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83 Use Nozol for Sinus Trouble Those suffering from sinus trouble should wash away the drainage from sinuses and clear out the nasal cavi- ties with Nozol. S Nozol is unequalled for cleaning out these toxic poisons. Sinus trouble is a serious matter and treatment should be given promptly and regularly. The Fam- ily Size Nozol bottle contains enough for a 30-day treatment. Each bottle contains Booklet giving full directions. 60c Size or large Family Size $1.00 Sunday Excursions $3.50 Philadelphia $3.25 CHESTER $3.00 WILMINGTON AND RETURN Sundays, October 7, 21 Leaves W Kertnd i Troaa 0. delphia_7:45 p.m.. Cheste Wibninston €38 o Similar Excursions November 4, 18, December 2, 16, 30 Pennsylvania Railroad [EASY 10 APPLY ) Easily Installed without removing Sash or Doors. No muss, no troubl Self Adjus Patented “S” fold gives double spring action. Stops cold air leaks. Makes snug weather- proof seal conforming to all warping, shrink- age and expansion of sash and doors. ~Spring bronze_ that lasts forever. Get the genuine DENNIS strip with the “S” shaped fold from your Hardware, Lumber dealer, or Department Store. Unly 9 cents per foot net. If dealer can’t supply you write direct to us W. J. DENNIS & COMPANY 2110-20 W. Lake St. Chicago, Il Four out of five women who try S. O. S. prefer it to anything else for scour- ing and polishing alumi- num, pots and pans, stoves, linoleum, etc. At chain, grocery, hardware and department stores. SOS Pat. Jaa. 15, 1918-Reg. U. 8. Pat. OF. MAGIC SCOURING PADS 2 N St. Mother Knew the Way Fvery mother knows what it means when her child begins to get underweight, pale, listless, bilious, feverish and fretful, with bad breath, coated tongue and no appetite. What every one of the loesn't know is it’s s to use harsh the little stomach use exp mothers have Millions « it and purely veg Syrup. It gently most stubborn cases tion; stimulates the appe- tone and 1d bowels so they continue mally, of their own accord; pale, lif children, feless rosy-checked and full of table ikes ped con- tior became bilious, I and fretf had n»s couldn’t digest right weight He was losing I had heard of California It regulated an eating heart- ything. Soon so I gave it to him. him quic ily and digesting ev he was his robust, hap, Ask for California Fig Syrup by the full name so you'll get the gen- uine, endorsed by physicians for over 50 years. LAXATIVE-TONIC fir CHILDREN A e | Huntsville, | here was closed yesterday. imenting in! trength to weak | Syrup ever since I was a child, | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1928. DEMOCRATS START DRIVE FOR WEST County-by-County Canvass Begun Following Smith Opening Wedge. BY FREDERIC WILLIAM WILE. Under the far-flung auspices of the so-called “Smith Independent Agricul- tural Leagues,” the Democratic drive to capture the farming West has just been launched. It will be conducted in the 13 States of Indiana, Minnesota, Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Wisconsin, Ohio, Oklahoma, | South Dakota, Montana and Kansas. The campaign is officially spansored from New York national committee headquarters, and, according to Chair- man Raskob, will eventually be financ- ed to the extent of $1,000,000. The speerhead of the Smith attack on the farm vote is George N. Peek of Moline, IIL, who for the four years of the fight | for McNary-Haugen legislation in Wash- ington was the official leader of the Corn Belt forces, which promoted it. Peek’s headquarters are in offices at Chicago, whence the crusade will be vigorously prosecuted from now until election day. All-Farmer Move. It is the first time that either of the two leading political parties has ever made agriculture the objective of so concerted an effort. The Raskob-Peek program is even more essentially di- rected at the farmers than the La Follette Progressive campaign in 1024, It is an all-farmer movement. Chica- go headquarters will organize the 13 agrarian States on as detailed a plan as the party national committees are accustomed to organize the country as a whole. The Democratic agricultural leaders will perfect, and have already partially. completed, a county-by-county organization, equipped to make a barn- yard-to-barnyard canvass. They will specialize in the same kind of a get- out-the-vote drive as precinct and ward c:xt;’ak.alns usually do in the towns and cities. Peek is proceeding on the theory that Gov. Smith has laid down the gen- eral lines on which the Democrats ask for farm votes. The acceptance of the principle of the McNary-Haugen bill by Smith is apparently wholly satis- factory to the old corn belt leaders, who are using the slogan: “A vote for Smith and Robinson means equality tor agriculture.” tI was ‘“equality for agriculture” which supplied the keynote for the McNary-Haugen fight in Wash- ington from 1923 to 1928. Among -Washington politicians of both parties it is felt that Senator Borah did sericus damage to Smith's agricultural position when the Idahoan spoke at Minneapolis on October 1. Borah’s contention that Gov. Smith’s real attitude on farm relief is obscure and unstable is designed to make the Peek campaigners’ work harder. “For Equalization Fee.” In its opening manifesto to the corn belt the Smith farm headquarters as- sails the agricultural record of Herbert Hoover, especially stressing the familiar story about how he prevented war-time wheat farmers from getting $3.48 a bushel instead of the $2.20 at which Hoover “pegged” it. After ringing all the changes on the Republican nominee as the arch foe of farm relief in Wash- ington during the Coolidge administra- tion, the Democratic appeal says: “Gov. Smith has come out squarely for the principle of the equalization fee. He izes the agricultural problem and the needs of agriculture more clearly than Candidate Hoover. His party leaders give it like recog- nition. “As Governor of New York, Gov. Smith has been sympathetic to agri- culture. He has advocated and pro- moted laws that would benefit agricul- ture. We believe he is a real friend of agriculture, and if elected President would take a positive, not a negative, stand with regard to its needs. His speech at Omaha has made this clear. His running mate, Senator Robinson, worked constructively and consistently for the McNary-Haugen bill, and stands with Gov. Smith for the principle of the equalization fee. “There "is much false propaganda with regard to both candidates, and it is the record of the two men by which farm folks must judge. “In analyzing the past history and the records of the two candidates, the platforms on which they are running and the statements which they have made, we cannot come to any other conclusion. We urge farm folks to vote {I?lffl Smith and Robinson in their own (Copyright. 1928.) AUTO STOCK SALES CALLED FRAUDULENT | Alabama Police Investigate Al- leged Wholesale Swindling Operations. By the Assoclated Press. BIRMINGHAM, Ala., October 5.— Sale of alleged fake stock in two au- tomobile manufacturing companies has cost people of Alabama “hundreds of thousands of dollars,” it was revealed here today as police continued an in- vestigation of a reported wholesale | swindle which is believed to extend tc other cities of the South. Arrest of two suspects yesterday was one of the first éteps in the State-wide investigation under way, in which resi- dents of Birmingham, Troy, Evergreen, Sheffield, Anniston and Florence are said to he heavy investors. ‘The office of the finance corporation Police de- clare that jnformation has been fe- ceived indicating that a systematic an of sales was carried out, with icitors invading many sections of Alabama. In one day alone the sales amounted to $5,000, police said. 'BEN ALI HAGGIN WEDS FRIEND OF DAUGHTER Artist’s Third Wife Is Mary Cor- day, 20, of New York and Florence, Italy. By the Assoclated Press. NEW YORK, October 5—Ben Al Haggin, wealthy portrait artist, who recently wes divorced’from his second wife, has married Miss Mary Corday :| of Florence, Italy, and New York, whom he has known since she was 'a child. | She is 20 years old. The marriage, which Haggin would only say had taken place Saturday in a little Connecticut town, became known on the return of the couple to this city from a short honeymoon. Haggin said his marriage developed from a romance begun three years ago when he met Miss Corday again at a reception in Venice and later painted her portrait. She is an amateur dancer, and fre- quently appeared at charity affairs. She is an intimate friend of her hus- band’s daughter, Mrs. Louis M. Gourd. Officials of two omnibus companies in Dublin, Ircland, were recently ar- rested for selling “goods,” in the form of tickets, without being licensed to do &0 under a street trading law, \ Chef, Surrounded By Food, Starves | Almcst to Death | By the Assoclated Press. MILWAUKEE, Wis., October 5.— Edward Connelly, 38 years old, a chef, was surrounded by food for seven days, and yet, he said yester- day, nearly starved to death. Connelly found himself locked in a boxcar which was shunted to a lonesome siding. ,The car was loaded with boxes of canned food, packed high all around him. ‘When his pounding on the door finally brought rescue yesterday, Connelly explained that he had feared to break into the food be- cause it might be thought he was stealing. When hunger finally drove him to consider getting into the food he had lost his knife and could not open the boxes. o So great was the rush by Jews in the East End of London to send Jewish New Year greetings this year that spe- cial letter boxes were placed in the most congested Jewish district. ARSENAL N CHURH SEZED BY POLCE Door of Edifice Battered to Serve Writ on Beleaguered Faction. By the Associated Press. LOWELL, Mass, October 5-—Holy one of the men inside the edifice that he would shoot if the officers tried to force their way in. While the officers were wielding sledge hammers two men ran out of another door and two others who remained inside tolled the church bell incessantly. Attracted by the noise, a crowd gath- ered in the streets nearby. The of finally broke down the door. They found the two remaining occupants at the bell rope and served the writ. They confiscated a supply of rifles, shotguns, automatic pistols, revolvers and knives and a large quantity of ammunition. The struggle betyeen the two factions for control of the church property started early in the Summer. A faction, owing allegiance to Bishop Rodostolou of the Greek Orthodox Church took forcible possession of the church an locked the doors. Trinity Greek Church, its interior re- sembling a fort more than a place of worship, yesterday passed out of the control of a faction which has heen | holding it by force of actual occupancy for several months, but not until the police battered down the door. This accomplished, the officers met with no resistance and served on the defenders a writ of possession granted by the courts to the opposing faction. When the police demanded entrance they were met by a threat from . Lieut. Col. Jansen Transferred. By direction of the President, Lieut. Col. Thomas E. Jansen, Finance De- partment of the Army, now attached to the office of the chief of finance, War Department, has been transferred to the office of the director of the Bu- reau of the Budget, for duty in the consideration of estimates for the main- tenance of the Army. ‘Take no chances on food Make sure of the package ~If not from this package it is not the ORIGINAL SHRE WHEA As Made in Shredded Wheat ractoyles for 34 Years It is so easy to serve for any meal, and so tasty and nourishing = on the table in a jiffy =no kitchen work. 12 ounces 12 full-size biscuits Some valuable advice on céoosz'ng therr dref Please don’t take children’s health for granted, mother. 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