Invents Method to Make Colored Photos Possible to Everyone Ixmdon, Dec. B.—A secret emul sion, invented by a Russian profes sor, which is is asserted, will make color photography possible for everybody, is about to be introduced into this country. The problem of making the process capable of snap shot as well as time work is claim ed to have been overcome and the exposure can be as rapidly as with the ordinary emulsion, thus fitting the invention for moving picture work also. Special cameras and plates will be on the market shortly and the cost of a colored film is expected to be only 25 to 20 per cent, higher than the ordinary black and white type. Help the Wife Out of Her Rut! Jlrh ft Would your dtsposl- f\ .A jSssijl Vt lion-remain as congen- If / 3 -lErueFl'y /( Aj ial as your wife's if you 11/ /jf (JgJJgjra AX had to use appliances C —1 in your work as anti- k K quated as those she is KVI J j vsjjj H J course, if she still uses || V 1 Hb 'an old-fashioned fl I K3' V am Has® broom, hand-operated MM \ 1 rn tub and washboard. JLU \■ I f|| Think it over, and, U. N jJ-i -njl if you want to put a (J I \ " - |||t smile on her face and Xaafc-- ! I lighten her work, order If an electric cleaner or an electric washing machine to be delivered for Christmas. , T NJB Investigate our Olub Plan. Va Dauphin Electrical Supplies Co. JOHN S. MUSSER, President 436 Market Street ,i Do you want skin-health 9 If you are suffering from eczema or jfcgr&sßSS* SS some similar distressing, embarrassing skin eruption, why don't you get rid of II jp|if|Mv4V jm Ut by using Resinol Ointment? Unless i trouble is due to some serious inter na' it quickly yields to Resi- V \ no '* anc ' ' n most cases is easily healed Ej| \ by it. The first application usually stops Hi |V\ itching and makes the skin feel cool and HL VVc recommend it with the Byl \ utmost confidence because of its \ harmless ingredients. Aided by imSC y Resinol Soap it acts even more txAlkesinol L Pjfl 'HI 111 A \ 111 Ointment and Resinol Soap also help to clear j I ilk; \. \ iU .. away pimples. Sold by all druggists and deal- 'hiW M- 'lil.'jfS/ I \ xl lit, f* 1 era in toilet goods. Trial of each, free. Dept. jifjf Samud^Goldwyn She dared not tell him that she loved him— He dared not tell her that she might An English woman in love with an Egyptian a Chris ¥*ss!?§& v jwlS V\ tian in the arms of Mohamet! the age-old barriers °' r * co ® n< * religion forgotten for one fleeting moment \ in the eternity of a fierce and forbidden embrace and then, midnight and revolution against England under UvJ th ® shadotv of the Pyramids. lf ever there was a great photoplay adapted to the > MONDAY EVENING. Busts of Former Vienna Royalty Going to Museums Vienna, Dec. B.—The government has begun removing from public buildings the statues, busts and por traits of former royalty and royal favorites and servants. These ob jects are being placed in the mus eums along with other historical relics. This week the bust of the famous former Mayor Dueger was removed from the Town Hall and sent to a municipal museum. It was Lueger who naturalized nearly 2 00,- 000 Czech residents to get their votes and thus kept himself in' of fice and at the same time laid the foundation for the present Czech movement here to demand Czech schools for their children. This ele ment wliile claiming Austrian na tionality persists in striving to main tain their original racial segregation. AMERICAN NA VY EMERGED FROM WORLD WAR STRONGER THAN EVER, DANIELS SA YS j Washington, Dec. B.—lncompr.r-' : ably stronger and more efficient than ■ ever belore, the American Navy, emerged from the World War "second only to that of Great Britain I and far in advance of any other for i eign navy in ships, in men, and every ] element of strength," Secretary j Daniels declared to-day In his an -1 nual report. | With eighteen capital ships—l 2 | superdreadnoughts and six giant I battle cruiser# —under construction, I all - representing the last word in 1 naval construction, and several su jperior to any fighting vessels now in {commission, the Navy is "pressing forward to greater things," Mr. Dan iels said. Recommendations Recommendations by the Secretary for the betterment of the service in cluded: Extension of the course at the Naval Acade&y to five years so the midshipmen may spend afloat as enlisted men. immediate enlargement of naval establishment on the Pacific Coast to take care of the new Pacific ; Fleet. Temporary increases in pay of of ficers anil enlisted men and increases in amounts allowed for commutation of quarters and other allowances. Government control of wireless communication. Expansion of the naval air service and continuation of the present policy of a separate air service for the Navy. Construction of new buildings, in cluding a new memorial chapel at the Naval Academy. Change of the names of the Bureaus of Navigation and Steam Engineering to Personnel and En gineering Bureau, respectively. Mr. Daniels made no recommend ations as to an annual building pro gram, explaining that' the recom mendations of the Navy General Board were under consideration and that estimates would be'prepared soon for presentation to Congress. The actual cost of the Navy to the Nation during the war was placed by the Secretary at $2,982,000,000.' During the next fiscal year, he said, the Navy's needs will be approxi mately $573,131,234, or approximate ly $40,000,000 less than the sum risked for during the present fiscal year. 150 Vessels Completed Commenting on the construction records during the war, the Secre tary said that during the 12 months ended last October 1, 159 vessels of all classes were completed for the Navy. These included 103 destroy ers, 1 battleship, 32 submarines and j 52 Eagle boats. A world record for destroyer construction was made, the Secretary said, in the building of the Reid at Squantum, Mass., in 45 working days. Discussing the proposed radical departure in the training of officers for the Navy, Mr. Daniels declared that "no officer can command so well as the man of ability and knowl edge who knows every character of service from polishing brass to the highest strategy and tactics." He added that a year's training as an enlisted man would prove invaluable to every officer and that heretofore commissioned officers had no actual sea-going training in the duties of enlisted men except an incidental knowledge acquired during short summer cruises. Mr. Daniels devoted much of his report to a review of the work of the Navy during the war and in for eign- waters since the signing of the armistice. He declared that the re markable performance of the Navy BA2UUSBURQ TELEGRAPH 'in transporting troops, particularly in bringing the Army back to the United States, was the outstanding wartime achievement of the Navy. Regarding the enlargement of the Pacific Coast bases, Mr. Daniels said he could not "too strongly urge that Congress make a beginning in the development of shore bases, Navy yards and air stations on the Pacific." Proper care of the vessels of the Pacific Fleet, he added, makes such action vital. The report paid high tribute to the services of naval reserve officers and men during and after the war "without whom," it said, "we could ■ not have manned the ships and carried on the war." Secretary Daniels characterized the naval re serve force as an Invaluable asset to the Nuvy and urged that Congress make ample provision for retaining and strengthening the organization. Advocating temporary in pay of officers and enlisted men and increase in amounts allowed for com mutation of quarters and other al lowances, the report declared tly.it high wages offered by the merchant marine and shore concerns was caus ing many officers and men in the navy to become dissatisfied and was resulting in an abnormal number of resignations. The Navy ha 3 been demobilized from a war-time strength of more than 500,000 officers and men to 132,000, of whom 5,000 are reserves, the report said, and enlisted men are badly needed to man the greatly in creased sea-going establishment. Praises Welfare Work High tribute was paid welfare or ganizations for close co-operation with the Navy and labor was euli gized for its patriotic response to the cry for increased and sustained production of war materials. Promi nent naval officers, notably Admirals Sims, Benson, Mayo, Hodman and Wilson, Rear Admiral Knapp, who succeeded Admiral Sims in command abroad, and the officers who par ticipated in the trans-Atlantic flight, received praise for exceptionally meritorious sendee. The value of the Nifeval War College, at Newport, R. 1., was graphically demonstrated during the war, the report declared, adding that "the day will come when one of the requisites to command of a fleet, squadron, division or battle ship will be a diploma from this institution." Salvage and sales of materials found to be surplus after the war has amounted to $70,000,000, Mr. Daniels said, while the sale of small auxiliary craft has netted $900,000. He added that all except 300 naval contracts made during the war had been settled. The records of the Marine Corps and the Coast Guard during the war were reviewed and highly praised, and the proposed transfer of the latter service from the Treasury De partment to the Navy Department was advocated. Splendid results have been accom plished by naval administrations in the Virgin Islands, Haiti, San Do mingo, Samoa and Guam, Secretary Daniels declared, particularly along sanitary lines, and in the quelling of banditry and lawlessness and the improvement of financial conditions. Mrs. Angeles Dies Without Knowing the Fate ol Her Husband New York, Dec. B.—Senora Felipe Angeles, wife of the Mexican revo lutionary leader recently executed by Carranza troops, died yesterday without having been informed of her husband's arrest and, death. She came here from El Paso three months ago suffering from nervous exhaustion caused by fear for her I husband's safety and gradually grew worse. At the time of General An geles' execution her condition was so feeble that her friends deemed it inadvisable to give her the news and she remained in ignorance to the end. She leaves four children. Senora Angeles was 43 years old. One Hundred Colleges Seeking Additional Funds New York, Dec. B.—A canvass of the colleges of the country, com pleted here to-day by the Harvard Endowment Fund, shows that there are at least one hundred American institutions of higher education i which are now either planning or i conducting campaigns for added I funds with which to carry on their ; work. At a conservative estimate ; \Vlthout counting the state univer sities which are seeking more money from their legislatures, these ap ; peals collectively will reach a body of 250,000 college graduates, from the shores of New England to the I coast of the Pacific. The list of needy colleges, which ! runs from Harvard, with 38,000 liv j ing alumni, to Heed College, Ore gon, with 138, includes institutions in all parts of the country. | Will Permit Rentier to Plead For His Country Vienna, Saturday, Dec. 6.—Dr. Karl Renner, the Chancellor, has been notified by the Supreme Coun cil at Paris that tt is willing to re |celve him personally to plead his I country's dangerous plight. Dr. | Renner will beg for immediate help, | proposing, as an alternative, the re tirement of the present government ;and the election by the Allies of a I neutral dictator and administrative | staff to govern the country. Holland Continues Rations in Bread i The Hague, Holland, Dec. 8.—Hol ! land to whoso population nearly all important foodstuffs yrere rationed ; during the war, has not yet ed sufficient grain to permit unlim- I ited consumption of breadstuffs. It has been announced in Parliament , that rationing of white and brown I bread will continue. No U. S. Destroyers to Be Built in Britain Washington, Dec. B.—Secretary Daniels has denied the report pub ! fished in the Pall Mall Gazette that the United States has contracted j with a British firm for a fleet of the i most modern destroyers of the Brit ; ish type. LEGALIZES MINE SEIZURE Bismarck, N. D., Dec. B.—A spe cial session of the legislature has empowered the Governor to take over and operate any coal mine or other utility when necessary for the protection of life and property. A bill carrying scuh provisions was passed yesterday. The act goes into I effect on July 1 ,1920. Plenty of Food in Pressburg, Slovakia, Wbile Vienna Starves Pressburs, Slovakia, Dec. B.—No- , where in Europe exists such a sharp contrast in food conditions as be : tween this place and Vienna. While i t ' le ffreat city fifty miles away goes i j hungry and meatless day follows! ! meatless day, here is food in abund- j I ance, and cheap. There were six: , meats on the dinner card of a hotel ! ! iTf to " da > r and every winter vege-I i table the climate affords. Whipped! i Cr usl m ' '' u ' ter and cheese, fresh eggs, ! white sugar and pastry are to be hail ! in every restaurant. The hotels are I steam heated and smoke issues! from every chimney. This was yie rich hinterland of! \ ienna before the disruption and j , poured the products of its fertile I I?.® Into the capital. Now a new ! political boundary intervenes and I not one pound of supplies may pass j into Austria.- The cars of the broad guage electnc line may not cross' the frontier. Passengers descend at the border and walk several hun- I dred yards to another car and sol- ! dier guards at both the Austrian and Czecho-Slovakian sides search everyone carefully. Passports are I , examined as if war prevailed, j A business man of this city admit- > ted to the correspondent that thei • region could export food in appreci able quantities as well as large quan tities of firewood. But the Austrian' crown is so cheap and government! regulations against sending food! from the country so rigid that no | negotiations seem possible. Skirts of Milady to Be Still Shorter Cleveland, Dec. 8. Women's skirts will be "frankly shortl' for the spring season of 1920 anl the' prices for the skirts will be no j lower. Such is the decree, immutable as the laws of the Medes and Persians' of the Style Committee of the Na- ! tionai Cloak, Suit gnd Skirt Manu- j facturers* Association in session I here. , The style committee went into j particularities. They decreed that! the hems of fashionable women's j skirts shall be from seven to nine' inches above the carpet, lawn or! pavement, and the hems of skirts that adorn charming young misses j shall not approach their pink toes nearer than ten inches. There may be some idea of economy in this pronounciamento; every inch of i skirt saved may cut the high price ' a trifle. But the style committee did not say so. PROCTER FOR WOOD Cincinnati, Dec. B.—Col. William G. I roeter., Cincinnati manufacturer, has announced his acceptance of the chairmanship of the Leonard Wood j National campaign committee. America-Speak English! The whole structure of good citizen- rV A*\ IB J ship rests upon a knowledge of the English language. How car one c\^ who can not read or speak our language be expected to understand our government? The laws of America are written in English, our Courts interpret the laws through the medium of the English language, while ninety-two per cent of our publications are printed in English. As a Christmas Gift lothing could be more acceptable. The i Ipressive in appearance, and its contents are of such practical utility for 9oop ee ., any person that it will be used and treasured for years to come. s^Vm The Funk & Wagnalls NEW Desk Standard Dictionary The Office In The Home In The School It should be in the hands of every atenogra- l t will be a constant fount of information for It ia aure to establish itself as the most easily pher and correspondent. It should be in evi- the growing boy or girl—giving exact, easily understandable classroom dictionary published, dence at the conference table, and on the tables understood explanations of those things which II wi " answer more classroom questions than of reception rooms. Big business houses are are most often the cadse of query and doubt in any other abridged dictionary. For pro equipping their employees with it, an order for the minds of youngsters in school. It will nunciation it has the text-book key and the 125 copies being received in one day recently a j so ierve a 8 an arbiter and information h„- r u V 'f ed , Bc . ,e ?" fic alphabet. All information in from a lar< B Insurance company. Protect your bu.i- ° f nr h!Jl , I, t , J £* b ° ok , 18 ° n . e B,m P le alphabetica Order, nest documents from error by havins this absolutely . grown-ups. It answers hundreds Principal events in American and English hts dependabic suide-book at your stenographer's right of thousands of questions in all branches of hu- tory recorded in alphabetical place. Recent hand. An error in spelling or punctuation may change manlcnowlcdge. Its presence in the home is an advances of science covered. Thorough syo -the entire mtanmt o( a contract or letter. evidence of care in the rearing of children. nym treatment, etc. WHETHER YOU WANT TO KNOW ~S. ov ? S P e " Pbthisis —Find the Age of Woodrow Wilson —Date the Granting of Magna Carta —Find the Population of Syracuse —Who Lenine and Trotzky Are Pronounce, Divide, Spell, Understand, and Define -Know When Antwerp Surrendered —Tell Who Karl Mar* Was Thousands of Words, Phrases, Proper Names, Etc. —Know the Difference Between One -Identify Micawber —The Meaning of Camouflage, Escadrille, Estaminet, ~il ? l n i i Another Locate the Argonne Jazi-Band.Poilu, Questionnaire, Rainbow Divisioa, —What the Bolsheviki Are —Determine What Pragmatic Philosophy la Shock Troops, Slacker, Soviet, Sniper, Ukulele, Etc. 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The* prices ruling in the market have set new high records in the spinning industry of Japan, and even threat en to exceed the record figure in the world's market. The present quo tations, if left unmodified, will soon tell on the welfare of the Japanese public, who are already suffering from the advance price of cotton piece goods. The government is taking the sit uation seriously and recently de spatched officials to Osaka, the most important center of the spinning in dustry, to investigate the cause of the recent advance and to recommend THE WONDERFUL "Quicker Yet" Electric Washers §The One Best Christmas Gift For Mother or Wife cp Hundreds of them in use here and in "— f suburban towns. We buy them by the I- & carload direct from the factory and this | | r U " '"j * enables us to furnish you this best of all | i ryj [I ■■■? j washers at reasonable prices. Y p\ Special Features of the "Quicker Yet." ( —Louisiana Cypress, water has no k eav y gears on the top or side of HI | Simpliest in operating— Best motor. Jmnf. 4 ntWi||lvi'; wJfrjL Reversible, Swinging Wringer. I I Quality Washing Machine. iff I \i PRlCES—Snowhite Electric, $105.00 1/ * ess *O% for cash. f Sn °^ lite Belt Power > $65.00, less 10% | Double Tub Electric, $135.00, less 10% Ik* Double Tub Belt Power, $95.00, less This shows the "QUICKER YET" SNOWHITE 16% for Cash. Washer with pulley to be run direct from small /T,' „ „ , , - „ engine or shafts where there is no electricity. V 1 lme payments On above, $lO.OO down, (We have the engines also.) <£11") fill nor- \ THE SNOWHITE ELECTRIC is like the above, 5>10.00 per month) less the pulley and equipped with motor and cord, ORDER NOW will ready to attach to light socket. Also has rollers e INUJVV We Will Hold them <> n legs. for you if you wish. WALTER S. BCHELL Open Saturday Evenings Quality Seeds 1307-1309 Market Street. DECEMBER 8.1910 measures for regulating prices. But | the measures taken by the govern • ment so far have produced no ef feet and quotations are still advan | eing. Have Plan to Stop Thefts in Churches Herefordshire, Eng., Dec. B.—So j | many cases of thefts from church j | offertory boxes have occurred here i recently that the authorities have ' | been advised to place the boxes be neath the floor with a connecting | pipe to the coin slot. | FOREIGN BUYERS COMING I Washington. Dec. 8. Foreign buyers are coming to America this year In larger numbers than ever before, according to Information se cured by the foreign trade bureau. _ Star Carpet Cleaning Works Let us clean your carpets now. General Upholstering Expert Work Guaranteed Give Us a Trial Joseph Coplinky Eleventh & Walnut Sts. Bell 398-R Dial 6951 9