THE NEWS-RECORD, MASHALL, N. C. ' ' 7 -i 14 -. JL M' A. 1 V T Gillett to Leave the Speaker's Chair .. tfter March 4, next, regarded as a certainty no matter how the senatorial sit atlon develops, means a realignment of the party organisation there and prob- t . . . .. .1 . . X - r .ll.lnniil HUWltmL tahly a renewed effort dj me La ouewe rouowera- to iwiud uuwi Won ahotald they retain a substantial voting strength after Oils' year's election. Two Congressmen I Representative Thomas 1 Blan ton of Texas, Democrat, who has been jln the , limelight before, Is In again. This time It's a fight between "him and 'Representative William C. Hammer of (North Carolina, also a Democrat The fight In which books and chairs were Churled around promiscuously and spec tators scattered for cover, was staged tfn a meeting of the house committee that deals with District of Colombia ralrs. . The battle was lively white It last ed, the two members swinging wildly and struggling . to get at each other jwhlle spectators and other congress men endeavored to keep them apart ... The trouble started when Blanton (portrait herewith) objected to the ' meeting being held on the ground he had not been previously notified ' Hammer said Blanton had "will fully misunderstood" an announcement LhAnf that maarftio- . I Vmi'm a nmtlnni nM rnlmnfhft.', retorted Blanton. . "That's not true," cried Hammer, to say it" 'Vmi'm a Ha" vail All RlflBIOB. AWMAW Bm, ..- " 1 tt .nj Rlanton nmnff nil missed. - All even. . ii--. ... .aaiwni mirari th North Carolinian picked np a IfnMlna- rhalr Ml. rMchln Over UW 060. OX YVUUam a. nniu, 4 - (Washington Railway and Electric company, siruci iw j.wu. n tn. .I- k. vtani that war not h tinting cover were hanging on I DJ Uila ww uyTrm.--m 'the coat tails of the contestants, and - - . apart Later on tney went ai n nuaiu hastily adjourned ue seswon. Will the Vast Stinne8, Fortune Endure? I ; 7 the Stlnnes' enterprises. He will direct the properties In the Ruhr and unine . n,ktiA nnm Harmann fitinnoa irnnnnar ui. will oversee the family's In terests at the headquarters In Berlin Droperties.' ' - . V ' " : . r . .1. ' . ; . . . ; 'a, - ' iTlie President's OU i Hera Is a new. portrait of Rear Admiral Hilary P. Jones of the special commission appointed by President Coolldge to atudy the problem of nary oil conservation, .His ' colleagues are ' George Otis Smith, ' director , of the . geological surrey, and R. D. Bush of tbe California, state bureau of miner alogy. The commission has reported recommending that, no more navy oil be exchanged for construction of navy reserve oil tanks by Doheny, Sinclair, at any other contractor. For the pro vision of such additional tanks In the , Hawaiian Islands and at other strategic n points It will he necessary for -congress to. make large appropriations. " Says the .report : :; , ' -, , 1. , ' '' c ' "The. prime purpose tn retaining Ihe oil In the naval reserves being safe- ' ty, the administration of these reserves should be animated by principles of 1 anvlng publicly owned oir for these M-.a. ....la. au-kA 4VVaM n MwlTIlt nilh. Jj. fund, from present expenditures. t0 b"The,oll that now remains under goVernmental control, or that can be . j.. .h r,ti mna ha traaanred not for'tts market value, espe- clall,ln these days of low prices, but t..-:-.. t.'i .,Ja. -m k. noAitod tft nrovlda adeauata tankage, consld ' arable more to purchase on to fill those "' " I . ' H. Mil P Speaker Frederick H. Gillett of the houn has decided to become a candi date for the Republican nomination for senator from Massachusetts. The speaker reached hl decision after sev eral conferences with 'Massachusetti nolltlcal leaders, including those in charge of the national campaign of President Coolldge. He win s?e elec tion to the place now held by Senator Walsh, Democrat Speaker Gillett has been a mem ber of the house from the Second Mas sachusetts district since March 4, 1803, his sixteen continuous terms consti tuting a record of unbroken service not eaualed by any other representa- Mvm now in office. Be has' been speaker since 1919. but was re-elected to that post last fall only after a long deadlock forced by the fight of the Inanmtnr RMMlhllCBlUi aimlnSt ' . the nartv organization. - . nia withdrawal from the bouse Stage Lively Scrap "and you havent tha couraga of a dog ... ... they finally succeeded In pulling them ... r ..fl a Klhlman. Marvland. ,wjui. . . Dr. Edmund Huao Stlnnes (por trait herewith), who by the death of his father has suddenly become tne monarch of one of the world's most rlirantlc Industrial and commercial em plres, Is described by bis associates as "a youth 'of engaging personality and winning urbanity.' Although only twenty-eight years old, he served a rigorous technical and commercial apprenticeship under his father's un narlnir tut el aire, and subsequently waa graduated from the Charlotten- burg Technical school with the degree of doctor of enslneerlng. He enlisted aa a volunteer In the World war and advanced to a lieutenancy In the ana tlon cores. Touna- Stlnnes was constantly at his father's aide during the letter's restless and manifold activities' of the last five years and la possessed of firat.hanii knowiedffft of the mining. .m.ltlm. an A Industrial . hranphea of. and care for th? shipping and foreign Comniission Reports Tha choice between oil and dollara baa for It emergency value at some future tanks, and still mora funds to test and . 'j Cow Is Important Figure in Remarkable Variety of Arti- ,1 Mm Am, rrnm Millc. ... WnRhinirton. "If the humble cow ever aspired to trademark ber prod ucts the average shopper would be amazed at the labels 'Made from milk which w.ould aaorn bis im"...." niirrhnspa ranilnz from horn-rlm. apec- tacles to. chessmen, magazines to ra dio sets," says a bulletin rrom uie w tlonal Geographic society's Washing ton headquarters. "Consider a debutante's Dan, wmcu. Is a most Inappropriate place to con tmnlnt thn nnromantlc cow.' The oc casion would lose niueh of Its glamor If the cow didn't supply tne mum which helps provide many other ad juncts than the ice cream. "Yonder maiden s Durnisnea gu.ueu beir Is kept In place by a flaring comb, made of milk she toys with a mllk- handled fan ; she made her touei somewhat hastily with an array or ar ticles largely made of milk, because she received her belated Invitation from a procrastinating young man through a telephone receiver made of miiir aha ia inttinir dowft her dance engagements on a program made or milk, while she chats during mieruii--slon with an escort flecking ashes from a itrnrt-a in milk-made bolder. "Sounds a bit far-fetcnea, aoesui It? But 3 per cent of casein in cow s uin. la tha raw mnterlal for a luim iwhj . " " kaleidoscopic, array of manufactured r awv1 1 1 OT m ..... "Nor does this take into account that for every six couples at me dance, somewhere in the background la one cow. For at our present rate of consumDtlon every twelve persons consume the milk product or one cow, Milk aa fttaW of Llfa. "Bread has a reputation for being1 the 'staff of life.' but milk more nearly fulfill that definition. Substitutes for onr customary breads may be had ; but there la no substitute for milk. Our i.iiriiinHnn dpnondB literally UDon a nlnntiful udd1v of stood mllK. "Even tbe elimination or me casein from milk, tbe element which pro vides most of the by-products, would be Inconvenient Chemically, casein Is th nrlnclDal nltroeenous constituent of milk ; popularly, It la the 'curd' ; and Its first and principal use is f.or ehmmaa. ' "Our animal immigrants have been neglected. Their Importance deserves a society of their descendants. Eco nnmi eencrraDhv has been Influenced by the animal winners of our West When, In 1628, a pacxet oi tne uuicu west India comnanv landed on Man hattan Island with a cargo of domestic animals and agricultural implements It paved the way for a principal Indus crv nf the KmDlre state of 1924. Eco nomically, the New Amsterdam set tlers were cheesemakers. 'Aftr the Black 'Hawk war, in 1832, 7 the progeny of these settlers shaped Wisconsin's .economic -destiny by driving their covered wagons up the' west shore of. Lake Michigan. Wherefore Wisconsin last year pro duced 9.00O,wo wortn oi cneese. "Th very names of "cheeses- Cheshire, Oorgonzola, Edam, Cheddar, Parmesan, and many others reaa line a gazetteer. The genealogist, Sher- lrwb Holmes of the family tree, might get Important clues of people's origin by the cheeses tney ear. There Is a fascination, too, In the making of cheese. The spherical Edam cones are reputed to .be dark red to this day because, in the days before pure food laws, a consignment was tinted with a harmles solution of car- Monster Halibut . - .. .u. i. i HIS iriunc nan, ma ij(chi near the Boston light by Sam Scola. :OSh "A ;-x A! : ii ' 1 ::7 - . ) UL. . -.......- Industry n i ii ii i n 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ik Says All Food May Soon : Be Made by Chemists : Washington. Artificial pro- ; ductlon of the world's ' food supply; emancipating man from absolute dependence on the soli ' .and eliminating the dangers of ! famine and overproduction, was predicted before the convention of tbe American Chemical soci ety here by Dr. Carl L. Alsberg, director of the Food Research Institute of Leland Stanford uni versity. , . v Dr. Alsberg said there Is every reason to believe that the three groups of foodstuffs carbohy drates, fats and amino acids ; can or soon will be producible artificially. I II 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Ii 1 1 1 1 1 It mine.. Just why people like to eat In nlnk. rather thnn vellow. Is a m-oh. lem for the psychologists, but that prererence not only Keeps tne cneese red, but it has virtually eliminated yellow tomatoes from the market, and causes a heavy monetary loss to sal mon shippers If, perchance, their eaten happens to be white Instead of pink. - 8om Decorative cneeses. "The Italian Parmesan cheeses are kept for several years and then are polished with a mixture of charcoal and linseed oil until they shine like ebony. The housewife throws moldy bread Into the garbage pall, but when she buys Roquefort cheese she Judges Its quality by the green blotches, which are developed by . Introducing bread mold Into the sheep's milk of which Roquefort Is made. "In recent years manufacturers have become active competitors of cheesemakers In buying casein. The Finds Radio Wave Slower Navy Astronomer Offers an Amazing New Theory. San Francisco, Cal. The discovery .,.. ,h. .rfin wave travels slower 111 (XL fc. . - . than light was announced by c-apx. J. J. See, professor of mathematics ,1 tt.i, smM nnw. a-overnment astronomer at Mare Island navy yard, and well known aumonij theory of ether. ., According to Captain See tlie radio wave travels around the globe with a velocity of 165,000 miles a ae" whUe light travels 186,000. CaptaUi See considers that his discovery In the velocity of the propagation of the radio wave about the earth may prove the most notable step In the develop ment of the wave theory since Roo mer's original discovery of tbe velocity of light In 1675. Outline of Theory. An outline of the chief conclusions communicated to the London Times Is condensed below: '' "1. The mean velocity of the wire less wave was found to be about 173, 000 miles per second. This figure If about 13,000 miles per second less than that of light, but ten years ago we did not suspect the cause. o Tn March last a wireless signal was sent from the sending station near Caught Off Boston hullhut ever hmuirht to Boston, was caught - - . . . show, with the fish. The halibut has been NEW USE FOR DIANA i ! - J , Nl 7 Diana of Madison Square garden, New York, the beautiful weathervane, may become the world's most exquis ite radio antenna. James r. -err, ffeneral manaeer of the first radio world's fair, believes she can be so used, and his theory la being tesieo by radio engineers. anhatnnoa in hlzhlv cohesive and Is 1M Ue affected by heat or moisture. Henct It Is used as glue, and also aa a binder In making glazed paper, in ayemg cot ton cloth-and In piecing together laml tinted furniture. t a dniB- t ore were to display on a single shelf Its articles In which ia nMd the exhibit would re- waau - .amnio a rummage sale. There would be earrings and shoe polish, oilcloth and medicinal tablets, photographic plates and strings of beads. Than Light New York to Warsaw. Poland, and re flected back In 0.054 of a second of time. The double distance la &500 miles, and the transmission cornea out about 158,000 miles per second. "3. The mean of the two Independ ent V determinations of the wireless wave Is 165,500 miles per second. Phenomenon la Exnlalned. ' 4. What Is the cause of this! The aetheron or particle of ether la only one-four thousandth part aa lanere In diameter aa the hydrogen molecule, so that - compared1 to ordi nary molecules of the size of oranges the aetherons would be like smoke from a cigar, and moving 'with a ve locity of 294.000 miles per secoaU Tha wa vn travels throueh the Solid earth as well as through tbe air and free space above the air, but much resisted In the solid globe. As the ether la S89.S21.600.000 times more elastic than air In proportion to Its density thus almost lnnniteiy eiasuc the medium cannot suiter a Drean in Its continuity, yet the movement above the earth Is held back by the slower movement of the wave In the earth. Tbe resistance In the globe thus acts as a drag on the wave at Its base. The result is that . the wave' bends around the earth, as long known yet heretofore not generally understood. ."5. This bending is quite analogous to the change of form of water waves as they run ashore the top of the wave gains en the base. ' "The results are of interest m con nection with the wave theory of mag netism and the cause of universal gravitation, because they bear on. the cause of the fluctuation of the moon s mean motion." " illinium mill i mi lit Scientist Says He I. a m m a m. Has Weighed Atom Paris. The analysis of the atom, for which scientists have been searching vainly for years, I has been achieved, according to I an announcement oy rror. Camllle Matlgnon to the Society of Industrial Chemistry. Although the -carbonic atom weighs a billionth billionth of one hundredth of a milligram and is ten billion times smaller than the smallest object per ceivable through a microscope. Matlgnon showed that It was possible not only to weigh it but to analyse Its constituents by a process of "Ionizing." ; ; Through a this process, ! the atoms are ' charged with elec tricty, which accelerates the speed , at which they revolve, thereby permitting an analysis of comparative calculations of their speed with respect to their weight :'',';., -'V.- ::;- '"' The Importance of the dis- T covery is that possession of the tiniest particle of any substance now permits correct analysis of the whole. In such a way Ma tlgnon analysed a cubic . centi meter of air, proving that it con tained one millionth of a cubic rentlmeter of helium. , t-1 1 1 II 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 1 H 1 1 1 1 ! I I' 1 r . ia r i i IVm the lon-tsl-UsSa confection yon csn tay -find It's a belp to Cl fjestlon end a ilzezstr L . fi ta mfl??I M mvm amav " AZtlr and fprth. ' f 'fl XT Wrfolcya Mcaaa V beneUt aa well aa Prepare Your Tent iorVacauon Tor 11 wa will Mnd yoa poitpMd complata Inatriutlona how yott can watarprool jrour tant, whethar naw or old, and tha matarlal ud will coat roa bat m iaw canta. Po Dot and iMmpi. . M1D-WHST "rrilM.ll v. Emmatabani, lows A Smart Landlord PmnnetivA Tenant I like the flat very much, but I hear that the place Is haunted. ' Landlord My dear madam, I attend to that personally. The ghosts only appear to tenants who do not pay their rent and refuse to move out. Lonaon Answers. EWHUII sjaaMaa-Tiawaiaa-vaaai Lift Off-No Pain! Doesn't hurt one bit! . Drop a Uttla Treezone'' on an aching corn, instant ly that corn stops hurting, then short ly you lift It right off with fingers. Your druggist sella a tiny bottle of "Freezone"' for a few cents, sufficient to remoye every hardcorn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and the foot calluses, without soreness or Irritation. MOTHER KNEW CAM'S VALUE Georgia Lady, Who Had Lost Too Much Weight, Was Advised to Take Cardui and Is Now Well. Columbus. 6a. Mrs. George S. Hunter, of 17 North Columbus, waa relieved of great pain and suffering hv fniinvtns- the advice of her mother. who knew, from her own experience, of the value or uaraui. "After I married, thirteen months ago," writes Mrs. Hunter, -i sunerea with dreadful pains .In my sides dur ing . . . My side hurt ao bad It near ly killed me. I had to go to bed ana stay sometimes two weeks at a time. I could not work and I Just dragged around the house. . v I Teot very thin I went from 126 pounds down to less than 100. My mother had long Deen a user oi varaui and she knew what a good medicine It was for this trouble, so sne toia ma. to get some and take It V sent to tha store after It and before I had taken the first bottle I began to Improve. "My side hurt less, and I began to Improve In health. . . . The Cardui acted as a fine tonic and I do not feel like the same person. I am so much better." I am well now. I have gained ten pounds and am still gaining. My sides do not "trouble me at all. v . . "I wish every suffering woman knew about Cardui." tm3 ll:2.cn:i:fsT::::c ill! Dnalnna Opvoftnntty Open Io-llr lor I-adr. Act aa repreaantatlva for oomplola line rub toer (ooda and hoaaohoid necnaaltloa. fcara 200 per mo. and moro without Inreatment. Ooddard 8alM Co., al lath. Wh ton.D-q . PATEflTS! aminauon. lii'tr . i.- . auiwl. -!a"i vokiat raaa. rrt , t 4ipe!ou rc ..9 aS.:.::onai reserve v.m. ---r put on exhibition. : i - V

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