Palacios Beacon (Palacios, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 15, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 16, 1936 Page: 2 of 8
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Pegs 2
April 17, 1936
BRISBANE
THIS WEEK.
, Hear Lloyd George
i News From the Cosmo*
| Statesmen and Politicians
I Sloan’s Fine Figures
Lloyd George, who run the big
ear for England and won with
the help of old
Clemencenu, not
aympathetlc with
France this time,
says England Is
dangerously In-
volved and “we
shall send our
young men to
die, this time on
German soil, to
punish those ar-
rogant and ag-
gressive Teutons
for daring to
make prepara-
tions for the de-
Arthur Uriah... fpn8p of t|ie|r
turn soli against a foreign Invader."
wi/ieur
By Edward W. Pickard
__________0 Western Newt papa Union
Lloyd George Is hitter In his de-
snnclatlon of the suggestion that
England be dragged Into another
war. “France,” says he, “can spend
{600,000,000 on the erection of huge
fortifications. We can vote plans
srhlch Involve expenditure of an
txtra fifteen hundred million dol-
lars for protection. Hut If the Ger-
aians propose to throw tip even a
pillbox to guard their famous cit-
ies and their greatest Industrial
area . . . then ‘measures must be
concerted’ between the general
•rmy staffs of Brltuln and France."
r —
The “fastest" double star Is
found, and that Is the big news.
“Twin suns” close together. In the
constellation of Ophlurhus, revolve
New Houaing Program of
the Administration
system of government. An Invest!
gallon not based upon specified
F=i,-,„T" -rfmo- isits-s:
* (MY) (MM) trill ho annul In flio I ,,, „ „
specific statements of fact.
Sen. Wagnsr
000,000 will be spent In the next
four years on low-cost rent nndslum
clearance construction projects, pro-
vided the adminis-
tration's housing
bill, Introduced by
Senator Robert F.
Wagner of New
York, Is passed by
congress. Mr. Wag-
ner hopes It will he
put through during
the present session.
The measure Is
a compromise of
the many proposals
made hy the vari-
ous relief and houaing agencies of
the New Deal and was drafted after
n series of conferences with resi-
dent Roosevelt. It would create
nnother bureau, with five directors,
Including the secretary of the In-
terior In Ills ex officio capacity, re-
ceiving $10,000 salaries. The au-
thority could employ officers, agents,
counsel and other personnel without
limitation ns to number or compen-
sation and without regard for the
civil service laws. This authority
would supplant the existing housing
division of the I’libllc Works admin-
istration.
Only $51,000,000 would be appro-
priated for the present, of which
$1,000,000 would he used for the pur-
chase of the authority’s capital
completely around each other In stock, but the bill authorizes appro-
twenty months. The shortest period
of revolution for any other “binary"
■tar la five years. Some revolve
only once In a hundred years.
Nature Is both fust and slow;
the electron In the atom revolves
around the proton thousands of
(nllions of titties In a second. The
lens-shaped Milky Wuy above your
head, In which our aun Is one ol
thirty thousand million specks o!
light, revolves once In 225,000,000
years. No limit to bigness, nu
limit to smallness, apparently.
That naval conference In London
ends, quite to the satisfaction ol
England, with the situation about
as It was when Hiram Johnson ol
California put the situation In these
few words:
"Great Britain builds ns she pre
fers; the United States builds a:
Great Britain permits." |
England actually snys to the
United States, “You must build nc
more cruisers with eight-inch guns
we do not like them.” And the
United States humbly snys, “At
right, then we shall not build any.'
prlatlons of $75,000,000 for the fis-
cal year 1888, $100,000,000 for 19811,
and $100,000,000 for 19-10. In addi-
tion to these authorizations, the au-
thority could borrow $100,000,000
from the Reconstruction Flnnnce
corporation, and sell notes or bonds,
fully guaranteed by the govern-
ment ns to principal anil Interest, up
to $100,000,000 for the fiscal year
1037 and $150,000,000 for each of
the succeeding three years. Tills
brings the grand total to $970.-
000.000.
The authority would he empow-
ered to make grants not to exceed
45 per cent of the total cost and
loans for the remainder to any pub-
lic housing agency for the acquisi-
tion of land and the construction of
"low-rent" housing projects. The
loans would he repayable over a pe-
riod not to exceed 00 years, nt such
rates of Interest ns the authority
decreed. In addition to tlie loans
and grnuts, the authority could de-
velop and administer so-called dem-
onstration projects, which “as soon
ns practicable" would he sold to
public bousing agencies.
“Such an Investigation, or such a
search, Is unlawful In Its Inception
and cannot be made luwful by wlint
It inny bring, or by what it actually
succeeds In bringing to light.”
The decision was concurred In by
six Justices; s dissenting opinion
handed down by Justices Cnrdozo,
Brandels and Stone, agreed with the
warning of the abuse of power, hut
contended that the act of the SEC,
held unlawful by the majority, was
a legal and Just means of stamp-
ing out frauds In security sales.
ft Is the old stury: England has
statesmen, we have politicians—uric
some of them are Aiiglmiiuuiui
•nobs.
Senate Begins Impeachment
Trial of Judge Ritter
KSOLVING Itself Into n court.
Lowden May Be Keynoter
for the Republicans
I EADKItS of both major parties
k-t are perfecting the arrangements
for the national conventions and
picking out the chief orators for
those occasions.
The Republicans
have tentatively
selected Frank O.
Lowden, former
governor of Illi-
nois, ns temporary
chnlrmun and key-
noter of the gath-
ering In Cleveland.
If this choice
stands It Is pre-
sumed the perntn-
F. O. Lowden nPnt c|,alrmnn will
be an Easterner, possibly Walter
Edge of New Jersey, former am-
bassador and senator.
Some Western governor Is want-
ed by the Democrats ns their key-
noter, and the honor may he given
to Paul V. McNutt of Indiana, C.
Ben Boss of Idaho or Clyde C. Her-
ring of Iowa. For permanent chair-
man nt Philadelphia Senator Rob-
inson of Arkansns Is likely to he
picked. The speech putting Presi-
dent Roosevelt In nomination for n
second term may he delivered by
Senator Wagner of New York.
New York Itepubllcnns of the Old
Guard persuasion scored a decisive
victory over Senator Borah In the
primaries, and the Empire state
delegation to Cleveland will bo un-
pledged to any candidate. The tri-
umph of the conservatives was com-
plete. Not only were the Borah
candidates defeated In nine con-
gressional districts In which they
made contests, but the organiza-
tion candidates for delegates de- |
feated Independent candidates not ;
pledged to Borah In three other '
districts.
Maine Democrats In their prl-
Wallsce Reports Some
Big AAA Payments
UK to the Insistence of Senntor
Vandenberg for publicity on
large AAA benefit payments, Secre-
tary Wallace has begun telling
about them. He made a partial re-
port, withholding the names of re-
cipients with three exceptions. This
revealed that the largest cotton
rental benefit payment, $123,747 for
1934, went to a Mississippi company
headed by Oscnr Johnston, an AAA
official. Among the largest cotton
payment recipients In 1933 were the
Mississippi state penitentiary, which
received $43,200 for controlling pro-
duction on Its cotton acreage, and
$25,500 to the Arkansas state prison.
Among other large payments re-
ported under various crop control
programs were:
Sugar—$901,004 to a Puerto
Rican corporation; $802,400 to a
Hawaiian producer; $92,237 to a
California beet sugar producer; $05,-
505 to a Colorado beet sugar grower.
Corn-liogs—$150,000 to the “larg-
est ling farm In the world," located
In California; $49,194 to a farming
company In New Jersey; $10,008 to
n Massachusetts producer.
Wheat—$29,398 to a California
farming concern for the second 1034
nnd first 1935 periods; $20,022 to the
"operator of a number of farms" In
Washington state; $23,845 to a Cali-
fornia bank, owner of n large wheat
acreage; $22,325 to n "large Mon-
tana farmer."
Cotton—$115,700 In 1034 to an Ar-
knnsns concern; $80,000 the same
tear to another Arkansas company.
Tobacco—$41,454 to a Florida con-
cern ; $20,430 to a Connecticut pro-
ducer; $10,843 to a Smith Carolina
grower; $15,450 to n Kentucky
grower.
National Topics Interpreted
by William Bruckart
National Prell Building Washlncton, D, C,
r ' \ N;
Hitler’s Peace Program Is
Formally Submitted
A DOLF HITLER'S proposals for
4A peoce In Europe, together with
Ills flat rejection of the plan of the
other four Locarno powers for set-
tle m e n t of the
Rhineland s 11 u a-
tlon, were handed
to British Foreign
Minister Eden by
Joachim von Itlb-
bentrop, nnd passed
on hy Eden to the
French and Bel-
gian ambassadors
In London. The
British cabinet
thought the Ger-
man scheme worthy
of consideration, but the French
government looked upon it as a
“cunning plan" to split the Locarno
Adolf Hitler
WASHINGTON.—Some years ago
wh'i Heed Smoot of Utah was a
, member of the
Smoot e senate where lie
Prophecy enjoyed • long
ond meritorious
service, he ventured a prophecy. It
was this:
“The cost of government has In-
creased every year, and It will con-
tinue to increase. I care not what
party Is In power, that result will
obtain."
As I recall, Senntor Smoot's
statement was made about eight
years ago and It was made at
time when the Republicans, of
whom the Utah senator was one,
were In control In the senate. Ills
statement came as a result of an
Immense amount of Jibes that were
being hurled at the Republican ma-
jority. The Democrats were hav-
ing a grand time, kidding the Re-
publicans who were then In com-
plete control of the government.
Senator Smoot recognized that
which few In responsible positions
In the government recognized, or If
they did recognize the fact, they
chose not to admit It. Neverthe-
less, the senator's statement Is true
today as It was true when he made
It and for many years before.
The Smoot prophecy comes to
mind now because of the sudden
acceleration of moves to curtail
government expenses, to reorganize
the scads of New Deal and emer-
gency agencies, to eliminate over-
lapping functions among these
agencies, nnd, In general, to put
the house of government In order.
Two such efforts are under way.
One of them was Initiated by Sena-
tor Harry F. Byrd, Virginia Demo-
crat, who succeeded In obtaining
senate recognition of Ids charges
that there was tremendous waste,
that there were useless agencies
and that, In addition, governmental
functions were being generally
messed up because none except the
old-established onlts of government
knew what they were doing. The
Virginia senator obtained adoption
of a resolution providing for a gen-
eral survey and recommendations
for the clean-up. It was a situation
In which even the most nrdept New
Dealers could not And an excuse
So the senator
powers nnd make Hitler the
virtual dictator of Europe. Premier ; for objecting to It.
Surraut and Foreign Minister Flan- ; took the lead,
din were consulting on steps for
frustrating the relchsfuehrer nnd
preserving a united front of the
Locarno nations.
Following the example of Ger-
many, the Austrian diet has re-
pudiated that nation's military obli-
gations under the St. Germain
treaty. By unanimous vote It ap-
rnnry pledged ten convention votes proved a hill Introduced by Chancel-
to the renornlnatlon of Mr. Roose- i lor Kurt von Sehnschnlgg. providing | appears that the taxpayers are go-
Subsequently, President Roosevelt
reached the conclusion that some-
thing ought to be done In the way
of untangling the tangled skein of
governmental functions so he pro-
posed a survey under his direction.
He appointed a committee of so-
called experts to go over the prob-
lem.
Thus, at the start, at least. It
the senate began the Impeach-
ment trial of Federal Judge Hoi-
sted I.. Ritter of Florldu—the
-- | twelfth such case
Big business, like litlle business in ;;t7 years. It
has had Its trouble, hut here urn ; was believed the
there it Is still big business. It trial would lust nt
his annual report fut General Mo
tors. Alfred P. Sloan, Jr., report)
net sales last year uuiounllug t<
$1,185,041,511, against $802,072,67(
the year before; u gain of inort
than two hundred and nlnety-tw<
million dollars. That means many
new cars, and families made Imp
pier. The company paid out It
wages more than three tiundrec
and twenty-three million dollurs, no1
Including wages puid Indirectly t(
thousands of workers producing ma
terluls of which automobiles an
made.
Judge Ritter
Sixty of Mussolini's planes havt
wiped out Harur, Ethiopia's secant
biggest city, one of 40,000 Inhabit
anta. “Civilized" Europe. Knglant
leading, bemoans the fuct that <
Mohammedan mosque, the L'optlt I impeachment articles voted hy the
cathedral and a Catholic elmret! hollse with allowing A. L. Rankin,
least one week. The
defendant wns rep-
resented hy Carl T.
Hoffman of Miami
a n tl Frank R.
Walsh of Washing-
ton and New York.
T li e prosecution
was In charge of
ltepresentntlveSmn-
mers of Texas, Hobbs of Alabama
and Perking of New Jersey.
Originally approximately 00 wit-
nesses were summoned for the trlul,
but 29 were excused because of
withdrawal hy the prosecution of
two specifications In article seven
charging Judge Ritter acted Improp-
erly In electric rate nnd banking
proceedings.
Judge Itltter Is charged In seven
were blasted.
a former law partner, exorbitant re-
They forget what happened lu th(, CP|ven5ll|[( fees, with "corruptly" re-
big war, at Itheims, Louvain anc
elsewhere, and ihe German cnnnoi
“Big Herthu" throwing at I’arlt
shells that might well have wrecket
Notre Dame, the Madelelue or th<
Halnte Chapelle.
War Is as ruthless as was nu
ture In the earthquake that destroyei
the great cathedral of Lisbon.
When Pittsburgh Is through will
the disaster that lias almost over
whelmed the city, a monument
should be erected in a park, or ot
the mountainside, In honor of ttu
courage and recuperative energy oi
the great Industrial city. Wilt
lights turned off, water flooding tlx
streets, many men and women calm
ly continued their work, weurinf
coal miners’ llght-heuring cups, llk«
so many gigantic glow worms
Americans still possess resourceful
ness and cun do wlint they must do
— him that hath shall lie given,’
even in Wall street speculation.
Beginning May 1, If you buy $1tk
worth of stocks, you must put $5-’
of your own Into the deal. This wll:
compel small fish to operate on e
small scale and get rich slowly, li
•t til.
A King Features Syndicate, luo.
WNU Service.
celvlng $4,500 from Rankin, with
violating the Judicial code In prac-
tice of law while on the bench, nnd
with evasion of taxes on part of his
1929 and 1930 Incomes.
In n 12,000-wnrd reply, Ritter de-
nied nil of the charges, lie assert-
ed none of the actions cited had
"brought tils court Into scandal and
disrepute" of "destroyed public con-
fidence In the administration of Jus-
tice" In that court.
velt.
The Kentucky stute Republican
convention Instructed the four
Rtate delegates nt large to vote
for Gov. Alf M. London of Knn-
sns for the Presidential nomination.
This, with previous developments,
assured Lnndon of IS of the state’s
votes.
Tornadoes in the South
Kill Scores of Persons
'TV1RNADOES tore across Mlssls-
A slppl, Alabama, Georgia, Arknn- I
sas, nnd Tennessee, leaving death
and destruction In their wake. About
400 persons were killed and hun-
dreds of others Injured, nnd the
property losses ran up Into the mil-
lions. The little city of Tupelo,
Miss., suffered the most, with nearly
200 on the death list and more than
a hundred homes smashed Into kin-
dling wood.
A few hours later another tornado
struck Gainesville, Gn., nnd In three I
minutes Imd nearly ruined the busi-
ness section of the town nnd killed
more than 150 persons. In fires
that followed the storm the bodies
of many victims were burned be- [
ynnd recognition.
The mining communities near Co-
lumbia, Tenn., to the north nnd east
of Tupelo, counted seven dead. Red
Bay, eastward In Alabama, lost five
lives to the merciless wind. Near-by
Bonneville, Miss., had four killed
nnd Batesvllle, Ark., suffered one
death. 1
The tornndops struck while the
southeast wns reaching n final total
on storms which smashed through
that region n few days before, caus-
ing 43 deaths In Georgia, the Caro.
linns, Alabama nnd Florida.
for geueral national military service
"with or without arms." Every male
from his eighteenth to his forty-
second year Is liable to conscrip-
tion. This move, which has the sup-
port of Premier Mussolini of Italy,
was not unexpected, nnd though It
nroused Ihe lit tie entente nations to
nnger, probably their formal pro-
tests will bring no result.
Bruno Hauptmann’s Body
Cremated in New York
\irlTH the "utmost privacy," fun-
VV eral services were held In New
York for Bruno Hauptmann, who
was executed In Trenton, N. J„ for
the kldnnpiug nnd murder of Col.
Charles A. Lindbergh's baby son.
The body wns then cremated nnd
It was announced that the ashes
would be taken to Germany. Haupt-
mann went to thechnlr steadily. In-
sisting that he was Innocent of the
crime.
Supreme Court Hits at
Arbitrary Power
TN A decision concerning n spe-
1 elfie action of the Securities Ex-
change commission the United
States Supreme court ruled against
the SEC, and In Its pronouncement
It uttered n significant warning
against the exercise of arbitrary
power hy governmental agencies.
Especially censured were Hie “Midi-
lug excursions," often undertaken
by commissions and congressional
committees. ShI<1 the court:
"The philosophy that constitu-
tional limitations and legal re-
straints upon ofilclul action may lie
brushed aside upon the plea that
good, perchance, may follow, finds
no countenance In the American
Mrs. Roosevelt Christens
New Plane Carrier
A /IRS. FRANKLIN D. ROOSE-
i-VI VELT flew down to Newport
News In nn army plane and there
christened the navy's new $2,000,000
airplane carrier Yorklown, breaking
n lintllc "f domestic champagne on
Its how. The Yorktown will he ready
for lis lest trip In about 12 months,
nnd a few months Inter Its sister
ship, Hie Enterprise, will lie com-
pleted.
The flying deck of the Yorktown
Is 10!) feet (1 Inches wide, and 80!l
feet 6 Indies long. The ship will
have u sliced In excess of 35 miles
nu hour. It will carry 2,072 officers
and men, and about 142 nlrplnnos.
Italy Claims Big Victory
Over Ethiopians
DEAGE negotiations between Italy
* Hnd Ethiopia, outside the League
of Nations, seem Imminent, for
emissaries of Emperor Halle Selns-
sle already have
been received hy
Marshal I’letro Bn-
dogllo, nnd the Ital-
ian undersecretary
of colonies Is in
East Africa to con-
duct Hie prelimi-
naries. This news
followed closely the
dispatches telling
of a great victory
won hy Bndogllo's
northern troops
over 20.000 fresh
uml picked Ethiopian soldiers whose
light was directed and wntched by
the emperor himself. The battle, at
Mai Ceu, lasted nil day and the
Ethiopians left 7,000 dead on the
field ns they (led to Join the main
body of 50,000 troops south of Lake
Ashnngl eight miles away. Italian
fntHlItles Included 10 officers and
about 1,000 soldiers, most of the
latter being Eritrean Asknrls. It
wns believed Marshal Bndogllo
would follow up this victory with a
smashing blow at Dessye, main con-
centrntlon point of the Ethiopians,
unless peace negotiations stop him.
Just before tills battle Hie Italian
air bombers practically ruined
llurnr, second city of Ethiopia,
Marshal
Badoglio
Ing to be favored by a break. I
think It ought to be added, how-
ever, that no one has had the
temerity to suggest that either the
Byrd survey or that engineered by
Mr. Roosevelt will yield very much.
• • •
The survey promoted hy Senator
Byrd will dig up a good many help-
. ful facts but
Dig Up there Is every
Helpful Factt reason to believe
that the Virginia
senator will find many obstacles
placed In his way and that he and
hts committee will be unable to
present any comprehensive state-
ment on their findings to th# coun-
try In advance of the November
elections. The same Is true con-
cerning the survey directed by the
President, only more so. The cold
fact Is that there Is no chance at
all for the President's committee
to even approach the stage of mak
lng recommendations from their
survey until long after the elections
are held. Frankly, each of these
surveys Is permeated with polities,
so much so that a straightforward
accounting or general description
of the affairs of government will
not he ullowed to become public
property nnd thereby become a
campaign Issue. Of-the two, Sena-
tor Byrd’s proposal hns the better
chance, hut that Is rather small.
Adverting to the Smoot prophecy,
It Is therefore of no great Impor-
tance whether a thoroughgoing ex-
amination of the governmental
structure that hns grown up In the
last three years under President
Roosevelt Is made In advance of
the elections. Thpse New Deal
agencies have been created and
these New Deal agencies, like many
of the "Old Deul” agencies, are
with us to stay and suck tip tax-
payers’ money for quite some time.
I need only remind you that we still
huve In existence the War Finance
corporation and the railroad ad-
ministration that were created ns
wur-tlme agencies, not to mention
a dozen other similar units.
It Is possible, Indeed, I think It
Is probable, that there will he a
trimming of pay rolls In ninny of
the New Deal agencies Immediately
after election. There certainly
ought to he Important curtailment
of expenses and of the fist of em-
ployees, hut accomplishing Hint Is
a matter much more easily de-
scribed than done. So. I feel safe
In saying that nil of this ado about
a reduction In governmental swell-
ing aniouuts to nothing more tlinn
Just ado.
• • •
In making the statement sbovt
that the outcry about reducing thp
At r% i $ov®rnment pay
Now Deal roll and untan-
Spiriti Rioo ttlln* the function*
Is Just so much
ballyhoo, I think It ought to he
said at the same time that New
Deal spirits are rising. There wns
a time a few months ago when the
national trend was decidedly agulnst
Mr. Roosevelt It even went so
far as to cause many Individuals to
sny that Mr. Roosevelt would be
defeated for re-election. The pic
ture around the first of April was
quite different There Is In Wash
Ington quite a general feeling that
the Roosevelt re-election chnnces
have Improved and are continuing
to Improve. This condition Is quite
evident to observers continuously
on the Job here for even In the per-
sonal manner of the President him
self there Is an outward appearance
that he believes the situation Is
well In hand.
As far as I can discover, one rea-
son why the New Dealers feel so
much better Is that events leading
up to the national Democratic con
ventlon seem to be cleared of any
harassing possibilities.
I ntn sure that It will be recalled
how something like the blues over
came many New Deal stalwarts
after former Gov. Alfred E. Smith
of New York, 1928 Democratic
Presidential candidate, let loose a
blast at the New Deni In his Lib-
erty League dinner speech. I hap-
pened to he In a position to know
that the Smith speech caused all
kinds of commotion nnd fenr among
New Deal leaders. They know, as
everyone else knows, that “Al"
Smith hns a big following. When
lie threatened “to take a walk," lie
let loose a declaration that wns
charged with dynamite nnd the New
Dealers could not calculate how
much dynamite.
Now, however. It appears quite
certain that much of the danger
Inherent In
hns been eliminated. Nntwithstnnd
lng the Smith Indictment of the
President for repudiation of plat
Of INTEREST TO
I HOUSEWIFE
Tomatoes will keep for throe or
four days In a mechunleal refriger-
ator If placed stems down In a shal-
low pan.
• * •
If your floors are worn nnd will
not' JioUl wax, try touching up the
worn plnces with white shellac and
then wax. The floors will be much
Improved by tills trentmpnt.
• • •
If the pan In which chocolate la
melted Is lightly buttered, it will
pour more euslly.
* • •
When muklng uncooked frostlnga
with powdered sugar, add a little
more sugar than recipe calls for.
Sugnr Is likely to absorb molature
If left uncovered.
<D Boll Syndicate—WNU Service.
Whitens, Clears The
Skin Quickest Way
No matter now dull and dark your
complexion; no matter how freckled sad
coarsened by aun and wind, NADINOLA
Cream will whiten,
clear and amooth your
skin to new beauty,
quickest, eaaieat way.
Just apply at bedtime;
NADINOLA, tested and
trusted for over a gen-
eration, begina ita beau-
tifying work while you
•leep. Then you see day-
by-day improvement un-
til your complexion ja
restored to creamy I
white,satin-smooth, Ba
loveliness. No disappointments, no long
waiting for results. Money-back guar-
antee. At all toilet counters, only OOe.Or
write NADINOLA, Box 47, Pane, Tenn.
i ft A
■
>, -mm*
Cultivating Poise
Poise Is fostered by cultivating •
good deal of “don’t core."
CONSTIPATED
$0 TEARS
"For thirty years / had
ehronio constipation.
Sometimes / did not go
tor tout or five day a. t
also had awful gaa bloat-
ing, headaches and pain
in the back. Adlarika
helped right away. Now
J eat sausage, bananas,
_ pie, anything / front and
the Smith declaration Ti^rTStil^SlSl.
If you are suffering from constipation,
sleeplessness, sour stomach, and gas
. „ . i , , bloating, there ii quick relief for you
form promises and his description, in Adierika. Many report action in
of the Roosevelt policies as "a nn- 30 minutei afler taking just one dose,
tlonal menace, there Is going to Adierika gives complete action, clean-
be n pitifully small number of anti ing your bowel tract where ordinary
New Deal Democrats In the Pltlla- laxatives do not even reach,
delphla convention. The number Dr. H. L. Shoub, New York, reports:
will be so small. In fact, that how- "In addition to intestinal cleansing,
ever vociferous they become, their Adierika checks the growth of in-
Shouts will be heard no more than teetinal bacteria and colon bacilli.’'
the wall of a child in a storm. Give your stomach and bowels a real
It was to he expected, as I have cleansing with Adierika and ace how
reported to you before, that the good you feel. Just one spoonful relieves
routine type of Democratic polltl GAS and chronic conatipation. Sold by
clan will forget any differences he all druggists and drug departments,
has with the New Deal and be regtt-
lar at convention time and during1
most of the campaign. That type
of politician, be he Republican or;
Democratic, cannot afford to bolt, i
If he bolts, he cuts off hts own nose
and most politicians do not enjoy
being de-nosed for that Is tanta-
mount to being politically dehorned.
So, while the Philadelphia conven-
tion of the Democrats may have!
some seething underneath the sur-
face, It Is without the realm of pos-
sibility that there can be any
Important revolt against renotplnn-
tlon of Mr. Roosevelt.
Miserable
with backache?
G. O. P.
in a Hole
Inasmuch as the New Dealers can
properly regard their situation
pretty well In
hand, they nat-
urally can feel a
hit cocky over
the difficulties In the Republican
ranks. First, the Republicans are
at a disadvantage In that their con-
vention In Cleveland is to be held
at an earlier date than the Demo-
crats meet. This, however, Is more
real than apparent. It Is thus be
W/HEN kidneys (unction btdly and
W you suffer s nagging bsckschs,
with dlxxinsM, burning, scanty or too
frequent urination and getting up at
nignt; when you fssl tired, nervous,
sir upset... use Doan’s Pills.
Doan’s ar* especially for poorly
working kidneys. Millions of box**
are used every year. They ere recom-
mended the country over. Ask year
DOANS PILLS
WNU—P
10—36
No Need to Suffer
“Morning Sickness’’
“Morning sickness” — is caused by an
acid condition. To avoid it, acid must be
cause of the intra-party buttles that | offset by alkalit — such as magnesia.
ST/t Sand. Tim «■*»*"■ Recommend
are not together, not unified, on I Milnesia Wafers
anything. A half dozen candidates These mint-flavored, candy-like wafers are
with appreciable followings are pure milk of magnesia in solid form—
snapping at euch other nnd two or ,he most pleasant way to take it. Each
wafer is approximately equal to a full adult
three factions are announcing al
most simultaneously what the plat-
form is going to say. It just cannot
help leading Into a beautiful mess
at Cleveland unless the Republican
lenders show more Intelligence thun
they huve shown thus far.
In the meantime, the Democrats
are oinking note of the various
battle charges. You can be sure
they will use them. Whoever the
Republicans nominate at Cleveland
necessarily faces a big fight but as
the sltuutlon now stands, I think
the Democrats will be able to make
It an offensive campaign whereas
ordinarily the party In power must
give over much of Its campaigning
to a defense. Tills Is true unless
the Republicans can get together
and tnlce the offensive themselves
by criticizing nnd attacking on a
united front.
Of course, much wnter enn run
under tlie bridge before the Novem-
ber election. It Is always possible
that the party In power enn make
mistakes, can be led Into a hllnl
alley under the political guns of Its
opposition.
© Western Newspaper Union.
dose of liquid milk of magnesia. Chewed
thoroughly, then swallowed, they correct
acidity in the mouth and throughout the
digestive system and insure quick, com-
plete elimination of the waste mstters that
cause gas, headaches, bloated feelings and
a dozen other discomforts.
Milnesia Wafers come in bottles of 20 and
48, at 35c and 60c respectively, and ia
convenient tins for your handbag contain-
ing 12 at 20c. Each wafer is approximately
one adult dose of milk of magnesia. All
good drug stores sell and recommend them.
Start using that* delicious, affective
anti-acid, gently laxative wafers today
Professional samples sent free to registered
physicians or dentists if request is made
on professional letterhead. Select Product*
Inc.. 4402 23rd St., Lang Island City, N. Y.
35c A 60c
bottles
20c tlnu
MILNEgiO-
pjPj M 'wL/? ,E»sIA
Cry.I omuaacaEB
The Original Mil* ol Magnasls Waferm
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Mrs. J. W. Dismukes and Sons. Palacios Beacon (Palacios, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 15, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 16, 1936, newspaper, April 16, 1936; Palacios, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth725984/m1/2/: accessed June 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Palacios Library.