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Show SECRECY PREVAILS WV-Have-y. Second Atomic Test Hy WALTER A. SHEAR H With CROSSROADS fit it iri ILkira laionn has l for Ldinb u-.- OPERATIONS HONOLULU, t Vrm Analfii snd e i WASHINGTON.-- A ' te-- e staff of a he was one day to become editor. The office was a four-pag- oid.-re-- l I Imk ii.K.rii, anm- Id : " t j. IV.irl II ir- - .'i.-iu- nil-iju- i. i.ili i ( (( ( :.ii ii .w - ; repairs ! ilariaaii flu- 'M mi H .fJu;i - - ii.u.J- - I. or j Nm'l I cKlrr. I'llit ! II heavy J..p Iij'.'.Vj !..p lilt- - N ii'. i ' .... In, the iilrri:if! carrier h.ualn;,.i, the destroyer M.jr.i.'.t. H.e n'llni iir.i.e I'lliiU'.sli, a tie J.ii iil.iiK tni-.- Ii are ;mi t Failuor i.iil1- II may be tlut Ul.d the 1ilolflsh Other ships mf the tarpt tlrcl have brra placed In variaun position ranging up lu I.KM yardu am ay from I lie blast. and The Ai k.ui.-.i.the li i:.n-ulthe K:igulu all were aa lu super Ururiure in Uic tlist blast. Tl.c Iciis.K-iilp.uliciil.irly suffered heavy d, 1111.0:1.' hi her liie cia. Irul; la r Macks vk re blown tT il ilex buckled. Tli.s and her went al..ud the ciirresKii, after the fii lot ami laiterl drivdecks nnii'l.-.lthat and en diiwnw.il d nli'.iit 111 with such fniee tli.il steel supports bent atli were ilitven llirumjti the teel deck plating like loulhpirks thruuirh li.'per. Am aft Kepurl. There is cunsidei aiile speiMilutlnn as hi the mining report of the Military Evaluation board us hi tlic efficacy of the atom bomb as an offensive weapon in naval warfare. If the board decides that future naval construction must meet the dander of atomic blusls, then we muy expect an entirely different warship of the future. The experience of the first blast Indicate that firepower exposed upon high superstructure Is partictu the heat and ularly blast of at.uiiir power. The siecu-latio- n is that tu meet this threat, future construction will see streamlined warships with low superstructures, enclosed a much as possible, looking something like a modern deisel locomotive with curvrd surfaces to deflect blast. Installation of ventilation systems Iso will be Riven close scrutiny since It was learned that the blast in some cases, partieularly aboard the Pensacola, entered the ventila- - I;.; iTr'v d.nn-age- , a ... Feu-Sarn- 1 In-- wi-i- e . . ' 1.1 i ut lb TFRKIF1C RKII.I.I N('K . . . Camera ratehes terrilie brilliance of atomic blast In this pluits taken Just st time ol detonation of the atomic bomb. e d ticn oiN'niugs and followed the duets below decks, breaking out at the weakest points, shoving through a bulkhead und smashing other in its way deep in the ship. This was partienlarly noticeable in a comparison with the German ship Frlns Fugrn. which has no ventilation system and depends upon row upon row of portholes for ventilation for Its crew. Not a porthole was smashed and no damage done below deek, hut she was admittedly much farther from the crater of the blast than Ihe Pensacola. In reflecting upon the damage done tu the ships in Hie first b'nst, the remarkable Ihu g to lies writer is lli.it not a live mine, shell, hag of pewder or any (ither a Nurd any ship was ex- (doilcd ei'her by Ib.o heat or hi i.force of the bomb. Torpedoes on the Independence exp'-viidue a fire winch finally exploded her powder magazine ar-- her aviulton es su-gl- -t ileli-nate- r j fu-t- o Rats Rom in Defiance of Atomic Death rnduMi-iiv-itDespite dc iths t alum g mama's uh aid tost, ships in ti e ltik'i'i h'.on.c tlie nmmal poi'.'.i'oM ri"i'.i,ns firm the statue ary, I'SS Bnrli op. .1 snip of Task Force I, reveal. To otlsrl the drains fiom a lifter i f rats was born aboard the USS Pennsylvania and the new arrivals were unaffected by the bomb. Originally there fn-o- well-- i t.o-go- Jo-a.- l i hvir-.c- - j 1X1 i goals leg and 3. ill1 while nils phired .(hoard 22 fhu- Poa-:i f target (hot fr "Ml r.iduviCt my arc roiiiuiuii-g- . accord- leg til rebel's f:".'M the l!;:re.in. cf I. To aicui s t'iU. an::-:.:- : i. the id per ci.--.r riady h.n s i e r The liiCo ("g. f.iu ii s i:u:viiic ted aid Lind a(:,r :i.kii'g of Hie Sukawa. is ed tu be still alive Rat Were Menace Holly-woo- To Sun-Vall- ' Cite Health Some time ago I had occasion to mention the invasion of Washington by rats and how the city hired a modern Pied Piper who has done an effective, if silent, job. This was brought to my mind recently when I encountered a fat, black cat on my way to work early one morning. Tlie cat had a guilty look, and I had a hunch he had spent the night in riotous living and was merely sneaking in to change his collar However, tlie cataclysm caused by the in which, believe It or not, a baby's hand was eaten brought hasty action and I see that it was considered worthy of com-nient by experts, including the editors of the magazine of the Amcr-- . lean Museum of Natural History. The campaign began when a case of typhus which is spread by fleas and mites on rats, was discovered Traps set in the neighborhood caught a number of rats whose blood was The United States Public Health service got busy, shocked to learn that the scourge uf Europe two centuries ago was a possibility right here in our fair capital. An expert was called in. He first sealed up all points where corr.mer- cial transportation entered the city. Then 300 traps were set up in the zone where the Infection had been found. Five days later the traps were taken in and the area was thoroughly dusted with DDT. the insecticide which the army perfected. Next bait was distributed. It kills rats, but not pets or n 1 typhus-infecte- ; red-squi- ll .. S . In 1940. 50 millioD votes; o. yi BARRS "'U- - .f ,1, iiiinssiouwwooiisiiJ 11,1 Mount Borah, 13,W5afert, Idaho's highest mountain. k 1WI ST. ()Ppo7 Concrete Block Machined ,, Fait, hund oprr:-r$n S:Kd eat S"K,!,N n;ilt h si't? BUSINESS f , ,, . Uni War Profiteering Will Be Scandal IXSTKl 1 1 l(i LAI) IKS Book of 3no The juicy scandal uncovered by ey mid ttmv K.ititif li..j n'ii' ?.! "2 the senate war Investigating com-- HAKOLD C. miltee In which "profiteering at Its MlSCELI.AM.oig worst," as Senator Mead called it, HZ m V AMI s was exposed. Is. I fear, only the be- - Office Fllll.ll'.l'r. i lie, Machines. S ,tc- f ginning. SALT l.AKk 111. Any moment I expect to hear an IS Wl Brass. y. M, explosion in connection with surplus j War breeds waste, and property. the cloak of patriotic endeavor as A Safe, Sound Investment Samuel Johnson Indicated even more bluntly, often covers skulldug- - Buy U. S. Savings Bondi! gery. The same thing happened after the last war, and on a smaller scale, after all wars. But what la prob- ably making people squirm all over Washington is the revelation of the fact that telephone wires were pretty generally tapped, and heaven knows what may be in the FBI fllei. It Ii a strange thing about the telephone. People have just come to take for granted that because you can't see anybody on the line, nobody is there. I wouldn't be surprised to learn that telephone conversation! with most of the government departments are being recorded right now. I have reason to believe that when the question of Installing these recorders in the White House was brought up, it was flatly turned dowm. White House employees have long and excellent record for fidelity. Of course they ere carefully screened, and when the campaign to get everybody fingerprinted (an excellent idea if you have nothing to conceal about your past and no plana Now cream positively Hop fur an future) wai underarm Perspiration Odm begun, the White House employees voluntarily came forward and ofon 1. Nat stiff, not ipraA Jn fered their thumbs, fingers and Uka msishias emuu I Dab it -- ador ! hands for the 1 Actually sooth ins Yudors con Is wri risbt liter ahavias-Wont rot delicate fabrics, When the People : , j j n om dab KEEPS P QIaWAY r nwsnr-Yud- ink-pa- A Xacpfl soft I Yodora does not disk hair waste: irors far. Tbt hot climate teate-ma- dc br rare this daintier deodorant keeps ute arms hnmaculateip sweet under tbr nwt eerera conditions. Tit Yodorsi Is tnbw w IoUIm jars lOf, IOC. SOf. McKesson Inc Brtdsvpoit. Connecticut. Vote, They Win The June Economic Outlook," published by the Congress of Industrial Organizations, contains an article entitled "When the People Vote That might be inThey .Win. terpreted in more ways than one. The article points out that an "off year" is so designated politically not only because the presidency le not at stake, but because the politicians know that general apathy on the part of the voter has marked those elections in the past: 1938 (off) thirty million voters went to the polls; (1940 (on) fifty million voles; 1942 (off) twenty-eigmillion; 1944 (on) forty eight million. The CIO takes the attitude that what the people as a whole want ia what thi-(the CIO) want, aad that the people get what they want when they vote for It. They say: "Mass registration and mass voting is the best guarantee of liberal progressive government." They might also add that if you want conservative rather than liberal progressive government, you have to vote for it, too. In any case you can't get what you want unless (you go after IL The Outlook" prints a table showing how the vote shifted in certain district in The table showed that when the vote fell off. It was the Democratic vote. Districts which swung from Democratic to Republican candidates in most cases shifted with a decrease in the total vote . . . "the Republican vote remaining relatively stable, while the Democratic vote dropped sharply." Does this prove that Democrats are sleepier than Republicans, or that the Republican is a creature of habit? 1942. 21 The big man rum Texas who knew hew to say it wi'.h Hour, get tired uf saying no tu CPA. . ; cm YODORAi DIODORANT CREAM , ' JUST A DASH IN HATHIRS ORfSPRIAD ON$R0OSTS , lll(H 1OI0II0W LAXATIVI GET A 25 I0X thffii&all One Of The Creates Here OiOODfROH YOU CAN BUY If you lack BLOOD-IROfou (iris and women arm from elmple anemia that Tf'J f. aS weak. "druKEed out" ihu v ? bo n to lark of blood-iro- n Plnkhsm'e TABLETS ore "f l; nI . '''j' borne waya to build up - ' eet more strength in endhsm'e Tablets are oi-- e of u.' :,v blnnd-lra- n tonics too r" 4 30 W Foe You To There is an eld Spanish proverb that "Make s bridge of silver lor a flying enemy." Maybe the Um'.ed Nation could get rid of Franco that way if they can't find ny other. ku: - CLASSIFIED DEPAj T M ENT i KPcfnepMSs, WorJaWell 9 5 i''u V LSSJ WNU ' radui-activit- w'-'t- ' year-nroun- j 4xv- - L, make-believ- No city was ever more magnifl-- I ccntly planned, or more discredit-- ! ably neglected in its eurly days, as Mr. Noyes description indicates. To- day, as the undisputed capital of the world, it still has to battle grudging congress fur its budget. It remains the chief city of the greatest democratic republic whose 838,000 citizens have no voice in their own government and whuse citizen-- j ship itself Is bar to the basic priv-- i liege of a democracy the ballot Mr. Noyes was, as is the news- paper he aerved, a Washington institution. He will be remembered for his lung campaign to give Wash-- ; ingtun a vote in cungressiunal and national matters. pii-.- j t beets thrive and alfalfa grows luxuriantly. Cuttle and sheep are fattened on rich pastures and in feed lots, and dairy herds are found everywhere. Only recently has Idaho come into prominence as a playground and recreation spot for peuple who are life in cities. weary of It offers d skiing, hunting, fishing, swimming, boating and other sports. Pheasants, ducks and goose are plentiful. There are antelope, deer, elk and other big game in abundanre to assure the sportsman of his kill. From dog rnci's at Ashton when the snow Is deep, to suir.n er boating on rnyette lakes or fishing Tend d'Oriclle, no otty-stale exceitis Idaho in sports of the great outdoors. New York capitalists and d movie stars have found in in the Sawtooth Mountains one of the world's finest recreation spots. In winter, skiing is the outstanding sport, with tobogganing and big game hunting following. In summer, the mountain streams nearby offer varieties of trout, the gam-es- t fish of them all. Lakes and woods in the Stanley Basin afford boating, fishing, riding, hiking and camping. Idaho is a state of mountains, valleys and deserts, variety enough for everyone. The mountain ramie include Cabinet. Coeur , gf d'Alene, Beaverhead I3;lter .Meifib. aOM Boot in the north: Salmon River. Sawtooth and Lost Rivers in the SALMON KIV1K . . . Highwav renter of Hie state, and the Bear. along the ranyun. The Salmon Is r.Iuckfont and Snake River mounknown as The liner of No Kc-tains in the sou'heast, with the Teturn." ton along the Wyoming line northward. 46 feet higher Shoshone Falls camp that became a ghost town, a than Niagara pours its Hood over new community u peurrd, built solrun in Snake idly on the develnpmeiit of Idaho's a horseshoe-shapegreat natural resources. Malm set- River ranyon. Twin Falls is another . tled down, at last, to build its majestic sight, and American and Salmon Falls are also attractive to The northern part of Idaho re- visitors. Idaho offers the unusual claimed logged oT land, to become the one of the mo-- t productive areas in almost unbelievable In scenic the West. Idaho while pair and wonders. The deepest canyon on the plenty i f it" is the slogan of its North American continent drops lumbermen, and yellow grows almost 8.000 feet hclnw the rimrock broad and tall. Idaho's mines yield of the Seven Devils ranges of countless minerals, with mme br- mountains. The Big and Little Lost rivers tumble down from mountain ing discovered each year. The Snake l?:vor valley nml its iwaks to disappear into the porous drainage area has I rosiereJ under volcanic desert, breaking into sunirrigation and reclamation, while light again as Thousand Springs lands beyond the lrr g.i'.ion ditches in the Snake River gorge. Reeert have been ullli.-efor wheat and volcanic action is offered at Craters other grams. New irrigation proj-- . of the Moon, and Mount ltorah. ret are beu g ois-- i ed, and Idaho's highest point in the state, carries corjl limestone on its crest, lifted agricuitiue and livestock from the sea which was or.ee three are thriving miles bilow. Malm potatoes, famous a'.l over The state of Idaho remains a part the civih.'ed wot Id. are grown in desert ml enrich. d by ceuiuries if of the Great Northwest, rich in re- sagebrush mid other (iesi'rt grcwtli Hourres. sure cf it future Tlie front-Milftl" hi es in counties waj s lunched hy the mag.c ef irri- - cr gallon Fven cull pul.iter are new wiiluii Hi border, ready to mount ul l .'ed and made u !o industrial to thunderous zest in the derelap. uleohul. or fed lo hvrsh'ck. Sugar mer.t that seems sure to com. king-dum- s ... 1 d 100-fo- it atMi-.i- , at-.- . who had to be held in check by a long whip and firearms, and it was "positively dangerous at times tu gu intu the al- ley which they infested, leading to the composing room." The town as the boy hud grown ' up in it was a straggling over-- ' grou-country village "with zigzag grades, no sewerage, no street cars, no water supply except from pumps and springs, unimproved reserva-- . dwellings and ttuns, second-rat- e clreeia of mud and mire. That doesn't sound like the na- lion's capital whose budget fur the coming year is $76,755,008 but that wai the way It wai in 1858 as described by the editor of the Wash-- , Star, Theodore ingtun Evening Noyes, who died early this month. He joined the paper in 1877. Except for the Australian capital ' of Canberra which a ruse almost as Camelot at a wave uf Merlin'a wand, there nothing to compare with the bizarre history of city whose site was based on a political deal and no city which hac gone through mine vicissitudes than this ' 1 gasoline, itut on most all the ships ' Were plaeed live mines, lioiiihs, shell were in guns or on loading apparatus, and each ship had a full luad of umiiiuiiitiiin. None of It was exploded and the safely crews which boarded the ships following the blast were careful In their examination. Then the siieeulation goes to the use of lead lining against rock wool or some oilier protection against bent, und concrete or some substitute against neutron and other radioactivity. Opinions Vary. There are twu schools of thought as to the damage likely to oeeur to ship hulls (rum the iiiidcrwuliT blast. Having in mind the fact lliul depth rhnrgcs of presently used explosives have sunk or damaged submarines and heavily damaged destroyers und oilier lighter craft, one school declares lhat the atomic bomb will play havoc with the target fieet and predicts that even rsp-ita- l ships closest to the blast will be capsir.ed und sunk. Others, however, predict that much of Ihe forre of the blast will be absorbed by the water and that, although there Is danger of light ships rapsi.ing. the larger ships will merely roll with the water und their heavier underwater tumor will not be dumur.i-d- . They predict the sufheavily uruiored ships will fer as iniieli underwater damage iis could lie iu!lii-ti-wuh a torpi-dnThis is all in Hie realm of speculation, howevei, and the navy remains mum blumt its own In discussions aboard Ihe Appalachian among scientists and ) eoninirnl hy naval officers, (here is some rra-boto presume that (he atomic bomb as an offenslre weapon against ships at sea is not as e (relive as other weapons, llow-evr-r. its rffertivrness against naval bases would he devastating and a fleet without naval Imbasra would he rrndi-rr' potent. Atoll to Remain, This w rHer lx Unit Ihkinl dahadkasaifcAMt atoll and (Is eocounul groves will be there after the second test is ever HFSFKTT . . . Sagebrush cleared and even after the third bomb schedaway and the magic uf irrigation uled for November or later is applied, the desert produces in lumdicds of (.iHi-mof Idaho's famous potatoes and alher water in tlie ocean outside l!,k:ui crops. We d not export any waves nor lil.H-.some wave may wash do. (ihs. The lurbulonre of wind former the violence nrd Ho, IMy's A over the Island l' find wave Could of its ways, he inferred from do that statement of that Hut the to-- ! which has changed the in only 28 of the 2iW persoits from a joint atuv-p.ivoperation, m ISiM died from which so much stress was put, its cemetery ' natural cauM-sinto strictly a navy show- nod which But the i!evoi of Idaho was is probnh'y col.r-about a half to follow the decline of gold fever mi'.hori dol'.ars a day. !:ki-!will give Caf.len-eherds into pushed tlu-iour military men all the knowledge tlu-will need to piopare for or the territory from Wyoming, and soon followed More kheepmrn against the iiIomuc boM'.h in the if indeed (here is any way Mormon farmers moved northward lure was expanded and The of prep.iring against it. newsboys ' s The Ml SIIKOOM ( I.III II huge mushroom eloud rises ever llikini sluirllv alter the atom bomb was dropped, lids pleture was made by a photographer Hying in a ili-i- ' r 111 mill be nearest the bomb burnt, which, a baa been annuunerd. mill be an unilermatcr dcluna-tiu- t WILLIAMS (javerinir of Idahu (ovi-rnuWilliams was born in I'tah, but msved lu Idahu in 1M17. He was a member of the stale legislature and lieutenant governur before be-- y coming governor in 1M5. liigli-Uii- v g characteristics, he later said, were "sewer gas, rats, dirt, overgrown rowdy AKNOI.I) a Hi. I 3 allillllllf :tt J tiulK-- i y ; i.f li e vl-i.'- l null iiiclii.li- - the 1 .ilt'i ii!j criiNer l'cioii-Cu.a- , '.lie l! k.,j oil pi :ik Is build-bi- whuse notable the snu'li, and from the frnn on tl.e emit to the wnr.'ii Iurilic winds in Trim! lnoK-r.ipi.- y Itm.'.e Viillry. Id. .in. oilers u variety of cluri.-ite- . mid woruhT It has miles of desert mid fmnr.pl.il.le I.. hie l.uidx, but it aisu has more lake than it. mi ti,i i, ever ei.iinti d It has alpinr pear. where Hie lee i.ni si.ow never n.eit, and limni-- i.eated by wmi-- r fm.ii ii .'iiral lint spnm,'4. No inmc romantic and pleas, ml an-- rnay be foul i1 on earth than Idaho. Yet fiom an autom.ii:!i' or Irani window it nmy often appear to be a rolling . a llnfortin.idely the main waile, loiely nr.d eiiH.-land raiiro.nl Hack wander too far ft run reti in.ti beiiiil,f:il spots Id.iho, and tho.--e wiio would kr.ow Hie "linn of liie Mountains" must take the s. and great will be their reward. Idaho is a young slate, with young and energetic jeo-(l- e hand ..f tradiby the They are not haiida-retion, nor restrained by liie ghosts of their aneeslors. Whether liaMpie Mormon descendants, farmers from Nebraska, or reeruits from Hie West roast slates, the peuple of Idaho are living proof of Western friendliness and hospitality, Western progressiveness, and Western determination to harness nature's lesoums for the good if all. The early history of Idaho is hound up with (hat of tlie stales of Oregon and Washington, but its tradition and lure has borrowed much frum the Mormons if I'tah, the cattlemen of Wyoming, und flip miners of Montana. It drew from all its surrounding st.i'es and became Die great melting pot of tlie Northwest. mid Clark expedition, Idahn Following tlie was the hunting and trapping paradise i.f rally ndvtu-tuirrI.aler thousands of persons crossed Idaho by way of Hie Oregon trail, following the Snake river through the desi rt. The ruts of thousands of wagons still remain, but Ihe Oivi'un trail and one of Amer-lea's greatest miglldions added little tu Idaho's development. in In i gold was diseovernl Northern Pacific railru.ui iu.d its the Fierce C'ifv region and hy the rails across the Panhandle in 1H80-8Sfl.Otd) autumn of 18ti2 there were and the Union Pacific Oregon A greater Short Line crossed the southern persons near disrovery followed In the Iloiae part of tlie state in 1882 84. Its ,aln( ,n wdhin a year Idaho City mines and forest were opened comhad a iiopiilution estimated at neur mercially, and Idaho was no longer a wild frimlier. t(), (XXI. At the census of 1870, only of 15.IXXI remained of the s.-irWhen Idaho became a state in miners of the early 60s; but 200 181)0 Its valleys were soon homemillion dollars In gold had been steaded by sturdy stock from the taken uut t if Idaho the greatest Middle West. For each mining record in history for a similar period uf time. It was the Mormons who founded Idaho's first ioriiiancnt settlement l.i I860. They believed they were in lUah when they called Uieir village Franklin and made irrigation a fact in Idaho hv building s canal three and a half miles lung. They also established that year the first school for white children within the present boundaries of the stute. Agriculture made little headway, however, for the feverish Indus- try of thousands exploring the earth (or mineral trrnxnrcs continued. Al-- 1 though the Idaho Territory was in 1862. more lusty years rrvi,t,-Rich gold strikes wer wrre made In the Salmon Hiver ,mI o In H"Ue basin, M' terrain, in the O'eur llooin '"1 elsewhere. towns were erected overnight, and the days were rich in murders and hangings, feuds nisi melodramatic viiih-- v rattle-tra- p teri.pi-r-Ciii-Ii- th-- Hit- - A In li.c tiie.i: ,: a b..r whit- ' boy joined the paper of which migration tf been known to c-.emore than 2,0;C) ini:,5 taken 14 days and tinuous flying, and to have comprised of as 000.000 buttcrfl.es .n Commentator. children who might pick up the bait In places where there was no danger to human beings the deadly The cam- "1080" was distributed. paign was successful. Meanwhile, a clean-u- p of potential premises was started with court orders to enforce it. Today Washing- ton has a complete scientific rat- control program which will cost us about $75,000 annually. However, It still leaves a few rata for energetic cats. WNC Service, 1611 Eye Street, N. W., Washington, D. C. '"1 Ifnte ,. Among the painted lady By BAUK1IAGE .cla-cJuiu- . , turn. one-wa- y : nrl jiroi-eet- sand make mu! which only Features. WNU RE we have Idaho fabulous sunsets, lakes of gold .nuili attendant tari't H-- and at'-iturn rtv.i'juped f r the dreamy, purple mountains; million stars in the icturia-blue have cm dark of it'sp'inili-nt.the sky anil moonlight on the sagebrush; canyons and July 25. Although aiiiiieaiimi to reiaam in JSikmi gorges, sand dunes and crystal lakes; stunted desert brush to the States, several arid towering pines; waterfalls higher than Niagara and duruip, the ir.tt.-- nn so thi-- cuuii rover the arrari;!.fir.i-niief Wu.s t. j.'.ed This m coial by e t! gorges deeper than the Grand Canyon; snow 20 feet deep beint iri.jtJo for to among the pir.es and spruce; farms and cities amidst nature's nun were the navy, however, and ail to Kw.ij.Jein, where they were t ither li an.-- porteil unspoiled loveliness; natural caves full of ice in the hot inirr.eiliately hy air M the Stales or to Ilormluhi, or were desert. I rum the Canadian bolder nn the nnilh to Hie housed alioar press ship App ihuhiaii. t)i Of the 123 flies and n.ct!:, i'r. Worlds Greatest Capital Has Its Seamy Side Too! y EDWARD EMEEINE i wrifHfu4cm. N BAM AndJJere Ships Regrouped for 3 Billion Ilim.-rfl- i A 2.00.,. Mip million; by 1914, 48 ini 4 rB 14 boon every dsy, k, B,ft week, never etoppmc ' waste aistter from ihs If more people e- - s ktdnevs must eonsisico '' -. pine fluid, eseese scuis - million. witter that esnuothe without injury to i -t . bs better aadem-sniwhole system is arwt .( U (uBrtioa properly. J Buraia, srsnty or too ttoa sowetimrs wa-- r. ust .r. f Ii vrouR. You id sy arhs, twudDrhou. H ot? PDir. foltini up Rt V'' Ykhy ool try Baukhate These days, prices rise with the sun. rugs are forecast by Business Week. Anything to mako life less rugged. Nen-iki- frfir.p.B rir,,n.,,l! .'! b " tioa of (he kidnoy flllRb out POWT'IN blood. Tbry rnutaii Got Poau'i today. I At all dnec otoreo. hm (Mine OUBGry OTDT. 'J The t. bacco piants in Maryland look as precise and prim aa if they had been dene up in curl paper each night. I d WM; ,m fj . , I'h? - uc t w e i |