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320 A Rare Purchase If you want accurate time, see this Giibert Glock at your dealer’s. Hear its musical Normandy chimes. Gilbert Clochs ROAGCHIES Famousscientistsbelieve roaches spread cancer ! Killthesedangerouspests with Tanglefoot Spray. Prevent reinfestation by also using Tanglefoot Roach and Ant Powder. This double action gives immediaterelief, and complete THE TANGLEFOOT COMPANY GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. 709-711-713 Twelfth St.,, N. W. ARMANENTFUES - URGEDTOUNTE Harmony Called For at Inter- national Good Will Congress. | | i [ | | By the Associated Press. PITTSBURGH. November 12.—A plea for harmony among advocates of international disarmament and world peace was made today by Prof. James T. Shotwell of New York before the International Good Will Congress being held here under the auspices of tHe World Allidgce for International | Friendship Through the Churches. “In the past we have spent our- selves in mutual quarrels even more than in the attack upon the war sys- tem,” gaid Shotwell, who is director of the division of economics and his- tory of the Carnegle Institute for In- ternational Peace. | Advocating that all workers for world peace unite in favoring resolu- tions drafted by a conference of rep- resentatives of varlous peace organi- zations in Chicago last June, Shot- well pointed out that “if there is no way of reaching a working tolerance hetween the different groups there is little hope of evar getting rid of war, for the opposition to this great re- form profits from every disagreement among those who should ba collabo- | rators and colleagues in a common cause.” The Chicago resolutions, as he out- lined them, declared war as a means of settling controversy i& no longer legitimate; advocated entrance of the United States into the World Court: emphagized the importance of arhi. tration treaties and allled forms of peaceful settlemerit: expressed the be. lief that some form of world organi- zation is necessary as a pacific sub- stitute for the war system, anc recog- niged the League of Natlons “as the only such organization”; advocated disarmament and asserted this coun- try “should not so interpret its neu- tral rights of private trade as to be- | come the accomplice of an aggressor in the case of war between states which have accepted tests of aggres- sion as applying beiween themeelves." THE EVENING Choir Surpasses Foot Ball As Lure At St. Olaf College By the Associated Press. NORTHFIELD, Minn., Novem- bher 12.—Ability to “make” the fa- mous St. Olaf College Choir ranks prowess at foot ball or base ball and many promising gridiron stars have been lost through the choir's appeal. The St. Olaf Choir, under direc- tion of Dr. F. Melius Christianson, is the college’s outstanding insti- tution. From the student body 60 voices are chosen, while constantly there is in training a second choir as a “feeder” for the firat. Five or six times a week the choir drills, primarily in prepara- tion for the annual Spring tour, which this year will take the group to Eastern cities. Last year they visited the Pacific Coast. — INVENTS PLANE DEVICE TO PREVENT TAIL SPIN Designer of Round-the-World Flight Craft Declares 22 Tests Prove Success. By the Associated Press. SANTA MONICA, Calif., November 12.—Donald W. Douglas, aeronautical engineer, who designed the American round-the-world _ planes, announced here through officials of his airplane factory the invention of a device which would make a tallspin impossi- ble. Douglas is in New York. Plant officials stated that 22 test flights were made at Clover Field, near here, demonstrating to their sat- isfaction that the worst feared antic of heavier-than-air craft could be de- feated. The apparatus consists of specially designed aflerons on the tail of the machine, and a new type of mrfacing. The plane in which the tests were made will be taken to McCook Fleld for further tests by Army air experts. Move Farm on Special Train. In order to quickly move all the stock and implements of a farm from Fawley to Holmwood, England, re. cently a special railroad train was provided. Attendants fed the stock and poultry en route while the run was being made in record time. " Washingtca, D. C. “The House with the Green Shutters” L aad SALE of ODD PIECES An op}‘)ortunity to become acquainted with t e of W. & J. Sloane remarkable values at the store THE items listed below are a partial list of those small things that every housewife looks for at this time of the year to make her home more inviting, more comfortable. The very moderate prices shown here are typical of the values that prevail at the store of W. & J. Sloane. Whether your need is but a single chair or a.complete living room or bedroom suite, a scatter rug or a room size floor covering, you will find that the costs are just as decidedly reasonable as the merchandise is thor- oughly good. MAGAZINE RACKS END TABLES BOOK CASES SPINET DESKS . . LIBRARY TABLES . GATE LEG TABLES . WINDSOR SIDE CHAIRS . . $25.00 10.00 35.00 45.00 22.50 22.50 9.75 built for comfort The Chatham Chair “wifercomior IN DENIM v o IN CHINTZ IN TAPESTRY IN MOHAIR Scatter Rugs . . . - $72.00 . 82.00 . 90.00 . 103.00 154 Made in the best weaving districts of the Far East —— Sloane Endorsed Merchandise (Carries An cAssurance of Satisfaétion Store Open From 9 AM. to 5.30 P.M. Daily Including Saturday (Charge cAccounts Conveniently Freight Paid to All Shi; in the United States rranged ing Points STAR, WASHINGTON, PRESBYTERIAN DRIVE TEAMS MEET TONIGHT Laymen's Committee Will Report on Funds Collected in $130,000 Pension Campaign. Laymen's committees of the Pres- byterian churches of the Washington presbytery, which have been soliciting the local membership in the campaign for $135.000 needed to put into opera- tion here the new service pension plan of the church, will meet tonight at 6:30 o'clocit at the Franklin Square Hotel for a second report on funds obtained. At a meeting of the workers last Monday teams reported a total of $10,000 raised in the first five days of the appeal, and teams redoubled their efforts with a realization of the sum remalning to be provided. The slow start was caused, officials say, because of the number of churches which will not be actively :‘nllled in the campaign until Sun- ay. The local drive is a part of the national campaign for $15.000,000, which will make possible the new re- tirement plan for all ministers, mis- slonaries and other paid workers of the church having 35 yvears of service. The plan will provide pensions ranging from $600 to $2,000 and will be self-sustaining in about a decade, church actuaries say. GIRL ADMITS THEFT. Confesses to Stealing $100 From Man—Placed on Probation. Blanche Ziegler, an attractive young woman, pleaded guilty vesterday he- fore Justice Hitz in Criminal Division 2 to the larceny of $100 from Leo E. Smith last October while he was visit- ing_her apartment. There being no other record against her, the case was referred to Amos A. Steele, probation officér, for investi- gation. Upon Mr. Steele’s report, Miss Ziegler was sentenced to two years in the penitentiary, but was placed on probation. The giri left yesterday afternoon for her home in Michigan. — . The first springs of great events, like those of great rivers, are often mean and little.—-Swift. Pt * —the first wife of the late W. E. D. Stokes, a New York social leader for years, and descendant through her mother of the Spanish Duke d’Alba ODAY a certain woman is famed as a leader of New York social life. Her husband owns one of the world’s most valuable collections of art treasures. Her home is a mecca for nabobs and billionaires. Just a few years ago the same woman was a hopeless’ outcast. But she learned a little secret and started on the way to social prominence. What was the price she paid? How did she finally remove the last obstacle—the b. €, HIGH MOTOR SPEEDWAY IS AIM OF MANHATTAN Plan Is Part of Improvement Pro- gram to Cost $25,000,000 Along Hudeon. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, November 12.—Man- hattan iIs to have an elevated motor | speedway along the Hudson River | from Seventy-second street to Canal street. part of it over the New York Central Railroad tracks. The Sinking Fund Commission voted yesterday to vest title in the city to the necessary waterfront property, worth $2.000,000. The highway s a part of a shore- “WE were quite alarmed about mother. She wouldn’t eat, was terribly constipated, bilious, and seemed to be fading fast. We thought it due entirely to her 86 years of age. But a neighbor brought over a bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin and it was really remarkable how she picked right up, and now she can even dance around with her grand- children. Now weare never without Syrup Pepsin in the house.” (Name and address furnished upon request.) Regulates Bowels of Old Folks Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is so palatable, sets so € , 50 gently, so kindly with old folks as to accomplish its purpose without gripe, pain or other distress. For biliousness, sour stomach, coated tongue, constipation, and the lassitude, whether of children, parents or those in the evening of lfe, Syrup Pepsin is recommended everywhere. It is sold by all druggists. wellin the stomach, works so easi For a free trial bottle send name Pepsin Syrup Company, Monticello, Illinois. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, ithe new Holland vehicular tunnels All cross- { 1926. front improvement plan which will require expenditure of almost $25.000.- 000. Two new steamship plers, large erough to accommodate the largest ocean steamships, are included in the | plan. | The highway will have ramps lead- ing to Fifty-ninth. Thirty-fourth, Twenty-third and Fourteenth streets, and will connect with the mouth of under the Hudson River. traffic will be eliminated, and those studying the project say it will great-| Iy aid movement of traffic. | The horse-chestnut is o called from the fact that the Greeks and | Turks used the seed for curing glanders and other of horses, ailments Dr.Caldwelld SYRUP PEPSIN and address to and they really like to wear it — —this underwear which so many careful mothers buy for their children today. For here are garments which fit closely, stretch frecly, protect warmly, while: they keep their first softness through repeated washings. \ Sce them at your dealer’s today. Sorest Mills UNDERWEAR. he Woman Who Is Astounding America Reveals Sensational Secrets of New York’ MRS, OF LOVELESS UNTon LYDIG WARNS Marriage for Money or socia) | Mrs. Prestige 1y o Suicide Com. Maqazine Article, Philip Lydiglésserts _ Hatreds Ari S SOCIety iR SAYS LOVELESS UNIONISFAT LOVELESS UNIONS Declares Marriago for Money or Social Prestige I¢ Suiclde Compact Lead SCORE RRIAGES WITH FOREIGNER :able Rich Apy She Declares in o —_—— A few (of the hundreds) of the newspaper comments published all over the countryon Mrs Lydigs arfticles Mys. Philip Lydig is astounding America. At last she opens the door to her life-time of experience— her associations with the men and women of New York’s ultra-smart society. Tragedies that make you gasp are given in boldest relief—and in the next breath she tells you of the ridiculous and often amusing aspects of smart New York society. man who threatened to expose her methods and even bring her husband to financial failure? This is only one of many such incidents that Mrs. Lydig gives with astonishing frankness in her article: “Frauds of Smart Society.”” This article is published exclusively in the December issue of The Red Book Magazine now on sale at all news-stands. Is the Unwritten Marriage Law Passing? As Discussed by JUDGE BEN B. LINDSEY tionships, Judge Lindsey has evolved a philosophy so cou- OUT of the hodge-podge of thousands of tangled human rela- rageous, 8o removed from old standards—e> daring—that the nation is staggered. People, he declares, are making their own rules and laws, to suit their happiness and needs. For example, he says —The love triangle is often a happy solution to marriage problems! One’s love-life is his own and as long as he hurts no one, Society has no right to criticize or condemn. That Infidelity is NOT at the root of marital troubles—but lack of fair play and a feeding of green-eyed jealousy. That Freedom in love affairs, in marriage, leads to a monogamic mar- riage of itself. You will gasp mentally when you read his article in the December Red Book Magazine —The Moral Revolt; never before has any publication let such frankness go uncensored. You will wake up to RED BOO € ON SALE AT ALL NEWS STANDS changes in thought and action that are cropping up all about you! It is a vital issue—and will be thrust into your own life with tre- mendous force, if it has not entered already. Which side of the fence are you on — have you the courage to agree with Judge Lindsey? ‘Who understands people in all their pretense and sham, grop- ing and floundering, better than the author —the real author who does not exaggerate or color —but who paints word-pictures as true and realistic as any snapshot of life! And never before have we been able to offer you a group of such popular and beloved writers as in this December Red Book Magasine —authors who write of the people of today with a shrewd understanding that is uncanny in its realism. ‘Weiman, Leroy Scott, Virginia Dale, Struthers Burt, Samuel Spewack and others —all names that mean stories that /ive for you, packed with the pulsating romance of Life—its ecstasies and tragedies. Such as Rupert Hughes, Owen Johnson, Rita Kfi’flecember Price 25 Caars MAGAZINE