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The Des Moines Register from Des Moines, Iowa • Page 5

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Des Moines, Iowa
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5
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the the the THE DES MOINES REGISTER--Thursday Morning, June 23, 1921-LARGEST DAILY CIRCULATION IN IOWA. 5 Baptist Women Depict "The Call and the Answer" in Solemn Pageant CALLS FOR LIGHT IN DARKNESS Appeal for Wrokers Staged at Coliseum. Four thousand Baptists in a darkened Coliseum last night peered unseeingly at a darkened stage. The curtain had just risen upon "The Call and the Answer," the golden jubilee pageant of the Woman's American Baptist Foreign Mission society. Suddenly a voice, of invisible origin, (spoke, pondering, wondering.

It was a voice in the darkness calling for light. Came an answering voice: "Here am send me." Lights flashed on. In the center of the stage stood the Spirt of the Society, represented by Mrs. H. E.

Goodman of Chicago. Five Decades Appear From this point the pageant unfolded swiftly. First came the five Decades, each representing ten years of the society's development. They were represented Andrew MacLeish of Chicago; Mrs. F.

L. Ryder of California; Mrs. Skerrett of Philadelphia; Mrs. Nathan Wood of Boston; and Mrs. Marian Clapp of Boston.

They described gradual progress of the women's missionary work. troTh eleven came distant eleven lands. messengers From Burma, Telugus of India, Assam, Bengal Orissa, China, Japan, Africa, the Phillippines, France, Czecho-Slovakia and Poland they came, begging for aid in a search for light.55 Appeal Answered. Extending her hands, the Spirit of Society besought for aid from her sister behest women; eight and groups forward rep- at resenting sections of the society, all eager and volunteering to help spread the gospel. Throughout the pageant it was interspersed with songs and instruthe lights aided in obtaining an mental music.

Artistic Re handling of impressive effect. Mrs. Helen Barrett Montgomery is authoress of the pageant, which was staged by women, girls and children largely representative of the thirty-five states of the northern Baptists' convention. Preceding the pageant was an illustrated lecture by Miss Nellie Prescott, foreign secretary, in which women's missionary work in a dozen lands was described by th lecturer with the aid of steropticar slides. SALVATION HOME IS DELAYED: NO FUNDS Details have not as vet been worked out by the Salvation Army for the financing of new $250.000 home to be cheline at Fourth and Chestnut streets, Brigadier William Andrews stated last night.

The building cannot be started until half the cost ha been raised. Brigadier Andrews stated. and added that money would probably be gotten by a campaign. The present plans for the new building include, besides rooms for the headquarters, dormitories large enough to accommodate 100 girls. These rooms will be rented at cost to worthy girls.

Excavations for the new addition to the Girls' Rescue home and Maternity hospital at East Sixth and Indianola road have been completed. This addition will cost 000 and will enable the hospital to accommodate fifty more women. MRS. CORNELIUS WOELFKIN. Four Leading Figures at Northern Baptist Convention MISS THOMASINE ALLEN.

liver an address today on "Training for Leadership;" Miss Thomasine Allen is a missionary from Sandai, Japan, who is attending the meeting; the Rev. Harry S. Myers is TUSTIN CHECKS TEST BY FAITH BAPTISTS' PLAN CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE. ligious people, whose knowledge of the sacraments is chiefly confined to those of marriage and death" as evidence of such a crisis. There is, he declared, a "clear.

distinct call throughout the land for the unification of all forces of Christianity the great questions confronting the political, business religious world." "Countless thousands of our people are running beyond their means and living without the ecocare and saving of our forefathers." Mr. Tustin said. "There has come into the minds of the many a desire for equality of condition. In business lines the whole assumption seems to be get money; get it honestly it possible but get money. our local politics the morale lower perhaps today than ever before.

In nearly every city of our country the word of the boss is Prayer was offered by Doctors Carter Helm Jones, A. M. Bailey, E. A. Hanley and W.

S. Abernathy. Dr. F. L.

Anderson introduced eleven fraternal delegates from Europe and the Southern pa Baptist convention, including the Reverends Peter Gramp, Denmark; J. A. Horn, Arnold Horn, Norway; C. G. Lundin, Sweden; J.

A. Frey, Latvia; J. H. Rushbrook, London; Dr. J.

F. Love and Dr. Lee Scarborough of the Southern Baptist convention; Dr. Ma Saw Sa of Burma and Miss Grace Sweet of Hankow, China. British Send Greetings.

Dr. Rushbrook brought greetings from the United Baptists of Great Gritain and Ireland. Doctors Scarborough and Love of the southern convention were given great ovations. raised $92,000,000 for our main fund," said Dr. Searborough, "and $25,000.000 is already paid in.

Down our way they say that Baptists and Johnson grass are covering the country, and the Baptists threaten to tear the grass and have the country tc A resolution of sympathy was passed for the death of J. B. Gambrell. An impressive processional of members of the women societies' committees and officers, clad in white, and representatives from missionary fields clad in native costumes, started the afternoon jubilee. The marchers carried models of schools and missions built and to be built with the women's funds.

Harding's Message Read. Messages were read from President Harding, Secretary of State Hughes and Secretary of Labor Davis. All three regretted their nability to accept invitations to attend and felicitated the convention. "In the troublous times through which we are passing here is a special reason for plac.11 our fullest reliance on those undamentals which church unceasingly devoted." wired the president. Representatives from the Southern Baptist convention reported hat 175,000 candidates were ized last year in the south.

Signalizing the fiftieth sary of the Women's Foreign sion society, Mrs. Helen Barrett Montgomery announced that 000 had been raised for the construction of missionary schools. This sum, Mrs. Andrew MacLeish of Chicago pointed out, is $100,000 beyond the goal originally set, "collected in these times when most campaigners are satisfied to fall short of their goals." Amplifier Installed. The Rev.

Hi. R. Best of Des Moines, chairman of the committee on arrangements: Dr. J. Y.

Aitchiand Dr. Ferguson of India also spoke during the day, The ter's grandfather was one of 2,222 baptized by John Clough in one day. "In the complex society of arn life, the interdependence of sodiety is said Dr. C. V.

Arbuckle of Newton Center, "and the church is the point for spiritual Difficulty was experienced by delegates in the rear of the convention! hall in hearing. and an amplifier was ordered installed today. In the evening a stereopticon leeture illustrating worldwide ties of the women's missionary societies, was heard and seen by 4.000 delegates and other Baptists. The lecture was followed by a colcrful pageant which symbolically portrayed the achievements of the women Baptist workers in many ways and in many lands. Sure Relief I INDIGESTION 25 6 BELL-ANS Hot water Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION BAPTIST COLLEGE CONTROL IS ISSUE Chief Cause of Scrap Is Brought Out in Speeches.

Although the main ostensible battle between conservative and progressive Northern Baptists which has been brewing for several days and may come to a head tomorrow. is upon the adoption of a "confession of faith," the control of Baptist colleges is plainly the chief issue, according to a series of seven speeches delivered by fundamentalist leaders Tuesday at the Auditorium. Progressive or "modernist" leaders last night smiled at assertions made yesterday by fundamentalists that 1,800 votes were cast in favor of the "confession of faith" at the Tuesday conference. Only 1,654 Registered. yesterday's point first to the session fact of the that collie vention proper there was a total of but 1,654 registered and accredited delegates, and assert that but a small share of these were present at the fundamentalist conference.

The conservatives would be fully satisfied, they declare, if they are apportioned a number of Baptist schools to run as they please. Since Des Moines university would be vitally affected by this decision, local Baptists are awaiting the set-to with interest. Story As Illustration. The position of the orthodox Northern Baptists is illustrated by a story told yesterday by Dr. J.

C. Massee, president of the Des Moines conference: "A young lady went away to a Baptist college. At the end of her four year stay she had accumulated so many belongings that she could not get them all into her trunk. Espying her Bible in a tray, she removed the bulky book. Well, old thing.

I think I'll leave you she soliloquized. 'I've learned too much to worry about Firm Stand Against Creeds. On the other hand, the standpoint of the progressives is aptly stated in the following extract from an editorial in the current issue of the "Baptist:" "Baptists as a whole will never have anything to do with such a statement unless it is made clear to them that it is not a creed, that it is not to be used as a measuring rod by which somebody is to try individuals and organizations, that it is not to be an encouragement for heresy hunters and a beginning of heresy trials. True Baptists of every type will fight to the end anything which is to become for them a creed such as have been the blight of organized Christianity A witness to the churches and to the world is timely; the adoption of a creed would be fatal. Whatever is done must conserve both the evangelical position Baptists hold and also their glorious heritage of liberty." GERMAN VETERANS SEIZE HOSPITAL Set Up Soviet and Battle Reichstag's Decree.

BY S. B. CONGER. (The Register-Public Ledger Service.) (Copyright.) DERLIN, June -Two hundred war cripples variant who are staging an amusing of "in the Palace of the King" in the former royal palace of Charlottenburg, a suburb of Berlin, refused to comply with the request of the Reichstag committee which tried to persuade them to evacuate their pleasant quarters in the old residence of Hohenzollerns. They voted to continue fort in The defiance ministry of of the authorities, time ago decided to close the palace as a.

war hospital and distribute such of the unruly inmates as still required medical care among the er hospitals. It found however, oth: had reckoned without the guests, who formed a full fledged soviet government, and decided to convert the palace into. a permanent soldiers home under their own auspices. The ministry, to enforce compliance with its orders, withdrew the staff of surgeons and nurses. stopped rations and carried off all bed linen except the sheets on which the inmates were sleeping and which they refused to surrender.

The lusty veterans who are able to get about, though most of them are minus legs or arms, organized foraging columns to collect food. money and other supplies from sympathizers and for ten days have maintained themselves comfortably against the government's "hunger blockade." Your correspondent's impression after visiting the place is that they may be able to do 80 indefinitely. The enterprise has a distinetly communist stamp. Boisnevist agents are in and out of the palace all the time organizing resistance, and the communist party contributes the major part of the funds and supplies physicians wearing the red star of the Moscow tionals. The insurgents are so thoroughly communistic that they; refuse to permit even a socialist doctor.

who volunteered. to visit the hospital to renew bandages or to enter the building. This is the third Berlin hospital in which maimed veterans have refused to accept the government program of discharging those no longer in need of medical care, and concentrating the remainder in selected hospitals, but in the other two instances the veterans were less organized and were forced to yield. ARREST 13 NEGROES IN GAMBLING RAID Thirteen Negroes were arrested by the police in a raid on a crap grame at 919 Center street late last night, and placed in jail on a charge of gambling. Police Officers Closson, Alber, Chambers and Wilkinson conducted the raid.

The arrested men were: John Ware, Allen Richardson. Charles Thurman. James Foster, Charles Parker, D. Weldon, J. Williams, John Logan, William Callahan.

John Mason, Ray Mack, Jesse Williams. and Everett James. EIGHT MEN HELD FOR SALE OF BOGUS PRIZEFIGHT TICKETS NEW YORK. June 22. -Eight men suspected of flooding the country with bogus tickets for the or Dempsey-Carpentier fight were arrested tonight and charged with forgery, counterfeiting and grand larceny, Two were taken at the point of revolvers by six detectives, three in an apartment three in a raid on a house where police claim they found a printing press.

The first five men were arrested after one of them is alleged to have negotiated for the sale of $3,750 worth of tickets to a detective. A large quantity of bogus tickets, police said, were found in the possession of the men. ARMY REDUCED TO FORCE OF 150,000 MEN Must Discharge Eighty Thousand by Oct. 1. BY JOHN GLEISSNER (United News Staff Correspondent.) WASHINGTON.

D. June 22. -The senate and the house have finally agreed on the disputed army and navy appropriation bills and in 80 doing have defined the postwar military policy of America. This policy is to be one of maintaining the smallest military estabIshments consistent with national safety, with sympathy toward versal limitation of armaments on land and sea. In fact, manpower of the army and of navy, the as dictated by congress, is to be less than both the secretary of war and the secretary of the navy insisted would enable this country to keep herself adequately prepared.

It is to be presumed the secretaries speak for their chief, the president. But congress, controlling the purse strings, has the final word. Senate Yields to House. And congress has ruled that the army will be 150,000, it pre-war size. The senate ended the deadlock on the appropriation bill by accepting Wednesday the house amendment, after having held out first for an army of 175,000, and then for a more gradual reduction in strength.

The house amendment will mean that the army must be cut from its present size, 230,000, by Oct. 1. This will mean the arbitrary discharge of 80,000 men. Senator Wadsworth, chairman of the military affairs committee, opposed the drastic cut until the last, and in finally yielding so that bill could become law by the beginning of the fiscal year, July 1, said that amendment constitutes "the cruelest treatment ever handed out to the United States The navy, it was agreed in conference between delegations to the two chambers, will have a strength of 106,000 during the ensuing fiscal year. The senate, supported by Secretary the Navy Denby, wanted 120,000, whereas the house had voted for 100,000.

Borah Rider Still in Dispute. The conference agreed on virtually all questions in dispute in the appropriations bill except the Borah disarmament rider. The bill, as approved in conference, carries an appropriation of the house originally appropriated the senate added $100,000,000 and receded from most of it at the insistence of the house. Another meeting of conferees is to be held, but agreement is assured, according to conferees. The army, according to Secretary of War Weeks, is preparing for the reduction it will be required to make.

The general staff has been called upon to decide whether forces shall be maintained as at present, but in skeleton form. or whether certain branches will be abandoned. CHARGES GRAFT IN SOLDIER HOSPITALS Further Complaint Heard by Senate Committee. WASHINGTON. D.

June 22. -Further charges that former service men are improperly cared for, and ill treated at government contract hospitals were made today before the senate special investigating committee. The committee withheld the name of the witness, a tubercular patient. He tetified he received no compensation for six months after filing his claim, although prevented by hemorrhages from following his theatrical work. He described conditions in hospitals at Greenville, S.

Liberty, N. Phoenix and Tucson, Prescott, and Los Angeles and Monrovia, charging that facilities for the treatment of tuberculosis patients were inadequate, the physicians and nurses unsympathetic and in many instances inefficient, the food poor, and conditions unsanitary. He told of a contract physician in California who on payment by patients of $30 a month in addition to the allowance made by the government, gave proper private treatment to patients, but who otherwise placed the men in a boarding house, where he paid $12 a week for each patient, collecting from the government $24.65 for each. Former service men under hospital treatment are afraid to complain, the witness stated. because if they do they will either be compelled to leave the hospital or be classed as mental patients and be sent to an insane asylum.

NORRIS ATTACKS PRIVATE INTERESTS WASHINGTON, D. June 22. ate today by Senator Norris, repub-Charges were made in thee senlican. Nebraska, that "powerful interests'! which he did not name, had brought pressure to bear 011 the war department during the Wilson administration to block development of the Great Falls of the Potomac as a source of cheap hydro-electric power for the national capital. Legion Post Incorporates.

CRESTON, June post American Legion of this city today filed articles of incorporation with the recorder. The time is to be from June 20. 1921. until fifty years later. MRS.

ORTHWEIN ACTS OUT ZIEGLER KILLING Divorcee Says He Beat In Her Door to Slay Her. I THE REV. H. S. MYERS.

head of the stereopticon department of the general board of promotion and a well known lecturer; and Mrs. Cornelius Woelfkin is president of the New York district CLOSER UNITY SEEN IN BAPTISTS' RANKS Many Southerners Attend Northern Convention. Evidencing the growing spirit fraternity between the Baptists of the north and those of the south, there is an exceptionally large representation of southern Baptists in tendance at the present session of the northern convention, it was disclosed yesterday. For many years the two conventions have exchanged fraternal messengers at their annual sessions, but this year a number of representatives of southern Baptist papers and other denominational interests have come to the northern convention in an unofficial capacity. Dr.

J. F. Love, secretary of the foreign mission board of Richmond, Dr. L. R.

Scarborough, president of the Southwestern Baptist Theological seminary at Fort Worth, Dr. John R. Sampey of the Southern Baptist Theological seminary at Louisville, and Dr. J. W.

Porter, pastor of the First Baptist church at Lexinkton, are the official messengers of the southern convention, while some of the southern newspapermen who are attending the convention Drs. R. K. Maiden and S. M.

Brown of Word and Way, Kansas Dr. Victor I. Masters of the Western Recorder, Louisville, Dr. C. P.

Stealey of the Baptist Messenger, Oklahoma City, and Coleman Craig, staff correspondent of the Baptist Standard, Dallas, Tex. Frank E. Burkhalter of Nashville, publicity director of the conservation commission of the $75,000,000 campaign, is handling the proceedings of the convention for the twelve other southBaptist papers which did not send special representatives. In this way, all southern Baptists will be furnished with first hand reports of the proceedings of the convention. Dr.

Scarborough, in addition to his duties as president of the Southwestern seminary, directed the 000,000 campaign, and is chairman the conservation commission, which is conserving the campaign victory, when subscriptions in excess of $92.000,000 were made. Of this sum, subscribed in December, 1919, more than $25,000,000 in cash has been received, Dr. Scarborough innounces. HINDMAN, INSURANCE VETERAN, SUCCUMBS A. D.

Hindman, formerly vice president and general manager of the American Life Insurance company. here, died at his home, 3215 Eighth street. Wednesday, following illness ct several months. Mr. Hindman was well known in business cireles here, having been connected with the American Life Insurance company for twenty-two years, giving up his connection when his illness proved he would be unable to give the business the attention it required.

He was also well known in fraternal circles. being a member of the consistory. Masonic lodge, and 1 Shriner, besides being a Knight of Pythias. He also was an active member of the Chamber of Commerce. His widow, four brothers and six sisters survive him.

Funeral services will be held from Dunn's funeral home, Friday at 2 D. m. Interment will be in Glendale cemetery, TWO CHILDREN IN AUTO ACCIDENTS Two automobile accidents in which children were injured were At East Fifth and Court reported to the police, last night. avenue yesterday afternoon George Nahas, 5 years old, was struck DV and automobile driven by H. E.

Selecman, 1213 York street. bruised, The accident was reported by the driver. At East Tweifth and Washing ton streets Blane Bolte, 5 years old. was struck by an auto driven by M. D.

Thomas of 2418 East Twelfth street. The boy was hurt slightly. Dr. C. C.

Lang attended the child. VETS OF FOREIGN WARS MEET TONIGHT The Veterans of Foreign Wars will meet in Gibson's hall, over the Palace theater, tonight at'8 o'clock. All men who have had military service in the A. E. and in Cuba, the Philippines, China and Mexico are eligible for membership in the organization.

The charter will be open until July TO HOLD SPAULDING FUNERAL FRIDAY The funeral of John S. Spaulding, 1325 Twenty-first street, will be held from Dunn's undertaking parlors at 1:30 p. m. Friday. Mr.

Spaulding, who was 63 years of age, was a pioneer blacksmith of Des Moines. His widow and seven children survive him. Interment will be in Indianola. MRS. GEORGE W.

COLEMAN. of the Woman's American Baptist Foreign Mission society. Mrs. Woelfkin of the pastor of the Fifth Avenue Baptist church. New York City, of which John D.

Rockefeller is a member. BAPTISTS WOULD ADOPT TITHING Find Drives for Funds Are Ineffective. The establishment of a systematic and etficient tithing system, which would supply sufficient funds to conduct the work of the entire Northern Baptist convention and its component societies, was recommended yesterday in the report of the finance committee. Thus far the financial burdens of the organized Northern Baptist work has been borne by voluntary, irregular contributions, by campaigns from time to time, and by occasional grants, bequests and donations of large sums of money by wealthy Baptist laymen. "Drives are not the most ideal methods of raising money," says the committee report.

"In fact, it was thought they might become wholly ineffective; 'and therefore some other system should be adopted. The conference was unanimous in the opinion that tithing should be encouraged." The recommendations of the committee are: "First- -There should be created a laymen's department of the general board of promotion, or such department should become a part of one of the divisions of the work the said board. "Second committee of laymen should he be selected by this convention to advise with the managers of such laymen's department; the chairman such committee to be ex offcio a member of the administrative committee. That an educational propaganda be inaugurated by such laymen's department in nection with all agencies now operating, to educate all members of the convention to become tithers, and establish as soon as possible a tithers' league, having as a sufficient numbers by the end goal the present $100,000,000 campaign to carry the finances of the convention, its boards, societies, and committees." Baptist Program Today sessions official program for today's of the Baptist convention is as follows: Morning. 9:30 a.

m. -Devotional period. The Rev. Joshua Gravett, Denver, Colo, 10- Report of committee on inquiry concerning Baptist schools. 11-Report of committee on denominational journals.

11:15 Woman's foreign mission jubilee program continued. Appreciation of the work of fifty years on the foreign field. Adjournment. Afternoon. Session of the American Baptist home mission societies.

2 D. In. "'The Work of the Woman's Home Mission Katherine S. Westfall. work of the American Baptist Home Mission Society," Charles L.

White. "Unoccupied Fields." the Rev. W. H. Bowler.

Centers," the Rev. C. M. Dinsmore, Luella Adams. of the the Rev.

R. L. Bradley, Mrs. E. W.

Moore. in the United States," the Rev. E. R. Brown.

in Central America," Miss Dora De Moulin. 4:40 "Training for Mrs. George W. Coleman. 5:30 College reunions.

Evening. Session of the board of educa-1 tion. 7- "Baptist Schools and Colleges," stereopticon lecture, Frank W. Padelford. secretary American Baptist editorial society.

Address "An Eyewitness in Baptist Colleges." the Rev. Al-; lyn K. Foster. Address "The Christian College as the Teacher Sees It." Miss Jessie Burrall, Stephens college. 'Religion at Twenty the Rev.

Bernard C. Clausen, Syracuse, N. Y. TWO MEX. SOLDIERS KILLED BY BANDITS LAREDO, June Two soldiers from the garrison at Nuevo Laredo were killed and four others wounded in a fight late vesterday near Huisachito with seventy-five bandits under command of Colonel Delgrado and Luis Manero, accordto reports today.

Elliott Heads Settlement Workers. WAUKEGAN. June 22. Dr. J.

L. Elliott of New York, today was elected president of the National Federation of ments. Jane Addams, Chicago, and Bessie D. Stoddard. Los Angeles, were elected directors.

(By United News.) CHICAGO, June she killed Herbert P. Ziegler, $25,000 a year tire man, in her "Gold Coast" apartment, was described on the witness stand in court Wednesday by Mrs. Criminal, Orthwein, divorcee, in the following words: "After Herb and I quarreled in the cabaret I went home to bed. Later I heard the downstairs bells ring Then I heard some one at the door trying to get in. "I went to the door.

Mr. Ziegler was there. He said that if I would not let him in he would kill me. He swearing trying to break the chain. I said, 'Herb, you can't come in; please go "With an oath he said he would show me.

He crashed against the door. "I saw the door give way and ran back to my bedroom door. opened the door and he struck me, knocking me back into my room. I will kill he said, with an oath. told him not to hit me again.

When got to my feet he rushed at ine again. I saw the revolver on the stand near me. He looked like he was crazy, I picked up the gun and fired. He fell. I fired again, guess." Several times during her testi mony Mrs.

Orthwein collapsed. After she had finished she refused to re enact the murder scene for the jury The four persons above are taking a prominent part in the Northern Baptist convention. now in session at the Coliseum. Mrs. George W.

Coleman will de- ONLY BURMESE GIRL PHYSICIAN IS HERE Dr. Ma Saw Sa Representative at Baptist Conference. Dr. Ma Saw Sa, the only woman physician of Burma, and the first Burmese girl who ever got a college education, is one of representatives at the golden jubilee of the Woman's American Baptist Foreign Mission society Dr. Ma Saw Sa is at present the head of the Lady Dufferia hospital in Rangoon, Burma.

She passed her first arts examination as a student the Baptist college in Rangoon in 1906, a product of the excellent mission schools in that! country. After finishing she was given a medical scholarship and spent the next years a medical college of the government hospital, Calcutta, India. Afterwards she spent two years medical study abroad, receivng diplomas from the Royal Colege of Physicians and Surgeons at Dubiin. Dr. Ma Saw Sa's medical experince in Burma has been extensive.

pon her return to her own counry in 1913, she was appointed asdistant superintendent the general hospital, a government, institution in Rangoon. The following year she was appointed superintendent of the Dufferin Maternity hospital, which office she has filled with notable success. Her work includes not only her duties as a physician but the extensive training of native nurses, desperately needed at the present time in Burma. She also has the responsibilities of the entire administration of the large hospital on her shoulders. I COMMERCE WOMEN IN PICNIC Members of the department of women's affairs of the Des Moines Chamber of Commerce will hold their first annual picnic tonight at the home of Mrs.

Newton B. Ashby, 3209 Beaver avenue. Supper will be served at the Urbandale Federated church at 6 o'clock. Yes. California in Summer too.

Los Angeles Limited- GEEK out the glorious mountain trails on horseback. Visit Los Angeles and the beach cities. See the brilliantly colored ocean aquarium through the glass bottomed boats at Catalina. Tussle with big sea bass or yellow tail. Motor over Smiley Heights and through valleys like gardens of Eden.

See the old Spanish Missions. On the way stop at Salt Lake City, hear the organ recitals in the wonderful Mormon Tabernacle; bathe in the waters of the Great Salt Lake--you cannot sink. Take in Yellowstone National Park as you go. Travel on the LOS ANGELES LIMITED the crack train via the Overland Route, leaving Omaha 9:40 A. M.

or the CONTINENTAL LIMITED leaving Des Moines at 5:25 P.M. Low Summer Fares now in effect. Write for beautifully illustrated booklet "California Calls You" -and let us help you plan your trip. For information askD. M.

Shrenk, Gen'l Agent, U. P. System 606-7 Polk 309 Fifth Des Moines, Iowa V. A. Hampton, Gen'l Agent, C.

N. W. Ry. 426 W. 7th Des Moines S1-M Chicago North Western Union Pacific Salt Lake Route The Gero Co.

520 Walnut Street A Rendezvous you come in on your next shopping trip, town. use this store as your rendezvous. Meet your friends here, leave your bag, have your other purchases delivered here. Let us know when to expect you and a saleswoman will be waiting. Every moment, will be saved for "Jane can be of use in helping you in your selections.

There's a sale on, this week of Wooltex Coats and Suits, at $28 B. H. HOENIG, Manager Wooltex Tailor -mades Unexcelled in Stylein Quality--in Value $38 to $58 We Specialize in Large Sizes in Coats, Suits and Dresses. GIRLS! LEMONS BLEACH FRECKLES AND WHITEN SKIN Squeeze the juice of two lemons into a bottle containing three ounces of Orchard White, which any drug store will supply for few cents, shake well, and you have a quarter pint of the best freckle and tan bleach, and complexion whitener. Massage this sweetly fragrant lemon lotion into the face, neck, arms and hands each day and see how freckles and blemishes bleach out and how clear, soft and rosywhite the skin becomes.

Don't hide skin trouble-heal it with Resinol This treatment gets right at the root of the trouble. The rich, cleansing lather of Resinol Soap ride the pores of impurities, while Resinol Ointment soothes and heals the inflamed spots or blotches. Free trial. Dept. 6-T, Resinol, Baltimore, Md.

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