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@ar-cear ses 2 awn ee ee ane ne PAGE EIGHT MAGILL, SAYS ‘SLUSH FUND’ STORY IS LIE i Independent Senatorial Candi- | date Willing to Testify | Before Committee Chicago, Oct. 19.--(#)—The trail of | & reputed “slush fund” for the inde-| indent senatorial candidacy of Hugh . Magill of Chicago was followed today by the senate campaign funds committee, Besides Magill, Senator Reed, Dem and ocrat, Missouri, th Bole member ot the had summoned the O'Brien, Methodist Chicaeu, who was quot by two Anti as having said from $300,000 to $400,- 000 for Magill’s campaign had been assured. Magill, in a statement in East St. Louis last night, asserted that any Statements that u huge slush fund id been raised in behalf of his can- @idacy were lies. He said he would be glad of the opportunity to go be- fore the committee und make Sworn statement that his expe Would not exceed $25,000 and th she largest single contribution he had | Feceived was $1,000. chairman League Support Refused The dry leaders who t fore the committee-—-F, Scott M natioral superintendent, and George Safford, state super ident jd that the Rev. Mr. O'Brien had sought Anti-saloon League support for Magill but thi been refused, the officials objecting to the expen: diture of the sum they mentioned. Both quoted O’Brien as declaring that this sum could be spent without! Tunning afoul the law because there} were plenty of “holes” in the cor- rupt practices act. SENATE (1 ITTEE W111 PROBE INDIANA SITUATION Chicago, Oct. 19.—()—Investix: tion of the political situation in In- diana was decided upon today by the senate campaign funds committee. Subpoenas were issued for Clyde Walb, chairman of the _Republ state committee, and R. Earl Peters, chairman of the Democratic state! committee. and for a number of. former officers of the Indiana Ku Klux Klan, whose names were with- held. The subpoenas are returnable forthwith and it is expected that the Here are the principals with selling the A., left, Henry The other in the ame share: . and Be ee een Government S United States Steamship Corporation stock case, charged by the as mai min F. ounsel standing left. to right, are H. tarts Act’ y as three tim Stanwz0d Menke anding at nin Shin Stock Fraud Much, George Hobart did. Stanley C. Fowler. WISCONSIN PUBLISHER, SPEAKING AT PRESS MEETING, DIVIDES DEFINITION Ee the. table, is chief defense counsel. 1 Ba | true values. T hold that a newspaper | must have a soulX It must have s definite reason for .existing. As newspaper it must hav@the'news. Ti me tne greatest evidence that a new: paper is a news paper is when it has old days news, local, community and telegraph- ed, government|here. . . Seated are the three sons of C. W. Morse, Erwin| Germans, Hungari fe: the dollar and need: little education It is not a newspaper when jt ed a soapbox, took out his New York, Oct, 19,—During a sin- gle hour, dedicated by most folk to the eating of lunch, the. curbs of Dutch strect become a Babel of for- eign tongues us the “diamond curb market” swings into action, This amazing marketplace, which knows no parallel beneath the sun, once had a sidewalk ‘headquarters just under the elevated tracks. But so great became the din and confu- sion of bidders and hagglers that it was invited to moy In the-old days the dealing hours were varied. But since the change of address all transactions are made be- tween the hours of 12 and 1. Buy- ing and selling is confined to di monds. alone, From 60 to 200 jap’ dat jewelry jobbers, gem setters and such are always to found in the bidding ring. [f the dealing is particularly active they go without lunch; otherwise they arrive with hot-dog sandwiches, dill _ pickles, smoked herring and other delicates- sen dishes and shout, bargain ‘and rave between mouthfuls, Most of the races may be found Italians, Russians, Poles, Rumanians. Frequently not one-can speak the language of the other, or two can make them: stood in English. Yet th skilled linguists in the la guage in barter. A large part of the transacted in sign language. In the “under the el,” trading done through a man.who mount- order business is w TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1926 MINNESOTA BANK CLOS! St. Paul, Oct, 19—CP}—Announce- ment of Me Mages ot een, Bank of Sleepy Eye, with deposits o: fd 000, wan made today by. A. J. Vogel, commissioner of banks. A run on the bank was given as the reason for the closing. —SS ea To All Who Suffer | Stomach Agony, | Gas and Indigestion If it becomes evident that no | profit is to be gained a particular group, it breaks up and wanders to others. There are certain cash-on-hand members of the “diamond curb” who need not utter a word but merely flash ered money. » tal Wied jealers “on paper” si = mei that last lone after the clock strikes one. i | | | dibly amusing shoutings, pors sions and obstinacies, Z To a stranger the scene might sug- 4 reign ton @ fe They call each other robber, Finney Makes This Offer | and beet it nee te be om bol of ‘ » ti way a een The the i taka, eae regretful a aving| Your aeety Cheerfally Refunded It hi re de cae } sacrificed Junch for a gainieas hour! One Bettie of Dare’s Mentha Pep- | high crude, — the of shouting. be mae PT 3 | famous Cabin Creek Crude While the actual dealing is under con ae from which Bieleme Motor + yy ” ual rT is iven. . . its deere. mien for, himself—except pre oo eat Oil is made. Being made ‘one. And even in this Babel there/ During the past year thousands of | ‘rom ehis finest of natural is one sture toward sentiment.| sufferers from chronic and acute in- 1 tas One, of the regulars, for years a dia-| digestion have blessed the day’ they | material ures the super- mond setter, s gassed in the war it heard of this grandest of all es of ey 4 stomach medicines. Not only will Dare'’s Mentha Pep- , @ pleasant tasting elizie, relieve the most acute attacks of stomach | agony, but taken regularly will over-| come the most chronic stomach trov- ble that exists. Thousands in this part of the state know it and that 1s why every drug- gist hereabout is having such o tre- mendous demand for it. If your stomach keeps you. feeling miserable, start to make it strong and healthy today—one bottle of Dare’s Pepsin is guaranteed b; drug store .and you more than and his. lungs still are affected. He must stay indoors and his income is largely derived from speculation in the diamond curb. To him are grant- ed certain concessions now and then but oni; ww then. mt only 2 GILBERT SWAN. (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) lubricating qualiti Tielene. Copelin Motor Company ~ Corwin-Churchill Motors, Inc. Tiolene (Product of THE PURE OIL CO. U.S. A.) OF ‘NEWSPAPER’ INTO FOUR BRANCHES 19.) editor, Oot. th daily he local news is the daily his- Is a tory of the city in which it is pub- Chicago, problem of Vhen attempts to be a magazine, nor as it book and called for bidding to begin{ a newspaper when it stresses aove on gems. Since few could speak a; all its news features the fact that common tongue, a unique 8) it is about to print a story Nhat had been worked out by. old-timer Newspape cussed toda tor of the Daily Gazette, d by nsin) atest blot on the cha American people,” said ‘is that the newspap ny sensations, Magdalene eHow | criminals moren piff of the Bolles, weeping and columns ten for the brain » readers. They say © but it will Jeave ha one else makes a daring exhibit of dis of mentality, Mr. Bolles divided his definition of newspaper into four branches, in plying to the following questions: “Are not many ne! pers becom- j ing merely press association and feat- ur bulletins? front p be local news stori ‘i Newspaper Has Changed heads should has witnesses will be here tomorrow, Senator Reed, Democrat, Missouri, chairman of the committee, plans to inquire into the reports that an ar- Fangement existed prior to the May senatorial primary whereby the Ku Klux Klan threw its full support to Senators James E. Watson and Arthur Robinson, who won the Republican Benatorial nomination. The committee chairman also de- sires to question Walb about his btatement that “a conspiracy of in- ternational bankers” existed to de- feat Watson and Robinson because of their opposition to the world court, 13-year-old Girl Commits Suicide Over Love Affair Uniontown, Pa., —P)— laternal opposition to u love affair with a boy a few years her senior was Oct. 19. “The newspaper of yesterday changed,” Mr. Bolles said. longer an ex venture. is u business us sound as the mi of steel. It ix an establish tution, vitally necessary to every com- munity. “Once we had but today distan is a more than 500 copies of the New York Tribune came to the postoffice at Janesville. There are less than half a dozen now. ‘oday the regional newspaper may ave more und better service than the metropolitan newspaper could have obtained in the ‘70's, “It is no It ing ewspapers Once “Behind the metropolitan newspaper ™ sabat oe 2 Wsporer or as a substitute, Your wire news| had ketteae tank “Tere need in Une service determines how thoroughly | smaller city. That power was adver-| #4 wholly regional is your news- ti Like the question of whether, P&Per- 4 the hen or the egg was first the) “Ate we becoming merely press as- of the better newspaper as a | Seciation| and feature bulletins?" is! arcane thecadeecnine ed. Let the two be separated. ronage which made the better n paper possible, hus been a. ser edi- circulation. before the Inland Press. ya communi What proportion of news should ! ' a Believed to have led Mildred Burrie,| Westion. Its solution is of value 43, to end her life by shooting here| it will determine whether the adver-| last night. tising just came as a part of the ‘The girl, with a bullet wound in| CVolution of business or the increased | her forehead, was found dead by her| Value of the newspaper by reason of |i step-father. Indications were she had] 8T°Wing circulation from better news fired two shots, the first of which| S¢tvice made advertising a good ii 0. | over the for’ The answ lished. It determines the extent of It is pos a successful newspaper in dow of a great city with local vs alone. The outstanding example the Brooklyn Eagle. Fundamental Reason “Local news, well written, brightly written, is the fundamental reason for the existence of every newspaper listed in this association. No | should transpire out ef the ular commonplace life of which is not chronicled the very within the twenty-four hours in the newspaper munity. published in that com- We have absolutely proved own newspaper, the Janes- y Gazette, that this is the lation mes the news It is more expen- sive, requires greater vigilance, con- stant attention, high telephone bills’ monthly but it is the best investment outside the city, one may have in news publication. You must make a daily news not alone for the city of publication but for your im- ate territory. rst of all therefore, in the estub-' ment of a news policy, we must place local and community or regional news above all else. Put the front: page banner over the local story or} the biggest community story as many: times in the year as good judgment! shall warrant. “Your wire nows service determines! how many other newspapers pub- lished in neighborhood cities shall) find lodging place in your city, either] 8 pplemental to your own paper of the does it matter if your paper the same news as ours! me press association wires? the least. lue Measured by Distance News values rise and fall with Mileage is a great factor. tis why press associations have ided their distribution into re * ‘was first believed the girl committed failed to have effect. OFFICERS BELIEVE GIRL WAS MURDERED Uniontown, Pa. Oct. 19.—P)—A belief that Mildred Burrie, 13, was Murdered was expressed by authori- ties today after investigating the death of the girl whose body was found in her home here last night with a bullet wound in her head, It suicide because of parental objection ito her friendship with a youth a few years her senior. Two boys reported they saw two men leaving the house durriedly before the body was found. Palmetto Tree Being Turned to Furniture Atlanta, Ga, Oct. 19.—()—The sable palntetto tree, emblematic of the state of South Carolina, is about to attain its second place in the his- tory of the United States. This time it will be chronicled in the annals of furniture manufacturing. The tree received first ‘historical mention as a protection for the Amer- ican colonists in their defense of Fort Itrie, where the shot from the British fleet sank harmlessly in the soft, spongy logs. His attention prompted by the, unique porus quality of the tree, a large industrialist acquired a 300,000 gere tract of groves and enlisted the fompanies in an attempt to apply a Veneer finish. After ail had taued, the work was assigned to the wood ‘work department of the Georgia School of Technology which, after a two year period of reh, has just sueceeeded in applying a glass-like veneered surface and is now produc- sctyat ameries. i 's only use in the past hus been for dock jing and the building of rug- ged, rei ue log cabins. Noted Royal Theatre | Goes Into Repertory! England, Oct. 19.) “rag ng e —The Old re, Barnwell, e ya tre, el 1 intact, mble, Charles eridan Know- is under reconstruction be forty years used as maree kell company o! uJ and will be sup- vestment on the part of business. Regional Paper Comes Into Its Own “We do know that community news: papers, si into thei a century. The regional newspaper has become the real power in the Uni- ted States. map the national newspaper and made the metropolitan newspaper ranks as a regional newspaper along with the daily printed in the ¢ 10,000 people. The advertising ne n the paper is the line fenc “Ability to receive reports of pre: associations made possible by the reduction in costs and the abilit; pay for such reports made possible by increased income about this new condition, “The first consideration gathering and publication this fact of regional distribution. These newspapers are published f a definite, generally clearly defined territory in news “The national advertiser must use | Supe Neither! the b magazine, metropolitan newspaper nor REWSp the paper of the region. big circulation weeklies can com i ies, have come | fact would eventually break the na-| st quarter of| tion up into a set of mosaics irregu-| It has wiped from the, gious controversy join| Murder mystery in New Jersey, y of| lie demand: man| Rething une: calls this region his “field.” And the! ge it, Publi to! Story papers. has brought, in the newspaper makes onal bureaus. It regionalizes news lues, “One might say that this regional Not at all. 1 be interested in a reli- in a Tennessee interested in a ein anors and size. may al hamlet or equally “Do not worry over what the “pub- The public demands m billboards or through the staccato st of the radio nor yet from moethly publieations or weekly} a small town are more The public does not want history; it wants ne bas i It inion. | may not even need editorial support. is based on question of features, | fi in houxe to house distribution with! the regional newspaper. | a newspaper might be made up en-| the T have separat- d this into two parts, news and catures. Ix the newspaper becoming bulletin for features and press as- iutions? Years ago we of the self- r daily class made sport of t plate and patent insides per. The pot is now as black as the kettle. “I submit first the, proposition that “Into this discussion comes “The most powerful influence which tirely of local and community news & paper has comes from the manner #nd win circulation and influence. in which it gathers and prints its local news. “I submit, second, that a newspaper The press should never! might be made up entirely of tele- start without all of it being in the| kTaphic news and still win some cir- forms. 3 front page that must be determined As for the amount on the, culation and secure advet ising. “I submit, third, that it should Bh dag Ate itd ad East ahi bo inade apreaHitrey Guar oe eit Be eee ae ae ape naa ee atutss ied a Lane ct should be printed on the first page would be and should be useless, ave small circulation and little ad- If vertising and eventually pass out to the editor does not know what to do the limbo of lost hope. in a case like that, get unother who does, Paper Must Have the News “By cancellation we muy arrive at Pi ! still they issue hunting licenses. snould tind sepuiture only in three Each had a certain signal, garbarge cans, one for each triangle. “The singer of falsetto will eyen- some it was a pinch of the tually crack his voice. The newspaper, jerk of the scoat or a dealing in falsetto sensation Roes\to, trouser leg. seed because the ultimate once reach- ed calls for more never can be found. “I believe in features, not those selected by some for us, but from the mass submitted by a score or more of syndicates to pick and choose those fitted to our region. Some of them are what is wanted but more of them are piffle. If every reporter and desk man should be cailea upon to write a feature story or a department eacn week it, would be of far more valuc than to reprint all the syndicate lucu- brations of some one far away. ‘Let me emphasize the regional newspaper again. News first of all must be dictated by that uecepted fact. Its value is general, local and y . community. Breakfast “First, possible circulation terri- | Cooks in tory has determined the metes und bounds of that region. 4 ., “Second, news has fixed and held 3 to5 that territory, bound it down with minutes sheer value of the newspaper as a news paper and tied it up with some- {thing stronger than contracts—in- herent value, an intangible qual ty | which is placed in the sale asset as good will. Advertising Necessary “There is a third element and that is advertising. made ready, the mechanical typo- graphical art may be perfect, features | been selected and news edited with care, until the whole pro- duc’ i lates with brightness, yet it must have the blood of life. And that is advertising. “The advertiser must follow the news. He mast, if he desires to cover the territory, get into the regional newspapers. There is no other way. Cities are becoming more of one newspaper. The public is more and more becoming buyers of one news- paper. The availability of news hus user it so. The hen was first after a may have I. “With all the news possibilities to- day, the newspaper that cannot get and hold circulation without tin pans and clocks and jim cracks but as a newspaper better shake up the editor- ial department. The subscriber who Sticks is the one who is sold on the news.” of milk. Headlines you never sec: BROWN it is educated to de-| ING SAYS HE LOATHES PUB- opinion is not form-| LICITY. Perhaps one reason why people in sincere is that everybody knows how much you make. We feel that if everybody in this country except ourselves can be regulated we'll get along all right. About the most useless pastime we can imagine right now is thinking up a golden wedding gift for Peggy Joyce. Let's see — who was it that was nominated last eg ed (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Iftc.) HARSH OF HIM “I'm going to sell kisses at the charity bazaar tonight. Do vou think them “No. People at these affairs. pect to get cheated ‘Passing Show. Of the seventeen English porcelain factories, the earliest in date was es-! tablished in 1744 at Bow. The mark of its pieces is the anchor and dag- | ger, although the earliest bore the letter B. ultimate =_ \ Set Alarms\ The forms may be | five | Hesik too much to charge tor ‘ood by the man on the box. | leg, a yank at a When the session was well under way, it resembled a burlesque show rather than a business mart. i “the new meeting place, while quite noity, is better organized. Phch~ nationality forms a little ’ Jater now }icing, is faster than plain toast. |For stores of thousands it is solving the breakfast problem. The most delicious of breakfasts, it provides an excellent food “balani: of prot¢in, carbohydrates and vii mines — pilus ‘tlie “bulk” to make i less often: needed — that, authorities have made the mietetiet ‘urge of the world. Less nourishing foods, less de- ‘Nicious foods, siniply to save time are a folly. 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