The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, October 27, 1927, Image 2

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    £4
“You Need a
Diuretic!”
To Be Well There Must Be
Proper Kidney Function.
THE kidneys are the blood filters.
If their action becomes sluggish
they do not thoroughly cleanse the blood
of poisonous wastes. Such impurities
make one dull, tired and achy with often
nagging backache, drowsy headaches
and dizziness. A common warming of
imperfect kidney action is scanty or
burning excretions.
Doan’s Pills, stimulant diuretic, aid the
kidneys in their eliminative work. 50,000
users have publicly recommended
Doan’s. Ask your neighber!
PILLS
DOAN'S "oc
STIMULANT DIURETIC 55 KIDNEYS
THE CENTRE
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HALL. PA.
Foster Milburn Co. Mig Chem Butfala, NY.
Porter's
Pain Kin
ALiniment
For fifty years
your neighbors
have relied on this
remedy of pure and
wholesome herbs. Yet, even
now, some do not know that
quickly checking colds, re-
lieving aches and pains, Jf
healing cuts and burns, Ly
are but a few of
its many uses.
Read the directions
with every bottle.
“Power” Enough
The negro preacher was tall and pow-
erful of frame, and as he preached he
whacked the pulpit cushion with ham-
mer-like strokes of his fist.
But his preaching consisted simply of
the repetition of one phrase: “May
More
massive
the Lord give us more power.
power, O Lord!"
At last a small negro got up in the
back of the church, a disgusted ex-
pression on his face, and called out In
piping tones:
“What ycu-all need, Bruddah
bing, is not monah
{dees
Rob-
power, but me ah
His Job
He—What! Another new dress?
How on earth am 1 going to pay for
it?
She—That's your business, 1 didn't |
marry financial
vice,
you to give you
ad-
NEWS REVIEW OF
CURRENT EVENTS
Teapot Dome Lease Is Can-
celed—Woman Fails in
Atlantic Flight.
By EDWARD W. PICKARD
INAL victory has been scored by
the federal government in its three
years’ fight to regain the valuable oll
fields that were leased to others by
Albert B. Fall when he was secretar
of the interior. Last week the
preme Court of the United States
ated the Teapot Dome lease hel
Harry F. Sinclair, The decision sus
tained the ruling of the Circuit Court
of Appeals which reversed a Wyor
federal court that upheld the validity
of the lease. This brings back to the
government Wyoming oil lands esti
mated to be worth $100,000,000, plus
$3,000,000 in cash now in the hands
of the court's £2 000,000
worth of oll taken out by Sinclair be
fore suit was started and for which
be must make restitution, snd more
than $1.000,000' worth of oil tanks,
pipe lines and other improvements con-
structed by Sinelair, but for which the
court denies him equity because of the
leasing form,
The court's decision last March, sim-
Nlarly denouncing the Doheny lease of
the Elk Hills (Calif) naval reserve as
fllegal and fraudulent, restored even
receivers;
“When You Catch Cold
Rub On Musterole
_ Musterole is easy to apply and works
right away. It may prevent a cold from
turning into “flu” or pneumonia. It
does all the good work of grandmother's
mustard plaster.
Musterole is a ciean, white ointment,
made of oil of mustard and other hame
simples. It is recommended by many
doctors and nurses. Try Musterole for
gore throat, cold on the chest, rheuma-
tism, lumbago, pleurisy, stiff neck, bron.
chitis, asthma, neuralgia, congestion,
pains and aches of the back and joints,
epraine, sore muscles, bruises, chilblains,
frosted feet—colds of all sorts.
To Mothers: Musterole is also
made in milder form for
babies and small children,
Ask for Children’s Musterole,
Ite valué is place at fully
The government also re-
covered $24,000,000 for oil drilled out
Last week's decision, which was
Jess public officer.” It held that the
Teapot Dome lease to Sinclair's Mam:
ment. Fall's contention that develop
UTH ELDER, daring and skillful
“lorida aviator, almost achieved
her ambition to be the first woman to
With George
Haldeman she drove the
plane American Girl to within about
1,000 miles of Paris despite sirong
head winds that forced them off their
course, and then a broken oil line
forced them to come down in the
ocean. Fortunately the Dutch tanker
as co-pilot,
Better than a mustard plaster
Sufferers From Asthma |
or Bronchitis
Here Is Glorious News For You
No matter how long you have suf-
fered from Asthma or Bronchitis, a
gpeedy relief from your sufferings is
now offered you in CAMPHOROLE,
whose wonderful effects are realized
at the very first trial
It quickly reaches the sore spot with
a gentle tingle. Difficult breathing is
relieved as the choked up alr passages
and lungs are penetrated by the power
ful healing vapors which reach the very
sent of the disease with each breath.
Then you'll know why millions use
CAMPHOROLE, when once you realize
its remarkable effects, not only for
Asthma or Bronchitis but for deep chest
colds, weak lungs, gore throat and Ca-
tarrhal troubles, D-uggiets are author.
fzed to sell the 36c size on 10-day
trial—try it.
At Beware
All of
Dr. Brigadeil’s
Camshorsle, Atlcatls City, W. J
[PASTOR KOENIGS
NERVINE
| Ve 2
/ Epilepsy
Nervousness &
Sleeplessness
MIR LR
Tar lat Tae
(Bh tel By 84S &
up the two fiyers unhurt. An attempt
burned. The rescue took place about
800 miles northeast of the Azores and
whence they were to continue their
trip to France by steamer,
Miss Elder and Haldeman were in
the air more than 41 hours and flew
2574 miles—a record for all-water
flights. The storm they encountered
reduced thelr average gpeed from the
expected 100 miles an hour to about
72. The last five hours of their flight
was made with no oil pressure in
their motor.
MERICAN workers still yearn for
their beer and have not given up
hope of getting it. The American Fed
eration of Labor, in convention in Los
Angeles, adopted by viva voce vote a
resolution demanding that congress
modify the Volstead act “so as to per
mit the manufacture and sale of whole:
some beer.”
President Green's policies were up-
held when the convention voted, 130
to 32, against application of the fed:
eral quota law to Mexican immigra
tion. The executive council, after a
year's investigation of the relationship
between labor and the government in
Mexico, reported that it did not con.
sider the Mexlean government a trades
union regime, though the relations be.
tween it and the labor movement are
“very intimate.”
Max 8. Hayes of Cleveland, who was
Farmer-Labor candidate for vice presi.
dent in 1920, offered a plan for a labor
party, but the convention almost
unanimously supported Mr. Green's al-
ternative proposal that “we work for
the friends of labor in both national
parties at the polls,” The delegates
also rejected resolutions denouncing
the government's policy In Latin Amer-
jea and China, and approved the Mon-
roe Doctrine.
N EXICO'S latest revolutionary
L¥Y1 movement is, as predicted, effec
tively suppressed and Calles is more
firmly in saddle than ever, with
Obregon essured of the succession to
the Presidency. and
his band of followers in the state of
the
General Gomez
Vera Cruz were attacked at Chualulco
by losal troops under General Escobar
routed, bombing planes
playing a considerable part in the en-
Gomez and his staff offi-
cers, seeing the day was lost, fled into
the hills. Felix Palavicinl, a journal-
ist who has been deported, lays all the
blame for the mutiny on General Ser-
rano, who was caught and executed.
Obregon says that becomes
President he will follow Calles’ policy
in compelling Catholics and other re
liglous denominations to respect the
laws, since this policy has the support
of the majority of the people of the
country,
and utterly
ol
gagement.
when he
Fy UGO-SLAVIA and Bulgaria have
practically settled their row over
raids by Bulgarian comitadjis or ir-
regulars along the border, but now
Poland and Lithuania are on the eve
of a break which may have serious
consequences. The Lithuanian gov-
ernment has closed Polish schools and
confiscated Polish estates in Litho-
ania, and plans to declare Vilna the
capital of the country, despite the fact
that that city was seized by Poland
seven years agp. Then, last week, a
number of Poles were arrested In
Athuania on charges of having plotted
assassination of President Sme-
The Polish government sent an
timatam to Kovno threatening ac-
tion unless Lithuania should radically
alter its poliey within one week. Mar.
Pilsudski, dictator of Poland,
wishes to avoid the ure of force if
possible, but the British minister to
Warsaw reports that the situation is
fraught with danger.
the
tona.
1
shal
VER in China the pendulum has
swung back and the Shansi armies
that had defeated Marshal Chang's
! wpe and threatened to take Peking
have themselves been beaten in battle
and at lust reports were retreating
westward In considerable disorder.
About 10000 of the Shansi soldiers
were captured and sent into Manchu.
tia. The northern forces began opera-
jons for the capture of Shansi prov.
ince and against Gen. Feng-Yu-hsiang
in Honan province. Peking's feeling
of relief was modified by the knowl
edge that it had been saved partly by
the ealling in of a horde of 15,000
Mongol cavalry, reputed to be the
fiercest and most cruel fighters in all
Asia.
—
PAIN began its return to a consti-
tutional parliamentary government
last week with the formal opening of
the new national assembly by King
Alfonso. But it was only a faint start
that way, for the assembly member
ship is picked by the dictator, Gen.
Primo de Rivera, and so seems certain
to do the bidding of the directorate
which he heads. Two of the women
delegates, the duchess of Parcent and
Countess San Luls, resigned just be
fore the assembly opened.
———
SENATOR JAMES A. REED of Mis-
souri, who stands ready to accept
the Democratic Presidential nomina-
tion if Gov, Al Smith cannot get it,
was endorsed as a candidate by the
Missouri state committee at Sedalia,
and then delivered to a big assemblage
of Democrats what was considered the
keynote speech for his party in the
coming campaign. He denounced Re-
publican, rule as no less corrupt now
than during the Harding administra.
tion and scored Mellon, Daugherty and
Fall. Making a plea for unity, ‘the
genator sald:
“Let us make our fight beneath ban
ners proclaiming the right of each
¢itizen to regulate his own personal
conduct-=chart his own course through
lifedetermine his own habits and to
control the affairs of his own house.
hold, free from all restraints,
“If this people are to remain free,
local self-government and the sover
eignty of the states must be preserved.
The march of centralization must be
arrested. Government by boards and |
bureaucracies must cease,
“let us demand:
“The honest administration of gov-
ernment.
“The swift and sure punishment of
all public plunderers, bribemongers,
and other malefactors,
“The equalization of the burden of
taxation,
“The repeal of all laws creating spe-
clal privileges.
“The dismissal of an army of gples,
snoopers, sneaks, and informers.”
ADICAL Republican senators have
R holding a series of confer
ences in Was! and It was re
ported their purpose was to promote
the Presidential boom of Senator Nor-
rie of Nebraska. ut some of them
{srued a signed statement disclaiming
any “third party” intentions and de-
nying they planned insurgency within
their party. Their purpose, said these
gentlemen-—Borah, Norris, Frazier,
Nye and Brookhart—was to form &
strong Western bloc and "gel Some
unity of purpose and some polidarity
of action” among Western senators
and to impress upon the Eastern states
and their representatives in congress
that, as Senator Borah explained it,
“a large portion of the United States
lies west of the Allegheny mountaine”
Friends of Norrie, it Is sald, intend
to enter his name in these fourteen
preferential primary states: California, |
{llinols, Massachusetts, Nebraska, New
Hampshire, New Jersey, New York,
North Dakota, Ohlo, Oregon, Pennsyl-
vania, South Dakota, West Virginia,
and Wisconsin,
been
iglon,
N AYOR DUVALL of Indianapolis,
A¥1 convicted of political corruption,
was sentenced last week to thirty days
in jail and fined £1,000, and disfran-
chised for four years. He will appeal
the case and says he will not resign
until appeal has been carried
through the State Supreme court, The |
prosecutors believed be would be i
forced to quit office, In which case his
wife. now city controller, would suc-
ceed him. Numerous civic groups are
determined to oust both the Duvalls,
this
EDERAL JUDGE FP. P. SCHOON-
MAKER at Pittsburgh issued one
of the most sweeping injunctions In
the history of labor disputes, restrain-
ing the United Mine Workers of Amer-
ica. its officials and iis members,
Virtually every activity of the union
against the nonunion Pittsburgh
Terminal Coal corporation was for
bidden. The union and its members
were restrained from violence of any
sort against company employees and
prespective employees and against
company property. Union pickets were
restrained from putting their foot on
company property, but were allowed
to establish a single picket post on
each road leading to the mines. Such
pickets were cautioned against using
abusive language, but were permitted
the use of peaceful persuasion.
The long strikes of coal miners has
been ended In Illinois, Indiana, Towa
and other Middle Western fields, the |
men temporarily receiving the wages |
called for by the Jacksonville agree
ment until the question of pay has
been settled by commissioners to be
appointed.
An,
ILLIAM T. COSGRAVE, Presi |
dent of the Irish Free State, ob-
tained a majority of six votes in the
pew Dail Eireann and was reelected
The followers of De Valera and the
Labor party voted solidly against him,
and the Redmondites refrained from
voting. The chief attack on Cosgrave
was delivered by Sean T. O'Kelly, a De
Valera man, who declared the Presi
dent was the tool of England and at
tacked his financial and economic poli
cles. Next day Cosgrave announced
his cabinet, which was approved by
the same vote, and also announced that
the Farmers’ party had fused with the
government party.
BATHS of the week Include those
of Bishop P. J. Muldoon of Rock:
ford, I., a leader In the Catholic
church; Col. ¥. J. Dillon, member of
the federal radio commission: F. D.
Stout, one of the ten wealthiest men
of Chicago, and Dom Miguel, duke of
Braganza and pretender to the throne
of Portugal
“How best
can I trade in
my present car
for a new car?”
HEN you are ready to trade in
your preser:t car for a new car, you
naturally want full value for your pres-
ent car. But most of all you want full
new car value.
It will therefore pay you to consider
varying trade-in allowance offers in the
light of these basic facts:
Your present car has only one funda-
mental basis of value: i.e., what the
dealer who accepts it in trade can get for
it in the used car market.
Your present car has seemingly
different values because competitive
dealers are bidding to sell you a new car.
The largest allowance offered is not
necessarily the best deal for you.
Sometimes it is; sometimes it is not.
1 An excessive allowance may mean
that you are paying an excessive
price for the new car in comparison with
its real value.
First judge the merits of the new car
in comparison with its price, includ-
ing all delivery and finance charges.
Then weigh any difference in allowance
offered on your present car.
Remember that you are making a
purchase—not a sale. You are buy-
ing a new car and simply using your
present car as a credit against the new
car's purchase price.
E publish this message, believing
that the public is entitled to have
all the facts. And we invite you to send
for the facts about General Motors
products by using the coupon below.
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