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LIQUOR DEALERS EXPECT 10 RETAIN TRADE AFTER JULY peregpedenss Many Apply for Federal Stamps, Though Told They Pay Fee at Own Risk. Saloon keepers, restaurateurs and hotel men feel generally that they wMi be able to continue the sale of Nquor after July 1 This is disclosed in their applica- tions to Collector Willlam H. Ba- wards for the usual Federal stamps LEMON JUICE FOR FRECKLES Girls! Make beauty lotion for a few cents—Try it! Squeeze the juice of two lemons into a bottle containing three ounces ard white, shake well, and you jarter pint of the best freckle and tan lotion and complexion beau- tifler at very, very small cost, Your grocer has the lemons and any drug store or toilet counter mt oup- three ounces of orchard white for @ few cents. M this paki a fragrant lotion into the face, neek, arms and hands each day and see how freckles and blemishes disappear and how clear, soft and rosy white the skin becomes. Yes! It is harm- less and never irritates.—Advt. Your Questions Answered By “Our Reliable Druggist”’ Dolly G. asks: “What is good for acidity of stomach?” Lozenges of Bismuth and Char- coal. eer T. R.C. asks: “Is there a drug named Balmwort? If so, what are its uses?” No, Balmwort is a compound tablet for treatment of kidneys and bladder ailments. Excellent preparation, eee Miss B. asks: “Do you recom- mend yellow Minyol to cure dan- druff and prevent loss of hair?” Yes; sell it regularly to satisfied customers, Nothing better. Violet asks: “What does ‘q s° mean on a doctor's prescription?” Sufficient quantity, Mrs, K. B. asks: “Do druggists sell an obestity remedy in tablet form? If so, what do I ask for?” Yes, several, most popular is Arbolone Tablets. Thomas asks: “Is Su'pherb Tablets equal to sulphur and mc ‘asses for constipation and blood im: ities?” P think so, and more pleasant dosq, tdo. . T. RB. asks: “Do doctors pre- scribe “adomene Tablets as a tonic in weakened vitality? Do they contain iron?” Yes, some do. Yes, they contain iron and vegetable tonics. aig Aa) Alice asks: “Do thin persons gain weight by taking a tablet called Hypo Nuclane?” Yes; the nuclein and lecithin in them is very helpful.—Advt. —_——__—_—_—— BEST WAY TO WASH THE HAIR We find you can bring out the beauty of your hair to its very best |™ advantage by washing it with can- throx. It makes a very simple, in- poo, which cleanses scalp thoroughly of all the dandruff, dirt and excess oil, leav- ing a wonderfully clean, wholesome feeling. After its use you will find that the hair dries quickly and evenly, is never streaked in appearance and is always bright, soft and fluffy; so fluffy, in fact, that it looks more abundant than it is, and so soft that arranging it becomes a pleasure, Just|* use a teaspoonful of canthrox, which you can get from any good druggist’s, dissolve it in a cup of hot water; this makes a full cup of shampoo liquid, the head.—Advt. “BEST OF ALL” BALMWORT KIDNEY TABLETS Mr. Wm. F. Bryant, R. F. D., Bryantville, Mass. writes: “I am using your Balmwort Kid- ney Tablets and find them the very best of anything I have ever tried. 1 have tried lots Pains in the back, rheumatic pains, frequent, scanty, highly colored, smarting pains, ete, tell you that Kidneys and Bladder are not doing their regular duties, Balmwort Kidney Tablets cor- reet and revive their activity, Sold by all druggists. of other remedies,” ete, QeT T OFF YOUR CHEST— THAT LUMP AND DISTRESS SE enough 0 it is easy to apply it to all| the hair instead of just the top of} | allowing the sale of Nauor for twelve | months after that date. It also became known to-day Com- | missioner of Internal Revenue, Daniel C. Roper, has given instrugtions to Collectors throughout the country | that they should issue the stamps, they were sold at the purchaser's risk. The stamps.are not ready to be de- livered, but Collector Edwards expects them within a few days, and then they will be distributed to all appli- cants. Commissioner Roper sent out the instructions on June 14. Some saloonkeepers yesterday in- Roper “knew something,” and, be-| le go into effect July 1, men orders to issue licenses. “It is my firm belief that President Wileon will proclaim demobilization in August, at the very latest, and then, of course, this so-called War Prohibition Law will be killed,” said one liquor dealer “The sale of liquor of all kinds then will go on until the Federal Amond- ment comes into effect, in January. [t seems clear that is the way to In- terpret Commissioner Roper's order.” The State licenses will not expire until Oct, 1. An assistant of Collector Edwards said to-day: “What Commisioner Roper says in his order on the question of immunity is simply this: if, by any chance, the sale of liquor continues, the stamps will meet the requirements of the tax laws in force, If Prohibition inter- venes, the purchasers of the stamps will receive no rebates, and if the saloonkeepers violate the law by selling liquor, the fact that the Gov- ernment sold them stamps good after July 1 will be no bar to prosecution.” According to Samuel Miller, pro- pristor of @ restaurant in Nassau treet, the Society of Restaurateurs, consisting of about 1,600 members, has decided to apply for these stamps and go ahead wit ness, as usual. Mr. Miller said the members had been advised by their counsel, William H. Hirst, that if these licenses had been refused they could deposit $25 in a bank and so notify the Internal Rev- enue Collector, DOCTORS RETRACT VOTE IN FAVOR OF 2.75 BEER Allied Medical Associations Re- scinds Resolution Adopted on Monday. A resolution rescinding their ac- tion of last Monday, when they voted unanimously in favor of 2.75 per cent. beer as necessary for the treatment of their patients, was adopted ves- terday by the Allied Medical Associa-~ tions, in convention in the city. The rescinding resolution was intro- duced by Dr. Dinshan P. Ghadiali, head of the Police Reserve Aviation School in this city. Dr. Ghadiali, who is warmly in favor of Prohibition, was not present at the session on Monday. At the annual election of officers yesterday, Dr. Ignatz Mayer of De- troit was re-elected President; Dr. Wallace Fritz of Philadelphia, First Vice President; Dr. L. E. Siegeistein a Linear Second Vice President; ge Dugdale of Boston, Third Vice OP rendent and Dr. Dinshah P. Ghadiali of New York, Fourth Vice President. Dr. L. M. Ottofy of St. Louis was re-elected Secretary-Treas- urer and Dr. Royal 8. Copeland, Health Commissioner of New York, was elected Honorary President. Chicage 1 Water Fo CHICAGO, June 19. Nearly ha't a million dollars’ worth of new soda fountain equipment is being made ready for installation in Chicago with the advent of the dry era on July 1, and a oonsiderable part of this ex- penditure will be used to equip hotel bars for serving nut sundaes and chocolate majted milks, Beer gar- dens and amusement parks are put- ting in additional fountains, Twenty- seven breweries out of forty-three have refused to renew licenses. This means they are going out of business, Be Tied Up ST. LOUTS, Foe pproxi- mately 300,000 gallons of whiskey will be tied up in St, Louis July 1 as a result of the announcement of rail- roads that alconolic beverages would not be transported after that date, distillers announced to-day. One distiller said he expected to have 100,000 gallons of pndelivered whis- key on the first of next month. Ohie Brewers Seek Anti-Dry Amend- ments. CLEVELAND, June 19.—Trustees of the Ohio Brewers’ Association have de- cided to submit two Constitutional amendments to Ohio voters at, the No- Yorber cletipition status of bio and the other to permit the sale of beverages jcontaining 2 3-4 per cent. alcohol. f________________________} Is Tuare Avy Loaic le Buvine Sorte Tunis Craimed To BE As Goon As Twe OrieinmAar Danoruer GERM | DESTROYER? | ingist Veen GENoIne | Meweros HERPICIDE Rerpicianrernner Aephications At Goed Bareoe Shope” STops P«INn adway'’s aay = Rpoiet ie a ens chars oe DYSENTERY but that they should make it clear | —-TOBECUTBY CITY timated that perhaps Commissioner | that bone dryness would not| has given his) 300,000 Gallons of Walsker win! ff CAT TORO OMS BOL Bee _ THE See. WUKLD, re a COST OF NURSING IN SIMPLE CASES Four Schools to Be Established for Training of Attendants for Sick. New York Is to have a little army of “almost nurses"—or, ae they wii be technically called, “attendant nurses"—not sufficiently trained for difficult and complicated cases, but thoroughly competent to handle many chronic patients whose needs are isimple. ‘This will have the effect of relean- ing the kighly trained graduate nurses for the serious cases in which all their @kill is needed. And it will Provide inexpensive nursing for other cases. This is expected to prove a boon, especially to small-salaried people who cannot afford to pay $5 a day for a graduate nurse. Tt is announced that intelligent women between the ages of twenty and forty-five will be eligible. The departments will pay them $25 a month, with maintenance and laun- dry, during the training period, and $40 a month afterward. In private cases they will be able to earn prob- ‘ably $60 a month and maintenance, SACRAMENTO, Cal, June 19—Be- tween 200 and 300 electrical workers employed by the Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company in Northern California and Nevada joined to-day the strike of telephone workers begun Monday in California, RENO, Nev., June 19—All Bell tele- phone lines in Nevada are tied up to- day, operators and linemen going out on strike at 8 o'clock. | LEGISLATORS PRAISE WORK OF THE HIRSCH COMMITTEE: Vell of 10,000 Ret Handled—More Complaints of Rent Profiteering. The report to Gov. Smith of the Joint Legislative Committee on Houa- ing comments as follows on the work of the Mayor's Committee om Rent | Profiteering: ‘ “We have analyzed the work of the Committee on Rent Profiteering, of which Nathan Hirsch t# Chairman, jand ?fnd that they have done a great Public service, having efficiently han dled upward of 10,000 cases, many of which have been successfully arb\- trated.” Four tenants of No. 75 Sherman Axonue complained yesterday to tho Mayor's mittee of what they do- “entirely exorbitant ine 980. at Mra. Place bought the | to B. Schmukier, ants of the ralar em until June 16 rane: move. Twenty other * were jumped 50 per cent. in rent, the letter stated. BOOM BUILDING AND LOAN. . Secretary Mefwan Shews Ohance te Balld Up League. ONEONITA, N. Y¥., June 19.—Arehi- bald W. McEwan, in presonting his nual report cretary of the } York State League of savings and Loan Associations, which to-day began its convention here, urged that advantage a ague's work, Dodjes, throughout the State be aske for thelr support in building pro- Jecta. In his report, the secretary Pioneer Falls and Homestead Lon As tion of Utica each was roaching the $5,00,000 mark in asseta. The State As sociation’s assets SPe ss $82,00,- ———_ 0 at the close of Catholios Pi Fund for Charches in France. Archbishop Hayes today designated Sunday, June 29, for the collection of funds in all Roman Catholic Churches in the diocese for establishing temporary Places of worship in the war-devastated stions of France. In a letter to all Priests the Archbishop directed that the money be raised by an envelope collec- tion rather than by a general drive, Cases Efficiently | | j should set up a tribunal to Inve CORRE 68 Sy CAA ae Se t ATH a The | BRITAIN. TRUST-RIDDEN, INVESTIGATORS REPORT Every Big Industry, Except Ship Building, Declared in Hands of * a Combine LONDON, June 10 (Correspondence of the Associated Press), Business rings, combines and trusts, perfected during the war, ‘are controling Great Meitain's industries, according to the Aitpes of & Government committee appointed by Sir Auckland Geddes, Min- ister of Reconstruction The report was submitted to Sir Auckland and is now under considera- tion by the Government. The mittee does not suggest what the ernment’s attitude toward trusts should be, the only proposal mac the report for dealing with the a! tion being that the Board of cases Of abuse caused by combines and report to the President of that body. ery big industry in tho ith the exception of sh be controlled by a PAT RYAN WINS HAMMER THROW IN IRISH MEET. DUBLIN, Juno 19—Two American soldier athletes, on leave in Ireland, won places in the Irish track and feld championships Private Patrick Ryan of New York, holder of the world’s hammer throw, took that ovent with a throw of 160 Lieutenant William MoCormick Iniversity was second in doth hammer wand the stone throw, coming withia eight inches of record in the er INSTANT POSTUM Demand the genuine by full name—nicknames encourage substitution. ATLANTA, GA. The taste is the test of Coca-Cola quality. The flavor is the quality itself. Nobody has ever been able to successfully imitate it, because its quality is indelibly regis- tered in the taste of the American public. THE Coca-CoLa Co; : ’ a 1919. a, | FRENCH MINERS’ STRIKE OFF. wear than soeds Retnre to Work, Unton Dentes tt PARIS PRCA Ae June 19 lQUALIFY FOR A. E, F. MEET. Flimination trials for selection of the team to represent | Refreshiry after ° shows cle. nsing on teeth and mo [the American Army in the inter-Allled | PARIS, Wednerday, June 18TH! games thie month were to be completed | Ape’ ted oa Sao settled 4 he to-day. The keenest competition was! of Northern France, according to the |the United Staves. teeth, newapapers. The trouble, they said, was] In yesterda: trials, two heats of Uslees f eeae ttled on th ult of decision ened the th, and settlod a. er of a deci reach. |the 100-meter ah were fun within « ed by M. Colliard, Miniater of Labor. |«econd of the world’s record of 10 the gums, would people of and Louis Lé ir, Minister of Muni- | seconds, (established by D. F. Lipp ment for 70 years have used Hons, who agreed to arbitrate the quos-|cott Of America at the Olympic games| enthusiastically tiond et tesue fm the jin Stockholm, 1912). Sol Butler, col- | Cc. t after Secretary of the Fed- that the 1%, er Labor still in foree lon of strike was] conditl w. | La sity of Souther | marks of 10 4 jshowed the Am d atar from Dubuque university, and Paddock of the Univer- Call The other events also rc fornia hung up “THE SHOR convince you $7 and $8 shoes are equally satisfaction. The actual value 5 by 106 W. 1. Dongias 4 We Dow vaean pe orasrea ah rarcel ed Uatalog thoring bow foceder'ymalt W. L. Dou: *% _85 Nassau Street. 755 Broadway, cor. 8th St. 847 Broad wi 14th, #1352 Broadway, cor, 86th St. 1495 Broadway (Times 84.) 984 Third A #1452 Third Ave $2202 Third A ocr by mal for [ustrated w% 250 West co a marker One block from 14th St.“L,"” Hudson Tube Station and 14th Se. Crosstown li 9: at OPEN Rocker in mahogany finish, with gen- uine leather MOTOR TRUCK DELIVE, EVERYWHERE ris De Luxe Couch Covered in imitation leathe carved legs, as illu ted Porceloid Lift Cover Refrigerator 4 5% 50 pounds ice capacity, as il- lustrated il] Cor. 6th Ave, & 15th St, BROOKLYN. £1 ba) Eutten Benes or Pearl. Ieugl $4,202 $4;50 $5.00 $600 $700 & $R00 IF you have been paying $10 to $12 for fine shoes, a trial will that for style, comfort and serviceW.L._Douglas and will give ex determined Sad the retail price fixed at the factory before W.L. Douglas name and the il priceis stamped on the bottom. The stamped price isW.L. personal guarantee that theshoes arealwaysworththe rice paid for them. The retail prices arethesameeveryw! Fy Stemi Francisco than they do in New York | Stores in Greater New York: 79 Third Ave., det. 146th & ra7th Sts. B47 Hlevth Avonue. [xt 07 Broadw cor. Gates A 120th st. | ¥ 478 Fifth Avenue, cor, Lith Street, ith @ & carry complete lines of W. L. will be yours if it is furnished OUR way—with stylish, able furniture—at the lowest possible cost—on easiest \. A YEAR TO PAY. If you judge by VARIETY and QUALITY, you will come here, for we have eleven floors filled to over. | flowing with GOOD FURNITURE from which to choose. “‘We Make Terms to Fit’ Plain Figure Tags on Everything \ Open Saturday Evenings at Both Stoves janhattam Avenue. sherrnes ne rm on St. SEEWARK O8t EERENTON Shoes 3 Demon At Séth St, & 3d A ose rete ons jarks, jar tal State Street, Treen GAY 18 Korrark K Ayenue,. enlace Aves ieee itd ois | ; eS SN PL een SE i in