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Show • 'Y • WHY==== Bit Circus Has Cut Out There will be no more whips lash· lng out at angry animals In the center rJf the ring. Because parents object to their clJ!ldren seeing men and women enter cages with wild beasts, Ringling ~rothers and Barnum & Bailey announce that henceforth they will present no wlld·anlmal acts either In the garden or when. under canvas, the circus takes to the road, comments the New York World In an editorial. Congratulations arrive from the bu· mane societies, Mr. Charles Ringling says, For the humane societies havP. long disapproved of the cruelty of wlld-anlmal training; disapproved of whips and forks and heated bars. The lions and the tigers of the Ringling show retire from the arena, now, to thot:e small steel cages which give them a foot or two of headroom. They Join the ranks of all those other beasts In public zoos, equally fortunate in not having to perform In publlc; free to spend their days in Iron boJro:es with 18 inches to spare at either end for elbow room. Man, having conquered his competitors on earth, displays them behind bars, Why? So that by watching them In nn unnatural environment, and by shucking peanuts on their heads, and by goading them with sticks when the guard Is not around, he may study wild life at first band and add to the &.tore ot human knowledge. Scotland Forever Jean entered a butcher's shop In a little town In Scotland and demanded to see a sheep's bead. "Is it English?" she asked when one was shown her. "No, lass. It's Scotch," replied the butcher. "'!'hen it'll no do," said Jean. "llils. tress Is English and she said l was to be sure and bring English meat." "Here, Jock!" said the buteher, tossIng the sheep's head over to his aslrtstunt, "take the brains out of that, will you?"-Vuncouver Province. Two Optimiats • . Two bikers passing a motorist on the road: "How tar Is lt to Roch· ester?" "Seventy miles," he replied. "Not so bad,'" laughed the optimists, "only about thlrty·five miles apiece." -Transportation News. lt'a Darned Hard, Though The act of getting riches consists ver)' much In thrift. All men are not equally qualified for getting money, but it Is ln the power of every one alike to practice this vlrtue.-Frank· THEJORDANJOURNAL,MIDVALE,UTAH f~ENGH ENVOYS DISliKE OffER IS NOT WANTED [MITCHELL TALK' "Animal Acts" I FORT COMMANDER FORBIDS OF· FICERS TO DISCUSS AIR DE· FENSE OF U. S. FIRST PROPOSAL IS REJECTED BY DEBT COMMISSION AS UNSATISFACTORY Brigadier General Castner Lays Down Drastic Rule; Sharp Utterings Make Bolshevik!; Air Witnesses A~p Divided Service United States Said To Demand Higher Rate of Interest And Larger Payments Than Those Offered By Frar.-.a El Paso, Tex.-Discussion of the air defense of the United States was placed on the forbidden liS't of officers by Brigadier General Ca,stner, commander of the First cavalry division of Fort Bliss here. " Any officer of my command who talks about the air controversy will be court-martialed and put where he will never again be able to talk," Castner declared in a statement to newspaper men, who sought information as to the condition of the aerial equipment of the fort. . 1'1ed cr1•t•ICISm . t o the "ta lkCas t ner tmp " f c 1 1 W'll' policy o o one 1 tam M'tch 1 e 11, · 'ti "Th . 11 b army rur crt c. ere WI e no 'Colonel Mitchell' on the Fort BIH;s . " h e sa1'd . "Th'1s 1'd ea of reserva t ton, . l e tt mg a b unc h of off'Jeers run · · th . a ro Un d th e coun t ry cn•t•Iclzmg etr · d , k It superiors oesn t rna e an army. makes a bunch of bolsheviki in uniform •" h e sal'd ' "D. . r . th fi t tl . th J~C!p me lS e rs ung at a soldier s~ould learn. ~s lon.g as I am an officer no one Js gomg to t lk 1 11 h' h , th un es~ I te 1m e may, e a general saJd. 'Vashington-The Americ:m counter p.roposal for funding the French debt has been laid before the French debt Commission and from indications it was very disappointing to the French. After consulting President Coolid.ge a: the cab'inet. m.eeting and th~n wtth ~1s debt co~mtssion colleagues m a pnvate meeting. Secretary of the Treasu~y Mellon. l~1d the p.ropo~-al before Fmance Mtmster CaJl!aux in a brief session. . . The French miSSion, headed by C~illaux, spent o;tlY thirteen. ~inutes Wlth the. American commiSSlODCrs, b . . , emg dism1ssec as soon as the counter offer had been reac1 and then h d d t th aAn e th F em.h d 1 t filed out s e rene e ega es d' · t t of . the room, 1sappom men was . . plamly written on their faces. They d d t t • t d seeme owncas a wna appeare t b fl · t' f th · fi t teo e adt trheJect~ffon errt rs rms an e s 1 agreemen prod b th A · pose y e mencans. The American commts·swn continued in session for a short while afte .... F ·h 1 ft r vue rene e . Undersecretary of the Treasury Winston said after the French left j that the negOtiations "were proceeding in the usual manner of the offer and counter offer." He added, however, that there was no sign of a break up of the negotiations, and that as• a consequence all continued harmonious. N 0 official version of the experts estimated that the Americans would demand at least $120,000,000 a year, after an initial period of reduced payments and, furthermore: informed the French that the period of reduced payments which the French ro osed P p . was completely out of harmony w 1th American ideas on the subject. Th F h ff t 1t d · t et. relnc 0 er tcon femp at e merna 10na paymen & o no more tl1an $90 ,000 , 000 a t t h e h'1gh est, b ut an . Btg Seaplane Forced Down Astoria, Ore.-The seaplane PB-1, enroute from San Francisco to Seattle was delayed b~re by engine troub~e. The giant Bpe!ng plane, which onginally was destgned to fly to Hawaii from San Francisco, was forced down at Ilwaco, Wash., a litle more than two hours after leaving Coos bay. The plane was towed here later. Trouble with. the ~orward engine causfld the landmg. Lieutenant Comma~der J. H. Strong sent to San Francisco for a complete new motor. The PB·l is t S b · t d t th f t emg re urne . 0 e ac cry a eattle for repatrs. Commander Strong hopes for a chance to attempt the rr· , . H awa 1Ian 1ght early nen year. I I - ------------· FIXTURES For Estimates on Bnnk, Store, Church Fixtures Show Ca•es and Cahinet Work. Write ' S..lt Lake Cabinet & Fixture Co. U Richar<lo Street Salt Lake City, Utah. BARBER COLLEGI:!S ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Learn Barbel Trade. Catalogue Fre<:o OiploiWII luued. Wole1 Barber Collo1e, 114 lUcent S~ 15 SATISFACTORY li-'j~~~? TO TINKER W TH THE I PRESENT SCHEDULE WILL BE CAUS; I FOR FIGHT ~AMY OBSERVER ALBA IGHT T~lKS S~YS MOTO~ rJUIT ON PARK NEEDS TWO ENGINES OUT OF COMMIS· YELLOWSTONE PARK OFFICIAl,. SION ON THE SHENA~DOAH GVES HIS VIEWS ON PARK WHEN CRASH CAME EXTENSION Barograph Shows How Dirigible Con- Declares That State of Wyoming Will tested Heavy Winds For Half Not Suffer If Proposed Land Is Hour Before Being OverTaken Within The Bound· ary Lines come In Air Lakehurst, N. J.-A failure of two Salt Lake.-The proposed extension of the engines of the Shen- of Yellowstone national park, which andoah probably was a primary will embrace 200,000 more acres of cause of the destruction of the ship, Wyoming territory including the famin the opinion of Colonel C. 0. Hall ed Jackson Hole and lake region, was, " advocated by Horace M. Albright, suarmy ob;;erver on board. during the fatal flights, as given here to the na.. pcrintendent of the park, in an adval court of inquiry. dress before the c~amber of commerce Had all of the engines been func- here. tioning, Colonel Hall said, it would H e d ec1are<1 th a t th e ext e!'lsron . . IS have been more probable that the ,. t great airship would not have been contemplated as a means to auJUS drawn into the vortex: of the storm pak boundaries to conform with topwhich wrecked her. 'ographical conditions, throwing into "I do not believe, however, that th~ park certain areas drained by engine power had anything to do' waters tha~ flow into it. and throwing with the &ituation after \re got into out areas that naturally belong to adthe vortex of the storm," he said. jacent forests. The Shenandoah fought the line The proposed plan, acocrding to squall in Ohio. September 3 for at Mr. Albright, has been pending ten least half an hour before she broke years the land having been first with~p, the barograph instrument recor~ dra~ by President Woodrow Wilson ·' d b ef ore th e nava1 court or·· m t rouuce d t t' d b p 'd t ·mqlllry, · an .1a er sane wne Y resr en· s h ows. . • Th'IS recor d es t a bl'IS h es th a t th e Hardmg. . He said that the Ian: 1 lil . ship began its firS't rapid ascent at now a~mm1ster~d by the department 4:26 a. m., central time, rising from of agnculture and the only transacan altitude of 1850 feet to an alti. tion involved to make it a national tude of 2980 feet in eight minutes. park is to have it transferred to the The craft then leveled off, but two department of interior. , minutes later at 4:36, she shot up Mr. Albright said that consideralmost like a rocket from 3016 feel able opposition has been aroused in to 6065, in approximately ten min· Wyoming, based upon misrepresentautes. tions made by certain interests who Her ascent halted at this altitude fear that the state will lose taxable at 4:40 a. m. The Shenandoah then lands, that there will be an exten· fell abruptly 1765 feet in three minsion of a monopoly and that fees utes, bringing up at an altitude of will be charged for entrance to the 4280 feet. territory. He added, in answering At this point the barograph, ceased the first argument that the land isn't to function cons-ecutively. Lieuten- owned by WyQming and that, at the ant Clinton H. Havill, who was in- most, all the state would lose would troduced as an expert, said it was be $200 in taxes. He branded the his judgment that it ceased as a re statement-5 that the park service is suit of the instrument itself receiv- monopolistic as "bunk" and declared ing a violent bump, or else the whole that if the new acreage is added to control car in which it was located the park no fee will be charged for received such a bump. entrance. There were blotches on the record . Under the original proposal for the made of the s•ame ink as that in the extension of the park, it was planbarograph, but it was not possible for ned to take over 800,000 acres, Mr. the officers accurately to interpret Alb · ht 'd D · h 1 ng sa1 . urmg t e ast · · . sumthe blotches. mer P resident Coohdge appomted a Whether the barograph ceased to · . . function when the control car broke coo:dmatml?' committee under the off the ship could not be determined. chatrmansh~p of Henry W. Te.mple, . representative frpm Pennsylvama. to Commander Stdney M. Krass, an- co-ordinate the activities of the for· other expert estimated that the con- . t . d k ~ • es service an par departm"nt and trol car fell only about 1000 feet, and, further urged that it look into the if that be correct the baro •ra h d . ' g_ P propose extension. ceased . to work before. the car fe,~. H e sa1·d. •· Testimony that Lwutenant Co~"About two weeks ago the com nusmander Zachary Lansdowne, c~~:~m sion r~ported that the plans for the of the Shenandoah, never expies:-.ed extensiOn had been considered and a,!any prot est or ~eluctance to proG~d I vocated aJld that after its classifito the west with .the Shen~ndoah 'cation of lands only about 200,000 upon the weste:n tnp, was giVen to 1 acres should be added to the park. the court by L1entenan.t Commander Included in that area which has been C: E. Rosenthal. nagvtgator of the unde"r much discussion, is• the Jackson mrcraft. Hole country, Leigh and Jenny lakes, two high peaks, Grand Teton, with an Mayo Bankrupt altitude of 13,747 feet, and Mt. :MorNew York.-A petition in bank· an, 12.000. "The strip of land wanted for an ruptcy was filed in Uniterl States district court by Frank M.t}'O, motion addtion to the park is approximately picture actor, who said he owed th.irty m. iles Io.ng, running f1·orr. half 3 $8826.97 and had no assets. His crcd- m1le Wide at Its narrowest point (thr.> itors included ice and coal dealers, north end) to five miles wide at the butchers and grocers of Los Angeles, widest poin~. More than twice that where Mayo maintained a home for much land IS proposed in the extenseveral years. Mayo is a grandson sion on the extreme southeast corner of Frank Mayo who was a star on o! the park and about twenty to twenthe legitimate stage for many years. ty-two miles northeast by southwest. Many Injured In Train Clash Tacoma, Wash.-Six passengers on two Seattle-Tacoma interurban trains were injured, bruised or badly shaken up when the trains crashed head·on between Kerit and Thomas. No one was killed in the crash. Just how the accident occurred was unknown. The automobile block signal system ot the line is supposed to preclude accidents of that nature. A heavy fog may have been responsible, oft!· dals said. IJ ·~~ YOU CQ 'c/ You must eat! You must dr•ss ~ut no one can malre you use infei'!or oil and pay cold cash for th~ repairs that must result. M?naMotor Oil will eliminate at least j Dne of the bills that knock you cold. Washington.-In the molding of his MonaMotor will stop all repair bjlls pro:;:ram for presentation to congress, from faulty lubrication. President Coolidge has decided to Buy only ~ Oil st:tnd pat 0!1 the tariff. MonaM!stor Qil @.tnpany Business and labor can go ou their San Francisco, Cal. - Los Angeles, CaL ' wa:r- safely in the assumption that the tariff laws will stand as far as is without vital change for a year at 1 lca<ot. President Coolidge will propose no tariff change to congress llis spokesman there will combat any attempt I China Buys Less Autos at tariff tinkering. Tb'" tariff law t . , . BvHlently people of proVl·d es a met h od b y w hi ch h e an d . . Cluna would . ·rr . . ff t . rnthPI' fl~ht thnn ride, automobiles t h e tan COmmlclSIOn can e eC SID· purchased therp this ye:.r bemg . oned th a t fourth of norJJial. h ~ l e c h anges w en necoss.ary an IS construed by the president as pro· =;;;~~~:::;:~;:~~;::===~~;;;~ vidlng nnlvle machinery to meet any ,. - ~- - ---- emergency which may arise. The tariff commis.;ioners are speaking to each other again. They no Are you dragging around day after longer turn their backs to each other day with a dull backache? Are you I at the conference table. The presi- tired and lam-. mornings-subject to headaches, di~:y spells and Rharp, stabdent bas made enough changes in its personnel to get a commission of his ' bing pains? Then there's surely someProbably it's kidney cwn liking, in sympathy with his j thing wrong. weakness! Don't wait for more serious views. The tariff of the next three 1 kidney trouble. Get back your health years will be distinctly a Coolidge and keep it. For quick relief get Doan's tariff. Pills, a stimulant diuretic to the kidThe president's viewpoint is this: neys. They haYe helped thousands and I Tariff tinkering makes for uncertain· should help you. Ask your neighbor/ ty among the industrial and business. A Utah Case Uncertainty slows up business. Poor T. J. Rob!'rtson, carpenter, 3H S. business hits the worker. First St., "\V., LoSecretary Hoover and the presi· ga.n, Utah, s a. y s: "For about two dent's other busines..; advisers have weeks I did little assured him that business as a whole work on account of the pain ancl weakis in splendid shape. There arc some ness In my back. I had a. ~ore, lame isolated bad spots, such as the New back and my kidEu~land textiles, but those cases. are neV'Ie weakened so 1 so remote that they have only a mmor 1 that I hnd to g-et . up at night. Doan·s effect upon the busmess structure, I Pills put an end to the backache and New England is evidently satisfled with the tariff. The only other place suggestive of ! tariff change is the great agricultural STIMULANT DIURETIC TO THE KIDNEYS belt of the west, in which the ban!(· I Foster.Milburn Co., Mf~. Chern., Buffalo, N. Y. ruptcy courts for a time commended more of the farmers' time than their I ~----------~--------------~~ wheat fields. But Secretary of Agriculture Jardine and a host of senators, represontatives and business me:1 who visited the president at Swampscott and since his return to '\Yushington have "V/hen I feel a dizzy headache c:::.:!sed hi::n to believe that the farmcoming on, I take one or two ers are again poking their heads Beecham's Pills. above the surface and that fair crops "I am 33- a healthy, robust and good prices have relieved their mother with five happy children. former demand for tariff alteration. thanks to Beecharr.'s. I do all my own housework, besides sewing, The tariff this year is the least of washing, ironing and caring for presidential worries. the children." Mrs. ALBERT ORMEROD Burbank H<::s New Plant Fall River, Mass. Santa Rosa, CaL-Three new plant For PREll SAMPLE-write cr<>ations. a new type of sweet corn B. F. Allen Co., 417 Canal Street, NewYo~k Buy from your druggist in Z!i and 50c boxe• and new varities of the aster and rose have been created by Luther Burbank For constipation, biliousness, sick headaches, and. other digestive ailments take the plant scientist. The corn speci· men perfected by Burbank is much more 11roductive than any he has produc-ed, he stated. It is much sweeter, more tender and palatable and con1es - - - - -- - - - - - much earlier in the season. Burbank has produced more than one hundred If: ft varieties of the aster, and his latest offering is the largest of them all. It • is also beautiful in color, texture and f I1If appearance. The new type of rose haarlem oil has been a worldis a new variety, a bit different than any previously produced. wide remedy for kidney, liver and I I I Horse Racing Brief Is Filed Jewelers Fall For Gold Brick Explosion Wrecks Home Salt Lake City.-The plaintiff in Spokane, Wash.-The gold brick Los Angeles.-A two-story dwelling the case of the Utah State Fair as- 1 game still is profitable here, the po- bouse In the northea~t section of the sociation against the Salt Lake city ' lice reported. And the victims are city was destroyed by an explosion commission to restrain the city from ' not the traditional rustics, new tG of mysterious origin. Several persons stopping the operation of pari· mutuel city ways, but sophisticated jewelers. are believed to have been kili' l. The machines at horse races under the More than ten jewelers have com- blast completely wrecked the build· city anti·gambllng ordinance filed its 1 plalned to the police that they pur- ing and rocked the entire Lincoln brief in the district court here. The chased at fr~m $10 to $13, gold bricks Heights district. No bodies were re. encrusted w1th nuggets and bearing covered in 1t hurried search of the plaintiff contends in the bn~f that a Chinese gold figure on one side. ruins, but neighbors Insisted that four horse racing Is a ga~e of skill and Their genuineness was not questioned persons had been living in the house, that operation of pan-mutuel mach until one jeweler sawed one In half. so the sea.;och for victims was conI He found the Inside was of lead. • tlnued. ' ines is not a game at all. l 1 Pres:dent Will Stand Pat In Mcssago To Congress AS Far As Tarriff Is Concerned, And Has No Changes ° I I I ATTEMPT ° ~~ $145 to $225 Monthly. _----.~''JQ \PRESENT TAR Riff ___.__The_Grea--=---t Bea_r R_unt, I I Lt-Rrn Telegrnphy. Great opportunitie•. Clean ea.RY work. Positions se<"nrerl. Earn while you learn, Hundreds of gtndunt~s. Oldest and he•t Khool. \Vritc for tree rn.talogue. American Teleg!<tph College, 16t S. !linin, Salt Lake. ~ QL...-[_ l initial period of twelve ye-ars reducPd Teapot Dome Appeal' Filed payments, ranging from $25,000,000 St. Louis-The government's ap- to $50,000,000. A fleJ;,iple provision peal in the Teapoa Dome oil lease an- also was included stipulating that lin. nulment suit was filed here in the France should have the right to seek Eighth circuit court of appeals•. The revision of the debt settlement terms Too Bad "I told Tom the average woman'1 appeal was prepared by Atlee Pom- of unforseen conditions should aderene and 0. J. Roberts, special coun. versely affect her future capacity to clothing only weighs eight ounces.'' sel for the government and was filed pay. "And what did he say?" "He thought It was a shame theJ by C. M. Watts, assistant United The Caillaux proposal, submitted at had to wear such heavy shoes." States district attorney at Cheyenne, the first session of the two comml~ Wyo. Court attaches said that the sions, is regarded by some members filing probably was too late to in- of the commission as unsatisfactory, View of Friend•hip S'Ure hearing of the appeal at the De- but Secretary of the Treasury Mellon I have never given much encourag6cember term here, and the case prob- Is having it carefully studied by exment to frlendsh!v; I have done little tor my friends, and they have done ably would be heard at the May term perts in co~ection with voluminous data bearing on the Prench capacity little for me. One of the Ideas which in St. Paul. to pay. I have so often to cope with Is that Outside of the congressional group Silk Stocking Tax High friendship, as It Is generally underon the debt body, there is no clisposi· stood, is an Injustice and a blunder, Leeds, England-Britain's tax on tion to feel that the negotiations have which only allows you to distinguish silk stockings may have a tendency to come to an impasse at the outset and the good qualities of a single person bring about a lengthening of skirts. it may be said that this group Is ha· and blinds you to those of others who The Yorkshire manufacturers are conbitually pessimistic in the debt nego· are perhaps more deserving of your sidering lengthening the lisle thread tiations, having predicted the collapse sympathy.-Ernest Renan. tops of silk stockings to reduce the of the Belgian negotiatlo :\il a few quantity of silk per pair. (Glimpses hours before the Belgian agreement Name on Application of the cotton top would be most unT was signed. First Movie Actress-Hear you're sigtly, it is believed, among mem.' The negotiations have entered the married again, Sophie-whom did you hers of the trade, and so on that ac- jockeying stage without loss of time. marry this time? count skirts would have to be longer. Actress Is Held Up Second Movie Actress-Er-er-1 York.-Nora Bayes vaudeville New believe I've got his card In my bag Will Import Ruhr Coal actress, who used to do a comedy aomewbere.-Judge. Berlin.-Importation into the Uni- holdup stunt on the stage Is suffering ted States ot 250,000 tons of Rubr from the shock of a real holdup by Turn About coal, valued at $3,000,000, in order to He-It I do say It, you are the only break the coal miners' strike, Is sa!d four armer men who mauled and threatened her in an attempt to strip girl I ever loved. to be planned by a big coal company her of her jewelry. The men surShe-If I do say It, you are the only ot New York. Sanders Wertheim, :tellow who ever made me believe that president of the company ,Is expected rounded Miss Bayes' automobile in front of her home. Her chauffeur, JM.-LI1e. to visit the Rubr soon. He is quoted John Carlow, grappled with one of the as saying that the mine strike is the bandits and was shot in the right migbtest economic battle in American side. Why Snow I• White Snow Is white because the crystal" history and that it can only be broken Auto Carries Murdered Man are so minute that each cell ot the with German and English coal. New York. Collision of a sedan retina receives a general Impression MacVeagh New Japan Ambassador and a taxicab on the upper east side produced by the combination of differresulted in the discovery of a man's ent wave lengths reflected from InnuWashington.-Charles MacVeagb of body in the automobile, which was merable mlnutp fa,.f't!l. New York was officially apppinted deserted by three occupants after the ambassador to Japan. His name has crash. The dead man had been shot World Growa Better been submitted to Tokio and has been through tho head. Police believe that Another thing an experienced news- found acceptable. He is a lawyer of the three men in the sedan were drlvpaper man can do, says the Ohio State wide experience and the son of a foring it to the East river with the intenJournal, Is to make a correction sound mer cabinet officer. The ambassador- tion of sinking it to conceal •the murlike an entil'ely new item. Which is ship has been vacant since the death der. A jewish prayer book and $1430 better than the old·time policy of never several weeks ago of Edgar A. Ban- were found in the dead man's pockmaking a correction, assuming an In- croft of Chicago. ets. fallibility that was e\·en less justified than It would be today.-Troy News. Would Abolish Board Calles· May Succeed Self Washington.-Abolishment of the Mexico City.-It is reported that congress probably will modify the Holland'• Water Ditche• shipping board and the federal trade . . d t d b S 11Iexkan oonstitutiton so as to permit Cows lin Holland are l\ept in pas- comm1sswn were a voca e y ena. . C t· R bl' th the reelectiOn of a pres1dent for a d f ture by ditchea of water inl!tead uf t 1 or ur lS, .epu. tc~n, ~a er 0 e 1 second term. Such action would mean tences. senate, as b.em~ 10 lme Wlth his plans that Plutarco Elias Calles, the pres· for reorgamzatwn of the government ent chief executive, could succeed To assure prompt servit.e and quick returns himself. when answering these advertisements. mention department. the n arne of this paper. • • Oils & Greases Get Back Your Health ! I II DOgAN'snp~~~ Robust Mother of Five Healthy, Happy Children Keeps Fit with Beecham's Pills Beecham's Pills 'IC'OD OVER I " 00 YEARS II . P 1 M a r ust F ace Ch arge "' ttl ur h Ch · ~ ~r- and oC':l e, n as .- argm" " . l\'1rs. Ar th ur R eymore re f use d t o per· .t th . t h'ld t tt d th e1r wo c 1 ren o a en e public schools because they I would be taught patriotism a warrant r W!l.S issued for their arrest here Bail l1 was , set at $100 each. They R eym01 · . es 1 contend that the teaching of patriot· . f . · h h b r f f tb 1sm con hcts Wlt t e e 1e s o e religious sects to which they belong. ' · Deputy Prosecutor James Bailey arr· nounced he would seek to have thA childreu remand ·"11 to the juvenile i authorities unless the parents consent to their attending school. bladder disorders, rheumatism, iurnbago and uric acid conditions. m1 I Seattle I correct internal troubles, stimulate vital organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine GoLD l'VIEDAL. KEEP YOUR SCALP Clean and Healt y WITH CUTIC A Jail Break Is Foiled Miami, Fla.-Five white prisoners were wonnded, a negro trusty acci· dently shot and killed, and a pedestrian almost a block from tile jail for wounded in the left arm when fifteen l prisoners attempted to escape from the Dade county jail. The escape was ' frustrated when the men w·ere met by , Successful for 59 yeatll. ..Yolvers ROc an<l9f1~ bottl~sI a. volley from shotguns and. re ALL DRUGGISTS m the hands of deputy sheuffs as 1 =------------------,they emerged from tho jail door. In Thirty-one per l'f.·nt of all hospital unticipation of t.he atte.mpted esca~e, 1 1l'entment in t:le t'nlted Slates In the armed dcp1tws, headed by Sh~nff l!l2S \Hll5 gh en fr<>e and Hl.3 per cent Henry R. Chase, placed themselves ,n1s onl~· partly pnid for. at various points in the jail yard and fired as the men broke from the door. Boschee'S Syrup Coughs and Lung Troubles Big S~.:m Is Asked For Afr Washington. - Disclosure to the president's air board by war department witnesses that the approved project for expansiOn of the army air service would cost approximately $79,· 000,000 a year for the firft ten years and $60,000,000 a year thereafter to maintain a peace·time fleet of 250G planes and other auxiliary aircraft served to bring to light that this is only one of nearly a score of similar projects now under study at the deI partment. |