Prospects Of Addition Of Night Passenger Air Service Plan Faster And Bigger Air Planes Public Demand For Greater Time Saving Between New York And Atlanta In Transportation Felt Rumors of early improvements in service and charges in policy of the Eastern Air Transport corpora tion were in circulation at the Sal isbury airport. One report forecast the inaugu ration within a few weeks of a night passenger service between Atlanta and New York to meet the public demand for greater time-saving in transportation. The company is planning to put larger and faster airplanes into service on this route a short time hence. A slight gain in passenger traf fic and the volume of airmail has occured in recent weeks, it was re ported. Figures made public by the E. A. T. showed planes of this company now fly 13,300 miles daily on routes 2,488 miles long. This service along the Atlantic seaboard now is live years old and in that period planes of this com pany and its subsidiaries have flown 16,5 50,000 miles, have car ried 3,2 5 0,000 pounds of airmail and 218,000 passengers. The air express was started nine months ago and 5 1,200 pounds of express have been transported. This com pany’s original fleet of six small planes has been replaced with 48 airliners requiring 610 employeees to operate the service in all its div isions. —Buy in Salisbury— STAR LAUNDRY "The Good On*” Launderers and Dry Cleaneri Phone 24 114 West Bank St. One Day Service Relax Tense "NERVES" Loss of Sleep, Crankiness, Headache, Neuralgia, Indiges tion and Fatigue are common results of over-work and nerve strain, Miss Ruth Sheets, a charming Michigan school teacher says: “1 have taken your Nerv ine during my college work and when 1 get those nerv ous spells after a hard day’s teaching. I am sending my mother’s name to you. Will you please send her a trial package?” Relax your tense nerves with the same reliable medicine Miss Sheets found so effective. Get it at your drug store. Large bottle $,1.00 Small 25c. Money back if you are not satisfied. AN INNOVATION in the dis tribution of motor oil has come out of the same section of Penn sylvania where the first oil well was drilled in 1859. As drillinc revolutionized the methods o1 taking oil from the ground, the unique new drum developed b> Quaker State oil experts is ex pected to have a far reachinc effect on distribution to con --—sumers. -a HOST TO BOY CRAFTS MEN—H. T. C. Hender son, above, secretary of the Fisher Body Crafts men Guild, announces the 1933 convention of the Guild will be held at the Century of Progress Ex position in Chicago the latter part of August. More than one hundred boys representing every state in the U. S. and fourteen young craftsmen from Canada will attend. Attendance at the World’s Fair is their re ward as winners from among the 750,000 mem jbers of the Guild in 1933. / r " - I NEW BROADWAY FAVORITE—L Miss Ruth Denning, newest expo nent of “torch” songs, created a sen sation at the R K O Music Hall and is acclaimed by John Murray Ander —son as the “best find in years.”—J EDWARD J . . KELLY, former _ ‘President of the ~ Chicago South 1 Park Board, who 1 - was appointed § 1 Mayor of Chicago I ! to succeed the late 1 1 m~Anton Cermak;—>5 singer of sad songs, doesn’t sit on a pi ano at home as she did on her country wide tour as star of "Show Boat.” Here she is back Home with her mother in New York trying out a new electric clean er with headlight which brightens up dark corners as It sweeps. A FATAL LURE—Miss Sally Mahan of New York is just about to land one of the season’s first trout in a stream at Carmel, New York. Realizes 50-Year ‘Dream’ With Canoe On Mississippi New Orleans.—Guv Wanless, fifty-four-year-old toolmaker, had to wait nearly fifty years to realize a boyhood dream which came true when he shot his canoe into the Canal Street landing here and com pleted his trip down the Mississippi river from Milwaukee, Wis. He departed last September and laid over at Memphis, Tenn., from November 16 to March 10. He said he ran into rough water at times, but his canoe never turned over. He has a wife, daughter and son, and said today that, after a rest, he planned to return home and wants to repeat the trip later with his son. At night he camped on the river bank and was fed by river folk, he said. CHALLENGES RUSSIA’S CLAIM Moscow.—The long dispute be tween Russia and Manchukuo over the jointly-operated Chinese East ern railway took on a more serious turn with the publication of a communique in which Li Shao Keng, Manchukuan chairman of the railway board, openly challeng ed Russia’s claim to ownership of the C. E. R. 'UNCLE DAVE' ON JOB FOR FORTY YEARS Raleigh.—Governors come and go at the executive mansion here, but "Uncle Dave” stays on the job. "Uncle Dave” is David Haywood, butler, who has served the last 11 Governors of North Carolina during a period of more than 40 years. CANDIDATE USES SKATES Watsonville, Calif.—Adam Bar ber, attorney and candidate for mayor on a strict economy plat form, is riding about on roller skates to hand out election cards. He announced he had sold his motor car. A Laxative that costs only 1 $ or less a dose NEXT TIME you need medicine to act on the bowels, try Thed ; ford’s Black-Draught. It brings ! quick relief and is priced within \ reach of all. Black-Draught is i one of the least expensive laxa tives that you can find. A 25-cent package contains 25 or more dose8. | Black-Draught is made of ap I proved laxative plants, firmly j ground so you take the medicine : into your system just as naturally as you get nourishment from the food you eat. Refreshing relief from constipa tion troubles for only a cent or less a dose—that’s why thousands of men and women prefer Thed ford’s Black-Draught. NOW is the time to have your radiator inspected. Your radiator is one of the most vital parts of your icar. Let’s give the old radiator a "new deal” right now. We flush, clean, re pair and recore all types of radiators. W e self or trade, new and second hand. We are the oldest and most reliable. See us. EAST SPENCER MOTOR CO. THE CHRYSLER DEALER Phone 1198-J East Spencer, N. C. INSURANCES SIGMON-CLARK COMPANY 1 ' REAL ESTATE - RENTALS - LOANS - INSURANCE 11* Whit Inns* St. Salubuay, N. C. Phonb 2J« ■— LOANS WITHOUT SECURITY $5.00 to $40.00 Quickly Loaned SALARIED PEOPLE NEEDING FIVE TO FORTY DOLLARS IN STRICT CONFIDENCE, WITHOUT SECURITY, EN DORSEMENT OR DELAY, AT LOWEST RATES AND EASY TERMS CO-OP FINANCE CO. i j 202 WACHOVIA BANK BLDG. SALISBURY, N. C. ' Peru President Is Assassinated Luis M. Sanchez Cerro, presi dent of Peru since December, 1931, was assassinated1 April 30th a short time after he had reviewed a parade of 20,000 young men in Jorge Chavez park. His assassin, Abelardo Hurtado Mendoza, fired several shots into the President’s body as the execu tive’s party started to drive away from the park, and then was slain himself by presidential guards. Two soldiers were killed and one officer, five soldiers and a civilian i wounded during a melee which fol S lowed the assassination. ; _ j TT PAYS TO ADVERTISE! . Girl Gagged, Slain; Wounds In Neck, Arm North Adams, Mass.—The body if Leah Lloyd Johnston, eighteen, i>f North Adams, was found in the brush near a railroad underpass with wounds on the neck and arm and a gag stuffed into the mouth. Police believe the girl a murder victim. Edward Dolan, walking through the brush, came upon the body and called police. Medical Examin-, er James W. Bunce said there wasj a deep wound on the left side of the neck which severed an artery; another over the heart and one on the right, wrist. A shoe string was bound about the girl’s throat. Dr. Bunce said he believed the wound in the neck was responsible for the girl’s death. The girl had been choked with a shoe string, stabbed three times and a handkerchief forced into her mouth. Police immediately began an effort to trace her movements from the time she left the home of her grandparents immediately after supper saying she was going to a friend’s house to stay with child ren. Police at first believed the girl had been slain some other place and brought to the spot in an auto mobile, but a search of the scene revealed a small piece of the girl’s clothing caught on a bush about 3 0 feet north of where the body was found, and her hat near the torn r Inf It i n cr The place where the body was found was visible from the high way. The medical examiner said the girl had been dead eight hours. 11 BOYS, 4 GIRLS HELD IN FILM ROBBERIES Hollywood.—Hollywood police arrested 11 bays and 4 girls, high school students from fourteen to seventeen years old, on charges of participating in more than a dozen recent burgularies. Loot taken by the juvenile "mob,” officers report ed, amounted to more than $5,000. Included in the depredations attri buted to the gang was the looting of Harold Lloyd’s Santa Monica Beach home of articles valued at $1,000. FISH JUMPS INTO BOAT Glendale, Ore.—For several hours Albert Snyder, Glendale lumberman, sat in his boat and fished without getting a single bite. Thn he heard a thumping in the boat bottom and turned to investi gate. A 20-pound Chinook sal mon, he said, had invited itself a board. Snyder seized the hapless visitor and called it a day. Look Lovelier ANOLA FACE POWDER imparts a fresh, tempting bloom that ac cents your natural beauty. Cannot clog pores. Never looks "pasty.” Ffelps prevent pimples, premature lines. Finest, purest texture known Try anola face powder todav. TOMS DRUG STORE and all other drug stores. Fifty Paid] [For Single Infant As Its Father Feminine Racketeer Exposed In France; Made Good Income From Men Accused Paris.—A baby with 50 fathers is the chief exhibit in one of the most remarkable criminal cases that has ever come to the attention of the French Surete. Margaret Camillon, who is charg ed with perpetrating a remarkable series of frauds, adopted the baby at a foundling hospital to start her racket. Then got in touch with numerous men through a journal which specializes in such introductions. She then instituted proceedings against each one, claiming that he was the father of her child. Some paid rather than risk publicity. Others went to court, and in each case orders were made against them. Each was required official ly or unofficially to sign documents admitting fatherhood, and! so 50 such confessions have now been of ficially filed in the archives of the Surete. At the time the fraud was dis covered the "mother” was draw ing an income of $125 a week from her various "husbands.” The baby was her sole source of income. LOS ANGELES is sending out lecturers to convince the country the recent earthquake was a plea sure. Just a part of the Roosevelt landslide that got mixed up in its dates, no doubt. BOWELS need watching Let Dr. Caldwell help whenever your child is feverish or upset; or has caught cold. His simple prescription will make that bilious, headachy, cross boy or girl comfortable, happy, well in just a few hours. It soon restores the bowels to healthy regularity. It helps “break-up” a cold by keeping the bowels free from all that sickening mucus waste. You have a famous doctor’s word for this laxative. Dr. Caldwell’s record of having attended over 3500 births without loss of one mother or baby is believed unique in American medical history. Get a bottle of Dr. Caldwells Syrup Pepsin from your drugstore and have it ready. Then you won’t have to worry when any member of your family is headachy, bilious, gassy or constipated. Syrup Pepsin is good for all ages. It sweetens the bowels; increases appetite—makes digestion more complete. Or. W. B. 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