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QUESTION HOOVER,_ PROHIBITION DATA Federal Figures Show Larger Percentage of Liquor Cases | Irene 'ONLY LEASED CANINE, EVANSTON WOMAN SAYS Captle McLaughlin - Declares Dog “sale” is Voided by lm- Treatment of Animal, April 24 (P n of Mrs. Ir hlan for re proper is Mrs. cep BRITISH CAPITAL AND LABOR AGREE Joint Meeting Hailed as Begin- HARDWARE OUTLOOK ning of New Era proposa Pherinciys Drlghié ag Epring Comes on') London Smallpm Cases —Employment Increases for Skilled and Unskilied Labor. tiade of at a rapid A e nighest peak a7 1o o vears the situation roepeac: ambracing unskilled and cain of r 10 heip them anng niolsture Damages 1o b t0 recent wind @ has been ve a1l centers. 0oks for con- nto August, a condi- Persia W arned to Keep Hand~ Ofl Afghanistan 24 (P—Fred- ed the Now 2 Your Child’s Health and Happiness One of the most annoying and ’encnl complaints children suffer rom is worms. You know the signs—constipation, deranged stomach, offensive breath, eves heavy and dull, coated tongue, grinding of the "teeth. Don't let children suffer. Promptly give them Dr: TruesElixir LAXATIVE =« WORM EXPELLER ot ogov- .\1/~. to follow “My little girl became seriously 11l by eating too many sweets. [ used your Elizir with most bene- ficial results; she improved rap- idly. My has not had one sick day since.” —Mrs. Shay, Cam- bridge, Mass. Cleanses as it clears—a mild, pure- herb lazative. Pamily oise $1.20; other sises é0c & ¢0c. Successfully used for over 77 years KENT on May 1 will introduce SCREEN-GRID RADIO NEW BRITA JAIL CITY CLERK I Arrested ! | a Bond was $300,000 More Needed E or "()Id Iro 24 (R 52; One in Pan( \HOOYER HOPES T0 FISH OVARSON ChARgE_ n st Wiie of Hot Springs Official Also ident, Except for Trip to | York, Hasn't Been Away Fro Washington, April 24 (P—Presi- dent Hoover hopes to get away from | day in the country | , but as yet his plans ption of Monday's York. the chief 1 in his office visited his serve more 1 and in the meantime ind exercise have early morning a pistol t the White elect 1o take Former Wife of McAdoo DAILY HERALD, EXPLAINS WHY BOYS CAN'T KEEP QUIET ‘Nature Did Not Intend They Should, Williams Says a4 muscles 1 only one “A Doy has a thous: driving him to action which to sit still, yet parents and toachers expeet him to be Clared J. Harold Williams, t executive of Providence, . in his speech at the father- nd-son banquet of the First Church Men's Association 1 last evening the Iirst Congregational church. < preponderance of driving foree . made i a boy nd he advocate attempting this im- nd other leaders this energy fathers merely direct proper cl evement, cited adven nd adm from his own expe xecutive and camp dircetor, lure of adventure Will Wed Welter Keith i Wal- jdgs" “My clothes budget had dropped to zero but . ..” “My husband says I'm now a real partner in his new business! This is why ago he left a good position to go into business for himself. To help, I dismissed the maid and did all my own work, including washing my nice things—and I invariably used Lux. “What surprised me was how long I could keep clothes like new by always using Lux. Going over accounts the other day, I showed my husband that I hadn’t had any new clothes for a whole year! He couldn’t believe my clothes budget had dropped to zero! When I justly gave most of the credit to Lux for . A year keeping things new looking so much longer, he said, ‘Here goes Lux at the top ofoureconomybudget.””” MRS. S. D. THAYER, 9 Ashland Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. + Greatest Groups of Experts insist on Lux “For dollars and cents’ reasons we in- sist upon Lux,” say Hollywood's great Movie Studios, with million dollar wardrobes to care for! And every Mu- sical Show in New York, Fifth Avenue Dressmakers, Buyersin 132 Leading De- partrgent Stores —experts on modern clothes—find: “Lux doubles the life of fabrics, whether fragile or sturdy.” Lever Brothers Co,y Cambridge, Mass. Just b He also nts of st child v in it ehieveme example o hero.” 1o the it they wou'd vone into un- ith no knowl- trail, or the enduring the A guide, uld be able to show md convert e Drawing an he ness and 1+ hoy's father was Srop Thar CoLo/ The new safe wayto heal head and chest colds does away with all “doping”. Simply ask your druggist for a jar of WHYTE- FOX No. 2. Applyand inhale for instant reliet. Ideal for children -?hnl-amd soothes without upset- fing the stomach. s their sons i must et — WEDNESDAY, APRIL 24, 1929. his guide in ordinary life and that it would be much easier and pleasur- able for him if be had the benefit of his dad's direction. Turning then to the fathers, the speaker urged them not to make things either too hard or too easy for their sons. He said the boy would appreciate anything much more if he worked for it himself. but he counselled every father to see that his son had been properly coached and otherwise prepared for an undertaking and that the boy knew he had his father behind him and rooting for him. ‘Alexander H. Scott proposed a toast, “To Our 8ons,” while his son, John Scott, proposed “To Our Jathers.” President Manwell A. Coe of the association presided. Rev. Alfred D. Heininger led in group singing. The 10-piece orches- tra of Rcy Scout Troop 4 played a march as the guests came in to din- 1« and rendered several selections during the meal. Mid-Western Farmers Form Huge Wheat Pool Lincoln, Neb., April 24 (#—Wheat raisers of Nebraska and Wyoming to the number of 300 have effected or- ganization of a wheat pool giving it the e of the Midwest Market Non Stock Co-Operative. The pool was said to represent 13,000 grain raisers in the two states, and was declared the largest in existence in the middlewest, Directors were elected last night for majority of the sixteen distrites, constituticn and hy-laws farm relief measure being formu'ated in congress will orgunize farmers from the bottom instead of the top.” declared J. W. Brinton, ci- rector of the Nebraska wheat grow- cry association, in addressing the meeting. “The government will lend you funds for constructing re- spectable elevators and facilitics, but | it you do not use the aid offered, you will be no better off.” MERCHANTS EXPRESS 109" wheelbsse *545 COMMERCIAL TRUCK 120° wheelbase $775 1-TON 130° wheelbase 995 1-TON 140" wheslbase 1065 113 TON 150° wheslbase *1345 1Y-TON 165° wheelbase ‘1415 2-TON 150" wheelbase 1515 2-TON 165" wheelbsss 1585 3-TON 135° wheelbase 1745 3-TON 168° wheelbase 1775 Chassis prices f. o. b. Detroit 1129 Stanley TOURISTS PERISH OF INSECT BITES Duchess of Athol Faalities Are Attributed to Mosquitoes Cherbourg, April 24 (UP)—The Canadian Pacific liner Duchess of Atholi landed 90 passengers here at noon today after a cruise to South American and South African ports during which four American passen- gers died. Passengers who landed here said the death were caused by malaria contracted from mosquito bites in the Kruger National park and Vic- tdria Falls, Africa. The deaths gecurred a month ugo when the ship was in Italy, the pas- scngers saidy Careful examination of the pas- sengers who 1anded here was made under orders of the ministry of hy- giene, issued following reports that the fo mignt have died from a | contagious disease. The ministry said if the deaths were found due to an epidemic dis- eage, international sanitary laws| would be invoked and the passengers would be placed in quarantine or al- | lowed 1o continue their travel with sanitary passports providing for rigid survey of their health during the next 18 days. | The Cherbourg passengers ex-| pected to leave here immediately on | a special train for Paris. Two hun-| dred other passengers aboard the Duchess of Atholl were en route,to Southampton. The dead passengers were:— Henry Norweb, 68, Roslyn Heights N. Y., who died in Naples on March 26. Edward Hardenbrook, 52, Roches. ter, N. Y., who died March 28 in Superior performance Naples. His body was sent te the United States. 3 Luther Facey, ' 71, of New Yeork, who died March 28 and was buried in Naplea. Mrs. Alice H. Ernecke, Hollywood, Calif., whose body was cremated in taly. WORK GOES TO LONDON Washington, April 2¢ UP—Dr. Hubert Work, chairman of the ve- publican national committee, will sail from New York tonight for Lon- don to attend as a delegate the fifth International Congress of Military Medicine and Pharmacy. He is a colonel in the medical officers re- serve corps. COULD NOT SLEEP NIGHTS Helped by Lydia E. Pink. Compound When I hol nerve ous and run-dowid my bushand me & bottle right nn{ ‘.{i “i: [ grest help to me and I think tha$ dnredh;:' :’. ;l’wy 'y it It. worst sym, ‘w’:r.e nenmululyuld tired fo 1 could not sleep nights and I was s nervous I wou{‘cry if anyone looked ot me.”—Mi pa Brask, 196 Wash ington Street, Fairhaven, Mass. erformance = on the Road - Mt on the Boo of Dodge Trucks day after day, year after year, writes profits on the books of Dodge Truck owners. This performance is the sum of power, speed, ruggedness, safety and dependability. It has been proved superior under all con- ditions of road and load—in all lines of business—among fleet operators and single truck owners . . . . . And Dodge Truck operating costs are always low. Come in and inspect our complete line— critically. Make comparisons. Drive the one that fits your needs. Or let us drive it with a load of your goods. You'll see quickly why the owners of hundreds of thousands of Dodge Trucks call them money makers. 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