Drink Water If Back or Kidneys Hurt Begin Taking Salts if You Feel Backachy or Have Bladder Weakn(ss Too much rich food forms acids which excite and overwork the kid neys in their efforts to filter it from the system. Flush the kidneys occa- sionally to relieve them like you re- lieve the bowels, removing acids, waste and poison, else you may fee! a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains in the back or sick head- ache, dizziness, the stomach sours, tongue Is coated, and when the weath- er is bad you have rheumatic twingea, The urine is cloudy, full of sediment, the channels often get irritated, oblig- ing ene to get up two or three times during the night. To help neutralize these Irritating acids and flush off the body's urinous waste, begin drinking water. Also get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any pharmacy, take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys may then act fine and bladder disorders disappear. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, com- bined with lithia, and has been used for years to help clean and stimulate sluggish kidneys and stop bladder ir- ritation, Jad Salts is inexpensive and makes a delightful effervescent lithin- water drink which millions of men and women take now and then to help prevent serious kidney and blad- der disorders. By all means, drink lots of good water every day. (A THAT the safe easy way before 1yorse troubles follow, Take HALE’S HONEY OF HOREHOUND AND TAR The tried home remedy for breaking up colds, relieving throat troubles; healing and soothing—quick reli for coughing and hoarseness, 30¢ at all druggists Use Pike's Toothache Drops. One on Taft Chief Justice Taft is 1 telling jokes on Presidential an unfriendly to send over some and finally officer, sayin “I have an hour, | heen fuirter of ix so much nolse th “That's all right.” shouted sane from ft! anything.” Some people seer inherent have an mistakes, When your Children Cry for It Baby has little upsets at times. Al your care cannot prevent them. But you can be prepared. Then you ean do what any experienced nurse would do—what most physicians would tell you to do— give a few drips of plain Castoria. Ne sooner done than Baby is soothed : re lief is just a matter of moments. Yet you have eased your child without use of a single doubtful drug: Castoria is vegetable, So it's safe to use as often as an infant has any little pain you cannot pat away. And it's always ready for the crueler pangs of colle, or constipation or diarrhea ; effective, too for older children. Twenty.five million bottles were bought last year, LTT AY ERR r. Start thorough bowel Zy when you feel dizzy, headachy, bilioue. Take NATURE'S REMEDY MNT Tablets, «It's reild, safe, purely vegetable, and far better than ordi- TONIGHT nary laxatives, Keeps you W Zosling right, Ze. © TAL0anew For Sale at All Druggists CENTRE HALL. PA, the last while planting an from fdge's Capitol official steps acts, Hoover his on was delivering tree Chevy Chase ouk NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS Hoover's Cabinet Accepted by the Senate—Serious Rebellion in Mexico. By EDWARD W. PICKARD RESIDENT HOOVER'S first cial act of consequence was to submit to the names of for senate the Radical make a fizh of Andrew senators were firmation treasury, plained in these colu was not necesss 1.1 . fe . 3 since he is a h over, were Joire disti ted from Labor James J the Coolidge The firmed They are: senate without hesitation con- the eight submitted. names Henry Lewis Stimson of New York, secretary of sts James William Go retary of war, Willlam Dewitt Mitchell of sota, attorney general. Walter Folger Brown of Ohlo, master general, Francis Adams chusetts, secretary of the Ray Lyman Wilbur of secretary of the interior. Arthur M. Hyde of M yd of Illinois, sec Charles sonuri, agriculture, tobert Patterson Lamont of lin of commerce After a sharp debate resolution offered Kellar of Tennessee ordering diciary committee to retary Mellon's the cabinet without and to determine If he an old law that officials from engaging In ness. It was not bel ington that this action would bring about resulis adverse to Mr. Mellon. The secretary of the treasury, it was reported, intended to hold the office for not more than two years, Since Mr. Stimson is on his way home from the Philippines, where he has been governor general, Secretary of State Kellogg consented to remain in office until his successor arrives in Washington and qualifies. In general the President's cabinet selections met with warm approval, On Thursday President Hoover Is sued the call for the extraordinary session of congress, to open April 15. He said In the proclamation that the purpose is “to effect further agricul- tural relief and legislation for limited changes of the tariff,” During his first days in House Mr. Hoover received throngs of congratulating eallers from all parts of the country, and also he set- tiled down to the business of conduct- ing the affairs of the nation. He told the newspaper correspondents he de- sired to continue the periodical press conferences and to develop them in di- rections that would assist both the press and the President. He con- ferred with Senator Smoot and Rep- resentative Tilson concerning the call. ing of the extraordinary session of congress for farm relief and tariff re. vision, and with Attorney General Mitchell concerning the appointment of the commission to Investigate the administration of justice and especial. ly the enforcement of prohibition, His emphatic wots concerning law en forcement in his Inangural address were especially pleasing to all the church and dry organizations, and they presented him with their felicl- tations hand illumined on parchment and bound in tooled leather gold em- bossed. Mr. Hoover desires to place the entire prohibition enforcement machinery under the attorney general, This may require legislation, and the dry leaders in congress are not all in favor of this course, R. AND MRS. COOLIDGE, re turning to thelr home in Nore thampton, Mase, were given an im promptu loving welcome by their neighbors that affected them deeply. right to conti reappoi has violated prohibits treasury any busi eved in Wash the White Both of them were sincerely glad to resume their unpretentious home life, and Mrs. Coolidge especially seemed gay and happy. To the reporters Mr. said, Interviewing 1 that he Is not going to practice law In Northampton or anywhere else at present ; that the several contracts he has made for magazine articles are al he contemplates now in that line: that he will not write a book and will not make any speeches, He will not trav- el in foreign countries this summer, believing there are plenty of Interesting places in the United States to be seen. Charles G. Dawes, Viee nt, hastened back to Chleago Coolidge imself, Gen, late connected. the board » 3 y IN hroke n Mexico and ¥ nronort ior § i nang ir) Joined in the movement, « » government of President ordered had heen « uthorities | t, put into effed nder General | ion of Vera Crus oR Gen. Gonzalo wernmen rey the earls and Morrow entire rebellion, Ambassador he same belief, It was stated at the White House in Washington that the new administra tion would continue to Inforce the em- bargo on arms shipments to Mexican rebels that was maintained by Presi. dent Coolidge, but that licensed arms shipments would be permitted to go forward to Mexico City If requested by Mexican government. The State department said every effort was being made to prevent the smuggling of fncross the border, the arms HAT fuss over an alleged secret Franco-Belgian military treaty came to an end when the man who sgld the document to a Utrecht newspaper was arrested and confessed that it was a forgery. He was get free by a Bel gian judge and declared he was really an agent provacateur of the Belgian government. The Dutch Journalists passed a motion of censure on the Utrecht editor who published the forged paper, REATMENT of racial minorities in Europe was the topic the council of the League of Nations took up when it met In Geneva last week, but there was no prospect of action, for the council felt the problem was too big to be settled now and should be studied by a subcommittee. Sir Ans. ten Chamberlain, British secretary for foreign affairs, sald: “The rights of the minorities cannot be separated from their obligations, and they have to show that they have behaved loyal- ly to the country of which they are part and given true allegiance to the country to which they are subject.” NSTEAD of whitewashing Gen. Um- berto Nobile for the disaster of the dirigible Italia in the Arctic regions, the Italian court of inquiry censured him severely. The report of the court is divided into three sections. The first deals with the causes of the accl dent, the second with the behavior of the survivors, and the third with the relief efforts. After stating that the loss of the dirigible was due to error in handling made at the moment of the accident, for which the commander of the expedition must take responsi. blilty, the report passes to a consider address, ound, f of the charges of of ation connection Dr. Finn Malmgreen, the scientist, and the third Capts, Alberto Mariano Zappl the Arctic {ce Regarding General Nobile's action in allowing himself to be rescued first, the report “it find plausible justification and it can only be explained, not justified, by condi tions of physical or moral depression in which he was found which did not permit him to estimate the just value of his action, ‘even though It was de termined by the pressing Lieut borg was the Swedis! ff Nobile, with the disappe arance of Swedish with Fillppi man and on says: cannot invitation of Lundborg.” Lund who {00K © was “war of limax The final al meet Standard the man was Col of the about twice chairman With as Stewart shares could eon ockefeller forces ousted the the board, replacing him M. Burton, inventor of cracking we friend, 1. L i d director, had the kefeller proxie that nu n 1d corporations £3 : process = rhe Steph unsed an also Stewart ockhol proxies a mber, were men 8 d he gituation of pre a report that showed the com had just pros r in its history and he was controlle had the satisfaction pany closed the most per us yes uproariously applauded by his sup porters TAGGERT for Tan: + leader of the Democrats of Indiana, passed away at his home in Indianapolis at the age of seventy hree years after a long illness, Start ing business life In a lunch room in Xenia, he became a very wealthy man and a power in his party both In the He was given the credit for making Woodrow Wj son President, and Thomas R. Mar ghall, twice Vice President, sald his success in politics was due to Taggart Moses Edwin Clapp, former United States senator from Minnesota, died HOMAS sears ti law since leaving the senate in 1017 Among other recent deaths were those of Haley Fiske, president of the Met ropolitan Life Insurance the Detroit, a pioneer In industry. UST before he left office, Attorney General Sargent granted freedom on parole to Thomas W. Miller, former allen property custodian, who was serving a term of eighteen months in defraud the government In the han dling of German property during the World war. Miller was convicted in 1927 and began serving his sentence last April, A SUMMING up the work of the late Seventieth congress It Ig found that it authorized new expenditures total ing more than a billion dollars during the next decade, The chief authoriza- tions included the following: Mississippi flood control £325,000,000, The 15 $274,000,000, The Boulder dam project, $165,000, 000, Public buildings and army struc tures, $175,000,000, Compensation for German ships, pat. ents, and radio stations, $100,000,000 River and harbor projects, $72,000. project, cruiser construction bill, Buy your radio just as you buy Wie MAKES IT—and how? Is it simple, and easy to keep in order? Will it do its job—and keep on doing it? Aren't these the questions you want answered before you invest your money in a tractor and every- thing else you use on the farm? I's the same way with radio. Here's an instrument your family will depend upon for years and Vears. Pe want to know it's al- WAVE Ie ady 10 zo. Atwater Kent Radio comes from the largest manufacturer. It is made of better materials than are ordinarily thought ar . 0 Bri tly 8 118 reputation guarded that one out of every eight workers 15 a tester or inspector —and every set has to pass 222 tests before it can leave the factory. NeCess So, when an Atwater Kent comes into your home, it is absolutely dependable—and it stavs so. You do not have to fuss and tinker and apologize . . . If Atwater Kent makes it, it’s right—tone, volume range—everything, More than 2,000,000 owners know it. House current or battery scts— vour choice first choice is offered Wwiric opera- Quality Atwater Kent Radio of rural families everywhere in two forms: 1. For allel tion direet fro ise current that Light u merely plug in. 2. For operation from batteries. m the same he ir home; ve way, yon get of power for long- recept natural instanianeous gram selection with Furr-vision Daal. re are several all-eleo- models and two hatiery models. Let an Atwater Kent dealer advise you as to which is best for your locality, 160 and Battery Sets, 819-868 “wdid mnalag ony calnnets. Panels satin bricked an pedd. Foss -vimos Died Meadel 48, 349; Madel 29, votre row reful, $48 Proors do pet include tubes er bans or bestifu Free On the 0if we poery Cottey t ~~ if not from this package it is not the ORIGINAL Mode tubes and | pee sworter Kent Radio Hour west of the Rockies but it in the ounces full-size biscuits an, His worough, workmanship was pretty Dyes, 000, Increased capital for Mississippi! | barge line, $10,000,000, a Bo -ee If pain and make char mind. There will always pain and hardship enoogh. 1 hardship acter, never hee Words won't dye a are. Observe how eg i silk, wool, cotton, linea, cS <>
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers