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Show BEAVER COUNTY ~ NEWS THE WORLD’S GREAT EVENTS ALBERT Beane PAYSON REPLACED | BY TRUCKS TERHUNE = tw vy Dodd, Henry COUNTRY tall, AND LLAMAS BURROS high Mead & Company.) of Navarre boy—long of rather forehead, than with a great hooked beak of a nose, a tanned face and ‘wiry frame—came up. to Paris, against his mother’s will, .one day in the latter part of the Sixteenth b Graves, 3—Al the new Smith Gevence about to take of “Al his Seat abama, in the 2— “Queen Marie” float in annual Mummers’ par ade in New York gubernatorial chair at his fourth inaugu ration. poisoned liquor during the holiday s. ae their denunciations were fierce. The senate adopted a resolution introduced by Edwards of New Jersey calling upon Secretary of the Treasury Mellon to produce whatever correSpondence may have passed between the Ready to Exclude mith of Illinois— y Controversy. ARD W. PICKARD 4 SMITH, senator-designate Iilinois, will not be permithis seat in the United te if the plan agreed upon tly a great majority of the is carried out. When and if its his credentials, they are eferred to the committee on and elections, and whatever ‘the report of that committee fications, it seems certain ill be excluded on the ground t acceptance m the public utility of mag- e properties were subject lation of the Mlinois com. Of which he at the heard a long speech from : of Tennessee, Democrat. Hy demanding the exclusion Borah, Deneen and some cated an intention of con mit him to defend enate, and it was ed to do urces this himself said hx« partly of Republican IONAL advocates bx cam of : i navy continued their effort: it end during the week, bu ent steod so firmly on his Republican floor an amendment. t« - Tilson, introduced wrote a letter to RepreFrench’ declaring that his advising against any rence, remains unchanged. tative Britten of Illinois, who uon of turret guns on 11 battlethought the President was too ie -about that conference. r amendment, providing for the ction of a new dirigible, was st equal importance in f national defense was into the general state of gun by the house military the the the af- mimittee. wit- Among the first ind Maj. Gen. Fox Conner, depf of staff. They told the com- el, which already is 8,000 beaverage strength of the last senate the demands of the ”" men were_voiced by SenaSon of California, ‘the heighth first line who de- of folly to crip- of defense at a time iv war creditors are hating us @ world is envying our prosSenator Hale of Maine, chairhe naval affairs committee dministration supporter 10 igs, followed with a speech in building the American navy lasses of ships up to the 5-5-3 tablished by the Washington in both the senate and the ate opened up a vigorous govhe policy of the federaluse of the permits. which sons in the denaturing of alof ‘part of the enforcement {tion law. They had a long ths laid to the drinking of Treasury department and Wayne B. Wheeler, Senéral counsel of the Anti-Saloon league, jn connection with the poisoning of industr ial aleohol to make it unfit for bevera ge purposes. Several members of the house introduced resolutions and other measures dealing with the use of poison ous denaturants, Mr. Celler of New York raised a storm by asserting that congressmen drink to excess and refused to retract though others declare d the assertion was “an utter falseho od.” Brig. Gen. Smedley D. Butler, who fought the bootleggers and grafter s of Philadelphia for many months, seems to have changed his mind about proIm an address in Oakland, hibition. Calif., the commander of marines on the Pacific coast denounced the as class legiseighteenth amendment lation, saying it reacted against the poor man and favored the rich ‘one. Its principal demerit, he indicated, is thé manner in which enforcement has grown eut of it. - M ATTERS between Cantonese L forces and the British approached \ real crisis last week when a mob of, Chinese at Hankow, infuriated by anti‘oreign harangues, attacked the Brit‘sh concession, took possession of pub- Phil- can government will thus be th into the Supreme court. There a ae wage for many months, if not for years. Meanwhile, if they continu e to extract oil from the propert ies they occupy illegally, they face federal suits for indemnification. WO important manifestoes emanated from Premier Mussolini of Italy last week. In one the duce orders the prefects of all provinces to Suppress ruthlessly all illegalism and violence by . Fascists, especially when directed against the representatives in Italy of foreign nations. Particularly Mussolini referred to “squadrism,” a word coined recently in Italy to describe the act of “squadristi,” or little men, strong-arm Fascist of bands who, while important in the days im- mediately preceding the establishment of the Fascist regime, have now outlived their usefulness, At the same time the duce an- henceforth Fascism that nounced meant the Italian state, and, through the fascistized further cabinet, the state by extending to all employees of the public administration the law providing for the dismissal of employees hitherto applicable to the central political departments. RIG, GEN. RAFAEL CRAMB, chtet constabulary, Philippine the of died a few days ago, and another conflict over his successor is due between Governor General Wood and the Phil- century. He was the penniless Prince Henry of Bearn, ‘son of. stupid old Antony of Bourbon, king of Navarre, Tn coming to Paris he wag walking into the very jaws of death. Catherine de Medici, widow of Henry II, was practically ruler of France in spite of the fact that her weak son, Charles [IX sat on the throne. She had four sons. They were all childless, Should they chance to die without direct. heirs, the royal line of Valois would end, and the crown must pass, by “suceession, to their cousin, the king of Navarre, Catherine was an ardent Catholic, as were her sons and her adherents, Navarre, a little subsidiary province near the Spanish frontier of ‘France, was the center of the Huguenot (Protestant) movement. The rulers of Navarre were the chiefs of the Huguenots. Hence, if the king of Navarre should inherit the throne, France would probably become a Huguenot country. So Catherine cast uneasy eyes towards the little kingdom and began to plot measures for averting such a possibility, . Jeanne d’Albret, wife of Antony de Bourbon and mother of young Henry of Navarre, was also doing some plotting, but along wholly different lines, She was one of the noblest, best wom- en in history. Her husband had been a weak, dissipated, thick-headed fellow, and all her hopes were centered in her boy. She accordingly had Henry brought up as a rigid Protestant, sought to turn his mind to high thoughts, to honor and personal rectitude, urged him to outdoor life and exposure to toughen and strengthen him, and confided his military train- ' ing to the famous Admiral Coligny. In the midst of this cousse of training Jeanne was horrified to receive 4 request from Catherine that Henry visit the gay court at Paris. She well knew that such an invitation amounted to a royal command, and that it could not with impunity be disobeyed. Yet she RON Popular Type of Truck Loaded Transportation of heavy supplies up steep mountain trails formerly trav- ersed only Bolivian by burros mines feet above located and llamas, to 12,000 to 16,000 sea level in Andes range, has been solved by the use of light automobile trucks. Developed by Incas, Centuries ago the Incas first developed these mines located in the most inaccessible inland ranges. The Spanishh conquistadores, envious of the Indians’ wealth, made short work of reducing the native population to a condition of slavery and supervising the production of gold. In later years silver and tin have been the most profitable metals produced in Bolivia, with operations seriously handicapped by the inaccessibility of the mining sites, Until a year ago burros and llamas, carrying a& maximum load of 100 ALCOHOL IS BEST ANTI-FREEZE DOPE With Concrete Blocka pounds each and traveling only 20 miles dally were relied upon to trans port supplies to the sky-line operating centers and to carry down to seaboard and railroads the refined metals, enormously heavy even in small quantitles. Improvements in mining prae‘tice were impossible until better distributing methods were available. Charges Notwithstanding only rough Reduced. roads trails covered which were with rocks and the fact that an automobile motor . ordinarily loses 80 to 85 per cent of ita power when operating In the rarefied atmosphere of high altitudes, trucks have practically superseded the pack animals. One light truck carrying 2,000 pounds and covering 120 miles daily, does the work of 120 burros or llamas and cuts transportation charges exactly in half, ‘ Signs Suggested for Railroad Crossings A Houston road sign painter suggests the following signs for railroad crossings: "Come ahead, You're’ untmportant.” “Try our engines. They satisfy.” -*Don't stop. Nobody will miss Great Drawback Is That It Readily Evaporates and Must Be Replaced. you. ” foresaw the terrible influences 3 woman like Catherine could exert on her pleasure-loving son. Henry, delighted to be free from such close discipline, hurried to ‘Paris and “Take a chance. You can get Letter circular No. 238 in revised hit by a train only once.”— form has just been tssued by the Houston Post. United States bureau of standards. It enibodies the tests made on a number of anti-freezing mixtures and gives ippine senate under the leadership of | plunged at once into the dissolute a table showing the ‘percentages of al| ‘ie buildings, hoisted the revolutionary Manuel Quezon. It is regarded as gayety of the court. Jeanne in vain cohol, ‘of glycerin, and of combinaWashington Police Get flag and foreed the fofeign business certain that General Wood will name tried to retain her influence over him tions of the two that are necessary to houses to close. The British residents an American for the post, and Quezon .by writing him lon letters full of | produce a solution having a_ given ded to the French and Japanese consays the senate will not confirm the advice and of news Of his old home. freezing point. cessions and all the British women and appointment of an American, General Catherine dreaded the effect of these ( Alcohol ts still regarded as the best children in Hankow, Kiugiang and Crame, who was appointed by former letters, so she sent Jeanne a pair of | material to keep automobile radiators Ichang were removed by vessels, most Gov. Gen. Francis Burton Harrison, polsoned gloves. Jeanne wore them | from freezing. If wood alcohol is used of them being taken to Shanghai. The was of Spanish-Filipino descent. He and died. care should be taken to see that it is was considered fairly efficient as chief, Cantonese officials were appealed to Every decent influence being thus free from acid, otherwise corrosion of but the organization, which is thorSy the British consul and the inadethe radiator and circulatory system removed, Henry wallowed deeper daily oughly Philippinized except for about quate. British forces: there: were within the infamies of Catherine’s con- may result. The great drawback to a dozen American field officers, is addrawn, control of the area being surtrivance. He was now king of Nathe use of alcohol ts the fact that ft mittedly not up to the standard set rendered to the nationalist commandreadily evaporates and has to be revarre, nominal head of the Huguenots, when American army officers heador, The British government ordered Glycerin. does not. have this placed. but too steeped in the pleasures of ed it. javal reinforcements from Hongkong, court to give much thought to his re- | drawback, but {ft 1s more expensive, ind American and French naval forces sponsibilities. To wipe out the Hugue- . Antl-Freeze Solutions. were held ready to land if the necesN A report to the President, the nots Catherine arranged the massacre Among other anti-freeze solutions ity arose. The hostility of the na& United States ‘St. Lawrence river of St. Bartholomew within a week | giscussed are calcium chlorid e, honey, after Henry's marriage to her dgughtives in the Yangtse valley so far is: commission advocated the immediate glucose and kerosene. f ter Margaret. Henry, seeing his life construction of the St.. Lawrence shipdirected almost wholly against the Calcium chloride is frequently used was in danger, renounced Protestant- and found to be very effective, but it way as a measure of transportation Sritish. . . ~ ism and became a Catholic. relief for the Middle West. The conThree | has a decided corrosive action, paryears later he escaped from Paris, ticularly on solder and aluminum. ies the first fime since their with- clusions of thé commission are thus where he was treated more like a This salt forms the basis of many of summarized: drawal in-August, 1925, the AmerWashington. traffic police are to be prisoner than a king, and fled to Na“Kirst: The construction of the shipthe patent anti-freeze mixtures on the ican marines are in Managua, Nicaraprovided with these little pagodas, the varre, where his Huguenot adherents way from the Great Lakes to the sea market. To some of these a soluble gua, together with some American latest thing in safety, comfort and were awaiting him, On the way he| chromate is added to prevent sorrosailors—166 in all—commanded by is imperative both for the relief and} visibility. Traffic Officer R. M, Frye — stopped long enough to renounce sion. The bureau finds that little corCapt. Julius C. Townsend of the navy. |. for the future development of a vast ig shown overlooking the hurrying Catholicism and” declare himself a rosion results when this ts added exarea in the interior of the continent. Landing from the U. S. S. Galveston throng in front of the United States faithful Huguenot. Fer the next few cept to the aluminum parts. An“Second: The shipway should be at Corinto, the party went to the captreasury. ; years he indulged in as gay a life as other troublesome feature of ce!cium constructed on the St. Lawrence route, welwarmly was and ital by train his impoverished little kingdom could chloride is its tendency to cause short provided suitable agreement can be national Nicaraguan the by comed afford. circuits when it gets on the spark made for its joint undertaking with Deceleration Is Quite guard and the officials of the Diaz Meantime, on Charles IX’s death, plugs or ignition wires. When cold the Dominion of Canada. It was sent to Managua government. Important to Motorist his younger brother, Henry III, had it takes up moisture and forms a good “Third: The development of the legaostensibly to guard the American come to the throne of France. He was “Accelerates from five to thirty . conducting layer where such is not power resources of the St. Lawrence | of tion and on the recommendation frivolous and weak. The Parisians miles an hour in ten seconds,” read@ It is hard to remove and desired. should be undertaken by appropriate maintaining is who Admiral Latimer, worshiped the duke of Guise, who an auto advertisement. Very good, the ~short cireults formed by it hard ‘agencies. along openly declared himself a claimant to the neutral zone he established but what about deceleration? How to find because they disappear when _ “fourth: Negotiations should be Acthe throne and who started the many seconds are required to bring the eastern coast of Nicaragua. the engine gets hot. entered into with Canada in an enfactors important the of League, an organization semi-civil, the car from thirty miles an hour tually one deavor to arrive at agreement upon Unsatisfactory Mixtures. Washingthe semi-religious, made up from all down to five? . prompting this action by In such negotidall these subjects. ‘Honey and glucose were found undetermination classes and devoted to the Guise fam-| It is-customary to think of stoppiig ton government is the satisfactory because a high concentrations the United States should recopcanal route in terms of distances, whereas it may ily... Henry III, to check this rising to protect the proposed tion is necessary to prevent freezing, proper relations of New York the nize the which for be more to the point to consider it in revolt, had Guise assassinated. The Niearagua, in across and this results in a thick solution to the power development in the and also League in fury rose to avenge its seconds. The time interval has much United States paid $3,000,000, that does not flow freely. There is alternational section.” naval base e to do with the distance, for even if leader’s death and drove the king out in to protect eur leased so danger of depositing sugar in the Senator Shipstead of Minnesota the of Support a car has poor brakes and does not of Paris. The dispossessed monarch requesting the the Gulf of Fonseca. circulatory system. Low percentage resolution a troduced sae stop efficiently, a second saved sol... joined forces with Henry of Navarre a part of this Diaz government is solutions do not lower the freezing to enter into the necessary as the lan - President where in the process is quite a Lit against the League, but was himself It was in¢ Fully as important icy. point to any great extent,. but they do negotiations with Canada. of distance saved as well. assassinated in 1589. This left Henry was the decision prevent bursting the radiator. When ing of the marines at the White House that Pres: dicated the By conserving even a fraction of a of Navarre rightful ‘king of France. to lift reports the regards such a solution does freeze it first of President Coolidge Coolidge ident second, some drivers are able to get of arms an pe Henry boldly laid siege to Paris te as turns to a slush which must first be pargo on the shipment favering the St. Lawrence project . four-wheel-brake results with twoiba 1,000 ‘enforce his claims. He .beat the the the of judgment cooled to a considerably greater expermit Diaz to get representing ‘the oe wheel brakes. Drivers who have used m several League’s armies ‘at Arques in. 1588 and he has guns tent before it turns solid. machine best experts available, but that hand brakes in the past well rememand at Lvry in 1590. Henry was tired which he ne nt. ammunition indorseme of own his rounds not yet given ber the gain in deceleration distance of warfare and poverty. He wanted States. This abe chased in the United Carburetor Wisdom when foot brakes speeded up the stopto be a king, not a guerilla leader. So Borah, a hone RANS-ATLANTIC radiop not pleasing to Senator ping process. : In making carburetor adjustments, ne he abjured Protestantism and for the and existing York New under between that service clared Stopping is coming to be a matter an operation the owner usually pera second time declared himself a true fore The Frion n operatio it was intervention. London was put in of seconds more than of distance. Stop forms when the engine is cold, the Catholic. This removed the last bar_ W & was the senate, day. T he first communication watches on the braking technique of lations committee of new adjustment should be given a rier to his success and all France glad one between Walter S. Gifford, many drums probably would show the chance to prove itself before another ly acclaimed him king. ling for immec diate with- formal ‘America n Telephone need for sucha change. change is made. That. is, after makir Paris entered he 1593 in So G./ and Sir ney naval :forces fromry | and ee ing a change the engine should be ran dra ! : ‘ pace \ ape . a no in apparently Evelyn P. Murray, secretary of the | triumph, Nicaragua, decided to ask oe Cause of Some”Leaks ~ his for a couple of miles, even if i misBritish general post office. After that-|-abashed at having twice deceived ready fires at the beginning while it is still K loge ro.expiaty to: it ie such Many cars have wires or rods leadby followers F “ine!” was thrown open for gen- | earlier Nicaraguan situation. —os ore ervice and there was plenty of | changes of faith. He drove the Span- cold. It may be that after it has ing from the front of the radiator te — warmed up to normal running temthe priming device on the carburetor. of France, put down the me S$ of Mexico has | era’ § for applications ha d been com- { ish out perature, the new adjustment will These rods pass through one of the RESIDENT Som that, . League, and in 1598, by the edict ot ce g: the enforlvin days: ~ prove satisfactory. ing in for many ee the invo lw: Se air passages of the radiator. Th. Nantes, assured privilege and relig “Safety First Pagodas” +o ign oil a tion of the fore et s to which sh erating on land , right legal 20 der that law, ed y for Bey aaied to appl a e e firming their oui companies will ae a osto ‘against the disp Pet injunctions matically proceedings. Auto ee Mexithe and them eaeir paseo in started California’ rear W rith a series of 50 killing while that, s e earthquake severee of damage in the no 0 ne, did a lot The effects of the Imperial valley. It also in northern fe was temblors were in The heaviest losses Mexico. town, Mexicali, Calexico and its sister r. borde the across S IRN ota ious toleration der him médern He the to all Protestants, Un- France had its birth. ruled wisely and for the good of people. . At the height of his career, May 14 1610, he was murdered by Ravaillac, € fanatic, his young son, Louts XIII, suc ceeding titn. Arrest Noise Makers Under ‘an ordinance forbidding unnecessary nolses_in St. Louis, Mo., drivers of trucks, texis and auytomobiles whe allow their vehicles te backfire and who use sirens will be a> rested. s : tubes of radiators are made of vers thin material, and in the course of a season’s use the primer rod, in rat- tling around, through vibration of the | car, may cause a leak that will be troublesome. The remedy is to sert a stiff plece of tubing passage that holds the| a fn E |