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Show ) ' f \ THE MIDVALE JOURNAL October 5, 1928 • ... . KNOWS IT • Dur!ng a heat "are u magistrate was di~eussiug with u fe'' dub friends ti1e QUl'slion of summer til inks. unci he admitted that he d;tl uot ktww nf a good thirst qnl'nclter. "Have you tried gin nnd ginger· beerT' askPd one of the g"'up. "Nn; hut I'\'P tried man~ pc,ople who was haYe,·• the r(•~Jponse.-Gias~ow Enning Citizen. DEEP DESIGNING 1-l're,iclPnt and Mrs. Coolld~e at the graw of their son, Calvin, Jr., at .Plymouth, Vt. 2-Storm rcfu!(e~s In Florida rcceh lng allotments of clothing from :Miami fire department members. 3-Cnpt. Sir George H. Wilkins (second from right) lind members of llis expedition thut sailed on the Southern Cross for the Antarctic. I NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS I Mabel Willebrandt's Hoover Speeches Create a ~tir Help Storm Victims. By EDWARD W. PICKARD ~lABEL \\"lLLEDlU:\Jl'l', attutney general of ~tate~. wa~ the ~tot·m cen· ter of t11e [wliticul camp:tign la't week, and 'If she enjo~·s [IUI·Iicitr ~he muKt have hall the time uf her life lor she fairly nowtleu the .:undiuutes thew· seh es oiT the front page. :\Irs. \\'ille· bmndt has eBpc'l'ial ciuuge of the go,·· ernment'ti lt>gnl proc~cdiugs against dry law \iolator, und already had In· curred Ute enmity of wet New Yorkers 11 ho resmted the raiding of night clubs and silniln1· doing,. ThPn she blarted ont to m~l{e ~P''""hes for :llr. llooyer and one of hc•r first eiiort~ In this line "ns uu adell'< ss to a big 1\!ethodist g:11 h e l'in~ In Ohio in which she urgPd tlu1t all uwmbers of that churel1 ~lwulli get to;,;ethcr to help in the dl'feat of AI SmiLh. Tl~:tt ;!cntle· man anll l"OUntlc:; ti others iuunediately accuol'!l l1er of atta('!,ing ldm on re· lig:iou~ ~r ..nJnds, and Ut.._lre \Yrre numer· OUS d1~muntJH that she lie S<'!J'!l'lltell from her ;;o' c•rnment jub and al>o that she be taken fr·om the litit of accrell· A un1que engraving made to llluS· ited lt<·r u!Jiimn fpellbinders. Some of t~te an Italian poem by G~iliano the IIooyerites Hecnu•li to be• fearful Dato, printed In Florence in 1493, Ie~t she iJPcome the female Doctor shortly after Colunobus' return. From Burchard of the camp.tlgn. a factimile of the original in the Grit. Dcclinin;,; to retract or modify any ieh Museum, reproduced in the Yale her· utterance>, .\Irs. Wille'-!ru•l<lt us· of University Press "Pageant of Amer ohe had a.ked the ~Iethodists to serted 1 ica." oppo'e Rmith on the ground of his __m--cr_e_J_y_t_o__R__p_a_rt__o_f_t_h_e__fn-,.-®: views on prohibition untl had made no mention of his religious beliefs. She LhP nose or around the eyes; with otlu•r!i himself was trying to 1 said Smith it extendE"<l to the whole body and g':.i V"e j his O\\ n church," ond bt•hind "dotlge them a wild and fantastic flppearnn ·e-. Thctr complC').:ion was ot a ta\\ ny or 1 furthermore that the Democratic can· c-oppf>r hue, and they were entir~l} 1 didate was the one who bad made dE>:8titnte of be-ard~ Their h:ur wa!1 n.;t prohibition an Issue of the campaign. ~ri~p~rl, lil;:e the rec·ently d:sroverPd ~ ~rlbes nf the Afrif'an coast, under the- 1 Congt•essman Walter Newton of ~lin· <::nnw latltudP, but Rtralght nnd con.nt-, neRota, c-hairman of the ltepublicao partly cut sll"";rt above the ear~ . tu~t spl'nkers' uureau, statrd that Mrs. ~ome loc-J.:.:;, were left lonf!" bchin(} nr d Tlt•ir Willebrantlt was SJlPnl-ing uncll•r the f~ll'ng upon their should•rs. au,pites of ll1at l>lll'l'ilU anti that de· f~.:aturc~~. though ol,srured nncl dl~fi~ urec1 by pnint, were agreeable: thPY mauds for her, 11'0lll e' cry pmt of had lofty foreheads and remarkably ~!idtlle \\'est, were fur more titan the fine ey('s. They wcr<' or moderate stat~ ure o.lu1 well·shapprl; nH1!-<t of them she could till. HS. a~'hwnt M the L'nitl'd kt~r-. e d knee~. CTOI~l':H •l:t,v set 9 A11~crieans 11hieh n~idP Is 1:! llonnrill!! lhP ~~':{J'·~t41 r::PlllOI'j' uf tfi(l (;;?IIOt-'!-'€1 sniJor who is u1 aoq for· 1 nnin-rsally hPin~ erl·llit~•cl with ~~~nsl'on~re>r" thP of tile :\ew 1\"ol'id •nd in IWl'llt~ ·till'Pf> Sl 11 1 l'S UJJ!un-.\ rlatu~as. (\II ifot·nin. lllllli'Jlfi<>CPJJIJPttieut, Del.! wa I'P, Itla lio ltidiut:n, K:illsns. Kentu< i{.\' und, Massn!'husc·!ts, .\li, hi~:Hl ~~~''•""'' ~lonlana, !'\PI\ .Terse~·. 1\l'w 01\lalwma, PPnn<::y1vania. l!hiH!,_. 'l'exas,. Vel'lnont and \Va~hitt~ <'olumuos day Is u IP~al IH,Jirla,v Most of us know somathin~: nlo.o•!l fur th!: stcu·~· of his life of Its rlaunlft•ss ·•m re<'ord the which di'OI'!' him on In SJiite (If disappoinlmenls and dis,·uura;!+' until suc<•ess cume to nim ttnl.l end In pol'erty und failure, is onP the most romuntlc and ot tilt• "''m" one of lhf! most tl'll!:k in the nn But what of thF of m:mklnd. IRtnr1r·n:1uking event itself, tilt> un of which we nre nhuut I•• again? !low l'iPar u pldnrf> lta\·e of what took plac·e on Oetolwr day, 4:lfl years ago? For. of the millions of 1\ord• thnt hal'" w•·fttf·n about Chrl~tophN I 'ol ond his voyuges of di~•·m· .. rv the pust four <'l'nturles, thel'e Is whleh paints till' s<·Pnt> wni'P than do the worcls of l•n AIL!'!' a~:n. and mocl·•m has found hut little to In thl' record us It I~ set duwn Wnshlngton Irvin~ In his "Life nne! of Colnmhus." a hundred yPars was on ~'riday mornln!( the 12th Octol>er, that Columbus first beheld New World As the day clnwneo before him a le'Vcl isl!ind ee•·· leagues In extent, RIH1 c'OVt•rP.<l trees l!ke a continual orl·h:-trd apparently uncultiv:tt(·d, It \'\:J~ for the inhab1tnnts were Sf"t·n rr.1m atJ parts of the woods nntl g tQ the 8hore. They were pPrnakP.d, and, as they f:tond Knz the ships, appeared hy tllPI' ctlto/..f',,. and gestures to be lo~t In oonntocnment, Columbus made sigr1al ships to cast anC'hor, and be manned and RfmPd tt-1 ... £-1." his own boat, richly ntt1ro•d In et, and hid1ng: the royal stnnd·u d, Mattin Alonzo Pinzon, anrl \'1- Yanez, his brother, put ol'r In In their boats, each v. ilh n r of the enterprise a grf'cn t'rns~. emiJI~zoncd hnv1ng on ell'Jer the letters F and Y the Initial• r;a~•tllinn monarC'hs, £<~t-fn1ndo Ysabel, surmounted by <'rtl\\'11! 1'\P aoprorll'hefl fhP ~horf", C<IIUna· who was dl!po~l'd for all kll';"'rJ~ the agreenble lmp.[esslon~. \\'"'" rl1 ll~ht· w th the p11r1ty and suo• 1ty or tho the ('rystaJ tran~pnH.·nc·~. sea, and the P.Xtraorfin1.1r~ He hehcld. or tha vegetntlun lta of an unknown kind llp~tn tr~P~ which ove:rhunh the ls.nding he threw hlm~c~lt flhore:;~ on h.~ C0Ium bLIS ' Story LOSt \\'ben Columbus return:•tl to SpHin the New World, he stopped on ry 14, 14!13, at Sunta Murin, •me tht Islands of the Azores, Jlrubahly take water. f'our dass IJpfure thl~ had encoWJtered 8 most terrific and was convinced tlwt he, his and hla vessels mu~t p~t·ish. Now Columbus realized In his hPfll"t he. was geln~t b>icl< to Spnln with of a ,lfSC.'OVei'J 8P<·••n<l In lm thanl~s the earth, and returnf1l or to Uod \\'Jth tears joy. £:xamnle was fullo\ved hy the v.·ho:::ce hc,nts indcl'd overflowed the san;e feelJr.gs of gratitude. th~n b.1s Colum~ risint:,, drf'W his swo r d, clJS· the plnyerl HIS rL.st, 'nth royal nod ~tandatd, a3- scmUlihS rl)und hhn the two c tHalns, '.\'i1h ltodrtgo de E )('00('{!•1, Mt.1ry of the arm.tment, Hr.dr i r~o Sanchf'z, ntHl th::. re~t who had Ia nllf!'d, he toolt solemn pof'Er.:o ~ ,on in the name of the Ga.stllian f'••\'Preig,ll!\ g,\·ing t'"'"' l~J.:J~U tl.c n:une ot f:.~n !:ial\'2d,,r Ba•,ing cDm pl•ed with. the rcQuir:te fpr:r;s nnd t...-cremon eA, he ('nllrd upon a 1 l prNwnt to take the oath of olJ e U.icnre to him, reprf':E:Pntln~ a~ adm.r: I and viceroy, the p4 r~on~ of the ~overc!gns Thl:' fH:lmgs of the ~rew now hur~t torth in the tno~t extr1.vag ..tnt lt::n~ They• had rec Pntly consltlrred purts. thems.Pives devoted men, hurrying forw:trd to dt:structJOn; lhf'Y now IonlcPU upon thern~clvt::; as fu\•orttes of fortun(\ and them~elves gn\'1~ up t9 the They thron ~o:el mc::.t tinhoundtd joy the ndm1ral w1th. o\·crflnwm;.;: ze::~J, some embrncing him, other, kls~ i'1g- h1::~ hands ThPRe ·who had bePn dur . n~ mo~t mutinous and turhulent the voyage \Ve-re now moRt devote-d around. and ent-husmf;ti" S~1me hegged f:.l \'OrS ot him as if he alrend:r l1:1d wenllh and ho'nor~ w his g1ft. Mnny abject spirlt.i, who had outra&ct1 him br their lnsol('n,·e, 'lfJW crourhcd o.t h ts tJegh'.ng pardon for nil lite trouble f('PI , th~• nnc1 promising tht• Ullndest olJ~dienc-e for the future The nat i \'e~ of the iSland, \\ h<':n, at the dawn of dny. they b:td beheld tiH ship~ hoVf•ring on the1r co ..1st, bad sup IJG~l!d them monr.tl·rs whkh hitd lf'Snt>d 'rom the det>p dur;ng the ni;-rht ThC'y caU b\.'d had h1111 haU croweled to the bca<·h and wat" hPd th~1r mov~m·.!nt:-: with awful anxiety Their vef'ring nbout, npJ):-lrently Wtth ~ out tffnrt. and the Hhifting and furling of th£-ir sail!'l, resemUl1ng huge \vings, \Vhen filled them \\ ith u.stonl~hnwnt thf'Y behl•ld tl1dr bontR nnlJrc~ach the Rhore, and a number of ~trange be· in:;s clad 1n gl1ttering ~tN 1. or raJrncnt of var.ous colon, lazHl•ng upon the b•ach, lhey fled In aiTri,..ht to the li'Jnding, however, that th~ru woods. was no attempt to pursue or molert them, Uwy grnrlually recovPrtd from thc!1 t('rtor, nnd approached tlw SpAnlards with gr~~tt nwe, frequently prnstratmJ; themselves on the earth, and mhking- g,gtJs of <ldorntlon. During the ceremornPs or taking pos~eRsion, they remain('d gazing in timid adm1rnt1on at the tomplexlon, the beards, the shining nrn~or, and splcnd'd tlre~R of the Spanl:tnls. The admiral particularly attr:lrted th~ir ntte11tion, ftom his com mand,ng he·~·lt, h1s air of authority, h1~ dre-s~ of f!carlet, nnd the deferencn whi!'h was pa; i him by his companions; all whil'h pointed hirn out to he thP ~ummander When they bnd still further recovered from their fears, thes 'he Spani;:urh, touthl'd JvpronC"tu•d their he:1rds, and examined their hat.d-: and fare~, admiring their whitene5is t..:vlumhu"' wns ptealllcd with their gentlenC's~ and confiding ~lmp1iclty, arul suffered the!r E<<'rUllny w1th perfect actpnet-:<'en('e, wlnmng theLn by hL!!: benl.,o:;tllt\ 1 hey now tupposed that the •hip' h~d sailed out of the cr)•tal firman,ent whkh hounded thelr horizon, ur had d~sr.ended rrom above on thE:"Ir ample wmg~. and that these mat velous being"~ wert! lnhnblt:tnts of th" ekle~ The 'laUves of the Island were no less obje<'lM of curJO~dty to the Spnn- mrds. aqfering, as they did, f1 orn a 1y rnre of men they had ever seen. Tneh flTIPPamnc-e vnve no promise of e1thcr w~alth 0r <'ivl1tzntion, for they n·ere eutirely nnlted, anti painted ·with a \.ariety of colors. With eome It Wft!- I portam·<> to no other. And when It lhnt his shlp would sink ut nn'· mOJlll'nt he set to work to make a r~ord of his mighty undertaking hoop· lng that b,v some will of the Fnte~ It would not he lost to posterity. IN> he carpfnlly pt•epnred as com plete 811 account of l1ls manel,ms vo,voge as was pn~sible under the dr· He wrote the details cumAtnnres. of his journey on a stout pit'ee of parchment, wrapped It carefully In a pleee of waterproof cloah, then pia red It In ao Ironbound barrel and threw S('PlllPcl 1 SUPPOSE I TI-IIJJJ<S WERE GOIJJ<i '1b srr AROUIJD AJJD WAI'T 'Tl/...L SI-IE OOMES HOM£ I=IZOM BRIDGE CJ.UB:.liJE'U.. FOOL J.IER. BY EATIIJG TilE AT ~,.r,.-n-ft-ne_d j I or i ·tge; ·thPre was Out one frmalP wHl them, (1U!te young, nuk('d l1ke her l:Om~ j OYEHl\Olt SMITH, in the cour~e panions, hut he-aut1fully formed of his We~teru tour, spoke at A9 r.olumbu~ suppoflrd hlm~r:lt to • in adroeacy of u!Jsolute go1·· Denver have bnUcd on an isln.nd 1tnd nt th ... :\tlllenrcd to be under thirty YNirS G extremitY nt lrdia, he called the nn· tiVf'!<i by thr gcnrrn.l appell:~lion of In. dinns, \'l.'hl<'h "as univer~ally ndopted Oefor~ the true n:1tur£> of h ~ dlsroverv w.u~ lcnn'vn, and has since been extenderl If' ul1 the abnrigin~ls of the Nf'w "'nrlr! The tle tsl~nders Tht'lr were friendly and gen- (·nly nrm~ wPre lances, hardenool nt the end by ftre, or pointed wtth a flint. or the teeth or hone of a 'rh<'re was no iron to be se~n. nor dHl tht•Y Sflpcar a<'quainted with It~ oroperties, for, when a rlra\Vn ~word wa~ P"<'Sentcd to them they unguanlf"dlv took it by the edge Columbus Jt~tributed n.mong tnPm colorPd <'aps, glass bends, llawks' bellj;!, fl.~h. nnd other trine•, such as the Portu~ucse were arrustomcrl to trade with among. the nations or the gold const ?f A fnca. They received them eag-erly, ernmeut o" nerslti!J and control of the naturul watPr [HI I' cr re:;ources of the I country and for imm<'liiute action in the conHtruction of l.loultler canyon dam. Tnen he mor<'d up through Wyoming to ~lontunu antl in llelena devoted most of his udclrc's to the Teapot Dome scantlal und the alleged r·esponsiflillty of tbe Hepnbllcan party therefor. The chiefs of the SeYCn In· dian tribes of the state made him a member with thij na111e "Leading Star." 'l'uming back towartl the east, he passed through I'lorth Dakota, where the political ~iluatlon 18 pe· culiarly ~Om[llicated, and during a 'b.· f stop in Bi"murck he was chris· I I ue I tt-ncd , . The lsl".o1 where Columbus had thus upon "Chief Chargm~ Hawk' by the Sioux. 'l'hur~day night he SllOke In St. Paul on a ,·ariety or topiC'~. and · \\" d tl t l 1sconsm 1e next day 1e en er·~ tangle. It WDR believeo that in his ~Iilwaukce addre~s Iw migl1t take up b' ·t 0 f prohlhltion hitherto tl1 tho New World was called by the nalives Guanahane. lt still retains the qame of San Salvador, whl<h he gave It, though calle-1 by the J·:nglish Cat Island. The oight which he had seen the evening previous to hi• makln~; land may have been on Watling's 1•- Ignored du1·ing the tour. Sume days before Senator Rlaine of \\'i~con~ln had completed his ftop hy announcing . · . . hiS mtentlon to vole for !:'tmth. Ik~ publirun Jeuders 8aicl this amounted to little 8 ince Blaine never hac! b~en east San Salvador is one of tho great cluster of the Lurayos or Dahama f•· lands, whrch stretrh oouthoa•t antl n real ltepu!Jllr-nn. hung the beads round their necks, nnrl were wonderfully pleased with their f~nery, and with the s~und or th• bells. 1 oe StMmacds rematnrd all day on shore, 1 efrf"f:h tng them!=:elv<'s nfter their anxious voyage amid the beautiful ~trove' of the island rflr the first t1me, spt hHt foot land, which lies n few lengues to the north west, from to Hi•paniola the coa~t of Floridd It lntu the raging oceun. nut the Fut"s were ldntiC'T to Coluu1bus than to thl• account made in a tlme of stress. Certnlnl,. this, the tlrst record of Amt>rlca, written hy the brave hund of Columbus, woultl fle the tnost pre· cions relle fn all the chronlr!Ps of our country. Alas, that It ne,·er has bf'(>n found ! And If I thought there wer~ one chance Ia a million of finding It I would take my power boat, the First Folio, and cruise In the nel!(hhnrhuod of the Ar.ores forever !·-R. W. Rosen bach In the Saturday Evenlni P(111 e ' su JeC' St>nator Borah of lcluho was the big gun of the flepubllean speaking bat· . tery durmg thP week and his loudest explosion was in Kansas 'City, where In lively fashion he contrasted Smith's record and knowledge of the farm problem with that of Hoover, violent· Jy assailed the equalloo.tion fee, and blew up the charge that Hoover was responsible for the lnwerlng of the price of wheat dur'inJ the war. He also defPnded the Eighteenth amelHl · ment and paid his disre~pects to Tam· many. W ITH the approval of Prl'sldent Coolidge, S\'<·retary of State Kel· Jogg sent Identic not.-s to Great BrltV.n \"il Fr•n"" <Pt11ng forth our VOU KJ.JOv.l 'lOUR ETIOOETrE, J PRESUME government's attitude toward the na1·ul limitation agreement reached by those two nations. The contents of the notes were not mulle public, but It was understood that they stated the British · and l~rench sug:;estlons could not be accepted hy the United States as a basis for nm·al limitation, 'l'he and pointed out the n•ason. American objectlnn to the Anglo· Fren<'h ng•·eement was tersely ex· pressed by the London Dally News when it said: "It gl\·cs Grt>at Britain unlimited small cruisers, France un· limited small submarines, and giles America nothing she wanted. It i~ almost too crurle to be true." Dis· patches from London insist there are no ~ecret clauses In the agreement. t\ome or tlie French papers are in· di~;nant Ol'er the American opposition to the pact, saying England und France are hl'ld sla,es of the United ~tales !Jy tht>ir war tlebts. having W ITHOUT progre-s toward much the assembly of the League of Nations cnd~d its fall sessiou. AIDJoot it~ last act was to pa~s a resolution that the dbarnwment )H'eparntory commi,,ion shoulcl meet again not later than January 1. No mention was made in It of any plan for a general disarm· nment conference, and Germuny and Hungary refuocd to vote after Count von nernstorfl' had made a bitter ~pccch chiding the league for· It; slow· ness ur,d as~et·ting that Germany was heltrless and <urrouudcd fly hea,·ily armed neighuors. At lhc final session the earl of Lytton, speaking for In· diu, warned the league that while it was firmly estaulished In Europe, its position In Asia was not a~sureu. Costa Ilica, "hich re:'l~ned from the league in Hl:.!5, gan! notice that it would rejoin. made ui~urmament, the United States. According to a statement issued by him, he will follow the policy of the late PresidcntBlect Alvuro Obregon In the uplift of tlte peasantry, encouragement of irrigation and exten.ion of schools it, the rural districts and mountains. He will wo1·k to incorporate the Indians, which form 50 per cent of the population, Into the body of the nation. He will f(o along the lines laid down by While organized President Calles. labor will not be repre~ented In the cabinet, he will, nevertheless, extend u helping hand to lhe labor unions as part of the gm·emment policy to uplift the laboring ma~ses. "'Yh:Jt btl\ e .rou agaiHst tue i" 1 'Xothing-, 11 said ~rr. Cnmrox. u1 think I should Jil;e you f<ll' a son-lulnw ." ''Tiien why did you forbid your daughter to see mr't' "I \\'flUted to Introduce an element of romance thnt would lndute her to d('fy ms \\'islles and concentrate oD a ynnn!: fpllnw for whnm I rPall,v have n high rPgurd."-Washington Star AMONG THE MASONS • • WATEHIVAI'S COflPORA· I :\'LAND lion, In an nwlication tiled with the interstate commerce commrssioo, proposf.'s extension of the go\·eromeot barge line~ sen·ices on the ~lississippl and Warrior rivers to all parts of the country through the establishment of joint barge und rail rates and barge and rail through routes. The corporation's aplJiiCUtiOll first askS the COm· mis~ioo to declare that the sen Ices of the barge lin~s ure a public con· venience and necessity for expansion of the sen Ices to the tributaries of the Mississippi, including the Illlnots waterway \'irtually every railroad in the country is named In the part ot the applic·ation asking the es tablish· ment of through routes and joint rates. Joint barge and rail rates 20 per cent lower than nil-rail rates between ~llccltled points are sought by the corporation, that being the basis on which exis ting barge and rail rates are generall • made. Nicaraguans go to the polls W onilE:-/November 4 to elect a Presi- ''John nus !lie gri(ope,' "Hope he won't ~:et the pussword as well." Joy of Contest If eve rJ thmg we ut IJh: t:zy t\n<J F'o rtunt> tn ' •dt' no s l ps, Life 1-\ o1.!rl lH;t alJ so easy~ 'l'h erf''d be no Ch a mp10n~hips • Dozed on Her Job l'oli"ellillll-llow did the ucd<lent IHI JlPPtl ? ~lniol i't :Ill wilt• 1<·1 1 usil'e[! in the ba Ck SP:I I Following the Sun Cr:1wtor<l I~ .-.thli< k n•all~ •>hill!:C<t to 1r:l\d 'sn rtiuc·h ( 'nil"l""v 1\'h~ . yi'S; he pta..vs ~ult the year rnun<l. dent every voter will be ma1·ked on tile band with n chemical stain as he casts his ballot In order to prevent lrresi:;tible EIIAlllLITATI0.:-1 is now the great repeating. To avoid misunderstand'So aJame l!:i' tin,lli.l llC~<' J)tPcl lhat task in Florida and l'orto Hico ings the election buard, beaded by \'Ull tlg IU \\'~ P1' 1'' and the job is In the bantls of the Gen. I•'runk L. JllcCoy, U. S. A., Is- 1 "Yps, ~lw HH.\'S ~lie c•uttld nu lunger Hed Cross, as is that of feeclin:; the sued a statement explaining that the resist the powPt of utt<,nH•y.'' An lm· chemical was harmless and the stain thousand~ of ~torm sufferers. mcnse sum Is heing raifrd by popular will disappear wltbin a day or two. Lipstick sub,criptlon for these purposes. In Au election oftlcial said malicious ile- l.et'• ki" ntH1 nt:1l,~ up. Florida the dead are now estimated to agenls are spreading reports among If )·ou ' ll I1P \PrY carPfnl Rite wlJI Americans the that Indians the them of most 2,300, than more number won "t IIPPrt to in rhe rrgiun about T,al;e Okeechobee, . use a chemlf'al that will poison the where the dikes broke down and the ,·oters. Other alleged threats to hln· An Oasisatic Discovery waters were driven over the !anti. <ler the voting are rumors that the The exact number never will be Amerif'ans eat children, and that the •Pa. wtwn \\'Ht"> t 'uha di:st·uvcred ?" known·. Heports indicated that the Sandinistas will attack the booths, or .,,J 111 y 1. Hll H rn .\ S('D ' ' white death list was about TOO. The kill tho~e registering or voting. • tlunger of pestilence made it neces· POOR F'ELLOW sary to burn most of the hodiPs as 1\ 11~m. GAXNA WALSKA, opera soon as they were found. The- Porto 1V singer and the wife of Harold It'. lti('ans WNC reportetl to be In pitiful ~lcCormick of Chica~o. is an Ameristate. There were more than 15,000 can citizen, despite her residence in cases of influl'nzo, nnd malaria, mPa· I'rance, anti will have to pay duty on sles and other discuses prevailed jewelry anti personal effects which among the refugees. The homeless on are said to be valued at -about $2,fi00,the Island are stated to number 000. '!'his ruling was matle by Philip R • t 28·1 ,000. I:Jting, coiJector of the port of New Probably l.iO person~. lnclutling York, who told Henry D. Bulldey, atchilclreu, perblied when the big Nm e· torney fo1· Mademoiselle Walska, 'that dudes tlreater in 1\!a<lrid, Spaio, ber· claim to foreign re~idence and • burned. 'J'he fire startt><l on thP ~tage consequent immunity from duty had and the tragprly closely res!'mhled the bel'n denied. Bulkley immediately t.J.o:squllo Yuu 1onk Sid< burning of the Iroquois theater In · made plans to appeal nod will, If necFro~ - Yes. I fpeJ lll;e I 11111 going to Chicago years ago. The flames spread essary, curry the matter to the United '"CJ OUl\ !" the through the huRiness district of States Customs court and the Court city, tlestro)·lng many buildings. of Customs Apppal. Not So Dumb l<'ive villages in the Hate of Coa· A dumiJ ll~ll {h~) call a lluilia, 1\lexico, were swept away by I'IOTIH;R "air derby," this time Cui• I lilt thingtloods and many Jh·es were lost. 'l'lle But Rht>'Jil not tw dumb shP from Los Angeles to Cincinnati, Chinese city of llnnkow was the scene Can't get a ring wns pulled off last wee it. First place of a tremendous couflar;ration that in class A was won fly Hobert A. destroyed thou~an<ls of huildiu;,;s und L.iving on Some One Else Dml;e of Pittsburgh, Pa .. and In class an unknown numher or lh es. The n by ChnrlPS IV, llolmnn of St. l'uul. Oa\\ ~ un- llu\\ loll~; will yuu remain old ~[lunish fort of f'ahrel"izas Rajas Arthur Goc•lwl, flying his "Yankee nPre at l'alm B~·ad1? on a hill allc"·e 1\Ielii:a, Morocco, was Donclle" plane, won the nonstop race I lt> Br·nke-As lnng us my mon•·y d!'molished fly nn e~:ploslon of the IHStS. in 15 hours ancl 17 minutes. powder magazine and scores of lives l>a\\son (wllu lias luuncd him ~;lU) were lost. i'hPn you mu~t have IPft some tlwe IIIXESN Nationalists In Rhanghil ago. unoOidnlly announced that tiJPy )IILIO I'OI:TJ•;s GIL, secr.etary of the interior, wns elected pro' ision· hud practically compiPtt'd the reorHe "Got By" ul l'resiclcnt of i\lexieo fly a jo:nt ses· J:'anization of the system of govern· DMI-ilom <lid _you t'UIIIe out with sion of the senate and chamher of mcnt. eliminalinr; the previous Soviet 1·our exu rns? Husfrom borrowed was which form. deputit>s, without opp,);ition. lie will t\on I'H""cd em Just lil-e they were new scheme, General take oftice on Decem~Jer l, when Pres· sia. Under the ,., r• n hru d. f:(OV· Nationalist the head will Chiang !dent Calles' term expires. '£he eon· ernment council, hi3 posi'ion being gress also ordered that a popular His Way-Right or Wrong to that of President or presimilar Presidential election shOlllcl be held UtH'Ie l£tl- \\'ell . .Johnny, how du you mier. on the tl:i:·u Sunday of November, Gen. Pal Chun~·h<l reported from <!Jell girufft>? l!l2!l. that he had Johnny- G·i·r·u·f·e. Senor Portes Gil will be one of the northern Chlhli province the of remnant a defeated completely Unc·Je-The dktlonnry sp<'IIR It wltb 1 few l'resitleots Mexico has e,·er had rwo f's Chihli·Shantun!( troops nnd that Gen. ot exclusively clvili~.n career, being Chang Chung-chung had fled, presum: .Johnny- "-'ell. sou us ked me how 1 devoid ot any active military experi· in area leased Japanese the to ahly Unc·le. ··pelled, Untll selectetl by President ence. Maochurio. Calles for his cabint•t he had been A • C E governor of Tamaulipas, where he established partial prohibition, suppressed open gambling, and estab· lished the first state supported lndnstrial school in Mexico for indigent i'hildrPn. He Is known 1\5 a friPnd of D Aloof I~A 'l'HS of the week include those of Sir Horace Darwin, sou of Churles Darwin and himself a ooted scientist, nod R. F. Outcault, veteran newspaper eomlc ~trip artl~t. SURE! ETtQVEr 1li IS 'TI-lE ,JJOISE I AWS'T!JT EAT MY SOUP W/711 "ThP ileutennnt Sel!ms illstant." del'lnr~d Ruth .. II(-' hPiong's to t!1e reserve corps.".._ explained !~Ioise Sell-Punished Sh~~The n•n e of thut rrnow next door! He threw a stone through I he wlndnw while I was playing and sing· In g. fie-And whnt a fool! ~ow he will henr you all the plaluer.-Epwortb Herald. LeveTage Mrs. F.-1 just heard nn awful story abollt your husbnnd. Mrs. C.-Do tell we. I need a new dreJ!8. (. |