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6 ' " _11.%? The Taste Tells Smiles of satisfaction . light the faces of all the family when Beu’s Ice Cream is served. ‘FEARED IN BRITAIN Experts Say tf.ondon Could Be Laid:Waste Within “Twenty-Four -Hours. || SOUND . OFFICIAL. ALARM Condition of Unpreparedness Made " "Subject of Special - Propagands. LONDON, July 1—Britain is de- clared again to be in dire peril. She is described as-in a dangerous state of unpreparedness against alr attack. Experts contend that London couid be'laid in ruins from the air within twenty-four hours. Many facts and A homemade product, made with such skill and care that it has captured the fancy of all Washington. Make your next lunch- eon memorable by serv- ing our Homemade Cakes and Ice Cream—a twin delicacy unmatch- able. Delivered: any- where. BEU'S papers to prove it. Britons, and Londoifers especiaily. are told they should be so badly scared “they wouldn’t sleep soundly in their beds again until somethinig was done to set matters right. but the - stolid Britisher refuses to be scared for anybody or anything. He rejoices that {t has temporarnly stopped ralning and that the last two days of the Ascot racing were glo- riously fi Serious Troudle: Likely. But there may be serfous trouble bréwing for the gpvernment over the state of the country’s air defense: 1 Maj. Gen. Seely staried the trouble as_trouble is often started here—by asking a question in parliament as to how the country was fixed for &ir- planes in case of war. * Fire- reply of Capt. Guest, the alr minister, was not exactly calculated to make nervous people feel comfort- able. He sald that while the country 1n-1920 had 186-clvil airplanes fit for war, it now had only eighty-three, and these were of twenty-eight dif- This year there are machins actually flying in regular service. f Afr League Statement. | The Air League of the British Em- {pire, which aims to do for the air I!orce’whll the Navy League does for Music Wherever You Go irola honograp 29 IROLA is a portable phonograph of unusual con- venience, as the carrying case serves as a cabinet, and has space for six records. Yet, it can be closed in compact form and carried as easily as a handbag. CIROLA is a good-looking instrument, with rich mahogany finish, and plays all makes of records per- | The total strength of the royal air fectly. ‘ When the outdoor season is over CIROLA will be just forco in these islands Is twelve squad- | rone. of which a percentage are skelc- as enjoyable in your winter home. 1f you sece CIROLA, ‘ Bl vou will take it along on your vacation, or surely have it in 'm;'on;‘::;:lulofi- i e e ans Jougsdihines} Bomes sure that civil machines and per- Balcony Phonograph Shop 3 sonnel’ shall take part in the aerial The French aircraft industry 1s ‘defense of the country in case of war. I SBURGH & BROTHER France has at present ‘126 squadrons turning- out 150 machines per month. s N e e e e e le——cl—=lol——]lc]———]c[c——lol——20] LANSBURGH & BROTHER Bargain 6th Floor < the navy, saw In the turn affairs had taken a chance to do some effective propaganda work and issued a state- ment, of which this is the gist: several hundred civil machines ear- Behind this force she has at present marked for use in case of war. = —— Sweeping Clearance Wash Dresses Of the Better Kind. Imported Linen, Normandie Voile . "~ Dark Voile, Organdie, Swiss . and Ratine Formerly Up to Former price was very low—value considered. ‘Those who have shopped here have seen for themselves—and will appreciate what this price reduction. means. All desired styles including the surplice body effect—side pleated pan- Sizes from 16 to 44. 1 - I RI to-go at far less 2 : than cost because : : on the Bargain 6th Floor. are nothing’ short of ridiculous. Und ", SWA , aprons, children's -gingham dresses, I:a.m;uu,oco;u:s, C‘l’ll;ldrfl'.li"l ebrav;le;;b:s‘: e\:;'o'e:enz: 'ht;iincg suits nfld white £ els—straight line sport models—all colors and white. . Alltablebargains we are eliminating these departments. | This is an opportunity that marks the zenith of vduwvhgm this Iloor—pflus gabardirie skirts, For uxmple of value, these skirtsare Z5ceagh. IRWR_ considered even a possibility ‘st ‘the start of today's play and had to.fight | with his way, through from' a piace in the | rear. aid it with an-exhibition of golf .- that - seldom ~has been approached in a titular contest, for en’ holes were made 1in 33-35-68—two. strokes under-par and | mad: ote of -the-only two, scores to- break par.in the two da; 68 equaled the course:record: in com- petition. and ti8d Hagen's lgw’mark | of yesterdiy. 3 ‘Whan Barasen turned in his card it ;.l-hld reasonably sure that he would e _the w! but the BT TR e, Samplont until “many T8 later, for out on tne links “playing desperately were three golfers, - two -of them Msted among the world’s best shooters, f::nr\:n‘nsn cu: s roke off ths 288 angd snatel bk i the victory oit. of rst Bobby. Jonea threatened the Pittsburgh player, f par 1o (player, for Robby had a hemesis also, was too much -for thi younf southerner, and his five against g::‘c:u‘ l\Il ht:mh out. A short ap- ollowe: a short was Robby's trouble. . - - ek vy Sarasen Is. Incredulous. 5 Then the statiscians figured that Walter Hagen could tle ‘with a 69 for the afternoon. He took 35 on the first nine and. then fell down com- pletely. With only John Black be- tween him and the title Sarazen sat on a bench in the locker room insist- ‘"fi, to his friends that he could not bl “How can I win?' he asked Leo Dicgel. “t'm Just a kid, just been professional three years, and every- tnng | know about golf I learned caddying. Out there are,the best.in the world. "Of course' I hope I win, but it's too much to expect, even 'if you did tell ‘me last spring, ‘when I won the southern open casingion- ship- that I was sure to capture the national.” . en & 33 against par 3¢ was re- ported for Black’s first aftermoon round, meaning that he could shoot 38 on the par 36 final nine and tie 8 it began to look as if the Pittsburgh player was right in being modest. But Black, forty-four years old, gouthern, northern any ceu champion, low vania had improved in the crises. When the California man put him- self out of the running at the seventy- first, a newspaper man rushed to the { locker ‘room and told Sarazen he had won. { e jumped from the bench. turned a’handspring and let out a yell.-A few moments Jater he was carriéd out on the shoulders of some of the thou- sands who gathereq round-and given chder .after cheer. e ctor Rewards His Caddy. Reaching down in his pocket, Sara- zen pulled out a roll and took off $50. “This 18 for the kid who helped me win” he sald, and handed it to his “he” : e tournament produced record- breaking golf. All of the prize win- ners—the first twelve—finished with scores of 300 or less. This is two strokes less than the 303 score with which Hagen won the British open { champlonship. The tournament also brought in a new era in professional golf, for it found all of the *old guard—Hagen. Barnes. Hutchison, Evans, Mitchell, Duncan and the many others, whose names are bywords in the goif world —swept out of the running. A boy triumphed over age and experience, while another boy was tied for sec- ond and only one veteran—Black— really pressed the winner. And Black s comparatively unknown except on the Pacific coast. o Sarazen was twenty-one years old only last February. He was born in nd it was around that earning a- little pocket ddy, he picked up his George Sparling.'en was the only real teacher he ever had. He formerly caddied for Sparling. Sarazen is scarcely five feet, five inches tall. and weighs ornly about 145 pounds. Asked. If he was married, the new champlon laughingly replied: “Goodness, no. But just bring on the girls and be sure and ftell them T'm single.” ~of ‘play. Tiris | fir: D trouble, for Black sent his- tes. . [tnto’'a sand pit st the left and barely pitched on n’:r his second. .Two putts e it ‘ons over par -3; but he was under for the mine. . ‘Then, came the twmu-gifith with ifs three putts and the “thirty-third xxga"uq.vl-z tl‘n Suots, s missing. inst’-par 4. This le had st on the pit an ; It 3 5 - hole carefull usted himself for his' tee '-noz onl'th- thirty-fifth—the.seventy- in_ total play—and with ‘a terrific swing of had been giving Htm 3 L ar B i Taivway volted: o :vnud“th- bonnd.:ry fence and woods X t".léafsl‘.l-t or in?”.called the official secoter to the Boy ‘Scouts stationed along the fairways to help. control the “gallerie: ¢ A‘y"un‘ er rushed qver to the tence while the gallery stood breath- less, for it seemed to flash simul- tandously through the-mind of every spectator that onsthe reply of the boy hung Bl ances to be na- al open n. -t $ro-u " came buck the younsg: shrill voice. Even en Black still had & bare chance, gr his second tee shot —was.:a neauty. About 190 yards from v.,zo green, which was guarded closely by bunkers, lay the ball, and Black trfed to make it with ltoon. The DPI started straight for the pin-and the llery started yelling, but suddenly g. cross wind caught the sphere and carried it just to the left of the green in the rough and against a verticat bank three-feet high. . The six which resulted lly “put Black out, although he still could have tied with an eagte on the final hole. Sarazen's = game nn-oughonq the lournament was remarkably steady and frequently brilllunt. Of the eight sections of nine holes each, he played three in less than pi actly and the rest had only one bad nin this ln(‘lrnln{i when he took a 40— 6 over par. He narrowly missed some putts, and several times .barély got into. traps—always with’ a ‘bad. lle. Twice he was bunkered. It was e tact he went out and ‘won by shooting less than par for the rest of the thi e his victory all the mo! ensatiol Seven Birdies and an Eagle. He hung up sovén birdies today and sank a 40-foot putt on_the 316-yard 32d for an eagle 2. On his second out round today his 33 was made through the finest shooting ever seen on the Skokie course. Only once did he get any real lutk on a hole, and that was through & 20-foot putt, and once he got a bad break when two shots in n_the 590-yard 25th barely a 6, against par 5. t was just plain golf ability, every shot sUIle HOBOIUtely trye. The Incoming nine of this round— 35 for the 68—was even befler. A bad shot on the twenty-seventh gave a 5 where perfection is 4, but the res{ of the card was made up of six 45 and two Ss—two of the eight bein, birdies—and he ended with a total tor the nine of ene under par. The title winner did not excel with any one club in his play. swung them nicely at all times and through- he -did not empt. His 68 rst time that 70 in his final national tournament. - Few See Champilon Play. 0Oddly, 6nly a very few of the 12,000 persons who paid -to.watch the play during the two diys saw the new champion shoot. The gal ieries all followed - Bobby , Black, Duncan and suc! stars. especlally when it became known exactly what Jones, Hagen and Black had to shoot to win. Bobby and Black faced -tre- mendous mental handicaps in know- ing they had to shuot virtually per- fect figures when they still had nine or_more holes to go. = The patd attendance yesterday was more than 6000, and siightly less than that figure today, although to: day’s play decided the title. weather and playing conditiona were virtually perfect. No complaints from the players were heard. It was announced tonight that rangements had been. made for a British team to come over hers in August- and play an, international match with an Ameridin team. The latter undoubtedly will number Sara- zen among its_members. (Additional mews of the epen golf tourney will be found in the sports nection.) out his seventy-two h And when the many feminine ad-|. mirera of champlonship ability flock- ed around they agreed that little Gene Sarazen was just about the best- looking golf player they ever saw. Youngeat of All Title Winmers. Walter Hagen when he won the open title some ye: ago was only twenty-one—Sarase age in years— but the present champion is a few months younger than Hagen was ‘when he captured the title. Black's collapse was truly heart- breaking to his admirers. The silent Scotchm! ha ven a great exhi- bitlon in. afternoon nine after rather indifferent play in the mornm- ing. H.&lbved ix of the first seven holes {n the afternoon in par and had the other. Then he p— Cleveland Park Macomb Street . Eight Large Rooms and Bath. A Bargain at $12,750 Thomas O. de Beck 734 15th St. Tel. Main STO5 Exclusive Agent for Economical Trensportation UTILITY COUPE 720 . F.O.B. Fline, Mick. Built Especially for Basy Men | ‘Here is a'new closed -car built especially for utility . poses in city or. country. driving, . £ ty and greater durabili - Business men have o closed car of better q pur- ty—com- i plotdy equipped with all the essentials of modern motoring. Chevrolet Utility 3o LVES OF SUBETS ny Fropos'a\] for Safety of Na- tionais Following Evac- uation of Siberia. Yot 501 Gorrespondence of the Asscciated Press. TOKIO, June 28.—Whlie there is k1 no-doubt here-that the Far Eastern Republic will propose the resump- tlon of negotiations with Jipan, now that the latter has definitély decided to évacuate Siberia, with.the view to the ‘protection of Japanese.residents there, the Japanese government has another plan if negotiations do not materialize or fail. =t The alternate plan proposes that all Japanese subjects leave Siberia at the expense of the Japanese gov- ernment. Thi not expected to be costly, a8 most:of the “residents” are camp followerg who. have been earn- ing a livelth ‘by catering to the troops. - As & measure of protection for Japanese interests during and after the evacuation, in’ addition to war- ships which will be stationed at Viadivostok, - close -commynication will be established. between . t! northern halien before winter fers win exersize FiEid Suard on ihe , the Japanese government |geon 10! SRere! e hopes that negotiations will go still| Siberie, o he roops have def further, ard that, efther by an agree- e ment with the Chita government or the soviet at Moscow, Japan will be| .All the larger folines jump for their able to withdraw her lrgqvl from 'opponent’s throat in attack. i l '} RADIUM OINTMENT. is unexcelled in the treatment of all forms of inflammation; poison ivy, sunburns, painful joints, etc. 3 “RADIUM SOLUTION for Hay Fever positively relieves HAY FEVER, or money refunded. ¢ RADIUM APPLIANCES for the relief of local pains, especially valuable to women. - On Sale at 0'Donsell’s Drug Sters. 604 Bth Bt. W.W. Tipton & Myers, 17th and Park RADIUM is indicated in practically all blood, nervous and glandular disorders. Give us a history of your case. We didn’t schedule this sale; ‘But ’twas too good to pass up! A Sale 3,700 Madras [ i Shirts Liondale Shirts (Guaranteed) Won’t Fade | \ UR July Sale calendar didn’t include a Shirt Sale. But our buyer, in his bent, scouting the market for seasonable bargains, was confronted with this proposition, and ‘twas too good to pass up, for here, we can sell high-grade woven madras shirts, 3 for $4, or $1.35 each. Maker said: “We are tak- ing inventory, and if you can. use a.quantity of these Liondale- guaranteed won’t- fade woven Madras Shirts, - .I'Il!make-the price so tempt- -ing” that you can give your “customers a real shirt value.” “We got his id ately—he didn’t want to have “them on his inventory, would rather take a loss chasec 3,700 shirts at a frac- tion of their.real worth. We think so well of we are frank enough to tell you that we have paid more wholesale, for identical qual- ities, than the price we are going to ask you to pay. They are so good that we had to include a number of our higher- priced Madras and Oxford shirts to avoid confliction. So you see this is some sale. ea immedi- A wonderful selection of patterns and colorings. Neckbands, or collars attach- ed. Sizes 13%; to 17. , SO we'pur- them! that starts tomorrow morning _ =buy all you need, there won’t . be any more sales like this one!