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| DIAMOND RUSH TO GIRLS! LEMONS BLEACH SKIN WHITE lemons ounces Squeeze the juice of two into a bottle containing three of Orehard White store will ehake well, ar for a few cents, you have a quarter pint of harm! and delightful lemon bleach. Massage this sweetly fra- grant lotion into the face, neck, arms, and hands each day, then shortly n the beauty and whiteness of your skin Famous hea this lemon lotior i and bring that soft, cle rosy-white complexion also as a freckle, sunburn and tan | bleach because it doesn't irritate | FIVE POLICEMENTO TAKE GIVIL SERVICE supply stage fes use to blea Patrolmen to Be Examined for v Fitness to Become Sergeant of the regula Five the local their inte patrolmen on signified examin- ot by today n, Patrick Peter Me- \ Ha > have ing the on s of tak e new posi will be named police hoard, it hecame known They are Michael Fly O'Mara, Patrick McAvay Evoy and Je Stad there are any others the civil service tests is not known at the present time. On Waiting List. Three of the reguls who have been on the v some time and who examinatior cided that t ing exam eycle Po William ael M satisfactorily and have be for promotio the who Stro %k torwhich: ons ointed 1e, it that Lan- for his of the to the new serg: was whispered in Supervisor of Tr pher would be th the day sergeancy, because of extensive knowledge of the conditions about the city. He, ever, will not take the examinations | for the place. Many are predicting | the appointment of Patrick O'Mara to the new position. His work on the/ vice squad, it is said, has carried much weight with the police commis- sion. Others claim that he will not be appointed. The police commis- sioners themselves are silent on the matter, saying that they will await the outcome of the examinations be- fore they will make any statements as to who is likely to be appointed. cir arence selected NEW YORKER TRIES SUICTIDE | Estranged From Wife, He Takes Poi- | son At Mount Clemens, Mich. Mich., Aug. 31.—| clothing manufac- guest of unsuccess- Moynt Clemens, A. J. Feigelman, turer of New York city, local hotel here, made an ful attempt to kill himself here today because he was estranged from his wife. Feligelman was found in a dazed condition on the banks of the Clinton river, where he was debating wheth- er or not to throw himself in Taken to police headquarters, it was' found that he had swallowed poison Feilgelman told the authorities that he had been unsuccessful in his over tures to have his wife, also a guest here, return to New York with him He will recover, physicians say. a ENTERS UNIVERSITY AT 13. Northwestern Waives Age Rule To | Admit Its Youngest Student 31.—Willmore Ken- the youngest Chicago, Aug dall Jr, thirteen, dent ever enrolled university, was yesterday admitted to the freshman class, after he passed tests applied by university officials Kendall, who is the son of a Meth- odist Episcopal minister, will take up | his studies under a special dispensa- | tion which sets aside the university's bar to students under sixteen GIRL NOW WELL AND STRONG Daughter Took Lydia E. Pink- bam’s Vegetable Compound as Mother Advised Wauseon, Ohio.—‘‘ My daughter al- ways had backache and leg-ache at cer- tainperiodsandcould not g:on her feet at those times. We read about Lydia E. Pink- | ham's Vege table Compound doin 5 girls so much goo 80 she began to take it. That is two years ago and she is a dif- ferent girl since then able to do any work she wants to do—al- though she is still careful not to do heavy work — and so well and strong. We recommend Lydia E. Pinkhnm's%/egetable Compound to all mothers with ailing dauq_hters,‘and 1 ive you permission to pub! ish_this let- r a3 a testimonial.” rs.A. M. BURK- HOLDER, Route No. 2, Box 1, Wauseon, Ohio. Something out of balance will affect the finest clock, causing it to gain or Jose. The proper adjustment made, all jswell. Soit is with women. Some trouble may upset you completely Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- E'o\md will wrrocnll;lleaun o{:he trouli diu{goen e symptoms wil di:.ndru y did in the case of Mrs. Ider’s dsughter. o worthy of your con- MOTHERS — it i8 which any drug | ote |this case to peg out claims in a new- {ly discovered diamond fleld was men- [vor lth Ons | weather ime | safe, traffic | how- | | edge of the tables. | | Laborers Voluntary Exiles. “One of the most striking teatures of the mining of diamonds by the large companies in Kimberly is the | existence of the unique labor com pounds nee diamonds are so easily | stolen, only those native laborers are loyed who will agree to ‘enlist’ for three months and remain for (w not in the mines, ‘floors’') within a walled stu- | em at Northwestern | <) ASPIRIN | Say “Bayer” and Insist! | " HIMBERLEY FIFLDS New Fields Discovered Which Will Rival Famous Mines c 30,—A America but in Washington, D Aug rush" such as frontier knew in its free.land days, tioned in recent dispatches from South Africa. This new diamond country opens up possibilities of a rival to the great Kimberly dlamond field in the same general region, the world's greatest source of the spark- ling white gems. The methods of mining Kimberly, which may in the new flelds the formation proves the same, are outlined in a| bulletin from the Washington, D, C headquarters of the National Geogra- Unless you see the name “Bayer'” on package or on tablets you are not get- ting the genuine Bayer product pres seribed by physiclans over twenty- two years and proved safe by millions for Colds Toothache Earache Rheumatism Neuralgia Pain, Pain Accept only “Bayer’ package which contains proper directions. Handy hoxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Druggists also sell bottles of 24 and 100, Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetica- cidester of Salicylicacid. GLAIMS MEMBERS HEAR PETITIONS Headache dlamonds Lumbago at be followed | tho! crystals are created are in worthl clever have few tons enced relatively fine trucl-lo the phic soclety, in, “are in very anclent vol- ith the great heat and pressure of | ands of the hard white carbon embedded a great volume of | e o na se e srovertis! To Applicants Given Permission cate his needle with a powerf m:xc-; cleverly ‘to mepardte the tnY| The claims committee of the com- “The effectivenes with which Na- | o)k and Corporation Counsel J. H. " brought up from the depths | council that two of the four petition- for four months to a vear to the|and to postpone the others for fur- over the weathering ‘floors’ for many | In the case of Stanley Just, who ‘blue ground' weathers it crum- | Grove and Broad streets, the com- est are dragged over it to facilitate | claimed $12 for doctor’'s services and “Eventually the material is broken | at the hearing, that the property in mechanical nine for | ered a thin patch of ice, which a wire mesh- | witness could not state positively Lik» Needle in Haystack. The mines at Kimberly,” says the oes which ages ago lost all sem- blance of activity. But during their| se volcanoes created gigantic | laboratories in their depths in which which diamonds, were The precious little lumps| rock known as ‘blue and under old conditions needle In a haystack. But just as a scarcher could probably lo- i : to Withdraw, Others Postponed lespite the straw, so engineers| evolved mechanical means | R —— - liamonds from the many ot mon council, represented by Council- lirt which they are hidden. men George Molander and Walter ure has concealed the crystals is evl- | Kirkham, met last evening and de- by the fact that the ‘blué| ijeq to recommend to the common the mines and carrying its price- | ers whose claims were discussed last less gems, is spread out in the open | cvening be given leave to withdraw, The dlamonds are perfect!y | ther investigation for officials who have walked | PDamages For Fall, | vears assert, that they have mnever|claimed nages because of a fall found a diamond in this way. As|on an fcy sidewalk at the corner of and great harrows like those | mittee decided to give the, petitioner ed on the bonanza farms of the |leave toewithdraw his claim. Just] the process $76 for time lost at the Russell and Gems Trapped in Grease. | Erwin factory. It was brought out down into particles. | front of which the petitioner fell is It is then t to the [owned by Maria Wisk and was cov- treatment mixed with | was in turn covered with a thin patch machines and of snow. The petitioner and his only whether there was any ice there or ble of the | not d in| con- Auto Top Destroyed. Louis Greenberg of 12 Pliny street, 4 over | Hartford, sought damages from the sloping, vibrating table ed with | city for his automobile which was thick grease, Because of some little [ struck by a falling tree at 32 Beaver understood physical property dia- | street during a severe rainstorm last monds stick to the grease while the | month. It was claimed that the top worthless material flows over the of the automobile was damaged to The gre. with | such an extent that it necessitated a its load of crystals is then scraped [ néw top and windshield. The tree into a perforated container and heat- | Was examined after it fell and was ed by steam. The grease melts aw found to have had a bad spot near and leaves the small but highly valu- | the base which was not noticed be- able object of th months of work. | fore it fell. The committee decsled “How widely spaced the diamonds|that the petitioner had not proved are in their matrix of earth can he that the city was liable for the dam- shown best perhaps by a comparison |38€¢ and he was given leave to with- of volumes: The earth taken out in|draw. a year by the largest mining com- pany in the field, wouid form a cube more. than 430 feet in each dimen- sion. This would fill large ci block to a height of more than stories. The diamonds found in this Petitioner Absent, The case of Mrs. William A. Allan jof West Main street, who tripped over a root of a tree near Corbin avenucy was postponed until the petitioner | will be present before the committee, vast amount of earth would fill only | She claims $100 damages. Her hus- two or three desk drawers or a|band described the circumstances of | the accident, but as he was not an cubfeal box less than three feet in| ‘2 SCCfent, bu | each dimension. But these few pecks | itness, it was decided to have woman present. | of stones for which a mountain w Await Report | moved were worth perhaps in exce The petition of Eugene Bleau, | whose property was damaged by the overflow of the Monroe street brook, | will be acted upon after a report| from the city engineer is received Mr. Bleau's claim is for $19.50 for plowing and marking ground, seed, potatoes and fertilizer, which, he | claims, was washed away by the overflow, a he at le that period or on the enclosure. \ In the largest compou more than four acres, Not only these rounded by high walls, but they are also covered overhead by fine wire | netting so that diamonds cannot be thrown outside to confederates, | Laborers entering or leaving a compound must go through a pro- , covering | ) men live : New compounds sur- Britain Man Takes Miss Ger- trude FElvera Rosen of Bristol As His Bride—Married August 19. Mr. and Mrs. Carl V. Rosen of George street, Bristol, announced the marriage of their daughter, Gertrude cedure not unlike that when enter- i Elvera to Wendell Day Kinkaid, son ing a foreign country having strict|,¢ Mr and Mrs. George Kinkaid of | immigration and customs laws. They|New Britain. The marriage was per must pass a health examination and formeq in Christ church, Springfield it diseased are rejected or placed in|\ass, by Benjamin Louls Ramsey, as. quarantine. Only certain articles may gociate rector at 3 o'clock on Satur- | be taken into a compound, and no day afternoon, August 19. boots, shoes or other hard or solid They spent their honeymoon on a materials may be taken out—only motor trip stopping at Boston, Mass | clothing which has been searched.|pgjand Springs, Sebago Springs and In the largest of the compounds, peaks Island, Maine. The bride was | where some laborers have chosen to | formerly employed at the Bristol stay for years, are stores, a church, | Trust company and the groom is em- |a school, a hospital and dispensary,|pjoved as a salesman for Pierce, Inc athletic grounds and a swimming | or Hartford. pool. The manager of the com-| Mr and Kinkaid *will be at pound is a sort of mayor and Judge home to their friends in their newly rolled into one and led upon to | fyrnished home on George street af- | decide innumerable jter November 1. Mrs. is ca sputes."” GARY OPTIMISTIC. Liquid Fire A liquid fire to the bedbugs, roach- tion, in Chicago yesterday on his w es, ants and fleas is what the new to New York from a vacation spent| chemical discovery really is, al- chiefly in Colorado, said that “there though there is no damage to be seems to be a general feeling that ac-| done by using it to your springs, tivities are 4 that great| furniture or clothing. spe e witnesse when- FLUApe N This new chemical is known as Pesky Devils lever conditions relating to produc-| o eue p D, Q. Costs 35c but these few cents | tion and transportation will permit"” will have the power of midding your Mr. Gary said he thought there house of bedbugs, ants, roaches snd v . 1 ite D.Q Itisused still was a good “deal of profiteer- fleas if you purchase P | ing in business, building materials and recommended by the leading Hos | troad Companies as the b i ias o R g S L el fi;:t:::«:;::kenwly()l ridding the | that he looked upon the proposed | pe.ky bedbugs, ete | action of Henry Ford, who has an-| rounced his automobile plants will | close on Sept. 16, unless some way is found of obtaining fuel, "“as simply a protest against paying extortionate prices.” | Chairman of TU. S. Steel Thinks Busi- | ness Will Still Tmprove. E. H. Gary, U. S. Steel corpora- Chicago, Aug chairman of the increasing a will P.D. Q can aiso be purchased in sealed bottles, double strength, liquid ferm, Crowell’s Drug Store and Other Lead- ‘ng Drugzists Special Hospital size $2.60--makes five gallons. | IMPORTANT!toEveryMan who Wears Good Clothes KAHN TAILORING CO. Remember the Days and Dates Friday and Saturday, September 12 Ordered now they will be given that fine attention to detail, that care in finish. not alw height-of-the-season rush ! The prices quoted are the lowest that can be named without oring, service and style. of Indianapolis Are Sending a Personal Representative He brings to us—in effect the full resources in America. Throu edge of woolens ang to New Britain of this great tailoring house—the finest h }315 perfect understanding of Kahn facilities and his complete knowl- tailoring—you are definitely assured, through his co-operation, of ut- most s'ntisfact'ion in your FALL AND WINTER MADE-TO-MEASURE CLOTHES. He brings with him woolen displays so appealing, so distinctive that their like has never before seen ! The finest loomings from America, England, Ire- land, Scotland, France and Belgium are included. Clothes ordered with his assistance fit, serve and satisfy to perfection. Order now—Have your clothes ready when you want them. ays possible in robbing the tail- DROP IN ! It’s worth coming many miles just to see the fabrics. It is music to Mr. Burton’s ears to hear you say—*“Show me through the Kahn line !” ASHLEY-BABCOCK CO. 139 MAIN STREET BRITONS HARD HIT English Press Attributes Recent De- feat of Selected Team to Tendency of Making Long Drives. London, Aug. 31.—(By Associated Press.)—British golfers are hard hit over the defeat of their picked play- crs in the international matches at Southampton, N. Y. There is much comment in the morning newspapers and the upshot of the experts' analy- sis seems to be that the British lost their supremacy by making a fetish of long driving. The Daily Mail editorially recalls the remark made by Walter J. Travis when he surprised the golf world 18 years ago by capturing the British amateur championship. Travis said: “I won because the British play- ers are engaging in a debauchery of long driving."” That is still the trouble here, ac- cording to Harry Vardon, who in an interview is quoted as declaring: “‘All that our leading amateurs, and our younger professionals too seem to bother about is hitting the ball a tre- mendous distance. They don't trou- ble about the finer points of the game which count for most. That is where the Americans beat us; they beat us particularly in the iron shots up to the hole which have always been the master shots in golf.” 9 DIE IN EXPLOSION. Cumberland, B. C., Mine Collieries Have Fatal Dynamite Blast. Cumberland, B. C, Aug. 31.—Nine men were killed and 17 injured yes- terday afternoon by an explosion in mine No. 4 of the Canadian collieries Dunscuir, Ltd. The cause of the ex- plosion has not been determined. Of the 17 injured seven are in a serious condition. The dead include three white men, the rest being Ori- entals. GILDING THE ANGEL Preparations for gilding the angel at the top of the Soldiers’ and Sail- ors’ monument on the central green have been going on for the past few lays, and in a few days more, after the cleaning process has been com- pleted, a new coat of gilt will be plac- i on the figure as well as other gilt! It is estimated the work will cost about $400. A scaffold has teen erected about the monument and workmen are busy preparing it for its new painting. lecorations. Answering Letters beccmes a congenial matter when yecu use the right kind of note MHER WA L Social Stationery Made in eight fashionable envel- ope sizes, with sheets to fit, in thrce finishes — linen, bond, and ripple. Alsosupplied in con- venient writing tablets in the popular lsizes, with, attractive covers. Wen't you step in to see our offerings of tns. popular line? ADKINS 66 Church Street {ble was fixed this forenoon SHIP DISABLED Metropolitan. Line Steamer Bound for Boston From New York Delayed By Engln:z Trouble. Boston, Aug. 31.—The Metropolitan line steamer Calvin Austin with 350 passengers aboard bound from New York for Boston was held up for 12 hours off Stratford, Conn., early to- day by engine trouble. Ofticials of the Eastern Steamship Co. here said their advices were that a crank pin had broken. The trou- and the steamer proceeded, they said. She was expected to arrive here about midnight. “CANDIDATE" GETS 30 DAYS Cincinnati Man Seeking Presidency is Sentenced For Intoxication. Cincinnati, Aug. 31.—Henry W. Hayssen of Milwaukee, who claims he is a candidate for the presidency of the United States on the ‘Universal Brotherhood" ticket, was yesterday sentenced to thirty days’ imprison- ment on a charge of intoxication. In Hayssen's presidential platform he advocated thirty days’ imprison- ment on the nation's highways for drunkenness, and when he remon- strated with the court over the sever- ity of his sentence the judge told him he was simply putting into practice Hayssen's platform. ADDRESS PARCELS TWICE. New Scheme to Prevent Unnecessary Returns From Abroad. Washington, Aug. 31.—Hereafter parcel post packages for England and Ireland may carry two addresses. The idea is that in case the postal au- thorities over there cannot find the| person to whom the parcel is pri- marily destined, they may deliver it to the alternative addressee. The second address is to be carried on a paster. This will obviate returning a Iot of parcels sent to people who have moved. It also will take care of nu- merous cases in which the sender makes an error in one address. A further innovation is that the sender of a package may write on a paster, “if not delivered, abandon.” WATERMELON PACKS A KICK. “Georgia Cocktail,"” Good to the Rind, Newest Hooch. Sioux City, Aug. 31.—Policemen answering a call found Andy Rodisch and Andy Klatt on the verge of a fight to decide which would get the | 1ast portion of a watermelon. The inspected the melon. It smelled and tasted Jike moonshine whisky, they said They took Rod- isch, Klatt and the melon to the po- lice station and charged the men with intoxication. Now the police are on the trail of a bhootlegger, who, they learned, has hit upon the idea of pouring whisky in a watermelon and selling it all as a "Georgia cocktail.” policemen DITOR A SUICIDE. SOUTHERN 1. L. Chivington of Chattanooga Swal- lows Poison, Sitting in His Car. Chattanooga, Tenn., Aug. 31.—John L. Chivington, for 16 years city editor of the Chattanooga Times, and later | editor of The American, a weekly po- litical paper, committed suicide here vesterday by swallowing earbolic acid. He was arrested on Tuesday on a charge of passing worthless checks on a Knoxville hotel. His health had been bad for about three years, and it is thought that his mind had been un- balanced for about a year His body was found in the rear seat of his automobile, which had been driven to the top of a hill directly overlooking his home. In notes left to his wife he said that he had been ¢itting there watching his children play for several hours. INSANE MAN SHOOTS WOMAN. Portland, Me., Aug. 31.—Mrs. Rose A. Galll, 20, a bride of a year, was WEATHER IS FAIR Forecast Indicates Moderate Tem- perature Tonight and Tomorrow New Haven, Aug. 31.—For Conn.: Fair weather and moderate temper- ature tonight and Friday:; gentle va- riable winds. A Conditlons: The pressure is high east of the Mississippi river and low from the Missigsippt river westward to the Rocky Mts. Light scattered showers are reported from the west- ern districts. The temperature is ris- ing in the Mississipp! valley but con- tinues about normal in the Lake re- gion and New England. Conditions favor for this vicinity: Generally fair weather and not much change in temperature. APPROYE CECIL PLAN League of Nations' Council Acts On Several Matters of Importance In Today's Session. Geneva, Aug. 31. (By Assoclated Press)—The council of the league of nations this afternoon will finish its discussioh of the status of the holy places in Palestine after which it is planned to take up the letter from Chancellor Seipel of Austria appeal- ing for aid which was referred to the council by the allied statesmen at their recent conference in London. Lord Robert Cecil’'s plan for re- gional agreements or continental pacts for mutual guarantees of security and simultaneous reduction of armaments was approved today by the league of nations sub-committee, YOUNG WOMAN ROUTS BANDITS. Kittery, Me., Aug. 31.—The routing of three young men, one of whom had held her up, by Miss Sarah C. Scott of Burlington, fa.,, a summer resident here, became known yesterday. Con- fronted on the Gerrish Island road after dark last night by a boy, who she sald was Bernard A. Donnell, with a demand that she give him her money and jewelry, the young woman opened her purse as if to comply but drew out instead a pearl-handled re- volver. The boy ran and two com- panions waiting in the woods ran with him. Young Donnell, Edward Pratt and Henry Wilson were ar- rested. e — s U e CARE FOR YOUR CHILD’S EYES Let Us Examine Them Frank E. Goodwin | Eyesight Specialist 827 Main St. Tel. 1905 o i GRAND FALL OPENING PROGRAM Sunday Night, Mon., Tues., Wed. 1T'S McENROE, NOT McENROE. One Has to Be Up All Night, While Other is Home Loving Person. Fred McEnroe of Union street does not seek to emulate Thomas Edison insofar as but about five hours of sleep. at night are concerned. The Union street man considérs at least eight hours essential and does not consider 2 a. m. a respectable hour for any water board employe to be gallivanting about the streets. Thus, he desires it to be understood that the Fred McEnroe who recently testified in behalf of Policeman Thomas Tier- ney, telling the commissioners that he saw him at 2 a. m,, and that his con- dition was all right, s not “Fred J. McEnroe of Union street, an em- ploye of the board of water commis- sioners.”” His sleep has been inter. rupted much of late, it is said, by curfous and kidding friends who in- sist on knowing why he was out at 2 a. m. The Fred McEnroe who testified for the policeman is a well known local newspaperman, whose business duties demand that he work night and sleep days. | Jesse L Lasky presents H'fllnlly thot yesterday near the pub-! lic market in Federal street by Er- nesto Vosali, said to have been ob- sessed by the idea that she was his wife.