Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 13, 1924, Page 2

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' PAGE TWO. ASS AND JAPS SAID ON VERGE OF AGREEMENT Early Settlement of Con- troversy Seen by Nipponese. By MOTO TAKATA. a 4 Press Staft Correspondent) OSAKA, Japan, (BY mail to Unit- ed Press)—Japan and Russia are on the verge of making an agree- me The outlook of the private parley between M. Karahan, Rus sian envoy at Peking, and Mr. Yo: shizawa, Japanese Minister at Pe s so promising that a draft sent might be reached before long if there is no serious obstacle on both sides Apparently erally hope for and ur tanding, and nec Japanese ré t only Jap people in Japan gen- an early settlement alizing import os store Russo. fons, They think that of immense material who is poor in na tural resources, but it is imperative to restore the friendly relations with Russia. Especially after the unfortunate incident with America on recent immigration issue, Jap. anese people urge for the early set- tlement. Everywhere in the world the Japanese people are meeting with a cold rception. ‘In all coun- tries inhabited by Anglo Saxons, Japanese are peremptorily excluded. At such a time Russia is desirous of the co-operation of Japanese in the exploitation of Siberia, which has inexhaustible supplies of na tural resources. When such an ex- cellent, opportunity is placed within Japan’s grasp, where {# the neces- sity of Japanese forcing their entry into the lands of Anglo-Saxons? So they opine. Look to Kato. It is true that the impending po- litical change has called a halt to all diplomatic problems toward settle- ment, but the Kato ministry is ex: pected to encourage early settle- ment of the Russian question. They now regard that should the present negotiations fail, another appor- tunity would not come for a very long time. This consideration makes ~it imperative for the authorities to pay the closest attention and work most earnestly for a speedy conclu- sion of the negotiations {n progress. Tt is not only on the part of Japan but also on the part of Russia that realizes of the desirability of an im- mediate settlement. Russia has noW fully realized that Japan consti- tutes a very important factor In the settlement of all problems pertain- ing to the Far East, and that with- out an understanding with her it is impossible for Russia to do anything in the Far Hast. Formerly the heads of the Russian government had rather been antagonistic to Japan, but now they are changed to a great deal. Even M. Trotzky now ex- presses his hope for a friendly un- derstanding with Japan. Thewe fac- tora contributed to make tho pres- ent parley {n Peking more hopeful than ever. According to the latest reports, an agreement of views has already been arrived between the parties on practically all important problema, on w sla a ich Japan demands from Rus- sincere apology. ‘The Nikol avesk in was a fatal obstacle in all the Russo-Japanese pourlarers in the past and #6 long as there exists disagreement on thia issue there can be no bright prospect for the negotiations. In the present par. leys, Japan has. abandoned her claim of indemnity for individuals; she simply demands an apology from Russia so ax to save her face. "This is clear proof of her reconcilia- tory attitude. At the last parleys this demanfl was refused by M. Joffe and M, Karahan seems just as re- luctant North: Saghalien. Another difficulty les in the issue of Northern Saghallen, During the discussion with M, Joffe, ‘the ques. tion of purchase was disoussed, but Japan's idea of price was a sum just about equal to the debts owing to her by ‘the Tsarist government, while Russia's idea was at least 10 times as much. The questions of debts and fisheries had been also serious obstaclés at the past parleys, but these do not constitute any seri- ous difficulties at leys. Undoubtedly the present par-. the Anglo-Russfan negotintions in London have been elosely observed by the Japanese authorities and they would have some effects upon the present par- leys or any other future nogotia- tions betw Japan and Russia It would be especially so when the question is taken up by the hand of Viscount Kato who is anx! to have closer co-operation this allied other with and any yernment on ernational FOREST FIRES L055 1S HEANY (Continued frqgm Page One.) to all civilians except those posses- thers no #mok- mpers may use allowed ing only ertain edsignated camping grounds The loss due to fires this season approachin 0. four times th ke rir normal sea and the danger is far from past Almost 90,000 acres of land, some of it valuable virgin timber have been burned. ove At least two lives have been lost. Lntticendecde B nr2) The Bhutanese women, in India, are sald to have been the first to “bob” their hair. sade STEN Stockholm, th built on a nety Swedish capital, is ork of waterways. REL ROP. ON SSE ae ee Che Casper Sunday Cribune " HIGH SCHOOL LADS RETURN | WITH HONORS FROM MILITARY TRAINING CAMP, FT. DOUGLAS: Thirteen students of the Natrona ‘County high school returned last night from Fort Douglas, Utah; where they had been in atendance for a month at the ‘Citizens Military Training camp in which they made an enviable record equalled by no other single group-of-men at-cam: There were 1200 young, men at the camp. The Casperites were made members of the crack gun, squad, an achievem@ht that demonstrates the general high ability of the men and the good military training they had received at the local institution, Forty-one medals were given for marksmanship. Twelve of . these medals were given for pistol work alone. Six pistol medals were won by Casper men. Vincent Duty an- nexted two of these medals and won| the silver medal given by the 104th’ @ivision for the highest pistol. rec- ord during the entire four weeks of training. Others who won pistol medals were Paul Cody, John Mur- ray, Thayer Hawkes,“and Dan Bell, Henry Haberni¢ht won a sharp- shooter's. medal for rifle work. BRAZILIAN REBELS BEING SURROUNDED WOOLGROWERS WILE MOBILIZE (Continued from Page One.) outlook for the industry are among the things to be discussed. Speakers of national )rominence will have leading places in the daily programs. F. J. Hagenbarth, presi- dent of the National Woolgrowers association, Charles IF. Herrick, president of the Institute of Ameri- can Meat Packers, and R. C. Pol- lock, managing director of the Na- tional Livestock and Meat bosrd, ng them. The convention fore have features sch as these that Wyoming Woolgrewers ean ill afford to miss. Senators francis E. Warren and John B. Kendrick and Congressman Charles E. Winter will probably be in at- SUNDAY, JULY 13, 1924. pan, Belgium, Brazil, Spain, Swe- den, Czecho-Slovak and Uruguay. As the six non-permanent mem- bers of the council change from time to time the nations represented on this sort of k of nations general staff for the control of cen. tral European armaments, wilt;) change so that the con- trol will be virtually as internatior/ 2 Pel aal aera ae: ie a to! Guess Who They Are! | John Murray who was a major in the local cadet corps, was made captain of Company I and alsd. cap- tain of the battery. Paul Cody, Or- ville’ Overbaugh, and Gerald Gregg were made chiefs of section. Dan Bell was selected as first sergeant of battery. Jack Norton and Vincent Duty both became gunners and Nor- ton was @ gunner in the crack squad. Fred Mohr was the remaining Cas- per member of the cfack gun squad. Robert Miller, Bugene Brittain, and Henry Habernicht were mem- bers of cavalry. Habernicht was immediately promoted to the white or second year course in cavalry. Cody and Murray were the only Casper, men who had ever attended training camp before. The excel- lence demonstrated by all the men was shown in competition with many persons who had had more training in the work given elther in camp or in private life. FORMER CASPER POLICE CAPTAIN STOPS HERE BEFORE GOING TO UTAH After attending federal court -in Cheyenne as a witness in a liquor case, William Clayton, former cap- tain of police, returned to Casper yesterday for a brief visit. He is scheduled.to return to Ogden, Utah, today where he is engaged in busi- ness. : ——_—_e- JAPANESE IN HAWAII TO BE BARRED SOON WASHINGTON, . July 12.—Issu- ance of a ruling that Japanese in Hawaii are not allowed to enter continental United States under the new immigration law excluding Japanese is expected here some time next week. Although authorities dealing with this question refuse to comment on Once this commission is charged with the control of all four states in question, it is expected that it will be in permanent session at Geneva or on tours of investigation in all the ex-enemy states. Geneva will become the internat- fona] eye that will look after the maintenance of European peace, at least as far as Germany, Austria, Hungary and Bulgaria might threaten it. In preparation for this change in control the council of the league of nations has just charged this com- mission with drawing up a complete Project of the manner in which the pees shall exercise this new mis- sion. As a matter of fact the commis- sion Kas already been collecting 4 uments and information to this eve: ever since it was constituted some three years ago. In addition, it will have at its disposition all of the data and information collected by the al- lied mfitary control commissions in all of the four states, since the close of the war. Europe Will Grin. With all danger of war from the centrat European states removed by this central league control, and with normal relations between the allies and the ex-enemy states ended by the withdrawal of the former's military control commissions, in- ternational authorities declare Hu- rope will take a quick leap forward in the adjustment of most of the problems and abnormal situations left over by the war. It is also at this moment that the league begin to play the full role which was intended for it un+ der the peace treaties, but which has been retarded owing to the lack of agreement amongst the allied powers. The policy of the new French government, coupled with that of the MacDonald and Musso- lint cabinets, has now rendered this change possible Progressives In Nebraska | Boost Bryan OMAHA, Nel Ec By NEA Airmail Service, Bet you couldn't guess in a year who these folks are? Yet you surely know them—minus their make-up. It is Henry Ford, with the high flowing tie and trick whiskers, up in the driver’s seat! And at his left is Mrs. Ford! You will notice, too, they are riding flivver. They are all dolled up this way for Detroit suburb, where they live. g POLICE MARK TIME AWAITING EVIDENCE FROM PASTOR WHO WAS BRANDED BY MOB, REPORT BATTLE CREEK, Mich., July 12. —Police tonight awaited a word from the lips of Rev. Orrin Van Loon that may lead to the arrest of the person or persons who branded a triple “K” on his right shoulder. The Berkely community church pastor lies in a semi-conscious condi- tion at Nichols hospital, suffering from shock caused by the burns and lack of nourishment. He is unable tq recall the events of the twelve/days following his di: appearance from his home at Berk- ely, Mich., on. the morning of June 30, Police are working on the theory that the minister was branded with ® regular branding iron rather than some sharp, hot instrument. By NEA Airmail Service Admirers of John W. Davis, Democratic presidential nominee, did not even wait for the cheering in Madison Square Garden to subside before they were besieging the New York home of Frank L. Polk, where Davis and his wife were stopping. And the photographers as usual, were right in the front line, Cordon of Federal Forces Thrown About Stronghold of Sao Paulo While Ar- tillery Devastates City The three K's on his back are block letter in form and about two inches in height. They are burned deeply into the flesh and hospital attendants say the pastor will carry the scars for the rest of his life. The minister was found lying in the street late Friday afternoon. His identity was learned from a driver's license found im his pocket, but it was not until today, while a hospital nurse was giving him a sponge bath, that the branding was discovered. Detectives do not believe that the attack occurred in this vicinity but they think that the victim was brought here in an automobile and abandoned in the street where he was later found. 1 IT TAKES ALL KINDS 4 BY U.'G. KEENER ; (United Press Staff Correspondent) RIO DE JANEIRO, July 12.—Brazilian federal troops tonight were throwing an iron ring around rebellious troops who have held the great interior city of Sao Paulo for more than a week and deposed temporarily the state government headed by Carlos Decampos. The famous mountain highway between Sao Paulo and Santos, its seaport, has been cleared, The two sources of information of rebels and federal reinforcements | were indefinite conflict in. describing ara proceeding the road to great] the activities of government troops. interior plateau of which the fam-| The brazilian embassy dispatches ous coffee capital ts situated. said government troops had cap- ‘Artillery of the government forces | tured 21 machine guns and had driv- continue to pound away at the reb-|en the rebels from several portions els’ strongholds inthe great Luz of the city. Furthermore, the em- military barracks, near the center | bassy stated an offer of the rebels July 12—Governoe™” Charles W. Bryan will be placed on a ticket - Tunning‘mate of Senator of Sao Paulo city, and the Santa] to come to some agreement had been ay Care hundred woolmen from | What step will be taken to meet this TO MAKE A REICHSTAG Robert M. LaFollette in Nebraska, it Ana barracks, which overlook the| refused with the demand made by| At least a hundred woo! ex.| Situation, officials pf the depart. was declared at a meeting of third fashionable Avenida Paullata, Sao| the government for an unconditional | other, points in. the stato are ex: | Tite Ola ang PY at Aiphone \ BoE Ge party men at Lincoln tonight when % mht! surrender. rected. lan! situated cere iocine: ot te roh ‘stall sc On Abathan oann. tite guy 9 of.{ Wives: ¢ The gathering therefore} Migration were in. | conference} smoprzN, July 12.—(United Press)) mer minister of finance, who is a| ans Were launched for placing a throughout’ the day ahd it was in- aicated that a definite / policy on this jon will soon be made LaFollette ticket in tho field. The LaFollette campaign will be formally launched within a few biter pashse mass meeting to be held at Incoln or Grand Island, i; decided. geo The proposed LaFollette ticket will include besides LaFotlette for presi- promises to ®e large and tne cele- bration they are assured will be certain to-come up to their oxpecta- tions, —Trade union leaders and journal- ists dominate the German Reichstag as far as numerical strength iq con- cerned, while ex-chandéllors and ‘ex- ministers trail closely, ‘The trade union chiefs have 75 seats while the Dress is represented by 56 editors, doctor of both nationa: economy and medicine. High state officials form a group of 29, while Count Bernstortf is the only former ambassador who is a delegate. The contingent of school teachers coffee millionaires and many Ameri- cans who have made fortunes in Brazil. With the situation apparently well in hand and the rebel move- ment confined to Sao Paulo .city, the federal forces are proceeding ficial dispatch from Sao Paulo stated the governor had fléd and that gov- ernment forces were threatening no immediate attack. This dispatch said all ratiroad and wire communication had been cut off. It was said, how- ever, there had ween little destruc- known. ; PREMIER OF —————_ - —— HALF MILLION 3 tion of property in the elty. six publishe: three newspaper | js fairly large. There are 15 univer-| ent and Bryan for vice slowly, vreferring to force surren- 3 * president, der ofthe rebels rather than make| The government troops “alregdy EG YPT SHOT owners and one’ printer. Germainy,| sity professors, five headmasters,| George W. Norris for senator, and another attempt to take their posi-; surround Sad Paulo and have even plentifully supplied with former} and 19 “Oberlehrers" who have been|J- N. Norton for governor, . tions by storm—an action which, it] Teached the center of the city,” sald 4 ministers thrcugh its post-war chain tutoring either in elementary or in high schools. Catholic and Protestant preachers Selection of Bryan depends upon LaFollette's acceptance of the Nee braska goverpor as his running mate, of cabinets, has turned 40 of these “exes” to the Reichstag. fs feared, would cause an artillery battle that would ruin scores of big a dispatch given out by the embassy “However, thay are not precipitating BY ASSASSIN CONFISCATED bulidings within range of the rebel Gs bs ar rate arrest of the es is abajo not Serene 5 pel pb abaya equally by five dele- leaders of the movement said. sy rebels since it is desired to avoid un- 3 title of ex-minister and have regis-| gates each. MRP a er Papert In Rio De Janeiro tonight | Necessary injury to the city, LONDON, July 12.—Premier Zagh-| terea in the new year book ascot Medica! eclence is represented by D. Mill D f Indicated that the rebel position has] This dispatch asserted telograms| SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., July 12,|loul Pasha, of Egypt, who was shot] other professions. one doctor, one female doctor—a eM ULE é endant become well nigh hopeles: recently pri “the most im-|—Opium worth. $500,000 retail was|in a railway station in Cairo, this! ior instance, former minister of| specialist for nerves—and two chem:| +_. “Nothing but unconditional sur: | p . pe and {Seized by customs officers on the) morning was not wounded a@ serl-| 14. interior Sollmann is listed as edi-| ists. ut Water Contes: render” was the cryptic,reply of | Ameri “the most false|Uner President Lincoln of the Pa-| ously aa at first believed, a Central) icy ‘ana former Prussion prime. min: ‘Twenty-Two Workers. Governor Decampos to overtures for] and alarming information about the| fle mail line here today. PO pas Rae oreg hos id i;| ister Stegerwald as president of the| Twenty-two delegates are register- i armistice by the rebels who yester-| mutinf in Sao: Paulo,” The drug. was contained in 753 night. that the premiere lnng| Christian trade union. federation,| ed as “workers.” One of them the| , 40S ANGELES, Cal., July 12.~ day sent any emissary seeking a] The embassy charged thes tins secreted in the aft water tanks. | clans shows that the premier’s lung! voi. former Chancellor Wirth communist Thaelmann, enrolled as|4@U® fontana—running clear and truce. Announcement of Decat- | were sent out by friends of the ean eral. officials had. received. @}iwas not pierced by the bullet-” 1b) Vit oa as docior without sp transport worker, however, earned | °°°!—Cecil B. DeMille, prominent pos’ stand was contained tn an of] and that conrespondents accepting | OP.) that the opium was on the| Passed through his arm pisrced | ication of profession, which former-|his bread and butter before becoming |" director is defendant today in pals nication published , to-| these reports while eee ee ePting | vessel and have been searching for|the flesh of the cheat. hung, | f oy cAatneae sOE hatioetaies Ea cross complaint filed in superior Saas I - ip] tebe: paboets Cwhilb acting in entire | it ever since the liner's arrival from | however, was not injured. pL tardl ras OMA ha Meteation prise fighter" “|Court for $35,000 damages and an ay. have been the victims of |G ai It 1s reported, the dispatch says,| - rua babys) bce ng! ‘ i , Tl vi . ording to the ” riental ports yesterday. \, injunction to compel him to stop’ ofticis Meio ycomnunieeS ee) (a : the report received at-|the belief that more will be found. | fessed to police he attempted the as-| ‘farmer’ h 37 others while a wtldheted ne ctitore el, PeMine, ctiginalin, aahed,e.. yen confident of victory ‘tha ppd pal fa from Sao Paulo have stated the |The selzure is one of the largest | Sasination to prevent Zaghloul from|deegates represent “large real es-| the rest are ticketed as editors, writ- fraining order to force F.C. Des: rebel reduest (tional carrender, |ooxernment. forces have not only|ever made at a Pacific coast port. | leaving Egypt for negotiations with| tate.” _ ers, welfare-workers, etc. Mond, rancher, whose mountain manding unconditional surrender. | surrendered but that attempts to — tke British government regarding Ten of the delegates of the new Among the professions represented home is above De: * ‘There is a report that Major Bar-| raly a new government expedition to the Soudan, Reichstag are judges and 15 law-| by “singles only” as a banker, an en- ve DeMille’s on Little said to be the robel been captured. tholdo Kling ehief of staff hi put down the rebellion were “diffi- Tujung, a creck to refrain from di cult in view of the disloyalty of ‘the The assailant is a young medical verting the water supply. Now’ Mes- student, a member of the nationalist yers while only two are registered as economists. One of the econo- gine driver, a street car conductor, a wine-grower, hotel owner, a chief SMUGGLER IS With the federal victery consid-] military forces and the 4 3 Mason foreman. |{ised. the creck water for hie wan ered certain, news of the severe] federal support." Taaeauate 4 Pet oe ee hee siete ates Beast acai sb elt ati iene oki ~_|used the creek. water for his own ered certain, news of | the | savere sur | Rosi and demands damages for Paulo highway is gradually leak-| Will Meet Tuesday Bash chs” icra an] Wik Se Doi Nd League to Take Milit sorship which was clamped down|a meeting Tuesday ovening in the ry . 43 a 8 soon as martial law was declared | Odd Fellows hall, beginning at & nment goon after the] o'clock. Following the business ses- lined ‘ hy started t week. pparent that hundreds hav been killed, including many civilians in the ,»oorer sections of the Sao Paulo elty around the Iuz barracks. Travelers reaching Rio and San- sion will be an old fashoned enter- tainment and a dance. All members and their friends aro invited. + NIAGARA FALLS, N, Y., July 12.—Morey Pearson, 24, Niagara Falls, Ontario, was shot and killed herp tonight, in a thrilling battle with immigration officials and po- lee, in the Niagara river, while at- Control of Former Enemy States With Allies Okeh A change In location has been made by the Crescent Boot Shoppe. From the O-8 building the entire stock has been removed to the new space at 237 South Center street WOMEN'S ILLS Alice Werner, a former who took up African ex- tos report seeing scores of dead and] Pploration, is now professor of Swa-| tempting to smuggle three aliens ry WOMEN OFTEN THINK THEY wounded in the streets, It 1s also d Banta languages at the| {nto the United States. Edmund|éxt to Tripeny’s drug store, Mon- BY HENRY WOOD. when the league has in its power the | HAVE (HEART 3 known that the federal forces, con-| School of Oriental Studies n Lon-| Barry, 21, also of Niagara Fall sr tobe Sd dala Termine Gettin ines nited Press Staff Correspondent) | right to control the military, aerial, Eek as WHEN aoe SIMPY way to the long, forest covered] "Traps baited with catnip are be-] In the excitement, one allen league of nations with the full con-|that no offensive military prepara: BLOOD. mountain slopes alohg the Santos|ing used with much success inlleaped into the water, swam ashore sent of the allied governments, will] tion isever under way. Many women believe th ae —Sao Paulo highway. catehing 1acuntain lions in Colorado. and escaped. take over definitely the military! This new role by the league, and} weak and nervous as a result 6f age, Causes of the rebellion still ar control of all of the ex-enemy states.| which was definitely assigned to it|Worry and overwork; they think obscure owing to the Wathcite fi A os t \ This change from allied to league | under the treaties of Versailles, St. peut Sietuthed Bieation, head- It now appears, however, that the dvising he Newspapers ’ | control, will, according to internat-| Germain, Neuilly and Trianon, will , heart palpitation, shortness outbreak was the result of political i i i ft of breath, pains across the back, ambitions of a handful of military a ; jonal experts, constitute one of the| It Is declared immediately lft the} of, "ore dueto more Conon as most important steps taken since the close of the war towards settling the Braver internationa! problems that league into the vitalest and most leaders of the Sao Paulo state arm: commanding position in Europe, instead of the real cause—iron star- who Indvced their men to join them vation of the blood. ‘This is proven The change from allied to leagut con-| by the fact that when many of these in the plot. Another story Is pat are still menacing Europe. tro! is expected to mean as much] same women take organje tron for Jealousy beter xtval pruerys cit According to these experts the|for the future development and in-| awhile all their alarming symptoms ers was partly respon : COAST NEGRO SAN JOSE, Calif., July 12.—De- tective Van Hubbard was fatally wounded and Ed Mays, a negro, was dangerously wounded when the ne- gro shot the officer in the abdomen and was in turn shot down by Po- Neeman John Murphy. The negra ran amuck after thr ening two women in a lodging house and when VanHubbard attempted to arrest him opened fire on the de- two most immediate and important results of the change will be thes: First, with the withdrawal og the ‘allied missions of control from the ex-enemy countries, the final return of normal conditions between the lat- ter and the allies, Secondly, the establishment of the league of nations on the full basis of authority which the peace treaties ternation position of the league as it will for the adjustment and return to normalcy in the Huropean situa- tion, Replaces Allied Control. Although the allies, ever since the close of thé war, have jealously kept this military con‘rcl of the ex- enemy countries in their own hands, nevertheless the league, as early as quickly disappear and they become trong, robust and healthy, Iron is absolytely necessary to enable your blood ‘to change food into Itving cells and tissue. Without it nothing you eat does you the proper amount of good—you do not get the strength out of it. If you are not strong and well do not wait until you go all to pieces and collapse in a state of nervous outbreak. General Abrilio De Noronha, the Paulo militar commander, 4 captured by the rebels the night He was mplona SHINGTON, July 12. jlian gvernment fore ‘ i e, x i. t . | Prostration, but take some oy oe intanteaattoeat badhteer gov: bard Sy, pairpby [eataeesd ene the | one of the most effective means for| der all the peace treaties, Be. guen de bos, a Gas rents rt ernor has fled, according toa sec- poise arpa irae gira) in the/ the maintenance of European peace.| As a consequence the league al- ere + Tindarteecely ee ond direct message from Sao Paulo Mayu:.went, to the lodeing | haves League Controls Armaments. ready has definitely constituted and|the action of strong acids on smail received today by official sources ede :-+he tat oenite oe “yet ‘and|_ 4% long as the league has in its | in operation for the past three years| pieces- of iron. Organic NUXATED here of unquesitonable. authority threatened to kill Cular Robinson, | POWer the right to control the arm.| the body that will be charged, as| IRON is like the iron in your blood At the sume time, however, the the police learned, when ‘Agnes aments of Germany, Austria, Hun-| long as the peace treaties remain in| and like the fron in spinach, lentils Rrakitian embesly” tented) \onticies young, friend of the Robingon wom.| 885Y 2nd Bulgaria, and to see to it| effect, with the league's military con-| and apples and it often increases the communiques from Rio de Janeiro an, interred Mays at the point of| that they are. navey silowed to ex-| trol of the central European states, | bodily and mental vigor ot. weak. declaring that “the rebels are com- a pistol march through ceed the limit imposed in the peace wornout women in two weeks’ time. pletely dominated by government a RtaeterhGe Ceeate pica en rel eating: Europe will be relieved of| ment military, naval and aerial gd-| | Beware of substitutes. Look for troops. By NRA. Abronil neva what has always been its greatest| visory commission. It is composed| the word “Nuxated” on every pack- NE! © encountered the policemen. The dispatch from Sau Paulo was LTE RS. filed there July 9, while the Brazil lan embassy stated its dispatch was tablet. ‘Tour meney will be retunded tal ‘our money will an jal expert from each state rep-| hy the manufacturers if you do not } war scare and war danger. The largest private collection of] The problem of the limitation of cacti in England is owned by a| armaments for the rest of the world, of one military, one naval and one Edward T. Clark (left) the dent's tell waiting znewspaper men rsonal secretary, steps out to ut the ns for the funeral of Calvin resented on the league councl!;|obtain perfectly satistactory results, sent from Rio de Janerio yesterda namely England, France, Italy, Ja-At all druggists.—Adv. Coolidge, Jr, woman. will it de declared, be halfway solved

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