The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 23, 1923, Page 9

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THURSDAY, AUGUST ¢ Middle Westerners Chilled by Cold Wave; Don Overcoats SURPRISED BY FLEET WILL BE WOULD ASSURE COAL FAMINE FLOOD BREAKS BIGGER FLEET Cis Me tr, ts Sa a weaTigp SACK IN 1924 FUEL SUPPLY IS PREDICTED BIG RESERVOIR 1S NEGESSARY SS SSS" gas r cards for Mra. Coc oldge, ‘This ts |Admiral Tells Mayor Navy |President Coolidge Speeds Lewis Says Strike Will Colorado Home Owners Flee Coontz Says It Should Berm 'scisnie amr to ‘pracioe which Mr. Wien started when nt I y a red the 4 - ; Will Favor Seattle Plans to Protect Public Mean Scarcity of Fuel Rush of Water Able to Protect Trade A beacause White Birds Migrating | irr preaiat oa la erica. et g After an absence of three years BY FRAZER EDWARDS BY PAUL R. MALLON DENVER 2 4 the 1 t sda South; A ugust) in Seattis, Admire) RH. Coonta VASHINGTON, Aug, 23.—Presi:| ATLANTIC CITY, Aug. 25 wall of we : 4 tending thruou Id, whould | short mber 16 for 80: lvengers has been designed with the . 8 a y ans 6 fleet to} r¢ 4 n ¢ body n the wings, s0 commander of the 8. navy, re te : 3 f "i nmander of the 1 navy, 1 ;| dent Coolidge today speeded plang to| pension of anthracite mining Sep-| Ark c evelopment | wit t urface ; “ turned to the city Wednesday aboarc : : z é 5 4 shat . i 5 J a io Saher Hy. he ibarbsanteels Recor d Is set |the destroyer Charleston, temporary [insure a fuel supply to the public as te ene ri may a A 8 a famine, | mwoll the break} of the * forely 1 trade, | Mlagship of the navy government officials virtually aban: |» °" - the Apishapa| cls ai r 7] 1 Admiral G ‘il in 8 United Mine Workers of America,| : : < - hates CHICAGO, Aur » | al Coonts will. remain in Se-)doned hope of averting a hard coal| warned today the 1 r hos ot Brecirton Salil Movies strike. At the same time Samuel Warrl |! hur t patock | Mitte in t Pg» , FREDERICK “2 diwhen he will sa out | | n : ods sto t early tog ling | sleet. fo Pati ofa #4 eed Even membera of the United|ner, chairman of the anthracite oper:| and inundate A teal fy southwa nd | Culed: re ‘The | States coal commt who main-| tors’ policy committee, declared that| the canta 5 aren "which a OAV ieiinn anh ine wlebra, in the West Indies, The | Sta nission, wh Son & ssepension ema maaan wa) aoa need bet on up he cruiser Seattle, flagship of tho fleet, | tain it would be “suicide” for either | tore than a ‘alight inconvenience” | Roky for pe | Yangtze river, where a few pitiful is now at Bremerton, undergoing | side to assume the blame for a strike, ! to consumers. Water spread A five-mile}) cue mer pe Ths adipa dla pparin i FIFTH 7 NE LSC past repairs, made necessary by - 3 | Expressing these conflicting views| area in some plac ruining crops prisey ews » ? » are gloomy over the prospect. oxpressing these conflicting nad gears OHH » the chilly, raw weather spread | the grounding {fa dense fog off Mar- |"? air.|Tesarding the possible fate of the| nd destroying most’ of the smaiier|®%e% nto China,” he wuld. Up the St. Lawrence river and in-|rowstone point Tuesday morning.| Th® first big step taken by Mr. general public in the anthracite-using | animals on farms, A warning i aie noncaoar: Of He to the Southwest Sho will be ready to steam, south | Coblidge in the execution of his plans | Fiat, thts niche cen papreeys apne 1p TEN by gba stele i Warmer weather was promised | from Port Angeles Monday with tho| to supply the country with sufficient | operators and miners remained in| Dré Shaker ihe oe human for th ernooi | fleet, according to Coontz. Unusua fhght of migra-|_ That the fleet will return to Seattle | tory ‘ s declared by weather | B&Xt Summer was promised Mayor esage an early w Brown Wednesday by the admiral two weeks ahead of | Th¢ decision has already been weather bureau said * he said ‘ting in the Northwest yester.| minor Gregory Maj, Gen oust. com [supplies of bituminous coal in event | thelr hotels here, each following a| 4 of She. flood w watchful waiting. | Hev as the o of a co} | potley c of a strike w th alling of a in. and wit ference at Now York city August 28), Warrier told the United Press to, 8nd Jot state governors or thelr repre-|44¥ that if his coal mines are shut ae “ for distribution of soft coal | Gite sapply'ot the nation’ out offs th Poy © the lowest |. Fer three months, in the waters of | 2 : "a ,|Dituminous output, coupled with oil a [the West Indies, th st line ships| , vitations to the conference were | and other fuel nubstituten, |from the Pacific and the weouting | dispatched by Federal Fuel Disteibu- | y national Head ay fleet trom the: Atlantic’ wit i tor Wadloigh to the governors of the Appre: ot rgo| themselves t ; land and Middle Atlantic ' >» battle practice this winter, The fleet | 11 New England and Middle Atlan ack on r and Eastern and hern New York | wil) be states making up the principal an HERE'S RE ! ¥ do a a i 0° | aerem pin bat | are in the grip gf the coldest August divided tor @ liberty’ period | fracite consuming territory SRE’S MORE ABOUT , expressed the gratitude of the! ed several hours in Pueblo pe jand the ships will be assigned to} vay thwe ho visiting congress. weather that has be ied since | ent te . Cool: | AIR M II airs today te : ein vad en re@r ded sin hee | Guit of Mexico and Atlantic seaports. | It was evident today that Mr, Cool 4 & repal s san'|men for visit here and mercury stood at $7 Th idge still banks on influencing oper ho Apishapa reservoir was 1 nt t that ember of th mitt i he cruiser Seattle will participate ARTS ON PAGE 1. |! oo .| Pointed out that each member of the dinight and during yesterday ey in these manouvers, and her gunners | *t0FS and miners to keep the mines | Etats cated . wg Should drouth| Party Was pa his own expenses Jast night the person without a top. jen be pitted against the champions |TBAing by threatening to flood the 1 of land, & frouth and was moved to do so in the hope coat was out of luck. , Frosts were anthracite market with bituminous }follow recent storms further dam.|“? , 400 tp Ad c 7 OU5 | silastic over the results to date. ‘The that he might m tellige ad reported from the Adirondacks re,|0% %&® Bavy, according to Admiral seul coka alitwnd than edhationten (ae r the results to 4 The | | might n intelligently a |Coontz. She will return to her Pi night run between Chicago and minister to the needs of the nav sion. 0 her Pa-|)) > irrign The ability of the bituminous mines|Cheyenne, wifere great beacons of F outlined the new naval pol oteite cific base at San Pedro in May. oun bridges: 5 four ‘ | to produce the coal never has been |ijent point the way during the dark aa brie ilng fourt yin regard: to Alaska, which calls KANSAS CITY, Aug. 23.—Lowest | | Aueationed, but ‘the problem of mov-lnours, really the experimental leg |'@lroad trestles, were it put Of) for the formation of another naval |}| temperatures for August on record ing the coal in sufficient quantities! ce the flight, has been most suc. |" The. Eighth st. bridge, 10} 4+ :10¢ there and which ahould prove oa Ss an a es were reported over the Southwest from the mines has yet to be solved. | cessful lo, spanying Fountain r | | a great stimulus in its development, Yesterday and today. The mercury However, government experts have| oe ea W Bo weakened by the torrents | he said. a made a low mark of 62 here. Nor. no fear of real hardships in any sec: | fee 3 c. tthe |thAt traffic was barred from the | MEG COAST i d Cl Mal summer weather was expected | NONE T0 BLAME tion lente A Ne Ys Aug. 22TH? letructure. Pueblo experienced the | URGE COAST In the Season-En earance westbound transcontinenta CO-OPERATION by tomorrow. They estimate American consum hest water since the “ mail. plane, piloted hy Wesley 1. | moog of 199 : Coontz and Congressman Georg BUF Hoey j a late agin de Goa win cia tea |Smith, lett Hazelhurat at 11:56 a.| +p ea aeaaayag: _|P. Darrow of Pennsylvania ure JFFALO, Aug. 23, — Slight! , j jane fa taaie OF Ly daylight « stl | y Aaa tial eiig ey | united action to br deqt ¥ warmer corditions prevailed today, | Describes Cruiser Ground=|o00 tons of bituminous coal above |™* “(azlEnt saving tme. |aid not materialize, and ‘pee | unl quate 1 is | ; . f a repetition of the 192 | vision for the the foliowing the coldest August weath sroung and soft coal mines capable | CHICAGO, Aug. 23.—The second] ‘ jointed hat the @r Buffalo has experienced in 53 ing as Unavoidable of producing 13,000,000 tons weekly | was declared past eee years. The temperature reached a. in the face of m normal 9,600,000 tona|“ttmpt of the United States air mail | \ ¥ pes HIS is one of several clearance groups— jservice to span e West in night} degrees A naval board of inquiry was toj consumption, experts do not fear al mre’. wan the West in, night hs x at an tay doe disposing of garments from Spring displays °. on | meet in Bremerton at 10 a. m. Thufs-| shortage of hard coal substitutes exeape oe continental mall wh lett San|| HERE'S MORE IT ¢ has 17 at sharp reduction PITTSBURG, Aug. 23.—Pittsburg. pad Seaeasapr as Rune weattaree Francisco yesterday morning arrived HORE ABOUT " sur Its de i iser § y nlal cit : REDUCED TO $25.00—Coats and Capes ers hunted up additional blankets/ cre dita a s here in a plane piloted by Eugene ) iy j Il carry little welght, they i during the night and refreshment | marnowat ie FInnhy, early -Tuteday f| ots Sleep | Smith at 4:23 a. m., after it had been THIEVES [se a in soft pile fabrics: tweeds and twills, pro- Parlors started brewing the first “hot! when questioned .at his | | transported in unbroken relays. No TARTS ON PAGE 1 given that the viding for many different occasions and drinks" this mornin es the term. , obstacles, such as caused by a Wy-/| . i 5 m-! Thursday morning, Admiral c sass ce paella aml | coas jd be looked after in th offering choice of black, navy and sand- perature dropped to 4 » the lowest tn | G, hk & waka Ge on iquor: oming fog in the firstitrial, ¥ x enced. Y y | ; color. Gece accident and that probably jeer to er t . th 1 | ' 5 A few minutes L ¢ mail wa ‘ Other clearance groups of Coats and Ca $15.00 no one would be held responsible. z eae | Sei sik . : but J y - t 1 pes NEW YORK, Aug. 23.—The a “The connnatider was evidently 66 Agents Find Booze in | speeding eastward in a p b nesds nd for & nt t and $35.00, Vance fall styles were rushed today | tempting to pass another ship on the M en be ace store cde ete “ ; ' Sapa ik wie Bawa eecpna vise in chilled New York, when River-|right and drew a little too close to Mattress Basingard rac boosts xyes 7 ‘ i distr to return for lunch Z side drive dogs appeared in over-|shore. The fog was very dense and rea or pos Ae ; t club, board Ponts. : fa ceccetrgrvers tad” seit antes BY STEVE ARNETT Lege e eps eine sae Pe ote ; had tc ar ened mores et ee Belted models in plaids were popu: | Coontz. Sleeping comfortably, despite the |? ~- bu easter: cat — lewewr bitha thar ia® Be a af 1 a trip to Tac a ogany-Finish lar, The temperature was 57 degrees| ‘The admiral sald it was just one|fact that they were slumbering on |°%? pil ter be Goan “Wiiticuae os | e RR tor fon of Camp Lewis. At 10 o'clock. Haberdashers reported | of the many sea accidents that have|some of the hardest liquor in Sent | rived joes thy Abe tape today and|having been fc in his cou: , . wed their convic @ run on caps. j happened in all parts of the world/tle, George and Thomas McLinn, | left for New York at 8:29 a. m pas pet service~ai fe” Ureel thor @ strategic locatic oor am B ee | within the past 24 houra le and 9 years oid, were not awak-| hours ahead " le :f ency. n mands proper forti Pp ases ST. PAUL, Minn., Aug. 22.—Freez-| “The dense fog seems to beprev-lened when ‘federal agents raided “Deputy sie Ross made | fication and that the United States res were reported pre-|Alent over tho entiro Coast at thisitheir homo late Wednesday night| san FRANCISCO, Aug. 23 ¢|no recommendatio: atever, and ah i navy up to Yailing early today in ditferent parts| time and navigators are experiencing /and virtually moved thair bed from |third airplane to leave Sam Franclons | ehace h wners of mit allowed by jthe Four} AY . I of the Northwest. Potato vines were | “!“ficulty in controlling their vessels. !peneath them. leith: tran ontinental mail in the|the a >biles . te. | Ps reaty, / pecia ° frost wit at Anoka. Near Du-|, “The ships in these fogs proceed! ‘phe children, sons of Mary Mo |five teat flights, now being conducted |ly remunerat 1 “ . egirdiess of the action of other : Tuth temperatures were-reported at{ bY dead reckoning and the fog 0 lrinn, proprietr sh:|by the postoffice departm got|turned, also th 6 had | nat t Bt mu a deadens the ship and shore wirenstment at Pheahg » | day troca' Orleay fiala at 6 a. teen bee cea well “as 3 Anes are 100 of these Mahog- |that it Js sometimes impossible to} sleeping oblivious to the party that} cific standard time. The pla 0 Matenids veutink”: coutiaued’ eh | ping party that} andard time. The plane was|to as “a sili raat c any-finish Floor Lamp. Bases | was in progress when the agents | piloted by Burr H. Winslow afd car-|i¢ wg aa aie its commer I not 0 sell a Ss ia i for the place was cached in the|115 pounds, entence." : — | IN WAR FRAUD jmattress of the children's bed, ac: | Fi Apisaataky cates’ tise olaaas Graceful designs, well-finished, “pth Pits A o| pectin to the agen | CHEYENNE, Wyo. Aug. 23—The! of the .two they were again RITAIN to, be completed with shades. of Federal Judgo Bundy by a grand | leiteer aaa believed by agents to be | pi loted by rank Yaeger, arrived Pierce county on information r i iy | |m partner in the business, was also |here at 3 a, m. Tho plano waited| farslahed by Gerais 7 Two styl ’ f May ater’. invetigation of elicat wap urnished by German. Attorney _ Two styles, one as pictured, 60. ested anc being held Thurs dawn and started for Mate: Gt the’ dlanédal (of war inde arrested and was ng held Thur: a . ar dack Sullivan defended the a inches high, equipped with two t hich in the es undef, —_—_— day on possession, sa and main. rings at 4:30 a. m. ine ; i erial which cases und t nulstrice charge. Mra, Me-| Cheyenno {s the end of the FS a ix- investigation, aro said to have in-/Grand Jury Demands That |{um'* * Mulsttce charge. Mra. Of ight sockets and six-foot cord }Linn was pe@mitted to remain at| ‘lying district and officials held the volved ‘a, $2,000,000 loss to the | aatarnnient. Officers Resign |homo on her promise that ALBANY, N s. 23.—Albany m | | tion of Brinker Thursday and | deplored the second arrest of | Atl ciane for. daylight, becwure thae| the two on evidence they gave |Baldwin and Curzon May with plug. hone tudietel were, Colona’ St oer would appear for’ her hearing | * possible accident without the| the police in the i See Poincare in Paris ould «senate toe aid of the powerful beacon lights at|AH, YES THEY Special $4.05 each a; Purcell, Seattk, chief of the sales|(- ROSEBURG, Atig. 23—City offl-| Another raid staged. at 151214 | Night-flying stations. HAD WA a BY. LLoyd ALLEN Fee auare Stee aa of the war department in| clals of Reedsport, Douglas county, Ninth ave. Wednesday night, by | Pane ied "I think is Is 1 | ug. 23—Prime Minis John C. Skinner, chief of the | have formed a closed corporation federal ‘prohibition agents resulted |, OMAHA, Aug. 23.—Congreas willl where the probation law in and Foreign Minister sale division of the quartermaster’s | with bootleggers and split Profit8}in the arrest of Minnio La France |5¢ *#ked to appropriate money to| used," Sullivan aid, may meet Premier Poincare in the near future to. dis corps; Henry Miller, of H. Miller & derived trom illegal sale of bo0m.| 454 George L. Walker. Both ance | make permanent transcontinental air| young men, they tol fl Co., merchants, New York, ty, and | according to @ report of the grand being held Thursday oh nalsance | ll service, sucheas is now being here and both have splendid war| cuss nvoking new allied con-| Henry H. Canter and ° Bertram | jury on file here today. and sale of liquor charges. tried cut between New. Zork and Bait | recotds ‘dnd’ comel-traht (good) tain-| ferdnos .to\- discuss. reparations 85-lilles. I think their arrest on evi-| was learned reliably he this after. | . doing business ag the Untver-| ~The report asks the resignation Francisco, Col. Paul Henderson, Sales corporation, New York|ot Couaciiman J. , Jus. sistant postmaster general, declared] s..cy they themuelven furnluned eal | z tee of the Peace Fred Earl afd NE W RAILWAY | todays - ee tho police, is a despicable action.” linformed persons expected Canter and Weiss at once gave | City Recorder Caley, * Deputy Prosecu said to confer with Curzon in bail in the stm of $5,000. Colonel| The grand Jury found evidenge WORK IN ORE ROCK, BPRINGS, (W70.. Aire 30 een oe erat. Wan derertan | Eratioa within few a The | Purcell is on his way to Seattle|that bootleggers outside the ring *|—Westbound air mail plane No, | Sawm i pp ied Pitcend ae foreign minister ts on a vacation in to answer the charges. were arrested and put out of pusi-| PORTLAND, Aug. 23.—Possibility|281, piloted by Collinson, arrived |®4 Served time for a petty larceny nister acati | San Francisco a A ese mandy |ness, giving those in leaguo with|of another railroad extension for |here at 7 a. m. and Pilot Bishop in|!" 84m Francisco and that Wessel |the authorities an exclusive field,/Central Oregon is seen in the joint|Plane No. 648 loft gor Salt Lake |*4™itted he was arrested in con eat Me ack baie Gee ean BUSINESS MAN | the report’ continued. |visit today to Prineville, “Crook |City at 1:02, taking two minutes |nection with the theft of automo. | British, disappoint was learned | | _“Jastice ism mockery and’ thejcounty, of President F. A. Booth|for the change. ‘The plane was|ile accessories but that the case|‘remely d Informed sources ‘toda IS RELEASED municipal court a burlesque,” it|and directors of the Ochoco Timber |running on schedule time, in clear, j ater wan: Clamiioed jap | While the government stilt declined was declared, company and Ralph Budd, president |cool weather, President Dyer of the Auto club al comment, pending receipt | Shortly after his arrest on a petit | of the Great Northern railway. Gc059 anid Beattie 38a shaven “cop jot tho Belgian reply, there was no| larceny charge by a Kelso real estate | h \ payee 4 thieves, due to the leniency w | The officials are investigating the ELKO, } , Aug. 23. st and) — secret tha little hepe could be} firm for which he formerly worked, 'Revenue Men Open possibility of gonstructing a rajl-| westbound air mail nes passed | Which 4 treat the crime |gleaned from Poincare's uncompro. C, W. Neimeyer, manager of the| | rs atty 4 - Drive on Theaters road from Prinevilk east, nearly 15|near here today, westbound | mising statement of the French! Boren, Ane the charge, seainst him timber recently purchased York by the , the eastbound plane the tht 8c officials still found a frag-| is ve day. | to start campaign against théater by th | e-| dismissed Wednesday. See m mee * Ochoco company. The deal, if it|to leave San Francisco, |ment-of hope in the possibility the Neimeyer declared that the affatr|and dance hall owners who seek to} K > ‘ db: sunderstanding | evade the payment of administration |80¢4 thru, will include taking over| Pilot Paul Scott arrived here, elgian reply might offer some] ee apie misunderttan fi | and seating taxex, according to C. L,|the privately owned line running| westbound, at 9:80, and Jack Eaton| ISHPEMING, Mich. Aug. 23.—|ground for continuance of the en | inyo Mod io HS + Ba hi ites: suey; chief deputy collector of in.|ffom Prineville west to the Oregon | hopped off for Reno at 9:35. This | Tho vacation tour of Thomas A, Kdi-|tento, but others, more matter of| eas with ‘the. ‘Kelso foteats rpha | ternal revenue for this district, The| Trunk line, and the whole construc: | should take the New York mail into| son, Henry Ford and Harvey jfact, realized the Belgian document vatier ‘i ‘ata ts fly a. i levasions are being attempted not so|tlon would cost approximately $2,.|Reno about noon and into San Fran.| stone went ahead in upper Michigan | probably would be little more than Meical wacks gol ac bon er cal trtigh: in, Beattle paritel? sorae. other |800,000,/ It "la ‘eatiraated, cisco about 2 p. m |today, the trio invading L’Anse, site} 4 restatement of the French post | eee eee, Seer 88 On Be he fx oft tha Tabites Ane” collactor] eas ithe Pilot Monton wrrived at Elko from {of the Ford model timber mills |tion, with emphasis on Belgium's | was advised of the misunderstand.| parts o! eer | Reno at 10:29, aud Mivt Sharpnack,| Edison's slight cold and sore fin-| priority claims on German repara- {|| fing, said Neimeyer, and the arrest | stated. 3 Portland Thugs ae | Mints troin tha fallure of the Keetes aa ee Sawai = eastbound, here for Salt Lake|ser were declared only “incidentals” | tions fomipany to notty the authorities o¢| ‘The best honey in England comes| Get Bunch of Keys|i # 1031 |to such a vacation trip and the “elec-| | Tt seemed to be the general opin There Is Only One | ca izar¢ na dec ‘ed |ion that continuance of the official Gab Mitta of.the cies, nite clover, PORTEA ND) STAN sac miee trical wizard” was declared in th 5 | 23 | best physical condition. |correspondence would lead only to} 9” thugs rushed out upon Oscar M. |Coolidge Piedad Members of the party denied ru-|@ repetition of the endless bicker. 6 Smith as he was walking homeward With Mail by Air m that Ho wancthl'l ada naservon nw tate tanemar wed UrrenssreClelih early today. One stuck a pistol in that he is “absolutely oke | reparations hanges up to this | his face, another searched hig pock WASHINGTON, Aug. | After camping at L'Anse for a day | time. con h F V ] ets, while a third slugged him over|dent Coolldge today expressed, ‘is or two the party will probably board| It was admitted, however, that the Famous Vulcan the head wit bh gratification over the results of the "Smith was out for several min.|trial fights to. establish a. 28-hour HIS is the Range that has immeasurably lightened and improved cookery-by-gas. It utes, and when he came to the rob. ing gat ne Sec eee ,{day. A trip on the boat thru the Britain would he difficult with- | bers had fled. The president voiced his pleasure) (oh. 4. country 1s contemplate ffording France an opportunity hag Meda Rhea GE gas ceanien casiart antl | more economical. ‘ | ; Smith took stock of his losses and|at the achievement of the air mall to make a strong appeal to world} Any day in our Stove Section you may see Baldwin in the position of having to tinuous transcontinental air mail| W.'s subject to six months’ jail sen- roe . « 1 W service will bo a firmly-established|tences for contempt of court upon | Another appreciated feature of the “SMOOTH- Galileo was imprisoned for teachi g Eng Civil on Passes and functioning Inatitution in the|Proof of membership, was granted | L WO Autos Smash; TOP”—vessels may be moved about freely on the Priso: hin, Mich: Ban, Anown to nelgh: | rear future way made by the post-|by Judge Charles O, Busick today. Five Persons Hurt | polished top with no danger of tipping or spilling. that the Earth moved Round the Sun. MeMlst Caled Ae HU nse “2g master general tn an interview with] The sult for the injanction w Two automobiles colliding at See. |f| i ) phish ; McMillen," died at his home, 623) aster Rouen! tn brought by tha district attoney Of] ona ave, and Wall’ at, Wedmene’, Several models, large and small, to meet the needs Don’t let prejudice imprison you—keep [Cloverdale st., Wednesday night at Sacramento county, “In the name of : | Now expressed keen delight over evening resulted In severe injuri of various households. 4 r the age of 81, Mulligan, it was cperimental {the people of the. state of ‘Califor ig ad fs you from trying delicious NUCOA and learned thru paper's found among his|the results of tho first experimental |10 to five persons. The Model Pictured, $95.00 air mail service, and pointed out | Ma. 7 Soanesalons;.- Waele civil war’ veteri 2 One of the machines: wag driven ‘ nat finding out for yourself that it is in, having served in the Tist New {that the first experiments were so iy dott MoGeath "908 teavaver Nee Stove Section, DOWNSTAIRS STORE Finest Table Quality York Volunteer infantry. Ho ts wur.| ‘early perfect" as to warrant the) Former Montanans and the other car wag driven by vived by a sister in Brooklyn, N. ¥,|Prediction that the service soon will eis Mrs, Harry J, Weedin, 1827 N. béth At One-Half the Price He ede be a success, to Picnic Sept. 3) xocratirs auto wan completste Members of the Rotary Glee club| “After the present experiment, the) ‘The fourth annual pienic of for-| wrecked against a lamp post, injur: | THE BEST FOODS Inc. visited the Woodland “auto park postoffice department will go over|mer residenta of Philipsburg, Mont., | ing McGrath and four passengers in| y - Wednesday evening and entertained |final plans for Institution of the| wil) be held Monday, September 3,| his ¢ Mr. and Mrs, Thomas | BIEW XORK | CHICAOO KANSAS CIEY) | SAN FRANCISCO the tourisin with a musical program, service,” Now said. ‘The servico|at the Roso Hill clubhouse, at Kirk-| Leatham, 2162 Soventh ave, W., and Jud Mather, director of the club, led | will |be expensive, of course, but so|land, All families are asked to tale | Mr. and Mrs. 'T, W. Hawos, of Bay the songstern. is the telegraph expensive, their lunches, City, Mich, Ford's now and palatial 300-foot| Poincare’s statement was cleverly |{| acht, which arrived at L'Anse Mon.| Worded and that separate action by | jfound the thugs had taken—ajpilots to Postmaster General New, | opinion. } bunch of keys. who called at the White House to. I. W. Ww. Injunction In other words, the French pre-| pce, express.’ SACRAMENTO, Cal., Aug, 23.—|assume the major responsibility. for this Wonderful Range keeping three vessels Bi Currency carried’ in an inside|day to report to Mr. Coolidge on mier still has kept Prime Minister | The Delicious Spread for Bread pocket had been overlooked the progrest of the modern “pony Granted by Court 4 y A f Confident prediction that a con-|An injunction that will make I. W.!a final rupture in tho entente. steaming over one small (junior) burner. Prejudice 'Aged Veteran of ous nor 4 y Run) tah 1S) ese Wl

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