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Show BEAK RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER J WART, the Speed Cop The MARCH OF TIME the Editors of TIME The Weekly Newsmagazine From Page One) Although the Japanese advance was last week resumed, 'after extremely April budget estimate Sin!f,v,m1tted.( $208,000,000 of ex- - heavy fighting" according to Tokyo communiques, it evident that been knocked off by Chinese troops in mountain areas so Xtrative action and another inaccessible even their own Govthat ? by bookkeeping adjust--- ernment has not known exactly how Reserve AcOld (Continued . Age reduction of $323,000,- nf But reduced interest .rates on farmers will cost the extension of PWA, fnoOOOO; social .security tax re-- ! the Railroad $113,000,000; cotton f f- - all dills ViHO;1Tl) V ' & -- 1934 CJ1EV. TRUCK CHEV. TRUCK Lg. Wheel BaM No shrewd buyer passes up our used car bargains BORDER BATTLE x -- .mra hit-and-r- Kai-she- arm-fore- . iv.i. -- . -- it rtiiwni, rial Li g 9 The son was last week dug from its grave the night after burial. In the empty coffin was left a note demanding $100 ransom. Two days later, before horrified Father Pope had a chance to pay, a group of children found Hayden Pope's corpse in a ditch by the roadside. jstxn- ' I ? f POST OFFICERS - - O PI FATAL REMEDY - - - I l. jLl, , First 1938 Plymouth Down The Line-- No automobile ever built got a more than this first, intensive qoing-ove- r ' ' factory pilot car of Plymouth's new 1938 line. Eaaerly waiting for it was this veteran group! of factory officials, who built the first Plymouth model ten years ago. D. S. President Edins is third from good-size- 80-ga- Ontario STREETSVILLE, body of Hayden Pope, of the Streetsville blacksmith, Spanish-speakin- WASHINGTON Latest remedy for gonorrhea and septic sore throats and a good remedy for scarlet fever, erysipelas, and cerebrospinal meningitis is sulfanilamide. Noting a great de mand for sulfanilamide, Dr. Samuel Evans Massengill, who compounds veterinary medicines in a d factory at Bristol, Tenn., this summci decided to add that drr.g to his lino. Knowing that his Southern custo mers prefer their medicines in bottles (New Englanders prefer pills), Dr. Massengill sought something in which to dissolve sulfanilamide, which had hitherto been taken in tablets and intravenous injections only. He decided to use diethylene glycol, a close relative of the alcohol used to keep motor car radiators from freezing, but never before put to this purpose. The S. E. Massengill Co. made up several batches of sulfanilamide solu tion, labeled it an elixir (a technical pharmacological term for a drug sweetened and dissolved in alcohol), shipped it to 375 retailers one as far er Biistow last week received something that will help him to realize RANSOM - - - rse-cau- se Negro Haiti (10,204 sq. mi.) had a population (2,550,000) almost twice that of the g Dominican Repub- He twice its size (19,332 sq. mi.) crowded Haitians have for years been slipping over the border, squatting on Dominican land. Out of the jungle last week seeped news that the border villiages recently blazed with fire and the banging of musketry; that when the smoke cleared, over 300 were dead on Dominican soil, mostly Haitian squatters, their wives and chil dren. Nervous authorities in both countries now fear reprisals. French-speakin- $325.00 can continue in their accustomed sales routines. And prices already raised some 5 per cent in August, are generally being raised some 5 per cent more with the show. O "NAPOLEON" - - - wa IX $595.00 1935 te China Although Ja- iaai wp 1725 square miles of Chinese Territory, including Shanghai's long "LJ North railroad station and ft s vicinity, sizable Japanese units in among rantured North China territory Rhansi were being nf mountains the fPd with biscuits dropped by Japanese muicauun Clear harassing Chinese guerrilla tactics scale recently launched on a large lines. had cut some Japanese supply I Chief generals in charge of Chinese wartroops waging hectic "Red were Napoleon" fare last week Wei Chu Teh and "100 Victories" to shoulder. shoulder fighting Pour years ago the Chinese Government was offering $100,000 for the "Red Napoleon" alive or $80,000 for "him dead; and the '100 Victories' more or less, which earned General Wei his soubriquet were won in skirmishes aimed to exterminate the Chinese "communists of General Chu. news Typical of belated but glorious received by Chinese Premier and Genk at Naneralissimo Chiang was this week telegram king last from Red Napoleon Chu: "First the left flank of our army began an attack against Ningwa, which was held by the Japanese. . . After besieging the city for four days we finally recaptured it, taking 2,00 Japanese prisoners. . . On October 7, we attacked the cities of Taiyueh, Yulinstun and Mayi, the last two of which were We also destroyed all highways, bridges and telegraph and telephone lines in the vicinity of Taiyueh and outside the .city killed over 100 d 'Japanese and destroyed a dozen cars. . On October 12 we again 'defeated Japanese reinforcements ; coming to relieve Taiyueh and killed :200 and burned eighteen of their 60 "armored cars." MKTNG, nanese forces A fit!ilJVu-l-. rS - - - COMMENTATOR i vr TVJrr cmevrolet k. from Fort Worth, Texas. His be programs will contain no will probably P:";,, of the public of politics, will be confined jSffer at the end of next June than mention to news "in the lives of Mr. and Mrs. last June. Average Citizen." i ) (IT Tl MU ) pai3 -- O National debt in the & GJVLC.TRUCHC Lg Wheel BaM FORT WORTH, Texas Elliott loans $130,000,000. son second of Roosevelt, a the Presideficit represents net vht The dent last .tpnti'al addiUon to the National broadcast week signed a contract to news commentaries twice S now approaching 437,000,000,-a week WlCTORIES" Lg. Wheel BaM the war was going, have been making brave, effective resistance on a scale Chinese have not before equalled in the North. Re-SSn- ir BUYING SAFE -- f-- ' s if WHO SLAKES USED CAB THB WIDOW K SHtS TOO Xvl OOO HT BtAttUS A VJOSOESi DO Y I SAVE MORE THAN MAKE Httll (SHE ( LADIES- - MV WHERE IS SPENDING FAST TO BeJTO HAW I THE TPEASUdERS) ( REJPORT S ENOU6M FOB ALU MV VOU GET AS SHE CAM TEACH POSSlDEKIT; -- OOB MONtV ATftEASwaEBATMASOOVs, REPOOT DUES ALL THEM ( CLOTHES-CLUUS ALL HOW TO ) TREASURER -STAHw.EKT V. ON HEQSELF -7 ( SHOWS A BAL- - FINE CLOTHES) ETC. BV KllPm& MY (JT HOOtl AV VSw S-- AV E r OAV lEVtttV I FOR THE i ) V U fMOW MUCH) ) AKCS Of 58,O00 THEN XCAR SERVICED AT f w Jntta"total By Fronk Chevrolet Co. V bso. u. a. fat. orr. Prepared by PAGE THRE3 4, 1937 left. A " 4 y FOUR CUBS MAKE A NOVEL TRAY-LOAThis litter of hon cubs Jias recently made its appearance at an English zoo. FILM Storm, En NEWCOMER-San- dra - cio. O STAR FARMER KANSAS his CITY, Missouri When father and mother died in 1936, Robert Lee Bristow of Saluda, Va., inherited a share In a farm, with a $2,431 mort gage, 203 acres of depleted soil and almost no equipment. Persuading his three brothers and two sisters to give him their shares in the establishment, Robert Bristow got the bank to ex tend the mortgage, rigged up a tractor out of a Model T Ford and part had of an old truck, before year's-en- d 69 acres under cultivation, 1,100 chickens, a grist mill to grind his neighbors' grain. In his first year out of high school, where he had stood fourth in his class Farmer Bristow cleared $725; in his second, he expects to do twice as well, cut his mortgage in half. Farm- - down-at-he- el wm IHIJIHIIIII.ILII1I TH m& ST. LOUIS, Missouri When the town post office of Enough, Mo. was discontinued last week, the St. Louis "Post Dispatch" editorialised deploring the loss, hoping post offices in Missouri would not be discontinued at Huzzah, Ink, Useful, Novelty, Peculiar, Wisdom, Ponder, Aid, Braggado- gland's most famous model, makes her American notion picture debut hi3 month f rJ his expectations: At Kansas City, Mo., where 8,000 of the 143,000 U. S. members of the Future Farmers of America gathered to attend their tenth annual convention,' a committee of three headed by Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes announced the name of the Star Farmer of America, selected from F. F. A. rools three weeks ago: Robert Lee Bristow. With the honor went a $500 prize. m iijiiij iiiiiiim ga Decorations at New York Auto Show to featura "Streamline Age" . . . there's nothing new, any more, about streamlining, but we guess there's nothing newer, either . . . Trailer makers are confident they've reached tops in comfort and beauty . . . leading firm rashly promises no change in design for five years . . . Boake Carter to speak at S. A. E. dinner . . . will' give engineers a chance to see the face behind the voice inside the radio . . . Survey shows that the automobile is second to food in Pacific Coast budgets . . . clothes and rent stumble along a poor third and fourth . . . New Safety STOP sign for middle of street la hinged . . . when a car goa over it, it is pushed down against rubber bumpers . . . New Studebaker automatic vacuum shift needs no change In driving habits . . , the handy little lever works the same way as a conventional shift . . . growing popularity of highway poker (betting your own license number against that of pass-Jng cars) has Minnesota lloense-bureadismayed . . , they they spend all their time nlHx! requests for Uowse that ch L wi agqp' " V1 m Q r BACKFIELD COMBINATION They may see quite a bit of service this year. (Left to right) Nevin McCormick, Andy Puplis. Mario Tonnelli and Jack McCarthy. They are right half, quarterback, left hall and fullback in that order. IRISH f COOWPB I Llah-spee- d away as Puerto Rico. Massengill's Elixir Sulfanilamide had by last week caused the deaths of at least 41 nersons. the disability of countless more, a nationwide scare. First warnings of trouble sounded when who took this medicine neonle ' I for sore throats developed nsusi :i. cramps and inability lo urinaio. Au topsies revealed destroped Kitiness nnii livers. A rents of the Federal Food and Drug Administration, posh throughout the country to waicn unjust such pharmaceutical accidents, flask promptly confiscated evtry last could of the Massengill "elixir" they find. Meanwhile Dr. Massengill cooperated with the Food and Drug men by sending warning telegrams u an his sulfanilamide customers. The Pure Food and Drug Bill up before Congress last session would have made Dr. Massengill liable to Federal Rut-- thf bill failed and there is no law which makes a pharmacist responsible to the Federal Government for selling untested arugs. ur. sengill is nevertheless liable to civil damage suits from relatives of the L 1 . tot- e- GONE "WCL voU I visit or are - - a. ovrn or or read meal t.w pro-ontin- ttU . Thal., f8he test auto-sburtuncj et plaCeiS and the cloche icUY too cooV last, oodc0 iVeY bave -l- proved oeei - ro0ving. e B or ..conorricai---Bang- f duC.. th n . 41 dead. PEWS AND TULPITS NEW YORK Lackadaisical U. S. church attendance, and related problems facing U. S. Ministers, made news last week:- In Hyannis, Mass., where Rev. Carl F. Shultz of the Federated Church listed six causes for empty church pews: Rest. Radio, Riding, Relatives, Roomers, Rum. In Atlantic City, N. J., where Headmaster Frank Ely Gaebelein of Stony Brook (L. I.) School for Boys told a Methodist Protestant conference that little more than 25 per cent of 49,000,000 U. S. young people have ever been In a church. Recent questionnaires, ho said, showed that nevof 55,000 school children had er heard of the Ten Commandments; only 2,000 of 18,000 students could name four biblical prophets, only 6.000 the four gospels, only 8,000 any three of Christ's disciples. Headmaster Gaehelein'a remedy: "Revive the family altar and the reading of the Bible." 16,-0- Utah Power & Light Co. r r. Eltctricity Is The Biggest Bargain In Tht Horn FASHIONS OF 1938 - - - NEW YORK From the viewpoint of the public, the annual Automobile Shows opened by the Manhattan show (staged by the manufacturers) and followed immediately by 44 shows in other cities (staged by dealers) are eagerly anticipated pageants where the nation's most progressive wonderful industiy displays new and improvements in U. S. mankind's most basic luxury. But improvements in 1938 automobiles, on view for the first time last week with the opening of the 39th annual Automobile Show in New York's hulking Grand Central Palace, are neither new nor wonderful. Cars look virtually the same as last year, save for a few refinements of streamlining, and the only newcomer Is a midget car named "Bantam." From the viewpoint of automobile makers and sellers, the Automobile Show is considered the best means the industry to a good of "kicking-of- f start." To the industry, this year's kick-of- f looks good because the slight changes in car appearance mean that few exnensive changes in plant and tooling were necessary to launch the new models. The lack of newcomers and new gadgets means that dealers ESl si r1 J&& X2S' ft To All Who Suffer From Acute Attacks Asthma-Bronchit- is Over 9,000,000 Bottles of This Famous Cough Mixture Sold in Canada Two or BUCKLEY'S de ttre of th Famou hot wpetend ret.r-Inc wafer and lppd .lowly just tfor sleep. restful umurm MIXTURE In night sufferers enjoy a and nigh?; you'll sleep coughlets If you wl bs Mf whe Waka refrr-- d rwugh to ta& 2 or 3 doses before you usually Asthma-Bronchit- r is m asm' miry w w City Drug1 Co. III iw - SCHENtEt DlSIRiBUTOftS, INC., NEW YOEK CITY |