Underwear S?
Health T
WE wish to call your special pif T"
attention to thr under- jl , I'
wear we now have on n
display.
These garments are really Jzk
J tailored They fit perfectly and
;JB easily over all portions of the
9 body
gH I The materials are the soft,
3H J soothing kinds that absorb the
? moisture and keep the body at an
fMfl even temperature
ifw Truly they are wonderful gar
flH ments and at a price consider-
HH ably lower than you would ex-
T , pect to pay.
I mi !Y LOSE
i DIPLOMAT FIGHT
- v Union of Rumanian Princess
I With Grecian Prince Op
posed by Allies
By. NEWTON I PARKE
I Iriirrnntloiiiil -- Srr kt staff l r-
1 1 ipandeaL
' PARIS. Oct. 20. Correspondence I
The diplomatic battle to prevent the
marriage of the beautiful oung Prln
'(U Elizabeth of Runiunla with Prince
i-orge. eldest mm of the exiled King
Cunslantlne of Greece ha been renew
I with prospects tht a!l the leading
allied statesman of Kurope will soon
)c allied against King ('upid.
jua i .i u. opposes
Premier Lloyd George was reported
a fortnight ago to hav e strongly urged j
Queen .Marie of Rumania against such
a marriage on the ground that It would I
Ill-feeling nctween Rumania ami
'elgning VeniaetOi government In;
VtlH-iifi hiuI also in allied countries t
ii v UiKg Tonesoo, Rumanian foreign
ti mi u I , iiiif laitpii a Bianu HHinni um
i al matrimonial elllahce nni is aald
S. lo hiv - 1 1 diacUBMd it with French
lull dining his visit to Paris early
in iciobcr.
Dill ih.- mobt important development
i i in- Intercallnj ganit of lov e and
UW -diplomacy Is the report that the Prin
" ess herself Is now wavering and may
break off her engagement lo the
prince she has loved for many years.
Her attachment to her country is such
hat she does not want to risk an es
trangement of relations with another
Balkan power solely becauM of her
heart affairs'. Her mother Is still
strongly urging the marriage and de
fying all Europe to prevent It.
Ql I l is DETERMINED
Queen Marie Is sani to be determin
d that hr daughter shall one day
Occupy a throne ami she belives her
h inceg best If she marries Prince
George, who accompanied his father
In exile In Swltezland when the Allies
forced Contahtlnc off tlie throne for
alleged pro-tierman tendencies. There
are only two other eligible princes In
the world who probably will become
Kings and the Rumanian queen docs
not want to miss any opportunities
The Prince Regent of the new king-
ROOM HUNTERS
BUSYJNV1ENNA
IENNA. Oct. o (Correspondence
I of the AaaodWted Press i Like near
ly evn other city In Europe. Vi
enna rooming accommodation is lax
ed beyond capacity The hotels are
overflowing at exorbitant rates tin
crown values). Every train unloads
Its quota -f newcomers to travel In
taxlc aba und fiacres from one end of
the city to the other in search of
sleeping quarter, while te'' Lh( room
requisitioning sj stein by the govern
ment fails to house many thousands.
An American isltor wishing to go
from Vienna lo i;uduist i -lographed
daily for a wi ck, receiving dally till
reply, "nothinir Available." An Amer
ican woman, wife of a consul, arrived
the other das ami It required all the
influence of foui American officials
to secure her a bathroom in which to
sleep
To solve the permanent rooming
problem the city authorities hue '
uaaeed an ordinance permitting i i
reconstruction of the attics of apart
men! buildings for sleeping quarter
This -pace under the roof ii meant
as storage room for tenants and for
laundry drying purposes. It was un
lawful to permit unyone to sleep there
,and an ordinance required the con-
u rge to lot i. (ha entrance at 7 p. m.
It la estimated that there are 40.000
such buildings In the city, but how
many landlords will go to Hie expense
of alteration r mains' to be
I dom of Jugo-Slavi.t Is one of these and
I It Is he that Allied diplomat- have sug
gested would maku a suitable husband
i for the Rumanian princess, since ho
I U much attached to the Allied cause
and already virtually occupies the
throne. The other Is Boris of Bul
garia, who is oung'-r t L i n i h. prim
and whom she Is said to detest. What
the Prince Regent of Jugo-Slavia
thinks of the plan of marrying him
off the the Princess Elizabeth is not
known.
Army nurses are accorded the same
obedience from enlisted men and
patients in military boepitala as Is
accorded commissioned officers.
Chow Chow Visits Boys
and Girls In Schools Here
:
Chow Chow, the clown, and two o f his friends In the public schools, to j
whom he has given painless mforma Hon about hygiene. , i
Havo Johnny and Maggie been some
whit more attentive to their morning
and evening toothbrush exercise'
Have they adopted the up and down
movement or rotary instead of tb
horizontal in manipulating the tooth
scrubbers ?
Have they resisted less strongly thi
exhortation to wash the back of the
neck and the many creases in and be-J
hind the ears?
If !he are doing all this. It U per
,haps due to the efforts of Cho Chow,
Mho clown, who has been visiting boys j
'and girls In the City schools and whoj
SPANISH IGNORE '
CLOCKSOF CITY
MA PI-1 K Oct 16. Correspond
ence of the Associated PftCSS.) For
eign visitors after ;i short stay In Mad
rid begin to doubt whether Spaniards
in able to tell the time. There are
s ores of public clocks In government
buildings and on church towers and
nearly every Spaniard carries a watch
l.i. l. Vr i.ft..n lrrL-a nf I, lit 9lin.il -
lenti) these do not mean anything to(
i the average citizen.
An Invitation to o meal at certain j
hour mana that the host or the guest
will appear half nn hour or more late.
, n appointment for a fixed tine audi
place nearly always finds both parlies
I absent at the hour named. An inter-1
view arranged with an official Involves i
usually a wait of Jin hour in the ante
room. The tailor will not be ready to
try on your suit until at least twoj
dayfl after he has promised to do so.'
Trains rarely start and never arrive
at ;h- scheduled hour. These are I
some few indications of the little in- j
tcrest Spaniards show lu the time. .
It Is either morning, noon, evening
'or night with Spaniards generally
land of course the etornal mananai
I which never comes. The exact hour isj
' nothing to them; yet thousands of
thorn will unsemble on the Puert.i del
!Sol to watch the fall of the globe on
jtho ministry of the interior at noon j
every day.
oo ;
The capital of Germany now known
as Great Berlin, comprises eight
cities, 5!) towns and 27 rural dls-
l u lets with a population of 4,000.000. I
I i i
r Lace Curtain Sale
?ip? """"" r jpj
Many are taking ad
1 vantage of the real bar-
H ' Z 8a'ns ottered at this
I i l 100 pairs were sole!
Y Monday and Tues
day. At this rate
they won't last long.
r'' , "! '0 While they last, values
T from $2.50 to $12.50 mm
Cover your bedroom and bathroom floors with
rag rugs. See the rugs and the prices in our
north window.
is now turning hi? attention to the
'county school children.
Chow Chow is a real circus clown.
He wears funny clothes and everythin'. j
And he paints his face. too. and does
funny tricks with a ladder and a big
toothbru3h.
Very paJnlessl. and accompanied
by buffonery. ChOD Chow drives
home into the domes of the kiddies im
portant principles of hygiene While
they watch the antics of a clown they
p.rn absorbing information that will
hrdp them grow up to be beultbler and
stronger men and women.
CROOK'S CAREER
RIVALS MOVIES
German Flim-Flam Artist'
Made Daring Escapes But
Lands in Jail
BY FRANK E. MASOS
International Scvts Service surr
Correspondent.
i.l.li.J ,u. o. f uuu 'iiinm i
two-reel comic with the regular old I
movie 'hokum" of Charlie Chaplin ,
and Doug Fairbanks makes up the
recent experience of Richard Dennor
hack. tiermany'p newest scnuation In
comedy, criminality and con famf.
The film opens with Richard mak
ing a reprulutlon style bow In the
Bmart uniform of a Prussian officer
decoruted with the necessary Iron cross
and black-and-white orders. After
making a tour of WVst Germany re
citing a monologue of fictitious experi
ences as a prisoner of war In far-off;
India, which made tender-hearted
Germans who had never seen India'
weep copious tears and open their ,
hearts and pocketbook string. Rich
ard landed In Dortmund one day
during a general strike.
POS1 l IS -i i Etl I IGENT
With an air of profound secrecy j
he took the proprietor of Dortmund'
largest hotel into his confidence and
disclosed that he was a "secret agent
of the German government." Fur
thermore he had come to Dortmund to
arrange for the Immediate deportation
of all male between eighteen and
t lilrt v.flvi ii I n nt SkWP hnCAUP the
French were expected within a few
days to occupy the Ruhr.
The hotel proprietor hastened to ac
commodate his Important guest with a
good dinner and the hostelry's best
wine, but he also spread the news that
a wholesale deportation of the mascu
line sex was contemplated- In twen
ty minutes nearly every man In Dort
mund was either packing his luggage
or devising a hiding place to escape
the deportation. Within thirty min
utes the military authorities had dis
patched a patrol to Investigate, the
secret agen'. The patrol officer took
one look at his nibs the "government
agent," and ordered him detained un
der arest In his room on the fourth
floor of the hotel.
E60APE i hi t:it."
The next morning the military
guard posted before the hotel room,
after a period of auspicious quiet,
opened the door and found the prisoner
had disappeared. A bedsheet tied to
the bed revealed nn improvised ladder
The guard rushed to the window and
peering ov er the edge he saw that our
hero was d.nigling on a level with the
second story window from his rope of
twisted, knotted blankets, towels, bed
sheets and dresser scarfs.
The green-clad Sicherheits-guard
flashed out his bayonet and hacked
at the towel across the window until
It broke under The prisoner's weight.
Dick landed with a thump in the court
below. When he regained conscious
ness In the hospital he found that he
had broken a leg and his right arm.
Pause while we change reels and
two months pass.
! in SCENE sun i -
Scene- The hospital Herr Donner-
hack Informs the patients. Internes
and guards at the hospital that he has
j had some little practice in magic A
! pack of cards, please' He was very
I dexterous In removing the ace of
hearts from the coiffure of the ward
i nurse, and everyone applauded his
; proposition to change their watches
! Into live, singing canary birds Dick
collected the watches and not only
disappeared into the next room but
I dlsapepared for good, the watches
i with him
Several months later the notice of
Muenster, on the lookout for the Com
munist leader Levlcn, who was wanted
j believed that thev had found I-evlen
I in the person of Richard Donnerhack.
Donnerhack didn't care to be put
through the third degree and succes-s.
I fully escaped despite a shower of shots.
; The next scene Is Uerlln, where a WO
1 man betrayed him accusing him be
i fore the police of being a marriage
swindler.
Medical olficers at the trial In Ber
lin's Criminal court testified that the!
j prisoner was of inferior mentality. In
consequence of which, according to the
Berliner Tageblatt, the court reduced
the sentence for his combined and
assorted misdemeanors to ihre years'
imprLsonmenU
' r.ipirr---
-WirfxSkiife . I
I A COODb TO TRADE I
no gift can give quite the pleasure as a piece of
JtfJfBn dainty silk underwear Every time it is worn the
I M&R'vHl iccipient must feel appreciation of the good judgment
fiBffl Vffl and the good taste of the donor
! Dainty Silk Underwear For Gifts i
j The Sale Begins Tomorrow j I
J Whether for gifts, or for one's own use, the best time to buy under-
wear of silk is now. Recent lowering of silk prices have enabled I j!
I us to offer the best sale in a number of seasons. And these are j
such wonderful garments that you'll be proud to make gifts of
them. Those who wish may select now and have their selections
j reserved for them. Come to the Second Floor for an inspection
x $J95 In thls a8SOr,; $ A95 Hcre are flow
I mm fJT ,lirnl are " Ox t mg' luxurious
bloomers silk gowns of heavy i
camisoles, silk chemise You'll agree silk crepe, silk skirts in the last hour
when you see the qualities of the fabric models; vests of silk and chemise that I
.i . .i .i z must please the most fastidious. Made
that thev are the usual values . ,
to sell to $0.
C OQ At this low price .
I -fit 13 you may buv m $95 Here are gowns,
UL U handsome vests Ctl D ome s Tnd I
' or rich silk , .chemise and attiactive cam- 7 oomers an
f ,0 hi 1 r 1 l vests ot such rich, clinging silk that vou 1 !!
4 isoles. So well made and or such rich .n j 1 l a
will wonder how we can price them so 1
r 1 .1 . .1 .1 11 11 t- Cfl . . . . . . . . I
raoncs rnai ency snouia sen up iu crieapiy Indeed they are values to $10. J
' J -R All silk gar- a 1 n I j
Ctt fXCLlt mcnta now $3 Pajamas & Gowns $195
.o.5o,o$23te Joh of Outing are Now 1
Really, it would be worth $195 to make one of I
Manv of these have trimmings of hand- "e garments to say nothing of the mate-
rials. The outing is of that rich, thick soft
made lace. Many are hand trimmed. kind that costs so much Many are Brighton f
... i - i k make. Pajamas and gowns arc now $1.95 I
i ou will enjoy seeing this lot H I
WAS SHE MODERN
OR TOO HOMELY?
BY ZOi: BEGKIiEH
N 1 . Strf ('orrtpr.iulnt.
EOSTON', N'ov. 3 Why did Shewa
Line kill herpplf"
Here was a girl steeped, her rabbi
bridegroom asserts, In the modern
Ideas of New Russia. She came to
America to marry her old-time sweet
heart. Joseph Louwlsch of Pough
I keepsle.
In almost the first breath of her
1 confidences to him, he says, she con
fessed to a renunciation of religion,
of belief In God even She rejected the
Ideals of old-fashioned love, marriage,
motherhood. She wanted freedom,
self-expression. money nnd the stimulus
of "proeressiVM thought."
Amazed and shocked he says, at
the change In his gentle sweetheart
of ten years ago, the Rabbi Lou wist h
demanded and ohtained from Justice
Morschauser an annulment of mar
riage. The civil rite only had been per
formed Shewa herself, the rabbi
says, had refused the orthodox Jew
ish religious ceremony, at which in
her new-found atheism she laughed.
And so. Shewa went to her aunt,
Mrs. Benjamin Rabalsky of Boston.
There she wrote a note to Mrs.
Rabalsky. tore her bed-sheet into a
rope and hanged herself from a tran
som WHY DID SHE DO IT"
Why prefer death to the free road
before her. that she is said to have
so coveted?
She was a highly educated young
woman. -Jv no wing many languages.
She "did not believe in marriage.
Why. then, did not the adventure of
self-support appeal lo her?
The "old-fashioned orthodoxy of
her fiance had repelled her and
caused her to sneer and Jeer, he aays.
Why should she. prleve, then, at the
loss of one whose type was anti
pathetic" It was useless to ask these questions
of Rabbi Louwisch. He did not
know, be said
CASE ISN' T ENDED."
So 1 asked Shewa's aunt. Mrs
Rabalsky. whose lawyer-husband in
sists that the case is by no means
ended but will be "completely cleared
up" and with tho rabbi s version some
what altered.
Rabalsky declares with feeling
t that
"Louwisch blame the annulment of
I their marriage upon the girls Boi-
shovlst Idea' It Is the common prac
tice to blame everything on bolshev-
lsm."
Shewa's aunts are equallv positive
I that the reason for the girls pathetic
ending of her life was disappoint
ment and humiliation.
"I cannot live any longe-." she
wrotf In her last note, "after this
experience Tell my people nl home
I died naturally."
Mr Rabalskv 'old me
"Shews was far from pretty. She
was undersized and stout and not at
tractive She realized this.
"But she did not complain even
when she returned to rne from Pousrh-
i kecpslo nlone and penniless She was
proud. She kept her sufferings to lier
helf Only when it got too bad, she
quietly ended it in that terrible way."
"And she had no Bolshevist oe-
I liefs"' "
Sh&wa's aunC smiled sadly and shook
her head.
"Life In Russia." she said simpl.
"has been hard in the last years. She
piobablv suffered much and learned
I "
much perhaps had mors libera! ideals ll
Lhan in othef tim . But for being
a dangerous radical' or a bad girl
I would never, never believe It. Sh
was Just a poor little thing who die-
appointed h'-r good-looking sweetheart .fl
that Is all. And she couldn't besi H
the thought of the lonely, forsaken iifl
life she felt was before her. ff
"Why else should she have killed 'mLm
herself?" JLM
Why. indeed" fM
oo rm
Duelling was abolished in the Brit
ish army In 1S44.
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In
One Day I M
Take
Grove's 1 I
Laxative
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tablets I H
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Be sure its Bromo
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