wd SHIN i CBO shrine for autolsts, erected the American Legion. York In “covered wagon" near Cincinnati, by Rev. W, California. 8—America's first wayside NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS Smith Selects J. J. Raskob, Big Business Man, as National Chairman. By EDWARD W. PICKARD. OHN J. RASKOB, head finance committee of the General Motors corporation and a resident of Delaware, was elected chairman of the Democratic national committee at the behest of Gov."Al Smith. He is an active Catholic and has given much money to the church and to the anti- prohibiti but the Presidential ‘andidate made it plain that he select: ed him to conduct campaign not for these reasons but because he is a big business man, In accepting Raskob declared mud-slinging and no pussy- ing in the campaign on the part and he wa spoken as to of the ion cause, the the chalr inship Mr. there sh be no ocrats, 8S sur pris the wet and “Governor Sr " he ident of these ni ited St the reson then able to give the people sald. “as Pres- ates, roes wii be ture of er the | tion laws. nd control o » liquor quest way that il return of ahsol utely saloon, el its accompanyin store tempe then ’ : plan and to advo- cate sucl h res In Constitut 1y be its adoption. This Is leaders pussy-footing. “Mud-slinging always makes enemies than friends, I should like to every speaker and worker for our cause to constructive policies, “In our business life today we suc ceed by constructive work and by hav- ing better goods to sell than our com petitors. There Is every reason why Democratic party should follow this constructive business poliey In this campaign. This is our job. Let others sling the mud.” Col. Herbert P. Lehman, New York nanker, succeeded Jesse Jones as chairman of the finance committee of the national committee, James W, Gerard and Charles A. Greathouse were re-elected treasurer and secre- tary respectively. Raskob was author. ized to appoint an advisory campaign committee and selected as chairman of that body Senator Peter Gerry of Rhode Island, who had rather expect- ed to be made chairman of the nation- al committee, The five national vice chairmen chosen were: Frank Hague of New Jersey, Gov. Harry Byrd of Virginia, former Congressman Scott Ferris of Oklahoma, former Gov, Mrs. Nellie Tayloe Ross of Wyoming, and Mrs. Florence G, Farley of Kansas, It was decided that main headquarters should be in Naw York city, but that Governor Byrd should have special headquarters in Richmond, since the campaign in Virginia is expected to be quite Impesiant. our laws and necessary for p—not more pledge the HOUKH Al Smith, In conference with his running mate, Senator Itobins™n, declared that If he were electe”r the first thing he would do would de to start on plans for relief of the farmers, the Farmer-Labor par- ty, in Aational convention in Chicago, was fot won over to his support. In- stead it selected as Its candidate for the President Senator George W, Nor ris of Nebraska, The choice was made on the third ballot, which was 16 for N¢ ris and 14 for Norman Thomas, nd ainee of the Socialist. Will Vereen of Moultrie, Ga., wealthy cotton mill owner, was nominated for vice pres- ident. Both Norris and Vereen sald they would not accept the nomination, The Prohibition party convention, algo held In Chieago, nominated Wil. liam ¥. Varney of Rockville Center, N. Y.. for President and James A. Edgerton of Alexandria, Va, for sec. ond place. An attempt to stampede the convention for Hoover falled, but the Republican candidate received votes on the deciding ballot. = JH ERBERT HOOVER, who already has sent to President Cooll his resignfftion as merce, left Washington the West, On the way he ences with party le secretary of com- Saturday for held confer veral see- and be spent Sunday afternoon Vice President Dawes in Evans- considering the difficulties that confront the Illinois Re ppbliegns, largely to the wet cago and county. Mr. further plans Included a vizit with President and Mrs on the Brule river In Wisconsin continuation of 1} ip to Califo anders of s tions, with ton, due sent Cook and 8 trig with a brief stop in Omaha, fication ceremony is no August 11 at Lel versity, and at that says, he will w schedule Hoover outline his position relief, ied of hi presidency on the eve farm notif § nom Topeka, Kan, National Chairman Work, In nery, 10 at his home in 1g the party machi ranging to give more authority to the natl men and state organ Moses of New Hamp pointed ever before “contact Wi N the dirigible aster in the the YOrs neteorolog pilot, and gator, started on reach the last week, 42 days the was unable to Russian aviator discovered the ice but Next day the Krassin reached the grou and Zappl, gren had been dead about a his body having carried along by his half-frozen arving companions. The as it had rescued the again turned its prow toward and a few hours later reached 3 rescued the five had been left by 1 floes, cued inne that Ma month, been and st jcebreaker two men who Nobile near Foyn island, Arex the half-dozen victims of girplane accidents during the week was Morris Titterington, inventor of the earth inductor which Lindbergh used on his transatlantic flight and of other safety devices for airplanes. He and Mrs, Patricia An. drews, a pupil, were killed when their plane crashed near Snyders, Pa, in a storm, Despite the various stories to the effect that Captain Loewenstein land- ed alive in some way or another from his plane and is in hiding, the Belgian court that Investigated the cage de- cided that the famous Belgian finan- cier really fell into the sea and is dead. The insurance companies re fused to pay until proof of death was given and the capitalist's family sta- tioned boats along both coasts of the English channel to get the body if it was washed ashore. In Lendon it Is believed Loewenstein's disappearance is either a fake or suicide, . Countess Brandenstein, daughter of Count Zeppelin, christened the world's largest airship, named after her fa ther, at Friedrichshafen, Germany, and it was announced that the huge di- rigible would make three trips to the United States this year. compass NE of the worst sea disasters of recent years occurred off the coast of south Chile when the Chilean army transport Angamos girtick a rock after losing her rudder in a storm and speedily sank. More than three hundred lives were lost, the list of victims including a number, of po- litizai dignitaries. The other passen- gers were laborers and their families on their way to the nitrate fields In northern Chile, The crew numbered 215. Lifeboats were smashed by the heavy seas as fast ne they were launched and only a few persons were washed ashore alive, The captain shot him. self on hia bridge. \ The schooner. Rofa, one of the entrants In a race across the Atlantie, ran into rough weather and lost her masts when about 800 miles out. The six members of the crew, including Capt, William Boos of Pelham Manor, the owner, and Mrs. picked up by the oil tanker Tuscarora and brought back to New York. An at tempt to tow the schooner In failed and she was abandoned. KELLOGG'S pr war i= well on its Boos, were JCECRETARY act to outlaw 0 acceptance by all the h it was submitted. Germany has already sent a fav and last the ministerial council authorized Minister Briand to France's the his rev regtions showed giderate tation of reservations | espect to her conned tion w the Locarno pact and the League of Nations. This action fol- lowed a Parley ¥y In Geneva by Sir Cecil Hurst, M. geot a err Gaus representing el opposed powers (0 orable reg French Foreign Mr. unconditional week notify Kellogg of acceptance of treaty i present ised * restrict Americal ut ther indication mw consent to al HoSTRInES its tari etween Paragon Alres porte »¢] that a vis ienog I was rn the front f war existed on troops had fone v dopted rulations, country’s financis ina were a Inde detalled reg seeking the elim provement of administration, ination of for the fit ith ori ity and other regal increased ministry, ook. ing to the development of China's re sources and trade ations NVESTIGATION of Republican tronage in Georgia, pas cond: jected by a subcommittee, vealed that postmasters, whether Hep oho or Democratic, had been in the habit of contributing from thelr salaries to the Republican state party fund. Some of the witnesses more than intimated that they were virtually compelled to make the contributions, while others said the money was not “demanded” but that they were told the gift of § per cént of the salary was customary, In Mississippl a federal grand jury is inquiring into Republican methods of distributing federal patronage and about two hundred postmasters as sembled in Biloxi to give evidence, senate NCREASING speculation in stocks in Wall street is causing thé fed- eral reserve board a lot of worry and some method of checking it and avert. ing a great crash is being sought, Last week a step in that direction was taken when the Chicago and New York Federal Reserve banks increased the rediscount rate from 4% to 5 per cent. It was expected this example would be followed hy the other re. | serve banks, The Chicago action re- suited in a wild break in prices on the New York exchange, declines ranging from 1 to 18 points, Wiping | out millions of paper profits, Charles BE. Mitchell, president of the National City bank of New York, in a | recent warning sald that the heavy | borrowing of the banks through redis- | counting and their relending of the money on stock and bond collateral, which is not rediscountable at the re. serve banks, are reducing the liquid. ity of the banks and creating a situa. tion which, if not actually dangerous, reflects a trend that is unfortunate, LKS, in national convention In Miami, Fla, elected Murray Hul- bert of New York as grand exalted ruler for the ensuing year. They vot. ed to establish a £20,000,000 trust fund for use In charitable, edn cational and benevolent enterprises. It will be known as the Elks’ ndtional foundation, . i { Most Famous Tapestry Gobelin tapestry is ao (npestry in Faubourg, St. Marcel, Paris, so-called from the brothers dyers from Relms, who made a for- tune rom thelr scarlet dye in the reign of Francis 1, In 1667 Louis XIV converted the busifiess Into a royal manufacture and employed eminent artists like Lebrun to Invent designs. made and Gobelin, Twig Grew Into Forest The weeping willow was introduced into England from the East in and into the United States in 1770 by & British officer who came to Boston with the army, bringing a twig. This twig into possession of John Parke Custis, who planted It on his estate in Abingdon, Va., where it came the progenitor of this species in the United States, 1722, came bitre Fun for Photographers Butterflies and moths are not only exceedingly beautiful, but the various stuges of the development are most interesting bserve, Nature furnish wonderful fo @ “addicted 10 « They for BOVE ane Star Almost Stationary T Naval from any given place in the the North the same apparent wut the en Observatory says that Northern pies [O- he minphe re star ocen approximately tire night and en- ire year. Card-Playing FOREN Expression candie™ | “SUPREME AUTHORITY" WEBSTER’S NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY THE MERRIAM WEBSTER Because fundreds Supreme Cour CECE CONncu highest of the work as ‘their Aut The Presidents f all lead ngU ni- vers ities, ( olleges, and Normal Schools give their h ca ty indorse. ment. Taisc homty. All States thar have ado pred a large dictionsry as standard have sclected Webster's New Interna tional. The Schoolbooks of the Country adhere to the Merriam-Webster system of diacritical marks. The Government Printing Office at Washington uses it as authority. WRITE for 2 sample page of the New Words, specimen of Regular snd India Papers, FREE. 10 i EADACHE Quick Relief Monthly Pains ( Headache Backache Neuralgia Toothache and pains caused by Rheumatism and Neuritis Dr. Miles’ AxthPain Pills re- lieve quickly and without un- pleasant after effects. They do not cong Spats or Tek fhe gestion. We will be Bad. —~ amie for 2¢ stam Dr. Miles rae eibuay Indiana S’ All these closed cars have HE mechanical performance of General Motors cars is tested and proved on General Motors’ 1,245 acre Proving Ground. Before any new model is put in production, it must pass more than 135 different tests for power, speed, durability and general per- formance. As to the appearance and comfort of General Motors cars, we invite you to be the judge. Every closed body is built by Fisher— the largest builder of automobile bodies in the world. The experience and the vast producticn of the Fisher Company mean more beauty, more comfort, and more luxury than you will find anywhere else at corresponding prices. We invite you to check, on the coupon be- low, the cars that appeal to you most. Com- plete literature will be sent to you, without any obligation. CHEVROLET — 7 mode! $495 to $715. Bigger and Lett than ever before. 4 wheel brakes, More powerful engine. Luxurious Fisher Bodies. New hood. Duco colors. Also truck ie-ton, $395; 1ton, $495. New chassis ; PONTIAC —7 45 10 4s t i AY models, $7 Lowest.priced qua “six.” New models improved from taillight Bodies by Fisher. New head. Increased finish. radiator to 4-wherel brakes. GMR power. Duco cylinder OLDSMOBILE models, $925 to $1085. Fine quality price, signed and improved by ral Motors Longer, roomier, more powerful. Fisher Bodies. 4-wheel brakes. car at moderate ede Crone OAKLAND —7 models, $1045 to $1375. The All-American “six.” Smooth, powerful engine. Longer, lower and more bes bodies by Fisher. 4-wheel br Every OOnYeRenoe., New orlors BUICK - 16 m £1195 wo $1995. Largest value in Buck's history. Beautiful low bodies by Fisher. Getaway like an arrow. Vibrationless beyond belief. 6-cyl- inder “valve - in - head” engine. Duco finish. Ld seis, LASALLE 16 models $2350 to $2975. Beautiful car of Conti- nental lines. Companion car to Cadillac. Vatype, 90 de- gree 8-cvlinder engine. Marvel- ous bodies by Fisher. Stang Duco combinations. CADILLAC—26 models, $3295 to $5500. Standard of the world. Famous 90-degree V-type 8-cylinder engine. Sumptuous bod- ies by Fisher and Fleetwood. 500 oolor combinations to choose from. (ALL PRICES GENERAL MOTORS 3 F. O. B. FACTORIES) GENERAL MOTORS (Dept. A), Detroit, Mick. UJ Oe a Motors Product Literature describing each PONTIAC [J 1 have checked — together with with the booklet, OLDSMOBILE [] . “Principles and Policies.” OAKLAND [J Name BUICK i] LASALLE [ Address capac [J SER GREET IN SER DIOR SI ROHR Se. em,