Evening Star Newspaper, August 22, 1926, Page 12

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Oidfield, Keystone crats’ Keynoter, Assal Demo- ils Re- publican Expenditures. B. the Amsociated Press ALLENTOWN. Pa. Aug The opening guns in the fig Democratic party for the ¢ Congress were fire hig outdoor meeting Democracy. The keynote livered by Rey field of Arkansas, chairma party’s congressional uittee, and William B. Wi cretary of Labor in Presid son's cabinet and the opp William S. Vare in the U nited States Senate. herv of addi entativ today at the -8 were w. election son, forn ust ht of the of ontrol Lehizh A old the com o dent Wil onent of A n of race for the Claims Tax Cut Credit. Oldfield Democrati come tax claimed credit reductions during year, especially those that the smaller taxpayers. He clared that the Democratic : o trade party d “an honest ta | stimulate business in fal ion id produce revenue Government Responsibility for the defeat of farm | lief legi: n was placed on the b publican party, and Mr. Oldfield ngratulated the Republican floor H e )Norweglan Crew Reports admitting it i ) ] i Switching his talk to the Pennsvl | Capture of 450 Animals. \ \n‘ ind Ihmois Republican primary elocthons, he said: “Both primaries ! | Show bt our saponents mave ne| 'ScllsiSlN3j060iCargo. | scraples about buying an election. o o | Holds Shock “Pe ‘ By Consolidated Pr He added that the primary reveli-| SAN PEDRO. Calif., August 21.— 'l Ins came I shock | \yWhaling, an almost forgotten industry Ut not nd in stories of the 1 devoted mo to an attack on the use of vast sums e » s ¢ | gre> in the waters of the Pa off the recent primary by the Republi- | tha coast of Southern and Lower i candidates for the Senage in P | Gatifornia Evianta | and ekn the bel More huge denizens of the deep have <unis reveale mof what actually w cpnesition candidates for the party for most of the in- the past affected also d= party is r compe to the resident | President | except in history t of his talk | gy, is veviviy but a por s spent by the D.C.TO NAME WOMAN ARTISTS, SESQUI PLAN! Maryland Day August 27 and Vir-| ginia Day on Columbus Anniver- so1y Under States’ Observance. Augus art. literaturd ivies among women wil d and honored by omnittee of the women's Sesquicentennial celeb: nor of every lected woren his State n the ome sked 10 ve done Commof nned, who Bis been who n his en. it is p the . t i and th wining the period set peetive State States’ cof calendar of Hostesses on State Days. the States’ board fon. State, mittee ey e. music 1 be rec of aided will rep. n's com- ame the most in nwealth will be women's aside In this WORKING NEGROES GIVEN CRAPSHOOTING PERMIT Birmingham Judge Issues “Anti- Jail Slips,” and Claims Benefi- ciaries Always “Play Square.” By the Ass BIRMI A work craps iated Press. HAM, Ala., August 21— negro caught shooting should not go to jail, in the opinion of Judge B. B. Abernethy, County court of misdemeanors. To Jefferson County court of misdemean: {ors. To that end. the court has adopt- ed “antijail sl which are proving very populs The “anti-jail slip” policy of the judge came to light when newspaper men hea hig fellow in overalls re- quest the judge to renew his “anti- {jail slip.” “Judze Abernethy renewed { the slip and told the applicant to carry it_only when he went 1o a crap game, The slip 1: “The bearer is a working negro, and will appear in court on his own bond, and 1 hereby authorize any officer of my court to let 1is own hond.” Abernethy said he had issued ut 200 such slips and that so far his fidence had not been abused. “A working negro will always play square.” said the judge. “They think lots of that slip and never go to a crap game without one.” WHALING REVIVED - OFF CALIFORNIA arlier | g de- | iling boats of an to an astonish | picturesque THE SUNDAY Venerable Palaces, Scenes ofl 0Oid Plots, Have Many Secret Passageways. Fearing Headman’s Ax, For- mer Officials and Wealthy | Men Go to Foreign Quarter. BY PAUL WRIGHT. Correspondence of The Star and the Chicago Daily News In Peking the mysterious East is been captured this season than in any | similar period since the whaling busi- | ness fell into the d rd. Scarcely a | ship arriving at this port f: port stehting one or more of the great | miammals during the run from | i Diego to Los Angeles. | Passengers on one liner making the sea yun this week saw three whales | sporting in the lee of Catalina Island. The whales, whick from 60 to 80 feet in _len were spouting. sounding and ! did in the old d: plashing just as th when whaling ves sels searched so thoroughly for their prey that they almost wiped out the | species. | | Survivors Hid Away. ) The remnant of the schools which | { escaped the whalers in the | perfod of West Coast settlement | to have hidden themselves away in | some remote parts where, undisturbed by man. they increased in numbe until they outgrew their hiding place | 2d were driven by overcrowding | again to range the open se: Dis- | patches from Atlantic ports recently | have told of great schools of whales | sighted in those waters, also. Where the whales hid and where | | they have come from are questions | Which sclentists are trying to an |swer. While they are seeking a solu- of the. other men are | ‘king and ng profit by wel-| coming the sea monsters with mod- [ern metheds of destruction. | The first consignment of whale oil domestic | i i | ever scharged here for r} Who vepresent the best in |consumption was brought in recently ar is. music and literature in ¢ a motorship manned by a crew of in State will be honorary host- | Norwegians, After a month's cruise o5 w0 My ealebrited by their | South of San Diego the vessel had a il honors will be he. |cargo of G88 tons of oil, valued at| o he four women by their |$113,000. The cargo was sold to a| X States. as @ part of the | seap manufacturer ' E renonies, 50 W i ve Ta 5 s. Wb NI Have Taken 150 Whale v Ve heen fixed and a dozen| Capt. J. A. Bryde. an _old-time ' tentatively agreed hunter, has been placed in et of Columbia and Alaska of operutions for a Norwe o will participate, it is planned | v which is planning exte S M eca TR operations along this const Vssemble “Peace Flags. | Capt. Bryde says that four ships re Jinz of a set of “peace | cently put into this revived industry hie varic by the Norwegians have taken 450 the Sesqui, & The first two Leen received st have v omen of headqus rs of the States . the women's board. Hawaii nd the State of Ohio have celebrated ieir days and have presented flags cprese : each. The flags all are of uniform size and material and ater he presented to the city of Phiiadelph These S N deter nined M Penn- svlhvania New Jersey 20; M Pepnessen ( tober 120 New Mina Vi Ot SN Paris Shops Campaigning to De- feat Vogue of Bob. PARIS st 21 U®.~The hat simiple and orned, he it the toque ich as Queen Mary wears, the bell or shape, has had its day. So. ‘- i the guiding intel: 1 he Parisian millinery who have decla 18 4 mere utilitarian hea only made possible by th lent custom of hobhing The camp: are now bel are elahorate distinctive in style, but ats g. and the \werage Eggs Not Included. From the Prog cotch farmer had agrees ) to the local 3 wever, were sent 18 almost ng before t h bird was brought in irmer even “Man,” said the butcher, ate with this one!” “Ave.” asreed the other. Unimpeachable Efiden&. From the London Tid-Bits. An Aberdonian charged wit “drunk and in station” plead ame out that raxi drove him to the station adm! ceiving sixpence over his legal ““That's done it,” exclaimed oner. driver who itted re- fare. the British Living Away Up. ars since the World In the 12 ¥ T ar began Great Britain has pasmn 11925, At presen T per cent high an in 191 and light ¥ ocent (lothing advanced 126 | vents nearly 50 per cent ov Ievels, e Slute Roof House, which September % 1do. d war on the &n will open fn the Fall inclination of returning sive Grocer Magazine. , she didna’ lay till this afternoon.” { apable in the precinets | rse of evidence it “I must have been drunk’ cost of Hving within its bounda ch as 73 per cent, which v a vear later, it s States which | Wso has flags of by commit- | C: assachn Sep October inia, Oc her 18 ) d cover. e preva. | ne in pre form i 3 the bob- | bing habit is growing rather th i Parisian to d to de- market. and it he twen by the| | ou're | “you're | h being | ed “Not ris- seen the | ries go | 4. F her 1 wl cent, | | introduced the subject in the national | whales within a radius of 300 miles of | San Pedro. Three of the ships do. the hunting. while the fourth receives the blubber and reduces it to oil | pt. Bryde sees great possibilities | in revival of the whaling industry. | { but mournfully admits that the ro-| mance of the old days cannot be re- | turn. Nowadays whaling is just a | business—more efficient if ~ more prosaic than formerly—with short < and quick retur Norwesians are not alome in scenting profits in the return of the whales. Half a dozen Ameriean com are being formed here and at ego to hegin in after the f if the whales are in evidence then Still Qut of Luck. Although an effort was years ago to obtain the French women. they still are without the right of suffrage, says the Topeka Capital. Probably the first woman's suffrage move in France was made by Citizen Rouzet, deputy of the | Haute Garonnee, in 1796. when he made 130 vote for convention, but Lanjuinais turned tion in a clever man he said, ask what honest woman will dare to maintain there is not unity in the wishes of her husband and her own. The husband, in st ng for him self, stipulates mnec ¥ for her who is one with him. Besides, women are destined to another kind of glory, more flattering perhaps: | they are called to mould from the cradle, hearts in which will shine all the republican virt The assembly wus convinced; the members smiled and passed on (o the next bu: atch to The St Wis., August 21.—Mem Kaltenback family have )f the village Kaltenback ster in 1837 and ntil his death in Andrew, entered the service. Upcn Andrew's death two months ago. his widow was ap- pointed to fill the vacancy. Special T POTOST bers of the held the postmastel for 84 1 Cele was appointed post continued i 1891, when his W Synthetic Corn, Too? The tourist from the East had stop ped to change tires in a desolate re- gion of the Sout *1 suppose,” e remarked to a na- | tive onlooker. “that even in these iso- | lated parts the bare necessities of life have risen tremendous] in price?"” and er 1924 “Y'er right. stranger.” replied the native. “and it ain't worth drinkin when ye git Square Joughnut helng ! duced in this countr) | against those more I created ling ships have no chance to| Lord Oxford and Asquith is an ex- compete in whaling or any other im- ‘ample. plain “Mr. Asquith” he was | portant activit he said, “Wind- | known to every one in the empire. As jammers, manned by expert sailors premier he had the greatest glory and harpooner inspired by com-|which can come to a British subject | munity Interest among the crews, be- | All other Asquiths and Askwiths | gan and completed a phase of the |took a back seat for the premier. i whaling industry that can never re- | Even after he left office at the hegin- | | four became one of Britain's greates part of the air you breathe. It is everywhere all the time. You en- counter the inexplicable and the enig- | matic on the right hand and the left. The uncommunicative walls of the hutung are built for concealment as well as protection, because the Chinese wishes to be secluded as well as safe. His home is more than his castle. Mysteries cluster thick around the | venerable palaces, each behind its! proper assortment of great walls. The | ellows | roofs that still sleam with {and purples and blues, despite the | mold and moss, are redoient of hidden | affairs. Every one of the old edifices | has known successful and aborted | plots, unexplained murders and upris 3 Herein the | have conspired | ppily placed in against author slaves of all varietie { life. There are deep cold wells that | have concealed for a time the victims | of the murderous dagger. There are subterranean passageways that have llowed nobles to escape their enemies | in time of trouble. These things have | been in times past and they are today everal Escaped in Tunnel. | Within the last month an under| ground tunnel permitted the getaway | ) o general whose enemies sought to | arrest him—as . necessary prelude | to cutting off his head—in his home | in the Chinese city. And through his | private subway he fled to another | house and thence into the open Air | and eventually the restricted liberty ! and absolute safety of the legatiol quarter, where no Chinese troops can ente i ven the big hotels that are usually | filled with commonplace, plug Amet- | icans and Europeans have their ghare | of muysterie pecially | the one hotel in th n quarter. Many are the guests whose names qre ot on the register and who never appear in the gining room. You may get glimpses of them in their apart- ments as you pass along the corridors MYSTERIOUS ORIENTAL SPIRIT PERMEATES PEKING ATMOSPHERE| | the laughter | chilaren in their Chinese clothes of 29 Ly STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., AUGUST SCOTLAND RAPIDL BECOMING IRISH Every Seventh Resident Found to Be Son of Erin. Scolchmen Migrating. By Cable to The Star and New York World. LONDON, August 21.— Irishmen who have never forgiven Oliver Crom- well for colonizing Ulster with & and thus changing the racial ¢ ter of the population of northern Ireland, can console themselves with the knowledge that Ireland is steadily ing” Scotland. The immense increase in the num ber of Irish residents on the west coast of Scotland had long been rec- ognized, and Glasgow, for instance, is almost an Irish city today. Re: cent investigations made by the Lon- don Morning Post disclosed remark- able statistics, for the Investigator finds every seventh Inhabitant of Scotland today is an Irishman. In the west coast industrial region every fourth man is Irish, while in the Lanarkshire section of that area. which includes the great mining centers, approximately every third person is Irish. From 1881 to 1901 the increase of the Irish population over the whole country was about twice as great as that of the Scots. From 1901 to 1921 it was slx and a half times as great. Official_statistics show in 1890 there were 338,643 Irish in Scotland, and in 35 years this figure has doubled. while In the same perod the Scots have only increased by oneninth. One-fifth of the children born in Scot- land in 1925 were of declared Irish extraction. In Glasgow alone 25 per cent of the children born in 1914 were Irish. In 1924 this figzure had increased to 281, per cent Causes for Change. ‘The causes of this wholesale zation” of Scotland by the Iri many and various. The man) of trouble over the home rule ques- One of the Main Gates of Peking. or you may hear them in excited con versation or you may catch the rattle | of the mah-Jong pieces through an|tion caused migrations from Ireland open transom. Or occasionally you | of all sorts of people. The creation pass them in the halls, silent-footed | of the Irish Free State increased the in their slim cloth sho nd dignified | flow to Seotland—and in a manner in long robes and round skull caps.|most disquieting to the Scottish (and Some of these elusive figures are|[nglish) authorities, for all the ir Chinese generals temporarily out of | reconcilable elements, which, after luck and waiting for hetter times. | of warfare against the British, Good Chinese Communists have heen | seemingly found it impossible to live living quietly here since the koumin-|a peaceful life under the Free State. chun’ was driven out of Peking’ in/Those who could not go to America Apr Notably there s one old | yromptly went to the west coast of Chin ; s ‘;. n!h‘n:’\nl:\;_lh‘" llm “l:‘y“: Stotland (many of them in order to rd whose cripple-footed wife and fegeape Free State jails for plotting their little daught = \\;lh hir ”l‘* against the Dublin xn\'srnmpnxll prospects grow mno brightel the | “U'nder the United States immij weeks pass along. There are former i, jaws, Ireland—as the Free State cabinet ministers and other politicians net. mir « : ' | _was given a speclal quota, distinct e ot would | from Great Britain, and this proved risk the headm: > inadequate, so that Scotland seemed the Tata squad if they vent or the Chinese cit Riches Taken From City. echo with sed Chinese the only alternative. Next year the Free State quota to America will be reduced by 8000, and presumably The stairs and hallw of well d silk. but there is no mystery about them, because their fathers are mer- chants and bank who brought hither their strong hoxes and their families when the city was in danger | of being looted by the victorious Fengtien troops not long ago, and the only safe spots in China were the foreign quarters, where law is still law. [ Many of the Chinese come into the | dining room, and all the Russians,| Who love the music of the Russian | orchestra. The T ans ave reds and | whites, the bolskeviks and those who | love the old order. They never speak | as they pass by, and they converse in their own little groups, each pla the discomfiture of the other. h reds presumably foresce the day when all capitalistic_ clvilization shall be overthrowr you know nd the whites—oh, well, Meanwhile, they both ear | salle-a-manger, though | tomorrow. in the same at separate tables, and make the b of (Copyright, 1928, by Chicago Dafly News.) BRITONS ENDANGER EARLY FAME BY TAKING TITLES IN PEERAGE, By the Ascociated Press . LONDON, August 21.—British public men need some sort of Lucy Stone TLeague to protect them against losing the glory of their early careers when they are converted into peers and as- sume a lordly title. ned a great nd ran 18 nig of the war he rem: leader in the Liberal party neck and neck with Llovd George 4 prominent figure in British politics “Lord Oxford” Small Tdentity n Mr. Asquith was no and the blandish, became Lord By degrees But when pla longer able to withs ments of a_peerage oxford, he began to ip. the Asquith was lost in the news.| papers and he became merely Lord Oxford. | The name suggests the university, | or the dictionary. § That put him into the class with hundreds of lords who are merely virtue of birth. because they | have given liberally to charities or| distinguished themselves by public service. Also it robbed him of the right to sit in the House of Commons, | |and sitting in the House of Lords is a thankless task. Lloyd George Avoids Peerage. Iloyd George has avoided a peer; age. He realizes that the House of Commons i§ the foru which is really important. Consequently he held an advantage over Lord Oxford and As quith in the struggle they were hav- ! ing for supremacy in the Liberal party. Lord took a Birkenhead another who | chance when he accepted peerage. He had been lord high chan- cellor of Great Britain, which is a cort of combination of the posts of . President of the Senate and Chief | is Justice of the Supreme Court of the United Stat of € nd was ranked as one eat Britain's ablest legal lights. (aggering under the plebefan name | ith, he managed to lend that name, but when . peerage ondered he assumed the more high-sounding title of Lord RBirkenhead. By attacks on what he described as the stupidity and inac tivity of the House of Lords member ship, however, he has kept himself in the limelight through suggestions for its reform William E Gladstone did not accept a peerage. He saw danger to a Lib- eral politician in the assumption of the hobbies which membership in the House of Lords carries with it. Ar- thur Balfor declined to become a peer for many vears and as plain Mr. Bal- | diplomatists Must Have Publicity. | The great majority of old ,»emgps[ are held by men known only to read- ers of Burke's Peerage and of the! social and sporting columns of promi- | nent British newspapers. A lord is on the defensive and must show great pility to attract 4 on from the | ceneral pubiic and gain space in ihe press. - Ramsay MacDonald and Ligyd ten: 1500,000 to seven r ieorge hold universal fame, but their light might be put under a bushel were they to become peers and as- | sume some high-sounding name which | not readily assocliated itself with their | activitles premiers and par leaders. Village Has Seven Millionaires. From the Vancouver Province. i Nearly 50 years ago a YOung man left Frelahorn, a little village in Bava- | ria, for the United States to make his fortune. Eventually he became the | owner of a valuable coal mine. His | last business deal before he died was to sell this mine for more than $9¢ 000,000. He left his fortune of $9 tives still living | little village has | in Freiahorn. This “‘conquering” and, in fact, ‘‘coloniz | |and just i | | 1926— PART 1. i Special Dispatch to The Star. LIBERTY, 8. C., August 21.—Mis: Sue Isabel Boggs. black-eyed, pretty turned 20. a good hous keeper, a better cook and a splendid ‘home-make! on all counts, has never had a beau in her life, despite the fact that she gets letters from every State in the Union, and could number million- awyers, do and an Indian chief or two among her suitors, if she wished. The fact that she claims to be the only “beauless girl” in the world and that she set out deliberately to earn that title and Vows never to relinquish it, was the subject of a news dispatch recently that must have zone to all corners of the xlobe, for since its publication amazed and even indignant men have heen writing to her from all points of the compass. Lawyers, preachers, artists, cartoon- ist: archietects, authors editor: po soldiers, musicians. farmer: brickiavers and several Indians are among those who have written to Sue Isabel to assure her that she is mak- ing the mistake of her life and that she ought to get a sweetheart right away. Quite a few of them have sent presents. In every instance Sue Is bel Boggs has returned these gifts with a firm note to the effect that she couldn’t consider accepting them. All her life Sue Isabel has wanted to establish a world record at some- thing. She didn’t get to start school until she was 12 years old. In 29 months she finished eight grades, and that aroused in her an ambition to set a world record for t education. | But with this title seemingly in her grasp. she had to quit school to help out the family budget At that time { 80-Year-0ld Claims to 3-Mile Strip | Annexed to Samoa Once More Advanced. By the Associated Press . " APL Samoa August i girls weren't thinking of swimming i - 4 mImINg | ¢roxgfonal wction annexing Swa the English Channel, but they were Island, a three-milelong :peck in the l;‘:‘;‘;":fi( | ocean 250 miles from here, to Amer: can Samoa has brought up in the high court here an old suit to determine its ownership. doing . good deal of Bible So Sue Isabel, after learning of Matthew by heart when she was Just 16, set out to memorize the whole New Testament, for by now it had become her fixed purpose to accom- <hty years ago the coral atoll hore plish . some undertaking that had |& few cocoanut palms hout that never before been achieved. She was |time it was settled upon by Sula Ty rell, a4 Frenchman, who built houses getting along toward the middle of the holy work when she found that there was a man who already knew it all. She stopped and concentrated her and established a station for down copra into oil. Tokelau won In 1851 boiling Tyrell married a and his wife went 1o efforts on . Sunday school teaching. | other Islands to buy cocoanuts, leavinig When she was about 17 she had [behind an ¢ year-old son. taught every class from the heginner: During their absence Eli Jennings, to the men advanced class.| an American citizen, with two other and until this day she believes that | white men and sc was a world record, but it was dis- | on the puted. from Ty, Then, as a stroke of inspiration, the The nati landed lagoon ne islanders. de of the mile settlement e in char sent the boy, idea came to her to be the only beau-| Kalofa, across in a bo: eviden less girl. Up to that time she had|that the island belonged to a whi been too busy to bother with beaux.|man. Jennings. however, insisted but from then on it became her fixed | upon erecting buildings and informed purpose in life never to hold hands.|the natives that Kalofa would She began to sign all her letters. “The | sgopted by him as son. Wh Beauless Girl of Liberty,” and the | jenning's daughter attained marriage news got into the newspapers. Since then temptation has beset her in the shape of letters from all parts of the country. Sue Isabel could now have a sweetheart In every town, but she is going to be just the opposite of Cleopatra and such famous ladie able age she was wedded to Kalofa Title to the island and its now fru ful cocoanut groves passed from Je nings and his companions into other hands, but the descendants of Kalofa {and Jennings' daughter have alwavs | asserted that their title descending this number of possible emmigrants | will move to Scotland. of Scotland is now re. the “reddest” section of in. but it is contended that the *reds” ave the Irish and not the regular Scottish inhahintants. Cer- tainly the majority of the recent Irish fmmigrants to Scotland have brought little love for England with them, and as Scotland is, for all adminis- trative purposes, governed from Lon- don, it is perhaps only to be expected they should show enthusiasm for all “anti-English” movement: Scotchmen Migrating. Naturally, there has been a big ex- odus from Scotland in order to make room for the Irish (though it is con- tended by some critics that the Scots were forced to emigrate through the The west is garded as Great Brit: Irish “invaders” taking their jobs). From 1921 to 1926 mnearly 300,000 voung Scotchmen left their native country, mostly for Canada and other British Dominions. It is suggested in some quarters that this ‘“colonization” (or recondi- tioning, according to an Irishmnan) of Scotland is part of a definite anti- British plan, and anyw Irish political leaders on the west coast predict they will have the political mastery of Scotland within 10 years, at the present pace. There. would seem to be eve: reason why the in now become, perhaps, the richest place-of its size in the world. It can boast of seven millionaires. e e Imported Linen Trousers, full Nearly half of the output of all Japan's factorles is composed of silks nd other textiles White Duck Trousers. . Calvert St. Bet. 18th & 19th N.W. (Just Half Block West New_Ambassador Theater) TODAY A delicious dinner with a variety to choose from $1.00 1 PM. to 7 P.M. Service and Food Unsurpussed Parking on Three 1725 Taylor Street West of Sixteenth Semi-detached brick dwelling of eight rooms, two tiled baths, hardwood floors th r oughout, spacious kitchen, large lig cellar with servants’ toilet and wash trays, thirty-gallon auto matic storage heater. Open fireplace, lot 311X156 feet. Three built.” Two sold. 015 E Streer NW. 733 12th St. NW. Main 352-353 Black Office Coats in all sizes. Fine Quality Khaki Trousers. .. .. Summer Trousers, small sizes. ... ....... Light Summer Mohair Trousers. . . Regulation White Sailor Trousers. ... ... Woolen Trousers in light shades. . . .. ... Low or High Shoes, factory damaged. .. Qveralls and Jumpers, union made. . . . ... Bathing Suits, 1 and 2 piece. .. Jazz Bow Ties, in finesilks. ............. Four-in-Hand Ties, new patterns. . . ...... Cotton Hose, irregular. . .. .....19c, 6 All-Wool Bathing Suits. . ...............$1.00 Cotton Golf Hose, light weight. . ......... 59 Men’s Blue Work Shirts. ... .. .. Men’s Fine Quality Pajamas, sizes AtoD. . ..95¢ Fancy Hose, slightly irregular. . ......... 39¢ ‘The Heeht ARGAIN AN Store Hours, Daily: 9:15 A.M. to 6 P.M.—Closed Saturdays During August °* ] . $2.65 .$1.95 .$1.59 .$1.29 .$1.95 .$2.95 .$1.25 .$3.85 .$1.85 .$1.00 69¢ 19¢ 39¢ $1.00 for 59c¢ | for Hot Weather Wear The price gives ycu no idea of these values. grade fabrics, finely tailored, in grays, tans, stripes and a host of blacks and other plain colors. Two and three button coats for young men and men not so young. All sizes. It will pay you tc buy tomorrow for next year. Alterations made at actual cost. | from Kalofa is older than that derived two Celtic races should mingle satis- | from Jennings. An effort was made factorily, if only from racial sympa- R o thy, but British conservative poli- | quiet the title in the Suprem ticians affect to regard the new !established under the three-power “Irish problem” with anxiety lernment of Samoa, but difficulie i Pr— aro: to jurisdiction. The Frenchman, Tyrell, it was a Practice Makes Perfect. From the London Answers e Tt was & dark night at Aldershot, | ©°F €°C°2nUts- and in the gloom could be heard the | Sound of an approaching he “Halt! Who goes there? the picket. “Regimental “Dismount, sir, recognized.” ward learned, had been murdercd on { another island, to which he had gon . Dog Electrocuted Drinking. When ‘u sheep dog at Lausanue, Switzerland, started drinking from stream nearby, it was immediately electrocuted aminers touching tha The colonel dismounted and came |08 afterward were also shocked. Tn over to the picket, who presented | Vestigation showed that a leak from arms with a snap. {nearby factory had charged the river Proceks sitt he sald: |and the current had to be shut off. An e Iaborlously got back on his | (N Proprietor of the factory faces horse the colonel asked {he | suit for the loss of the animal. way, who posted you there? “Oh, nobod: replied picket. “harked | commander. and advance to be Feeding Policemen Taboo. In Philadelphia the chief surgeon of the Police Department has appealedl to the public not to feed the policemen on the beats. It is a habit of long standing to offer candy, peaches, ba nanas and other tidbits to the officer | but the surgeon has found an incre: |ing rate of diabetes among the men fand by restricting their in-betw | meals ‘eating it is hoped to check { diseas the si “I'm just practicing.” Co g School Baths Mandatory. In Peru a law has been passed mak ing mandatory the installation of shower baths in all school buildings The law recently was passed by the Peruvian Congress and will call for a considerable outlay to equip all the buildings throughout the country Tomorrow in The Hecht Co. Men’s Bargain Annex, 613 E St. Clean Sweep All Summer merchandise must go, and in The Clean Sweep nearly everything a man wears is priced so low that it will go. Get your share of these savings here Flannels, Tropicals, Mohairs, Linens and Linen Crashes A Fine Assortment of Good-looking Patterns High-grade Suits $ 8.95’ High- Low Shoes Tennis Shoes $2.85 $3.50 to $5 Goodyear welt oxfords, tan or black; rubber heels. Good assortment of sizes. 69c $1.50 high tennis shoes, brown or white; heavy crepe rubber bot- toms. Sizes6to11. 300 Men’s Shirts colors and many patterns. Collar-on and 1,000 Collars neckband styles; sizes 14 to 17. ~69c 5¢c Several popular Slightly irregular semi- shapes with either plai soft collars; usual 35¢ or fancy bands. Broken quality ; nationally known sizes from 6 5-8 to 7%;. brand; broken sizes. NEX Straw Hats

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