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WEDNES PREPARE FOR COAL STRIKE Walkout Ordered in Anthra- cite Fields September 1 ATLANTIC CITY Miners N.J leaders today Aug made final of | arrangements work for suspenslc fields a in | i | Following collapse of the negotia tions between miners and operators, | the anthracite Sep- tember which came when they were unable | to agree on a 20 per cent wage in.! crea the union chiefs rushed to completion all details incident to the walkout of 155,000 men. No further | orders are necessary. The suspen. | sion goes into effect automatically, | September 1, unless it is specifical. | ly called off. The two slides, now completely | split over every point under discus sion, are awaiting word from Wash. | ington, | There is a belief here that Presi-| dent Coolidge may summon the two | slides to Washington for a talk The miners belleve a strike ts as sured, because they will not submit to arbitration, and the government | holds no power to force an agreo ment. | The negotiations can be resumed at any timo either side desires, but unless there is some new develop. ment to change the present situa tlon, things will remain as they are. lived at 6312 E. Green John Ta Lewis, miner head, ts Refuses to’ Evacuate Ruhr} “xenneit Unger, relay pilot, sot Itanio Simp, SRL, to make’ the dash | Lace en, Wet at $314. Green standing strong against arbitration i i iq [awa Salt Lake City with the], } | : yr see aT pes pag hsch rear Until Reparations Are Paid jaway & “, it Lake City nth: The giant dirigibie will be|by a son and daughter at Long|a since the Wilson arbitration board einen oe jisunched here. ia, the pext few) Beach, Cal failed to live up to labor expe BY WEBB MILI OF area eal on res Shao | tions In 1919. The dispute must be] PARIS, Aug Neprray Bae, at Aug he t's a sister ship of the fllfated c : qattle’ ny direct negotiations, he|pat , Aug Fr stands | second westbound alr mail plane |ZR2, which collapsed in mid-air HER MORE ABOL maintained ak ‘ hopped off for Cleveland, 424 miles /and fell to the ground a mass of 1 the British reparations note, made | was piloted by Shirley J. Short Baraal tw But it fn factories and industrial furnaces! public today, inflexib! held. th aie @ epee POR AR Duselsle ap dis Lied | STARTS ON PAGE 1 are now being held up by the oper-| French policy t An ae ap tpt |more like the giant German Zeppe ST/ 'S ON PAGE Ators, and these. will bo distributed, fusing evacuttion of the RURF us| ae cna eta arta | te, ttt, captured by the alllea| 4 t .}fusing evacuation of the : | in case of the walkout, Domestic|ti payment ts iahataen iaolthe eastbound transcontinental atr mail| during the closing days of the way./encapes at the county hospital wan | coal has been bought by Individuals |any proposal for reduction of eof araenae tellne-bsphatabv inp par abepy A combination of the Berman|required at the inaistance of Fire | who feared the strike would occur.|/amount of the German debt | m. today after landing to refuel. Jang Hritish ideas in dirigible con-| Chief Georg, F. Mantor, Other in-| and there ts practically no surplus) iisan tiled | struction, it has the safeguards of|creases are $60,125 miscellaneous now in the mines. pe rr ontalned ttle of the} CHICAGO, Aug. 22—Tho east-|poth and the weaknesses of neither, current expense, and ae igcegen Th aR ES forbeast, and Ih tate pasercee eh {bound trans-continental alr mall/according to Rear Admiral Willlam|the 1924 olections lattes ader Satie” Passages WAS) plane, piloted by Harold Lewis, ur-|\. Moffett, chief of naval aero-| It ts in the road and bridge and spd Bay s rived here at §:40 a. m. today. | nautic road district appropriations that the BOGUS MONEY pin Ratan DOESN'T Five sacks of Western mail were} Jt framework ta made from du-|reatest cuts must be made, where, PASSED HERE a “ rp - 4 . | |transferred to & plane piloted bY |rajumin, the toughest and lightest/Gaines says, his investigations al ,Tisteceing'to'the British elluston to| Liout. B. 1, Wagner, two sacks of |metal known. Ite outside skin t|ready have uncovered a number of | Discovery that’ two counterfeit} ‘ne “hts OF others,” the reply said:| Chicago mail were added and Wagner |made of cotton cloth treated with|Mon-easential items, One ts tho half-dollars had been passed at the} ‘“F¥ance docs not need to be re-|hopped off for Cleveland at 8441 ceiiuiose acetate “dope.” proposed Des Moines brid for | Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Batley | ded of her duties am pees Millions of cuble feet of hellum,|Which an item of $22,500 is includ ctrous Tuesday night, led secret serv-| “1 resret our lack of ac se : 22.—The|t2? Bon-inflammable, non-explostve|ed. There already is a good bridge fee officinis here Wednesday to in-|Mneland,” Poincare said bere FRANCIECO, Ave ang |eas will be used to inflate her.|in ume, but it i proposed to aban: | vestigate the activities of allegea|Mefly to the British claim that oc.| eastbound trans-continental alr "ahi Twenty gaa bags fit snugly inside|don this and put a bridge in that counterfeiters who are sald to have|CUPation of the additional German | Kot away on its second attempt this}. rain thing. will eliminate a sharp turn in the been operating here recently * rarrtiocy 45 Sises). 16 Cla te eng ae ne eg oc||, The Nansar, nousing the slant|road at th ‘cach to the atruc- | W. R. Gerald, chief of the secret | de Feterring | the. reperations|__ The pia Once aT anni [bimp, is 800 feet long and 270 feet| tur does not believe this service here. scouted the idea that|qWestion to the permanent court of| Vance, rone above the fog and shot |). MP. 1S 600 toe. lane and A) toh |e kapverpenised gang’de’ now. manutac. | Mtermational Jgstice, 4: The Hague, | Sway eastward before the first ray machinery and welghs ¢ road and bridge budget for turing and distributing worthless | 7 tone ne need to deter to th Ha ‘tactiad elghts pauctias of citat fonly 39 tons the north and south ricts. this money in Seattle, but all angles of |.“ W. ail ili seate bony Vincbaead Beige tghing 108 podsas There {x nothing outalde the akin | yea 8 hi than Inst the case are being thoroly tnvesti-| J Pols any fy ieee due in R ev, except the six gondolas, each equip-| yea Jaines #3 his is too gated. incare dismissed the charge that| Vance t# due in Ri ie ae wit pl ist Sheng oto. pared Bese | eccupation of the Ruhr is endanger-| where on Mouton awaits with a |P h & 300-horsepower Packard | The coins were found by a conces- sioner at the circus. He notified the secret service here and the investi- gation was immediately started. The coins bore dates of 1910 and 1912 and are said to be the work of amateurs, according to Gerald. They were made of babbit metal and stamped id an imperfect machine. Officials here are of the opinion that the coins were passed by hang- ers-on who follow the circus, trusting to their movement from place to place to cover thelr tracks. AUBURN MAN’S PERMIT TAKEN E. K. Armstrong, of Auburn, was the first victim of a new traffic law, | which permits a judge to suspend a| CHILDREN SEE FATHER DROWN Crazed Woman Seizes Man in Death Grip Planning Round-the-W orld Flight Seized with fear when she got be yond her depth in Green Lake while she was being taught to swim Tues day afternoon, Mrs. Gertrude H. Ke aie grabbed Fred Johnson, 60, around | the neck in a death grip, and befor they could be rescued, both had drowned before the eyes of Johnson's three children. Johnson, who recently arrived in Beattle from Greensboro, 8. C., was teaching Mrs. Kenzie, his housekeep- er, how to swim, They were not on the regular bathing beach, but bad gone in bathing at a point between the two municipal bathin aches ‘The two bathers apparent | stepped | } These are the three naval officers who'll be in charge of America’s greatest dirigible, | into @ hole, and Mrs, Kenzle became the ZR-1, when it takes to the air at Lakehurst, N. J. From left to right: Lieutenant | Pnicstiicken, and seized Johnaon. Commander J, P. Norfleet, Commander Frank R. McCrary, commandant, and Lieutenant | ptrageiing in the water, Mra, IR. E. Jacob Klein, executive officer, Oliver, 6416. Green Lake bivd,, saw| — - —-| Sir Pry them called Dr, A. B, Kidd and] | | 4URST, N. J, Aug. 22 Ralph’ Cramer, 3516 Jackson st. The “DIMa 7 m . tushed to the lake shore, and Cramer | FRANCE STANDS HERE’S MORE ABOUT |} Fiying around the world from| Fane la be talienth dean toe | | Pole to pole! Johnson's body was recovered ARTS ON PAGE 1 wino old Uncle Sam insists it can|evive him failed. The body of Mrs. he ideas K e was found by swimmers from} | a nearby bathing beath | | morning, arrived here at 9:24 a. m.| And he's relying upon bis new tl-| Johnson MANY FIGURE | MAY BE STRICKE to relay the mail on to|Mmotor, giving @ speed of fre |70 miles an hour. But in: 60 to de the} " ts ing Europe by declaring: | “We have destroyed nothing in the | Elko, } Ruhr. Its capacity for industrial] Falr weather and favorable winda|™ain bag, in the form of a Large items in the road production is stronger than ever.” | were predicted for the firat two legs |the keel corridor, running the length |bridge and road district Poincare only envisaged continu: | of the trip. of the craft. In this are the crew's|which will be scrutinized at budget |” ance of negotiations by suggesting | ee Javarters, the 15 tons of gasoline,|time and probably eliminated, fol that, {¢ they were carried on, either] RENO, Nev., Aug. 22—Claire K.|tho ton of lubricating oll and | low immediately or after cessation of re-| Vance, piloting the eastbound trans-|the 15 tons of water ballast. In District No, 2, the south end, | sistance by Germany, it would be|continental alr mail plane which left] Looming up overhead in the| represented by Commissioner Frank | preferable that conversations be|San Francisco at 5:26 this morning, |biackness of that cavernous hol-| Paul, George Bayne road, $15,000 more discreet and given less pub-| landed here at 7:07 a. m. low will be tho oscillating bags of|Culman road, $18,000; Ne road, | Ucity. The relay plane, piloted by Jack|hellum. These are of rubberized] $10,000; W. W. Beck road, fill and Starting with the first British ton, got away for Elko with the/cloth lined with beater skin,” | bulkhead, $20, ; W. D. Lamb road, point, Poincare said pouches at 7:09 |a composition mado from the In-| Vashon island, $7,500; Frank Lynch | “I regret we cannot understand At Elko, Kennett Unger awaits to |testines of road, $17,500 Bridges in same dis tha British disappointment but un-|carry the mail on to Salt Lake City . trict are Des Mofnes bridge, $22,500 oe fortunately we cannot see the effort Whitney bridge, $22,000. | England says she has made toward . * BLIMP ZR-1 | Items in budget for roads and fapettiecet with Says Night Flying antiatietalt ree locidges in North district Nov 8, rep that is, execution of GREATEST DIAMETER—19 || resented by Commissioner Tom Dob peace. Is Proved Success feet son, follow: Graveling Salberg road. | OMAHA Neb. Aug. 22.—Nigtht : 000; new road between Kirkland SAYS BRITISH NOTE CONCILIATORY GAS 100,000 BAG cuble CAPACITY of helium. flying fe trans-continental alr mail and Redmond to eliminate existing feet motorist’s driver's Icense, when he} ervice haa proved a success, dexpite 25 sity. 3 iy . rerantag |ReFVICO has prov an, dexp Skene paved road, $25,000; Falls City-Tolt faced Judge C. C. Dalton Tuesday on| Our rea lution has been repeat SMOG Pomot LIFT CAPACITY > Apprad: | | ert 936.000: Issaquah-Hobart road, a charge of reckless ing. Judge|* hundred times not to renou: js in charge of |} ™tely 70 tons $25,000; Lake Sammamish shore line, | Dalton suspended his driver's license |One centime of reparations, lared today MOTORS—Six Packards, 300 || $25 900; 10th ave. N. E., north of the for 30 days and fined him $10. nbd sacred,” the premier ue rted, | Col. Paul Henderson, assistant aol el bee lelty mits, $20,000; Jamen Koifer Armstrong was arrested Sunday on | declaring hag taken NO|ostmaster general, and his aides Ware FP ph eesien rond, $10,000; Norman bridge, $31 the East highway between Kent and | heed of ‘ | were jubilant when informed by SPEED—60 to 70 milles an}! ooo. ‘iiott bridge, between Renton Auburn after he had zig-zagged in | sential the United Press that the west-|| hour 4 und Maple V . $16,500; Cedar and out of a line of automobiles at| basically unconciliat }bound machine, plioted by Jack|}| PROBABLE ARMAMENT Mountain bridge, $14,500. & Feckless speed, Orin Lieldy, state} “I avow that v ot under-| knight, had reached Omaha and that || Elght machine guns, a two |!" 14 gaaition to these items, there highway patrol Inspector, who ar-/stand the British reasoning regard. jthe eastbound machine was winging || Pound gun and _bombe. : lare seve: which are believed neces. rested him, said. |ing Germany's capacity for pay-/its way safely early today. | RADIDUS OF ACTION—4,000 || sary, Among t iy a cut-off paved The new law permits judges to sus-jment, for Germany's capacity now It was wonderful—a greater suc miles. [strip from the end of the Rainier! pend drivers’ licenses for periods up|is zero, by her own will,” cena than wa could have hoped for,”"|| ESTIMATED CosT— $1, | Valley car line thru to the East Side to six months. Suspension of a drty-| er's license prohibits'the person driv- | ing during the period of suspension. | mstrong’s case was the first under néw law to be tried in the court FAIL TO FIND | BODY OF MAN) Diligent search of the waters of Rosario straight had failed Wednes-| day morning to reveal the body of| Roy Hotfman, Seattle fisherman, | who was drowned when the fishing| boat Decision, carrying a crew of three men, was rammed and sunk | by the: Princess Charlotte Monday | night Capt. C. Jensen, of} in the Decision, and Carl Sorenson, en-| gineer, escaped death by clinging to} the overturned dory of the fishing command vessel. The Princess Charlotte hove to and boats were lowered, but ow: ing to the dense fog the body of Hoffman could not be located. It is believed that he was dead when he| struck the water. He was in his} bunk forward and the small boat| was practically cut in two at the place where he was sleeping a| “| ; A DR. CU The Old Reliable EYESIGHT SPECIALIST Back in the Old Location 4002-3 Arcade Bldg, Third Floor Phone Main 7208 declared, adding that a commiasion| Henderson said. of experts to pass upon the capacity of the reich would be useless, | “Does England wish entirely to suppress Germany's debt on the pre- highway, eliminating the detour thru the town of Renton, known as the) Smithers’ undercrossing. Thi stretch | will cost $25,000, | FAVORS STEPHENS APPROXIMATE officers and men. CREW — | | 000 | HERE’S MORE ABOUT pagel ten crsa lease Ole aie SHIPS | PASS HIGHWAY erm tiean aes ana The Stephens Pass highway will Poincare sald France does not de-|| STARTS ON PAGE 1 BURGLARS ENTER coat (s1b(000, 2 thle project. provides etre to remoein: in the ane, eee | for a highway thru Index and Sky than necessary and has no polltical +, accident and navy bfficials ex: | |komish between Chetan and Seattle, oS eee Se | pressed the opinion that she would Tho forestry service has appropri It 1s not a fact, the premier said, | ated $90,000 for this project and Che-| lan and Snohomish counties have} appropriated large sums. King coun-| ty, as fourth party to an agreement | to build the highway, must construct a roadway thru King county with| | not be placed in drydock for repairs. that the French claims are of @| <1. way convoying the naval trans. nature to crush Germany or exceed | yor Ghaumont, carrying the naval her ability to pay. affairs committee, on a tour of in Francé’s propositions admit of | spection of the Keyport torpedo base amendments provided her principles | and the Bremerton navy yard. Steal Gems Valued at $500 From S. A. Perkins Co. re not Infringed upon. ‘The Chaumont did not stop after ; the highway passing thru Stephens ; ; ce! as re; " e| ‘The ringing of an automatle bur-| pass. | The reply was generally consid-|the accident was reported some tim i n ; cred ag maintaining intiexibly the| later, and proceeded to Bremerton vlarm.at 3:67 a.m, Wednesday | “I consider It a duty to keep the previous French attitude. It does - revealed a daring Jewelry robbery in| tax levy this year down to last yvar's j 5 , . A § the heart of the downtown district.| figure and I believe we mn save ot change the demand for cessa- | ‘ Hacer saatve Canteen the Plan Trial Flight |The thieves had entered the offices | large sums by scanning the road and MRE ctetubad ari: tntarnktional’ oomal of Barling Bomber |° '"* 8. 4; Perkins company, manu-| bridge appropriations,” Gaines sald. | OMSL Gad 46 billion ‘gold smoarke Re. ObIOTK After |(@cturing Jewelers, on the second) Many county departments have | U2 al el aap rll MN a * | foor of the Commercial building, at sir budget estimates under the for France and suggests friendly | weather conditions had been ob-|ucor of th : 6, at} cut thelr buds tetvann Britain aud he a | Second ave. and Madison st., taking discussion between Britain a: |werved at 10 o'clock today definite | giamonds valued at $500. allies to reach a basis for an early |announcement was iasued at Me The thieves had used a thin plece settlement of a portion of the Ger-|Cook field headquarters that the i 1928 figures. Departments who will operate cheaper in 1924 than in 1 and the amounts saved, follow: Superior courts, $3 sheriff, |of metal in the crack of the door to man debt to correspond to thelgrent Barling bomber will be flown| force back the bolt. ‘They took {gir stockade, $820; county en amount of devastation suffered by|tonight at 6 o'clock | tay Oe whe Binmondaeix rubled and. cinoer sRidbe Mahe: oe. way RADAR each country. Mhevhuge cratt’was to have had |so7 So tcwiie ana escaped by |osent “tabollaedy. ’$8:200;, corohér The commission of reparations jits first trial yesterday, but rain | cinbing thru a window opening on|$464; health department, $3,001 has duly assessed Germany's obliga: | interfered Madison st county home, $587; public welfare Hons and :there {s no need: to. re-} arvana to Patrolman Frank Bertrand found department, $4,860; county farm, | consider this question, the premier jagainst Germany |six of the rings on the sidewalk, | willows, $7,016; county agricultural | said, Furthermore, the obligations) The reply concluded with a de-| whore they hd dropped out of thé agent, $2,468; county commission: | annot be revised except by wnan-/mand to permit the commission of | purgiars’ pockets. Other rings were lers, $1,510; industrial sites and| imous consent. The idea of estimat- /reparations to “fulfill its mission, | found In the guttter and some on|tracts, $17,315; county garage, $4,-| ing Germany's capacity to pay once |strengthening instead of weakening |the marquise, where they evidently | 615, ATTENDANT IN for all never entered the heads of |jt,” and permitting It to study the were dropped in the thieves’ haste the framers of the treaty situation In Germany, evaluate Ger- to get away. of Jone over the other." Poincare reiterated his previous) Aberdeen Woman Lot AD 85, an attendant, thru the Aiihay Bastards even. the: invataet| j d Link ‘Thon, before the throng of amazed y Ei id, evel ores A Germany has mado sufficient pay.|_ ABERDEEN, Aug. 2.—Mrs. C. E.} walked out of the place and disap. ments (o restore the French de-| Bartlett was struck on the head by| peared. | vastated regions, a golf club held by ©, ©, Jefferson) Miss McGregor is unconscious, and Small. tin box, containing ‘The reply said France would be|at the Washington open champion-| close to death, She could answer no} | ship matches here yesterday, tions as to the man's identity. | film of Roth Stonehouse, willing to study a method for the qu (MOUNTAIN VISITORS BREAK ALL RECORDS AND MORE HIT TRAIL ure to the Tuesday Chamber of Com merce from the park supe It is expected t the total at tendance t ear over 10 and that at least peor t the ver e ant Due to her, in spite of © haze which hung over the und and nea level the mountain has never been seen to better advantage than during the ant two or three weeks, report visitors, nd the number of has been at a mint FOUR PERSONS _ARE INJURED traffi in which was due to the stor swept A Marton ured when he uc 1 ave. and James t. 2 ar Mag he had bent his head to avoid driving rain. He was taken to the city hospital Knocked down and Washington st Washington st., brut the teoth was ven by C. st uve Walking Fifth ave Randle, ut Second ave Lew Wong received of by Wicklund, ne and struck F. car 602 in front of an auto at and Virginia st, E. T 1733 Hinds st., was knock ef down by the my which driven Dr, Ht Baum 451 Wheeler st Chesterfield, a Oxford hotel, was at First ave. and by a car driven by H. R 3 34th ave, He w the body. Cc. was garten, A. R, at the down boy iving Stewart James, Grand Jury Ordevs Probe Into School CHICAGO, Aug Charges thi youthful inmates of the Chica, al ental (truancy) school were na ctherw cruel in: structors were ordered tigated by a grand jury by Judge Michael L. McK chiet justice of the criminal court, here today. Judge McKinley has been holding the caso for several The grand jury will also probe hearings on days. ana|Teports that instructors were in-|falling out, a woolen jicket caught funds, |Yo!¥ed in immorality and “revolting |on the door handle, ¢oking the punishment” at the institution. ws) meeting of the Klan Thurs knocked | injured about | FIFTH AVENUE—PINE STREBioner, DEPUTIES RAID SEATTLE HOME WOMAN DRIVER HELD FOR DEATH De tt» Mike Brew-| Killed Aged Woman Who So ‘ wt Got in Path of Car ORTLAND, Aug. 2: Held in the He g name of b fathe 6 1 r of reckless driv I 1. ¥ but no h nar ng tis McCgnn awaits it the director The| court action today, following the le quo: found | death jate wterday of ‘e. Clark re tal dintr 4 was | Corey, 60, struck by the McCann ma- elaon had been seen leaving Mrs. Corey was carried across @ the place frequently carrying sus Jewalk and crushed between the car, us package and a bulld'ng, receiving injuries ison ia being held in the county | which ¢ 4 her death in a few” on @ charge of possession of| hours. Witnesses sa% that Mra. Me- quor | Cann seemed to lose all, presence of mind at the instant her car struck Mrs. Core and evidently “stepped KLAN MEEK IN STEUBENVILLE instead of the brake, | Coolidges Dine in , on the gas” STEUBENVILLE, Ohio, Aug | % ; |—Plans of Steubenville officials Executive Mansion ub city were dropped last night | ‘ately <ollowing: \upohees. in thee? when Ku Klux Klan leaders an-| note! suite yesterdsy, President aa nounced there Would be na. kan. | Mrs, Calvin Coolidge removed to the , Be 0. °M| White House and had dinner in their ‘ here Thursday night new home in the evening. This was Feeling has been tense since last) tne first meal of the new executive dnesday night, when more than] and Mrs. Coolidge at the famous 1600 0 persons were injured in a fight} penn, nia ave. N. W between Klansmen and a mob of citi 5 el zens. Fe recurrence of the have the cou ed Is had planned to cll pass an ordinance to prohibit the ay. Thin wan deemed unnecessary, | however, when Klan leaders called} off the proposed meeting and the |ordinance was not presented | | | | | Booze Violator Is ; | Aan | Sentenced to Jail | COU ta | Pleading guilty to liquor violation 7 |charges, included in five sepa | counts of a complaint filed in federal court, Arthur Renlund, proprietor of | the ‘olo Bar, 806 First ave., was! fined $300 and sentenced to serve} | four months in the county jail by | Federal Judge Frank §. Deltrich Wednesday According to federal attorneys, Renlund’s sales at the Solo Bar to- taled ax high in some cases as $500 in one day. The sentence imposed by Judge Deltrich in the heaviest levied | in federal court in many weeks, ac, | cording to the prosecution. “CROWN?” Heater For Coal or Wood Full nickel trimmed, | duplex grates, mica |Baby Strangles in * Her Own Clothing BEND, Ore., Aug Betty Jean, Lindley, 11-monthold daughter of |f| front: door, M@ and Mrs. J. Morton Lindley, is |#) No. 18, $17.50 dead here today, strangled by her |own clothing. | The infant crawled from her best in the rear seat of the Lindley au- tomobile while the rother left the |machine for a few m iutes, and in No. 20, $19.50 No. 22, $25.00 |babe to death. | How to buildup your | Weight (T 1 © be under weight often| Proves low fighting-power in the body, It often means you are minus nerve-power, minus rede cells in your ft the the cor- wr it tved ibit- blood, minus health, minus vitality. It is” serious to be | Wool Crepe Skit box-plaited styles, Many “attractive effects “MOTHEX” Red Pine Tar Garment Bags 75c "Mothex” are of air-tight moth-, dust: and and afford storage for furs and yaluable garments. Large sizo, | inches; low-priced at 75¢. Garment Bags construction. damp-proof, safe compact and DEFENDS VOTES many's capacity to pay periodically | Approach of officers from the | eee |OF COMMISSION jand modify dates of payments as|alarm company, responding to the Ng : p if “We wish to pay our debts tolteen turned in, Is believed to have : i | commission of reparations in oyer- | been turned in, VANCOUVER, B, C., Aug. 22.—An : " _|the United States, as well as to | caused the hasty retreat of the in- eine wet Ta | Q . FE ay eran [England,” Poincare sald, “and we|truders. unknown man’ walked Into the) How Is Your ing ow at France ; * Jcould not grant preference to the | Sacinteieicat Hastings shooting gallery here last |) al hold 60 per cent the claima | night, rented a rifle, and shot Mildred ||| Supply of Mazda Lamps? The Hiectrical Goods Section rehabilitation of Germany nd| Jefferson had just awung at the} Witnesses of the shooting could give! carries a completo stock of reconcile {t Avith payments, the! ball, and on hia follow thru his iron| no cluo that might lead to an ex.| Clear, Frosted, “Daylight LIBERAL REWARD the day when resistance ceased, | struck Mra. Bartlett on the forehead, | planation of the mysterious shooting, and "Flame" Mazda Lamps in |but that restoration should not be| knocking her unconscious dnd cut - - the various sizes, Return to Pantages theatre, “too fast or too eAany, becaune| ting a mash. FRANKFORT, Ky, Aug, 1A bow ATRS STORE this would result in Germany's in Her husband, a physician, admin-| revolver fell from Henry Torbet's Seattle, dustrial reconatruction at the ex. istered first ald treatment, The] pocket at a church plenic, killing @ s in Beige, Blue and Black— Wool Ratine Skirts in wide assortment of fancy stripe effects—box. and group-plaited styles. Waist measurements—25 to 82. ade & re number © i ©! de of | blood-cells, you begin bacota or- | plus. That's why ¢ S. S., since: y-. | 1826, has meant to thousands of eid- | underweight men and women, a 1 + , P + | plus in their strength. Your body lai bo, | fills to the point Se ncaa pats jv. | flesh b-- Decidedly Low-Priced: $5.75 UNCOMMONLY attractive values are offered in a new shipment of 200 smartly fashioned Skirts. Gray Serge Skirts—knife-plaited style. Plaid and Overplaid Skirts in a wide assort- ment of patternings and shades—box- and group-plaited styles. of designs concealed in folds of large plaits. Low-priced at $5.75. —DOWNSTAIRS STORE New Shipment of the Well-known “ARCH-SUPPORT” Shoes for Women NY women hive become regular wearers of: our well-known “ARCH-SUPPORT” Shoe, and have recommended it to friends anxious to enjoy real foot comfort. New shipments have completed our stock of stylés and sizes. Women’s “ARCH-SUPPORT” Oxfords ............50.- $6.95 Women’s “ARCH-SUPPORT” High Shoes ............$7.95 Sizes,314 to 10. Widths AA to D. ly DOWNSTAIRS STORE pense of France and others, wound is not serious, §-year-old girl.