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53 8S BSESSSSSHSSSSKXSa H 98 Read the Journal ad- H vertisemerits. They have 8 a message for you. M 8g8K8SS8iaSBBB8l8BH ' - ' SECOND SECTION K K W PAGES 11 TO 20. PENSACOLA, FLORIDA, THURSDAY MORNING, JULY 3, 1919. itmftw BOLSHEVIKI REIGN PASSES OVER BIELEBEi Biebebel, European Russia, Asso ciated Press Correspondence. The reign of the Bolshevik! passed over the people of Blelebel like a scourge. The Bolshevikl occupied Blelebel for several months. The correspondent of the Associattd Press visited the town within a fort night after their evacuation. The peo ple were Just beginning to readjust their domestic and governmental af fairs. Refugees were returning to view the wreck of their homes. They were veritable wrecks for the Bolshe vikl had occupied all vacated houses and had carried away or destroyed most of their contents. An elderly Judge of the district court. Professor Paul Blumenthal. long a resident of the United States, who left upon ap proach of the Bolshevikl, was so over come with grief over the fate of his native town that he wept. Many persons had disappeared and It was well known that many had been murdered. The corpses of vic tims are being discovered. The cor respondent followed a stream of men, women and children which flowed out across the fields toward the edge of a scraggly wood. There under the overhanging bank on the edge of a gravel pit they were lying, a tangled heap of bodies, apparently as they fell or had been thrown, with no attempt at burial. The bodies were mostly those of mlddle-agea or young workmen. From each the boots and most of the outer clothing had been removed. Of some the skulls were crushed, of others the faces were disfigured as though by gunshot at close range. The crowd on the bank above the gruesome pile appeared fascinated. They silently made way for a group of Americans, Including Consul Em bry. from Omsk, and two correspond ents, and watched with interest while they photographed the victims. A nicely dressed woman and a little girl walked into the pit to get a bet ter look at the figure of a blond young lrl, which lay partly uncov ered' close under the band. The : body was perfectly preserved by the cold and lay with arms bare and crossed as though the girl might have been sleeping. The face, which was not disfigured, was that of an In telligent, pretty girl. Toward dusk the body was removed by relatives who had come from Ufa. She was a high school girl from that town who had been abducted by the Bol shevik commissar' when Ufa was evacuated: Close by was) the body of another woman. ' When the Bolshevikl entered Biele bel the, government of the town was taken over by a "revolutionary com mittee "of- communists. There was formed a "committee of investiga tion" under the presidency of one Velt. a Lett. One of the first acts of this committee was to shoot the president of the formel local county gcmstvo as a counter-revolutionary. SUFFERED WITH RHEUMATISM, CATAR RH AND STOMACH TROUBLE "I think 'Number 40 For The Blood s a blood purifier has no equal. When I began to take 'Number 40' I was m very poor health as I had .Rheuma tism, Catarrh. Stomach Trouble, Lead Poisoning, and an Itch that I had tried almost every known remedy to re lieve. I have taken six bottles of 'Number 40' and am on a fast road to recovery. I owe my life to it as I used to weigh 127 pounds and now weigh 148, my usual weight. I could write more but this should be enough to convince the most skeptical, and you are at liberty to use this letter any way you desire." Geo. Klinker, Lima, Ohio. The Ingredients in '"Number 40 For The Blood" are set down in the U. S. Dispensatory and other reliable medi cal books as follows: "Employed In diseases of the glandular system, in blood poison, constipation, stomach and liver troubles, chronic rheuma tism, catarrh, sores, ulcers, skin erup tions, mercurial and lead poisoning. Under its use nodes, tumors, scrofu lous swellings that have withstood all other treatment disappear as if by magic." Prepared by J. C. Mendenhall. Evansvillf, Ind.. 40 years a druggist. Sold by Crystal Pharmacy. Adv. The latter was ill at the time and had to be carried out to his death in a chair. Twenty men were shot ana in addition many Mohammedan priests. A member of the investigat ing committee boasted that he shot one priest because he was too long over his prayers, while the committee men waited to take him. High school boys and girls and priests were compelled to clean the streets. Women of the "intelligentzia" were made to clean the floors and walls of the barracks occupied by the Bolshevik troops. Mme. Koshnevikoff. owner of the most imposing residence in the town, was arrested. Her daughter, seeking her release, was told that the charge against her was a secret. After a month in Jail she was released. It de veloped that all they had against the woman was that on a previous evac uation of Blelebel she had served such a fine meal to the Bolshevikl that some of them narrowly escaped cap ture by the "whites" because of tar rying over their dinner. More than eighty hostages were taken when the Bolshevikl evacuated. ABBOTT AUTO REPAIR CO. Phone 415 Palafox and Gregory Streets HOT WEATHER HINTS FOR CARE TRUCKS BY ALFRED F. MASURY. First of all, it is necessary to un derstand the cooling system. Do not expect the truck to labor in low gear up long grades or through deep sand, perhaps with a trailer, and still keep cool if carbon deposit is permitted to accumulate in the cylinders, if insuf ficient water is not put in the radia tor, if the oil level is low or the oil is of the wrong kind. At the beginning of the season it is ordinarily necessary to change the carburetor adjustment, that in sum mer being a trifle leaner than that for winter. Overheating is sure to result if the carburetor is improperly ad justed. Timing has an important bearing on cooling. In hot climates where tem peratures are excessive for a consid erable part of the year, the engine may be made to run cooler, but at a slight sacrifice of power, by setting the camshaft one tooth ahead (earlier) on the timing gears, so that the exhaust valves open earlier. A weak spark has the same effect as late spark timing, and overheating will result. Difficult grades can be made with greater speed and less fuel in inter mediate than if the engine is per mitted to labor in high to the point of stalling. Contrary to popular suppo sition the engine will cool better if it is not obliged to labor excessively. Keep the exhaust clear of obstruc tions and do not allow mud to cake on the outside of the muffler or clog the outlet. The radiator must k filled as full as possible. Do not a.low the over flow pipe to become clogged, or flat tened by a blow or kink or slip down In the radiator. Usj only the best quality of rub ber hose for water connections. The Inside of cheap tubing is apt to dissolve and the rubber particles clog up the system. Oo over hese connec tions in tha spring because some antl-freeze solutions have a deleter ious effect upon the rubber. Also they have a scum Inside the radia tor which will not dissipate the heat. It must be cleaned out. In filling the radiator only clean water should be used. Strain the water through a cloth where none but dirty water is available. Above all, do not use buckets in which oil ha.3 been kept. Keep the fan clean and well greased so that it will turn freely. Not all of the cooling of the engine is effected by water; but lubricating oil plays an important part, as it cools the bearings. Keep the crank case clean; it cools the oil. It has been found that gasoline washes the lubricant from the cylinder walls and a mixture of gasoline and oil runs into the crank-case where in time It destroys the lubricating qualities of the oil. For this reason the oil in the crank-la.se should be drained and replaced with new oil every 1,500 miles. If this is not done the oil will be unable to properly lubricate the rubbing surfaces and heating will re sult. The average working temperature of oil in summer is higher than in the winter, and so oil of the same body will be thinner. Some times it is ad visable to use a grade heavier oil in summer. In excessively hot spells an especially heavy grade of oil may be I required to maintain the oil at the J proper consistency in operation. When i a heavier oil is used care should be ; taken not to work the engine too hard before it is warmed up. Buy oil only from reliable refiners. NORTH RUSSIA STANDARDIZES MILITARY GARB Archangel. Russia, July 2. The khaki uniforms of the British type that have been adopted by the North Russian government for Its soldiers have now, with only a very few ex ceptions, replaced the dozen or more varieties of fancy military dress that were common in the early days of the fighting against the Bolshevikl on this front last September. This little matter of standardizing the uniforms typifies the efforts that have been made to organize a Rus sian army in the north. Only three units now are out of khaki; the French Foreign - Legion, Russians who wear the French light blue and the Polish legion, also wearing light blue and with strange four-cornered peaked caps. Even the Cossack troops have had to give up their gaudy colors and flaming striped trousers for the khaki. The Slavo-Brittanic legion officers wear the British uniforms, "pips" and all, as grade markings, but the other Russian officers wear the old Russian shoulder stripes on British cut coats with the Sam Browne belts. A startling contrast to the well uniformed government troops are the Bolshevik prisoners who are broucht in, from time to time, to Archangel. Most of them are without any uni form at all, wearing their peasant clothes, while some have queer mix tures of the dress of half the nations of the world. Many former Bolshevik prisoners have changed this garb and also their politics, for the khaki, and now are fighting against the Bolshevikl. One entire battalion of former Bolshevik prisoners, officered by an English colonel and known as "Dyer's Battal ion," has done excellent work. Hundrsd of boys are In khaki in Archangel. Recently Governor Gen eral Miller announced that an ''edu cational battalion" of boys from the ages of 12 to 18 years, was to be formed, to include boys guilty of ac tions deserving imprisonment, ram blers and houseless boys, and boys whose parents would like to have them brought up in an atmosphere of military discipline. In honor of General Edmund Iron side, the British commander-in-chief, this battalion will be known as "Gen eral Ironside's Battalion for Children," and will be dressed and fed at the expense of the British government. RED CROSS ATTENDS STARVING CHILDREN IN SOUTH EUROPE Bucharest", July 2. The children of Rumania are the special care of the American Red Cross nurses who are showing Rumanian mothers how to care properly for them. They are dis tributing Infants clothing, condensed milk, soap, talcum powder and every thing that contributes to a baby's J comfort. In this field of relief work the efforts of the Americans already have shown remarkable results. The condition of the children has been wonderfully improved. The Red Cross workers found the children in all thesa war-affected towns in a pitiful state of impoverish ment. Many of them were slowly dying of starvation. Others had pella gra and malignant - skin diseases. These little ones are now being cared for and given nourishing and fatten ing foods, such as bacon, jam, cod liver oil, etc. They have shown won derful improvement since the . Amer icans came. All these children have been under the stress and strain of war for four years and have really never known what childhood is. In common with their parents, they have borne the keenest privations and sufferings. Since Rumania entered the war they have not known what it is to play or n to .laugh. Hunger has robbed them of that spirit. The war has blighted their lives. No smiles have N$ne to their faces, no happiness into their hearts. They are like flowers which have never seen the sunshine. Their wan, pinched little countenances tell a tragic story. They have had neither proper food, shelter nor clothing. Many of them have lost either ono or both parents. The Red Cross gives them Ameri can Jam and sweets, the things tfiat youngsters the world over crave for, and their dark eyes, frank and melan choly, light up with a new radiance. They become children again. The Americans give them clothing, shoes, stockings. They bathe them. The lit tle tots become real human beings. The Pensacola Electric Garage Official Service Station for Philadel phia Diamond Grid Battery. GUARANTEED 18 MONTHS. Ignition Splalist. Chase & Baylen Phone 40 PEAKE ELECTRIC COMPANY. The Home ol Exide Battery Serrice. 30 S. Palafox. Phone 345. JAKE STONE 94 North Palafox Street MIXED CANDY 60c Pound LONDON TAXIS WANT TO CHARGE 25 CENTS PER MILE FOR FARE London, July 2. There are only 3. 000 taxicabs on the streets of Lon don today as compared with 9.000 in 1914. One company owning 3,000 idle cars refuses to operate them be cause the government will not permit it to charge a flat rate of 25 cents a mile. Five hundred other cars are kept out of service by the police re quirement that there shall be a clear ance of ten inches between their axles and the ground. HALF PRICE SI Today, July 3 SAI Today, July 3 A ONE-DAY SALE ONLY THE MOST ASTOUNDING AND SENSATIONAL EVENT OF THE SEASON xTT1TnT?nSl13gr.this monster half-price sale of alUCOATS, DOLMANS, CAPES, SUITS, DRESSES, WAISTS, JLGLIGEES, SKIRTS, SWEATERS, PETTICOATS and HATS. It is an amazing; sale that cuts every thread of prof it to the very quick. This opportunity is yours to procure choice garments of styles absolutely correct, at a most re markable saving. There are many things you may need for your vacation trip, or for the Glorious Fourth of July celebration this big HALF-PRICE SALE comes at an opportune time. It's your unrestricted choice of anything in our store excepting UNDERWEAR AND HOSIERY at HALF PRICE One Day Only : THURSDAY, JULY 3 ; One Day Only DRESSES 512.50 Dresses C? OfT Half Price... 0'ZD $15.00 Dresses Half Price. . $20.00 Dresses Half Price.. $27.50 Dresses Half Price. . $32.50 Dresses Hrxlf Price. . $35.00 Dresses ' Half Price.. $37.50 Dresses Half Price. $45.00 Dresses Half Price . . , $59.50 Dresses Half Price. . $69.50 Dresses Half Price. . 7.50 ' 10.00 13-75 1625 17-50 . 18-75 . 22-50 2975 3475 SUITS $25.00 Suits Half Price. $30.00 Suits Half Price. $35.00 Suits Half Price. $37.50 Suits Half Price. $45.00 Suits Half Price. $47.50 Suits Half Price. $59.50 Suits Half Price. $69.50 Suits Half Price. $75.00 Suits Half Price. $89.50 Suits Half Price. S12-50 15.Q0 17.50 18-75 22-50 2375 2975 3475 37-50 4475 COATS, CAPES, DOLMANS $15.00 Coats, Capes, Dol mans, Half Price . . $ 7.50 $20.00 Coats, Capes, Dol mans, Half Price. . 10.00 $25.00 Coats, Capes, Dol mans, Half Price. . 12.50 $35.00 Coats, Capes, Dol mans. Half Price . . 17.50 $37.50 Coats, Capes, Dol mans. Half Price. . 18.75 $45.00 Coats, Capes, Dol mans, Half Price . . 22.50 $47.50 Coats, Capes, Dol mans, Half Price . . 23.75 $59.50 Coats, Capes, Dol mans, Half Price. . 29.75 $69.50 Coats, Capes, Dol mans, Half Price . . 34.75 $75.00 Coats, Capes, Dol mans, Half Price . . 37.50 SKIRTS $5.00 Skirts Half Price . . . $7.50 Skirts Half Price. . , $8.50 Skirts .Half Price. . . "$9.95 Skirts Half Price . . . $10.95 Skirts Half Price . . . $11.95 Skirts Half Price. . . $12.95 Skirts Half Price. . . $15.95 Skirts Half Price . . . $16.95 Skirts j Half Price... f10 aX. Clriro I Half Price... $2-50 375 4.25 4.97 547 597 647 7.95 8-47 997 WAISTS $3.95 Waists C?-j Q7 Half Price J.5 $5.95 Waists Half Price $6.95 Waists Half Price $7.95 Waists Half Price.... $8.95 Waists Half Price $9.95 Waists Half Price $10.95 Waists Half Price $15.00 Waists Half Price.... 2-97 347 397 4.47 4.97 547 7.50 PETTICOATS $6.95 Petticoats flQ AH Half Price D $7.95 Petticoats Half Price .... $8.95 Petticoats Half Price $9.95 Petticoats Half Price $10.95 Petticoats Half Price $11.95 Petticoats Half Price $12.95 Petticoats Half Price $13.95 Petticoats Half Price 3-97 4.47 4.97 547 5- 97 6- 47 697 Half Price. $9.50 Sweaters Half Price. .. SWEATERS $8.50 Sweaters g A 25 TTnlf Prirp A 4.75 6-25 7.50 12-50 17- 50 18- 75 $12.50 Sweaters Half Price . . . $15.00 Sweaters Half Price . . . $25.00 Sweaters Half Price $35.00 Sweaters Half Price . . . $37.50 Sweaters Half Price... SALE STARTS TODAY 8 A. ML ENDS TODAY 6 P. M. HATS $3.95 Hats Half Price $4.95 Hats Half Price $5.95 Hats Half Price $6.95 Hats Half Price $7.95 Hats Half Price $8.95 Hats Half Price $9.95 Hats Half Price $10.95 Hats Half Price $12.95 Hats Half Price $1.97 247 297 347 395 4.47 4.97 5-47 647 STORE WILL BE CLOSED ALL DAY FRIDAY IN OBSERVANCE FOURTH OF JULY No Approvals; No Ex changes; No Charges; No Refund Strictly Cash. JUST ACROSS FROM SAN CARLOS HOTEL Underwear and Hosiery not included at Sale Price