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“SKIN SUFFERING IS UP T0 YoU SAYS POSLAM * " If you suffer from eczema or a skin eruption of some kind, it's your own fault. The remedy is right at hand—apply Poslam at night and note the great improve- ment in the morning. The itching ceases and the skin starts to heal. You can get Poslam at any drug store, 50c. Convincing Test-Box Free! Write Poslam, Desk 2, 2564 W. 54th St. N. Y. POSLAM SUMMER SUITS $1350 Charge it. $4.50 IN AUG. $4.50 IN SEPT. $4.50 IN OCT. EISEMAN’S, 7th & F Nothing down. Acids Cause Tooth Decay% Mouth acids attack teeth and cause decay. To effectively fight this dangerous aci dition brush your teeth twice . It contains more than 50% pure milk of magnesia which coun- | teracts acidity. This splendid den- safe cleansing TIHO STATES HOLD REPEAL SPOT LIGHT Drys and Foes Spur Fight as VYotes in Arkansas, Alabama Near. By the Associated Press. Both repealists and prohibitionists are mo' 11 thelr forces into Arkan- sas and bama, newest battlegrounds for the eighteenth amendment, equally letermined that the voting on July 18 will go their Repealists, arguing that defeat will merely slow up the march to eventual victory, nonetheless express hope for a conquest that will encourage more States to set voting dates this year to get on & band wagon in the movement to eliminate the amendment in 1933. Both Sides Certain. Prohibiticnists, determined to fight on even if defeated in these two tra- ditionally dry States, look for a victory that will mark the turn against repeal, already voted by 16 States. ‘Two days later, on July 20, Tennes- see will ballot, and on the next day Oregon voters step to the polls. Here again both sides are publicly avowing certainty of victory, but the repealists are pointing to Tennessee’s legalization of beer and Oregon's repeal of its| State bone-dry act. Alabama’'s Legislature, in special ses- sion, declined te legalize beer, and pro- hibit ts hope this indicates the state of puMlic opinion. The fight is bitter, with Dr. L. E. Barton, chairman of the Association Against Repeal, predicting a knock down and drag out fight, in which “we ask no quarter and will give none.” “Facts Only” in Arkansas. ‘The contest in Arkansas started out The Roosevelt New Deal Re- q\flefls_ peal Club will not even allow its mem- | bers to debate prohibition on a public platform, working instead “to present the facts to the people instead of play- ing upon their passions and preju- | dices.” Arkansas did not legalize beer. Tennessee repealists are predicting victery by & 50,000 majority, but the drys are also forecasting a large vote in their favor. In Oregon, Methodist Episcopal lead- ers have launched a vigorous fight to keep the State out of the repeal column, but repeal leaders appear confident. While repealing its bone-dry law, Ore- gon’s Legislature declined to enact some form of liquor regulaticn, although the return of legal beer was imminent at the time. Bay Labor Plan Dropped. New South Wales, Australia, has abandoned the plan of having public construction done by day labor, and is agkinb for bids on all government projects. Life’s Chivalry Was Lacking in Men’s Attitudes on Trip From California. T'8 a long and lonesome road, that 3,000 miles of h#‘l‘lvl ‘which separates Eleanor t f;—om her home in Woodland, Calif. The road which beckoned at first has as- sumed & sinister aspect for the 23-year- old college graduate, now that she has hitch-hiked over it. Miss Fait has just arrived in Wash- ington, coming all the long way with $2 in her purse and what she was able to earn behind a ribbon counter in Chicago. She hopes to find a temporary job here, 50 she won't have to travel that road again by the hitch-hike route. What with drunken drivers and cow- boys, dust storms and tornadoes, she can't quite muster the courage to set out without a bus or rallway ticket. Started as Lark. Back at Mills College, Oakland, Calif., where Miss Fait went to school, her classmates considered hitch-hiking a “lark,” she said. “All the girls hitch<hiked. They had lots of fun—but that was back in California!” she added, with & sigh. “There is & different attitude toward girls in the West, more chivalry.” In New Mexico, Miss Fait had been standing in the desert for five hours waiting for & lift while night ap- proached and Mexican cowboys rode by. The sautomobile which Miss Fait eventually halled was driven by a drunken man. Miss Falt did not know this until he let the car roll down an embankment. She was bruised and the driver somewhat more seriously injured. In Colorado Miss Fait arrived in a small cow town on a Saturday night, while the hands from adjoining ranches were painting it red. Miss Fait, the | only new girl in town, created quite & | sensation, she said. Saved From Toughs. The girl picked up her suit case and ran for the railway station, with a boisterous, laughing crowd in pursuit, she said. ‘There, Miss Fait continued, the stationmaster waved the toughs { away with & pistol, while she curled up on a bench to spend the night. Miss Fait explained this lack of chiv- | alry did not occur in the “West,” since | all” Californians regarded Colorado as an “Eastern State.” A duststorm in this same State and a tornado in Kansas, which blew auto- mobiles from the highway and spread death and destruction through several nearby towns, were additional experi- ences, Found Work in Chicage. Miss Falt left California May 16. She found work in Chicago and stayed there | for several weeks, sightseeing at the | World's Fair each’ night, before hitch- hiking to Washington. She is now stopping st s branch of C(DGL and FBESH as the air after a Spring Rain— on | THE GEORGE WASHINGTON THE SPORTSMAN » THE F.F.V. All Genuinely Air-conditioned No more stuffy nights on sleeping cars. No dust, dirt, cinders or deafts. Cool, clean, fresh air, eonstantly changing, on all Ghosapeske and Ohio thru trains. The F. F. V., new fast air- eonditioned might train West at 10:35 P. M., offers convenient ahernative to 6:01 departure of The George Washington. Air-con- ditioned overnight servioe to White Sulphur, Hot Springs, Hunt- ington, Charleston. Thru air-conditioned sleeping cars to Indian- apolis, Cincinnati, Lexington and Louisville, Sechedules designed to conserve your productive honrs GEORGE WASHINGTON Atrconditioned WESTBOUND . (Standurd Tiam) Iv. WASHINGTON ... . .6:01 P. M. Ar. WHITE SULPHUR 12:15 A. M. Ar. LEXINGTON. ... .. 7:52 A. M. Ar. CINCINNATI... .. Ar. LOUISVILLE. ... .10:25 A. M. Ar. INDIANAPOLIS . . 10:35 A. M. Ar. CHICAGO.. ...... 350 P. M. As. ST. LOUIS. . ce .. .. 440 P. M. THE F.F. V. Abrccaditioned WESTBOUND (Standard Time) Lv. WASHINGTON . ..10:35 P. M. Ar. WHITE SULPHUR *6:00 A. M. THE SPORTSMAN Atr-cosditioned 'WESTBOUND (Btandard Tieme) Lv. WASHINGTON. . .11:55 A. M. Ar. WHITE SULPHUR .6:45 P. M. Ar. CHARLESTON.....1045 P. M. Ar. HUNTINGTON . .. 11:55 P. M. Ar. Columbus.. o0 e ...340 A. M. Ar. Toledo. ... Ar. CINCINNATI Ar. Detroit... .. . J. B. EDMUNDS, Assistant General Passenger Agent 714 14th Srreet, N. W, Phone: National 0748 ING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. Seamy Side Often Seen, ok Girl Hitch-Hiker Says, Sadly| ASCENT SUCCESSFUL [ ) ELEANOR FAIT. the Y. W. C. A. at 614 E street. Miss Fait said she hoped she would have an opportunity to tell others girls about hitch-hiking. “I wanted to see the world,” she said, “and I saw it! But it was too much of the seamy side. If a girl should ask me about seeing the world the way I did I would say to her: “‘For heaven's sake, stay home!'” Dog Race Betting Vetoed. SPRINGFIELD, I, July 11 (P — Gov. Horner yesterday vetoed the bill legalizing pari mutuel betting on dog races. The QGovernor said “it might be said that the bill has been prepared by and for the dog track operators with & maximum of license for them and a minimum of regulation or advantage to the State and its people.” ‘ TUESDAY, SECOND VOLCANO Father Hubbard, However, Says Drop Into Shishaldin Ended “Almost Fatally.” By the Associated Press. Bernard Hubbard, the “glacier priest,” is back here safe after the second suc- cessful ascent of Shishaldin Voleano, during which he said the expedition ended “almost fatally.” Already the conqueror of the dan- gerous Munimak Island peak while it was in on last year, Father Hub- bard repo; that this season his party was repulsed twice in six weeks before the summit was reached on July 3. “While struggling along the perilous WHAT LS AIR JULY 11, 1933.° the swirling snows. the lea of an fce' pinnacle we to get a fly tent over our heads. There four men and three pack dogs cquched, freesing for hours, until & slignt lessening of the gale allowed us to_get to the bottom of the mountain.” When the summit was finally reached, he said, the mountain again “blew & blizeard” at the climbers and all had to enter the gassy, cone at the top to thaw out their clothes and freez- ing fingers before starting downward. e Bearch for Missing Sloop. COLON, Panama, July 11 (P—A United States Navy patrol plane and coastwise shipping were se: the cosst yesterday for Mmmcuq and PFrank Coplita, employes of the Critobal branch of the Chase National Bank who bave been missing in an 18-foot sloop since ‘yesterday. CONDITIONED REFRIGERATION? It’s a new, scientific way to keep food fresher, in both homes and stores. Operated with American Ice, Air Conditioned Refrigeration gently circu- lates cool, moist air around the food. That means food will stay fresh longer—and flavor will be re- tained. System is economical to operate. For further information telephone District 6240. American D ICE @ Company has begun to persusde 2 o e supply ane ue the cit ‘s“urmpfly!mth:wmmm- er. ke declares the city is the center of a subterranean basin of 2,500 square miles of water bearing rock at varying depths from 400 to 1,100 feet. The sup- uld be_inexhaustib] Deafened... Vast Artesian Basin. MINNEAPOLIS (#).—A vast artesian basin that could be tapped for the city's water supply at an estimated cost of HEAR AGAIN RENT AN ACOUSTICON The outstanding hearing aid since 1903...small. . . light. .. compact Rent a brand new Acousticon for 90 daps! Learn the joy of hearing again without obligated to "buy first. All it will cost you is $9.75. We supply the batteries and service: free of charge. Only $3.25 2 month—a little over 10c a day— will bring back the joy of hearing again. If you want to buy, 50% of the rental will be spplied against the purchase. 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Things that you ought to know for your own good. iInBrown Bottles he Beer hat _ Iaukee famous SCHLITZ BREWING COMPANY, 2800 10¢h Street N.E. POtomac 5550