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About The Winifred Times (Winifred, Mont.) 1913-19?? | View This Issue
The Winifred Times (Winifred, Mont.), 25 Oct. 1935, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053313/1935-10-25/ed-1/seq-2/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
• THE WINIFRED TIMES \Well Begun's Half N Done\ When Making Your House Frock PATTERS 5614 There was never a truer phrase than that, and how well It applies here! nit...before you know it yicur dress is cut and ready to stitch. This pattern is so easy to follow. There's everything new about the lines of this fetching house frock, with its contrasting surplice facing and doesn't it look like a different dress when buttoned up to the neck, see small sketch—with those enor- mous buttons?, When household chores are finished, button up the deep pointed surplice and wear the frock to market. It's smart enough. Try it in colorful novelty cotton or gingham. • Pattern 9614 may be ordered only In sizes 34, 36. 39, 40, 42, 44 and 46. Size 36 requires 4 yards 36 inch fabric and % yard contrasting. Com- plete diagrammed sew chart included. Send FIFTEEN CENTS in coins or stamps (coins preferred) for this pat- tern. Be sure to write plainly your NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUM- BER and SIZE. Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept., 232 West Eighteenth St., New York, N. Y. THE REASON WHY Chatty—Oh, he's so romantic. When he addresses me he always calls me -\Fair Lady.\ Catty—Force of habit, my dear. He's a street car conductor.—The Sunday School Herald. A Big Noise \How was the baby show?\ \A howling success. The babies howled all through it, and that's what the other mothers did after the dumb judges awarded the prize to'the brat they did.\—Cincinnati Inquirer. Ladder of Fortin— Chap—What happened to Frisby— he's all bunged up? Pell—Tried to climb the ladder of fortune and there were a couple of broken rungs he didn't see.—Detroit News. Haril and Fast Policeman—As soon as I saw you coming around the bend I said to my- self, \Forty-five at least.\ Lady Driver—How dare you! it's this hat that makes me look so old. News Review of Current Events the World Over Laval in Uncomfortable Position as Anglo-Italian Relations Grow Worse—Senator Vandenberg \Not a Candidate.\ By EDWARD W. PICKARD e Western Newspaper Union. pEMME LAVAL, premier of France, found himself in a tight place be- cause of his efforts to retain the friend- ship of both Great Britain and Italy and to keep his gov- ernment from being upset by its foes at home. In the process of trying to find a way to bring about a peace- ful settlement of the halo -Ethiopian w a r, Laval proposed that Britain withdraw its big home fleet from he Mediterranean to mollify Mussolini. This suggestion was laid before the British cabinet and turned down flatly. The cabinet gave hearty approval to the policy at Geneva of Capt. Anthony Eden and Samuel Hoare, secretary for foreign affairs. Its stand was reported to be substantially this: Mussolini will respect nothing but force. He would interpret any withdrawal of Britain's Mediterranean forces as a sign of weakening. If Mussolini wants to clear the way for Italo-Ethopian peace talks, let him halt his armies In Ethiopia and accept league terms as basis for negotiation as Ethiopia al- ready has done. Furthermore, the British government called on Laval for a definite reply to its question whether France would co- operate with the British fleet if there were an open break with Italy. The French answers to this query had been too wabbly to suit Downing street. Particularly the English wanted to know if their fleet would be permitted to use the French naval dockyards. It was believed that if Laval could not satisfy the British, the latter would withdraw from active leadership In the League of Nations and refuse to renew the Locarno com- mitments on which France relies for protection against Germany. Pierre Laval D tSPATCHES from the African war front are subjected to so severe a censorship that they are not only unsatisfactory but often quite unreliable. All kinds of sensational stories are circulated and some of them may be true. One such is the report from Djibouti, French Somali- land, that Italians killed a number of British Somaliland subjects near the Ethiopian frontier, some of the vic- tims being members of the came; corps that is a part of the colonial army. British Vice Consul Lowe heard, also, that Italians had gassed and shot a lot of cattle and goats In British Somaliland. Certainly relations between Italy and Great Britain were growing worse daily and there were many predictions that the two nations would be at each other's throats before long. The Brit- ish have been In a deadly cold humor ever since they found out that Musso- lini's friends had been trying to stir up an anti-British revolt In Egypt. Now the border between Egypt and Italian Libya is the scene of swift concentration of troops on both sides. 1pTHIOPIA'S representatives in Ge- A-i neva were told by delegates of sev- eral nations that Mussolini was ready to end the warfare if he were given considerable cessions of territory and certain large economic advantages. This tentative offer was transmitted to Addis Ahaba, and the reply of Emperor Haile Selassie was a determined \No.\ The Italians want virtual control over the entire country, and the emperor is not willing to give up a yard of ter- ritory. The Italians in northern Ethiopia were jubilant over the desertion of Degiac Halle Selassie Gugsa and sev- eral thousand warriors. This (Riese is a son -In-law of the emperor and a de- scendant of Ring John who reigned in the last century. The traitor Was in- stalled as ms or chieftain of the oc- cupied territory. Seemingly reliable reports from medical missionaries in the southern sector, the Ogaden zone, said the Italians were making free use of chlorine gas and of ditm-dum bullets which for many years have been out- lawed in 'all \civilized\ warfare, ENATOR ARTHUR II. VANDEN- BERG of Michigan, who has been mentioned frequently as a possible Republican nominee for the Presi- dency, came back from a summer tour of Eu- rope and declared flat- ly he is \not a candi- date for anything on earth.\ He did not attempt to predict who would be named by the Republicans, but did say he felt the G. 0. P. would win in 1936. \I think President Roosevelt wrote his obituary in his first Speech in congress in March, 1933,\ he said, \and historians will show it, when he said 'most liberal governments have been wrecked on the rocks of loose fiscal policies sod we Must take care to avoid that.'\ Liberal spending by the New Deal was defended by Senator Fletcher of Etenatot Vandenberg Florida, chairman of the senate bank- ing committee. In an interview he said that \government activities and expenditures have restored about $10,- 000,000,000 of bank credit lost in the $21,000,000,000 deflation of 1930-33. \Business is going to get the bene- fit of that. The money the govern- ment is putting out is going to people who are putting it in the banks. It is increasing purchasing power and likewise expanding the credit facili- ties of the banks.\ The senator expressed the belief business was \reviving declared re- lief and other emergency expenditures would drop as continued improvement Was shown, and predicted many work projects would be of lasting benefit 1T DOESN'T take much these days to cause the Republicans to rejoice. The latest event hailed by them as a harbinger of victory next year was merely a by-election in Massachusetts to fill a vacancy In the state senate, The district normally is Republican and this time as usual a Republican was elected. The reason for the G. 0. P. shouts was found in the de- creased vote polled by the Democrats, and the fact that Salem, a mill town and former Democratic stronghold, was captured by the Republicans. Democratic leaders said that the Is- sues in the election were purely local and that the reverse at most was a rebuff for the administration of Demo. cradle Gov. James Curley. The Re- publican leaders asserted that the New Deal no less than Curley was involved. 'TICE PRESIDENT JOHN GARNER V and a large number of senators and representatives sailed from Seattle for Manila to represent the United States at the formal establishment of the Philippines commonwealth and the inauguration of President Manuel Quezon on November 19. Fqr the first time in history both the President and the Vice President were outside United States territory at the same time. Secretary of State Hull was the ranking official left in Washington and consequently was the temporary head of the government. However, Mr. Roosevelt was in cloy,. and continual communication with th1 ,11 capital by wireless throughout his cruise. TN SOME quarters Col. Theodore I Roosevelt is credited with consider- able influence among the Republicans 'of the eastern states, and often he is men- tioned as a possible Presidential ca ad date. Another poten- tial candidate, strong In the West, Senator William E. Borah of Idaho, recently wrote to Colonel Roosevelt proposing t ha t the 1936 Republican cam- paign be based on 3 \trust-busting\ issue. The colonel turned down the plan. He replied that, while he was in sympathy with the senator's attitude on monopolies, he felt there are many other issues as great or greater. Among these he named \scandalous waste of the pea pie's money, government extravagance, multitudinous taxes, and attempts to subvert our type of government.\ \I entirely agree,\ Colonel Roosevelt wrote, \that monopolies are evil, for I am a firm, believer in the established American principle of competition. I have stated this over and over again during the last eighteen months. \I do not agree, however, that this will be the major issue of the cam- paign.\ DRESIDENT ROOSEVELT turned his hack on the l'aclflc and begin his return voyage on the cruiser Hon& ton. The vessel was started through the Panama canal while the President went to Fort Clayton and other posts to inspect the garrisons, and to the new Madden dam on the Chagres riv- er. Ile boarded the cruiser at Pedro Miguel locks and, with President Arias of Panama and Mrs. Arias as guests, proceded to the Atlantic. • VT Al GEN, WILLIAM L. SIBERT, LVI one of the three men who really built the Panama canal and laid sur- viving member of the canal commis. sion, died at . the age of seventy -live at his country home near Bowling **ten, Ky. Ile Was hurled in Arlington Na- tional cemetery with full military honors. General Sibert's career as engineer and soldier vvas distinguished. Ile was made brigadier general by special act of congress for his services in con- nection with the building of the Pan- ama canal. During the World war he commanded the First division of the A. FL F. lie retired in 1920 to engage in pri- vate engineering work and subsequent- ly served as chairman of the Ala- bama state docks commisision in con- struction of the state docks at Mobile. From 1928 to 1932 he was chairman of the Boulder dam commission, and in 1929 and 1930 was president of the American Association of l'ort Authori- ties. Col. Theodore Roosevelt iIIN L. LEWIS, president of the J United Mine Workers, and his in- dustrial union bloc lost a hot battle when the American Federation of La- bor, In convention ID Atlantic City, voted to continue the policy adopted last year in San Francisco. This policy was to organize workers in mass production industries, such as automo- bile and steel, along industrial lines with due protection of the rights of craft unions. Lewis and his followers proposed that the mass production industries he organized, one union for each in- dustry, with the craft unions kept out altogether. DARLIAMENTARY elections in Can- t ada resulted in the defeat of Pre- mier Richard B. Bennett and the Con- servatives who have been in control since 1930. The next premier will be Mackenzie King, leader of the Liberals who won 158 out of 245 seats In the house of commons. The new deal poll- ..ies of the Bennett government were repudiated by the electors. In the program outlined by King, in rase lie won, the great emphasis was laid on relieving unemployment and lowering tariffs back to 1930 levels. A reciprocal trade agreement with the United States was opt of his strong arguments. Nationalization of the Bank of Canada, to control credit inflation and deflation was another plank. One immediate result of the Llbers0 victory was the resignation of W. B ilerridge as Canadian minister to the United States, effective when the new administration takes hold. Berridge is a brother-in-law of Premier Ben- nett and his appointment to the Wash- ington post was severely criticized by King during the campaign. AROL, king of Rumania, cele- brated his forty-second birthday at his summer palace in Sinala, and as the family gathered for the occa- sion Mme. Magda Lu- pescu, the king's Inti- mate friend, arrived unexpectedly f r o in Paris, The Peasant party had Intended to make the day notable by \anti-Lupescu\ dem- cnstrations, hoping this would help to keep' tier in exile, but her return confounded ,the leaders. The agitation against \ Magda has now taken a decided anti- semitic turn, her enemies circulating broadsides calling attention to her Jewish origin and charging that through her influence a large number of Jews are getting easy jobs in the public service. The peasant leaders also redistrib- uted a statement of Julius Maniu, out- standing foe of Mme. Lupescu, that she Is \responsible for almost every ill which besets Rumania.\ \I am a monarchist,\ Manites state- ment continued, \but every Rumanian should receive a good example from the palace. The crown must respect itself.\ King Carol CIONSTITIITIONALITY of two New %.- ,1 Deal projects—the AAA processing taxes and the TVA operations in gen- erating and selling power in competi- tion with private power companies— is to be determined by the Supreme court of the United States, and an early ruling on both is expected. Among the court's negative rulings was a refusal to consider the latest habeas corpus proceedings brought in behalf of Thomas Sictoney, California's most famous prisoner. The court also refused to hear an attack on a law which strengthened the political ma- chine of the late Senator Huey P. Long of Louisiana. S ECRETARY WALLACE should wel- come the announcement by the American Liberty league that its com- mittee of 58 noted lawyers has volun- teered to defend small potato growers against the potato control law. Not that Mr. Wallace intends to violate the act by growing unlicensed spuds, but . he has declared he Is so opposed to the law that he will try in every way to avoid enforcing It. F OR about twenty years John D. Rockefeller, Jr., has owned a 60 - acre tract of land at the upper end of Manhattan island, known as Fort Try- on park, and has cared for it and beau - tired it. Now he has presented it to 'New York city as a public park—truly, a magnificent gift. The land, which is value& at $6,000.000, extends from One Hundred Ninety-second street to Dyck. man street, S THATFOIID HALL, the fine old colonial house In Westmoreland county, Virginia, which has been the home of the Lees for 200 Jeers, was dedicated as a national shrine, its 1,100 -acre estate being included in the gift to the public. The place was bought and restored by the Robert E. I.ee Memorial foun6ation. President Roosevelt sent a message to be read at the dedication exercises, and many high officials were peesent The house was built by Thomas Lee, colonial governor of Virginia, and was the birthplace of Gen. Robert E. Lee. D ON JUAN of Bourbon, the twenty - L. , two -year -old son of former King Alfonso of Spain, and the Infanta Maria de la Esperanza of the Sicilian house of Bourbon, were married in Ronie, blessed by l'ope Pius and start- ed for London on A honeymoon trip that probably will take them around the world, including a visit in the United States. The young man is of International importance only because he is the 'heir presumptive to the * Spanish throne, and there are chances that the monarchy will be restored by the Spaniards, Healthy Eye Can Exist Only in Healthy Body \It may be put down as a general and obvious truth that a healthy eye can exist only In a healthy body,\ says Dr. Hyman Cohen in \Hygiene of the Eve\ In Hygela. Progressive shortsightedness with its inherent tendency to grow worse during the growth and school period requires special hygienic care. The eyes should be re-examined frequent- ly. Glasses should be worn constant- ly. School tasks should be shortened as to time and amount, and no extra tasks, such as music, sewing and special studies should be imposed on near-sighted children. Good print in the books that are read, proper light and proper posture are important. Seats and desks in schoolrooms should be adjusted to the height of the children so that the erect sitting posture may be maintained and the habit of tilting the bead to one side may be avoided. Light is the medi- um in which the eyes work, as air is the medium in which we breathe. Light should be sufficient in quan- tity, free from glare, evenly diffused and properly directed. Excel Oar Foes Let us carefully observe those good qualities wherein our enemies excel us; and endeavor to excel them, by avoiding what is faulty, and imitating what is excellent in them.—Plutarch. ,Quicit,,Safe Relief For Eyesirritated By Exposure To Sun, Wind and. Dust— So It Is If the people are weak, they will get a \strong\ government.. Tired.. Nervous Wife Wins Back Pep 1 Hermwnerveswere soothed. She ban- ished that \dead - tired\ feeling. Won new youthful color—restful nights, active days —all because she rid her system of bowel -clog- ging wastes that were sapping her vitality. NR Tablets (Nature's Remedy)—the mild, safe, all -vegetable laxative—worked the transforma- tion. Try it for constipation, biliousness, head- aches, dizzy spells, coldaSee how refreshed you feel. At all druggists -25c. 1j)T0+11CHT TOMORROW ALRIGHT FREE:gfrmo — ria3nrAral lg eiltr - taer-u - mometer with the 'purchase of a 25e box of NR or a lie roll of Turns (For Ark! Indigestion.) Then There's Trouble Opposites should marry, but not too opposite. NASAL IRRITATION due to cola, Renew tlic fleas and irritai ion t apph Mientr aturn nlehl nuirninQ NE N If you prefer nose drops,or throat spray, call for the NEW MENTHOLATUI1 LIQUID in handy bottle with dropper Quick, Complete Pleasant ELIMINATION Let's be frank. There's only one way for your body to rid itself of the waste mat- ters that cause acidity, gas, headaches, bloated feelings and a dozen other dis- comforts—your intestines must function. To make them move quickly, pleas- antly, completely, without griping. Thousands of physicians recommend Milnesia Wafers. (Dentists recommend Milnesia wafers as an efficient remedy for mouth acidity). These mint flavored candy -like widen are pure milk of I\ gnesia. Each wafer is approximately equal to a full adult dose of liquid milk of magnesia. Chewed thoroughly in accordance with the direc. tions on the bottle oz tin, then swallowed, they correct acidity, bad breath, flatu lence, at their source and at the same hale enable quick, complete, pleas ant elimination. Milnesia Wafers come in bottles of 2C and 48 wafers, at 35c and 60c mew tively, or in convenient tins containing 12 at 20c. Each wafer is approximately an adult dose of milk of magnesia. All good drug stores carry them. Start using these delicious, effective wafers today. Professional samples sent free to reg- istered physicians or dentists if request is made on professional letter head. SELECT PRODUCTS, Incorporated 4402 23rd St., Long Island City, N. V. (AMNESIA iff4 d i n d WA FERS 0 1 7 .M1LX OF MAGNESIA WAFERS Choicest Products Sent Afield, Travelers Find If one must have the choicest caviar, stay away from Russia, or if the finest cheese Is desired, avoid Switzerland, reports the Columbus Dispatch. This statement only re- flects what experienced travelers have discovered, for it is an axiom that the finest products of a district or country usually are reserved for export. Even in southern California one looks in vain in the grocery stores for the great sound oranges so common elsewhere. Moscow serves the inferior caviar, with the eggs small and many of them broken, while search for a cheese of the large -holed variety In Lucerne brings the answer from the shopkeeper that the good cheeses are shipped to England or America. The answer to all this Is very sim- ple. Shipment to other parts brings higher prices. Apparently the people are not con- cerned over the fact that these fine qualities of their choicest products are sent afield. Familiarity with then. qualities lessens the appetite for the delicacies, and the increased revenue Is sufficient to make up for any denial on their part. Reaction of Motives Motives by excess reverse their very nature, and instead of exciting, stun and stupefy the mind.—Col- eridge. THE DOCTORS ARE RIGHT Women should take only liquid laxatives Many believe any laxative they might take only makes constipation worse. And that isn't true. Do what doctors do to relieve this condition. They use a liquid THREE STEPS ELIEV1NS I CONSTIPATIOS A cleansing dose today; a smaller quantity tomorrow; less each time, until bowels need no help at all. axative, and keep reducing the dose until the bowels need no help at all. Reduced dosage is the secret of aiding Nature in restoring regularity. You must. use a little less laxative each time, and that's why your laxa- tive should be in liquid form. A liquid dose can be regulated to the drop. The liquid laxative generally used is Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. It contains senna and cascara— both natural laxatives that form no habit even with children. Syrup Pepsin is the nicest tasting, nicest acting laxa- tive you ever tried. Bright North Star The north star Is brighter than the sun. If You Eat Starches Meats, Sweets Read This They're AU Necessary Foods — But AU Acid - Forming. Hence Most of Us Have\Acid Stomach\ At Times, Easy Now to Relieve. Doctors say that much of the so- called \indigestion from which so many of us suffer, is really acid in- digestion ... brought about by too many acid-forming foods in our modern diet. And that there is now a way to relieve this . . . often in minutes! Simply take Phillips' Milk of Magnesia after meals. Almost im- mediately this acts to neutralize the stomach acidity that brings on your trouble. You \forget you have a stomach!\ Try this just once! Take either the familiar liquid \PHILLIPS' \ or, now the convenient new Phillip' Milk of Magnesia Tablets. But be sure you get Genuine \PHILLIPS' \. Also in Tablet Form: Phillips' Milk of Magnesia Tablets are now on sale at all drug stores everywhere. Each tiny tablet is the equiva- lent of a teaspoonful of Genuine Phillips' Milk of Magnesia. PHILLIPS' cf/tIartek . ez_ WNL1—X 4:1 rThe Daily Use of CUTICURA SOAP Helps Relieve Irritation And assists in keeping your skin in good condition. Con- taining super -creamy emol- lient and medicinal properties, Catleura Soap, used regu- larly, soothes and protects the skin. Price 25 cents •