OCR Text |
Show THE MIDVALE JOURNAL September 7, 1928 Page Seven No more Over -Acidity Gas, nausea, sick headache, heart• bum, distress after eating or drink· ing quickly and surely relieved. Safe. Pleasant. Not a laxative. Normalize• Digution and SweeteM the Breath BELI:ANS Hot wafe!J Sure Reli~;:• LI:A.NS FOR INDIGESTION 1-Stmon Mkhelet of n•ashlngton, president or the National GN-Out-The-Votc cluh. :!-Muyor James Holph. Jr., of San Franc!sco turning the first soil for the city's $G,OOO,OOO war memorial bullding b'l'OUp in the ch·ic center. 8--Former ncprcsentatiYe John Phl:ip Hill of ~ft<rylan<l, now a colonel In the Three IIundred and Sixth Cavalry at Fort Meyer, Ya., taking his troops over a steep bank. NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS Many Nations Sign Kellogg Treaty Renouncing War as a National Policy. By EDWARD W. PICKARD AR-selfish and wilful war-Is W now outlawed. Which is to say tbat tbe representatives of fifteen of the leading nations of the world gatb· ered In Paris and signed the Kellogg treaty by which they agree to re· nounce war as an Instrument of na· tiona! policy in their relations with one another. Neither Secretary of State Kellogg nor any other of the signers pretends that the pact Is a panacea for the llls or the World war nor that the ceremony In the Qual d'Orsay mean> that there will be no more wars. But as Lord Cushendun, British acting foreign secretary, said, It Is the most Important step yet made In the long road to realizing eventual world-wide peace. . "l'he world has not been remade by the sigulng of the pact," said the Brit· Ish plenipotentiary. "Wars may still occur and we must not be too terribly disappointed it some minor war breaks out In the next few years." lie warned Europeans not to be OP· tlmlstlc that treaties make any change ln America's traditional aloofness from European affairs. "There Is no Implication or any Indication or AmerIca's part to concern her~elt with European affairs," be said. Before It Is binuing on the United States the pact must be ratlfied by the senate, and It Is certain that there wlll be a fight on that action next winter, for a good many people, Including some senators, profess to believe the treaty will lead us into foreign entanglements and toward mem· bershlp In the I.eague of Nations. It our senate does act tm·orably, the other nations signatory will ratify the pact within one year. ~ The fifteen original signers of the treaty, led by Germany because It came first In the French alphabetical list, are: Germany, United States of America, Belgium, France, Great Brit· aln and Northern Ireland, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Irish Free State, India, Italy, Japan, •foland and Czechoslovakia. The treaty remains open for the adhcr· ence ot all other powers, and telegrams and cablegrams or adherence began to come In before the Ink was dry. Among the first nations to ex· press the wish to sign were Denmark, Norway, Bulgaria, Cuba, Rumania, Yugo-Slavia and Peru. And YugoSlavia was first to sign. An especial Invitation to join the other signatories was extended to Soviet Rus· sin by M. Herbette, the French ambassador to Moscow. Here are the two chief articles In the treaty: "The high contracting parties solemnly declare In the names of their re!!pectlve peoples that thPy condemn recour~e to war for the solution of lnternati cual controversies, and renounce It as an Instrument of national policy In their relations with one another. "The high contracting parties agree that the settlement or solution of all disputes or conflicts of whatever na· ture or of whatever origin they may be, which may arise among them, shall never be sought except by pacific out his government's contPntion thnt the Lerrgue has done noth:ng toward the solution of t11e problem of real disarmament. Tie Insisted that urge!!t steps should be tal{en to obtain definite results and avo!d tbe risk of future wars. MUSSOLINI, whose InPlU<J:>riEit spired press poked all kinds of fun at the Kellogg treaty, and continues to do 50, has submitted to Spain a new treaty 11ith Italy that Is looked upon In Europe as his reply to the AngloFrench naval agreement. It Is said that Spain Is highly flattered by the Duce's attentions, fully realizing that It was Spain's neutrality in the last war wbkh enabled France to concentrate on the east. The sole obstacle appears to be the Spanish klng's British sympat11les, and It is considered that the deciulng voice may be that from the Vatican, to which Fas· clst diplomats are now said to be turning their warme~t attentions. is strlying earnestly to at· RUSSIA tract foreiJ,'ll capital to that country, and the congress of the Common· Ist lnternatlonale, In session at Moscow, has revised a new method to do tbis, embodied in a resolution which instruds foreign Communist parties energetically to oppose further inve~t· ments of capital in colonial or halfcolonial countries. The resolution classes China, India, Egypt and South Africa as colonial countries. Latin American Is classed as half colonial and the order ins1:ruchl agitators to hinder by all means possible the en· trance of capital to such countries. Through arranging strikes, uprisings, and sabotage, the Communists can make these countries appear a poor place to rlslr money, as compar.ed with Bolshevik Hussla. continued their Asuccessful marine& attacks on rebel bunrl\l MERLCA~ In Nicaragua by routing a group com· manded by Miguel Ortiz in Neuva SegoYia. Amnesty has. been grantPd to Col. Guadalupe Rivera, one of Augustlno Sandino's supply chiefs and foragers, who surrendered to the marines at Jingotega. His surrender Is belleved to hrn·e been cau'led by recent rebel defeats along the Coco river and the capture of bls brother by a marine patrol. of Gov. HarByveyPROCL-\MATION Pamell, las1: Thursday was a holiday In Arkansas in honor of the state's favorite son, Senator Joe T. Robinson, who on that day was formally notified that he Is the Demo· crntlc party's nominee for vice pres!· dent. The governor also called out several units of the National Guard whicL took part In the parnde In Hot Springs, scene of the ceremony, and helped to maintain order. Something like 40,000 persons flocked to Hot Springs, many or them in automobiles, and the traffic problem was serious tor there Is only one through street In the city. Senator Robinson received the notification standing on the veranda of the Arlington hotel. In front of him were seated 24,000 persons, and other thousands stood In "Bathhouse row" or on roof tops and in windows. For the broadcasting of the ceremony the local radio station's power wa3 Increased ten-fold and new lofty tow· ers were erected to prevent lnterter· ence from the surrounding mountains. Altogether It was a great day for Senator Joe and Arkansas. defections from 0 FoneTHEpartypersonal to the other, the most significant of the week, because of its A group of feminists, led by Doris possible consequences, was that of Stevene of America, tried to "crash Senator John J. Blaine or Wiscon:'lin. the gates" at the assemblage of em- lie Is listed In the congressional dl· Inent diplomats to obtain recognition rectory as a Republican, Is a La .l!'oltor their demand for equal rights tor lette follower and was go,·ernor of women. They created so much dis- Wisconsin before being elected to the turbance that Miss Stevens and others senate. His predilection for Al Srnith were taken into custody by the police. was more than suspected, and in a speech at Burlington he said : "I have no doubt that ruy friends and supSSERTING that any attempt tn porter' arC' going to vote for Governor supervise the production of anna· · Smith for President. The:;e are times mt>nts was calculated merely to ml9- when partisanship must not hllnd n'l. Iead the public, Soviet ltll'Ssia has re-· We must condemn nepnblicnn silence 'lJ'"""'u to collaborate with the League on the scandal of tbe Harding adNations In its present efforts to ministration as nn accessory after the control the manufacture of arms. fact." Dlaine also denounced the Maxim Lit>inoff, Soviet vice commis- methods of the federal prollibition desar for foreign affairs, In telegraph· par·tment which he said was honeY· ~ this decision to Sir Eric Drumcombed with crime and bribery. rie w.,nd, secretary of tba League, pointed assailed "snoopel"f! and spies who shoot m11ans." A 25¢ AND 75¢ PACKAGES EVERYWHERE Isolate Drunkards t)pli«ing and shavin~ shingles-pioneer ocyie-for tchool house, Sept.·Oct, 1927. &:hocnbrunn Me· down innocent men with dum-dum bullets." The applause that greeted the sen· ator's speech indicated that the La Foll~tteltes of 'Wisconsin will follow him into the Smith camp. Democratic Chairman Raskob, durIng a visit to the Middle West, said the budget of the national committee calls for a fund of $4,000,000. He said the party would spend $500,000 In ten corn belt states and $000,000 In radio campaigning. In northern Russia chronic drunk· ard~ are given the same treatment as persons surrering from smallpox or any other pestilence. 1'hey are confined as a menace to health and life of the community. D\Orial Park. near New Philadelphia, Ohio. • "" T By ELMO SCOTT WATSON FTEit being ''lost" for nearly one hundred and fifty years, the historic town of Schoen bruno Is to rise from its a~hes ar1d to live again. The restoration on its originnl site Is already under way and only the other day state otllclals and the citizens of Uhrichs· ERBERT IIOOYER opened his ville, Dover and New Philadelphia, personal headquarters In a house Ohio, gathered near the latter town on Ma&Sachusetts avenue, Washington, to dedicate tbl rei)llca of the original and from now on this will be the base Schoenbrunn tchoolhouse, which had of the Republican Presidential cam- been erected there July 29, 1773, the palgn. 1'here the candidate Is recelv- first school building In that state. log political workers from all parts ot That thP dedication of this partlcuthe country and deciding questions ot Jar b!lildlng and tbe whole plan for policy. It was stated that he was pay- the restoration of Schoenbrunn bas !ng e8pecial attention to New York more than local Interest was atteststate and would soon go there to make ed to by the fact that bundreds of some speeches. Whether or not he visitors from other states attended would discuss prohibition was not de- the ceremonies and that the plans for clded. National Chairman Work, Sec- the renaissance of this historic town retary Fort, and Earl S. Kinsley of are telng followed with appreciation Vermont went to 111alne for a confer- for Its significance by many outside ence with Republican leaders ot that the borders of the Buckeye state. state. The Maine state election comes For Schoenbrunn, establ!shed as an September 10 and as It is always taken Indian mission, was the first town as an Indication of relative party built by the whites In that part of strength the R€publicans are an.xlous the Old Northwest terrltocy which to poll a heavy vote. was later to attract so many settlers Prohibition party leaders decided to Its fertile lands; !n tt stool! the that their national ticket should be first church and the first public school withdrawn and members of the party building In that part of the territory advised to vote for Hoover, not as a and there, too, was organized the partis.an but as a firm supporter ot first peace and temperance societies ihe E1ghteenth amendment. west of the Alleghanles. It Is these facts which give It Importance In our DOWN in ~exas the run-off Demo- • national history and when the restor· cratlc pnmary was won by Con- atlon Is completed, the new Schoen· gressman Tom Connally by a majority brunn will stand as a monument to of more}ha.n 5~,000 o;er Sen~tor May- the spirit of the pioneer missionaries field. Nommatwn bemg eqmvalent to who, with their llibles and ChrMian election, Connally will replace May• teachings did thelr sher·e in winnin" field In the senate at the expiration the 'Vest' as truly as did those othe; of his term. pioneers who carried Into the wilder· Incomplete returns sl10wed that Sen- ness the rille and the ax. ntor Tom Johnson had been r~omThe story of the MoraYlnn Indian Inated by the Republicans of Calrfor- mission at Schoenllrunn and Its sisnia. I.daho Republicans re-nominated ter mission towns of Llchtenau and Senator Frank Gooding. Gnadenhutten Is a story of Chrlsliun heroism, a tale o! romance, pathos UtECTOR OF TIJFJ BUDGET and tragedy. All of It centers around L'ORD Issued a report that was the names of two great missionaries, not at all pleasing to President Cool· John IIed{ewelder and Dadd Zeis· idge, since It estimated that there berger-and most of all, Zeisberger. would be a treasury deficit of $04,279,- From 1137, whPn he was but six-teen 846 for the current fiscal year. It 11 years old, until 1808, when he died, the first time since the war tlie gov- be gave every day of those seventyE"rnment's estimators definitely Lave one years to the one consuming pasforecast n defir·lt in their anntllll re- sion of nis life-that of bringing ports. 'l'hey base their contention on Christianity to the Tmlians of the an Increase In pro-pective government llllddle West. , expenditures, due to increas(!d nctivl-~ Early In 1771 Zeisberge• cro~~ed ties of bureaus during the fiscal year over into Ohio and on March 14 of 192() and to a prospective decrease In , that yea . arri~ed at Gekelemul:pe· revenue. This swlt:h In estimates lu1s chunlc: the principal town of the Dela· converted the estimated surplus of wpre tribe (now Newcomersto-.vn ~252,540,288, figured upon when the Ohio) where he preacl1ed the flrsi 1929 budget first was fixed, Into tho Protestant sermon ever delivered In deficit. Ohio. Tie came back again in ~larch. Mr. Coolldge let It be known that he 1772, and. the chief of the Delawares wlll take stringent measures to reduc~ having suggested that he establish n government expenditures dnrlng tho mission among them, Zelsberger be· remafl1der of his admlnl.;otratlol\. gnn to look around for a suitable site. When h\l returns to Washington ab011t While doln~: tlrls he discovered a the middle of September he will con- sparlrling spring which he gave the suit members and department head!! name of Schoenbrunn (Beautiful on means or cutting expenditures even Spring) and resolved to establlsh his below what was allotted them In the mission there. So he went bnck to budget. Pennsylvania to return two months later with 28 Christian Indian~ and ARSIIAL F.11ILE FAYOLLE of work was begun at once on the build· !•'ranee died last week In Paris, log of homes, a church and a school. at the nge of seventy-six years. He On August 28. 1772, Rev. John was considered one of the most brll- . Heckewelder and Rev . .Tnhn EttwPin llant strategists In the World war and with more than :!00 Christian Indians directed many of ~he French .army's arrh•ed and th<. next day the mission· most successful actwus. aries and their Indian helpers laid Gov. A. G. Sorlie of North Dakota, out the town of ScboPnbrunn and who had been Ill with heart disease formulated the first civil code ever for ~ month, passPd away at the ex· adopted In the state of Ohio for the e~utlve mansion, In msmarck. As can• gowmr; ent of tJ 1eir town. By the d1date of the Nonpar·tlsan le:Jgue he middle of September the church was wns elected go,'ernor in 1024 anrl w:L'I finished and services were held In it. re-elected In 1!1:!6 but did not se~k reFor awhile the mission was pros· nomination this year. He is succeeded perous and pence and contentment by Lit'Ut. Gov. Walter Marldoci{, a real reigned In the town. The Indians "Uirt farmer." Some men are sll~nt because of their wisdom and some because of their Ignorance. Dreams and weather usually go by contraries. Some men maJ<e a 8peclalty of posing a~ horrible examples. H D I M D lFJ~'EllE~CER hetwef'll We.~ tern railronus anu mnplo~·e,,s organlzrd In the flrotherhoort of n:lilrc>ad Trnlnmrn nnd the Or,Jrr of Hn!lway C'ondnrtors arc pxpcrtr!l to he rP~on ciled b>· an ng-rernwnt u~•!ottrH'~<l hy the t'nitPd Stat•'S !Joan! of me·''ntl<'n, which hn~ been discu .<sin~ th1• !<sne with both gro·1ps sinr·e .Tnly :!:~. T!!e propo~ed settlemPnt, drtrll 1 ~ of whkh cannot yet hr mnde pd>lic, nHJo>t be ratified hy the As~ociatlnn of GenPrrtl Committee~ on bt>halt of the railway employees before It goes Into e!'fect. MOlJ.JER-1 7UIS IS MARJOFUE :: Sl-/1: JUSI MOVEO 1/J NE'iT OOOR. AIJO SHE'S iVJ/I.JS The "Ohio Road" I Do yuu remember the old fingPr· post nt th~ c~rner of Main street and the Ohio runrl? It was n simple board cut to a long, finger point, and mounted on a t;1ll p%t; oncP upon a tlme It had been vail>tPd white, with black lettering_ l'rohnhly thnt was as loug ngo ns the t!mP whPn that name for the road had some meaning, for since the mid· die ot the Jpst century the name. "tb• ~ predictions GIRL KEPT LOSING WEIGHT Lydia F.. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Built Her Up !"JISt cabin rebuUc ac &hocnbrunn, first town in Ohio. BuUc lT/2. rebuUc June )uly,1'127. Indian Cemet~ry in the distance.- _,,,., were not only Instructed In the Christian religion but they were shown how to cultivat' the land and to raise live stock. Visiting Indians were am·zed to see these Indians content to re· main in one place and to work. nut trouble soon came to the peaceful town of Schoenbr·unn, stirred up probabl.r by the surrounding tribes who resented the influence of the whites in changing the lives an<.l hub· its of their red brethren. A certain clique in the town plotted to o~er· throw the missionaries and, although Zeisberger saw the rebellion brewing and attempted to stem It In time, his efforts were fruitless. ~'inally he called I! meeting of those who remain < loyal and there on April 19, 1777, he held the last services, after whlrh he ordered the church to be torn down that it might not be desecrated by the apostates who had plotted against him. Soon afterwards the mlssioua l'ies an.J their faithful Indians deserted the town and the ,.ou~s were bur·ued down and the flelds laid waste by the "pagan" Indi.IIIS. From that time on Gnadenhutten was the center of the Moravian activity. During the Revolution the ~Ioravian Indians tl'ied hard to maintain a strict neutrality but this attitude won them Mends on neither side. The British charged them with aiding the Amer· leans and It is true that they did aid them by ransoming captives from hos· tile Indians and by warning the offi~ers at Pittsburgh of Impending Indian attacks. nut as time went on the Americans also began to suspect til!' Moravian Indians of being proBritl~h. The Iaostne Indians used the Moravian towns as convenient "half· way houses" when starting on or re· turning from a foray against the Ken· tucky or Pennsylvania settlements and thPre they got shelter and re· freshmen! which the Moravian Indians dared not refuse them. Fiually a party of Pennsylvanians. Jed by tile notorious Col. David Wfl· liamson. set out with the avowed In tention nf wiping out the Mora\'ian towns. TIJey arrived at Gnadenhut· ten on ~!arch 7, 178:?, and gathered the unouspec!ing Indians In 1\v, hou5es. the men in one and the worn· m and children In the othPr. Then they told the Indians that they were to be put to death. The n~>xt mornIng the butchery b;>gan. The whlies entered the cabins and cold-bloodedly put to death the r~ defenseless men, women and children-an unexcusable massacre and In many respects as revolting a crime as eyer the most savll.~e Indians perpetrated against the whites. From that time on the surviving !\Ioraviuu Indlans were wanderers in Canada m.d Ohio. All that time Zelsberger continued his work among them and when he died In 1808 at the age of eighty-seven he was burled, at Lis own request, In the Indian cemetery among the people he had served so l0ng and so well. When the inrush of settlers flooded Ohio nfter the last Indian w~rrs In the Old l<'orthwest, the early setllers of Tuscarawas coun·l ty completed the work of destruction · of the towL of Schoenbrunn. The land was farmed over and the site of the vlilage was Indistinguishable from the surrounding fields. It became a "lost" city until the efi'orts of Rev. J. E. Welnland of the Moravian church at Dover, Ohio, who made many trips to Bethlehem, Pa., where he pored over the archives of the Moravian church, resulted In finding the data which led to the town's "rediscovery" In 1023. Excavations made on the site t·evealed the exact outlines of the church, the schoolhouse, Zeisb€rger's house and the houses of a number of the Indians. Theu a movement tor the restoration of the town was started. The Eigbty-fltth general assembly of Ohio appropriated $10,000 which enabled the Tuscarawas Historical society to purchase most of the land on which the town stood. 'rhe next general assembly added $7,500 for three a(j· joining tracts and the last general assembly prt vlded a $25,000 approprJa· tion for the actual work of restoration which Is being carried on In the 165-acre Schoenbruun Memorial park by a committee appointed by the Ohio State Archeological and Hlstor· leal society. One of the log cabins, that of John Joseph Schlbosh, Zelsberger's asslstunt who married an Indian woman and whose eldest son was the fir·st person killed In the Gnadenhutten massacre, wa• rebuilt last year. ThP rebuilt schoolhouse was dedicated .July 20 of this year and the dedication of the church has heen announced for Octob( r 21 of this year. Ohlo Road," was merely n m2mory. That rr il was laid out in li45, and local tr·11rPl up the riYer was ns much a part of the life of the road as the we;;tern trnflic. It was the ronrl o,·er which hoth Dav;r' Zeisherger and John !Jed<ewelder left BethiPhem ut,d traveled towanl the setting sun, with an ax in thelr equipment for clearing a path through the woods and chopping woou for cam1 fires. The mls~IIJnarles tlrere came from Bethlehem, and here in Bet lehem are t.M>J.r reports, their diaries lll!ld their history. 'filNC Is a diary of a journey from Cuyahoga to Bethlehem hy John lleekewelder In 1786. Such titles relating to Ohio can he found hy the dozPn, The ,·eternn Ueckewelder gave no Interesting account nnd a map of the Connrc·ticut dalm. 0ne of the mo~t valuable re~etJt finds wns a plnn by Ilerkewelrler of the first Rettlemmt out therr, Z~l,herger's vllla.!:;e, with the location of each hou~e ard the name of its occupant.-Eiir.nbeth Mv· ers In the Dethlebem (l'a.) Dijlil' Times. WEU.. I'M FIVE"BUT I DomKIJOW ' HO• OLD £2'1/EL'/IJ IS Scobey, Mont.-"1 was working for two years-derking in a atore11-_....;;__ _.,. and €eemcd to be steadily losing in weight so was forced to give up my work. A neighbor recommended J,ydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to me and I have now taken six bottles and oon't . tell you how I have appreciated it. I am feeling better and stronger every day. I recommend it to all young girls and if any have the same trouble and will write to me I will gladly answer."-Mns. EMIL H. GERTIIB, Box 476, Scobey, Montana. - Powerful Vacuum Tube A vacuum tube with a power of lfi,000 watts, ~ending out wirele~s waves of six meters in length, can produce a warmth in near-by spectators and cook sausages In 11 glass tube without fire. It MayBe li'!Jtnl Whengour Children Ctr for It Castorla Is a comfort when Baby II fretful. No sooner tak~.n than the little one Is at ease. If restlesR, a few drops soon bring contentment. No harm done, for Castoria Is a baby remedy, meant for babies. Petfectly safe to give the youngest infant; you )lave the doctors' word for that l It Is a vt'getable pro· duct and you could use it every day. But It's in an emergency that Castoria means most. Some ni;;ht when constl· pation must be relieved-or colic rmins -<lr other suffering. Never be without it; some mothers kC('p an extra bottle, unopened, to make sure there will al· ways be Castoria ln the house. It is effective for older children, too; read the book that comes with it. I APPETITE IMPROVED ••• QUICKLY Carter's Little Liver Pills Pure~ Vegdab!e Laxative ~~l!:i~,lmove the bowdt free &om pain and unple211tant after e{lcctt. They relieve t~ IVttem of conrtit*" tion poitona which dull the detire (ol;' food. Remember they are a doctor'• preecrlptioa and can be taken bv the entire fa.mily. All Drui!iiiU l5c ond 75c Red Pacbg., CARTER'S JJruPILIS |