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All deslers, Waste Paper The per capita use of paper In Amer ica is over 200 pounds a year and it is admitted that a raft of It is wasted MOST people know this absolute antidote for pain, but are you careful to say Bayer when you buy it? And do you always give a glance to see Bayer on the box—and the word genwine printed in red? It isn't the genuine Bayer Aspirin without it! A drugstore always has Bayer, with the isenid, lmperiling lives ol Captain G. Allen Huncock, Mexican good will fiyer, lying NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS Misfortune for Mexico— By EDWARD W. PICKARD PEiHaPs the greatest that could happen to this time was the murder of Gen viaro Obregon. Quite aside from heinousness of crime, the sination of the president-elect removed from the scene the strongest and most progressive of republic's leaders, and not only threatened the country with renewal of the chaotic conditions that have held it back for many years, but also imperiled recently re stored friendly relations with the gov- ernment of the United States. The excellent work dowe by our ambas sader, Dwight Morrow, In the latter regard was given powerful aid by Obregon and his administration, which was to have been installed on Decem- ber 1, would have carried It on to the ptmost, misfortane Mexico at Al the the assas- the the Obregon was shot to death at a bao quet in the fashionable resort of San Angel, 12 miles south of Mexico Clty by a young man who has heen ident} fled as Jose de Leon Teral, an art student. The assassin was. arrested but refused to name his accomplices or the instigators of the crime. A score of suspects were taken In cus tody. Alberto Cruz was immediately supplanted as minister of by Zertuche, of Obregon's closest friends, and both he and Pres ident Calles promised that the murder would be cleared up and those guilty punished. In a signed statement Calles sald the had admitted that the motive of his crime was religious fervor, and added that the authorities had obtained much io formation “implicating directly cler leal action™ In cbnclusion., Calles sald: “Finally | want to annoufice that the government will continue as heretofore within constitutional paths and with the requisite calmness and energy.” This was taken to mean that he would not attempt! to continue in office after November, as the Mex. lean constitution forbids direct cession of the president in two terms in office. However, that constitution has been altered before to fit cireum- stances and may be changed again police General one assassin the president suc: Despite the words of Calles, 1° is scarcely conceivable that the Catholie church in Mexico as an organization or any of its responsible members can have instigated the murder of Gen. eral Obregon. The relations between the church and the government had been steadily improving, and Obregon, though pledged to carry on the poll- cies of Calles, was looked to as the man to settle the trouble finally. The best guess at this time ds that the as- sassination was prompted by political enemles of the president-elect who utilized a weak-minded religious fa. natie, Telegrams deploring the erime were sent by President Coolidge, Vice Pres. ident Dawes and Secretary of State Kellogg. In Washington Ambassador Tellez, though terribly shocked, said he was certain the tragedy would bring about the unification of all men In his country, sweeping away the dis. turbing and reactionary elements. He expected the old congress would be called In session to prepare for a ape cial election. The permanent commis sion of congress already had been summoned to meet to consider the po- litical situation. Sn HILE mourning Mexicans were taking the body of General Obre- gon to his native state of Sonora for burial, Americans were sending home, with all possible honors, the remains of Capt. Emilio Carranza, the Mexican “good will” fiyer who was killed when hi# plane crashed in New Jersey dur. ing a storm. After it had lain In state In New York the body was con. veyed to Mexico on a special funeral train that carried also the aviators father, an American army guard of, honor and Mexican officials. The smashed plane also was taken back. All along the route the passing of the train was watched by sorrowing crowds, and at many cities the major general's falute of 13 guns was fired, HOLESALE bolting from either the Republican or the Democratic national ticket does not seem to getting much encoursgement In the country, The most ambitious at tempts to bring this about are being made in Texas. There the anti-Smith Democrats with the avowed all the Democrats they can to vote for and they are led by men who-have been rather prominent in the that state. They are making no attempt to defeat the state Democratic ticket. which disappoints fry the other be organized of getting have Intention Hoover, several party in who dis affected hand also in Texas a group of anti-Hoover Republicans who are throwing what influence they have to the Smith ticket, In Asheville Bishop Cannén of the Methodist. church, South, gathered about 181 men and women to plan for the defeat of Smith In the Southern states. Nearly all the delegates were preachers of the Methodist church, South, or paid workers of church or prohibition agencies. Sixty-six were from Buncombe county, North Caro- lina, of which Asheville Is the county sent No Democratic party leaders were present, and it was noticeable that the Baptists held aloof, except for Dr. Arthur J. Barton, who was made chairmaa of the meeting. The press was excluded from the real sessions. Leaders of farmers’ organizations in the corn belt still hope they can In. dure agriciiturists to oppose Hoover, and their meeting in Des Moines adopted a series of resolutions condemning the farm relief plank in the Republican platform and commend ing the plank inserted in the cratic platform. Most of his meeting declared their In the smaller On some of are there Is the Demo those at. tending tention of supporting Smith, but there is still little reason to believe that their stand will Induce very many af lows whotn their November farmers to political The of change filintions next large numbers farmers, held their state convention Inst week and unanimously ndorsed the Hoover and Curtis ticket and the Kansas City platform, includ ing Its farm relief plank. The platform condemned Al Smith for “his attitude on nullification” of prohibition and alluded to "Tammany's effort to fasten itrelf upon the nation.” Earlier in the day Governor Hammill of lowa had had a talk with Herbert Hoovers on the latter's train. and he told the convention something of what farmers might expect from Hoover if he were elected President. Governor McMullen of Nebraska also had a chat with Mr. Hoover and after ward said the candidate had a prehensive understanding of the farm problem, but the governor did not rem to have been won over to Hoover's support. President Coolidge was Hoover's host for a couple of days at the sum- mer White House and they fished and talked politics ‘together, after which Hoover resumed his trip to California. It was saddened by the news of the death of Mrs. Hoover's father, Charles D. Henry, in Placer, Calif. Republicans, are corn belt state the cCom- OVERNOR SMITH was busy as a bee in Albany with political con- ferences and picture makers. Among his callers was Congressman Byrne of Tennessee, who assured him he would carry not only the solid South but also the border states. Al could see nothing to worry about in the stories of Democratic revolt in Texas or elsewhere, The report that Smith had selected Owen D. Young, chalr- man of the General Electric company and colleague of Dawes in the repara- tione work, to be the Democratic can- didate to succeed him us governor was flatly denied on behalf of both the gentlemen, —— ECRETARY KELLOGG'S anti-war treaty goes marching on toward complete victory, Last week it was ficcepted in principle by Great Brit ain and the dominions of Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Union of South Africa and by the Irish Free State and India, Acceptances also were received at Washington from Belgium, Poland and Czechoslovakia. All the answers, It was believed, would be found satisfactory by the American government. Approval had already been given the pact by Ger many, France, Italy and other nations, and that of Japan was considered cer tain. if the various reservations of some of the governments, which are not radical, can be accepted, the final success of the great plan to outlaw war seems virtually assured. The treaty is to be signed during the com- ing fall by the principal powers and will go Into effect with the deposit of the ratifications. It will remain open for signature by other nations. Poland and Lithu- an unaccomplished wrted that Premier Lithuania, pra E between ania is fact, and It Is Waldemarae of still reg relying on ng to defy the League of Nations at the Sep. tember the or the League. The Poles have Sir Austen Chamberlain that they hold the League responsible for the existing state.of affairs and de mand full support In whatever meas ures they may deem necessary American members of world court of arbitration at Geneva nom inated Charles Evans Hughes for the vacancy created Dy the resignation of John lassett Moore. Dr. Walter Simons (8s second choice for the place, Observers in Geneva were quite sure Mr. Hughes would be elects), the support of Russia, is prepari meeting of assembly council of notified the EPRESENTATIVES of Francs, England, Spain and Italy last week signed a new accord on Tangler which gives Spain full command of the gendarmerie in the international zone of that country. A special com. mission was created to witeh for snd Suppress intrigues ngninst the Spanish protectorate, Italy creased representation on the legisla. tive body of international zone and was also given representstion oa the and similar tribunals, Al gian wns given ie the courts loubt concerning the death of i «¢ ‘apt Alfred Bel. Loewenstein, on ancier, who disappeared from while the was dispelled by body near Cape lil crossing Eng- the Griz lish findin his Nez, T HE as 8 basis for wage negotiations in the bituminous fields has been abandoned by the United Mine Workers of Amer. fea, according to the action of the policy committee of the union, and hereafter each of the districts has the right to effect settlement with operators “upon a basis mutually sat. isfactory.” Action taken by district officers must be submitted to the min- ers of the district for ratification The policy committee author ized district organizations to per mit any coal company or any mine to employ all the men it may require for maintenance, repairs, development, construction or production of coal, the existing wage scale is paid temporarily until a district agree- ment Is reached he new policy is interpreted as a gesture by the union toward bettering the depressed condi tions in the bituminous coal industry, Jacksonville se ale also all aii providing MONG those claimed by death during the week were Giovanni Giolittl, Italian statesman and foe of Mussolini; D. C. Davies, director of the Field museum in Chicago; Henry R. Rathbone, congressman at large from Illinois, and William E. Harmon of New York, who as “Jedediah Tin. gle,” had given large sume to unree. ognized heroes, good children and de. serving authors. Sn ECKLESSNESS In prohibition en. forcement has again humiliated the American government. According to announcement by Secretary Kel logg, we have sent a note to the Brit. ish government expressing regre® and apology for the violation of the sov- ereignty of the Bahamas islands last September when Larry Christiansen, commanding a coast guard rum-chas- Ing boat, seized two boats off the Bahama coast, towed them into a Ba. hama port and then removed the liquor and prisoners to Miami Mr. Keliogg promised that the coast guard would not again offend in that way, that the boats and liquor would be re stored to their owners and that Chris. tiansen would be transferred to ane other part of the country, Prohibition administrators held thelr annunl conference with Commissioner Doran and other Treasury department officials In Washington, Among other topics considered was the Increased use of airplanes In enforcing dry laws. Guardian of Mokel Hill By AD SCHUSTER 00000000000000000000000000 Copyright.) Vy HEN the state commission which has to do with the regulating of | public utilities granted the request of | the Mokel Hill Water company that it be allowed to abandon its feeble sys- tem, the public gave the item some at- | tention because It meant the passing Lot a town famous in the story of the gold rush to California in '40. There { were many who recalled that the | place Lad been a thriving city in the | fifties and sixties, and there were oth- | ers who wondered how the few re- | maining would take this | notice to belongings and | ove i Nat inhabitants pack their away. Little remembered town was filled with men | parts of the world, when | balanced scales weighed millions in gold, and when the daily arrival of the stage was a signal for joyful cele- bration. In those days they had run a ditch seventeen miles back Into the | hills for water and out of this stream | which sang through town the miners drew their supply. Now the ditch was but a memory and the water company, veduced to hauling barrels i from a distant stream, bad found the task too expensive, the wa- ter company, holding that fifty years of continuous service was epough for any man. So the townmen, all but Nat Little, furniture and moved, ancient brick and stone g# surrounded by quiet and tra- The were swung shut and the wooden awn- Mokel Hill and Nat Little, t sireet, like the all agate- when from the besides, packed their ne iron doors and windows ings were allowed to sag. became a dead town walking its deserted fel consorting with memories, ont told town have leave!” Every day he would the and he They were growing fruit and would grow stay, ome back, would his triumplL in the foothills now more in futur, he argued, and this would bring the Any day a capitalist looking for a chance to invest his money might drop In and decide to sink a shaft straight down in the mother lode where there is stiil more gold than has ever been taken | out, So he drove long distances for Bis supply of water and held the town, a guardian of its reputation and an exponent of its faith, When the knowledge came to him that his savings would not permit of an iodefinite stay If he must stand the expense of bringing in the needed water, Nat resolved to dig a well, It had been tried before, he knew, but those men might not have understood their business. Nat put faith 0 a wil- low twig and dire necessity and spent his days drilling ® hole In the rock. Deeper and went without a sign of water. If this fiction the people, deeper that hole were one mizht say bit the old miner's drill bit into id, but truth demands the the had been Nat, he region that never below the levels of the earlier he did plunk his drill into a reservoir of quicksil- ver, a roomful of I which had escaped the mills in iy times and with tie outfit, would able to sink endeavors, What wis large this elusive metal those days of prodigality. When wealth was plentiful, it was pever recovered. Along a fault In the rock formation it had worked to rest in natural basi Little, mining made certain of the extent come to this nan, of his dis covery, climbed out of his hole and danced a Jig. he of the find is Men know how Nat sold his and say It near £50.000, story property. quicksilver somewhere Common was Nat he worth never gave out the figures but bough: himself some clothes, had a car penter repair the awnings along Main street, and continued to live in Moke! Hill. Unce a week an auto truck, of his hiring, stops at his house and fills his tank with water, and it is then Nat swells his chest and beams upon the world. He figures he can afford to pay the truckman for some: hundred years to come, *1 won't have to leave,” he says as he walks the empty street which, it may be, he imagines is peopled as it was in the roaring fifties. new Your Humor and Mine Each nation has a national sense of humor more or less peculiar to itself. It is seldom that the people of one country appreciate the humor and wit that reason all people are in the habit has no sense of himor. Sydney Smith once said, “You can’t get jokes into a Scotchman’s head without a surgical operation.” “Ay, to be sure,” retort ed John Wilson, the Scotch humorist, “English jokes !"—Pathfinder Maga- zine. Whale Laughs at Rifles Shooting a whale with a rifle is a waste of tie and ammunition. One was caught in a salmon trap at Pe. tersburg, Alaska, and after shooting at him for a week with rifles the fish. ermen had to use dynamite to destroy the big fellow, The Personality Within If you feel that you have no person. ality it is because you have not dis closed the unique and interesting per. son that lives in your body.—Ameri- can Magazine When your Children Cry. for It Castoria is a enmfort when Baby is fretful, No sooner taken than the little one is at ease, If restless, a few drops soon bring vontentment. 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