CREED SUCKERS HOT REINS FREED Secretary Baker Carrying Out as Provided f fr.."Vi Each Case. LLEUT B. W. MAYNARD ro ENFORCE WAR PENALTY Review of Cases and Recommendation* for Clemency, Coupled With ; Good Conduct, Have Served to Reduce Terms of Many. - i BP.;- 1%-.' w * ^Washington, Oct. 21.--Betw^eh fh" efforts of tlje amnesty committee It Chicago and the civil liberties bureat' in New York to bring about the re lease of conscientious objectors from the military prisons and disciplinary barracks In which they are confined, and the protests of the various posts of the American Legion which desire to keep them in, the war department is striving to maintain strict neutrality in the carrying out of the law in each case made and provided. Only those conscientious objectors who refused to co-operate with any of the regulations framed especially to provide for them as sufficiently warlike to earn for them the status of "general prisoners," are now held a? Leavenworth, Alcatraz, Fort Dougtasi and other prisons, the plan at present being to concentrate the recalcitrants at Fort Douglas. Several of these since the armistice have modified their resistance by consenting to work and otherwise to conform to the rules governing their fellows, thus bringing about material reductions in their sentences nntf in a number of cases their release. Review of cases and recommendations for clemency, coupled with good conduct, have served to reduce the terms of the majority of objectbrs. No disposition toward clemency exists, however. In the case of agitators and propagandists, who of their own volition or as missionaries of societies organized to encourage resistance to authority, have sought to convert others to their own peculiar views. Apparently in this the war department is following the attitude adopted by the department of justice in dealing with violators of the espionage act. There Is no indication of any desire on the part of war department officials further to mitigate the sentence of Brent Dowev Allison, the Chicago conscientious objector wfK) was »urtmartialed for deserting af^r persistent and defiant refusals to appear when drafted, tie was finally taken frcft^Vashington to Camp Grarft under <&ard and court-martialed, receiving a sentence of 15 years at hard labor. Eleven years were subtracted from this sentence by a special clemency board a few months ago, and it is highly unlikely fhat anything short of positive orders from the secretary of war will relieve him from serving the remainder of the term. Of approximately 500 conscientious objectors who became "general prisoners." about 200 are still serving terms ranging for the most part from two to ten years. The only objectors released from prison and honorably discharged with pay and allowances were those, 110 in nuq^er, released from Leavenworth last January, after examination by Judge Mack and Dean Stones, who found them sincere and would have recommended them for farm furloughs had the plan been in operation at the time of their imffrisonment. ; While ncwgeneral jail delivery is contemplated of those objectors who are still serving, with more or less active resistance, the terms imposed by the courts martial acting on their eases, recommendations for clemency, commutation of sentences, and even for release, are having their effect, though not all the cases reopened for consideration result in action favorable to the objector. HEADER RECALLS PLEDGE OF LABOR SENORA LE BRETON Gompers Rises From Bed Sickness to Deny Charfl v ^ of Bolshevism. •$v"> I ASSERTS UNIGnSTRUETQU First l.h iiri an: Helvin \V. Maynard, who won. th<e army transcontinental air derby of 5,402 miles. , v MAYNARD WINS RACE "FLYING PARSON- WELCOMED AT ROOSEVELT FIELD. Lieutenant Completes First Air Voy- «ge Across the Continent jM.' • Back Again. Mineola, L. I., Oct. 18.-*-LiOTitenant Beivin W. Maynard.'The "Hying parson,." at 1:50 o'clock brought his airplane to a graceful landing at Roosevelt field, thereby completing for The first time in history an air voyage across the continent npd back agajn. He had left Cleveland at 6:58. stopping for a half an hour, as required, at Buffalo, Rochester and Binghumton. A rousing reception was accorded the airman who is now conceded to he America's premier cross country flyer. Hundreds of persons had driven to Roosevelt field hours before Maynard's arrival to watch for him. ^s the flying parson brought his machine to earth the gathered automobilists set up, a terrific din with their horns. • The moment that the big airplane hit the ground and even before it had stopped rolling Maynard's brother flyers stationed at the field were running to greet him. The "flying parson" was smiling broadly when he met them. He had made good on a promise made to his «ife more than a week ago when he left here for San Francisco-- that he would be the flwt to return here via the air. x . Mrs. Maynard arid the "flying par? s«n's", two children were among rhe first to greet him. They had Waited at the field for hours In order to be on hand when he landed. PLANE CRASH KILLS WRIGHT Lieutenant Who Thrilled Chicagoans Meets Death While in Friend's Machine in Nebraska. Chicago, Oct. 20.--News of the death of Lieut. Cameron Wright, killed when an aeroplanp in which he was riding aa a guest crashed to the ground at St. Paul, Neb., at the same time seriously injuring Miss Helen laggart, also a guest, and Pilot Rex Randall of Gibbon, Neb., was revived In Chicago. Lieut. Wright conceived the idea of giving a ride to each purchaser of $25,000 worth of Liberty bonds last spring. More than 100 Chicagoans had thus taken air fliuhts with him. He was flying instructor of army aviators at Chanute field, near Rantoul, III., during the war and always lent a willing hand to drives and funds for the government. In these events he provided thrills for thousands by doing daredevil stunts in midair, such as jumping from one plane to another. Lieut. Wright was stop commander at the Nebraska landing field in the transcontinental air race. Declares Government of the Untted States Is Solidly Anchored in the Heart of Every True AmerU ' fan, in Answer to Lore*. ;i f Washington, Oct. 20.--Samuel Gainl> ers, weak^froiu several days of Ijl- > ess, took the fl«»or at Uie national Industrial conference to bitterly assail an insinuation tliat the workingmen of the United States planned an attempt to overthrow the government. Mr. Gompers was moved to what was called' the most eloquent speech of the conference by the remarks of L. F. Loree, who, speaking frfltn the viewpoint of-the employers, referred to what he said were attempts of bolshevism to gain a foothold in the United States thrMigh labor. He added that "there Is an Element that believes that because it was easy to tear do.wn the established government In Russia it will be easy to destroy the government of the United States. "That is not true."-he asserted. "In Itussui the government was centered in one czar and his ministers, but the government of the United - States is solidly anchored in the heart of every tne American." When Loree. \rho is president of the Delaware & Hudson railroad, said that labor took advantage of the most critical period of the recent war to force important concessions from the war labor board, Mr. Gompers rose to liis feet. ' • Speaking in a weak voice the federation president recalled the conference of 136 labor leaders on March 12, 1017, at which labor pledged itself, three weeks before President Wilson asked for a declaration of war, to back the government to the limit, come what might. "And American labor made good its ,pledgehe added hoarsely. c Plainly drawing on lrts reserve of strength--lessened by several 0«.vs of illness--the veteran labor leader referred with scorn to Mr. Loree's insinuations that labor had enjoj^nLJundue benetits from the war. ----L • "Ah, we should go to the great corporations, to the iHiard of directors to find the philanthropists of our time," he exclaimed ' sarcastically. "Perish the thought!" " ' Asserting that "whether you like it or not, the masses of labor of the United States have at last found their ability to articulate through organization," Mr. Gompers told the delegates that the laboring people are producing the wealth of the world nnd that, without minimizing the great contributions made by men of thougUt and direction to that production, the time had come when in America labor was determined to gain a fair share of the rewards. SUGAR RATION FOR GOTHAM One Pound Only to Be Sold to Each Purchaser; Envelope to Appear in Restaurants. New York. Oct. IS.--Arthur Williams, federal food administrator for New York", is perfecting plans to place the city on a sugar rationing basis, similar to that in force during the war. Sales of sugar will be limited to on^ pound for each customer, nnd many restaurants already have put Into effect the sugar envelopes employed •luring the war, instead of the open bowl. WILLIAM W. ASTOR IS DEAD Wealthy American Expatriate .in Year Fight /or Honor in ? Great Britain. Oct. 21.--Viscount William Waldorf Astor died of heart disease at Brighton after a year's illness. He was seventy-one years old. The body will be conveyed to the residence of his son, the Hon. Waldorf Astor, M. P., at 4 St. James square. It will be cremated and placed in the family's private chapel at Cliveden. REDS SLAY 23,652 IN RIGA Intoxicated Executioners Shot Men, Women and Children--Aided by Young Girls. Stockholm, Oct. 20.--Prof. Ouido Schneider of Riga, In a lecture het-e, stated that the holshevikl shot 23,652 men, women and children in Riga. The executioners, intoxicated and unable to aim straight, wounded their victims time and again, laughing at their agonies, which sometimes lasted a whole day and night, he said. Young girls, elegantly dressed, volunteered as executioners. I Germany Starts to Pay. - ftairUn, Oct. 21.--The Cologne Gazette says it understands that Germany has paid the first instalment of the war indemnity. The newspaper Pays it consisted of deliveries of various commodities amounting to 20,000,- 000^000 marks. Seeks Big Alimony. Newport, Oct. 21.--With reported divorce proceedings infetituted by Mrs. Cornelia Biddle Duke of Philadelphia •gainst Angier Buchanan Duke, It Was rumored that Mrs. Duke seeks to secure $100,000 alimony. Still Await Liquidation. Washington, Oct. 21.--The war department still lias on It? liands 5 724 emergency contracts awaiting liquidation. according to a report issued. The sum involved aggregates more $1,600,000,000. Wilson Foe to Be Deported. Leavenworth, Kan., Oct. 18-- Fraqk Gefzler, an Austrian, was rearrested by the chief of iMilice when he was released from the federal prison here. He is being held for deportation. Geizler was convicted of threatening the life of President Wilson in !^orth Dakota in 1917. than Sf Alaskan Family browns. Prince Rupert, B. C., Oct. 21.--Louis Powell, his wife and their three sons, natives of Metlakatla, near Ketchlkat, Alaska, are believed to have been drowned from their small boat off. the mouth of the Naas river. Nathan F. Barrett Dead. New Rochelle, N. Y., Oct. 21 --Nathan Franklin Barrett, seventy-three, widely known landscape architect and a former president of the Anferican Society of Landscape Architects, died at his home in Pelham. Letts Cross Duna River. jf" ... Copenhagen, Oct. 18.--Lettish forces liftve fought their way across the I>\ina river at Riga and operations there are now developing favorably, according to a dispatch received from Ltbau by the Lettish press bureau here.. Siberian Reds in Flight London, Oct. 18.--A general retreat fey the bolshevik! before the armies of Admiral Kolchak in western Siberia Is announced in a wireless message frota the Kolchak goveraoient at Dwk, dated October . Food Hoarders Are Jailed.' Washington, Oct. 18.--Jail sentences and fines In two cases brought un <ler tjie food control act were reported to the department of justice by District Attorney John R. O'Connor of San Diego. Wales May Not Visit U. 8. London, Oct. 18--It Is quite in the cards that the visit of the prince of Wales to the United States may he abandoned owing to, President Wll son's continued lllfipp, I»J7 I Mali. , SLAYER OF CHILD IS HANGED Thomas Fitzgerald Pays Penalty for Crime «n the Gallows at • Chicago. Chicago. Oct. 20.--Thomas Fitzgerald. slayer of little .Tanet Wilkinson. Is dead. He was hanged for his crime in the Cook county jail. Fitzgerald was calm up to the moment when he went to th» gallows. A religious exaltation seemed to sustain liiin thrflugh the ordeal of the ^leath cell. AUSTRIA RATIFIES TREATY German Party Members, 8olid Against Pact, Alona Vote "No" on Proposition. j Vienna, Oct. 20.--liie Austrian National assembly ratified the peace treaty of St. Germain. The ratification was voted without debate. The German party alone opposed favorable action, that party being a unit In opposition. Prints News Without Tyfie. Los Angeles, Cal.. Oct. 21.--The Los Angeles Times appeared with a page of new? printed without type? Articles for the page Were typewritten, photographed and a sine etching made therefrom. I. & TROWS PUT TOWORK ON PIERS Regulars WTO Attempt t6 End X Congestion Caused by Longshoremen's Strike. ."V ' C .... : • ' ' •" MLLSHOJT IF NECESSARY .CUPID TIES CAN TO SIMPLE SEA DOG Sonora I t' Breton, wlt'e of the ambassador from Argentina, has Just reached Washington after a stay In Paris, where her husband represented his country at the peace conference. She is a member of a distinguished Argentine family pnd Is noted, for the quality of her entertainments. SAY PETROGRAD FALLS GUARDED STATEMENT ISSUED BY STATE DEPARTMENT. Same Report Says Kronstadt Also Has been Captured by the Anti- Bolshevists, • Washington, Oct. 20.--Petrograd has fallen, according to an official dispatch received and made public by the state department. Kronstadt has also been wrested from the bolsheviki. The announcement was made by Acting Secretary of State Phillips, but it was guarded in Its nature, because complete confirmation has not yet been received from the American diplomatic agent who is nearest Petrograd. The state department's announcement says: > * "The fall of Petrograd and the occupancy of both that city and Kronstadt by the Russiun white forces has been officially reported by the general staff of the Finnish army to the VIborg representative of the northwestern government of Russia." Mr. Phillips added that a direct dispatch received by the department from its representative nearest the oil Russian capital reports that the Finnish official announcement has not yet been officially corroborated from other sources. - The first message reporting the Finnish announcement was very brief. It came from Viborg. It followed uncon- 5rmerl reports which have come to the apartment through Swedish and Russian sources t£ the effect that the two cities had been taken from the bolshevik! by attacking forces under General , Yudenitch; and that with the fall of Fort Gafchlna. 3."> miles from Petrogi# d. on the way to Berlin, the collapse of the old cftpitol was inevitable. The bolsheviki a're now reported to be concentrating all their forces for a decisive struggle with General Denikine's troops in the south. Paris. Oct. 20.--Contradictory reports are received from Russia, and it is impossible to confirm rumors that Petrograd has been taken by the northwestern Russian arm;* under General Yudenitch. It seems certain, however, that the Yudenitch troops, are advancing and must be at th«». gates of the city, if they have not already taken it. • Newspapers here announce that General Mangln of the French ar iy has been nominated as chief of the lollies' mission to supervise the evacuation of the Baltic provinces by the German forces, which up to last week were under the command of General von der Goltz. They declare, howeveiy that the nomination li^s not been confirmed but that It seems probable that this or soihe other similar post has been offered to hfm. General Ma-gin Is understood not to Save maj)e?knowu his decision as yet-. NO "MADE IN GERMANY" NOW Old Familiar Label Is Left Off From Manufactured Goods--Symbol ^ Used. London, Oct? 20.--The <bnce familiar "made fti Germany" Is hot appearing on products of German manufacture which are finding their way Into continental markets since the armistice. An American salesman who has/Jfist returned to London from Italy Mis sev- 'eral samples of the goods Gernyxn firms are distributing there. Each bears some symbol but none the three old words. General Davison Says Soldiers Will Aid In Moving Transports or Wha^ ever Else Is Needed--Paker . Refuses to belay Action. New ¥ork, Oct. 22.--Five hundred' soldiers of the regular army were landed We're from the transport George Washington to attempt to end the congestion at the army piers in Brooklyn caused bjr the longshoremen's strike. The men are under orders "to shoot If necessary," according to a statement made by Brig. Gen. Peter Davison, chief of troop movement at the piort of embarkation. "The troops •will aid in moving transport or whatever else la neces-' sary," said General Davison. General Shanks deprecated Sensational rumors connected with the Use of troops, , "There are no machine guns with these men," he said, "and they are not to be used as soldiers in the ordinary sense of the term. There will be no"* shooting or anything Hke that. There are many foreigners among the strikers and their possibly limited understanding of the situation created by Ihese rumors may tend to make matters much worse than need be/', As the soldiers Were arriving -the police learned Incendiary circulars appealing for the establishment of a "workers' government like a soviet republic in Russia," were being _ distributed to the strikers. The. pamphlets read In part: "To striking longshoremen: A proclamation issued by {lie communist party' of America of Local Greater New York. "Sixty thousand longshoremen are on strike against the bosses, the government wage adjustment board nnd the scab unionism of the American Federation of Labor. Strike means victory. Arbitration means defeat. ' "Unite with the striking express drivers, stevedores, freight handlers, platform men and chauffeurs for one big industrial transport workers' union. ; "The government will send soldiers to take your places. Some already are doing the dirty work and 18,000 are on the way. How can you expect a square deal from the bosses' government? The -government will place soldiers at the piers with rifles and ma- ; tehine guns to shoot"you down. "The only way to get rid of the bosses' government Is to establish a workers' government like the soviet republic of Russia." The soldiers were landed at Hoboken ar.'l Immediately transferred to Governo. s island preliminary to duty at the army piers in Brooklyn. They comprised two battalions of the 12th regular Infantry, First division, which was first in trance and first In the lighting. Many had overseas chevrons and wound stripes. The troops were In command of Col. Meffe M. Cullison. who commanded tfle 28th infantry of the frlrst division In France and. received several decorations. He was greeted at the pier by Brigadier General Davison, who, when asked it more troops were coming, said that members of the 13th regiment at Camps Upton and Merritt, near by, would be brought here If necessary. The soldiers were outfitted with civilian working atthre. Asked whether the soldiers would carry arms when working, Maj. Gen. David C. Shanks, commanding the port of embarkation, said: 1 "If necessary an armed guard will be placed with them, but it is Impossible for a man to work and carry a ritfe." General Shanks added that no soldiers would work at commercial piers or do anything other than strictly government work. / Washington, Oct. 22. -- Secretary Baker refused the request of Mayor Hylan of New York to postpone the use* of troops at New York until further efforts could be made to settle the strike of longshoremen there. Mr. Baker said maintenance of army transport service out of New York was a part of the war operations of the gbvernment and that he intended to continue the operation of the ships. He added, however, that he was willing to co-operate with Mayor Hylan in any possible way "to bring about an adjustment of the strike difficulty." Cyclist Breaks Neck. Racine, Wis., Oct. 22.--Joseph Beyer, twenty-one, was killed when an automobile collided with a motorcycle which he was riding. His neck was broken. Pretty Girijhrows Gallant Cap- 5 Love Dream Into Dtfvy Jane*' Locker. - New York.--a' winsome lam Jrae about t6 faiss, but he raised hlshnfr with a smile, so she changed her mind -y-as does womankind--and decided to linger awhile. And thereby hangs the sad story of tjie wallop Cupid handed to Capt. Edgar Lucas Adaiqs of the Bailing ship Phyllis. The captain had been some fifteen months on tne water, without sight of women, gnd when he hitched his ship's halter to a tiepost at Erie basin-and stepped Ashore.youAfc woman fltt His Hat Willi a, Smll* Hps like ripe cherries and eyes abont -as large as sancers, who chanced by jgist then, looked good to Mm, wherefore the hat-raising episode. She, too, smiled. They eonVersed. ' She took him to her home In Brooklyn and introduced hir*to her mother and sisters. Everything was lovely; there wasn't a cloud in sight. Soon they became engaged. Captain Adams and Mildred Coffee, who, he said, went to his head \Jke a stronger drink. The sailorman's next move, he said today In court, was to give her $600 to redeem a diamond ring she ha«l pledged. It was to have been their engagement ring. „ "And then what did she do but tell me she couldn't marry me," declared Captain Adams. "She Said her bus-* band mightn't like it." -- Down crashed the sailorman's knrc dream to Davy Jonas' Ipcker. '. ,W : . . •>' Chaplain for 200 Sofdiem Washington, Oct. 21.--An army chaplain must accompany every transport carrying mora than 200 soldiers. Secretary Baker instructed officials of the Hoboken embarkation headquarters. Irish Prisoners to Go Free. Dublin, Oct. 20.--Thei lord ttukyor has been informed thnt all the Irish political prisoners in Mount Joy prison will be liberated Immediately. This is the outcome of their~hunger strike, it was explained. ' U. S. to 8ell $500,000 Leather. Washington, Oct. 20.--The war department announced an ayctlon sale of approximately $500,000 worth of leather to be held November 14 at the office of the zone surplus property ot< • fleer io Chicatf). Flyer Crosses Alps. Paris. Oct. 20.--Lieutenant Poulet, the French aviator who started from Issy-Les-Moulineaux Tuesday on a flight' to Melbourne, Australia, arrived at Romrf at the aviation "field vof Centocelle. Flag# to Be Preserved. London. Oct. 20.--The admiralty has apnounced that flag? flown by British ships in battle are to be preserved and placed in suitable position on their ships. Lutheran 8ynod4 Merged. ;Rockford, 111., Oct. 20.--Merger of the northern, central, southern and Chicago district synods, the organization to be known as the Itlinols state synod, was effected at the northern Illinois Evangelical synod convention. Germans Arrive in Brazil. Rio Janeiro, Brazil, Oct. 20.--Among the passengers of the Dutch liner Hollandla, arriving here, were 406 former German officers and soldiers. Of these 28 will remain 1n Brazil, while til* remainder will go to Argentina. /• Awaits Senate Action. Washington, Oct. 22. -- American troops will not be used to police Silesia or any other country for which a plebiscite is proposed until the treaty of Versailles has been ratified by the senate, Secretary Baker announced. Yvt Men Die' In Swift Fire.. Iowa Falls, la.. Oct. 22--Two men were killed, another may die^and several others were more or less seriously injured, following two' explosions in a fire which destroyed the produce plant of Swift & Co., here. \ Curb on 8ugar Profiteers. Washington, Oct. 22.--Beet sugar refiners were notified by the department of justice that a charge for sugar In excess of 10 cents a pound wholesale would be considered ill violation of the food'control act. Autolat Slayer la Prison. Milwaukee, Oct. 22.--Hudson Montgomery. who was found guilty of killing Mrs. William Blanchard^ one of three persons, by his automobile, was taken to Waupun to begin four- Chose His P&Hbearers, " 1 Then Committed Suicide ] yVHliam Heller of Newark* N. f J., visited severqJ_j?f his friends, f one day recently and requested ? tlj^m to act as pallbearers at liis j funfrat, which he said wouM I probably be held soon. They 4 thought he was joking and 1 assured him they would aftsent | to his wishes. i The next morning Mr. Heller's | wife found him asphyxiated !n f the parlor of their home. During | the night he arose from the bed, f went Into the parlor closed the 2 door and .stuffed the keyhole ! with paper. The gas was turned,, • on. Hfe was prdno'unced a Wi- ',4 clde. ' • _i J , . «. «... BEE'S STING HURTS THREE Pe*iy Pricked, Runs Away Throwing Out Three Boys Who Are Se- * riously Injured.'/ Stamford, Cohn.--One of the dangers of country life was brought home to the two young •ons of Judge Charles D. Lockwood. former assistant district attorney In N£w York city, nnd law partner of Homer S. Cummings. chairman of the Democratic national committee. A bee stung a pony they were driving near their home in Noroton, and the pony ran away, throwing out the Lockwood boys. Walter and Davenport, and their friend. William Bouton. All were Injured badly. 8nakf Has Two Feet. Waynesboro, Pa.--A copperhead tnnke with two well-formed feet was killed by Ira L. Kaetzel at the foot of the Blue Ridge mountains. The reptile measured two feet fou^ Inches In lengt^ The feet are located abo*»t six Inches from the tip of the tall. The legs are three and three-quarters Inches In length. The feet are round, about twice the size of the legs, and are covered with a hard gristle. The frank has been preserved in a!cOh»L He Obeyed Orders. Sab Francisco.--Mrs. George Voelker wants a divorce because George was too obedient. Quarrels always ended by her ordering him to'leave home, she said--and one day he.obeyed orders. •hell 8hock Gave Lust tfl Kill. Berlin.--Josef • Rltter. a German miner, has been sentenced to death six times for as many murders. Before the court he explained that during the battlte of Piave he suffered a terrific shell shock and now occasionally feels an uncontrollable lust to kill. NERVES GATE OUT Serious Kidney Trouble Had Made Life Hiserable, But Doan't Removed All the Trouble. Hasn't Suffered Since. . 1Sad such S(>vere pains in my •*vf Wt s I n v? AIrs Albert Akroyd, "X? « I',(;inna Avenue, Philadel- (JDlfl, Pfl„ thnt they fllniost me up. Many a day I coulrl not do uiy housework and at every move it seemed as if my back would break in two. My feet and ankles swelled until I had to wear largesized slippers and sometimes I couldn't stand tip. "I had dizzy spells and dreadful heada c h e s a n d f i e r y flashes passed be- Mn. Akroyd fore my eyes. Had a heavy weight been resting on my head, the pain could not have been more distressing. The least noise startled me, I was so nervous. I couldn't control the kidney secretions and the pain in passage was awful. "It began to look as though my case was beyond the reach of medicine until I used Doan's Kidney Pills. The first box benefited me and four boxes cured ali the troubles. I have had no further cause for complaint." Sworn to before mel Thos. H. Walters, Nornr# PuhH*. GttD<wii'«c?AarStar«,Wt»B<n DOAN'S VZ1V F03TER-MILBURN CO„ BUFFALO, N. Y. want a letter from every man and woman who la afflicted with Bhenmatism. Lumbago I or Neuralgia, (lying me their name and addrew. so 1 ~»T! send each one Free a One Dollar ' bottle of my Rheumatlo Remedy. I want to convince erery Rhenmatlc sufferer at my expense that my R hen ma tie Remedy does what thoaaands of so-called rem- VS edies bure failed to ac- \ eompllsh. I feel sore of |J\lt and I want every I* Hheumatto sufferer to <\V know it and be sure of it 1/ before giving me a penny ' profit. Don't, try to coax Rheumatism out through the feet or skin with plasters or canning metal contrivances. Don't try to fMss'i out with liDimcnts, electricity or magnetism. Don't try to imagine it out with mental science, row must drive it out. it Is In the blood and you munt go after it. This Is just what I belie've Kuhn's Remedy will do, and that Is why It relieves Rueumatlsm, I believe that Rheumatism comes from Uric Acid In the blood, and Uric Acid and Kuhn's Rheumatic Remedy cannot, live together In the same blood. The RhtumaiUm has to go If you want to be free from pain and suffering. My Remedy relieves the sharp, shooting palna, dull, aehlng muscles, hot, throbbing, swollen lirabs, and stiffened joints, and relieves them quickly. I CAN PROVE IT all to you If you will only let me do it. I will prove touch in one week. If you will only write and ask my Company to send you adolUr bottle FKBB, according to the following offer, I don't care what form of Rheumatism you have or how long you have had H. I don't care what other remedies you have used. If you bave not used mine you don't know what area! rheumatic remedy will do. Ilnnl (nir n«er f p ^ JJ be/mii and urnii A / » & /or it at, once- /, / Dollar Bottle Free We do not send a small sample vlnl. containing only a thimbleful and of nopracticnl value, but a full-sizeii brittle, sellingregu 1 n rly at drug-stores for One Dollar each. This bottle 1s heavy and wte must pay Untfle Sam to carry It to yourdoor. Yott must send in 25 cents to pay postage, mailing case and packing, and this full-sized One Dollar Bottle will be promptly sent you, free, everything prepaid. There will benofMnp to pay on receipt or later. Don't waltnntil your Heart Valves are Injured by Rheumatic poison, but send today and get a One Dollar Bottle free. Only one bott 1 e free to n family and on ly to those Who lend 25 cents for charges. Dept. W* la KUHN REMEDY COMPANY 1888 Milwaukee Avenus Chicago, Ms. w MEN WHO COULD SELL GOLDDOLLARS FOR 90* \ WONDERFULrewcarburetcr f\ (or Ford Cars that is guaranx teed to give 50% to 100% more mileage and to start in zero weather without heating or priming, is M easy to sell as gold dollars at each. We have it and sell it with legal money-back guarantee that IS days trial will prove our claims, l'rice only $23.50. Easy to install and easy to adjust. Simplest and ipost economical carbureter eveff lie vised. Nothing to get out of order. Every Ford owner a customer. Enormous demand. Exclusive territory to agents who can carry small •tock. No Special experience necessary. Thi» carbureter sells itself. Hustler can make $10.000a year or more. Investigate! Write now.C.W. Wm fto. Eceaemy Carbureter Oh, Dept. 1 MUw.uk^Wfc GRACE HOTEL CHICAGO: Jackson Boulevard and Clark Street Rooms with detached batli 11.00 and $1.50 per day. Rooms wilb private bath $1.50 and Sl.00. Opposite Post Office -- Near All Theatres and Stores Stock yards cars run direct to the door. A clean, comfortable, newly decorated hotel. A safe place for your wife, mother or sister. MONTANA'S FINEST RANCH. ISIS crop: 80 bunbeiH Corn. Kb Oats, fine Alfalfa, well Irrigated, near city. SO new modern bnltd- Ings }:!5 per acre; Includes 1.00(1 bead stock, new (20.000 farm equipment Ne«?d partner O# sell all 4 smaller farms. 8en<1 for pho- IH Klctriand Meadows Kancb. Sidney. UasL Ford Owner Agents Wanted--We manufacture Ford necessity which sells on sight. Do you wart to make $100 week? Others make more Motor Products Co., Indianapolis. Ind. BRONCHITIS SUFFERERS-Quick and positive relief. "LANT0F, the world's greatest discovery.. Satisfaction or no pay. Aw druggist or write Boy 1.1 Co., 2100 Slrsrd Avenue, South, Deal. (, Minneapolis, Distinction. "Did you go up Mount Washington?** "Oh, yes; we stayed overnight at the summit." "I suppose you lived "high?" "Yes, we had a tip-top supper," BOSCHbE'S SYRUP. - -- -- In these days of unsettled weather look out for colds. Take every precaution against the dreaded influenza and at the first sneeze remember that Boschee's Syrup has been^ised for fifty-three years in all parts of the United States for coughs, bronchitla and colds, throat irritation and especially for lung troubles, giving the patient a«good night's rest, free from coughihg, with easy expeetoration In the morning. Made in America and kept a I a household panacea in the homes of thousands of families all over the civilized world. Try* one bottte and accept no substitutes.--Adv. Does the Next Best Thing. "What do you do when you want t® pall your husband's hair? He la as bald as an egg." • ' • ' uHe hnsn't shed either of his <an yet. has he?" . Bagdad is famous for Its breed of white asses. Their e$rs and tails are sometimes colored n brijrht red. - -- teen-year senfcenr , Meanest Thief. York.--New York** meanest thief was revealed today. He stole $7.- 000 In Liberty bonds from the safe of St. Agnes chapel--the life savings I ef the 70-year-old sexton. m TOUR EVES Vfltfht and Morals#. Mm Strong, Healthy Eym. If they Tire, Itch, Smart or Burn, if Sore^ Irritated, Inflar.ied or ursuiilstEd, use Murine often. Soothes* Refreshes. Safe for Infant or Adult. At all Druggists. Writefor PfeeeEye Book. ObImEi* tarty Cah,aiHp 1 AfcJtefe