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Show THE JORDAN JOURNAL, MIDVALE, UTAH WHY _ _:I LOST SUBMAR !NE I I NOT TO BE RAISED 1 Painting Pre£erves the Life of Wood Unpainted wood surface!! absorb Rnd dirt more readily, are mor~ likely to stain, and are harder to keep 1 clean than those In which the pore11 1 of the wood nre filled with varn\sh. ADMIRAL IS AUTHORIZED TO REo!l, paint, or other finish. In l::t-t"<eral. LEASE GIANT CRANES; HULL a house shou:d contain a~ ft:w unfln· IS PENETRATED BY DIVERS lsl1ed wood ~<urfaces 9.!> pos~lbte. In one kitchen. for example, labor mas be saved hy tlnishln~ or covering the tl.oor. by rovt-rlng the table with oll· Efforts to Raise S-51 Rammed by Ocean Liner Fail; Motor CJm· cloth, linoleum or zinc, and by paint partment is Found Filled lng or varnishina- the rest of the furWith Water niture. Unfinshed wood surface11 may be 1 . 11crubhed with the grain of the wood., using small quantities of water and a United States Submarine Base, New mild soap, rinsed with a cloth wrung London, Conn.-Rear Admiral H. H. out of clean water, antl wiped dry. Christy, in charge of the res cue opStrong soaps. alkalis. and too much / erations at the scene of the wreck o[ water darken wood and' may soften lt. 1 the submarine s-51, recommanded thl' It the dirt cannot be, remo,·ed with 1 release of the two big floating crane:; soap and water, a securer, such as which .made an unsuccessful effort to fine steel wool or powdf'red J!umfce, , raise the vessel. may be used. Unfln!ahe:l wood can be ; His recommendation was made af. blenched with oxalic acid solution, 1 ter announcement had been receivea "'·hlch Is poisonous. Th~ wood should 1 of the. recovery of two additional bod· be covered thinly with the solutlon.ltes found by divers in tha engine allowed to dry. and then thoroughly I d taken to mean thJ.t no washed until all traces of the acid · room, an was b . de to are removed. rr grease Is spilled on further efforts _wou 11 t e rna r;rea~e RESOLUTIONS PRESENTED TO coNFERENCE RecoGNIZING PROGRESS BEING MADE raise the subm~nne. . Admiral Chnsty reported also t~at the door leading from the engme I room to the motor room had been found open and the room flooded. His message said: "Divers entered engineroom hatch and found mater rooa1 door open. Plan to bore small exploring hole In torpedo room to determine whether it is flooded or not. Recommend release Monarch and Century as I can see no possible use ot. them in rescue operations." The torpedo room referred to in the message is In the tip of the bow and is the only compartment whlcll has not yet been investigated. The bodies recovered were those of V'lalter E. Lawton, electrician's mate, who resided in New London, ana Brady D. Lindsay, engineman, of Pensacola, Fla. Why the "Golden Age" Reports had bee!l received earlier t of the finding of a body in a navy IS Never th e P reaen uniform off Stonington, which lea Dean William Ralph lnge, the most base officials to believe that one o! recent Eogl!~h visitor to look us over .:he men washed overboard from the and tell us what he thinks of us, S-51 had floated in there. but Lieu!lpeaks about t~e "Increasing stupidity tenant A. H. Deering of the medical or modern llfe. It would be Interestt t St ·n t n to view the lng to learn .Just how such a thing . corps, sen om. g 0 " ~ d Did our forebears 1 body, reported that 1t was not that O• j b d can e u _e . I h d b i th t make no mistakPs? Was life In the, a navy man. t a een n e wa er past even a few years ago, less dull • about three weeks. The body later tha; It ls now? Are there good signa was identified as that of S. N. Ros· 11how!ng that human beings are act- stand of Noank, Conn. lng more like geese than they u1;ed to' It ls a common habit to clothe the Shorter Yellowstone Route Proposed vears that are gone with bright nnd Ogden-R. H. Rutledge, district for~hlnlng garments. The golden age is ester has left here for Jackson, Wyo., neYer the present one and it will not to confer with T. L. Laird, Wyoming come In the future. It has always highway commissioner, about a probeen ln the past. 'I'hls Is why regrets posed road through the Grand can wlll be expressed until the crack {It 1 yon of the Snake river in the Teton doom that people and llfe are not 88 forest, a distance of twenty-six miles. they were once, even though there be u the road is built through the Grand 10,000,000 eviJences of betterment.- canyon of the Snake, a new, better Toledo Blade. and shorter route from Ogden to West Yellowstone will be had, forest serWhy We Should Walk More, vicemen say. It is estimated that it Dr. Charles \V. Eliot, president will cost $40.000 to build a sixteenemeritus of Harvard, at a Boston foot automobile road through the rugluncheon to promote Interest In con- ged canyon, but its completiOn will servatlon and protection of scenery, eliminate the hard automobile pull hlatorlcal sites, wild life, forests and over the '1. eton pass and bring Ogden public reservations, declared the hab· about fifty miles closer to West Y eltt of walking ls b"!lng lost or largely Iowstone. If this canyon road is built, dlmlnl!lhed today and urged that more the route from Ogden to the park people frequent the parks and publle will pass through Brigham, Logan, reserYatlons, says the New York Her- Logan canyon, Bear Lall:e, Montpelier ald.ll'ribune. Of a survey made of \ Arton, Star Valley, Alpine, Grand cantraffic passing his home on Brattle yon of the Snake, Jackson. and thence .treet. Cambridge, for periods of l1S! over the present route to West Yelmlnutes at four busiest times of the 1 day, he read flgurell showing a tota I owstone. of 44{) pleasure vehlclet!, 110 trucks Honor Paid to Murray Crane and delivery wa"g ons. 2 motor cyclec Dalton, Mass.-The president of the and 153 pedestrians. United States, the chief justice of the supreme court and a United States Why He Wasn't Going senator from Massachusetts were The sturdy individualism of the Scot among those who paid tribute to the was recPntly demonstrated at a re- memory of W. Murray Crane at the vival meeting when the preacher, who dedication of a memorial tablet here felt that his words had produced the to the former governor of the comdesired efl'~ct upon his congregation, monwealth and one of Its representarequested all present who wanted to tives In the senate from 1904 to 1913. go to heaven to hold up their hands. The response wa11 unanimous with the Chinese Strike Ends exception of one man. "Do you not Shanghai-The strike of Chinese wish to go to Heaven?" the preacher telegraphers, which crippled commuasked this man. "It's a' rlcht about nication throughout the country for going to Heeven," he replled; "but rm several days, has been ended. no gaun wl a trip." ! I TERMS AGREED UPON TO COVER A FIVE-YEAR PERIOD; BOTH LEADERS COMPROMISE Negotiations for Settlement of Entire Debt Will be Held at Later Date; M. Caillaux is Pleased With Conference Labor Leaders Meet Atlantic City, N. J.-The executive boards of the bricklayers' and plasterers' unions were called into joint session by William reen, president or the American .l!'ederaJ;ion of Labor, for the purpose of attembting settlement of their jurisdictional dispute, which has tied up $250,000,000 in new construction. The metal trades, union label and bullding trades departments of the federation held separate sea1 sons. How Will Aid Unemployed Chicago.-\Varm firesides, hot coffee and doughnuts will be furnished the unemployed who visit the hobo retreats throughout the country financed by James Eads How, St. Louis millionaire hobo, he has announced here. This year's national convention of the "migratory worket'S," as How terms them, will be held ln Denver November 11, a date selected, he said because many of the delegates coul4 sleep In the open there. . C opytnll t h e ''M"ruua,, The tailor finished takina- measurements and lnttulred of the mnn who was orderlna- a new suit: "And how wide do you want your trousers?" The customer smiled. "I don't exactly know," he replied, "but I'll tell you one thing. I hate to have my wife ~:et ahead of me. How wide Is a tight ~~lrt ?'' TELEGRAPH SCHOOL $145 to $225 Monthly. Learn Tt•h'lfraph)·. Gr~at opportunities. Clean - y work. Position• ~(!CUred. Enrn while you learn, llunrlred• of ~rradual~o. Oldest and belt ~~ehool. Write for free catalogue. AmeriCAD Telegraph College, 162 S. Main. Salt Lake. FIXTURES For F.etimates on Bank, Store, Church Fixture., Show Cases and Cabinet Work. Write Salt Lake Cabinet & Fixture Co. It Richards Street Salt Lake City, Utah, BARBEll COLLEGES •rber Trade. Cata&~ae Pree. UlploJIUY! ~ Woler Barber CoOep, \16 ~•-t lt. 'Leara j l s"'""' 1 Will Protect Stool-Pigeons San Antonio-"Stool-pigeon>.?' will be protected by the United States courts, Commissioner R. L. Edwards ruled here, in refusing to make public to the defendant in a liquor case the name of the man used to get information upon which a search warrant was obtained. I Note how it relieves that stuffy fee!..l.:tg after hearty eating. Sweetens the breath, removes food particles from the teeth, gives new vigor to tired nerves. Comes to yoG. fresh, clean and full-flavored. ~~f?~ .~~::n_:~:. ~'::,,. : , ~:~;mere.~ ~;;~ AGRE[ME NT M1'a\ 0E t'\~L LM[rTA LSHIP ~~::~!'~,:~~2~,.;';{:~~~~::::~~~ resolution~ I I AT DEBT PARLEY ~VILL BE BUILl lI Man Shot For Deer Victoria, B. C.-Mistaken for a deer while hunting in the highlands disElephant. Slaughtered Thirty tllotamnd mate elephants are trict, near MacKenzie bay, William T. killed every year 1n the Bel~lan Congo. Richardson, 47, was shot and instantly killed by Chauncie Woodward, another hunter. This was the first To assure prompt service and quick returns I hunting fatality of the season in this when answering these advertisements, menW. : district. the name of this paper. I makes your food do you more good. Was hington-The twenty-th~rJ ccn '\'.'a!'h ington-This wPe!{ ad•ls one ference oi' the Interparliamentary 1:1ore to the invc ..tigations growing union in a re>.·olution here, i~1d:;r.- e.t out of the Shena1:Jcah disaster. the efforts of ihe JN:gue of nation-' The nviatio!1 i::q':.liry board, wh 'ch :u~d the Pan American u:1ion to cod:fy was in SP~sion last wee:, and w!ll co r. internat.ional 1aw.s and called for a tinue indcfir,itely, iii th~ t \\en y -r ec general and constructive plan for the or,d official investigat:o:t into avia · work. I tion during th :. compa . atively few The conference also adopted a res! tyears it has been a part of the na· Woman Denied Seat in Session Washington -The application of Miss Mary 1\'n.cSwiney, a member of the Irish republican party, for admir· slon as a d~legate to tht:> inter-par· liamentary unicc confer()nce was denied by Baron Theodor Adelswaerd, president of the union. ° I I Washington-Negotiations for settling the French war debt ended here when French Finance Minister Cail laux agreed to place before his government a temporary arrangement covering a period of five years. The French finance minister did not sign an ironbound agreement, because he questioned his own authority to do so, holding that he was empowered only to settle the debt in full. Under the propos-ed arrangement, France would pay $40,000,000 a year for the next five years and would re· sume negotiations for ful! settlement during that time when conditions warranted. The payments would be considered as fu!J interest on the total debt. It was explained by Secretary Mellon that if the French government ap proves the arrangement, a reopening of the discussion as to permanent settlment terms would be obligatory on the French. Mr. Mellon was disappointed that nothing more came out of the weeklong conversations here, but he said that a better understanding had resulted. M. Caillaux also appeared cheerful even though he had failed to accom plish what his mission had set out to do. The sess-ions apparently were completely devoted to the effort to place in effect an agreement which would prevent complete disruption of the negotiaions. Finance Minister Caillaux in taking action of his government said: "We would have been as happy to reach a final agreement, which, within the limit he has indicated," the French minister of finance has been intrusted 't o sign_ The arrangement you now propose bears a provisional character which has not been contemplated by the government of the republic. "Consequently, being as desirous as you are not to interrupt the negotiations, which cannot fail to reach an agreement the minister of finance con do no more than to submit to his colleagues of the French cabinet in Paris, the proposition which you have made and he will do ris utmost to give you an ans" er as soon as poss-ible. · ' The final French offer which was rejected. the statement disclosed, provided France should pay $40,000,000 annually for the first five years; $60,000,000 annually from the following seven years, and $100,000,000 a.Q.nually for the nexy fi!ty-six years~ thus spreading the payments over sixtyeight years- there being important conditions attachecl to this proposal which rendered these payments uncertain in the view of the American commission. The total payments offered implied a return of the principal of the U.cul. and somewhat less than 1 per cent per annum. I REPRIMAND OR DISMISS~L FROM couRT MARTIAL Ex--r::;n::.D FOR COt•. r.;;TCHCLL Tw••ty-thl•d Smio• Fovm M•ny N•vy ;, " " ' " Fi" •• R< Matters of Vital Importance to suit cf Rec e nt Close Catastrophe; Nation; Many Nations Are ' Session Is to Be a Lengthy Represented Confab ! unfinished wood cold water should be applied at once, If possible, In order to harden the grease and prevent Its spreading, then as much grease as pot!slble should be scraped orr with a knife. and the spot scrubbed with a washing soda or lye solution. It the !<pot appears dark, . a paste marle of fuller's earth and water l!hou~d he spr.-ad over it and allowed to remain overnight. Oiled floors should be sw~pt with a soft hrnsh and dusted with a dry or olled mop. Occasionally they may b& washed nod afterward wiped with an oily cloth. Water should be used sparingly, and co.re should be taken to rub the oil in well and not to use so much that a surplus Is left on the surface to hold dust and be tracked onto rugs. I wars of aggress10::1. The l cleared the way for the confe•·ence to consider at its next session the question of i·eduction o~ arn:ament~. The resolution of codificatiOn of mternational la·.vs was drafted by E ihn UNITED STATES TO CONSTRUCT ~ Root, whose p~per_ on the subje~t ~a~ AIRSHIP WHICH MAY BE SHEN· been read earlier Ill the day b) ANDOAH'S SUCCESSOR resentdive Theodore ~u:ton of Omo~ It expressed appreciation for th~ work of the league 0 nations a_nd the Pan-Americ;:;.n uruon on codifiHenry Ford Is A~so ln~erested In Ship J cation and urged "a gener:ll and con Which. Is Sa1d W1fl Be Proof structive plan for such codification, Agamst Fire And Weather based on the progress made during Elements recent yeat·s, with a vie,w to defming the fundamental conditions of the regime of peace to be instituted be ~ Washington - President Coolidge tween the nations•." It al so would and the navy department are taking provide a plan for the judicial set~Je liYely interest in the construction o.f ment of di soutes "which constitute a • regime, and to t h e app 1·! thG world's first "all-metal" airship. lhrc.at to that If their findings are satisfactory, cation, if necessary, of methods of congress will probably be asked to execution and of sanction." The second resolution, reported by appropriate the money for a dirigible Senator H. La Fontaine of the Bell'f that type to take the place of the doomed Shenandoah, says Fredenc gian group, provided for "a declara William Wile. The Aircraft Devel- tion of rights and duties of nations," opment corporation of Detroit is r.o·v which would "prove a powerful fac building a demonstration vessel, the tor in promoting amongst them the distinguishing feature of which is s·ense of order, of international justice and of responsibility. that it is metal-clad. R:? I ! an mvestJgat.on. It consists of a brief question and answu con- 1 fen•nce between General Mitchell and the ins·pector general of the army. The laLcr asks the former if he j 1 charged the war a :-.d navy depart- , ments with "crimi 1:al ne g-lig ence." General lllitchell :m.;v;ers he did. The1·eupon the inspector ge ~1eral cru. I or can not order a court martial. Presumably he will. That, so far a s it goes into aviation, will co.nstitute the twenty-fourt h investigation, o.the final installment of the twenty third. . Then whe <l con g res•.; get!! back to town there will be at least .., "Albers stcmds for Better Breakfasts• Albers twenty fourth and possibly a twenty, fi.fth. To be clear in this maze, it is we!l to start with General Mitchell's p r r sonality. It is an out of-the-ordinary personality a nd th e out-of -the ordinariness of it is ess·:.-n tially patt of the whole ~ituation. The reports coming to Washington s a y the "man in the street," and especia' !y the man in the moving pictures theater, likes Mitchell's personality ar.d is- on hi~ side. That is a clear fact and to b~ I ·on· ush~ A hot, nourishing cereal is the prime morning need of a growing child. This is why the wise mother always serves Carnation Mush to His Highchair Highness. Whole wheat and deli.:..iousl expected. Mitchell is an engaging perso;-tality, well adapted to win popu Jar approval under any circumstance c; and in m:my respects to deserve it. To Mitchell's pers'Onality add the ob· vious fact that nearly everybody The Shenandoah's steel frame was V. V. Pella of the Rumanian g roup encased in a silk envelope. Some of introduced the third resolution, which the testimony just developed at the would create a permanent committee Lakehurst l· nqul·ry 1·nto the Shenan- of the comn1ittee on J'uridical queslikesboss." a man daring enough to "sa ss cloah's loss was to the effect that a tlon, "to unde:-take the ' study of all the silk-clad dirigible affords no adequate the social, political, economic a ·1 d facilities for "anchoring" the girders moral causes of wars of aggression . Apart from the publi~, Was~ingto~, · h.1p. Th at d e fi clency · s of an rurs· WI"11 an d t o fi1nd prac t'1ca1 so1u t'Ions f or th e h1gh anrl. low, rather hke s l'tfJtchell . not exist in an "all-metal" craft. In prevention of that crime," and to pt>rson;l~tyd but the better ~~fo~~ed addition, the Detroit dirigible is "draw up a preliminary draft of an partto 1,;D oehs. n~; a_Pprove 18dJUf( g · d t o b e b o th fi reproo f an d m · t erna t'10naI 1ega1 co d e. " men tl· a~· re- ' c1a1me r dIngt MI S"t ha I!wor 1 1 weather proof. Its constructors also 1 In a preceding pas >.· age, Mr. R oot quen y ~pfp Ie b to c e • noAt onhy "t '11 h t d h d . . . d tl as an avla :or, u as t a man. t t con en 1a 1 WI ave a spee , I a d state h1s convJctwn t 11at wars f ,~ h · f th d " · · d f . fl. P,"e o ... ,, e IS one o e most ar carrymg capacity an range o ac- resulted from a state of mmd. He · '· .· t · th ld Th tion superior to any existing airship amplified that statement with the a~ mfg h~\ Ia hors d111 ; work · ey_ ~ ay • • f . .1 . a 1m, e oesn t a s - any aviator Our 35 years of improvement and o S1m1 ar s1ze. serhon that "we have reacher! a pomt t d h t h d 't fi t ·' h' M c l'd · " " h t b f 11 o o w a e oesn rs uo 1m perfection of oil and grease have _ r. . oo 1hge 1s as gfa~e as an:vt , ": dere war e anno. e su~ficess th.l yfcar - self. The higher he goes, th~ better made MonaMotor the pass word of sa1 1or m t e navy re usmg, as 1 I ne on un 1ess It grat: eg t e ec 1- h l'k •t proper lubrication. Say ~. were, to "give up the airship" just I ings of the great body of the peop!e 1 e 1 ,cs 1 · Every quart or MonaMotor 0~. because Commander Lansdowne's of the country." each can of MonaMotor Grease IS craft fell afoul the elements. The J "The ooncluslon," the paper c on- ~ Divers Have Close Call backed unconditi~nally by president has not the remotest inten- tlnued, "is that the most effective On Board U. S. S. Camden-Diver.' MonaMalor Qj! @cpa.oy tion of abandoning the dirigible sys I method of d ealing with the state of ! attempting to recover bod!e~· from the San Francisco, Cal. Los Angeles, Cal. tern of aerial construction, He au- mind which leads to war is not by 1 s;.tnken submarine S -51 had another thorizes the statement that there is as any m ere negative, but a counter-af-1 dose call when a sudden ~quail swep: little justification for doing so, on ac- 1 firmatlve consisting of a sub:;t!tute on the diving- boat Chittenden. B :.~ t count of the Shenandoah disaster, 'IS for decision by war in the form of de- for quick action by the s urface ten there would be in building no more C!Slon by proof and reason . <'ers their air lin.e;; mig ht have bcE'n ocean liners for fear they would all "Considering the use of these three snapped when the clivi:J~; boat wa~ A ha:o;ty demand requires a leisurely meet the fate of the Titanic. institutions in the disposal of inter- J swung on her anchor rh'l'n hv th" reply. Uncle Same must continue his et 1 national controve rsies under the force of the wind. Diver \Villiar.~ fort to conquer the air-by dirigible troubled and excited conditions of 1 RN>d was wedged in the t " r.,edo room Cnlumct '\Vhent Cuke• as well as by the heavier-than-air Europe during the past five years and ; hatch of the S-51, where it lie :· on t!1 c ~ ~~ -~e~u~sp. Calu- ~ ef:vel tsp. salt types, in Mr. Coolidge's opinion. He the bene!icient r esults which have ocean floor. 128 fe et b ~low t h, sur- 1 met 13aklng 2 tbsp. me It e 4 · i 8 apparent th c. t f ,lce, ::nd Diver V1il !'on wr~s be::id c j l'hPowder butter is watching eagerly to see whether been accomplished, It L. milk the Detroit engineers have hit upon these institutions are an evolution bim wh"'1 Lieutenant S. R. Hicker 0 Sift fl o ur, bald ng powder and salt a system for the dirigible that will from the practically ncccs s!~ies of in· the Chittenden saw the squall com I :',{J1 c~~~~~~:\vtt~ e~;~~~~g~JlJ'tn ~~; restore congress' faith in it. On all ternational life." ing-. signaled Reed to pull out of the making a soft batter. Bake, hands it is conceded that the light- I It Is donutful if humility ever dld 1 hatch at once a~ he feard that th~ er-than-air machine received a seriou~ Everybody In Town Arrested ('hittenden'~ anchor would drag wh en much good. blow when the Shenandoah was deAuburn, CaL-Five county and the squall s! mck. . stroyea. It is largely up to the De- 11 state officers swooped down on thn - - -----troiters to shfjw that they have hit peacefl41 village of Westville, situated : Bank Cashier Goes To Jail Honored politically and professionupon a device that is at least an ad- £ast of here, in the Forest Mill divide Moundsville, w. Va.-Joseph Ward , vance upon the system that fell rather country, and arrested the entir::l pop - assistant cashier· of the closed Bank ally, Dr. R. V. Pierce, whose pkture a p p e a r s • here, easy prey to the winds in the mid- u.ation The entire population con- of Ben :wood was • sentenced to ten made a sus;cess dle west a month ago. sisted of Fred Lambert, hotel oper- years in the state penitentiary after few have equilffed. The man chiefly responsible for the ator and telephone agent, and James he had pleaded guilty to fnlsification His pure he1·bal creation of the "all-metal" dirigible Is Connor. Both are ch:lTged by the of the uank's condition in reports remedies w h 1 c h hu ve stood the Ralph U. Upton, former ch1ef eu- county officers with illegal pos"'Ps- to the state banking department. test for fifty yenrl'! gineer of the Goodyear Tire and Rub- sian of liquor, and by the the f;tate 'Vard was arrested Reveral weeks af· are still mong ber company's aeronautical depart- officers. with having- d~g meat in the:r 1 ter the banking departme nt closed the "best ~ellen:." ment, and four times winner of na- po:::sess10n and trappmg bears. In the institution when examiners re· Dr.l'iercc'~ <h•l<len tiona! a-nd international balloon races. I '\\'-estville's heydey, when the mbing port.,d the dl~covery of a shortage in t.letlieal Dis<"overy Howard E. Coffin, one of the Cool- boom was on, the town had a p::>pu- Its funds. William A. Leach, cashier is a hfond mE'Cilcine and ,;tomach alteridge air board members, quotes It- lation of 1800 p()Op~e. of the ban'!l:, was given a similar senative. It dt>ars the aly's greatest aviation expert, Sigtence several weeks ago when he skin. beautifies it, inerea>ll'S thp hlood nor Nobelli, as saying that Upson is Train Beats Airplanes With Mail pleaded guilty to the same charge. supply and the clreufation, nnd pimples the leading aircraft engineer in the N"ew York.-The air mail between nncl eruptions \'Uni,;h quicl;-ly. This United States, if not in the world. Chicago and New York is both a Dis<"on•ry of Doctor Pierce's vuts you Airship Court Completes Job waste or ti~e and money, according ! Lakehurst. N". J - The court of In in tine condition, with nll the organs adiv<>. All cl ealers hn ve it. Street Car Fare Goes Up to an expenment conducted by the l qulry into the Shenandoah disaste1 ~end 10 cent ~> for trial pacltage of Des Moines, Jowa.-An increase 1n Chicago Tribune last week. Letters has finisheil its work. Rear Admir tahlt>ts to Dr. Piert'e, Buffalo, N. Y. street car fares has gone into effect j carrying the extra l 0 cents postage a! Jiilarv P. Jones. Captain Lewis Me here, bringing the fare to 10 cents and deposited in the special air mail Bride a~d Commander John H Tow BATHE TIRED EYES ~ · to tl · c ~ • wlt.b .lJr. i'llowp:wn IS byewar.er for adults and inaugurating an in boxes. took· from_ t\~o 1_ree d nys m I ers, members of the court, will meet noJ•H your•11un1•••or crease of 1 ~r cent in children's car · transit. L ette1 s pos t ecl Jl)· th e T w:n· in 'Vashington soon . The judge ad · ...,...,. 'l'r~)T ~- k. J.tcJO.t..let. 1 tare, raising the juvenil€ fare to o tieth Centur$' and the Bro:tdway Llm· vocate and technical advisers will go . cents. The adult fare furmerly was ited trains were delivered in twenty- with them. 9 cents. four hours. need not annoy you. Pimplet blaeJ., Film Folk Enter Protest Federal Judge Favors Light Wines Large Baking Merger Completed Vienna.--Three thousand film acBrooklyn, N. Y.-Amendment of the New York.-Completlon of plans for tors paraded the streets as a prate~! Volstead law to permit sale of light a $100,000,000 bakin;; merger, lnvolv- against the importation of foreign wines and beer was advocated here J ing the General, Ward and Continen· films. They shouted, "\Ve want govby Federal Judge William H. Shep. ! tal baking companie:s, which togeth· ernment protection of our Industry," herd of Pen acola, Fla., who hal! been er operate 157 plants in all sections al).d similar dema_nds. At a mMa substituting in federal court here for of the United States, was announced I meeting a res_olutlon was adopted ~ugust the past few weeks. The prohibition here. The Gene-..al Baking corpora- protestin~ agamst the importation or 1 for Constipation. h b r t d in picture f1lms from the United States · law obviously is not being enforced tlon, w hl c h as een 1ncorpo a e and· a deputation sent to the govern- • lndisestion nd In New York, Judge Shepherd said Maryland to abeorb three concerns ment a demand for the enactment of 1 Torpid Uver Conditions in the gulf states and In will be the largest maker of bread in necessary legislation for the exolusion s - f u l for 5t y--., SOe and 90e bottlaCalifornia are much the same as In the world, with an estimated total of aucb films. j ALL DRUGOI8T8 New York, he added. aales Tolume ot .200,000,000 annually. I The House !Jelaind tAe goods I -----·--- MonaMotor Oils & Greases I I Well-Merited Success l ! I l BLOTCHY SKIN R~~iDOl • Green's Flower I |