Newspapers / The Alleghany News and … / Nov. 5, 1936, edition 1 / Page 3
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What Luck the Lady Did Not Have Quinsy It was the evening of an Inter esting family event, and the mas ter of the house, who hoped it would be a son, had been pacing the floor, anxiously awaiting the doctor. When the physician en tered the room the father seized him by the arm and demanded: “Is it a boy or a girl?” “Tr-tr-tr-” gasped the doc tor, who stuttered rather badly. “Triplets!” “Qu-qu-qu-” stammered the doctor. “Quadruplets! Man alive! What Is it you say!” “No-n-no. Tr-tr-try to take it qu-qu-quietly. It’s a girl.” *1 was run-down— looked pale . .. lacked a keen appetite . . . felt tired • • • was underweight.” “What did I do?” “TI/TY intuition told me I needed a ■I*A tonic. Naturally, I am happy and grateful for the benefits S.S.S. Tonic brought me." You, too, will be delighted with the way S.S.S. Tonic whets up the appe tite ... improves digestion.. .restores red-blood-cells to a healthier and richer condition. Feel and look like yonr old self again by taking the famous S.S.S. Tonic treatment to re build your blood strength... restore yonr appetite...and make better use of the food you eat. S.S.S. Tonic Is especially designed to build sturdy health...its remark able value is time tried and scientifi cally proven.. .that’s why it makes you feel like yourself again. Available at any drag store. O&AS.Co. ■**•* Joy and Grief That happiness does still the longest thrive where joys and griefs alternate. MIN IN BACK NEARLY DROVE } HER CRAZY Got Quick RELIEF By Robbing Mode* wore ao wre >ue cuuiu v .» ■ ■ hardly touch them. Used Hamlini Wizard Oil and found wonderful relief. Just rubbed it on and nibbed it in. Thousands aay Hamlins Ward Oil works wonders for stiff, aching muscles. Why suffer? Get mu not HAMLINS WIZARD OIL lot MUSCULAR ACHES .inri PAINS Dut to RHEUMATISM NEURALGIA LUMHACO CHEST COLDS _ IMPLES from aurfaoe condition*j ie«d not bo endured. rMake your skin dearer d smoother with and Resinol ■ . It's smooth sailing whan you’re staying at Tha Claridge, Atlantic City's newest and tallest beach front hotel. Hare you're high above the crowd; yet Just a step from the life and . geyety of the boardwalk. Bmafean Plan: Siagl. bam $4. DoibU froa |6. Abo American Hem. Jesuit V. Maas, Mgr. IN REVIEW' by Olm/icL UJ. Pi • We*tern Newspaper Union. Europeans Are Lining Up, Communists vs. Fascists JUST about everything necessary J to a general European war is now ready. At this distance it seems that Josef Stalin, dictator of Soviet Russia, will oe uie man 10 nre the starting pistol; and he is reported to be convinced that another great con Iflict is unavoidable. The nations of the continent are lining up as Communist or Fascist, either in the constitution of « „ tneir governments Josef Stalin or ^ ttidr active sympathies. The immediate occa sion for their disputes is the civil war in Spain. Nearly all the conti nental governments and that of Great Britain joined in an agree ment of nonintervention, but that pact is about played out. Russia, accusing Portugal, Germany and It aly of aiding the Fascist Spanish rebels, has denounced the agree ment and declared she reserves, freedom to help the Madrid govern ment; the accused nations deny the Soviet charges and retort that Rus sia already has sent many ship loads of war supplies and munitions to the Spanish loyalists. At least three ships, alleged to be Russian and laden with munitions for Ma drid, have been bombed by insur gent planes. Portugal severed diplomatic rela tions with the Madrid government, and the representatives of the two countries were recalled. Dr. Ar mindo Monteiro, Portuguese foreign minister, followed up this action by sending to Lord Plymouth, British chairman of the nonintervention committee, a long document accus ing Russia of having planned and brought about the Spanish civil war. He named the Russian diplomats, agitators and soldiers who, he charged, were directing the opera tions. He alleged that Moscow sought to start a revolution in Por tugal and thus provide a base for attacking General Franco's insur gent forces in the rear. Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy have buried their differences for the time being and reached an agree ment on a united policy. This was outlined in a communique published after Italian Foreign Minister Gale azzo Ciano had conferred with Reichsfuehrer Adolf Hitler. In the first place Hitler and Mussolini in form the world that they intend to recognize the insurgent government headed by General Franco as the legitimate regime in Spain, but they promise to respect the terms of the nonintervention agreement Other important declarations of policy by the two states are: 1. Co-operation to protect the peace of Europe and "the holy riches of European civilization" and family life. 2. Endorsement of a conference to rewrite the Locarno pact guaran teeing European borders, but only in the west This implied that nei ther would agree to Soviet Russia’s presence at the meeting. 3. Co-operation for the rehabilita tion of the Danubian countries. In one clause of the agreement Germany recognizes Italy's sover eignty over Ethiopia. U. S. Submachine Guns for French Fascists? pOPULAIRE, the organ of Pre * mler Leon Blum’s Socialist par* ty, alleges that a shipment of sub machine guns from the United States has been added to the secret armaments of the Croux de Feu in preparation for a civil war in France. The Croix de Feu, a Fas cist organization headed by CoL Francois de la Rocque, was dis solved recently by the government and was succeeded by the new So cial party. Populaire, referring to the sub machine guns, said these “terrible weapons used by American gang sters" arrived from America through the port of Havre and through Holland. The paper added that the weapons are being planted in caches in Normandie and else where in the north of France. Fur thermore, according to Populaire, great quantities of tear gas bombs and tear gas pistols are arriving from Germany for the use of the Fascists. Mussolini Holds "Eternal” Peace Is Absurd PREMIER MUSSOLINI, talking at Bologna, said that Italy's “ol ive branch grows out of an Immense forest of 8,000,000 bayonets”; and next day at Imola he told 70,000 listeners that he hoped for long pe riods of peace, but not for “eternal peace, which is absurd and impossi ble." “The Italian people, which gave its blood for the empire, is ready for any other trial when the crucial hour approaches,” the Fascist chief shouted. “In order to make peace —Just as to make love—it la neces sary that there be two.” Spanish Rebels Pushing Toward the Capital GENERAL FRANCO, head of the Spanish insurgents, ordered the immediate taking of Madrid and each day the state of the defenders of the capital became more desper ate. The rebels closed in relent lessly, making effective use of bombing planes and armored tanks. President Manuel Azana and some of his cabinet ministers slipped out of Madrid and appeared in Barcelona. Ostensibly they were making a tour of the loyalist fronts, but the general opinion was that they had fled from the capital to make a “last stand” in Catalonia, which province always is radical. Anyhow, Azana took over an office in the Catalan parliament building for himself and his secretarial staff. Senora Azana has quit Spain. She appeared in Toulouse, France, and departed for an unannounced des tination. British Government Curbs Oswald Mosley Great Britain is determined to keep out of the Communist Fascist conflict if possible. Sir Os wald Mosley and his black-shirted Fascist followers have been trying to stir up trouble in England and in con- j sequence the cabinet I decided to put a ban i on all political uni forms. It was ex pected that when parliament reassem bled the government w o u i a announce drastic action to suppress the Mosley s,r Oswald organization or at Mosley least to put a stop to its demon strations and parades in Leeds, Manchester and the east end ot Lon don, where these Fascists like to create ugly feeling against Jews. The public demand in England for action against the Fascists has been strengthened by the revelation that Mosley takes his advice from Berlin and Rome. It is reported, and widely believed, that Mosley’s tactics of deliberately leading his Blackshirts into Jewish communi ties are based on advice given him by Paul Joseph Goebels, Hitler’s propaganda minister. Labor Conference Will Assemble on Nov. 9 SECRETARY OF LABOR FRAN CES PERKINS announced that the third national conference on la bor legislation, designed to stimu late the raising of work standards through federal and state co-opera tive efforts, will be called into ses sion in Washington on November 8, and will last three days. Governors of all the states have been asked to send official dele gates including labor commission ers. Private individuals who have special knowledge of labor problems have been invited to attend the con ference. Green’s Big Fortune Moved to a Bank EIGHT armored cars escorted by armed private guards and state police, carried a fortune of $25,000, 000 from the estate of the late Col. E. H. B. Green in South Dartmouth, Mass., to the First National bank of Boston. There it will be stored in vaults until legal actions may be taken to obtain income and in heritance taxes for the state of Massachusetts. The fortune, which consists of the famous coin collection, valued at 5 millions; the stamp collection, valued at 3% millions; a large amount of cash and securities, and a quantity of uncut diamonds, has been under constant guard at the Green home since his death. Supreme Court to Pass on Wagner Labor Act BEFORE taking a recess of two weeks the United States Su preme court announced that it would review and hand down a decision at this term upon the Wagner labor relations act Many lawyers believe this law will be held unconstitu tional, tor in the Gulley coal act de cision the Supreme court held that the relationship between employers and employees was local and beyond the power of congressional regula tion. Browder Not Allowed to Talk in Tampa ERRE HAUTE is not the only * town that refuses to listen to Earl Browder, the Presidential can didate of the Communist party. Browder went to Tampa to deliver a campaign speech but as he began talking a group of men violently broke up the meeting and upset the speaker's stand. Ti$p leader of the attacking crowd denied that r their action was sponsored by any organisation, saying “We are lust a group of red-blooded American Senator James Couzens of Michigan Dies TAMES COUZENS, Independent Republican senator from Michi igan, died in a Dtroit hospital after a long illness and immediately following an operation to relieve uremic poisoning. He was-sixty-four years old. Mr. Couzens was one of the wealthiest .men in congress, his riches being a result of early as sociation with Henry Ford in the automobile business. He was twice elected mayor of Detroit and was appointed to the senate in 1922 to fill out the unexpired term of Sen ator Truman H. Newberry. As a senator he frequently disregarded party lines, and since the election of President Roosevelt he had sup ported many New Deal measures. Before the recent primary he an nounced that, though a candidate for renomination as a Republican, he intended to support Mr. Roose velt for re-election. This was an act of political suicide, and he was defeated by Wilbert M. Brucker. Supporter of Chiang Slain in Hankow General yang yung-tai, governor of Hupeh province and one of Dictator Chiang Kai shek’s strongest supporters, was assassinated in Hankow by a Chi nese youth. Yang was a close associate of Chiang Kai-shek and for some time was his personal secretary. He was appointed civil governor of Canton in 1920 and earlier was associated with President Sim Yat Sen. He Whs appointed governor of Hupeh prbvince last December. Foes of Alcoholism Meet in Pueblo ' ■ 'HE first Mexican national con * gress against alcoholism opened its sessions in Pueblo, and the first address was delivered by Josephus Daniels, the American ambassador, who during his tenure as secretary of the navy ordered all alcoholic liquors removed from American ni val ships. On the first day of the convention all liquor stores through out Mexico were closed by order ui wc K^vciuiuem. Zephyr Train Sets New World Speed Record SETTING a new world’s long dis tance train speed record, the Burlington railway’s streamlined steel Denver Zephyr made a non stop run from Chicago to Denver in 12 hours 12 minutes and 27 sec onds. The distance is 1,017 miles, so the average speed was 83.4 miles an hour. Alter crossing the Colo rado border the train hit its top speed of 116 miles an hour, which was maintained for. one mile. Belgian Fascists Plan March on Brussels BELGIAN Fascists, known as Rexists and led by Leon Deg relle, clashed with the police in Brussels and Degrelle was jailed for a night He said tire motive of his demonstration was to show that ex-soldiers were backing the Rex ists, and he announced that he would carry out his threatened “march on Brussels’’ with 150,000 followers and overthrow the gov ernment Labor’s Quarrel May Be Handled at Convention PEACE within, the ranks of the American Federation of Labor has not yet been achieved, for the executive council of that body ad journed without settling the dispute between the Green and Lewis fac tions. The council will meet again November 14 in Tampa, and two days later the federation will open its annual convention in that Florida city. If there are developments meanwhile, the council or federa tion may discuss the quarrel, ac cording to President Green. He said: "The matter is temporarily dosed,” and added that so far as he knew, no peace overtures had been made by the CIO leaders. Mr. Green declared the ten suspended unions could not be admitted to the convention. Indictment of Five Is * Echo of Lindbergh Case AN AFTERMATH of the Lind bergh kidnaping case is the indictment of Ellis H. Parker, chief of detectives of Burlington county, N. J.; his son and three other men by a federal grand jury at Newark, N. J. The indictment charges the defendants took possession of Paul H. Wendel in New York, forced hiss to confess that he kidnaped Charles A. Lindbergh, Jr., and held him in New Jersey while revisions were made in the confessions as the older Parker ordered. President Questions Engineering Schools IT WAS announced at the White House that President Roosevelt had written to heads of 100 schools and colleges throughout the country asking the educators to determine whether courses at engineering schools are so "balanced" as to give students the necessary “vision and flexible technical capacity.” The “impact” of science on hu man life produces social disloca tions as well as advances in pro ductive power, he held. He men tioned "unemployment, bankrupt cies and relief.” The engineer, he said, has a responsibility to help design “mechanisms to absorb the shocks of the impact of science." Wives, Know Yourselves!-— Accurate Analysis Will Do Much to Overcome Difficulty in Wedded Life C PEAKING on the question of ° trial marriages, a well known writer said, “There should be no need for trial when two people know their own abilities and have measured themselves accurately. Two people who understand them selves will never, I believe, have any difficulty living happily to gether after marriage." That is a new slant on the ques tion of success in marriage, sup plements a woman writer of na tional fame. Not “Know thy hus band” —or “wife,” but “know thyself!” And, come to think of it, isn’t most of the discontent and dissat isfaction in marriage traceable to ideas of ourselves—that may be misconceptions, no less than our illusions about the other person? How many women’s dissatisfac tion with their husband has as its source the thought of all they gave up to marry him, all they “might have had” if they had married a certain other man? How many Women’s discontent with the role of wife and mother springs from the thought of how much more fascinating pastimes they might have had if they had followed that career? How many girl’s impossible ex pectations of a fulltime lover and Prince Charming originates in an exaggerated notion of their own devastating beauty and charm? Two Impressions of the Loveliest Things A school teacher put this ques tion to a group of children: “What are the loveliest things you know, persons not counted?” Here is the list of one girl: The scrunch of dry leaves underfoot, the feel of clean clothes, climbing up hill and looking down, hot wa ter bottle in bed. Here is one boy’s list: The feel of running, looking into deep clear water, a swallow flying, water be ing cut at the bow of a boat, an express train rushing, a builder’s crane lifting something heavy, the mounted policeman’s horse, the feel of a dive, a thrush singing.— Stanley High. If all discontented wives would look deeply unto themselves, measure themselves, stop fooling themselves, many might discover that the other man they might have married is a self-nurtured illusion; that the career of their dreams is not a soft snap and a joy forever; but a grueling, ex hausting job which might have worn them out if they had quali fied for it, which they probably would have been unable to do; that they themselves are neither devastating beauties nor always charming, but women who are frequently disappointing and diffi cult to live with. They might dis cover and admit to themselves that they are greatly in debt to their husbands for many things that make life easier and better and more worthwhile—that they would not get along so well with out them. Then they might think more of doing their part of trying to make those husbands happy. And that effort on the part of one mast in evitably go a long way toward a mutually happy and successful marriage. e Bell Syndicate.—WN U Service. Mine Rescue Methods More than 963,000 persons have been trained in first-aid and mine rescue methods under the super vision of the safety division of the bureau of mines. Since the es tablishment of this service such training is estimated to h a v a saved 665 lives. ATONE STATE! CLABBER GIRL BAKING POWDER Fill BOB JOINS THE RANGERS / , I'M 9riLL lCONSIV€RlN6 YOU Fqp. THAT , JOB A$>o*£?r| 1g/»WOBR, BoB. J BUT THESE {rums take 1 TIME, you KNOW! AW--that's what YOU SAID ZEFofief gg done with ' heV stalling! He KNOWS He VoeSNT heeoahy MORE MeN — HE'S -N6ERS f6crr two .HOW - (ORA . L*gDg HOW CAN X BE PATIENT WHEN MY HEADACHES AIL THE TIME ? X HAVEN'T RAD 6000 NIGHTS SLEEP ~OR A WEEK / HIS HEAD WOULD ACHE/Tbp—XF HE EVER TRIED (RTSS' «»■ ASLEEP TOR S SOUND LIKE PHYSICALLY WHAT Pass your pocnrt AW-HE SAID I'VE ? GOTOOFFEE-NERVES ! ■TOLD ME TO CUT OUT AND SWITCH COPPBE ANV *swm> TO THE RULES THE YEAR THEY „ K/jeED HIM! J OH, ALL EIGHT— I'LL TRY IT! J CANT FEEL ANY mm*# ferjrZUKSESi if SWITCHING WANT TO adviHep—THEN SEE ME AMIN ^ At OUT THAT eg ta JO*! J-Jr TALL TIMBER' air JO PAY5 LATER YOU I’M STARTING THE TOVGHE9T irr IN % NGE ON THE OBI RESERVE « mw/ Or COURSE, children should never drink rofiss. And many grown-ups, too, find that the rmtbi*, in coffee disagrees with them. If you have vrn1iirTit« or indigestion or can’t sleep soundly...try Postum. It contains no ceffisin. It is simply whole wheat sad bran, toasted and slightly swaatanod. You may miss coSee at first, but after SO days you’ll love Postum for its own rich, satisfying flavor. Postum comas in two forma Postum Cereal, the kind you boil, and Instant Postum,'made instantly in the cup. Either way It is easy to make, delicious, economical, and may prove a reed help. A product at General Foodie FR B j—Let us send yea your am week's supply e<
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Nov. 5, 1936, edition 1
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