OCR Text |
Show imi .ger and dismay tb mfccuia tahg FiUtokH AttnMMJ Except Suoday. -- Chon Wia .Hl Salt Lake City. Utah. Mamber of Tba Audit Bureau of Circulations. .... BATES. fcUBSCKIPTlON .,, One Week One Month S4n Tear On Tear U paid la advance) .1.0 f Cents Single Copies Utah.' to Idaho. rates shore apply Nevada. Wyoming. Oregon. .tVaabinrton- - Cote-rado. Montana. New Mexico. California and Arisons; o'ber slates by mall per month. Sand remittances and business comSalt munications to Tba peeerat Cake City. Utah. . Address correspondence for publication to tbo Editor. REPRESENTS' NATIONAL ADVERTISING TIVEo j, Cone. Rothenburg A Noee. Inc. New lork City ....1 East 40tb Street 3S4 North. Michigan Avenue Chicago .....General Motors Building Detroit . Cola Building Kansas City ,.3S CocaG lcnn . Building Atlanta .21 Victoria Building St Louis Deo Moines Cl Insuranoa Exchange Bldg .....Y......... S N. 4 ...... ...... ..... ............v - H. H. San Francisco Corter A Co- - .. ...1 Third Street JjjstatLT most resourceful con tractor.;' Beats the laconic mesjage. .railroad lirat; ami tlial means that by the time the engineers are re?dy foe their first train the railtrad of material at the dam-sit- e, road is going to be ready to deliver ft where it is wanted Nothing vrilljbe delayed the project will tnme forward willTeTock-lik- e Already the railroad engineers precision. have their plans ready their little grade-T- h stake! dot the landscape; and ties and rails. ty,n lorrtmotire and cars. wiii soon fol!ow. If, it hard to picture tha fate end progress of a project like this without tha re Hroad. Probably except for that great agency it would never have been undertaken. Certaihly no one could foresee when it would have been finished, nor what it would have cost. But with the railroad on thej Job, men talk with confidence and accuracy as , to the required for it completion and estimate closely its cost, when done. Truly the powers that be are beginning at the right end and have a correct conception of the proper theory of things when they announce the .opening of', the campaign with the message, railroad fifst." Entered at tha postoffico at Salt Lake City as second class matter according to Act of Congress, March 3. " THE PICKERSr 17. Vv SS SALT LAKH CTlY Buchtiter to It notice tha staadr prosriaa of foolish' fashions. Afaion all . and conyantonce. and ia flat contradiction to' tha xpraatd prefsrane of moat woman, tha skirt. after an. grows longer, fluffier, and laa easy to nan--a go. At first them difficultiea war. and axeawd on tha that ' the chan. applied ' only ground la evening wear; hut tha fashions for Ascot hare been aa Inconvenient na anythin that . jcould bo arranfed for th, ballroom,: Snobs and simpletons praise tham as they would praise anything that had been ordained as correct for Ascot, oven boots and though It were elastic-aide- d' n welf;b!sckd bit. OIL) Wednesday some commentator, on- the Ascot apec-- tacle were praising the quaint Edwardian toucheS of tha woman's cosla little county Tha Associated Press is exclusively en- QBEAT Is the fertility of the north of this city Davis. After of all news titled to tbs use for re ' dispatches credited to It.publication or not Othcrwiw cred it gets through with its Berries, then come tied In this newspaper, and also the local nows and its peaches and its tomatoes its cherries. All herein. for repubUcatlon rights published f special dispatches hero are also reserved. and other toothsome products of tree and one EALT LAKE CITY, JULY 9, 1930. vine, making the gathering thereof ceaseless round of pleasure. 'ill Scores and perhaps hundreds of young USE WATER SPARINGLY. people from this city! some of them recently HAT thia paper has been urging and out of school for the summer, others taking emphasizing for lo these many months their vacation from store, office or factory, perhaps to the annoyance of readers who find employment in these.-- . orchards and do not like to be told unpleasant truths fields; helping the husbandman collect his has at last come to pasa;4be city is pul on ripened crop.. The work is pretty hard, the walee relkms and restrictions to lawns, pa.y probably not too munificent, but the with perhaps more stringent regulations to change of employment and the outdoor life; follow as the condition of scarcity ia further are enjoyable and mutually beneficial. Being The simple fact is the eitys so near at hand, most of these extra hands' developed. water supply today is insufficient for the prefer to eome home at night; and this towns proper needs, and this situation will means, obviously, that lots of them will be grow worse instead of better during the lining the highway asking in the evening next few weeks. Many a lawn will look for a ride cityward, and in the morning for brown and dry, many a shrub will wilt and a lift out into the open placet of the day's shrivel, many a pipe will find the contained toil. fluid devoid of full pressure end yet we Perhaps the practice comes under the shall worry through somehow, if the opprobrious term of hitch-hikin- g, yet it demayor's restrictions are honestly obeyed and serves a worthier name, There ia nothing If every householder shall try to gel along dishonorable under the circumstances in Twenty Years Ago. with as little as possible insteed of using asking for a ride, nothing effeminate or in-JILT , JSIO. all he can surreptitiously extract judicious in granting it. We should like to . In (bis case it is A New Tork die patch said that Presipainfuj rather than hear of more drivers, in decent recognition ihe wayfarers dent Joseph F- -, Smith and .Presiding pleasurable to sayrwe told you so. Looking of honest industry,-helpin- g back a fewweeks. lt is almost amusing along a. few miles. They will derive a deBishop C. W. Ntbley, with member, of their families, sailed on the liner bow to recall the silly confidence of certain gree of salisfacliorfrom a thoughtful deed for Dover and Antwerp. They wiseacres who fell that the talk of water well done without a cent of cost or an item : or more. expected to be gone a month with effort! whom befriend baseless Those was V shortage that there always of they bad been enough and always would be, that a quick rida nver a bot bit.ofhis)iway wffl Cons ul.Ed ward LNatJhatt ofMersina there was some sinister motive behind the have a better sense of the innate kindliness reported thst the ancient city of Tarsus where the Apostle Paul was born, increased supplyir If such of humatr nature. - It will assist us 11 to igftation for--ce and which great aeat of persons could beJhe only ones to suffer, gel a better understanding of one another had recently been provided learning, in order to have their lesson deeply im- and to regard the common run of mankind with electric lights and other modern pressed, it would be a matter of simple jus- a tittle more favorably. conveniences. tice.'' But since all must feel, the pinch , BISYBODIES. MEDDLERS ANT) James Martin. an old tima miner, alike, the only thing is for all to be wise, bottom of n was found at th. careful, economical, thus making the incontiiaft in a Bingham Canyon Inine, venience andhardshlp as light as possible, ARIGHT good practice for anybody ia to where ho had been for fiv days aufftr-in- g and owr. hia to mind business and making ibe best of a bad situation. from n broken leg. thirst and starAfter awhile perhaps we shall all come to oot try to mind the business of anybody vation. He was rushed to a hospital. a unity of fhefaith on the proposition that else-- A great deal of unhappiness, suspicion K 'and Mr. R. E. wafer freftokt "wir Lake Route returned, Salt Wells the of themcould b all averted if people bring if, that we cannot grow without more of IT to their homo Jin Salt Lake City from a and that, eost what it may, it is the business selves to adopt this Utopian policy. But for trip to Boston, where They went to enof the present to procure ft wherever pos- many reasons it is doubtful if it can ever be. ter their two sona In a school of techhot sible against the sure demands of the future. Firstly, to begin with, there are thousands nology. They reported extreme of persons who do not have any business weather ln the East, of their own lo mipd. And secondly there CRIME, COSTS J600.000 DAILY At the annual meeting of the Bait are other thousands .who may have what Lake City Federation Of labor, the no own. a serves as business of their but the AT K- - E. Independence Day services in the following officers were elected: Currie, prcsldentr A. H. Burt, ecre- "Philadelphia, church which George mind; so, whileto it Is difficult if notto imposattend find mind enough Washington attended during his stay in that sible for them lary; S. A, Burfchouse. treasurer,. and H- Milton, financial secretary-city, the preacher told Ill's congregation that properly to their own affairs, their very crime. is costing the people of the United inadequacy in this respect seems to emboldtrend toward States 1300,000 per day. A rather conserva- en them to try to meddle alt the more resift - If the present-atro- ng tive estimate, one would say, and yet impertinently with that which concerns the centers of business continues, it will not be many years until nearly all of the people enormous enough to excite the nation to a some one else. ill be concentrated in the cities, and there But ah, the busvbodies! The great problively sense of the necessity of something drastic being done. The pastor himself pro- lem of society is to find some place for will be no .ie toft io till the soil, grow tbe posed nnfmedyi-esrei-f hwy -- eanrnt1 iwtj'iWv tie 'Wtfrift affd TffrtWrirtbF ! tint an) them wiser, th familiar counsel that the American people any good, they wilt do the toast harm; They necessary for nations! existence. This would should "take more lime to reriect on theft are the predominant e.emcn m js,liunp.evf py solve th farm A exveajue.i duties But refiectilg on them tfuTes win enmnmnilv: and Thrv refuse to be elim- but it might also mult in a greater problem, not cure the evils complained of. no mailer inated. Thev have then uses doubtless, for namely, how the necessaries of life could be how much time pious people lake-t- o IL The it. fill d that nothing w;s created In vain. procured. Perhaps, however, even this diftrouble is. there is too much theorizing and But for any useful part they play in the, ficulty would be overcome by the prnduc- not enough action. The original inhabitants genera! scheme of things, or.e.hasdo search Bon of concenirated fooilj'in tablet form bad f be. habit of taking. Ibefr. flintlocks with far and rhartfahly, and after '11 Is wsoaHy Thus preycniicg the neceasiSy of doing cookthem lo church, and it was said to be their of tb ing and ofher disagreeable custom first lo fall upon their knees and present day. then to fall upon Ibe redskins. A paraphrasing of these practices and their transHOOTR AND CONGRESS. lation Into earnest modern efforts would; Thoc who. taking the noise emanating help much In clearing the atmosphere. Anyf from the Capitol at Wahinglon tor an inamount of moralizing and piaiiluiiinizing in OVEMEXT of population to the rities dication of what was going on. have con1 has been unusually rapid, during the cluded That church Is Idle and inconsequential compared President Hoover was being 'wHh in pDSTh-ins- ? thwarted Try Congress and "particularly' the display Senate at every turn, are due for a surprise the a,t every turn arji makwhen they make a candid examination of ing him realie that thetanfire moral a wn (he rerord of the session just roed. This as physical force of the community is arrecord show: that the President' legislative him. Fix hurntoel thousand rayed against program has been carried through more fnt !v. probablv. than Tha t of any PreridenUTn dollars' worth of that kind of eff ort would years: that he bg won on nearly everv suffice, in even the worst mvcfAtre maior measure, that hi defeats were few would seem that the great majority of Ihe munifier, for many day. srd inronequen!iel. and that ns a leader inhabitant of the rountry are so strongly of hi party and hi nation, th President, FIRST THE RAILROAD. attracted by city life that they are deter- desnite hie muet method and hi anneae-ab- re nf nol taking an active part, has obmined to live where Ihe great while light tained newel v everything" he sought Iw 0 attempt to construct aueh a- colossal heat down upon the pavement. Gone Angel es.Times... .r "I s wag-tra- li-fo- ot tt . -- 1 e I - i "A If - lor the Light Is the Darkness. Iraito-"portali- on with It patch of garden safs. hillfb if cow and chicken and oi g. j! ndwood. that were always considered uch fascinating atlrkclinn in The coyritrv-'dAmericars are hifidinc farewell To the' life that made their, ancestors slrong and Feemingty a great majority art' content towork f or others instead of ownhrs rail point ever the -- desert wastes 'that help lands and raising their wp provision tretchbetween,the,4resit. track jintJ llip Thera I rompUjirjihout.a. large .cilj.ri.toh canyon brink, would be a problem to stag- - the average individual apparently cannot wrde-nrca- (Copyright. ISIS, by King Feature Inc--) ' There EyndicxU, Is ' so realty- - important sews lor you. thia Monday morning.' except that Mrs. Tnornton, no run the'Gunning River poul-tr- y farm!-nea- r BarnoaAl, N. j.. not far 'from the Lakewood telograpb oilice where thia is written, say aha gain IS per cent1 more oggo uy turning on tho radio ia the hen houae. at three a.ra. - so Science sxya it is simple. The hen gels up earlier, because ebe Ukeeibe music, or more probably, inleltigent creature, she buries her ears In 'the straw of her neat and lays an egg from habit. With elec- -, trie, light turned on them until late at night, and music starting at S nm., tho hen can sympathise with tbe modern American buxines man. ii.,, It e e e la always dangerous, however, that there te no important shooting at Fontainebleau one day to my new. Dooix the Dixtventir wem toward tho end of tho eighteenth century. Hal .shot nothings and wrote In hie diary the one word And Tien, meaning nothing. that day, as it happened, was the July It on which tho Bastille prison wee torn Cows, starving tbs revolution that cut of Louis bead. He would not have written Tien" could he have 'looked ahead, poor man. Mrs. Emily Newell Blair, eight of th Demnational committee, sees llsht In the darknesss, sailor. She thinks Mr. Hoover will pot run again, in 1)23. Coolidgo or Morrow will be nominated, tariff and not prohibition will be the and maybe a Democrat will bo elected. - o It b a big "maybe"; and tariff wilt not push prohibition out of first place. The tariff, for the average man. b a matter of theory, vague, like the Monroe Doctrine. Prohibition is a matter of fact, and opinions concerning it are definite. years ocratic a a Many workers believe that it has something to do with tho present lack of jobs. They cannot exactly te! why. but "times seem to have, been better when there' was no prohibition." And only a little while ago, with everything booming. saving banks bursting, wages going up. you were told that prohibition had done all that. Others believe that excessive income tax, discouraging new enterprises, encouraging government extravagance with its annual billions of Intake, put a damper on national effort. BoiBething-seeto he wrong fer the moment, and nobody knows what or why. When all went wett,- - everybody could . - -- ms Getting even with the States" to not simple. Our tariff annoys Europe, and Europe would like to retaliate-Bu- t see how'T Italy raised her tariff on automobiles to Impossible I ghts. We nearly all of repe, price cars, so thatsesoe4 to have mads arfor manula .luring ia la understood rangement ttnly,- long . EurA French authority say ope nations must work together, for, "it one day it comes to commercial competition between tbs United States on tbe one hand sad a number of competing eta tee of Europe not united og the other, the prosperity of Europe will bo ended." George E. SixtbtkA of Buffa.o, by trad end phiioepher by and profession, made an oak barrel, got in and went over the Horaesuoe Falls at Niagara, to hia death. One of bis another Grees more than Z.OOi years phUeoopber, - of age, jumped riatoslbe-crater- Vesuvius, disappearing Zorevori-o- r at least until the Judgment day- He wanted to Impress th multitude, and like the man that "fir-e-d the Ephesian domw bo has been more talked about than men more deserving.. eh ambition store MAY Believe it BX GLEN FUAXK. . of Wtocunstn saf F Cent ary Msgsrlnr, have just spent aa engaging d with one of the meet interesting and significant Americans of this generation. As America s Ambassador. In turn to the German Republic and to th kCourt of St. James, Mr. Houghton has brought n Incomparably dear and courageous to the pubilo service of hto time. He emerged from th war period uniquely free from th hatred and hysteria that soiled th spirit of so many statesmen. After rear fateful years, li which Western civilization came near to social suicide, he played a rale et nistoric significance In that restoration of the world's faith which was even more important than the reconstruction of the world's frontiers. In a politically minded post-wworld, when men around him were blowing lustily upon the hot Brodte. of , - ar revengo to eali-the- m into Edita of tho Hams, ho took quiet counsel of the simple human aspiration of peas- ant and th superior social wisdom of prophet. H remembered th essential unity of human interests in th midst Of a thousand subtle temptations te conscript mob emotions la tbs faneiod . interest of The tribal gods of race and nation. Ho substituted th direct for tho devious in diplomacy. Th eompolling candor and constructive common nano of his ministry In post-wEurope did more than any ether single fore to prepare th soli tor such financial and oeenomto agreements as tbe Dawes end Yeung Plans which corrected the more manifest maladjustments of the peace confer-enc- e and brought th beglpningi of order out of the chaos of wars af, termath. As a privets clltsen. ho remains an ambassador to the consclence f msnktnd. plesding egsinst of tho Jingo. and aligning himself with the forces that are seeking to set up worktoe able guarantiee against th facile recurrence of ware I find a deal of satisfaction la painting this Impression tat lo .por- trait of Mr. Houghton, because think no chano should1 be loot te emphasise the importance in th effairs ef our tint of the sort of loederabln groundsd In intelll-gen- e end free from th distortions of prejudice, pension, and partisanship which hts career so admirably exemplifies ( Gopyrighf, McClure Newspaper Syndicate.') ar - I' eur land, known aa th. Brooklyn gained fame and Urge receipts for hie saloon ob the Bowery, running no rtok at H-- Hia friends threw WORTH THE .MONEY n It cost Nw Torlf 30.004 to clean dummy off the He was waiting in the up 14 tons of paper and- - ticker bridge. water to be pl.Led up. tape from tho street, after' the wel come to Admiral Byrd. That much Reporter that knew did not money and a greet deal more may care to spoil a story and disap- wall be spent if It will give people vivid idea that peace baa victor, point Brodit, so he spent th rest of hto life, telling Ewery visitors lea greater than those of war. Too' from the country that every man long we- have made the warrior tha should take a chance once, symbol- of heroism. The AchieveHe wont ever Niagara Falls In ments of peer can be aa conspicuous end as dramatis as those of was name A fashion. the dummy put in the barrel, while he, below battle. Without war there is still the FHs, waited to similar bar- enough adventure lit The world TO rel to be rescued- satisfy even , youth. Among women fliers. American THIS MEANS CS but On reads girls shine as individuals, that America's na-- : have not taken to flying on n big scale. Only 203 American women tionat income provides about a month available for sa have licenses to fly. only 34 have 0wn at one time more than ten whetherTh troubleor with statistics,'to pleasant unpleasant, hour. British women take flying more seriously and enthusiastical- that ws do not niaks them apply to ourselves and net accordingly, in ly, perhaps because British girls hav fewer other forms of excite- many cases, of course, saving is an impossibility. In most cases th ment. failure to save ia merely a bad habit. Britains air heroine until last J week was Amy iohnson, 23, who NEED TO GROW VP. flew alone. In a small Moth Gipsy Moral maturity Is what America! plena, from London lo Australia. PICTURES This week all Britain is cheering need, according to Chancellor Winifred Br.iwne. She best all the Brown. New York university. We' ... on time, every time men. including the Schneider stars, need maturity to grappl with Britain's greatest aces, mile flight around won th Kings cup. No woman had1 poverty. Women who know men ! we pride ourselves on, it ever dona that. better than they know them-- ! whea you bring is this: Mias Browne, who to !( years selves say that men are -: litother filers. Ue boys grown tail. Mostonly old, beat eighty-seve- n of us your rolls of film to us to are little in our minds. We! France owns two tiny Islands, want what boys be developed we want when we went you get hemes of hardy fishermen, St. It. Without without rea-- 1 them back exactly when Pierre and Miquelon, off the New- on. Real logic abTmeans a maturity grown foundland coast, and tbso islands Up mlpd. It is a hard plant to promised. worry our so celled dry nation. - It needs, a greet deal of herd Canada cut down on. whisky growwork, study, cultivation. Yet we are careful. Such shipments recently 1 request, nnd immediately, the little French isskill and craftsmanship lands began receiving 'and ship- because they cant gel anywhere re used in our darkrooms ping to us. 3 i.M9 case ' of whisky when they're wet. Much ilk our per week. humbugs. that a" e e you are sure to get ,FTance promises to see what shs Senator Caraway Is glad he isnt the best possible prints ran do about It. Perhaps the best Bishop Cannon, whifh teaches us reply to our tariff, if they really that everybody can think of every time. And theyll want revenge, would bo ti flood alyyt-v- . bridge-jumpe- r, -- a .0 ; YOUR a -- Si j' -- ,'.'1 tor, he,yqYrh?E.tTthe - well reply lo our If tho Methodists run the counofficial protest: If you cannot But France complains and says keep your people from whisk try. isasit tbs Menckenites charge, to Italy: We must have legal to play e game tba: some drinking, bow do you expect me why ... requires repentance? earefuily worked out general plan. to do it." e Your new lari, hurts us." e Eome marriages dont last for Unci 8am. with hto drink. Is Ford makes an arrangement like Fleet's farmer that yoked the seme reason that big dinner with the great Isotta Fraschini himself up with a hull calf and doesn't appeal to one who has Motor company and wilt make his went galloping down hill shout- nibbled sweets nil day. e ear inside tbe Italian tariff wall, ing. Stop us somebody, darn our in Milan. tool souls! It to hard to chang I had Correct this sentence: Mr. Sloan! of General Motore, mens habits by law, been petted by forty others." said . she. but I got a great kick out of my marriage." very best amateur PARAGRAPHS " ROBERT - ' 3J paper. Tiro Kodak Hours WoaUy at 10 Thursday night AlJf, so'-- and other stations Friday night KO.i, and other stations KDYL at iO.-I-i EASTMAN KODAK STORES, INC. 315 South Mem Sheet QUILLAM Success: The result of knoning less man has e pise ef authority. But fortunately it doesnt happen often. Low. brows have a great advant age at their parties. They neednt to- - tbmk qaa noother rSiltff fie'power'of witty. lectrie lights until you visit New .. York. This to stoo true ?f Isreel- - , Tba chief oMecUon to trlnl Mirxst is that its n polite synonym ' tor something else and doesn't exToo dont hear modern mothers press it very welL a Precious calling their offspring Lamb. 8heep are easy to lead. rget-dran- marriage Vlrhnlx Murray Bml.r SJI there are no great pbiiosopbers now. This to one item that appear In Mr. Menckens He Preferred :to Bathe Alone wont Am- ericana." Tbo new fountain pens are almost flawleaw but they sUII have that old habit of writing IE" tor "E r. AmericktrtsrarArrtm dot arm) na tlon to exterminate foolish radicals: an indifferent acceptance Latins seldom make great golf-rs- . of organised murderers. it's s great handicap if yoa A politician ia a man who doesnt must drop your club to address tbe . know whst be stands fog until he balL a discovers whst the psepla will fall Theres some trick In everythin. for. s Tba districts that gained, in popus lation get another Congressman. Going to church on Sunday Is a a . , novel experience. The man . tn - A rknlc Is Just an ordinary per- front of yon doesn't fill roar lungs son who doesnt believe Amos an with dirt Andy gvt that much- Tho locusts, thst Infest the Holy Pity ordinary men when a stn- - Land dry themselves in the open . os ; ! Clean people jut don't have roaches around their homes in bathrooms or in kitchens. They (pray Flit into cracks and crannies and behind baseboards. .FUt is guaranteed (or money back) to ha quick-deatto flies mosquitoes, moths, roacheti bed bugs and other household insects. Yet Its npot is harmless to humans. Flit kills quicker if you use the special inexpensive Flit Sprayer. Insist on Flit, and dont accept A substitute. Get yours h clean-smellin- g I Spray cleansmeliii fUmAr nrnof. fjjere are some recent "radnate who will turn out to h i'i(. a important a they now fee!. Fort Wayne i . ; ews-Snt1- nt. v week-en- .wit?fe,wbi France might ' dr e. self-relia- THIS MTRACtE 'f FiaMdml of Calvacaity I By Arthur Brltbant "... of men, materiais and supplies, would be to augment iU co? ) jmjnyuel.v-i- f not indeed lo makeit impo!.sible, and would defer well nigli indefinite! the date of ita The hauling, of the giganlic eomptolion. machinery, and the necessary millions of -- tSBs of Cement-ajjd a leet.- rest -- ALANSON BIGEL OW HOUGHTON. Getting Even With U. S, A, Mr. Slathakis Barret ' ; -- -- lift) ' Interastlbk but, mtancholy the beautifully flowing tumes and the that had vanquished' draperies 'long straight Uu"' and now flplahod at tha ankles In a foamy mass.' It matter, little that a year or two ago tba asms sort of writer would have bean xu ding superlatives over the chasta and distinguished simplMty of - tba short sklrt; inconsistent fashion demand Inconsistent followers as a matter of routine. There, wxa. however, ona note of criticism; the wonrara of IhSM foamy masses had not yet learnt to walk gracefully in them; they were, ta ,ehort. justly hampers! by their ab- asrd garments, but when q slow, dignified mode of progress has- been attained the dress pageant will apTo put the case proach the Idea!. more brutally, when the chain-gan- g has forgotten what it was like to be free their fetters will maks a bettar line In the picture. It so happens thst yesterdaj's weather at Ascot provided a moat notable warning against the , folly of fetters; when tha delugo earn Jtnwn the wearers Of them could not move fast enough to- - shelter, end their soaked and ellnglcg draperies foamed; In fact as well as fancy. This ought to be an object lemon against a sense lees return to quaint' Edwardian touches." When even the idlers of n public spectacle can be caught by the unwisdom of their ew. attire, what folly it will . bo if such fashions. can be foisted off oa women who have a working place ia tha world affairs. V Hens and Music v - - Y Guardian.-- -- -- JULY AvtlT-.'it-iSDA- Chained to the Wheel. h..- eight-years- JS'K F A bousehoTIpreparatIon for half a century. Those who know the secret of Ain ' ; NAURU. NERVOUSNESS. frow-Thfr-ne- It would help gome 'perhaps if -- the French could be brought to reahre ihat thev are the only u?es who jumo when Vujsoliqj blow off steam. Detroit Free frees. . . - ' nd Ointmentregularly to keep the jAin and acaJp ia good condition. . They alio find Citicara Talcum ideal for every znarsher of the family, Naoke Zj TlieWolldt Selling Insect ewmsuamnm 1 |