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Show Thursday, January 29, 1931 TTIE AX PREFERRED TIMES-NEW- NEPH1. UTAH S. French Attache, With Joffre Sword This Week h Arthur Brisbane M 6 Complaining It Waste 200,000,000 Ounces Los Angeles Still Grows Tigers, Beware L "So In your quarrel with Smith decided to bury the ou've latehetT" an ai would decided "Yes; I've five belter result." COLOR WAS HER OWN This Pacific Coast goes along cheerfully, as well It may, with so many States In the Union helping to build up popuatlon and prosper, lty hers. It's against the unwritten law In this neighborhood to complain, earry and umbrella or wear an overcoat. Besides this Is a land of "everything can be done." Mrs. Scudder, the potato chip queen, says: that complain "If Easterners about business would put Into tbelr business the energy used In com. plaining, they would not need to complain." She tries 100 tons of potatoes In a month. Nature recognizes no depression, and this coast has gigantic crops. organiThe "Sunklst," zation of orange growers, will ship 70,000 cars this year, compared with 60.000 cars last year. Thirty-threyears ago they shipped 1800 cars. Tell your grocer he should sell his oranges cheaper this year. They cost htm less at wholesale, and selling good oranges I s public service. r7LW X r jsy R' f ,' J ' , r.f a. r 9 ... i, f e Sly complexion la my own I Louise I dou't do u lit it's paid for, my dear. I, Mary PARTLY SILK 4 The United States offers to lend China 200,000,000 ounces of silver for fifty years, according to news from Pelping. Governments change rapidly In China and fifty years hence China's rulers may have forgotten about "Why does she wear sucb long frocks?" "Her stockings are silk only bal way up." the NEVER BUY EM loan. However, we have the silver and It doesn't matter much whether we have It, or China has it. Lent at present prices, if we got It back at 1981 prices plus interest, we should probably make a net profit of 100 per cent above in- terest The world will not be stupid enough to leave silver at its pres. ent price, thus making it impossible for 800,000,000 users of silver money to buy goods in the markets of gold standard nations. Albert Louts Lleutaud, attache of the French consulate at New Orleans, with the sword of Marshal Joseph Joffre, dead hero of France. The mystery of how the blade came to New Orleans prohahly died with Joffre. Lleutaud, who heads the French Veterans' society In New Orleans, purchased the sword from a New Orleans man. The Louisiana city man bought It In a Paris pawnshop. The blade is Inscribed "Murechnl Joffre, Paris, Juillet, 1017." It Is intimated that Lleutaud will return the sword to France. REMOVE HEIRESS AS DAD'S WARD Guardian Found to Be Unfit for Child; Recalls Famous Elopement. Los Angeles, where such crowds pour over the sidewalks as you never saw even In New York or Chicago, Is widening many city streets, getting ready for the fu- Kolture Have you bought any of the paintings at the exhibit 1 Mrs. Newrlche Goodness, no. Wf never fcuy ready-madpictures. Mrs. e AN OVERSIGHT ture. And the roads of approach from the east are widened and straightened. Fifty-seve- n dangerous curves have Just been taken out of the Cajon Pass road, leading back to Victorvllle, Barstow, and points east. The roads are made less romantic but safer. They are also made sometimes much steeper than they were, because modern automobiles can climb anything. Douglas Fairbanks has gone to India, taking letters from the Duke of Sutherland to the Maharajah of Mysore, and letters from other Dukes to other Maharajahs, Princes and Potentates, plus a letter of credit which Is important Fairbanks will shoot real tigers from the backs of a real elephant in the Mysore territory. His camera-ma- n goes along and his director to tell the tigers what Is expected of Howell So you are married? Powell Yes, but It was contributory negligence on my part; I kept calling on the girl all through leap year. ALWAYS SPEAKING them. raj tional romance of a Pittsburgh heiress but also set free the imps of gossip that once so bedeviled the peace of Andrew Carnegie and his clan. The signing of the decree, girl was whereby a taken from her allegedly cruel and drunken father, was something more than the routine procedure of the Connecticut court. In fact, it was ihe curtain being lowered on the drama of elopement staged 20 years ago, in which the chief roles were played by Elizabeth Lauder, a niece of Andrew Carnegie, and Medford It. Kellum, a sailor and fishing She was not guide of Florida. happy. Love Match Fails. What transpired in a New England Probate court over the custody of a wee slip of a girl, who is destined to be one of the richest young women In the United States, was an admission from beyond the grave that a love match with a tramp sailor was imprisonment Instead of a happy romance. In October, 1930, Elizabeth Launine-year-ol- d WASN'T HE THE GOAT? Flapper (after ordering big din- ner) on't chew that menu curd while ynu are waiting. Only one animal He "Weil eats paper." "in't I the goatr Kelluin, daughter of me- In India, barefooted natives giving testimony, He with straight faces. But they twitch their big toes, and lawyers watch their feet. A well known capitalist twitched his thumb, when bluffing at. poker, and lost large sums, until he began holding the cards with four fingers, the thumb kept hidden.' The British will release Mahat-ma- y Gandhi, who has been in prison since last May and made a very comfortable prisoner, Britain being careful not to make him a martyr. The trouble is that being released it will be necessary for him to Invent some Interesting agitation. A Mahatma, like a salesman, must show results. But poor Gandhi, peaceful at heart, doesn't know exactly what to do with the 300,000,000 who stand behind him. What would Na poleon have done with such a crowd, or one of the great Tartar rulers, or even some leader of Tammany Hall, who would know how to use their votes T IMO. br Kins Pnnim Srndicat,. lac.) New Green-way- head of the department health In Yale university. Father , of Loses Her. After a brief hearing Judge deposed (he father as legal guardian of the child and In his stead appointed Mrs. Greenwny. who. by the way, is nn aunt of Polly Lauder Tunney. wife of the retired pugilistic champion. It was the testimony of James Williamson Hnln of Miami, Fla.. foster father of Kellum. that really led to the change In the child's This witness said guardianship. Kellum was an unfit person to have charge of a daughter, because he was addicted to intoxicating drink and erratic in his general conduct The hearing also brought out the fact that Kellum, while under the Influence of drink, was inclined to be extremely cruel. Kellum was not In court, nor was he represented by counsel. In a letter addressed ' to the Probate court he however, protested. against any order deposing him as guardian of his daughter. He also requested that. In event of a removal order being Issued, it should not he made permanent. It was brought out during the hearing that the father nf the child hailed originally from Virginia hut that since early boyhood had led a wandering existence up and down d U. S. CUSTOMS MEN SEIZE the late George Lauder, and the divorced wife of Medford It. Kellum of Fla died, Tavernler, leaving among other children, a daughter, Anna. The child bad been named as one of the beneficiaries of an estate worth $50,000,000. It was part of the huge fortune which had Its origin In the steel works of Andrew Carnegie. While upon her death bed the mother left Instructions that her daughter, Anna, the youngest of her children, should be placed under the guardianship of her sister. Woman Claims $2,000 for Death of One Tree A tree Is worth according to a suit filed In District Supreme court In which recovery of that sum Is sought. The suit Is brought agnlnst the Washington Gas Light company, by Lillian H. Rhodes of 3430 Brown street northwest Through Attorneys Carrel F. Rhodes and Frank Brown, the woman states that the gas company's agents dug a trench to lay a gas pipe to her home and In doing so caused the death of a tree. The tree Is described as of great value, a marvelous shade tree and very ornamental. Negligence on the part of the company's agents Is charged. Washington. Chicago's police have a "lie , "Women, generally speaking" Williams "Ititiht you are, brother, they're generally speaking." der $2.(KK, ter," that, attached to the arm of a suspect under cross examination, tells when he is lying. It works, because the human heart, not taught to He, changes Its beat when the anxious process of lying begins. Mrs. Harriet L. Greenwny, Haven, wife of lr. James C. Gil-so- New Haven, Conn. When Jurtjie John I Gilsnn of this city Issued an order a few Unys ago removing Medford It. Kelluin as the guardian of his daughter, Anna Kelluin, the judicial act not only revived memories of the sensa- down-and-o- Thompson i mi nniW ....snni it in Regardless of area It will take long for any country to have as big a business as ours. There is no excuse for bad conditions and idleness here, except the excuse of foolish Ignorance. Killing the value of silver has ruined hundreds of mil. lions of our customers. Allowing unlimited stock gambling has taken the minds of millions from their real business. And our stupid Immigration laws shut out the populations on which our success and prosperity are built. But all that foolishness will be overcome. Sees the Mysterious Packages Dumped Into Sea and Contraband Is Recovered. Guard San Francisco. The biggest opium haul of the year In the port of San Francisco was made recently by United States customs agents after a customs guard had seen five mysterious packages tossed Into the bay from one of the lower forward portholes of the Japanese liner Asama Maru of the Nippon Yusen Kalsha line. Clilng Yung, a Chinese cabin steward, confessed to ownership of the narcotics, valned at $r0,000, after hours of grilling, and Wong Ching, a steerage cook, suspected of complicity, was also held. The cache was brought to the surface with grappling hooks some hours after it was consigned to the bay and W'as found to contain 3,r0 cans, each containing one tael or a fraction more than sis ounces of narcotics. The cache was divided Into five packages of seventy taels each, carefully wrapped In canvas sacks Improvised from overall pant legs and linked together wltb heavy cord. The discovery of the smuggling attempt was dramatically made by P. L. Scholl, a customs guard on night duty at the stern of the Asama. While standing at his post right of way and the right to use "any earth, timber, stone, or other material upon any such land to the construction and Austin, Texas. How far down necessary of Its railroad through or the right of way of a railroad ex- operation over the land." tends Is the problem up to Texaa railroad claims that taking courts In a suit filed here by the oil The way and using state against the Texas and Pa- It infrom the righttheof road Is within operating cific railway. The rond Is sinking the terms of the grant. oil wells on the right of way, pro posing to use the oil for fuel. Attorney General It. L. Robhltt con Tennessee Clergyman tends that the minerals nnder the surface belong to the state. Helps to Build Church The milt Involves the rights In a Memphis. Tenn. His congregatract 20 feet wide and ten miles tion was not financially able to long In Ward county. The railroad bear the entire cost of building wos granted this 200 feet 50 years the new Park Avenue Cumberland ago. Discovery of oil nearby has Presbyterian church, so the preachbrought It into controversy. er. Rev. W. R, Johnson, put on a Texas was seeking railroads a pair of overalls and built it himself, half century ago. A law was with the help of volunteer and t amateur carpenters. pussed giving railroads a R. R. Battles State for Oil Drilling Rights 200-foo- PAGE SEVEN np the Pmith Atlantic coast and along the Mexican gulf border. The marriage. Jnnnary IS. 1010, at 41 nuil. Flit., between the beautiful young heiress and the an I lor was the culmination of a roinunce which had Ha beginning In 11)07, when George Lauder. 8r chartered a boat from Kellum, as wll as hiring the latter as a guide for tarpon fitihlng among the lower Florida keys. Paid Her Ardent Court. During the winters that were to follow, enieclully that of 1010, Kellum paid ardent court to the daughter of his employer. At the time, Kllznbeth Lauder was more than 23 years the Junior of the romantically Inclined suilor and fisherman. The family looked upon the attentions paid the charming and vivacious girl as nothing more than the friendship of age for youth. , During the Jatter days of February, 1910, old George Lauder peremptorily told Ills daughter, Elltahi'th. that he was cloning his Florida home. But the girl balked at leaving Miami and offered one excuse after another as to why the family should postpone its return home. "Why won't you go home?" demanded her father. "Becntise I am married to 'Med,' and wlxh to remain at the side of my husband!" was the astounding reply. For three years, she confessed, Kellum hnd been professing his love for her. Eventually, she had grown to admire and esteem the sailor and fishing guide. This feeJlpg was later to ripen Into love, the culmination of which was that the two stole off to Miami, where they were made man and wife by a Justice of the pence-He-'s Wealthy Today. There was nothing for the clan to do but accept Kellum after It was learned there was no way to annul the marriage. Despite the fact that he was the husband of one of the richest young women In the United States, If not the world, Kellum was not altogether an Idler. Rome of the wealth that came to him through marriage be invested In Florida real estate and made a few millions of his own. And most of the money he made he kept, and so today he can be accounted a man of wealth. As a result of his cruising about the high sens, Kellum became enamored of Honolulu and there established n magntticeut estate. The blood of the sea was. however. In his veins. Within a short time after his descent upon Hawaii he was again plowing the waters. Once more he heard the siren call of Hie South Seas, and t hither he Journeyed, this time In a Tills craft was to hnrkentine. prove his passport for entry Into the select and scientific circles of when buying Aspirin be suro it is genuine Bayer Aspirin Know what you are taking to relieve that pain, cold, headache, sore throat. Aspirin is not only effective, it is always safe. The tablet stamped with the Bayer cross is reliable, always the same brings prompt relief safely does not depress the heart. Don't take chances; get the genuine product identified by the name BAYER on the package and the word GENUINE printed in red. Start the Ball Rolling Why Some Shop Clerks I)ad was discussing the business Have Bad Dispositions and wrld: "I don't eee It happened in the hat shop In the depression how things ran improve until people East fOH, A young woman whose let loose of their money and boy." dress was distinguished by her flat "Why not start the bar! rolling and heels and tailor-mad- e Jacket was hav- buy me a fur coat 7" chimed In the ing a hard time selecting a bat, and chic high school duiightcr. was still dissatisfied after the exasperated clerk had brought out the en tire stock. An acquaintance of mine. who was also trying on lints, heard her say : "I want a hat Unit's mannish." "Tes, miss; how about this onet" Aci Promptly Warned the attendant replied, bringing out the last of the assortment. liy Kidney Irregularities. "Not mannish enough." When bladder Irritations, "But, miss," the other sighed getting up at night and constant backache keep you miser wearily, "It's a man's hat." New York Sun. able, don't take chances! Help your kidneys at the first sign of disorder. Use Dom's PUh. Successful for more than 50 LAXATIVE years. Endorsed by hundreds of thousands of grateful users. Sold by dealers everywhere. four-mnste- d THE WITH HIGHEST Honolulu. Rift in Marital Lute. He outfitted the barkentine. for a scientific expedition! With a group of Hawaiian scientists, he pene trated, under the auspices of the Bernice P. Bishop museum of Honolulu, many of the then Inaccessible spots of the Pacific Shortly before this expedition signs of a rift In the marital lute of the Kellums began to be quite noticeable to their friends. In November, 1928. Mrs. Kellum, after eighteen years of married life, much of which had been stormy. obtained a divorce In Reno. She died last October, leaving an estate worth STiO.tNMi.OOO and a little dangh ter to Inherit it. At Tavernier. Fla.,- - Kellum is now residing. He spends much of his time fishing. Doan's ills ENDORSEMENT When you get up headachy, slughere's how to gish, weak, half-sicfeel yourself again In a jiffy. Take a little Phillips' Milk of Mag nesia In a glass of waters or lem onade. Taken In lemonade, Phillips' Milk of Magnesia acts like citrate of magnesia. As a mild, safe, pleasant laxative, Phillips' Milk of Magnesia has the highest medical endorsement to correct sour As an antl-acl- d stomach, gas, Indigestion, biliousness, it has been standard with doctors for 50 years. Quick relief In digestive and eliminative troubles of men, women, chlldrea and babies. WORTH OF DOPE $56,000 a nullify Disordered r MEN WANTED to $20 dny. town. eMy or cquntry. Too Bmall capital, fiend 35c Ktfunpa. ? you an Item, and foil fnntriF'florra. with which yoo ran get 1 5.01 capita 4 two hours work. If too ft to not renal ta as stated, return tho Item an9 f will return J 6c aod return oostano. Bat. lufaction uarant'd. J. H- - EWING Box A. 107 Malta, Ohio $10 ned end Sunshine'" And Stiil Paying "Is this the way to treat a cus At th Fownost DMft Recrt tomer who has been doing business vrorra tunny of th. Wt morvalovs ctUoole with you for 12 years?" days clear starlit nlgMt dry Invigorating "For 12 years, sir?" air gorgeous mountain tpl.ndld roadt "Yes, I purchased a chair on the scanas Rnost hotels ihm ideal winter hone. Installment plan In 1010." Judge, Mrrfte ere A enatfy Alt Winter Long at about midnight he saw flickering flashes of light at the forward end of the ship and hurried down the pier to Investigate. Though the lights had disap peared when he reached the ship's prow he was Just in time to see the packages go over the side from a porthole and splarh In the water Scholl made careful note of the spot of their submersion. In the morning the bay bottom was dragged and the contraband was brought up. Search of the ship for the smugglers was conducted by H. H. HarA key ris, special investigator. belonging to Chlng Yung in n cabin from the port of which the nar cotics were believed to have been thrown, turned suspicion on him. Other evidence gathered implicated -- Dr. Pierce's Pellets are best for liver. bowels and stomach. One little Pellet for a laxative three for a cathartic Adv. Hi! "I hear you lost your temper yes terday." "Yes, but shell be back tomorrow." Chicago Post. PALMCalifornia SPRINGS Handsomely Said Girl (to man who has been driven Into from behind) My father has sent me to say he Is sorry. Gallant Golfer And a very handsome apology, too. JJummel, Hamburg. Our deeds are like children born to us; they live and act apart from our Friendship is the marriage of the own will. George Eliot. soul. Voltaire. Wong Chlng. Village Smithies Report Good Year Washington. The "Village Blacksmith" has come back into his own. According to the report of his activities for the first nine months of 1930 he is busier now than at any lime In history. The report disclosed that his anvil hammered out $200.(KKMHH worth of goods In 1930. Tliis business can be laid to the present trend in architecture, which Is calling for ornamental metals for home and building decoration. The decreased demand for horseshoes may really have been a blessing In disguise as lit forced the smith to return to his true craft ornamental Ironwork. I I I I I I I 1 I I 'I "l"t Motorist Receives Dollar Fine Back " It t-- N Goshen. N. Y. The dollar fine which was levied on Joseph Gibbons in City court was returned to him when County Court Judge Russell reversed the de-Wiggins cision. Gibbons was charged with passing a stop sign at a . . ', t street intersection. I I 1 I I 1 1 I I I I I I I I I I I I K Castoria ... for CASlURIil ih.Tm n MT'TI CHILDREN'S ailments SMWdl S f RE you prepared to render first aid and quick comfort the moment your youngster has an upset of any sort? Could you do the right thing immediately though the emergency came without warning perhaps tonight? Castoria la a mother's 6tandby at such times. There is nothing like it in emergencies, and nothing better for everyday use. For a sudden attack of colic, or for the gentle relief of constipation to allay a feverish spell, or to soothe a fretful baby that can't sleep. Thi3 pure vegetable preparation is always ready to ease an ailing youngster. It w just as harmless as the recipe on the wrapper reads. If you nee Chas. H. Fletcher's signature, it is geniune I Castoria. It is harmless to the smallest infant; doctors will tell you so. You can tell from the formula on the wrapper how mild it is, ar.d how good for Kttle systems. Dut continue with Castoria until a child is grown. |