OCR Text |
Show THE BINGHAM NEWS Rejuvenated Prominent retired merchant ays be feeU like new man line Tanlac relieved him of hit trou-bles. Can now outwalk men 20 year younger. Act w It. E. Boyd, 5000 Fourteenth St, K W., Washington, D. C, for forty--' eight years prominent hardware mer-chant In the national capital, but now retired, lends bis name to further the cause of Tanlac. "Indigestion and stomach weakness of a very pronounced type had troubled me for several months prior to last October fifteenth," said Mr. Boyd, re-cently, "but since that date the Tanlac treatment has made a new man of me. Now I ent heartily, never have a sign of indigestion, sleep like a log, and get up mornings feeling like an athlete. Today I can outwalk men twenty years younger. Tanlac alone put me In my present fine physical condition, en-abling me to get more real pleasure than ever before out of meeting and mingling with friends. Tanlac has re-juvenated me completely, so to speak. It's the finest medicine I ever ran across." Tanlac Is for sale by all good drug-gists. Accept no substitute. Over 40 million bottles sold. Take Tanlac Vegetable Pills. JOOOOOOOO OOOC OOOOOOOOOOOOO I Peanut Fan Fined for X 1 Shell Pile in Street 2 Because he stood on h street 0 9 corner and ate so ninny peanuts 6 9 that the shells plied up to his 9 6 knees, Alex lloussey of French- - 6 $ vllle, l'a., was flued a dollar. 2 6 The fine was paid, to a garbage 6 X collector to remove the shells. X 00000000000000000000000000 1,000,000 Farmers "Going Into Business" WASHINGTON. Over "gone into the marketing route, and to the tune of $2,000,000,000 or more dur!ng 1923, according to latest fig-ures at the Department of Agricul-ture, where a survey of the associations Is being made. This exact statement, coupled with B. F. Yoakum's project for an Inter-state farm marketing association, heading up at Washington, as de-scribed to President Coolldge, and the plan? of the National Council of Co-operative Marketing Associations for their new headquarters to transfer from Chicago to Washington, gives promise that the "farm " will soon become as well known about the capitol as the "farm bloc." The "co-op- " Is a slang phrase which has been used for many years to designate the loosely knit associa-tions of farmers who make butter and cheese or bargain for the sale of farm products. Hut In the last three years the Introduction of the Callfornln-eontra- et plan, which guarantees the delivery of the farmers' entire crop to the association selling agents, has worked a remarkable evolution In the marketing of most farm products and the 1,000,000 have nearly all been signed up within the last three years. I Erstwhile farmers, recently turned huslness men, attended in large num-bers the second annual convention of the National Council of Farmers' Co-operative Marketing Associations, re-cently held here. Almost every who spoke described huslness operations running well up Into the millions and showed how thousands of producing farmers tire Joining the movement each month, In the expectation that will stabilize market prices, nml eliminate most of the waste and losses that come from In-dividual shipments to a Btrange mar-ket, where the farmer has little or no representation In the dealing. marketing," said for-mer Governor Lowdon of Illinois, "Is our new national business policy. Thirty states and the federal govern-ment have passed laws establishing it The Supreme court has approved these as constitutional. The Depart-ment of Agriculture, the war trade hoard and the farm loan board and the federal reserve board are all be-hind the movement, which was so bad-ly needed to prevent farmers generally from 'going to the wall.'" But Congress Will Not Buy the Land of a ORGANIZATION public-spirite- d a thor-ough study of the Southern Appalachian mountain range for the purpose of selecting the most typically scenic area as a national park has been begun by secretary of the In-terior Work. Invitations were sent to Congressman Henry W. Temple, ol Pennsylvania; Major W. A. Welch, general mannger of the Palisades In-terstate park commission of New York, and Colonel Glenn Smith, of the geological survey, asking them to serve on the committee. The Council on National Parks, Forest, and Wild Life, with headquarters In New York, through Its secretary, Harrington Moore, was requested to name two other members. In those communica-tions Secretary Work said: "As you know, there has been awakened a widespread Interest In the F.ast in the creation of additional na-tional parks and several bills have been Introduced In the Sixty-eight- h congress proposing the establishment of areas In several of the southern states as national parks. "Our national park system Is the finest In the world and In making any additions to If, sites should be chosen that will be In every respect up to the standard, dignity, and pres tige of the existing national parks, I feel, therefore, that there should be a thorough study of the southern Ap-palachian range made for the purpose of selecting an area that will be typical of the scenery, plant, and animal life of this range for a na-tional park. I am confident that when such selection is made the vari-ous interests urging the creation of national parks can be centered In hav-ing the selected area acquired. As there are no government-owne- d lands In the East, excepting those acquired under the Weeks act for the protec-tion of the headwaters of navigable streams and which are designated as national forest reservations, any area that might be selected probubly would be privately owned, but little doubt exists, however, that when a suitable area is selected It will be found that the owners, through patriotic motives, will donnte at least part of the land for national park purposes to remain as a memorial to their generosity and Interest In public affairs. In any event selection should be made and the property purchased when the ground Is cheap. "I have In mind asking a committee of five public-spirite- persons to un-dertake such a study nnd If you can devote the time this summer I would like to have you serve as a member.' No More Immigrants Till After June 30 MOItE Immigrants, barring a NOfew scattered handfuls, will be admitted to the United States during the current fiscal year, which ends June 30, next, according to information made public by the Department of Labor. All Europe, except for Scandinavia and France, with a sprinkling of a few score or hundreds of Immigrants else-where, has exhausted Its quota for the current year. It will be the first time In the his-tory of the country'. It Is believed, rhat the human tides will have ceased to roll against the shores of America. Under the present Immigration law, which expires June 30, next, the num-ber of admlsslbles Is restricted to 3 per cent of the nationals of any coun-try In the United States at the time the census of 1010 was taken. The total which may be admitted In any one year has been figured out by the Department of Labor at 3o7,803. That total Is apportioned among the various European and other nations affected by the law (South America Is not affected), In quotas fixing the limit of Immigration from each coun-try. The highest Is the quota of Great Britain and Ireland. 77.342 per sons; the next, Germany, with 07,-58- while Italy, with an annual quota of 42,0.r)7; Poland, with 30,077; Russia, with 24,405; Sweden, with 20,042; Czechoslovakia, with 14,3.".7, and Nor-way, with 12,202, follow In the order named. Each of the remaining 3fl nations affected has an annual quota of less than 10,)t0 ; seventeen have quotas of less than 1,000. Under the Labor department's rul-ings not more than one-fift- of a na-tion's annual quota may be admit ted In any one month. Even with thi check the annual race among steamers to reach New York In the early morn Ing hours of July 1 each year ! participated in by from ten to twentj vessels, each laden with Immigrants Before July the present law will he extended or a new law enacted. Pro-posals looking to a new law contain restrictions which would reduce still further the number of adinlssibles to 2 per cent of the nationals numbered In the 1S0O census. How effectually the bars will then be up Is shown by the estimate that less than 200,000 persons would he admissible under such a law, as com pared with ri."7.0oo this year, .".OO0 In 1921 and l,21S,0xi In 1014. Is Cooking for Her Fourth President MARTHA MCLVKY was MIlS. In the household of the J. P. Morgan, Sr., in New York, says the Kansas City Star, and was fully satisfied there when Mrs. William Howard Taft, knowing President Tuft's love for good food, prepared properly, brought her to the White House nnd said: "There you are! You are monarch of all you survey." She stayed there during both the Wilson terms, then be-came Mrs. Harding's most important under officer and now Is serving In a similar capacity for Mrs. Coolldge. Mrs. Mulvey was born In Sweden something more than fifty years ago. She bus been cooking ever since she can remember, but she Is extremely modest about It all. She realizes to the fullest extent the dignity of her position and has Invested It with a sort of siinctity that Is entirely par-donable when you consider the per-sonages, American, foreign, w hom she baa sorved. Her proudest uiomtjnU come when some world-know- celeb-rity Insists on making his way below stairs to tell her personally how good her food tasted. Mrs. Mulvey Is main figure In a ro-mance of the White House, too. She was working hard on her Joh there when she met James Mulvey, n special policeman, who had been guarding presidents for 2.1 years. This was during the Taft administration. "You can't leave me,'" Mrs. Taft pleaded In considerable apprehension when she heard the news. Accordingly Mrs. Mulvey fixed It up with James so she would keep her White House position, and now tl6 Mulvey family Is a completely happy one. Mr. nnd Mrs. Mulvey own their own little home far over In the north-east section of Washington, several miles from the White House, ami Mrs. Mulvey rises at some unheavenly hour each morning and starts by trolley for the scene of her day's activities nd enJo; s IU " ' ' Will Your Family 13c Happy This Spring? If yours It one of the few remaining families lacking an automobile, no doubt you have finally decided to get one within the next four months. A low-price- d modern automobile like the Chevrolet hai be come indispensable to the family of ordinary income. A million other families can easily prove to you that (he better way it with Chevrolet. The beauties of nature, the interesting ' and educational features of other placet and ways of living, remain things to read about or teen dimly in cold photographs until you are free to get to them at your convenience and pleasure. But, suppose you have definitely decided to buy a Chevrolet this spring. Thit does not necessarily mean you are going to get it. Anyone posted on conditions In the automobile business will tell you that thousands of families are going to be unuble to get cars this spring. Thit hat been true almost every spring for the last ten years. There are juit two wayt of making sure of getting your Chevrolet for use when the flowers and balmy breezes of spring lure you to the country roads buy it now or order it now. If you do not want to pay for it In full at this time, any Chevrolet dealer will arrange terms to suit your convenience. You will be surprised to learn how easy it it to pay for a Chevrolet and use it while you are paying for it. Please realize these statements are made by ut in good faith ;' and we mean just what we say about the possible difficulties of getting a car delivered ;to you this Spring if you wait until then to order it. The only way to be sure of a Chevrolet thit Spring U to order it NOW. Prices . o. b. Flint, Michigan Superior Roadster . , . 4JO Superior Sedan . . . $7 Superior Tourlna ... 491 Superior Commercial ChsHls 394 Superior Utility Coup . . 640 6uperlor Light Delivery . . 49 Superior Coupe . . 721 Utility Express Truck Chassis HQ , Fisher Bodies on all Closed Models Chevrolet Motor Company, Detroit, Michigan Division of Qtntral Motors Corporation "DANDELION BUTTER COLOR" A harmless vegetable butter color used by millions for 50 years. Drug stores and general stores sell bottles of "Dandelion" for 85 cents. Adv. j MOTHER! Clean Child's Bowels with "California Fig Syrup" Hurry Mother 1 Even constipated, bilious, feverish, or sick, colic Babies and Children love to take genuine "Cal-ifornia Fig Syrup." No other laxative regulates the tender little bowels so nicely. It sweetens the stomach and starts the liver and bowels without griping. Contains no na rcotics or sooth-ing drugs. Say "California" to your druggist and avoid counterfeits. Insist upon genuine "California Fig Syrup" Which contains directions. VMis aTeaspoonfal? v, it depends on the Dal J trig Powder you use. You S. must use heaping spoonful ' 1 " of many brands because they jr don't contain as much lcav enlng strength as Th, Economy BAKIXQ POlVDf.7 t Level spoonfuls are all that are neo T j essary when you use CALUMET it j f0smL makes more bakings which means a real gggffjgS saving on bake day, 1 . Sales 2 times v I as much as that ;V j ofany other brand ,,J . world's greatest ABJNQ POWDZSt Sjr Velvet m- PENCILS y30Ef.:. At all jrf-'Z-C W Dealers CVVrC'iz lSupreme in their class. JCC0 As Smooth asVcIveL St tFrif for trial gampls i JUX" American Lead Pencil Co, New York 4 frizes worth $2,500 A TENTER th du Pont International Crow-Sho- 1 --J $2,500 in merchandise prizrs. it costs yon nothing to register. Destroy this menses to game 1 and crops. Write today for booklets about the crow. 1 E. 1. DU PONT DE NEMOURS & CO., INC. tPV V Sporting Powder Division WILMINGTON. DEL. L S SPORTSMAN. -- f ( r:, .,CSERVICE Hall's Catarrh Medicine lllZt local and Internal, and has been success-ful in the treatment of Catarrh for ovet forty years. Sold by all druggtats. F. J. CHENEY &. CO., Toledo, Ohio WW MITCHELL EYE SALVE heals lnflimed eyes, grnnulnttd Ilda, atyes, etc. Bure. Hnfo. Hpociiy. 25c at all dniKprlsts. Hall & Ittickd, N. V.C. A Use I'ISO'S-Mhi- .i preftcription quickly S tiw relievci children nnd adults, Aptrawnt ivrtiri. Noor'atetv NERVY GIRL BANDIT LAUGHS AT POLICE Escapes in an Automobile While Officers Wait. New York. Displaying utter cou-tem-for Commissioner Enright's or-der to a squad of 250 plain-clothe- s men, Issued a short time previously to "get her dead or alive," Brooklyn's famous bobbed-haire- d girl bandit, who has robbed dozens of stores, again made her appearance In her role as driver of a bandit car, and, with two confederates, escaped with $2(H) taken from a Thomas Roulston chain store, Thomas Kgan, manager of the store, and Willie Ryan, fifteen years old, his errand boy, were the only ones In the shop when the two men en-tered. The bandits kept Kgan and the boy covered with revolvers while they rilled the cash register. With a curt command to F.gnn to "keep jour trap shut or get ready to stop a couple of bullets," the two men backed out of the store. Around the corner was an automobile, over the wheel of which bent the bobbed-haire- d girl bandit. She had the motor going and as the men stepped into the back of the car she threw In the clutch and the car sped away before any one had noted the number of the license. The girl's daring bus staggered the Brooklyn police. More than 1W) extra men In plain clothes, some from the detective school, have been "planted" inside and outside of chain stores to catch the girl, but she always eludes them. Wisdom Justified Governess How old Is a person whs was born In 18047 f The Modern Child Man or womanl London Opinion. Learn Eyelid Talking Detectives In Canada are being taught a code by means of which they can communicate with one another by dropping, raising or other movements of the eyes, and also how to "talk" se-cretly by means of finger touches, by twisting of a cigar, fingering of a mus-tache and twiddling Angers behind the back. This Is being done so that they can transfer their thoughts when In the presence of criminals or prisoners. It Is declared that communication with the eyelids can be as rapid as the Brdlnary man typewrites. Popular Mechanics Mngazlne. And some people even seem to b proud of the fact that they have noth-ing to be proud of. I Man 64, Braves Death to Save Dog in River Detroit, Mich. An d Airedale puppy, frozen to the ice In the Detroit river and howling for help, was rescued from death by a man, who, risking hi life on the treacherous broken Ice, crawled to the dog, bundled him in a blanket and brought him safely to shore. The story was told by friends of Dr. It. Newman, to whom "Jerry," the puppy, owes his life. Doctor Newman saw the dog falling In an attempt to cross the Ice. "I love dogs," Doctor Newman said, "and I couldn't endure the thought of watching this fine puppy die for want of human aid. I tied a rope around my waist and asked a policeman to hold the other end. Then I worked my way over the Ice, pushing a skiff ahead of me, and at length reached and rescued the dog." Why She Was Interested The young man in the Pullman car, seeing that a handsome girl was look-ing at him very Intently, thought he had made an Impression and In a few minutes changed his seat to the vacant one Ibeslde her. "Haven't we met before some-where?" he ventured to ask. "Well, I'm not quite sure," she re-plied, "but I think you are the man I saw hanging around the night our motor car was stolen." .. The young man vanished Into the smoking car, amid the sniggers of those who had overheard them. Man Shot in Mouth as He Walks With Friend New York. While walking with a friend along Eighth avenue Michael Haines, twenty-tw- o years old, com-plained of a stinging 8"nsathn in the roof of his mouth. When his com-panion. Joseph Clinton, saw blood trickling forth he took Haines to the Harlem hospital. There It was found that a bullet, fired mysteriously, had lodged In the man's mouth, with a probability, phy-sicians said, of fatal results. Both men denied having heard a shot and asserted that Haines had no enemy who might he suspected. Kills Own Father ' Charleston, W. Va. Thomas Knlg'it was shot to death by his son, Thur-mond, In their home near liore. The son was arrested. He told police he killed his father to protect his mother. The father was Intoxicated, both the mother and son declared. Fleeing Convicts Shot Jefferson City, Mo. Three convicts who escaped from the penitentiary at Jefferson City, Mo., were shot nnd killed by members of n posse who found them hiding In a barn. The convicts killed a guard when they hmke out of the prison. Easy Teacher Dicky, name three fem-inine nouns. Picky Puck, goose and flapper. Stole by Schedule Miami, Fin. Admitting that he com-mitted 15 robberies In a month, P. X. Harrington Is In jail. Harrington spent his days In the water, napped during the early evening, then robbed. After each robbery he attended a dance, he confessed. Risks Life for Fish Genoa, (. Wlicfi fire broke out in his home, Pr. V. V. Willing leaped from a second-stor- window to safety. Then he turned around and dashed hack Into the house. He enme out with a howl of goldfish In his arms. Record for No Marriages Manchester, Me. Fifty years of preaching without repeating a sermon receiving a cent of pay, marrying one couple Is the record of Rev. I. W. Ilnwkes, Quaker minister. He sup-ports himself by farming. KM. Big Wolf ftlchwood, Wis. with n stout club, James Snhei k, fourteen years old, of this, place, killed a large fctnnle wolf caught In one of his traps. |