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PAGI HOOCH WORRIES U S, CAPITAL F Washington Embassies Ill at Ease Over Liquor WASH ous inter Ing” here % foreis INGTON, Ju at H D Tt is all th P Btates supreme < PProhibition laws to Messels from | Hquc P the three mile limit of this Of course, the coun 4) Washington, New \ i @igpatches all about t \troversy over the » if customs brought to the Uni By foreign liners secking to test supreme court decision by But the “serious international | wituation,” with which this dispatch ig something far more funda ital than that of al controversy fs the question of “diplomatic inside y knows from k and foreign © official con by Ame 5 hi As the respective members of the P@itferent embassies and legations tn ) Washington arrived at their desks Paharply at 11:30 o'clock the morning ‘the newspapers an rd P decision of the supremo court, ea j Zpavective member on receiving the 1 meed the a ews was astonished, absolutely shocked. | “Oh, T say Fou know! Quite! Member of one well “Mon Diet, this it Americains, it will be Mon Dieu! Hof & member of another Well known embassy. Bo, after diplomatic emotions had heen sufficiently controlled, emmts- earies from the different embassies : legations strolled down to the départment, trying, as all diplo uccessfully do, to appear un now! won't do ext what? and equally hey wanted td know all about it from Mr. Hughes Mr. Hughes told The different delegations that it was all right, that diplomatic Mqyor st! be immune; for Mr, S was probably relieved to that the rest of the world had come to tell him that {t had de- to push the United States out Of sight Into the ocean, what with ‘All those diplomats presenting them- Petves at the state department. | Jewish Lecturer _ Will Speak Here | Sunday evening at § o'clock, Dr, M. PMagnes, widely known Jewish leader, fll speak at the Bikur Cholum syna- "Rogue. Hoe is touring the Coast In Pehalf of Jewish nationalism. ‘AMAZING STORY | OF A RAPD RECOVERY. A well known resident of Heald# irg. Cal, tells his own story of how | regained health within .@ sho by taking the new tonic discov , Alvit /°E began using Alvita tablets ac cording to directions on the box, tak oYhg them with my meals. After three fi or four days I noticed that I could} i over without much effort and lace mty own shoes without the Ewain across my stomach. I was soon f entirely relieved from pain, my appe tite Increased and I am now able to | gleep all night without getting up. F consider my cure remarkable. It | is also fine for kidney and bladder S troubles and should be used by elder. | ly people to’ keep the system free} acid and other poisonous tablets are scientifically | prepared from the wonderful alfalfa P plat, which through its long root | P absorbs the vital elements necessary nd vigor—lime, iron, phos- and Vitamines. Alvita has especially beneficial in build “ibg up a weakened, run-down condi ton and in overcoming bladder and Prostate trouble. A dollar buys a phox at any drug store ment. Complete EXAMINATION GLOBE OPTICAL Co. 1514 Wentlake Ave. Near Fourth and Pike In the extraction of teeth we leay to our patrons: If we hurt Fyou don’t pay—could we aay more? Set of Teeth from $5.00 UP Gold Crown and Bridgo Woe from 34.00 UP Beston Dental Ojlices 1422 Second Avenue We Stand tho Test of Time ia Location 82 Years One So ran the exclamations | ~Advertise- | Cynthia Grey:' igaged—But She Insists Upon Retaining Compan- ionship of Former Sweetheart While Waiting for| Fia to Accumulate Hom d Car. nee to aw Dear Miss Grey: I am 21, Have asked a girl the same age }to marry me and she pro that she would, by en gagement, when I said that I was willing to sacrifice all pleasure for two or three years to obtain a private paid home. According to her opinion it must be well-furnished, | within city limits, and a $2,000 automobile at her service, | But to my greatest discouragement, she is willing to enjoy life in the meantime by going on mountain. hikes, night | parties or to movie shows with a former sweetheart, whom she claims she could not give up, because he was like a brother to her, when I said that such a friendship had to} jcome to an end, She is a stenographer. May I hear your} | candid opinion about such a proposition? K. L. | My candid opinion is that she ig trying to make a “fall not accept you, nor he re to say to you: “K, L., I will you. But if you shauld wish to| jask me to marry you, you should first have something tan-| with which to r a home.” With that, you might} nowing neither of you were tied, and that either of | ld change your minds at any time, or transfer your| affections. refuse | gible work, you co Such a plan could not hurt you, even suppose you worked and got the house and the auto, and then lost the girl. Be- cause you would have those practical possessions, which would probably make you very acceptable to many a girl. So long as a girl is free, she has a right to go about with whom| | she pleases, but when she is engaged, she is expected to give up other men's society, in so far as keeping company with them is concerned. ps Mins ia: and Grey will receive callers office Monday, Wednesday Friday, from™1 to 2 p, m, Tueadayy and Thursday it m to m, each week. Please do come at other asly inter When a death, illness or « |cldent postpones a weddt should the guests be notified? | The parents of the dride |cards using a form worded in the fol- }lowing manner Mr. @ | James Smith beg to recall the invt | tations issued for the marriage of | Seer daughter Martha, and Mr. Don- | jald Clark, on Thursday, July 16th } | “rv © | - What is megnt by the tndetermin jate neuter?” | In cases where gntmats and chil-| posto, in P " | dren are. referred MS by neuter pro-|n che ener po Pheri nbd nouns, this ia called the indetermin-| 44 . | até neuter.” Wa refer to en animal | cnegse ny Union Jor child as if if had no sex. For.) ty 1909, jexample, “The baby cried for its | mother.” issue om times, as it se with her writing He was ordained in the Methodist | 1896 to 1903) ‘ongregational Who" craze? atarted the bobbed hair Do plants eat insetts? The ordinary dict of green plants jeonstste of salts of various metals, |such aa nitrates, phosphates, sul | Phates, etc.; watery which they ad-| what should he the temperature sord from the soil; and carbon di-|o¢ water in a goldfish aqua ? | oxide which they inhale from the air| The temperature of the jduring sunlight. There are a number | range from 50 : of species of carnivorous plants auch| gundden ¢ as sundews, fiy-traps, pitcher- is té'o | planta, bladdervcorte and dutterworts, | | however, which in addition to this} Jordinary diet do have @ variety of | devices for the allurement, capture, |imprisonment, digestion and abdsorp- | tion of insecta, j + Irene Castle 4s generally credited with originating the style for women. dobbded hair} um ter may 50 degrees to 80 degrees. anges 4m te olded. mperature Is there much immigrant labor used in the coal mines of West Vir ginia? No, unlike the anthracite and the| older dituminous fields, the West fe = : aa Virginia coal mines are toorked main. | ere are hyenas found? y < 6 alee | The most sypical and at the same | eyicenar ees many of whom are ale | time familiar forma of the hyena,| ae | known as the atriped hyena, is found | }ranging from Abyssinia and the LAd yan desert, eastward to India, where | it 8 common thruout the open coun try. Two other spectes are ly found in Africa; the sp F inhabits nearly alt Africa south| ¢ Sahara and hunts in packs,| is courageous and ravaging. Ite un- |carthly, coughing chy 4a one of the| moat terrifying of animal utterances. |; The brown hycna is fownd on doth | 99 sides of Southern Africa near the| — coast and often on the mountains. Remains of hyenas have deen found in Europe, as far north as Engl | and are, of course, found in A | none has been discovered in Am What are the uses for wood flour? That produced from certain species of coniferous trees #uch tohite chiefly used for as | pine and apruce ts afaplione rec t a lena of t What insthe } ing done | Pro y are those of | India, Ceylon and the Persian gulf | Later fishe have been developed in the Sulu séas, on the coast of Aus- | tralia, in the Gulf of Panama and |along the shores of Central America land Venezuela, among the South Pa | cific islands, and in the Gulf of Calt- | fornia, the earliest | What-makes colored circles the around sc are due to meteorological | causes, and are known as haloes and coronae Haloes are at definite dis tances from the sun and are colored red on the inside, due to reflection |and refraction of light by ice-crystala suspended in the atmosphere; coro- nae closely surround the sun at vart able distances and are colored red on { the outside. They are due to diffrac tion le € Edward dri | medal red | human body. Worcester, Maas, from 1904) * we Tro" OWT ost Ring I er, 18 THE ES | ——— ed His Noodle || Maujer, taxi to be given a gold} by Mayor Hylan of} ordained | New York because he discov-| now got $20. that a strange bindle Episcopal ministry in £882, and was| carried by a Filipino was a) trouble MIGHT WORK s Found in Old Bird’s Nest BOONTON, N. J lont two year K logs nest bul July 12.—A ring ago by Miss Beatrice was found this week in a & robin in a tree near ROLL YOUR OWN WITH RisLe Crokx Papers Attached § cows") > THE CALENDAR Is Set for Summer go and Our Store Is Set For ao. (" DON'T LIE SUMMER CL FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY OTHES Stylish, thrifty people take gdvantage of these value-giving opportunities—at terms that are decidedly ferent from other stores, ALTERATIONS FREE CREDIT TO ALL You may pay as little as 00 § OR ‘Ll d j Don't tell the vafe you've | been sitting up with a sick friend. She might have a retinoscope, invented by Dr. W. D. Bates, of New York, | shown wearing it. The retino- | scope detects lies by discover- ing shadows in the eye, he} } | says. | 1) A WEEK R British Steel Workers Pleased WithShort Day Aecept Slight Wage Cut, But Remuneration Compares Well With U. S. 12-Hour Shift BY MILTON BRONNER LONDON, July 13.—The British teel indust wen on an eight hour ba Ja. m. on Monday, provided that if at any works there was @ surplus of material flable for the milla 1 ‘ond what could be 1 Mond men ¢ the Prier to plants had # main the 12-he But after the war had gone on for th Saturday, the nid upon to work on Sunday night mencing at m Ingot | f obtaining kerr and the North of| The re of finishing in England Iron and Steel Manufactur.| Melting shops and mills was 1 p represent the | Saturday Iron nd Steel) n, representing | vat the eight-hour @ the standard the shift men steel melting now aver|deavor would be 1.3 hours instead of 68; the | later than 1 0 shift men in the rolling mille aver-|if from any {rou age 43 2-3 instead of 68, and the day| stance, a furnace did not tap until men, 4% instead of 68 after 1:30 o'clock, overtime whould WORKED OUT j be paid at the rate of tenns WAGE SCALE & half Characte men | WORKERS GET na the want. | PAIR REWAKD zations, got together od out} Tho whifte of the to ted but r day was tho rule in association ognized time m anaociation, and th federat Workmen engaged after were to be paid time and a half or and 4 half for the extra worked, As regarded meitt furnaces, it wa owners, Trades the mgu, agreed day should be n As @ result of th that hour tonnage | time uncontrollable cir joally enougt omy thru their nd wo: wages regular sale ow cover the new ¢¢ Under this a hilliog ($12 to the same wages for hours as he did for 12 he But all who got 61 shilling or over cepted a reductic The effe that the firma acce from 6 4. m. ta # p. m ditions. jt 10 p.m Man who got 89}i5 umually ox Mi but the fe in Great living for of | be from 2 4 and from 10 ta 6 Ame m ty naidered that best wages In the wor draw lo ow t cost of figures # B n whe workmen has never high aa in the United State £12 ($60). 18.9.0 ($42). Plate mill follers, £18 (#90) eight hours of labor a the men who got the low wages.| Second hand meters 1 the men got the } ges aecepted the loss entailed in| who Third hand meiter ight-hour ¢ other we eight-hour da. worth while they paid for their and thought it well Thus a Avérage of other men engnded in steol process, £4.10.0 4d an who used| Rough labor, £3 ($15). to get 60 shillings now ehil-| In the critical days ef the war it lings and 2 pence. And men who| was agreed by the men that ff the| mado as high as 120 shillings—$30—| employers, anxious to get steel pro- The cuts thus agreed |dugtion up to its maximum, wanted accepted thruout the|to work the mills over the week-end nign of| no objection would be made w trade wi upon ut the slightest However, stopped thin their employers aa they found it was al, Not only did the Men need a rest but the plants need. ed the weekly them ineperfect order ' noon ON SUNDAY It wan agreed that in the meiting ops the melters should start at ¢ m. on Sunday and the mulls at @ not economs overhauling to put a p FRIDAY, Jt Eagle Lodge Will DAKOTA KILLS Exe ,Aedse wat BUILDING LAW 9" xm" Legislature Passes Measure Liquidating Association game FARGO, N ‘The North | all i D., July 18 ota Home Build law, @ non of legislation w The x open ited in no small measure to| pagies and thelr m The narge of tho sally repealed | out c. Lally, 8 4 Dawson, 8. B, nfall of the farmer regime in| committee was ¥ w of the ature, now ing the in home af 1923 legi While n of the state to engag law transfers th Home Builder “ © industrial coramiaston for re CHATSWORTH, Eng., July 12 The Duke of Devonshire has begun | boring # well for oil on his estate. the law was intended to| enable ne of small means to} Blue White on, it provided that state aid | yuld not be given on houses cost | DIAMOND RING re t , and this pro-| 4 Fancy White Gold Setting an $5,00 | jaion Jed to litigation still pending} and gave nonparti«an opponents one| of their potent battle cries in the re- | wil of 1921 that removed the nen. partisans from office r rising building markets material and that opponent nefficleney” on the part of cdininister the houses costip labor and alled those selected te 4 im the Mast of the ow und the lower ined them, holding the le for the excess of the a decision which, if upheid tate supreme court, will cost state, it is estimated, about more re result than § fused to pay 000. more courts su e was lia! ontract Special $25.00 Fine Watch Repairing b $10 “Lemke's house” was one of the talking points of the enemies of non partisans, So important a factor did it become tn the recall campaign that | sight-seeing tours were conducted to the house in the southern section of Fargo. Wm. Lemke, vice-president | of the National Non-partisan league and attorney general of the state, had secured state aid in building « brick | residence which cost more than $5,- | 000. The fact that Lemke paid the} state In full for his house, did not} quiet the campaign talk | BORDEN, Eng., July 13—Thomas| Lally took @ 70-year-old bride from | the poorhouse to his farm, but sent | EWELER her back in three weeks because she | 1404 Third Ave. had too big an appetite. A Money-Back Guarantee With Every Purchase Damaged . By Water Army Folding Cots The best Folding Cot on the market. Strong and durable. These Army Cots were slightly damaged by water leaking through the roof in the warehouse, but are still in good condition for use. Specially priced to clean-up quick, each......... U. S. Army Regulation Barrack Shoe Made on the geunine Munson last, in either tan or chocolate color, a real Outing Shoe, light in weight, with uppers made from high grade leather and a full leather sole; all sizes, per pair The Best Buy in Quilts on the Market Today The heavy, large Army Quilt, 72x80 inches in size, very heavy with a strong, durable khaki covering; they are a real Quilt; spe- celal, each “ Basford Folding Bed Sagless Springs; easy and quick to set up. Each— $2.7 Middy Blouse In Khaki All Sizes Special, Each $2.00 One of the Highest Grade All- Leather Work Shoes Ever Built Munson last; easy to wear; cost to manufacture about $7.50 per pair. ‘These Shoes are guaranteed to Folding Mattress wear and give satisfaction; special, per pair, . Ae Will take place of rear cush- . ion when traveling. Each Saturday only, Bed and Mattress together ...........$20.15 1013 Ist Ay. EVERY Ist Av. Khaki Breeches, all sizes, $2.50 TYLE SIZE Tents, flies and tarpaulins of every size and kind. Made of full-weight canvas, with the best construc- tion, and all priced at the very lowest pr you need a tent, see the display on our floor and get Quality with economy. our prices before buying. AND per pair. Trench Shovel—carry roe cara, LOG {0c Gas Masks Special ... Double Cotton Camp mae Blankets, $1.95 Special, per pair... And a complete line of Tents and Camping Goods, Shirts, Shoes, Leggings, Underwear, Sox, Blankets, Canned Meats, Enamelware, etc. MAIL ORDERS FILLED SURPLUS ARMY SUPPLY STORE 1013 FIRST AVENUE AT THE SIGN OF THE TWO SOLDIERS