By Edward Landon and Lowden Are In Accord on Agriculture COMPLETE endorsement of the ^ presidential candidacy of Gov. Alf M. Landon of Kansas was given hv former Gov. Frank O Low- , mr c,cn IHinoi.* following a conference | "vj in Topeka Follow- , * <$$& 1 ing the conference , f. * j former Governor j *29*^1 Lowden announced \ Wy thai he and Cover- ( nor Landon were in . L 1 "full accord" on ] 1^^^ A the question of farm relief. \ ^ ||-l The Illinois farm , . . .. loader levelled , that he nad ii,s- I rwucii cussed soil erosion, reciprocal treaties, conservation of . farm population, government aid in 1 marketing surplus crops, ccntraliz- f ing of federal power and reduction of federal expenditures with Gov i Landon. Mr Lowden declared: [ "We are in accord on the impor- j\ tant agricultural issues. I shall support him and campaign for his election." < Payment of cash federal boun- j tics to soil - conserving farmers I through a plan contemplating state \ administration was one of the farm j pi inciples advocated by Mr. Low-j With the Republican presidential g nominee at work on his acceptance I ; i ech, conferences with Other I leaders were scheduled. Important among these was the visit of George N. Peek, former AAA ad ministrator who resigned his post following ;i break with Secretary Q of Agriculture Wallace and .s now j a New Deal critic. Also on the \ program was the visit ot Col. e Frank Knox. Governor London's ( lf running mate. , c At Governor London s office a a letter was made public fron. Wil- a iiam Cabell Bruce, former Demo a cratic senator from Maryland, saying that he was "bitterly disap- <.( pointed" in President Roosevelt p and "deeply gratified" at Governor Q Landon's nomination. In the meantime members of the r, Kansas legislature had departed s, for their homes after submitting Q" two constitutional amendments to ^ the state's electorate. One of jj these would authorize state aid for the needy and the other would approve state participation in fed- p eral social security plan. Both ^ amendments were recommended j by Governor Laudon. v Dr. S. Parkes Cadman \ Is Taken by Death *N r\R. S. Parkes Cadman, who rose i from the mines of England to ' international fame as a pulpit ora- j s tor, died in Plattsburg, N. Y., at ] e the age of seventy-one. | a Dr. Cadman was pastor of the n Central Congregational church of Brooklyn and was a former president of the Federal Council of F Churches. j; In his youth. Dr. Cadman v.orked tas a "pony boy" in a mine in [ Shropshire, England- At fourteen he began to read theology; at seven teen he joined the church and at ^ eighteen preached his first sermon. He came to America in 1890 with " less than $100 in his pocket. ^ Through a bishop whom he had met " in London he obtained his first pas- ' torate. t r, New Austro-German Pact P Makes Diplomatic History v A NEW era in European diplo- ^ macy was heralded with the c> signing of a treaty between Ger- a many and Austria re-establishing peace and normal relations be- N tween the two nations. t< Since Italy has been acting in n the role of big brothei to Austria g i*- the past two years it was re- b garded as a virtual certainty that o Premier Mussolini nad sanctioned r the new pact. Observers pointed n out that with Germany, Austria and Italy in accord and with Po- p land friendly to Hitler's aims, Europe now has a prospective alii- * ance more powerful than the triple f alliance of Germany, Italj and Au- ^ stria-Hungary preceding the *'orld J war. h By the terms of the new Austro- f German pact, the sovereignty of s Austria is guaranteed, a friendly d attitude by Austria toward Ger- d many is promised, amnesty to Nazi t agitators in Austria is given a#d freedom of Austrian Nazi now in- p terned in Germany is permitted. b W In sealing the Austro-German v agreement Chancellor Kurt Schus- e The Cherokee Seoul 'avieur W. Pickard (pi U est cm Nfy-,V - L'-.: " chnigg of Austria wired a message of congratulations to Chancellor Hitler expressing his conviction that the agreement "would be to j the advantage of the whole German people." In replying Hitler expressed the wish "that this agreement will re-establish the old raditional relations springing from racial unity and the centuries long common history" of the two peoples. In diplomatic circles the signing if the new pact was regardeu as another shrewd coup by Chanceior Hitler and Premier Mussolini. The German and Italian dictators lave thrust a dictatorially governed Fascist and Nazi wedge hrough central Europe from the Vorth Sea to the Mediterranean. ^resident Roosevelt Leaves or Nautical Vacation A FTER dedicating New York's ^ new Sfi4.000.000 Tri - borough ridge, attending the wedding of Trs Ruth Bryan Owen, minister to Denmark, to jtCaptain Boerge | ^ Rohde of the Dan, ish court and spending two davs at his RpFJ | Hyde Park home. 1, / President Roosevelt V?: | embarked on a ? -r* j1 lautical vacation in ML Maine and Canadian waters. IBraSL. ^ On the bridce dedication program President vviih thc Prcsidcnt Roosevelt were Secretary of tie Interior Ickes, Gov. Lehman f New York, Senate* Wagner and iayor Fiorello LaGuardia of New 'ork City. The bridge is the largst completed public works adminstration project in the East. It omprises four spans in its three nd one-half miles of elevated ways nd connects Manhattan, the Bronx nd Queens, Long Island. Before leaving to board the chooner S e w a n n a. President loosevelt conferred with a group f eastern state representatives on le matter of flood control. Rep?sentatives of New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, West Virginia and ther states hit by disastrous oods early this year met with the resident. On the cruise of the Sewanna, a 0-foot schooner yacht, President loosevelt will act as skippei and elmsman. Three of his four sons, ames. Franklin Jr., and John are lembers of the crew. The cruise .'ill carry the President along the !oine coast to Campobello Island, lew Brunswick, where his mother as a summer home and off Noa Scotia where |ie expects to do ome deep sea fisi\ng. A destroyr, the presidential yacht Potomac nd the schooner Liberty carrying ewspaper man are trailing the Se anna. Juth Bryan Owen Becomes Iride of Danish Officer > OMANCE outmaneuvered diplo^ macy when Mrs. Ruth Bryan >wei., minister to Denmark, beame the bride of Captain Boerge .1 kunuc, gciiUCillclIl* vwaiting to King '.hristian of Denlark. The wedding amer Chapel at [yde Park, N. Y., g ^ w* 1 the presence of H 'resident Roosevelt .jjm ho nominated \ ^ Irs. Owen as the uniry's first worn- * n minister. ? ? A few days af.er Ku^ Bryan Irs. Owen returned K ( ;i > the United States tor the sumler, the announcement of her enagement was made in Denmark y Captain Rohde's mother. A day r two later. Captain Rohde arived in America and plans were iaae for an immediate wedding. Rockefeller Celebrates lis 97th Birthday "^UTTING a big cake to celebrate i > his ninety-seventh birthday, ohn D. Rockefeller predicted that e would live to be one hundred. )espite temperature of 92 in the hade, the famous nonagenarian lonned a sun helmet and went outoors on his summer estate near j ,akewood, N. J. The multimillionaire oil man and [ hilanthropist did not let the ce'.e- I ration of his birthday interfere j /ith his daily nap or his daily aft ' rnoon automobile ride. t, Murphy, N. C., Thurs< Foreign Words _ cmd Phrases Affaire du coeur. (F.) Affair 1 of the heart. A mensa et thoro. (L.) From bed and board. Ben trovato. (It.) Well invented. Chacun a son gout. (F.) Every man to his taste. Contretempts. (F.) An awkward incident: mishap. Dclenda est Carthago. (L.) Carthage must be destroyed. Ecco homo! (L.) Behold the man! Falsus in uno. falsus in omni- ; bus. (L.) False in one point, false in all. Garde du corps. (F.) Bodyguard. UrtcLe J^hll SfaijA: It's Pleasant to Forget How pleasant to wake up in the morning and not be able to remember what it was that worried you the evening befo.e Promises that arc the hardest to obtain are the surest of fulfillment. Life is a grind, but it doesn't 1 always make things smooth. Don't use your common sense so much to take your friends to i task. Be thankful that they like you. Despair Often Close Few know the thin partitions ( that separate their fellow men from despair. If you're going to be lonesome , anvwav whv tint I of the ladder of fame? I.ife is but a fleeting show?yet it is the best show man has on earth. j > r* about that ^ / say raise, charlie ? \ i irrita i'aa afraid vou're i 1 you > not ready for. \ \ heada" II 1CI ? 1 yUNT INWQE' lay, July 23, 1936 Scorn and Contempt A MAN, by indulging in the habit of scorn and contempt for others, is sure to descend to the level of what he despises so the opposite ha*-its of admiration and enthusiastic reverence for excellence imparts to ourselves a portion of the qualities we admire. Here, as in everything else, humility ; is the surest path to exalta- j tion.?Dr. Arnold. Nothing has such power to broaden the mind as the ability to investigate systematically and truly all that comes under thy observation in life ? Marcus Aurelius. Life Reflects Remember that in life as in a mirror you never get more out than you put in. Yesterday, if its memories are pleasant, is more to be cherished than any dream of tomorrow. After a man has toiled for a fortune he resents being called lucky. Getting a job is so much a matter of accident that it is a wonder any man can map out a career at all. Leave Worker Alone A man who does his work best is the one who does it his own ; way. B6 satisfied and say nothing. Saddest change in our old friend, when affluence and honors 1 are heaped upon him. is that he ( grows more effusive than ever to ; us ana imnKs about us far less ' frequently. A man could learn a great many things if he didn't think that he already knew them. What were mysteries to the an- I cients are our commonplaces. j _ ? ? ? ?? ? ? AW-TPLL 1 W HELEN. I WI9W WTJchmtI I AINTWG HER I JuMMlwr^ LP' ace/ you're i OING TO A I Oi v/TALIC i ridge GAME 1 ^WX.^F'l -vou'p be {- Sounds like bi.e;ToO, if ESp! coffee -ufbmc cmf?%d rJ 'l 1 hac> 'em, uni erf , / l -mv doctor mi * me switch to ???? **j postum -why d starting t& you try pdsti tmcize, is he? and see me la ^anpfor- about that ? i ell this ?i raisf 7 it-fisted si ave v/_ - j 'er^whrre jo ^' ij *1^j^ ' *3mf pomutn frrr! slmpl guimi foods, ba Tm Seod me, without jjffiar name?? if^1" j" c^0,^< A Barb at John Randolph George Kremer, a Pennsylvania representative of the 1820s. once put over a good one in the house on aristocratic Southerner John Randolph of Roanoke. The latter had just finished one of his flowery orations full of Latin and Greek quotations wher. Kremer arose and. to the amazement of all. launched into a fiery speech?in Pcnnsylvanian Dutcn. "Translate!" shouted Ranuuipn. Answered him Kremer: "When you translate the dead languages you are using to us country members I will also likewise translate my living Pennsylvania Dutch for you to understand!" WANTED 5QO Dissatisfied Farmers and Sons to Stop Renting Ajid begin retailing Rawleigh's Good Health Products to Consumers. Start your own business. Male? from >100 to $400 a month or more profit. Be your own boss. No Belling experience required. We supply everything?Products, Outfit. Sales auu cnimo iilVlIIOUI. XTOlllI incrCBRO OTflJ month. No lay off. Steady year-round. Loweat prices. Beat valuea. Most complete Serv ice. Rawleigh Methoda get tho moat bualneaa everywhere. For particulara write THE W. T. RAWLEIGH CO. DepLG-18?WNU Memphis, Tenn. READ THE ADS . WELL, MAYBEPE 5; C I WILL/ I CANT I DL FEEL ANY ?Ls IDE fl WOR.5Et JT^x^ ..^1 ^i^-ruoacl y J T-FC J TJSl Mrtfl j|fe,AMeAVt) JT* Op COURSE, children should never drink coffee. And many grown-ups, too, find that the caffein in coffee disagrees with them. If you are bothered by headaches or indigestion or can't sleep soundly... try Postum for 30 days. $ Postum contains no caffein. It is simpiy whole wheat and bran, roasted and slightly sweetened. Try Postum. You may miss coffee at first, but after 30 days you'll s own rich, satisfying flavor. It is ious, economical, and may prove a ict of General Foods. lend you your first week's supply of y mail coupon. O i?i? c r. cosr. ttle Creek, Mich. w. n. u.?7-ii-m obligation, a week's supply of Postun. afl State M xely, print name and mddrmma. ? 99 lads, address: General Foods, Ltd., fl L (Offer expires July 1, 1937.) I

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