you. It is a feeble sound?one
hundred a ml sixty thousand vibrations
to the second. No human ear
could pick it up, hut the machine records
it. Twenty live thousand vibrations
per second is the limit of your
ear, and that is not had for a primitive
contrivance like a human being.
Newton D. linker, secretary of war
in the "big" war, tells graduating students
of the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology it is their duty to
"carry science into politics.'* Scientists.
Mr. I?aker thought, must seek
f..H -
uiv gxiiniou hi worui problems
when the great international crisis
comes, as it surely will come."
A sufficient "great crisis'* seems to
be here now, with many countries
wanting to light each other, different
classes already fighting each other,
and in this richest country in the
world?ten million human beings living
practically on charity.
If that is not a real crisis, few
would care to see one.
George Bernard Shaw, not yet eighty,
says. "L must give up public speaking,
I am too old." That surprises you from
a Celt and an Irishman. At eighty
many men have been vigorous in
thought and body; for instance, Pope
Leo. Von Mo.ike, Gladstone, Michelangelo.
Not one of those, however, suffered
from handicaps that have aged George
Bernard Shaw prematurely; he is a
vegetarian and a teetotaler. Youth
and strength reside in a saddle of
four-year-old mutton nnd ??* ?
Bvv?, ll^UV
claret, greatly diluted with water.
In spite of England's pitifully weak
and belated backdown on sanctions,
due to London's fear of Mussolini's
air fleet; a backdown denounced as
cowardice by Lloyd George, Britain,
for face-saving purposes, will maintain
a great fleet in the Mediterranean.
Mussolini will welcome such
convenient air and submarine targets
near home as a sort of British hostages
to fortune.
Returning to the real American interest,
the defeat of Joe Louis, young
gentlemen and old will observe that
it Is most important in all undertakings
not to be afraid, worn out or
cowardly. Fighters that Louis had
encountered saw before them t4an in
vincible conqueror of men."
Kief Feature* Syndicate, In?,
WNO Service.
The Cherokee .
CuA/lMvty
By Edward
74th Congress Adjourns
After a Long Session
*T"MIK Seventy fourth congress nil (
' iourned after a session lasting live |
oral ? half months during which It np- j
pr<?[?riated nearly st|i!uKi,flOO.OflO and f
wis fared h? s?'th? unexpected Icgis'.t'ive
c???ii:i'-'-.i*iiU!s. I
In the . - til; hours the emergency ^
t.'i\ bill which i \|?eete?| to produce
Ssi..I ink, .M.,i j? revenue was passed. j
Supreme court invalidation of the AAA ?
and *. ;iTey i: "< and the passage ^
of the rash <- ?' Imiins over the s
President's \ein upset tin budget plans f
and made such a t?tI! nwpssary. j
Although It was pa<<ed hy the house. ,
the a mended *Iu eoal *>i 11 designed
to remove th*- <? ; :i??ris of the Su |
promo court failed of passage in the |
seriate. Similar^ the Warner slum
housing hill, which I.ad passed the senate.
failed in the house. ]
Earner than normal appropriations ,
for uern mental activities were J
passeii. The !> -i1 lis. farm payments, re- r
lief and the greatest national defense j
program In peace time history helped
swell the total.
Minds for continuing the present re- j
lief program were voted: the public I
works revolving fund was amended to 1
; permit more ' .ivy c?in?d ruction proj'' is.
r.,,1 congress failed to approve j
the I lorida shi| > and I'assnma- '
<1 noddy tide dam.
Invalidation ??f the \ A A brought a
revised and expat bed soil conservation
and domestic allotment net; the rural ^
olerint .wion ndn inistration and electric
tarm and home authority were
both pin<<d on a permanent basis; the
otntnoditv <'red it corporation was ex
pande<T; iwo Hood control hills wore v
passed. I.abor received attention {
through the Walsh llenly bill dealing t
with working conditions on govern- t
ment contracts. A compromise ship J
subsidy hill was rushed through in the
closing hours. Financial legiskijion included
expansion of tlie jurisdiction of ^
SK<\ Important among business legis- (
intion was the Pattnnn bill amending
| the Clayton anti-trust act regarding ^
price discrimination.
A number of Important bills failed J
of enactment. Among those were the
Pettlngil! long and short hauls bill,
stockyard regulation, I'razier-I.emke
farm mortgage bill, and bills on the :I0hour
week, extension j? railroad
co-ordinator's tenure, nntl-war prohts,
alien deportation, enlargement of the (
federal trade commission's power and
treasury agency service.
Smith Asks Roosevelt
"Be Put Aside"
CAM.I SO upon the delegates to the
Democratic national convention to
4,put aside Franklin D. Roosevelt" and
to nominate "some genuine Democrat"
^mmumi for President, former
<Iov. Alfred E. Smith
f -jm an(l four other antlI
111 administration DemoI
^ crats charged the New
l>* Deal with failure. j
ft H demand came In |
1gram and was signed t
^-v Smith, Bainbrldge 1
K?2Sh^^^9 state under President <
Wilson, James A. Reed, >
, Al Smith former senator from <
i Missouri, Joseph B. Ely, former gover- i
nor of Massachusetts, and Daniel F. J
Cohalan. former justice of the Supreme
court of New York.
Former Governor Smith and his colleagues
Indicated that they will not
support President Roosevelt in the
forthcoming Presidential campaign,
fulfilling Smith's previous threat to i
'take a walk." 1
Pro-Roosevelt delegates from every ?
section of the country prepared for a 1
I cuiicerteu auacK upon the "bolters." J
I Gov. Herbert Lehman of New York l
j turned his back upon Mr. Smith and 1
predicted President Roosevelt would s
I carry New York by a substantial ma- 1
Jority In November. He declared: 1
*1 have read the statement. I am 1
confident that the views expressed by
the five signers of statement represent 1
the feelings of only a handful of Dem- 1
oerts." <
1
Death Takes von Buelow j
Noted German Diplomat f
THE death rf Bernhard W. von Bue- i
low, secretary of state for foreign 1
affairs in the Hitler cabinet, removed
one of the most skilled of Europe's 1
diplomats. Von Buelow. who was fifty- I
one, was an expert on the League of i
Nations and gave his country valuable
counsel when Germany began to con- j
aider rejoining the league. He was i
noted as a studious and hard-working t
official, with a vast amount of detailed i
information always reidily available. <
Scout, Murphy, N. C., 1
nneur^)
W. Pickard
i' Western N'cuipapcr l'n."on
A "blueblood" of the German no
hility, the diplomat was a nephew o
the late Prince Bernhard von Buelow
imperial ciiancellor. lie was one of thi
first of the German nobles to associate
himself with tlie republican regime af
:er the collapse of the empire in 1918
\ I though dillerent in background fron
Hitler, he nevertheless enjoyed th?
.'haiicellor s confidence.
In Kiis> :i. .Maxim Gorky, early foe ol
ho c/ars who became a hero of tin
soviet regime and its outstanding
vriter. died of Influenza at the age ol
?ixty-oight. Although not a member ol
tie Communist party, Gorky had r
treeniinent position In Soviet life ant
.\as a former member of the centra
x?hitivr committee. Moscow honoret
I*iu? witll a public funeral.
Rep. Lemke Will Be
Presidential Candidate
n KPItKSKNTATIVK W I L LI A M
l.KMKE of North Dakota an
lounced that he would run for th<
'residency as candidate of a new po
litical group knowi
:,s the L'nion parly
Father Charles E
3 Coughlin. Iietrol
1 priest, is the leadin;
8P?nsor of T.emke'i
I. candidacy. Thonin;
1 J # Charles O'Brien o
i Boston will he tin
. 2f A vice-presidential can
f /^| didate on the ticket, i
iiS 1 v:,s annonnre<k
Mr. Leinke mndi
Rep. Lemke pU|,j|c n 15-point plat
orra embodying demands for re
inancing of farm mortgages, old ng?
;ecurity, a living wage for all work
?rs, limitation on individual incomes
lie establishment of a central bank
he Issuance by congress of all cur
ency and its regulation of the valtu
>f all the money.
Plans were made for the new part]
to hold a national convention sonu
time during August In Cleveland.
Mr. I.cmkc said the Cnlon party has
he support of farm unions, labor, the
S'ational l.'nion for Social Justice es
nbllshed by Father Cougblln. th(
Townsend old age pension inovemenl
ind "all other liberals who have been
Jriven from the old parties."
Packers Seek Recover
)f All Processing Taxes
A BATTLE to recover all the proc*
esslng taxes paid to the governnent
uniler the Invalidated AAA was
indertnken by the "big four" of the
acklng industry?Swift and Company,
Vrmour and Company, Wilson and
Company and the Cudahy Packing
rompany.
Having won back $4fi.000,000 wher
he AAA was declared unconstitutional
>y the Supreme court the packing in
lustry has decided to attempt to re
over from the government more than
>200,000,000 paid before Injunctions
igainst tne tax were granted and subsequent
payments Impounded.
The meat packing Industry as a
,vhole paid a totai of $271,000,000 in
processing taxes from the inception ot
he AAA. The packers are basing their
daims for recovery on the ground that
is the Supreme court ruled the processing
taxes invalid, payments made in
iccordance with that law were Illegally
collected and should be returned
U. S. Revokes Sanctions
Imposed on Italy
FOLLOWING the lend of Great Britain,
the United States formally reroked
all sanctions Imposed against
Italy during the recent Italo-Ethloplan
conflict, A proclama11
o n by President
Roosevelt declared all Wf- 7-I
previous communica- | |
lions dealing with the K
Sale Of munltlnnn HTBfc
irar. loans and travel ft *5" j
>y Americans on Ital- B
an ships was revoked,
Although the sane- ^B^JM^BB
'Jons were against
t>oth Italy and Etblopla,
In practical ap- Stanley
nllcatlon they were Baldwin
used only against
taly, since the United States did not
snpply the African nation with any
var materials and the empire of Halle
Selassie had no ships of Its own.
The French cabinet agreed to abide
>y any action which the League of Nalons
may take In cancelling sanctions
igalnst Italy.
The British government's decision to
ibandon sanctions was defended in an
iddress by Prime Minister Baldwin as
;he only alternative which wonld present
a suicidal war plunging western
dvlUzatlon Into "barbarous anarchy."
fhursday, July 2, 1936.
'IMPROVED j
UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
Sunday i
chool Lesson
By REV P B. PITZWATER. D. D..
U- mh?r of Faculty. Moody BlbU
Institute ?f Chicago.
(? Western Newspaper Union.
Lesson for July 5
THE COMING OF THE HOLY SPIRIT
IN POWER
LESSON TEXT?Acts 1:6-9; 2:1-11,
22-38
? GOLDEN TEXT?But y. shall receive
e power, ifter that the Holy Ghost Is
- come upon you: and ye shall he witness.-s
unto me both In Jerusalem, and
i In all Jmlea. and in Samaria, and unto
the uttermost part of the earth.?Acts
? 1:8.
PRIMARY TOPIC?Jesus Keeps His
f Promise.
JUNIOR TOPIC?A Promise Made a?
Kept.
INTERMEDIATE AND SF.NTOR
f TOPIC?New Power Throuph the Holy
f Spirit.
YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT
^ TOPIC?Empowered for the World Task.
1 I. The Missionary Program (1 :G-8).
I The work incumbent upon Hie Church
is witnessing to Christ's gracious salvation
to all iho nations. After this is
<lone. there will follow the preaching
of the gospel of the kingdom by convertecl
Israelites (Acta 15:14-17: Cf.
' Matt. 24:14). This was not clear to
the disciples, therefore they put the
question, "Wilt tliou nt this time restore
the kingdom to Israel?" The
) Davidic kingdom shall be established,
bnt not until after the gospel of tin*
grace of (;?mI is preached and the body
^ | of Christ is completed.
1 | 1. In Jerusalem (v. 8). This was
b done by the twelve immediately following
Pentecost.
2. In Juden and Samaria (v. 8).
This was done by the disciples after
{ the hands of the persecutors were laid
,.?? mviiit .>t?i imiv me iwt'ivt' nut
many others to??k part in this.
X Unto the uttermost part of the
earth (v. ^). Heginning with the first
foreign missionary enterprise, this
work has been carried on till the present
time.
II. The Coming of the Spirit (Acts
1 2:1-11).
? The power of the early Church was
the Holy Spirit. The watchword />f
7 | (loci's mightiest men throughout the
i centuries lias been "not by might, nor
by power, hut by my spirit, salth the
5 Lord of hosts" (Zech. 4 :t?).
: 1. The time (v. 1). It was on the
day of Pentecost. Hy "day of Pent)
ecost" is meant the feast which was
! held fifty clays after the wave sheaf
i was offered (Lev. 23:l.r?, 10). It was
observed hy presenting two loaves made
of the new meal (Lev. 23:17). These
loaves were baked with leaven, while
ieaven was rigidly excluded front the
passovor feast (Lev. 23 :G).
2. Upon whom the Spirit came (v. i).
Of. 1:13-15. The twelve and others to
the number of 120. The coining of the
Spirit was not merely for the twelve
j hut for all believers, all the members
of the body of Christ. They were in
c ne place with one accord waiting for
the fulfillment of the Father's
J (Luke 24:40). If the church would
he with one accord in one place, wonderful
blessings might still be expected.
3. The marks of the Spirit (vv. 2-4).
j These marks were external and internal.
a. External. (1) The sign of a
t mighty wind. There was no wind, only
i j the sound thereof, suggesting the all
pervasive, life-giving influence of the
I Holy Snirit. C2\ Tmi?iino
Each of the 120 was crowned with such
a tongue. The tongues show the praci
tical purpose of the Spirit's gifts and
the fire indicates his purifying energy,
purging away the dross and making fit
Us witnesses. (3) Speaking in foreign
tongues. For these humble Gallleans
thus to speak caused great
amazement.
b. Internal. This is seen in the
transformation wrought In the disciples.
They now have great cour1
age and self-possession. Peter, who a
little while before was cowering before
a Jewish maid, now with lionboldness
stood befo.e the thousands of
Jerusalem, and a little later before the
chief rulers of the city, and declared
that they had murdered their King.
III. The Converting Power of the
Holy Spirit (Acts 2:37-42).
Many people were convicted of their
sins?about 3,000 repented and were
baptized. This revival was real because
a. .iney continued steadfast in the
apostles' teaching (v. 42). They did
not grow cold or run after every new
teacher that came along.
2. They continued in fellowship with
the apostles (v. 42). The surest way
to grow is to keep in fellowship with
Christians. Spiritual Indifference is
?ure to follow the neglect of the fellowship
of the brethren in Christ.
3. They continued In the use of the
means of grace (v. 42). They broke
bread together.
4. In prayer. tThe apostolic church
was a praying church. The Christian
life cannot be lived without prayer.
Truly Excellent
TIIE very best {minting is un
questionaby so like the mirrored
truth, that all the world ad
mits its excellence. Entirely sirsf
rate work is so quiet and natural
that there can be no dispute over
It; you may not particularly nd
mire It. but you will find no fault
with it. Second-rate paintl.i^
pleases one person much, and displeases
another, but first rite
painting pleases all a little, and
Intensely pleases those who can
recognize its unostentatious skill,
i ?Ruskln.
Time is a cobweb; men are the
spiders and the llies.
? r
S\ ^ J
;^ggrpleman
/1? * lantern
A- I 'PHIS is the littl? Colsnsa
iiHI A Lantarn with the bis
ry \wBu t>rllh*nc?. It light? Irmantiy
and Is alwav* ready f. r any
llshtlny job. in any wntbir.
Just th? light too need for every outdoor one . . .
on the farm, for hunting, fishing, outdoor uporta.
Has genuine Ihrrex bulge-typ? globe. poreela.n Ten- 7
tllator top. niekl?-plated fount, nuilt-in pump I.Ik?
Coleman Lamp?, ft make? and burns Its own iru
from regular gasoline. It'? a big value, with yean
of dependablo lighting sendee, for only $S.93.
6EE YOUR LOCAL DEALER ?or writs
for FREE Folder. ?
THE COLEMAN LAMP AND STOVE CO?
Dept. WITloO. Wiehits. Kans : Lo? Angeles. Calif.1
Chicago, ri.; Philadelphia. Pa. C-.S(f
5* AND 10$ JARS I
THE I0? SIZE CONTAINS 3'/j
TIMES AS MUCH AS 1HE S< SIZE \JoSt.?)
MOROLINE
T 1 SNOW WHITE PETROLEUM JELLY
Be Sure They Properly
Cleanse the Blood
YOUR kidneys Are constancy filter
ing waste matter from the blood
stream. But kidneys sometimes lag in
their work?do not act as nature ;ntended?fail
to remove impurities that
poison the system when retained.
Then you may suffer nagging backache,
dizziness, scanty or too frequent
urination, getting up at night, puffinesi
under the eyes; feel nervous, miserable?all
upset
Don't delay? Use Doan's Pillr.
Doan's are especially for poorly functioning
kidneys. They are recommended
by grateful users the country
over. Get them from any druggist.
Il'it/VH'JHM
HERE'S RELIEF
11 Sore,Irritated Skin
| Wherever it is?however broken the
*^^surface-freely apply soothing?
Resinol
| WNU-7 27?W
ao^i
SLEEP SOUNDLY
Lack of exercise and injudicious eatiof
make stomachs acid. You must neutralize
stomach acids if you would sleep
soundly all night and wake up feel"*#
refreshed and really fit.
TAKE MILNESIAS
Milnesia, the original milk of magnesia
in wafer form, neutralizes stomach acid.
Each wafer equals 4 teaspoonfuls of ?2k
of magnesia. Thin, crunchy, mint-daror,
tasty. 20c, 35c * 60c at drug atorss.
i '