ess af tient with pain. ‘no need to suf- ead that throbs, che all over. would bring ime e Bayer Aspirin t feel the pain. til the pain has ry hesitate to ess? tions for check hroat; relieving ns of neuralgia, te. nt on its quick is of frequent as to its cause, REN r of Salicylicacid —— rizel » me. Then I ture in a sana- cian talked on That was cer- of ¢he patients jol. He recom= decided to try here was any- ahout natural man body. d finished the rion-headache’ ed out feeling. f life now. By zot to tell you npanion, too!” asn’t it? Mr. e normal nat- bodily poisons nd nature did 't you be well? licine. It con- effective, so s clock-work.” all good drug cages for less ouple of good ns have found the difference vill make you rove it, er. If you 1 girls with ill ward off good old ve nothing any irregu- dvice of a d in every tine always er’s signa- i i i i i AIR MAIL PROBLEM IS GROUND DELAYS Slow Delivery Is Cause of Most of Complaints. Washington.—The majority of com- plaints concerning slow delivery of air mail concern delays which occur on the ground, it is admitted by officials of the Post-Office department. The de- partment has launched a new effort to increase the speed of ground handling So that the main value of transporting mail through the air may not be lost through this handicap. The problem of increasing ground speeds is diflicult, according to Earl Wadsworth, superintendent of air mail service. The most that the depart- ment can do, says Mr. Wadsworth, is to utilize to the fullest extent the ex- isting means of transportation. Each city and the mail airport terminal pre- sents different difficulties. Police Speed Deliveries, Months of experimenting have been required to determine what is the best method of bringing New York's air mail from the eastern terminal at the Newark airport into the general post office at Eighth avenue and Twenty- third street. In most cities the municipal govern- ment aids delivery by giving trucks which are delivering the air mail the right of way and allowing them to dis- regard the speed limits. In other cities these trucks are accorded the same at- tention in traffic which fire apparatus receives. Police are notified of the coming of the trucks and see that no traflic obstructions bar the way. Amphibians Used in Chicago. A special experiment was tried in Chicago in an effort to speed the de- livery of mail arriving on the trans- continental mail planes. Amphibian plane service was authorized there to deliver the mail to the city, the am- phibians taking off from the air mail field and flying to the lake front, where the mails could be delivered to trucks which then had only a short haul to downtown post office stations. This service must be suspended in the winter as the amphibians cannot oper- ate because of the ice in the lake. Tests have been authorized of air mail catching devices but the feasibil- ity of placing them on the top of post office buildings is not yet determined because of the fact that regulations provide that airplanes must not fly lower than 500 feet when passing over cities, It is possible that regulations might be changed to allow the mail planes to use such devices, but even then it is problematical what the performance of the planes would be down in the canyons formed by tall office buildings. The possibility of the use of pneu- matic tubes for the transport of air mail from the airports to the post of- fices also is under consideration. The expense of installing tubes over such long distances is one of the limiting factors in such a plan, according to Mr. Wadsworth. AIR TOUR WINNER fateradtianal J. H. Livingston of Aurora, Ill, piloting a Waco biplane, was winner of first place in the 5,000-mile nation- al reliability air tour which ended at Detroit. Muskogee to Replace The “Hat-Box” Airport Muskogee, Okla, — Hat-box field, whose register includes signatures of nearly every aviator of prominence, is to bow to progress after ten years as Oklahoma's pioneer private airport. A municipal field is to replace the “Hat-box,” whose present steel hangar was erected by the army, following demands for a handy refueling point between Texas fields and northern cities. Little commotion was ecaused in aerial circles when Joe Witt, an army aviator, leased a plot of ground here and built a one-plane wooden hangar shortly after the war. Nevertheless, it proved a convenient stop for army airmen, When Witt’s ramshackle equipment was destroyed by fire the army was asked to rehabilitate it. That was done, and a lieutenant was placed in command. One day a squad of nearly 50 army ships stopped, en route to maneuvers in the North. Cramped in the small field and struck by black and white vertical stripes on the hangar, the army flyers remarked, “Why, it’s just a hat-box!” Thus the field was christened. Muskogee is most hospitable to avi- ators. Invariably they are given “keys to the city” when they stop here. That concession includes admission to all theaters and golf courses and spe- elal hotel rates e Gironde bnoblet 3 Women Desert Tours 3 . . oo for Airplane Trips ¥ & & 2 Brussels. — Flying, especially & 4 among American women visit- 3 ow ing Europe, is on the increase, oP 3 : : &» @ according to a railroad and o # steamboat agent of this city. 4 : : : & oP “It is getting quite annoying,” & + he said. “We start out with a 2 @ ‘group’ of twenty or thirty wom- oP % en. As we proceed it dwindles. bo @ We wonder where it has gone & % to. Little by little we discover i & that individuals, one after an- & & o é& other, forsake the good, well & 4 tried methods of traveling for & & . oy . : o> & flying. The fashion is catching 2 & is verv awl ws & % on and is very awkward for us, 3 & as it upsets all our calculations & 2 and organization for taking peo- = @ ple by sea and land.” “ a oGealnededuetestsetontontueteeduedontesdontrtoateeortreguetseleotonts oots DROPPING GUNS AND CREWS IN CHUTES Army’s Demonstration in Texas Is Successful. Washington,.—According to a report received by the chief of the air corps, the technique of landing machine guns yj and their crews from airplanes'‘is be- ing constantly improved. During a recent demonstration at the Air Corps Primary Flying school at Brooks Field, San Antonio, Texas, two machine put into action by two crews of three men each, who descended from an air- plane to the ground via the parachute route. Assembly of the machine guns and preparing them for firing was only a matter of a few minutes. This demonstration featured a ma- chine gun parachute bag, recently de- veloped by Sergeant Erwin H. Nichols, head of the parachute department of Jrooks field, The parachute support- ing the bag opens automatically upon being thrown from the airplane and floats to earth, by means of a rip cord similar to that on the parachute. Sergeant Dewey Travis Garner and Robert E. New and Privates R. W. Stevens, Eddie Ben- zency and Lorraine Tolle. Sergeant Horton had a thrilling escape when his parachute landed on the roof of the big dirigible hangar at Brooks field. The roof of this structure has a 30-degree slope and is well over 100 feet from the ground. Despite his precarious position, Sergeant Horton parachute and climb to an entrance on the peak of the building, none the worse for his experience, Cooling of Engine Problem of Builders Detroit.—“Air-cooled versus water- troversy among aircraft engine build- ers. Recent performances and experi- ments have done little to resolve a er, they have merely intensified the discussion. It seems inevitable that eventually aircraft designing must be standard- ized around either the engine which is cooled by water or by air. All of fact, all aviation feats which contrib- uted to the awakening of public in- terest in aviation, which began in 1927, were made with air-cooled mo- tors. The argument was advanced that this performance justified specializa- tion in the radial air-cooled type of motor to the exclusion of other de- signs. It was asserted that it was wasted effort to carry water into the air to reduce engine heat when the air flowing around fhe plane in flight would serve that purpose. But when aircraft builders began seeking greater speeds, the radial type with its enormous frontal resistance, lost some favor, and designers began discussing the possibilities of water- cooled types. A method of chemical cooling brought forward and tried by the United States army, has met with favorable results in preliminary tests. California Publishers San Francisco.—What is believed to be the first instance in the United States of a newspaper publishers’ as- sociation adopting a resolution to pro- tect the aviation industry resulted during a meeting of the California Newspaper Publishers’ association. Justus F. Craemer, president of the association, announced the adoption of the following resolution : retain its leadership in an infant in- dustry, and, “Whereas commercial aviation will become soon an important factor in the advertising world, and, “Whereas most airplane accidents result in unlicensed obsolete planes, or when the pilot is inexperienced, “Be it therefore resolved, that we, the state executive committee and governing boards of the California Newspaper Publishers’ association, urge the press in carrying airplane accident stories to carry the complete facts, if at all obtainable; that is, the name and type of plane, whether li- censed by Department of Commerce and whether the pilot and plane were licensed to carry passengers for hire.” guns were dropped in parachutes and | The bag containing | the gun, ammunition and a gallon of water for use in cooling, opens quickly | The parachute jumps were made by | I | Horton, Corporals | was able to spill the air from his | cooled” remains the outstanding con- | definite answer to the question. Rath. | the spectacular ocean flights and, in | Seek Crash Details | “Whereas California is the most | air-minded state in the Union, and, | “Whereas California bids well to | THE PATTON COURIER MOVE FOR HUMAN BETTERMENT By DR. JAMES G. K. M'CLURE, Retired Presbyterian Minister, HE greatest merger in history—the merger of science, business and religion—can be foreseen. Increasing knowledge and good will are to banish the prejudices now dividing retigion and science and business, and the two are now entering an era of harmonious achievements for human betterment. The fundamentalist-modernist dis- pute has run its course. There is no question that the true spirit of Christianity is entering into business threugh such men as Thomas A. Edison and Henry Berd, John D. Rockefeller, Jr., and Cyrus H. McCormick, and into interna- tional relations through such men as President Hoover and Premier Mac- Donald. standing, such as Prof. A. A. Michelson, Prof. Arthur N, Compton and Mme. Curie, all winners of the Nobel prize. They see no conflict between the study of the operation of the laws of the universe and faith in God as the creator of all. We don’t emphasize in this day and age the brand of religion so | much as we used to do, and it is a good thing. It is the spirit that counts. While there may be fewer people in the church now than there used to be, the jazz age is passing because it is superficial and unreal and people are becoming more serious minded, a condition which will service activity. HOME OWNERSHIP ON WANE By DR. PHILIP D. JORDEN, Long Island University, Scientifically arranged multiple dwellings of steel framework and glass walls will be the typical abode of the people of the next generation | in the cities of the United States. Home ownership is not only on’ the | decline, but is likely to disappear in the great cities. Even very wealthy or taking apartments or quarters in multiple dwellings. The multiple dwelling of the next generation will be a marvel of scientific perfection. Temperatures will be regulated by ventilation, and | the present-day steam radiator will he as out of date as the old-fashioned | kitchen fireplace. | We may expect houses to have walls of non-shatteranle glass, frosted and colored to admit health giving rays of the sun, and to exclude the harmful rays. Such dwellings will occupy entire blocks, or perhaps sev- eral blocks, and be operated as a unit. The private kitchen, or kitchenette, as it has come to be called, will have disappeared like the dodo bird, and meals will he s ientifically pre- pared in a central kitchen and probably served in central lining rooms, NEED FOR JUVENILE COURTS By CHARLES L. CHUTE, National Probation A sociation, An extension of the probation service which would place juvenile | courts and skilled probation officers in every city and county in the | V pro: : ; ' Ya . .. United States would act as a preventive of crime. Child delinquents in | | | and sent to jail, if convicted, giving them an attitude toward society which may lead them to a criminal life. offenses. If he had been dealt with properly in the earlier staces. his | later crimes against society probably would not have occurred, and crime statistics in our country would not be what they are at present. no juvenile court or probation service. This is unpardonable because we lessen much of the misery of neglected children in broken homes ; how to change backward, sullen youngsters into good and useful citizens, and fraction of the cases. yet we are applying this knowledge to only a small RELIGIOUS TRUTHS AND SCIENCE By REV. DR. HENRY DARLINGTON, New York (Episcopal). Likewise science has its brilliant minds with a spiritual under- | eventuate in an intensified zeal and faith, marked by tolerance and social | persons are deserting the cities for the great open spaces of the country, | towns where there is no juvenile court are tried in the criminal courts Many a professional criminal is developed through a series of minor | Although there are only two states in the Union without juvenile | court laws, hundreds of cities and the majority of rural communities have | know today how to prevent a great deal of juvenile delinquency; how to | The dictates of science should not cause one to become skeptical of great religious truths. There was a time when I was interested in squar- ing the teachings of religion with modern scientific thought. However, I discovered that what is good science today is bad science tomorrow. There- fore I have found that I have invariably had all my work to do over again. For instance, those religious leaders who have adapted themselves to the oractically outgrown Darwin’s conception. We need to preach a definite teaching based upon the great truths that Jesus emphasized. We should be more pragmatic. We should not be afraid to believe things that we have found to work, but which may be impossible of scientific proof, or which, when tested by science. may be entirely explained away. We must not sell our birf right of belief for a pot of porridge. SCHOOL TRUANCY LESSENED By HENRY J. GIDEON, Philadelphia Educational Bureau. | | The old-time sport of playing hookey, which was made famous by e. Truancy plays a small part in school absences now. The reason is not so much that boys and girls are better than they used to be, but rather that schools are more attractive. A three-year survey in Philadelphia has show Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn, is on the dec all nonattendance of pupils was due to illness. TI survey also showed that boys attended school more regularly than girls, but that unexcused absences were greater for boys than for girls. Whatever truancy there is in schools today is largely due to the incapability of parents. Illegal employment also keeps a few children out of school. Some teachers also aid in causing truants, for if the teacher 18 cross, unattractive and lacking in understanding, the child has an ' incentive to stay away from school. Darwinian teaching of evolution have had only to discover that we have | that 87 per cent of | | Bessell Chemical Co., Hack “Everyone Raves About My Rolls, Cakes and Breads,” Says Mrs. Galloway “At the Iowa State Fair last year I won twenty prizes. A first on Cloverleaf Rolls, third on Nut Bread as well as several seconds and several thirds on different | cakes—all made with Gold Medal ‘Kitchen-tested’ Flour. Everyone | raves about my rolls, cakes and | breads, but I tell them they could | | | [ | | make just as good if they uszd GoLD MEDAL ‘Kitchen-tested’ Flour. I can surely reconmmend it as an all-purpose flour.” | A Boon to Women All Over the Country HOUSANDS of women all } over the country now know how to bake prize cakes, pies, breads and biscuits every time. They use a new-type flour for all baking purposes—GOLD MEDAL “ Kitchen-tested”’ Flour—that sim- plifies baking remarkably and ban- ishes the cause of most baking failures. Failures, experts found, were mostly due to the fact that 2 sacks “They Could Make Just As Good, If They Used Gold Medal ’Kitchen-tested’ Flour” “Listen in to Betty Crocker 10:45 to 11:00 A. day, Eastern Standard Time. GOLD MEDAL FLOUR “Kitchen-tested’’ Always sold in trade-marked sack—never in bulk of the same flour often acted differ- ently, even with the same recipe... it was not uniform in oven action. So now all Gop MEDAL Flour is ‘ Kitchen-tested” before it comes to you. As each batch comes through the mill it is tested by actual bak- ing—bread, cakes, biscuits, pas- a I Please accept, free of charge, sim» plified recipes for 12 of Betty Crocker’s most delicious baking creations. Recipes for the dainti- est cakes, the finest cookies, the most popular pastries known. Each one is “simplified’” until it is remarkably easy, too. All 12 of these simplified “ Kitchen- tested” recipes are inside every sack’ of GoLD MEDAL “ Kitchen-tested’, Flour. You can get a full set today —simply ask your grocer for GOLD MEDAL “ Kitchen-tested’”’ Flour. WASHBURN CROSBY COMPANY M. Tuesday and Thurs- Stations: WCAE or WGR.” Mrs. Jake Galloway, Beaman, Towa tries—in an oven just like yours. Only flour which acts the same perfect way every time is allowed to go out to you. Thus you know in advance exactly what your, results will be: Special “Kitchen-tested’® Recipes In Every Sack (Changed Every Three Months) | There are some men who build a | $100,000 house in the country and move into it to get out of society. Hoxie's Croup Remedy for croup, coughs, and colds, No opium, No nausea. 50cts. Drug- gists, Kells Co., Newburgh, N. Y., Mfrs.—Adv, Castles in the air cost a vast deal to keep up.—Bulwer Lytton. It's A Big Help to free your bowels and liver from the poisonous drag of constipation. Why keep the system full of poisons that bring on colds and other troub- | les? To be healthy and strong, you must clean the bowels every day, and there is no safer and easier way than to use, when needed, Dr Boice's PRESCRIPTION TABLETS They spur the appetite, clear the head, and make you feel better and work better. 25 cents a large box on money- back guarantee from your druggist—or sent by mail on request to Boice Medicine Company 630G Street, S. W. ‘Washington, D.C. Garfield Tea Was Your Grandmother’s Remedy For every stomach and intestinal ill, This good old-fash- ioned herb home remedy for consti- pation, stomach ills and other derange- ments of the sys- | tem so prevalent these days is in even greater favor as a family medicine than in your grandmother’s day. No need to spend restless, sleepless ¥ nights. frritation quickly relieved and B fl rest assured by using the remedy that has helped thousands of sufferers. j 25 cents and $1.00 at druggists. h If unable to obtain, write direct to: A B NORTHROP & LYMAN CO., Inc., 4& Buffalo, New York 3 Send for free sample, oY IF used when retiring, relieves smarting scald= ing sticky eyes by morning. At Druggists or 332 Pearl St. | For JIEAD “DIpSoL N. YX, City. The Chlorine Way 35¢ at your druggist’s or write ack, N. J. Peculiarity in Home of Thomas Jefferson Monticello, historic home of Thom- as Jefferson, has many oddities which excite the popular interest, says an article in Pathfinder Magazine, For | example, it is a home without beds. The master slept (and died) on a cot of his own contrivance located in an opening between his study and what should have been his bedroom. He was able to jump out of it into either room, The cot was so arranged that | it was raised to the ceiling during the daytime to leave a passageway be- tween the two rooms, There are unfounded tales that Jefferson was afraid of his life and took this means to insure safety. One basis for this, probably, is the secret room directly above his bed which has porthole-like openings in the walls, formerly covered by pictures, through which supposed bodyguards could fire down on intruders if need be, Student’s Thrilling Ride G. M. Smith of Lakewood, Ohio, took his first lesson as a student pilot in a runaway plane. Accidentally the throt- tle was left open when Smith’s in- structor cranked the engine. The plane roared down the field with a very much frightened student aboard. “I pressed the right rudder to avoid a house,” Smith said, “and crashed into a tree. I scrambled out as quick as I could.” He was unhurt and soon was ready to continue the lesson. Now, just how could we “contribute to the happiness of others?” merely by keeping still, Perhaps, Too many people take advice that doesn’t belong to them. Your MOTHER, grandmother and great-grandmother used GOOSE GREASE and TURPENTINE for treating COLDS, CONGESTIONS and INFLAMMATIONS. The Old Fashioned Remedy Modernized GOOSE GREASE, TURPENTINE and thirteen of the most valuable antiseptichealingingredientsknown SCIENTIFICALLY COMBINED. JINSEROLRUB Answers ailneeds of an external remedy A wonderfully effective remedy for sore throat, colds, coughs, conges- tions, inflammations, sprains, bruises, cuts, rheumatic and neural. gic pass, sore feet, chilblains and earache. Can be Vaporized for IN- HALATIONS to relieve Asthma, Hay Fever, Catarrh and other Res- piratory Ailments. Get a Jar of it in the Home for that Emergency Mail $1 and we will send you post. paid a LARGE size of ANSEROL. RUB. Absolute guaranty of money refunded if unsatisfactory. Address: ANSEROL CHEMICAL CO. 22SouthSt. - Newark, N. J. Suits Everybody “The careful man carries accident insurance.” “Makes a good risk, too.” Constipation generally indicates dis- | ordered stomach, liver and bowels. | Wright's Indian Vegetable Pills re- | store 1 larity without griping. 25¢ a | box. 372 Pearl St, N. Y. Adv. No drug cures for cance ire sold in the interstate drug trade today, according to government officials en- forcing the food and drugs act. SNARES Famous Kleflock Steel Animal Snares. Choice of expert trappers. Work under all condi- tions, snow or bare ground. No. O Light Lynx, Jack Rabbit, Skunk, Woodchuck, Com= mon Rabbit, 3 for 50c, $1.60 d No. Light Fox nx. 5c each No. 2 Hea Fox, Light Wolf, er, Beaver, 60c each, $4.00 ¢ Wolves, Mountai Lion, Sr each, $5 doz. Also ‘snare Ww Setting instructions with each KLEFFMAN LOCK SNAR oi Dept. 27 = = = « « = Hibbing, Minn. Suitable Gift for Xmas, Birthday, Prize :d CIGAR ASH : RECEIVER Weddings, Party When chrome n top (on spring) is pushed dow cige butts drop tac Bb" w deep. op cl fire and s extinguishec finished in £ red. A would apprec if 9. L. B. Ricker, 1orn Sta., Chicago, Health Giving ums inim All Winter Long Marvelous Climate == Good Hotels = Tourist Camps—Splendid Roads=—Gorgeous Mountain Views. The wonderful desert resortof the West Write Croo & Chaffoy fPanm Sprimg CALIFORNIA PARKER’S 1 HAIR BALSAM % Removes Dandruff-StopsHairFallingj Restores Color and { Beauty to Gray and Faded Hai 60c. and £1.00 at Dru Hiscox Chem. Wke, Pate LY FLORESTON SHAMPOO-—Ideal for nse in connection with Parker's Hair Balsam. Makes the hair soft and fluffy. 50 cents by mail or at druge gists. Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchogue, N. Y. Will Heat Water Direct From Your Faucet Continuously— Instantaneously, Operates on 110 to 120 volts IN, or AC. Furnished with at re to lu RIC CO, gton, Be prepaic vanies order. ANHOT a (WATER | and Women, get this beautiful t let I up with a big e for part vars. LINK'S LAB- ‘S, 2646 Elm St. Dallas, Texas, MONEY & INDEPENDENCE helpi 16 t wil profit. Ww ORATORI Our book 100 ways of h show you the lect this won you will recei e ho € i AGRAH PUBLISHERS 479 Ralph Avenue - Brooklyn, N. ¥ or 25 CENTS B INGS FULT VAI S Lis NGS JL VALUE Article with TY carning opportunity, T GOERNER St, - Milwaukee, Wis. ER} 191 East State W.N. U, PITTSBURGH, No. 48.1929,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers