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*'l*!ir4MK>dMMU m h +1- THE PEOPEE, BARNWELL, S 1 (rnmlte shaft mivellw) at Sand 1‘oint thdd, Seiitth^ us niPinorlut to the arouml-the-world flijtht of the urmy aviators. 2—President Obrejton leaving the cathedral in Mexico City after Mexican independence day services which the American industrial mission attended. 3—(Jeortfe Dewey Huy of Chicago receiving gold e up irt radio world’s fair In New York, ns best radio announcer in the world. V NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS X Japan Wins Victory in the League of Nations— Baseball Scandal. By LDWARD W. PICKARD J APAN has, for the time being, put one over on the member nations of tiie League, of Nations, and all the world Is waiting, rather anxiously, to see what the result will be. It all turns on the matter of regulation of Immigration, wldch the Japanese will not admit Is a purely Internal ques tion that each nation is entitled to determine without outside interfer ence. They refused to accept the league’s proposed treaty of arbitra tion, security and 'disarmament until it had been amended to accord with their view on that point, and after a strenuous debate the committee In charge yielded to them and framed a Noenlled compromise widely satisfied them. The “protocol for pacific set tlement of International disputes,” ns It is officially known, was then sub mitted to the league assembly and ac cepted. In the opinion of most Amer- b nns and i f Australia, Canada and ofher Itritlsh dominions, the league 1ms overreached itself by attempting to become not only an international arbitrator but an International law maker. and the result Is more likely to be war than peace. Itrtelly stated, the nrnendm<»nts In .sisted upon and obtained by Count Adacld anil his Japanese colleagues oblige the league to arbitrate’the im migration question or any other ques tion of internal policy even aftei the world court has refused to have any thing to d with it. This, ns one cor respondent puts it, means that “Japan is • ntitbsl to drag the Cnlted States into a long, dangerous dispute on the nice question before the world’s na tions, even though the highest court of Justice in existence has declared Hie question a’fussue is America’s own business. No time limit is set for this operation, and If at any time dur ing this process the United States kicks over the trmVs and decides to bundle its own problems In Its own way the league is obliged to punish It by the military power of . r >4 nations.’’ ! If the'United States should refuse to obey the league’s* orders, Japan could declare war on us and could ■ count on the support of as many of the signatory nations as would honor their signatures to the document. In the -an;c case would 0 be any other ria- ,tion that hits adopted legislative measuris to check Japanese immigra tion.. debates in flenevn the Jap- e V.d the support of fTreece and 11 nit e underKtandabl\m~and of iuiiii whose reason for *ttieh a I is net clear. 5 The French and ;sh representatives wer*> so set hoption of the protocol, that they ■ t;i<|:y nreopted the compromise, wtlicil i t.n f "as pnictieally Tomplete sur- feTiiTer i ■ Coupt "AiTaeld’s iTlehTantTs!" I 1 . -Atve', adoption of the protoeql at t: Xeva is. not binding until tire docti- 'CVNtJLANIVS labor government has run up against a crisis that Is likely to bring altout Its downfall. T'omedays ago Prime Minister Mac Donald announced that if the house of commons failed- to fratify tlfc treaties negotiated with soviet llus- sia lie -would appeal to tiie country tiirough a general election. He said that under the pacts OWaU TTrital cured many valuable concessions and would only guarantee, not make, a loan to Russia. Wednesday night the Liberal parliamentary party, on which tiie Lnborltes rely for their control of the house, met and gave notice to the government to abandon tiie Rus sian treaties or get out of office. When tiie autumn session of parlia ment opens on October 2S the Liberals will offer a motion rejecting the treaties on the ground that they threaten “to divert resources that are urgently needed for national and im perial development,” and that they “contemplate that the British tax payer should be made liable for fur ther loans to tiie Russian state, raised by means of a-guarantee by Hie British government, as a condi tion upon which any part of the pri vote claims of certain -British cred itors should be recognized or met by tiie sfirlet republic." Tiie motion of repudiation •will be supported by the Unionists. F oR the first time in ten years France lias a balanced budget, and Finance Minister (Tementel says the equilibrium between receipts and ex- penditur * wijl lie maintained, the pol icy of raising loans to moot normal charges being abandoned., Ajjsvir- anee is given Hint none of the meas ures proposed are such as b* harm capital. Taxes will remain tin changed, but they will lie more thor oughly collected. Among the estimat ed receipts is StKUHJUJNHi francs from tiie eve of :‘ t , opening there came to light another sad. scandal. Commis sioner Landis blacklisted two mem bers of the Hiants, Outfielder Jimmy O’Connell apd Conch Cozy Dntan, for attemping to bribe Shortstop Heinle Sand of the Philadelphia team to throw a game to New York so as to make their victory in the National ate more certain. Sand refused tiie $A00 offered him and promptly informed ids manager. O’Connell, da I led before Commissioner Landis, President Heydler of tiie National league and John McOrnw, manager of the (Rants, confessed and vainly tried to Implicate three of tils fellow play ers. O’Connell was bought from the Pacific const by the (Rants in 1022 at a cost of $7.\000 and had been much lionized in California. He says Conch Dolan suggested the bribery scheme to him, but where the $.'i(X) came from is not yet revealed. Dolan has been in professional baseball for 20 years. C HK'AdO was host *last week to the American Bankers’ associa tion, which wound up Its'flnal session with the installation of the new pres ident, William E. Knox, head of the Bowery Savings bank of New York. Several of ^ie financiers who ad dressed tiie convention made severe attacks on Senator LaFollette, term ing him “tiie nation's chief liability” and “the archdemagogue,” Tiie inde pendent candidate for tiie Presidency. Indeed, found no defenders among tin* hankers, which Is not surprising. receipts . 4* (.eru^H uy. In 11 Ita!' U. i : via i Fag 5 on :: f F INANCE Minister Luther of Cer- many has*gone to London to sign the agreements in connection with the Dawes ptan loan*: which he said wrwild be floated before the American elec Rons and put on the market at 'JT and bear 7 per cent interest. Tin- British bankers informed him that unless (ierm'any was prepared to let down tiie eustoms harriers against British trade she .need not expect further credits there. Germany’s immediate worry is a prospective wheat famine, for the crop ' lias been full half destroyed in re- : gions that were devastated by great storms. East Prussia, Westphalia and the Rhineland suffered the most. Gov eminent agents have been sent to ^he I'nited Stafesr- (’aiiada and Argentina to purehase grain. Not much can he obtained from Russia for the cfops there .also are short. Tin* reieh plans to put an import duty on grain, the money obtained to go to the farmers, many of whom-are faeitig tinaitcinl ruin. l.o'!:' a - 11 M on rat i lied-by the govern- m nM of signatory powers, and tin* ) lospeot lew is that it will lie reject- «• 1 ip id least the British. Australian, Now Z aland, South African and -LVmulu.n .parliaments. • Anslraliip- whioh is doterniined to remain “white,” is es]ieoia11v concerned over the mat ter and its press is outspoken and hitter in comment. In the United States tiie consistent opponents of American membership In the league C M UNA'S civli war goes along mer- > rily hut neither side scorns to have won an\ decisiM* ailvantage. • on the Khtinghnl front the fighting hoen severe Tor several days and the defetnTers of tiie city irpperrr To he gelling the ^ w'oisT of it. These I'hekiatVg forces, however. though driven back, claim to have strength eTied their lines._ Their troops Jn th-c Sungklnng arc;f art* now coinmandi'd by Ma-liang, otio* a famous general and Uth*r-n bandit chlef ; —In northern China Wu and Cluing have not yet engaged in a real battle. Just to complete tin* record about wars, it should be said that the Span ish troop: in Morocco, after relieving some of the garrisons that were l>«*- S ENATOR BROOKHART <>f Iowa. who is 'running for re-electidh as a Republican, prepared ids way to bolting the G. (>. P. national ticket by a letter to Chairman Butler in which lie demanded that Charles G. DaWes resign <>r lie compelled to resign^ as candidate for the vice presidency^ He derlared Dawes had wrecked the cam paign, especially in the Northwest, and that he had organized a disloyal group tiie Minute Men of the_Uon- stitution to conduct an illegal de fense of the Constitution with the se cret purpose of destroying the con stitutional rights^ of union labor, lit* also held that the Dawes candidacy was an insult to tiie co-operative movement In agriculture. Bnmkjmrt has long been In sympathy with the LaFollette policies. Neither Butler nor Dawes lias replied to Ids demand at this writing. The “regular” Repub licans in Iowa are wondering what to do about Brookhart. He cannot be re moved as the party nominee, hut the state ‘.(/onimittee may decide to sup port Luther A.-Tjrewer of 'Vdar Rap ids, ati independent Republican can didate for the senatorship. Democrats of Rhode Island nom inated Gov. William S. Flynn for i’nited States senatoy. Their ]dat- fnrm denounces the Ku Klux klan and calls for modification of tb<‘ Vylsh-ad ’act To .prnrnt the sale of digh wines and beer. Similar planks are- in the platforms adopted by the Democrats of Vermont and New Jersey. see further Just i float ion for their po— -yrtgotb by the RijY trll)*‘stnen. were sition. Those who have advocated American meniliersldp are in the main noticeably silent. In one respect the discussions in the league worked out' to the disadvan tage of the Japanese, for they were romp I led to admit openly that they were considering th * possibility of making war on the United States over Hie immigration question. This might well result in Hu* making of an agree ment by America, England and the British dominions for parallel action, co-operation and support. I again in ditficultics because tiie Moors cut the Tetunn highroad and once more surrounded Zatien where there is now a Spanish force of l>,(HM). Also it is reported that the Wahabis, tin* fundamentalist fanatfes of Islam, have captured Mecca from King Hus sein's Arabs. N EW YORK Giants and Washing ton Senators, having won re spectively tlm National and Aim*.lean league pennants, are playing the world's championship series. But on R Kl’oRTS received b> Secret ary of the treasury Mellon >lio\v that timinciai .conditions in the agrieultifraT sections of tin* Northwest have im proved steadily under the operation of tiie Si 0,000,000 n if rl ci i tin f .-i jer ed 11 iirpl'i iuion wliich was fonm*d mF New York ;lnd Chicago hankers :it the sug gestion of President (’ooiidge, “Atteiiti' n w:ts first directed by the coiporati'Ui to tin* hanking situation, then in ’bad straits, and loans were imrde- to some- of the 2.'to bank's to an aggregate amount of over $b,OOo,oo<),” MODEL FARM AT GLEMSON Afili Show Everything That Upto* Date Place Should Hava. Cletnson 'College.—One of the big gest features of the state fair this fall will lie the model farm exhibit put on by the extension farm service. The exhibit will represent on a small scale a model farm of 120 acres and will he laid out in six fields with 20 acres to the field. The model home will be shown, the water system, the fencing, the barn and other farm buildings—in fact everything that goes to make a model farm. Uroii rotation will lie hcought out on placrads attached to each field, show ing the crops and the order in which they are to follow. In addition the or chards will be shown, the pastures, •'he woodland, the front lawn, the drive ways— all will lie in the layout to be seen at the state fair this fall , C. G. Cushman, S. L. Jeffords and D. D. Whitcomb of the extension ser vice are now busily engaged in cast ing a miniature plaster of Paris model of the farm. From t' is cast the big ger. which is to occupy a space in the steel building 25 by 45 feet, will be modeled. Other extension depart ments that are not represented in the model farm exhibit will have separate booths around the inside of the steel nuilding as they did last year. A. W. Jones Dies With Paralysis. Columbia, S. C.—Adolphus W. Jones, former comptroller general of i^outh Carolina and first chairman of the tax commission, died at the residence of his daughter. Mrs. J. E. McDavid, 2327 Lee street. He was stricken with par alysis ton days ago. He was a native of Abbeville, the son of Robert Jones add Mary Jones, and was born April 12. 1857. In 1886 Mr. Jonfis was appointed auditor for Abbeville county and held that office until he was appointed phos phate inspector by Gov. B. R. Tillman in 1891. He discharged the duties of this office until 190ft when he became auditing clerk under Comptroller Gen eral Derham. In 1903 he was elected comptroller general and served in this office for 12 years, resigning in 1915 after Governor Manning named him chair lan of the state tax commission, which office he held fo^ two consecu tive terms. He declined reappoint ment. Summerville Gets New Fire Truck. Summerville.—For a number of years the question of adequate fire pro tection has been a serious problem in Summerville. Owing to the large ter ritory which the town covers it has been impracticable to install a water works system. Recenty the question of fire protection h/.s been agitated aud after consultation with well know n fife fighters, among them Chief Beh rens of CharlestoJi. the town authori ties decided to buy a first class chemi cal enqine. This machine has Just boon received, and consists of three 5ft gallon chemical tanks mounted on a Chevrolet (basis. The truck also car ries' ladders, ax*-i and an extra supply of chemicals. The outfit was purehas 'e^xtmni the Sea grave company ;uid is said to be the very late-.-t product of this type of fire fighting apparatus. McLeod Addresses Embryo Doctors.! Charleston.—Briefly outlining thi history of the institution, bringing out the raet that the exercises began the IftOth annual session of the college wit ha large enrollment, Dr. Robert Wilson, dean, made a short but inter esting talk at the opening exercises of the Medical College of South Carolina, field in the assembly hall. The exer cises w : ore featured by addresses by Gov. Thomas G. McLeod and W. H Z^tglor. Phar I)., professor of phar macology and materia niedica. A fea ture of Governor McD*od's address was his appeal to the graduates to ! practice in South Carolina. Dr. Wilson, in bis opening address, told of the beginn'ng of the college, poifUin?^ out that those men who had established the institution only had as their resources faith and hope. <ays the statement from the treasury. •'Deposits In tie* hanks aided were <iv, r 8.*.:!,(KMl,(MX). It is difficult to es timate how many of these hank.; would have been closed If the aid had not been given probably 70 per cent, and the effect of their closing would have embarrassed other banks. “It is safe to assume that by stop ping the excessive number of bank failures in the Northwest until—the crop hegni to mature ami tiie spirit of tie* people in tliis territory revived, the corporation safeguarded at, least 82.',000.)Xxi of the people's deposits, ‘The hanking situation having so improved by the increased prosperity in the territory, the corporation ha f s now concentrated its attention on farm diversification." Bus Owners Meet. Spartanburg Representatives of, —bus lines oji rating in North and South Carolina " ill meet at the Frank- I Fla hotel on the afternoon of Novem ber 2 for the purpose ot organizing the South Carolina Motor Bus usso- I (iation. C. W. Stocks, editor of Motor Bus | Transportation, a New York City pul) ' location devoted to motor bus owners' in'erests. wijl attend the meeting as will S. A Market, representing the Motor Bus association of Virginia and the North Carolina Bus Owner’s asso ciation, td assist the South Carolin ians in organizing. Anderson Girl Made President. Anderson—Miss AgneS Blake of Anderson was elected president of the Chtcora student body at a 'Very enthu siastic meeting of the Presbyterian girl*. Miss Blake is a ifiemher of tiie senior class, and is the most attractive and popular student on the campus. The governing body of the Presby terian institution is.the student gov ernment association whulh is a cen tral committee. Members of this com* niittee arc the president and represen tatives‘from the senior, junior, soph* onaore and freshmen classes. ' MEMPHIS MAN GAINS 40 LBS. ON TANLAC Jenkins Gives Medicine Credit for Recovery* “Tanlne knocked out my troubles and gave me such a fine appetite and digestion that I have put on 4f) lbs. of good, solid weight,” declared W. A. Jenkins, popular street railway con ductor, 1007 Kirkland St., Memphis, Tenn. “For several years stomach trouble, malaria, nervousness, dizzy spells and sick headaches kept me all out of gear. I couldn’t eat right, my sleep Every uplift seems to be followed by an uplift In the taxes. was all broken and It was all I could do to keep on the job. “Since taking Tanlac I eat every, tiling, sleep good and feel fine all the time. I have found Tanlac Is the very thing for keeping my system toned up and In trim. Tanlac has also re lieved my mother of stomach trouble. It’s the best ever In the way of a medicine.” Tanlac Is for sale by all good drug gists. Accept no substitute. Over 40 million bottles sold. ft $ Tanlac Vegetable Pills for constipa tion; made and recommended by the manufacturers of Tanlac. Physical culture utlve on the farm. is rather linper- erurnie Aspirin SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSIST! Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years for Coldis Pain Toothache Neuritis Headache Neuralgia Lumbago Rheumatism Accept only “Bayer” package which contains proven directions. Handy “Bayer" boxes of li tablets—Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists, ▲aplrto U the trade mark of Uajer Maoafactare of Moona<*?tlra<*l<l«eter of BallcrUcadd The Reason Annette--Ralph told iii<* last night that he’s a w<.man* hater. Nanette—Is lie brake again? Judge. Yes, Once Ifraft* Employer Late again; have you over done anything on time? Clerk I bought a car.—Judge. MOTHERFletcher’s Castoria is especially pre pared to relieve Infants in arms and Children all ages of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhea; allaving Feverishness arising therefrom, and, by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Foodgiving natural sleep. To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of ^Absolutely HarmlessQjiiates,, Physicians everywhere recommend it eT spoonful of is goes as rar as a aw< • « * * * •• \ • r* a oake it BEST with ra 4 » AVIS A. i \ ?.v BAKING POWDER i EVERY INGREDIENT OFFICIALLY APPROVFO nv .. c . nr-t-NOVED BY U. S. FOOD AUTHORITK