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Family Of Nine Killed By Train Fort Wayne, Ind., Jan, 24.- -A speeding passenger I rain killed nine members of a family on relief today, Striking their stalled automobile broadside and scattering the bodlea along the right of way. Marlon McBride, 43, of near Gray?r r Mm 41?yar*ild wlffl ami aeven V of tile nine McBrlde children, all riding in a sedan were killed liiHtantly or futully injured. Two little girls. were picked from the debris and taken to the hospital, critically hurt. A baby. Htill born to Mn. McBrlde, wum found in the wreckage. The family had been In Fort Wayne Attending the funeral of the huHhand of Mr*- William Connor, sister-in-law of Mr*. McBrlde. Ah they neured their home neighborhood the automobile - Mailed on the railroad crossing. The Detroit bound Wabash passenger train ploughed into the car, scatterod bodiea and wreckage in all directions and ground to a stop hundred*.of fee! down the track. The locomotive was badly damaged. Braxton Wingate, of Idmolnton, N. C'., lias been recommended for holding by a Mecklenburg county coroner's Jury for grand Jury dealing, on Kusplclotr of having murdered C. B. Leatherman, a taxi driver of Charlotte. About one hundred desperate prisoners at Alcatraz prison, San Francisco hay, "struck" Monday, and 75 of these are in solitary confinement with u bread and water diet, while 25 are enjoying their usual privileges on a promise of being good. Thousands of office workers were stranded in mid town New York's skyscraper section Wednesday, because of a sudden strike of elevator operators. The strike affected'200 office buildings. Walter B. MeCormlck, 55, retired St. IxniiH, Mo., business man and eousin of Col. Robert MeCortnick, Chicago publisher, shot himself to death on Wednesday in his apartment. Ill 'health assigned as the cause. Beware Coughs o frcra common colds Thi-t Hang On No matter lur.v many medicines you have tried for your coutih, chest c-iM or bronchial irritation, you can reh< f now with Crcoinulslon. Serious trouble may bo brewing and ye i cannot alio-cl to tnl:c a chance with anyli.ii ; 1': 3 than Creomulslon, which t n-.s i i:* 1 ib to the scat of the trouble \ > ai l 'nature to f-'i >i.lw ur.d heal the i 'flann-cl membranes a the (.'orrn-lnden ] hleam is loo.oned aril i x{>elled. Even if other remedies have failed, don't be discounted, your drurrrrist is authorized to guarantee Crootnulsion and to refund your money if you are rr,t satisfied with results from the very fir: t hot1 lo.Oet OreemuHormitrhtnow. < \clvd Help Kidneys If poorly functioning Kitlmya and liladder make you auffer from CctUnfc Up Nlghta. Nanronanetia. Khemnatto Pains, Htiffnean, Burning, Smarting, 9 Itching, or Acidity try the guarantee Doctor-a PreHcriptionCystexiSiaa-tct) - Must fix you up or money OyOlvX back. Only76/ ?t druggiaU. Find Out From Your Doctor if the "Pain" Remedy You Take Is Safe. Don't Entrust Your Own or Your Family's Well - Being to Unknown Preparations BEFORE you lake any preparation you don't know all about, (or th e relief of headaches; or the pains o! rheumatism, neuritis or fieuralgia ask your doctor what he thinks auout it ? in comparison with Genuine Bayer Aspirin. We say this because, before the discovery of Rnyer Aspirin, most so-called "pain" remedies were advised against by physicians as being bad for the stomach; or, often, for the heart. And discovery of Bayer Aspirin changed medical practice, ? Countless thousands of people who have taken Bayer Aspirin vear in and out without ill effect, have proved that the medical findings about its safety were correct. Remember tins: Genuine Bayer Aspirin is rated amoruj Ihr hi si est mclli<>ds net discovered for the relief of headaches ind all common pains . . . and sn'r lor the average person to take regularly. You e. n get real Buyer \>;urui at an:; drug store simply by never a.skn.g !-jr it by the name "aspirin" alone, but always saving BAYER ASPIRIN when you buy. Bayer Aspirin I r' ~?~t* * v L_ - GOLD HUNTERS WILL MAP ORE DEPOSITS Canada Sends Out Surveying Parties Into Virgin Areas. Ottawa, Out. ? i *.t;tii l;i*m newest and probably I he strangest "will rUHli" Id Its hl?tory I* on. The vanguard of /in army.of nearly l.f?00 ^|l)/ii,| and 'AMiliHJP pecto's, who will search the whole of Canuthi and Its possession* In the for north to find where the dominion's vast untouched mineral riches lie, has left for the Yukon, scene of many famous gold strike*. One hundred and eighty to 200 other parties of gold seekers. made up of geological student* and laborers, and supervised by experienced geologists, will Htart nut for the far corner* of the country, often through virgin territory, seldom before trod by white men, to itnd and map mineral deposits at the expense of the federal government. The hunt will hist a year and will cost $ Ms lO.i n to. It Is unhpie In that the prospectors will do very little irrtfial prospecting nrut will he unable to slake claims. It will he piore of a geological survey. No Claims to Be Staked. The men will work directly for the Canadian department 0f mines, and since the department !s not allowed to stake claims, the gold hunters merely will note the loeetlon of their dlseoverle* and move .mi to other field*. Ultimately the deposits will he "rediscovered" by Independent prospectors, or developed by mining companies. The par'y j?Ht sent to the Yukon comprised eight member*. Later, when all the parties begin their work, about TO field* scattered between Nova Scotia on the east const and the Yukon on the west will be under survey. Particular care Is being taken in the selection of the surveying personnel. Young men Imbued with the pioneering Instinct will he favored and the survey will bo considered ns a challenge to their courage arid enthusiasm. While the work will take in the whole range of economirnlly valuable minerals, their net I vi ties will he concent im tod particularly In areas favor able to gold deposits. Uovemirient odielnls look at the scheme as an excellent means of speeding ih'velopui'Mit of Canada's gold Held*. Canada is the world's rid largest g,.h| producer and it Is tie' "pinion of geologist* that its production of more than Sloo.nnunuu annually could be greatly expanded. Geological^ Mapping. "It Is not .so mueh a gold hunt ns geological mapping." |)r. Charles Camsell, deputy minister, of mines, said In discussing the scheme. "For example, the largest number of parties will go to southern Saskatchewan to bore for underground water In the dried-out areas. The occurrence of minerals will he a secondary search. "lhere will be no prospecting. What will be sought are the Indications of gold or other deposits. When these are found and mapped, private IndusI try will carry on the prospecting and | development. "The personnel of the parties will Nary from two to seven or eight members. With each will be a scientific man. "While called a 'gold hunt' and. In a way. partaking of that nature, the plan really Is a return on broad lines to our gold geological mapping expeditions, modified, fop economic reason*. in recent year*. We expect, however. that It will be the basis of a great stimulus to Canadian mining industry." Biological Experiment Opens Way to Germ Study South Bend. Ind.?An Important biological experiment which may eventually lead to the Isolation of the germs that cause colds. Influenza and Infantile paralysis has been successfully completed at the University of Notre Dame, It Is announced. Prof. J. A. Iteynlers has succeeded after six years of constant laboratory work In obtaining absolutely germ-free guinea pigs and In raising them without contamination by germ life of nnv kind. The Importance of this work lies In the fact that It permits a study of any single germ on a living or ganlsm, until now considered Impossible. For more than .">0 years this problem has puzzled scientists who hitherto have contended that lire In an animal body was Impossible without bacteria. The presence of many forms of germ life has Interfered seriously with the Isolation In the past of germs that cause many of the most current human aliments. Consequently no serums or other effective preventatives for souk of the ailments have yet been do veloped. Bees Win Court Case Over Their Neighbors Marlon, nhlo.--"ls the h.-o to he .. not to he?" That the quest on. It ha tiles ; t > t"; 1:11. is here. Several Marion res.dent* have* bet hives In their backyards. Neighbor complain that the ".en ??> bees earn pollen on their fwt ami dust it ovei their freshly laundered clothes hang lug on wnshlines. Mayor Clarence A. Bopn thinks lit tic can he done nh,.nt it. "You mlgh as well try to keep the h'rds from flyim over the city." he said. "You can hard ly Icgistato t?;n!nst bees.* Bridge Monument To Late Senator Long New Orleans ended the year, 1H36, with the fulfillment of a dream that bus perflated for 50 years. in December that city celebrated the official opening of the 113,000,000 Huey 1'. l/ong memorial bridge which spans the Mississippi three and one-half mileH above the old Louisiana towu. 8tretching 4.4 miles fh length, Weluding approaches, this new bridge with ita railway tracka, highway traffic linea, and aldewalka not only becornea the longeat railway apan in the world and tak,ea lta place among the large brldgea of any kind now in exiatonce, but It alao completea the j bridge bullder'a conquest or the Miaalaalppi. One full century after the.United Htatea declared itaelf an independent nation the aouthernnioat bridge span-1 I nlng the "Father of Watera" waa at I St. Louis. During the following yeura, however, the engineers pushed steadily aouthward and 1030 found a com-' pleted apan at Vlckaburg, 200 miles j north or Now Orleans. The new Huey i I'. Ixmg structure now eloaea the laat | opening between Vlckaburg and ''the Gulf, and in furnishing a means for j Die Southern Pacific railroad to cross ' the Mississippi It displaces the lurgest' train ferry in the world. Hut besides its great length the Huey i\ Long bridge has other measurements with which to startle those who see it. The center span is bo high that even when the Mississippi swells to its highest there will be 135 feet between the surface of the wator and the lowest part of the bridge, allowing ample clearance for the largest of ships, that might ply the "Father of Waters." The midstream pier of the bridge stands where the water is 80 feet deep. Ninety feet farther on down below the bed of the river could be found the bottom of the pier. From there to the highest part of the bridge's superstructure it is 400 feet, a height equal to that of a 36-story building. Compared to the bridges ?r the world which a National Geographic Society bulletin lists as completed during 1!*3."? tin* New Orleans structure assumes a new importance. The most outstanding spun completed last year in Western Furope and one of the largest ever built there, Is in Denmark. It joins Jutland with the Island of Fyn. and provides passage for both railway and highway traffic. It, however, has a length of less than three-quarters of a mile. Russia finished a railroad bridge over tile Volga river which has a much greater length than the Danish structure, hut even it falls a few feet short of being a mile long. In America a large number of bridges were completed during the past year, and while many of them are Immense spans, none lias all the large measurements of the New Orleans bridge. However, when that great steel and concrete structure which eventually will connect San Francisco with Oakland across the San Francisco bay is completed it will be almost . twice the length of the Huey P. Long span. The former will have a length of eight and onefourth miles. Another mighty bridge is also being built in San Francisco. It will, when completed, bridge the famous Golden Gate. Work on both of these is now about half done. While the Huey P. Long bridge may be the most magnificent span in the vicinity of New Orleans, it Is not tho lirst long one that city has had. The New Drlennsl'ontchartraln bridge across Pontchartrain lake has a length of about 2.">,oo0 feet. It was opened to traffic in 15)28 after being built by private capital at a cost of $.">.500,000. ?The Pathfinder. Warner Brothers, moving picture producers, at Hollywood, Gal., have a program for producing this year-sixty full length movies, including twelve "million dollar specials." Included in the list is "Green Pastures," "Anthony Adverse." and "The Petrified Forest." Austin Phelps Palmer, retired engineer, entered a plea of guilty In a New York court, to an Indictment in Federal court on a charge of writing hreatening letters to President Hoose volt. Kdwnrd Roberge. a garage employe, has been arrested at New Britain, Conn., on a charge of cruelty to versons, his offense being tho breaking of the leg of his own son, seven nonths of age. A body washed up by the sea at Sanai Monica, Gal., has been identiod as that of Lieut. Arthur H. Skaer. lr . whose disappearance months ago vas a major aviation mystery. -1 hJliuin* U* manrrmjiH It), ten " J rrtirrnm* which I* bring'tig * ktmariii^rrlid. So1<! on inniclail J mon/vtal *uamnte%. "1 PR'.CaESS INFORMATION [j ?for those stiff cxinx from c STOMACH OH tH'OnrN.M. ?( i.i.t.KHS, DO: I o lit vi i? j r AC1UITY ? POOH IMOl ? . I KIN, AOII> I)VSJ'i : . . J NOl'R STOMACH (, \ vv| NESS. IIKAK rih UN, CIAS I 1 fArioN, bad n u ia r i i , si.rr.r LRS.SNRSS OR II KA l>ACIIE S. 1)1 t TO KIUUSS ACID. H Aafc lor a )rw corny of mW< " f- 1 _ V " VeKalb Pharmacy Fort Mill Textile \ Workers Have Farms Captain Elliott W, Springs, ownor of the big textile company with two iiiIIIh at Fort Mill, one of which Is about to bo enlarged by a largo addition, pluns a new living plan for his employes which will certainly please them. The addition to the mill will necessitate many new workers, and he will house them not In a village of houses clustered closely In towu, hut on small farms in the country. The homes for the workers will be built as cottages, each to have about twenty-five acres of land around. On this land, each worker family will be encouraged to grow enough garden truck for the family, and In addition , ,x> raise a few acres of corn or cotion?the corn to feed their own stock. ! This Innovation, by the leading textile magnate of South Carolina, and one of the lurgest textile manufacturers in the South, Is sure to attract attention ull over the country, j -Captain Springs owns a large farm j m ar town which lit will utilize for the new plau. The-location Is so near the mill, thsK^very cottage will he only a short walk from the mill.? ; Yorkville Enquirer. Sentenced To Attend Sunday School Compulsory Sunday school attendance is being required of W. C. Higginbotham of the Merritt's Bridge section of this county after he was con| vlcted in a magistrate's court some j time ugo for creating a disturbance outside a church while services were In progress. Mr. Higginbotham, a farmer, was originally sentenced to serve ten days or pay a fine of $10, but Magistrate U. E. Hutto, upon learning the defendant's finances were not In the best of shape, suspended the sentence and fine on the condition that he attend Sunday school every Sunday for a period of six months with a prepared lesson. That part of the sentence pertaining to the prepared lesson was later suspended by the magistrate when he learned that Mr. Ilig1 ginbotharn cannot read. The Sunday school attendance sentence is being faithfully served by Mr. Higginbotham, who, however, faces another charge of assault and battery of a high and aggravated nature growing out of the affair at the church.? Aiken Press and Standard. C O N SC1 E NCE MONEY History of Fund That Has Long Been A Mystery. I he government's conscience fund dates back to the year 1811, when during the administration of .lames Madison the sum of $5 was received by the treasury department from a person who did not sign his name. He wrote that he owed the Nation that sum. It was credited to "Conscience." Before the close of Madison's administration this fund had reached $250. Since then thousands of persons from all parts of the country, and Europe, who have beaten the government, soothe their consciences by sending money to the treasury department, j Usually the communications are unsigned. Of course, there is no fund known officially as a Conscience Fund. Such contributions are listed in the report of the treasurer of the United States as Contributions from known and unknown." The money is entered on the books as other public money and is expended as though it came from regular channels of revenue. But because they are prompted by consciences, the fund is popularly known as the conscience fund. Reports of the United States Treasurer show that there has never been a year since Madison's administration, with the exception of Monroe's administration and the year 1848, when some conscience contribution was not received. The largest came in during the administration of Roosevelt and Wilson. The total amount received during Roosevelt's administration was $100,160.70 and $106,084.66 during Wilson's administration. The fund contains contributions ranging from a one-cent stamp to $80,000. This latter was paid in a series of four returns from an unidentified donor. The greatest amount received in any one year was $54,923.15 which was paid in 1916, In 1935 it was disclosed that $617,576.41 had been received since 1S11.?Philadelphia Inquirer. Charlotte Man Frank Charlotte, Jan. 23.?Victor Shaw, Charlotte business man mentioned' among friends as possible candidate tor chairman, of the bonrd of county j commissioners, has issued the "best" j Political announcement of the coming campaign. Shaw said 'After giving the matter , consideration and at the insistence j of tm friends who have urged me J not to run. I have decided not to enter the race." The vote of the senate on the passage of the soldier bonus hill was 74 to 16?only eight senators did not cote on the measure. Gas Execution , Called Savage Raleigh, .fan. 26.r-Tb? State of North Carolina, today tried ith brand new lethal gu? system of administering punl'shmenf to criminals convicted of capital crimes, and in the opinion of practically all the thirty newspapermen and witnesses it was perhaps the most gruesome affair seen in the I 20 years executions hare taken place at State's prison. I Described by many us being hellish in the extreme and defended only as to lethal gas by Dr. C. A. Peterson, Republican member of the 1936 legislature from Mitchell couuty, who sponsored the bill substituting lethal gas for electrocution, the execution of Allen Foster, 24-year-old Alabama negro, for criminal assault upon a Hoke county white womau while he was a member of a Civilian Conserva.tion camp, was ^he chief topic of conversation here tonight. Foster died in what-uppeured to he a form of extreme agony and where it takes about three minutes on an average to executo a utun by electricity, it took 11 minutes to dispatch the young negro by lethul gaH, despite the fact advocates of lethal gus contended it Is "more human" than electrocution. Dr. Peterson Is virtually alone in making that contention in the list of' those who saw the execution today. "They ought either to Improve it or abolish it," said Dr. R. L. Carr, legislator from Duplin county, who witnessed the execution. "That was a bad thing in here this morning." Foster, who claimed to have sparred with heavyweight Joe Lewis while a boy in Birmingham, clenched his fl^ts and told the newspapermen as he sat In the chair he once fought Louis. He spoke to them through the thick glass separating witnesses from the condemned and lip reading was In order. After the hydrocyanic achl caused by a meeting of potassium cyanide with hydrochloric acid started envel-1 oping him, Foster appeared to hold his breath for almost q^nlnute and tlion he inhaled deeply only to blow the whitish fumes out of his mouth like cigarette smoke. Twice again he did that but the fourth inhalation saw him slump into the chair. I Minutes passed and he seemed to go into-convulsions. He acted like a man seized with a fit. He retched. The eyes in his uncovered face rolled grotesquely. His body lurched every now and then and for ten minutes at I intervals jt would give a great heave as though trying to leave the chair. The entire execution, including the time to neutralize the gas with ammonia gas, required 38 minutes. It seemed like hours. In death Allen Foster is likely to be talked about for mora in North Carolina thuu if ho wore another Jou Louie. Fourteen hours after Clyde liiggerMtuff in 1926 married hie wife, Myrtle liiKKeratuif. police arrested liltn for violating hie parole from a reforms tory. She uued him for divorce, after having learned that her husband carried on his courtship correspondence through hfs brother in Chicago, while her wooer languished in the reformaTory. Bhfi got her divorce, NO UPSETS The proper treatment for a bilious child tnrii itin r its Riuivma A cleansing dose today; a smaller quantity tomorrow; less each time, until bowels need no help at all, ANY mother knows the reason when her child stops playing, fcats little, is hard to manage. Constipation, Hut whut a pity so few know the sensible way to set things right! The ordinary laxatives, of even ordinary strength, destroy all hopes of restoring regularity. A liquid laxative is the answer, ? mothers. The answer to all your worries over constipation. A liquid can be measured? vhe jjose can he exactly suited to any age or need. * Just reduce the dose each time, until the bowels are moving of their own acc&d and need no help. This treatment will succeed with any child and with any adult. Doctors use a liquid laxative. Hospitals use the liquid form. If it is best for their use. it is best for home use. The liquid laxative they generally use is Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. Any druggist has it. checks ppp colds bob f^r Liquid-Tablets HEADACHES Salve-Nose In 30 minutes Drops f" 1 11 11 DRAYAGE S AND j STORAGE F. R. CURETON Telephone 233-J 1 DAVIDSON INSURANCE AGENCY I Annie S. Davidson I General Insurance I See Us For Accident Tickets I | 1 1 I 522 E. DeKalb Street Phone 190 I We Set tjie Standard For Insurance Service H MEETMEAT I I BROAD STREET LUNCH I ' ON TOP OF THE HILL - ii The Best Nickel Hamburger Anywhere. II Milk?Bottled Drinks?Beer?Ice Cream COURTEOUS OPEN UNTIL CURB 8ERVICE 3 A. M. ' J.C.COX I Sanitary Plumbing and Heating I TELEPHONE 433-J Estimates Furnished on Short Notice ELECTROL OIL BURNERS FIRE?AUTOMOBILE?BURGLARY?BONDS I 3 DeKALB INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE CO ? I o "INSURANCE HEADQUARTERS" ' ^ ' H CROCKER BUILDING?TELEPHONE 7 'i; | ^ M. G. MULLER ELIZABETH CLARKE, Mgr. gS jfl ALL?FORMS ?OF?INSURANCE