Newspapers / Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.) / Nov. 14, 1924, edition 1 / Page 3
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rsiw^naAMDCAN1! ?uw toevmioE BRIGGSSHAFFNEROQ ? WWSTOH-SALEMJI.C. A' windshield wiper, operated by a ?mall piston and compressed - air, for use on trolley cars, has appeared tn INDIGESTION KUANS For that skin eruption You can have relief Wn utithin an hour ; LJ pERHAPS yo? have given A up hope of getting relieffrora that msddening itching and banting, but Rssinol does bring k ' . comfort when many other rem edies h.ve failed. On* who has used this healing ointment writs*? Rssinol Ointment is > ' * so soothing it stopped my itch-'i ing at ooce and 1 got the first ' night's Steep I had had in :> :Wseks. Now my skin is wen." What it has done for one it can do for other*. Rettnol Soap contains the same soothing, ingredients Which enables it to thoroughly . cleanse the skia ' Tst Wave it free from sensitive ness and smart Sealed in its Purity Package jiiiK ' ^ 5 PEARM/NT ^1 ~rr , , jt , / / y> ' V l l.\ Bp.'' Are You One of the 80%? nk,. T^IOHTY people oat of i. F | ?Lj hundred are handicapping themselves tn life. Ktght of every ten are victims of Anemia ? blood starvation ? and don't know It. % Rich, successful, complete lives need rich, red blood . . . vitalising, energy-build Ing blood. j. Try the test pictured above: unless the inner eyelid shows a rich scarlet color, it means that your lack of energy may also be , due to Anemia. Oude"? Pepto-Mangsn for thirty-two years has been the choice of thousands of phvaicisns . It is the sure sray to add energy - buOdlng iron and manganese to * your blood. Your druggist has Qtjde's IVpto-Mangan tn liquid or tab let form. Gude's Pgpto.-Mangan Tonic and Blood Enricher\ W. N. U, (pMARLOTTB, NO. 4*-1#2* i, 1. ? Tomb In the Cuthedrnl of St. John dow been placed. 2. ? Building and alrifcln. tect the shore line from erosion. 8. ? Illlno] J 1 ; . K and In which his body has Islsslppl near Memphis to pro Bie state's $400,000,000 rron. NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS Some Causes and Results of the Great Victory of the 'Republican Party. ?y EDWARD W. PICKARD TD BASONS for the tremendous Ke publican Victory la tlie national election are not far to 'aoelc. ' First among them come confidence In Calvin Coolldge and faith 4n hi* wise devo tion to the public .welfare, and the re pugnance of a vast majority of the American people for extreme radical ism. Mr. Davis was not a radical, nor was his platform, but the "LaFollette menace" was an actuality, threaten ing a deadlock In the electoral' col lege and throwing of the election Into cpngress 4wltti the possibility of the choice of Charles Bryan as chief ex ecutive, and about 18,000,000 voters decided that this should not be. La Follette, of course, never had a chance of being elected, bqt he did have a chance of carrying several of , the northwestern states In addition to Wisconsin; which was conceded' to him. His popular vote In some pla'ces, especially , in Iowa ffnd several of the larger cities, was heavy, but In the main the farmers, npon whose discon tent he had counted, failed him. Fur thermore, it was demonstrated again that the vote of organised labor can not be delivered, for instead of going to LaFollette' In a body, as Gompers recommended. It split along normal party lines. One thing LaFollette and his "menace" dfti was tp bring out the largest vote ever cast . In an Ameri can election, and this only helped pile up the Coblldge , plurality of about 10.000.000. ? - ? v ' i . ? PRESIDENT COOLIDGE on March 4 next will take fresh hold on the helm of the ship of state with the pleasant knowledge that the. new con gress is safely Republican and that the little radical group has lost the balance of iiower. even In the senate. In the house thete will be probably approximately 230 Republicans, only 12 of whom cannot be counted upon to support the President's policies. Without this dozen the administration seems assured of a margin of about twenty above a majority. The Demo crats will number about 185. One So cialist, and two Farmer-Labor mem bers were elected. The situation lta the senate will be better for, the Republicans than they had anticipated. At' this writing the result in several states Is still In doubt, but It Is likely that the new up per house will contain 54 Republicans, only four of whom are definitely in the LaFollette group; 41 Democrats, and one Farmer-Laborlte. Forty-nine constitutes a majority in the senate. There are six Republican senator-, who have occasionally voted with the LaFollette bloc, but they can be counted on to Join with their party colleagues In the orgonlzntljn of the body. Especially gratifying to Repub licans and to the more conservative citizens generally was the defeat of Senator Magnus Johnson of Mlnnesotn. Farmer-Labor, *by Thomas D. Schnll, the Republican blind congressman. It was thought for several days that Senator Brookhart of Iowa nlso hod been beaten by Daniel F. Stock, Dem ocrat, but when the returns were re checked the man who rnn as a Repub lican anil at the same time supported LaFollotte for the Presidency was slightly ahead. AMONG the Interesting results of the election was the selection of two women governors ? the first to be so honored. Mrs. Nellie T. Itoss was elected hy the Democrats of Wyoming to succeed to the office of her hus band. the late Governor Hoss. and un der the law will take office as soon as I she qualities In Texas Mrs. Miriam Ferguson. Democrat, set out to vindi cate the honor of her husband, ?h<> had been Impeached nnd removed from the governorship, and she suc ceeded In defeating her licpublicun opponent on the face of the returns, although lie lins demanded an official tabulation at the vote before he ?lll I concede her victory. ?1 gave onstr coral whlc tlefei Stove ?y. W08 Bepi Gov* Ctiai Unit a I01 . ill part the Repi vol hie t hind klan cam Knn voti Will aBtW ? ? ? M Kansas candidates whom the klnn posed were successful. In Colorado, Judging by Incomplete returns, the klaa elected both * the governor ? Clarence C. Morley, and a senator for Nicholson's unexpired term, Col. Rice Means. In Denver it made almost a ideas? wwreep; ? Jack -Walton, the lm fpeached and removed governor , of Oklahoma, sought election to the United States senate on the antl-klan issue and was beaten' by W. B. Pine. Republican, which probably would have happened even if tlie klan had | reversed its vote. Ohio yielded the Ku Klux what Is accounted a victory. Governor Donahey, .Democrat, seeking re-election and "favorable" to the . klan, defeated his Republican rival, | former Gov. Hnrry It Davis, "unsat isfactory" to the klan.' His plurality was more than 100,000, despite tlie Coolldge landslide. On the rest of the state ticket four officeholders seek ing re-election, all "favbrable" to the klan, were re-elected. NO SMALL part of the credit for the Republican victory Is. to be given to General Dawes,, President Cooildge's running mate, who devoted much of his vigorous campaigning to defending our Constitution and Insti tutions against the attacks of the1 radi cals. . Over in France the result of the | election' was pleasing especially on Dawes' account, for they know him much better than they know Coolldge. Pertlnax, political editor of L'Echo de Paris, predicts that pow, with the English Conservatives In power. Great Britain more than ever will tend to co-ordinate her action with the United States, which, be believes, will Involve collnpse of the Geneva protocol on arbitration and security, the assem bling of another disarmament confer ence, and a moderate but strict settle ment of the nllles' war debts. Le- j Journal says the same things In other words. Ramsay mac donald and his cabinet did not wait for the as sembling of parliament, but tendered their resignations to Klag George. who accepted them promptly and intrusted to Stanley Baldwin the task of form ing a new government. The new prime minister soon submitted his selections for the cabinet and the.y were ap proved by the king. He Is himself first l9rd of the trensury and Austen Chamberlain Is foreign secretary. Lord Curzon being given the ornamental post of lord president of the council. Winston Churchill, free trader and antl-Bolshevlst, Is chancellor of the ex chequer. which Is regarded as a l>ld to the Lloyd George following to Join with the Conservatives and also as no tice that the loan to Itussia Is dead. Sir Itobert Home, former chancellor. : was offered the minor position of niln- j | l*ler of labor, which be refused, nr.d I : he and bis friends feel that be was , j Insulted. ' Before quitting office the Labor min istry made an apparently sincere ef- 1 fort to solvp the mystery of the al- | leged Zlnovlcff letter advising British | communists to revolt. Its committee found it Impossible to come to a defi nite conclusion on the matter. The original letter was not pr->ducp<1 nn I never has been seen hv the members elf the Labor government. GKN VT.Nci Yl' HSlANC iii-; I\ b:i* tnVen complete c<?n*ro'. <-?f the central China government ,it l*p king and plans to turn the iv.sntry Ho bolshevlsm. He has seized the Hlal palace, evicting the former H*or and his wife and servants; ^^^?ccupletl all of the Forbidden City Hias even taken the horses and ? car j of the deposed president, HKun. A bolshevlst rump cabinet H> by hlru has abolished forever ^Ble of emperor and all other titles Has confiscated the palace In the H Hof the state. A further mandate Ha to pny the former emperor H00 annually as a private citizen ^?o appropriate $2,000,000 for the ? of the poor attendants of the ^fevarakhun, soviet envoy to China, Hd to be most Influential in tho ?lis of Feng, and Dr. Sun Yat-sen. H of the southern China gronp, ^^Hieen Invited to Peking. Mean I General Fu, who fled to a war Hit Taku, Is waiting for a chance Hnsolldate the non-bolshevlst fae It will be lnteresting__to see ? course General Chang, the Man Hin, will pursue, for It looks bb if Hwere not proceeding according to Chang's plans and wishes. The ad vance guard of Chang's troops arrived at TIcn-tsIn. ' 'THE movement to deprive President Kemal of Turkey of his power Is growing stronger dally and since the grand national assembly has Just opened at Angora the crisis may be ex pected Boon. Raouf Bey, former pre mier and a great naval hero, is the leader of the opposition to Kemal and Is supported by such powerful and popular men as Qen. All Fuad Pasha, Qen. Klazlm Kara Beklr Pasha, Refet Pn#hn and DJambolat Bey. The osten sible object of their attacks (a Premier IsnJet Pasha. *'? ~ MRAKOVSKY went to" Paris and ? met Premier Herriot, cementing the Frnnco-Rjisslan accord. It was an nouncejl that Leonid Krassln would be the flrst soviet ambassador to France, and that Jean Herbette would be sent as umbassador to Moscow. PREMIER MUSSOLINI is confident that the, crisis which threatened -him and the Fasclstl has passed and that his organization will be stronger than ever. The minister of the In terior, SIg. Federzonls, who Is re garded as one of the biggest mem bers of the cabinet, and who has won the confidence of the country for his Impartiality, Intimated, that the Fas clstl are denning their own house and are taking energetlfr means to stop the excesses which were complained of by the Italians. FROM London comes the Interesting Information that contracts for con struction of an airship twice the size of the Lob Angeles, formerly the ZR-8, and capable of crossing the Atlantic from London to New York in two dnys, have been placed by the British government. Vickers, Ltd., the com pany which makes all sorts of war materials and other things, will build the huge ship. HENRY CABOT LODGE, senior senator from Massachusetts, was stricken In a Cambridge hospital where he had undergone several opera tions. and at the time of writing the physicians have little nope for his recovery. He has been In the senate continuously for thirty-one years, is chairman of the foreign relations com mute and has been the leader of those who opposed entry of the Cnlted States Into the League of Nations. Ferdinand W. Peck, a pioneer Chl cagoan and for many yenrr one of the most Influential citizens of that city. Is dead at nn advanced age. He was prominent In the creation and direc tion of the World's Columbian expo sition. was commissioner general of the I'nlteil Slates to the Paris exposi tion of V.XKl and was a gran I ofllcer of | the French I.egion of Honor. Cornelius Cole, who was eloited , senator from California way hack in | ISTtI and who had hecn an intimate j friend of Abraham Lincoln, passed away in Los Angeles at the age of one I hundred and two years. He was born j the >ear after Napoleon's death. B|:.\Z1I.S resolution, which is cen- j it-red in the Mate of Rio Grande , i . > Sill. l? spreading seriously. The ] ,-rrw - f the battleship Sao Paulo, the 1 :>lggf*t \ cs-cl in the navy, mutinied, j an<l the garrisons of several town* l.nve revolted. I IMPORTANT NEWS THE WORLD OVER IMPORTANT HAPPENINGS OF THIS AND OTHER NATIONS FOR SEVEN DAYS GIVEN THE NEWS* OF THE SOUTH What la Taking Plae* In Tha South, land Will Be Pound In Brief Paragrapha Foreign ? A cabinet meeting to discuss tho appointment of an ambassador to the United States will be called as soon as Premier King returns to Ottawa, It was announced. If Canada sends an envoy to Washington it would be in line with the action of the Irish Free state which, with the consent of Eng land. Is represented at Washington by a minister. i In the Interest of modesty and i female health, the Polish parliament ; j will be asked to make law and not i j fashion the arbiter of women's clothes. A bill has been drafted which would limit the display of ankles and should- ! | ers. The protocol for the pacific settle ment of international disputes, ijrafted by the assembly of the League of Na tions at Its last session has been sign ed by Paraguay, it was announced at league hadquarters. More than a dozen states have now signed the protocol., but thug far It has been officially rati fied only by Czecho slovakia. The Emir of Ktasina, who governs a district of Nigeria, many times lar ger than England, attended a moving picture show the other night in Lon don for the first time in his life. An internal loan of 1.200,000,000 pesatas was floated at Madrid in the form of treasury bonds. The loan was oversubscribed as soon as It was offer ed. s ? The? cay^lryof General Feng Yu Haiang, *' Christian general" now in control of Peking, entered Tientsin recently after quelling slight resist ance. The Swedish government telegraph department has announced that the first testa of direct radio communica tion with America have Just been car WM out between Sweden's new high power radio statlQn at Varberg, on the west coast, and wireless commercial stations in America. Warfare between the Wahabls and King All of the Nedjaz is expected to be resumed in the next few days around Jeddab, according to advices from the Rod sea port. Sir Charles Oman and Lord Hugh Cecil, conservatives, were re-elected to the house of commons from Oxford university, according to the returns from the elections there, whioh were announced. . > ' The Brazilian embassy at Buenos Aires confirmed reports that the crew of the Brazilian battleship Sao Paulo had mutinied, seized the vessel and sailed outside of Rio de Janerlo harbor. Washington ? Manual Herrick, former representa tive from Oklahoma, was awarded damages of one cent by a Jury in cir cuit court in his suit for $50,000 dam ages against Miss Ethelyn Chrane, his former stenographer, for alleged breach of promise to marry him. "Remember 1916." declared a state ment given out at national Democratic headquarters at Washington, refusing to follow the lead of New York Demo cratic papers in conceding the election of President Coolldge. A scale of minimum and maximum fees for almost every ill that a phy sician or surgeon is ever called upon to treat has been fixed by the Medical Society of the District of Columbia. Minimum fees range from $2 for a minor office consultation or a word of advice over the telephone, to $300 for certain major operations. Maxi mum fees for similar service range from $10 to $5,000. On the same tide which swept Pres ident Coolldge back into office, the Republicans have come into actual as well as nominal control of the next house of representatives. Whether they also will have the whip hand in the senate still depends on the out come of contests in several states. Secretary Mellon forwarded to tho navy department for distribution three treasury silver life saving medals which had been awarded to as many navy men for rescues from drowning. The recipients are: Patrick Flaherty. Brooklyn. X. Y.. ex-chlef boatswain's I mate; Joseph P. Fecley. Pit Afield, Mass . boatswain's mate, and Archie B. { Sanford. Minneapolis. Minn., seaman, [ firsirlar.s. It will be felt to the courts to de- j cide whether secret flies of the navy ! department are to be produced in the | suit to determine the legality of the 1 Pan-American Petroleum company's title to land in the government oil reserves. The Rev. J. J. Hlmmel. R. J.. former president of Georgetown university, died suddenly at the university after an Attack of acute indication He was 69 years old and had been a member ?if fje Jesuit order for more than 60 years. He was born In Annapolis. Maryland Claims of congressional gains tot tholr ranks in the recent election have been made by leaders of both the dry and wet forces. President Coolldge calmly received assurances of Ills election as presi dent by an overwhelming vote. Issued a statement of "simple thanks" and turned again to his desk and the work which has constantly occupied his at tention since entering office ? little more than a year ago. The Argentine embassy was advised that by a vote of 7 to 6 the Argentine council of ministers had decided to discontinue appropriations for an en voji to the Holy See. The action was taken despite the fact that the presi- ' dent of the council was against dis continuing the appropriations. President Coolidge issued a procla mation. formally proclaiming Thurs day, November 27, as Thanksgiving day. The proclamation urged that thanks be given because the year had been marked by a "continuation of peace whereby our country has enter ed into a relationship of better under standing with all the other nations of the earth" and because at home "we have continually had an Improving state of health, with Industrial produc tion large and harvests bountiful. Domestic ? The famous Cascade distillery, at Normandy, Tenn., founded a half cen tury ago by Victor K. Schwab, who died a few days ago at Nashville, was burned. It was Ignited by forest fires. John W. Davis, defeated candidate for the presidency, will again resume the practice of law In New York City, which he gave up when he accepted.' the Democratic nomination. A referendum on ratification of the child labor amendment to the federal a constitution was defeated in the elec- , tlon by a wide margin, as' wai the proposition for a state gasoline tax. Detroit started its first ship to * foreign port when the Onondaga, of the Henry Ford fleet left Its docks In the River Rouge bound for Buenos Aires, Argentina. It carried a 1,500 ton cargo of automobile parts. Addi tional tonnage will be shipped at 'Mon treal after the vessel, passes the 14 foot channel In the St. Lawrence river. "The progressives will not be dls- f. ' mayed by this result. We have Just begun to fight." That was Senator Robert M. La Follette's first comment on the election in a statement at Mad ison, Wis., in which he called on mem bers of the progressive party to "close ranks and gird themselves for the next battle." Three New York nuns prevented a stabbing affray between two male em- ? ployees in .the Madonna home when they wrested a 12-Inch knife from ope of the men and held him until the * police arrived, Cornelins Cole, of Los Angeles, , Calif., former United States senator, 102 years and two months of age, died recently at his residence In that city. He had been in frail health for several months. The volume of new state and munic ipal financing will be swelled from two hundred and three hundred mil lion by the approval of various bond issues which were passed upon by vot ers. i Governor Donahey recently signed a proclamation lifting qualified martial law at Nlles. The military had been in control of the city for several days after riots followed attempted parades by klan and anti-klan forces. The Associated Press sends rfut(a telegram from Evanston, 111., in whlcb it la stated that Charles Q. Dawes made over one hundred speeches in his vice presidential campaign with out a single "Hell Maria." Frank O. Lowden, In replying to farm organizations seeking to recom- ? mend him to President Coolldge for the post of secretary of agriculture. said that because he felt be could be of more assistance to the farmers out side the department, he would, if the position were offered him, feel it bis duty to decline. Henry Agate, vice president and traveling representative of a New York Jewelry concern, reported to New Orleans police that gems valued at ap proximately $200,000 had been stolen from his room in a hotel. To federal convicts In prison garb were taken from a Union Pacific trail) at St. Mary's Kans., after the express man had found them cutting them selves out of a box five by four by two feet, which was being [shipped to Washington billed as a box of ship ping tags. The recent announcement at Sche nectady, N. Y., of the development In the General Electric laboratories of a portable x-ray machine has been the source of Inquiries from a Central American government concerning the possibility of obtaining 1.200 for use of customs Inspectors at ports of entry. Six heavily armed bandits held up emploj'eeB and six patrons of the First National bank. Bunker Hill. 111., and escaped with $3,500. Naval academy airplanes, several steam cutters and a tug searched the waters of Chesapeake bay near An napolis for Miss Harriet Green and Lieut. William S B. Claude, who, It Is feared, were drowned. They wdre out In a c^noe and were caught In a heavy gale. The conviction of former Congress man Benjamin F. Welty of Lima. Ohio, nn a charge of having overcharged & war veterans in a claim against the veterans' burtan. has been reversed by the t'nlle.1 Slates circuit court of appeals
Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.)
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Nov. 14, 1924, edition 1
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