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About The Winifred Times (Winifred, Mont.) 1913-19?? | View This Issue
The Winifred Times (Winifred, Mont.), 06 Dec. 1935, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053313/1935-12-06/ed-1/seq-2/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
THE WINIFRED TIMES Pretty Actress Accuses Hard Cop of Resisting Betty Ann Painter, pretty \Little Theater\ actress, stopped by a Kan. ti s City motorcycle officer, protested. cajoled, flattered. smiled—all to no avail. She went to the station. \She was doing 45 miles an hour, and—\ said the officer, remembering, \—resisted.\ That was 100 much for the dainty prisoner. \Oh. no,\ she retorted. \You did all the resisting.\ I'M SOLD It always works Just do what hospitals do, and the doctors insist on. Use a good liquid laxative, and aid Nature to restore clocklike regularity without strain or ill effect. A liquid can always be taken in gradually reduced doses. Reduced dosage is the real secret of relief from constipation. Ask a doctor about this. Ask your druggist how very popular Dr. Cald- well's Syrup Pepsin has become. It gives the right kind of help, and right amount of help. Taking a little less each time, gives the bowels a chance to act of their own accord, until they are moving regularly and thoroughly without any help at all. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin con- tains senna and cascara—both natural laxatives that form no habit. The ac- tion is gentle, but sure. It will relieve any sluggishness or bilious condition due to constipation without upset. Too Good for Job It Is far better to give work widen Is above the men than to educate the men to be above their work.— Ruskin. Still Coughing? No matter how many medicines you have tried for your cough, chest cold or bronchial irritation, you can get relief now with Creomulsion. Serious trouble may be brewing and you cannot afford to take a chance with anything less than Creomul- sion, which goes right to the seat of the trouble to aid nature to soothe and heal the inflamed mem- branes as the germ -laden phlegm is loosened and expelled. Even if other remedies have failed, don't be discouraged, your druggist is authorized to guarantee Creomulsion and to refund your money If you are not satisfied with results from the very first bottle. Get Creomulsion right now. (Adv.) !F REI RELIEF widSore,Irritated Skin Wherever it is—however broken the surface -freely apply soothing] , Without Remuneration Does the '.'good listener\ ever real Ire that he wastes an awful lot 01 time? NASAL IRRITATION due to coldL. Relieve the dryness and Irritation by applying Mentholaham night and morning. MENTHOLATUM If yoga prefer nose drops,or throat spray, tail for the NEW WINTHOLATUM MUM In handy baffle wads dropper X 49-3f, Leading, Not Following Better be the head of a dog than the tall of a lion. WORK. .\FUN AGAIN V With Constipation Cleared Up elpftEeivi of everyday found her tired A. out. wervouk dun with headaches. But now, thank. to Nst ure's Remedy, work is fun again—she feels like going to a movie or dance any night. Mil- lions have switched to thst natural all - vegetable laxative. Ca' ntains no miner- al or phenol derivatives. Instead a balanced cswnisnation of laratore elements. provided by nature, Ow work natu- rally, pleasantly. Try en Ng tonight_ When yrsi h.. , much bet- ter you feel you'll know why a vegetable correC- love is hrst Only 25c, St all druggist& C. Lamle. Ille••••• FREE- ‘tT-.r drwFor , .. Ie. 1413e reornetar with the piurrhaw of a Vie hes of HR or • 10,' roll of 1oms For A rI4 I nelleeeffine News Review of Current Events the World Over Chino -Japanese War May Come From Autonomy Move. ment—Oil Embargo Against Italy Postponed— President Busy With the Budget. By EDWARD W. PICKARD C western Newspaper Upton. D OWNRTGEIT war between the Chinese armies of Dictator Chiang Kai-shek and the Japanese appeared almost certain when the autonomy movement in north China was revived In eastern Hopei and Chahar provinces by Yin Ju-keng, the ad- ministrative commis- sioner and friend of Japan. Leaders of the rest of the region were undecided on their course, but Jap- anese troops began to pour In by the train - Gen. Chiang load. Three thousand Kai-shek of them with full war equipment arrived In Tientsin, and the garrison at Peiping was more than doubled. The Fengtal railway junc- tion a few miles from Peiping Was seized, Colonel Takesashi, military at- tache, asserting this was necessary be- cause the rolling stock was being moved south, threatening the Isolation of the Japanese forces. In Nanking officials said the Na- tional government was determined to meet with force any attempt to force autonomy on the territory south of Hopei and Chahar provinces, end the executive Yuan proclaimed five sweep- ing reforms designed to stop the spread of the movement. Chiang was hurry- ing, large bodies of troops to the north- ward. Ile also sought to - hold the sup- port of the Shantung war lord, Han Fu-chu, by entrusting him with the defense of the northern Finnan and Shantung frontiers and promising him money and supplies, If needed, to stem Invasion. than Fu-chti of late has been wooed assiduously by the Japanese. Wang Ching -we', premier and for- eign minister of the Nationalist gov- ernment, resigned as president of the cabinet. He has not fully recovered from the recent attempt to assassinate him. B RAZIL was experiencing another I- , revolt, in the northern part of the country. Latest advIces said the rebels had control of the city of Natal and that a hot fight was on for possession of Pernambuco. The uprising was laid to the Communists and was be- lieved to be led by Luis Carlos Prestes, Communist leader for all of South America. It was said he planned to spread the movement all over Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Chile. Under command of Gen. Manuel Rabelo, the federal troops, army and navy airplanes and two cruisers were hurriedly sent northward to combat the rebellion. Several days later a revolt broke out In Rio de Janeiro, the capital, despite extraordinary precautions. The prin- cipal participants there were the avia- tion forces. They seized the aviation field hut government troops recaptured It and It was announced this outbreak had been suppressed. Finally the Brazilian government an- nounced that the revolt In the North also had been crushed and that 138 persons had been killed in the four days of fighting. T HERE was terror throughout Ger- many when Hitler started what ap- parently was to be another \purge.\ Hundreds of persons were arrested and taken to prison or concentration camps, those taken including some minor offi- cials of the Nazi party in Berlin. Many others were known as Socialists. The Association of Nationalistic Jews. corn posed of war veterans, was suppressed and Its leader jailed. N OVESIIIF:R 29 had been set as the date for a meeting of the League of Nations sanctions committee to con - elder the impositon of an oil embargo against Italy. but Pre- mier Laval and Brit- ish Ambassador George Itussell Clerk. after a conference In l'arls, recommended that the session be Indefinitely postponed, and this ac- tion was taken. The statesmen feared early oil sanctions would se- riously aggravate the political situation. and Laval thought If he were given more time he might bring about the conciliation of the Italo-Ethl- opinn quarrel. There were good reasons for the un- easiness of the French and British goy- ernmente Itenito Mussolini had blunt ly told the world trim the Imposition of an nil embargo would mean war In Europe, the warning being El wen through his ambassador to Frsece, Vittorio Cerruti. Furthermore, there was doubt In London and l'arls con cerning the rattily of the United States government to prevent the shipment of oil to Italian ports In WaahIngton it was reported that Ambassador Au gusto Rosso had discussed the matter with Secretary of State hull. etiggeet Int; that attempts to choke off exporta of oil. copper. cotton and other com- mercial articles did not constitute \orthodox\ neutrality. Empe.or Halle /Waggle made two airplane flights to the fighting fronts Premier Laval In Ethiopia and cheered tip his foreee so that their resistance to the invasion was measurably stiffened, especially in the Smith. The government at Ad- dis Ababa announced that its armies had driven the Italian troops back from Gorahal. recapturing the town ot Gerlogutil by encircling movements. In the northern sector, according to the official communique, a thousand Ital- ians occupying Makille retreated (10 miles to Adigrat Losses on both sides were increasing. CECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR ICKES has revived the controversy between the New Dealers and the big steel corporations concerning steel prices. ale Ickes said there was \prima facie evidence of collusion\ in identical bids on a Florida public works project. The PWA ad- ministrator said the four companies bid- ding $185,000 each on 3,300 tons of steel for a Miami dock—Inland. Carnegie, Jones & Laughlin, and Kalman (a Bethlehem subsidl- ary)—were the same that submitted Identical bids on an ocean terminal at Morehead City, N. C., and the Tribor- ough bridge in New York city. In the two earlier Instances German concerns underbid and were awarded the contracts. Amid protests from in- dustry and labor Ickes then halted all additional foreign purchases and raised the differential in favor of domestie materials from 15 to '25 per cent. There was no foreign bidder on the Miami project and Mr: Ickes said the contract would he awarded to the con- cern \that is farthest away and has to pay the highest freight bill—the object Is to spread prosperity around.\ Sec'y Ickes DRESIDENT ROOSEVELT was mighty busy at Warm Springs study- ing the departmental estimates for the budget of 1936-37. Representative James P. Buchanan of Texas, chair- man of the house appropriations com- mittee, took part In the first confer- ences and told the correspondents that he would carry a budget of not more than aroomm000 In excess of estimat- ed revenues through the house by \a devil of a fight\ Then Mr. Buchanan, who didn't appear to have White House support for this stand, left sud- denly for Washington, refusing to ex- plain his departure; and the confer- ences continued with Secretary of the Treasury Morgenthau, Acting Budget Director Bell and Mark Shields, clerk of the appropriations committee. The President told the press they were making distinct progress in ar- ranging the federal finances, having already cut the departmental estimates by $400,000,000. He contradicted re- ports that he was contemplating di- vision of the Ickes PWA and the Hop- kins WPA to ease the friction between the two New Deal officials. E LEVEN American diplomats and naval officers. selected by Secre- tary of State Hull. have sailed to rep- resent this country in the coming naval conference In London. At their head is Nor- man H. Davis. the President's ambassa- dor-at-large for Eu- rope, who participated in the preliminary con- versations last year. Acting with him will be Undersecretary of State William Phillips and Admiral William H. Standley, chief of naval operations. Ad- visers to the delegation will be Ray Atherton,counselor of the American em- bassy In London, and E. H. Dooman of the State department, who knows all about Japanese and other Far East- ern affairs. Noel H. Field of the division of west- ern European affairs, who attended the last naval conversations, and Samuel Reber, secretary of the American lege lion In Bern. Switzerland, will act as tecnnical assistants, The navy's four technical experts will be Capt. Royal E. Ingersol, Com- mander ROSCOP E. Schulrmann, Lieut, Arthur D. Ayrault, and Lieut. J. It. Fulton. N. H. Davis EETING in St. Louis. the Missls- sippi Valley association adopted reeolutions opposing any attempt to limit the \right of eater carriers to establish arid maintain such port to port rates as they see fit.\ The convention, which again went on record as opposing the co-ordina- tion of transportation agencies under the Interstate commerce commission, criticized I. C. C. rulings \which have the effect of permitting railroads to cut rates . for the purpose of kill trig off waterway transportation.\ Tha delegates, representing ram continent agriculture!, shipping, and induntrial interests of 211 states, again opposed ratification of the St. I.aw- rence seaway treaty. Col. Robert Inham Randolph of Chi eago was elected president of the as - soda lion. COME Interesting views on current 1 .3 problems: Raymond Wiley, former member of the \brain trust.\ told the Aasociation of Buying officers in New York: \1 have said many times that the whole problem of government relief and work relief Is a necessary temporary ex- pedient; but It Is also a shaky and dangerous one. Every one Is willing to recognize that work relief In Itself Is no curative. It Is narcotic In its effect.\ Harry W. Nlee, Republican governor of Maryland, declared In Chicago that America's constitution Is no more in need of change than are the Ten Com- nuindments. The Issue In the coming election, he held, Is that of free Insti- tutions versus dictatorship. Gen. Hugh S. Johnson, former NRA administrator, told Milwaukee Ronal - /Ms that the administration is proceed- ing to the \left that 97 per cent of the. basIness men of the United States are against it because of the New Dealers' attitude toward the profit sys- tem. As prime exponents of the gov- ernment's present philosophy, Johnson cited Rexford Tuewell, Aubrey Wil !lams, and Harry Hopkins. \The Idea of dividing the nation's wealth, AS pro- posed by these gentlemen, is not the way out,\ he said. \Rather the thing to be done Is to create wealth, with more persons working and each cre- ating new wealth.\ DAN -AMERICAN Airways opened a I new chapter in the story of avi- ation when Its huge China Clipper carried the first consignment of air mall from Alameda, Calif., to Manila, with stops at Honolu I u. Midway Islands, Wake Island, and Gua in. Capt. Edwin C. Mu- sick, veteran chief pi- lot of the company, wits In command of the craft and was aid- ed by a crew of six men. Fourteen passen- gers started on the ffight and twelve were dropped off to relieve the starts at Midway and Wake. The 1,700 allies between Guam and Manila had not been flown heretofore. After one or two more flights to Manila the clipper will continue to China and operate on through sched- ules thereafter. The Philippine Clipper, second of Pan-American Airways' trans-l'acitic air fleet, arrived at Alameda from the Atlantic coast and her crew began preparations for a flight to Manila be- ginning December 6. Capt. Edwin C. Musick nuNo RICHARD HAUPTMANN'S 1 - 1 attorneys assert that some of the Lindbergh ransom money has been found In Massachusetts and that their Investigators also have discovered isorue pieces of evidence that are of great importance to the defense. The doomed man himself Issued a state- ment calling on Dr. John F. Condon (\Jafsle\) to \make a full confession\ of what he knows concerning the kid- naping and murder of Colonel Lind- bergh's little son. CIOVERNORS of the federal re - Is - 1 F serve banks, in the bulletin of the reserve board, have sounded a most cheerful note concerning business con- ditions. Skimming up facts gathered all over the country, they concluded that the United States was undergoing the most substantial economic recov- ery since the depression began, with every sign pointing to its continuance. Business activity has been sustained for ten months near the high level It reached the first of the year. the bul- letin said. \in contrast to the course of business In the three preceding years when advances were not sus- tained but were quickly followed by declines.\ VOR a long time It has been appar- ent that there would he a split In the American Federation of Labor over the Issue of industrial unionism versus craft unionism. That split now has occurred. and in the ranks of or- ganized labor there Is coming a great battle between the two ele- ments. The matter was precipitated by the res- ignation of John L Lewis, head of the United Mine Workers of America, as vice president of the fed- eration. He Is the chief protagonist for unit unionization of mass production of Industries, and his opponents, the craft union advocates, are led by William Green, piesident of the organization. The latter have had fl majority In the late conventions of the federation, but Lewis hag a lot 01' toliowers arid is a determined tighter. He 11118 set up separate headquarters In Washington and seven international union leaders joined him immedietely. It was re- ported that the \rebels\ had a war fund of $10,000.000. Four-tifths of Gila came from a special assessment of $t each on the 4.000,000 United Mine Workers this fall. President Green sent a stern rebuke to Lewis and those associated with him. John L. Lewis rt NE hundred years ago Andrew %.-. 1 Carnegie was horn In Dunferm- line, Scotland, and the anniversary was celebrated not only In that town but In Pittsburgh, Pa., and In scores of towns and cities to which the Iron master donated public library build- ings. In Dunfermline everybody par- ticipated In the festivities, for Carne- gie practically transformed that city by IIIR gifts and his memory is highly honored. John Finley, associate ed- itor of the New York Times, wait • speaker at a formal banquet there, Here's Chic Frock That Will Slenderize Figure P,'rrsRR 51.411 If you've large proportions to cope with, yet aspire to a slender figure, you'll love this house frock which breaks lines In just the right places. Four easy pieces are Its sum total of chic, one hack, one front, and one for each sleeve. Don't you love the diagonal rows of buttons at the shoulder. just where they're needed for Inexpen- sive decoration? Pointed belt -ends nip in your waist, and a wide, square neck makes this frock a jiffy, over . the -header. You've all the novelty cottons to choose from, so hurry, send for your pattern today! Pattern 9546 may be ordered only In sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 32, 34, 36, 3. 8 40, 42, 44 and 46. Size 16 requires 3% yards 36 inch fabric. Complete diagrammed sew chart included. Send FIFTEEN CENTS in coins or stamps (coins preferred) for this pattern: Be sure to write plainly your NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER and SIZE. Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept., 232 West Eighteenth St.. New York. N. Y. Fishermen Stranded for Five Days on Sea Bottom Thousands of fishermen returning to Caspian ports recently told an as tonishing story of having been ma- rooned on the bottom of the sea for - live days. They reported that at the busiest period of the fishing season the sea Itself retired from under the fleet. The sea receded along 150 miles of the northern shoreline, leaving the boats stuck several kilometers fro.n solid earth. Airplanes dropped food to the stranded men until the tide flowed back and allowed them to re- float their ships. Let Real, Not Imaginary Interest, Be Reading Aim Learn to he a good reader, which is perhaps a more d:tlicult thing than you Imagine. Learn to be dIscrimina tive in your reading; to read faith- fully, and with your best ,attentlon, all kinds of things which you have a real interest In—a real, not an imaginary—and which you find to be really fit for what you are en- gaged in. A Horrible Example The Customer—Isn't It rather un- usual to see a barber with long hair and whiskers like yours? The Barber—Yes; but It's good business. Every man that sees how awful they look on me will fall for a haircut and shave. WRIGLEY'S IS COOLING TO THE TASTE! PEOPLE FEAR THE THINGS THEY DO NOT UNDERSTAND The beautiful voice of a famous opera singer Issuing forth In song caused a panic on board a ship! Seriously—that is the content of a news dispatch from off the coast of Australia where an American ship carrying explorers was recently au- thored. The voice of the singer came through a gramophone, and the audience among whom it caused a 'Janie was composed of natives, who ran in terror from something that they did not understand. It may seem inconiprehensible to us that a beautiful voice should in- still dislike or fear. Whatever the language of the song, you may say. is not beautiful singing beautiful to all who can hear—as the trilling of a bird must sound the same to men of any color and any language? But the beauty of the voice Is obscured by the fact that its source is something the natives do not un- derstand. For that reason it Is an object of suspicion—and of fear. If we stop to think about it, It will surprise many of us to realize how much we have In common with those Australian natives In that we fre- quently refuse to see beauty in the things we do not understand. We to() are suspicious and fearful of things we do not know. Most of the world's bigotry and prejudice springs from ignorance. And many of us, If we but realized It, create a spectacle no less foolish and unreasonable than those natives in panic over a beauti- ful voice issuing from a gramophone when we condemn without investiga- tion. when we turn without considera- tion from things which are new, things which are different, ways to which we are not accustomed. tj Bell SynciTcate.-1VNU Service. Admission of Wrong • A man should never be ashamed to own he has been in the wrong, which is but saying. In other words, that he Is wiser today than he was yesterday.—SWift. 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Service Plus Quality Roll developed, eight hi- gloss prints and ONE EN- LARGEMENT, 2be (coin). Mail Pilaw Dirdwt to OWL PHOTO SERVICE 113 1 / 2 Rohm. - Fargo, N. Dab. DRUG STORE, FIRST CLASS \You say he's opened a first-class drug store?\ \Yes—has the finest soda fountain in town.\ AFTER EVERY MEAL