THE McHJRNRY PUINDEAIJSR, KeHSNKT, 114* , * W1U.IAM LEROY EMMET. ir* Leaders Working on Program 'of Compensation for Jlj LiQuor Dealers*. :v^ 60,000,000 Itovernment May iMue Treasury Certificates In Payment for Stock Held :;H Bended Warehouses and Salt « for Legitimate Uses. ~r"tTjN! Washington, .Tan. 20.--Prohibition leaders are working out a comprehensive program for reimbursing the owners of intoxicating liquor for the losses sto be sustained under constitutional prohibition. ' A proposal has been submitted to the treasury department by some of the prohibitionists in congress which provides that the government shall purchase all the liquors now being held Sunder bond, amounting to about 60,- ©00,000 gallons. Treasury certificates would be issued for the liquor and these liquidated only as the government finds legitimate uses for this large amount of bonded spirits. From ten to twenty years, prohibition leaders estimate, will be required to use up this stock legitimately--such as for medicinal, scientific or industrial purposes. The fact that many banks, holders of warehouse certificates for government bonded liquor, will be large losers unless some relief is granted, is drawing support for the program. Prohibitionists believe the plan will provide for a stricter and more economical enforcement of prohibition and decrease much of the antagonism throughout the country to the dry era. The disposition of the liquor now in bond has been put up to congress squarely by the internal revenue bureau. Extra guards are being placed around all bonded warehouses> by the prohibition enforcement division of the bureau. The government must guard all this liquor, and under the present system the expense is fast mounting up Into tiie several millions. The new program contemplates the1 concentration of this liquor in several large bonded warehouses, so that its distribution for illegal purposes can oe prevented absolutely. At present it is stored in 250 government and about 175 private warehouses, thus requiring a small army to guard it. A few radical prohibitionists in congress favor the immediate destruction of all this liquor, but others point out that a small supply for medicinal purposes will be needed always. Refund by the government of taxes paid en liquors held in bond which the owners have been unable to sell or dispose of, redemption by the government of unused tax stamps purchased to be placed on such liquors, and purchase by the government of all liquors in bond are provided by a bill introduced in the house by Representative Sabath of Dlinois. As its enactment would result In a heavy drain on the treasury, which the I Republican leaders are now determined to prevent wherever possible, it is not believed that the legislation will receive favorable consideration at thla session. Wholesale arrests of bootleggers »U over the country were predicted here by John F. Kramer, federal prohibition commissioner. "With thousands of detectives at work all over the country," said Kra mer, "we plan drastic and quick measures to make the law effective." With the appointment of the ten department commissioners for prohibition enforcement, the government's machinery to be created under the eighteenth amendment to the Constitution was practically completed. GASTON. WorfdUnion Formally Started in Foreign Office. at Pans. »e-. PROTEST FROM William LeRoy Emmet has been awarded the Edison medal for 1910 fcr meritorious achievement In electrical science. His most notable recent achievement was the designing of the electric propulsion machinery for the battleships New Mexico and California. He also designed the electrical machinery for the collier Jupiter, the first naval vessel to be electrically propelled. U. S. MARINES IN FIGHT AMERICANS AND GENDARMERIE REPEL ATTACK IN HAYTI. Yanks Pursue Out Taw* Outside the Capital--150 Rebels Are Killed or Captured. Washington. Jan." 17.--Utalted States marines and Haytian gendarmerie repelled an attack on Port au Prince, the Haytian capital, by a force of 300 bandits, more than half of whom were killed, wounded or captured after being pursued outside the city, the navy department was advised. The casualties of the marines were two privates wounded, according to the report of the engagement received at the navy department today from Col. J. H. Russell, commanding the marine forces and gendarmerie In Haiti. The bandit force. Colonel Russell said, approached Port au Prince In three columns, which immediately were met and driven back. Certain revolutionary elements of the city attempted to join the bandits In the assault, he said, adding that he believed the fate of the attacking forces should be "sufficient to prevent an early repetition of the assault." Honolulu, T. H., Jan. 17.--The Japanese foreign office has announced that a formal note will be sent to China asking the appointment of a commission to negotiate with Japan regarding the restoration of Shantung, according to a Tokyo cable dispatch to the Nlppu Ulii, a Japanese language newspaper here. FIND HUGE U. S. SHIP GRAFT U. S. CHARGE NOW IN BERLIN Commissioner to Take Charge of .^Jpprisan Affairs While Awaiting . Formal Peace. ' Berlin, Jan. 20.--The Zelttmg am Mittag says Ellis L. Dresel, acting com missioner and charge d'affaires of the United States at Berlin, has arrived In Berlin to take charge of American Interests until the senate at Washing •Mm lias ratified the peace trea||y Jellicoe Is Called Hom^ ' Rio Janeiro, Brazil, Jan. 20.--Ad miral Viscount Jellicoe has received an urgent call to England and ftp that reason has canceled his visit to Brazil and Argentina. Government Is Defrauded Out of Bll- HRi* Dollars by Pacific Cost Contractors. San Francisco, Jan. 17.--Frauds Involving more than $1,000,000,000 In connection with the building of ships for the government in Oregon, Washington and California have been unearthed by government investigators, it became known when William H. Tidwell, special agent of the treasury department, was appointed chief assistant to Special Assistant United States Attorney General Bert Schleslnger here. The government, According to Information from authoritative sources, is alleged to have been defrauded through shipyard conspiracies worked by the payment of false vouchers for sums that shipbuilders obtained Illegally. It Is understood that Attorney General Palmer, on the strength of the scope of the alleged discoveries of graft, has ordered the United States shipping board to hold up claim^ approximating $37,000,000 to await the outcome of the Investigation. • HARRY S. NEW FOUND GUILTY tl." Mrs. William Rockefeller Dies. i • Brunswick, Ga., Jan. 20.--Mrs. William Rockefeller is dead at the Rockefeller winter home on Jekyl island, ,.,|^rl*eve. • . New French President, _ ?>i Versailles, France. Jan. 20.--I'aul Pesclianel was elected president of France by the national assembly here. He received 724 votes. The session was called to order by Lon Bourgeois, president of the chamber. I?:** Y Release Joseph C. Virgo. Xawton, Mich., Jan. 20.--Joseph C. Virgo, who for six weeks has been held In the county jail charged with complicity In the death of Maude Tabor Virgo, bis fifth wife, was released from custody. Son of Indiana 8enator Convicted of Second Degree Murder--Jury Was Out for Forty-Five Hours. Los Angeles, Cal., Jan. 17.--Harry S. New was found guilty of second degree murder. The jury was out forty-five hours. New was charged with shooting to death Miss Freda Lesser, his fiancee. , . Leon Bourgeois, Presiding Officer, in Addressing the Council, Expresses Bcgret at Absence of United , , •States at the Opening* Parts, Jan. 19.--Representatives of France, Great Britain, Italy, Greece, Belgium, Spain, Japan and Brazil, members of the council of the League of Nations, met in the "clock" room of the French foreign office for the first meeting in the history of the league. The council organized at 10:80 o'clock by electing Leon Bourgeois chairman and confirming the choice of Sir Eric Drummond of Great Britain as g«*ieral secretary. The first official act of the council was the appointment of a commission to trace upon the spot the frontiers of the territory of the Sarre basin. The council received its first formal protest to be presented to it almost before it came into being with today's Initial session. The protest was from the envoys of the elected government of the Irish Republic" against "the unreal English 8imulance of an international league of peace." Leon Bourgeois, French representative, who presided, said: The task of presiding at this meeting and inaugurating this great international institution should have fallen to President Wilson. We respect the reasons which still delay final decision by our friends in Washington, but express the hope that their difficulties soon wili be overcome and that a representative of the great American republic will occupy the place awaiting him among us. The work of the council will then assume definite character and will have that particular force which should be associated with our work. "January 16, 1920, will go down In history as the date of the birth of a new world. Decisions to be reached will be in the narqe of all nations adhering to the first covenant of the league. It will be the first decree of all free nations leaguing themselves together, fpr the first time in the world to sub* stitute right for might. But the organization of the League of Nations will not be complete until tfie assem-, bly of all the states meets." Earl Curzon* British secretary of state for foreign affairs,.and that nation's representative on the council of the league, said: On behalf of the British empire, I desire to express the loyalty of my government and the external dominions of the British crown to the spirit underlying the covenant of the League of Nations. It Is our Intention, by every means In our power, to Insure Its practical efficiency. It is our firm belief that through its instrumentality alone, we can hope to insure that such miseries as the world has experienced during the last five years shall not be repeated and that a new era of international relationship shall dawn. "The League of Nations is an expression of the universal desire for saner methods of regulating affairs of mankind, and provides machinery by which practical effect may be given the principles of international friendship and good understanding. The success of the labors of the peace conference is a good augury for the future of the League of Nations. For the first time an attempt was made to bring together under the auspices of the league representatives of governments, employers and labor, and an advance exceeding the results of the entire work of the previous quarter of a century has been made in the field of international action on industrial questions." All the members of the council called for by the covenant of the league, with the exception of the representatives of the United States, were present when M. bourgeois called the meeting to order. After the appointment of the comthissioners, M. Bourgeois proposed London as the place for the next meeting of the council, and this was approved. Lord Curzon suggested leaving the date and the order of business open, to be decided by the chairman and the secretary, since, he said, "It will be necessary to consult the United States on a great many questions likely to arise." V Spaniards Whip Moroccans. IKadrid, Jan. 19.--Positions held by Insurrectionary Moroccan tribesmen at ©e Anyera have been stormed and 'captured by Spanish troops and friendly natives, according t6 * dispatch from Tetuan. K., , Four Die In Explosion. Vast Chicago, Ind., Jan. 19.--Four f taen were burned to death by boiling oil and about twenty others were Injured when a coke still exploded at the plant of the Sinclair Ott Banning company here. Winnipeg Dailies 8uspand. - Winnipeg, Can., Jan. 19.--Because of the shortage of newsprint the three daily papers of this city announced that they would suspend publication The three editorial staffs will unite in issuing a one-page paper- Alleged Forger Is Held." fit. Paul, Minn., Jan. 19.--I. D. Cornish of Rochester, Minn., was arrested here by United States secret service agents charged with forging federal treasury checks Issued to disabled soldiers in Minnesota. Paper of One Column In Antwerp. Brussels, Belgium, Jan. 16,--Ant werp newspapers have decided to pub llsh a single column paper, to be called La Press d'Anvers. The combined issud will appear as a result of the strike of typesetters. Miss Lucy Page Gaston of Chicago, famous as the foe of the clgaret, wants to run for president on a platform of which the chief plank, Is: "It Is Imperative that the manufacture, sale and giving away of clgarets or cigaret papers be absolutely prohibited." BRITAIN FACES WAR? LOAIDON FEAR8 NEW C9NFL.IC1 p WITH RUSSIAN RED%; Cabinet and Military Chiefs Callikl to J**rta 'or Conference on A#* k-,V Situation. Before peace with Germany is a week old the British public has been brought up sharply against the possibility of another war. Winston Spencer Churchill, secretary of war; Walter Hume Long, first lord of the admiralty; Baron Beatty, commander of the grand fleet, and Field Marshal Sir Henry H. Wilson, chief of the Imperial staff, left London having been hurriedly summoned to Paris for a consultation with Premier Lloyd George and other British officials there on important military and naval matters. This summons Is inevitably connected in the public mind with the semiofficial statement published, calling attention to the threatening situation in the middle East as a result of bolshevik military successes, which have given the soviets virtual mastery of the whole of European Russia, for although it is not yet confirmed that tiny have entered Odessa, It is believed It cannot be long before they are In full possession of the coast regions in that vicinity. By their victories the bolshekivi have obtained command of enormous supplies of food, raw materials, coal and rolling stock and other means of tmiieportatlon of which they formerly were In need. Bolsheviki Occupy Odessa. Basel, Jan. 19.--Odessa, the chief port of Russia on the Black sea, has been occupied by the bolsheviki, according to newspaper dispatches received here. 30,000 Prisoners "Lost" Paris, Jan. 20.--Thirty thousand Roumanian prisoners In Germany huve disappeared, according to a telegram from Bucharest to Red Cross headquarters here and an investigation is £eing mad£. Allies Demand Kaiser. Paris, Jan. 20.--The supreme conn cil's letter to the Dutch government demanding the extradition of former Emperor William has been sent to that government. It was forwarded officially. MANY KILLED IN BERLIN RIOTS Members of Radical Mob Shot Down by Machine Quns When They Try to 8torm Reichstag. Berlin, Jan. 15.--Minister of Defense Noske showed his teeth to the radicals again when machine guns were turned on a mob of communists and independent socialists who attempted to storm the reichstag. A furious battle on the very steps of the reichstag was the climax to a demonstration of a mob (if radicals estimated at 30,000 who had left factories and shops at noon and poured through Unter den Linden and the Tiergarten to the parliament building in order to protest against the so-called "Betriebsraete- gesetz," a bill that would place the workkmen's councils in the various industries on a legal basis. Twenty of the mob are dead and more than one hundred wounded. NEW PRESIDENT FOR FRANCE Paul Deschanel, Head of Chamber of Deputies, Wins High Honoi^Millerand Succeeds Clemenceau. Versailles, France, Jan. 19.--Paul Deschanfel was elected president of France by the national assembly here. He received 724 votes. The session was called to order by Leon Bourgeois, president of the chamber. There were comparatively few members absent. Paris, Jan. 19.--The cabinet of Premier Clemenceau resigned. President Poincare asked Alexandre Mlllerand, governor of Alsace, to form a new cabinet, which he agreed to do after conferences with M. Poincare, Paul Deschanel, the newly elected president of the French republic, and Leon Bourgeois, president of the national assem' bly. The outgoing ministry has been In office since November 16, 1917. Secretary Daniels Stys Safety v of Yanks Was Department's^ Highest Duly. EVERT ORDER OPEN T01J6HT Declares Sims' Policy Was to Divert Convoys to Guard Merchandi*#<-- A^ms May Have to . •" 'Navy Trial Board, i 1 * Washington, Jan. 21.--There wlft t»' a complete and full investigation by the senate of the charges made by Admiral William S. Sims against the conduct and naval policy of Secretary Daniels during the war. The investigation was ordered by the full committee on naval affairs of the senate at a meeting called b£ Chairman Page. The subcommittee now probing the manner In which awards for distinguished service during the war wete made will conduct the inquiry as soon as the matters relating to the awards are finished. Meanwhile a court of Inquiry is in sight for Admiral Sims if the congressional Inquiry does not go to the bottom of all the charges made by the admiral, "and his motives In attacking the naval administration, of which in time of war jthe president Is the actual and active head," Secretary Daniels let it be known. Chairman Hale said the committee would not complete Its Investigation of naval decorations In less than ten days. Unless the senate investigation of Rear Admiral Sims' charges of failure of the navy department to co-operate fully with the allies during the war Is made to the entire satisfaction of the American people, an inquiry will be made by ' a naval board. Secretary Daniels announced. He added that "no organization in the history of the world ever did a betteT job than the American navy." While refusing to discuss Admiral Sims' letter of criticism of the department, Mr. Daniels Indicated the admiral frequently clashed with the department through his insistence that more destroyers be withrawn from troop convoys to augment the antisubmarine forces in European waters. "The paramount duty of the American navy," Mr. Daniels declared, "was to protejct the passage of American troops to Europe and the safeguarding of merchant shipping, vital as that was recognized to be, necessarily was secondary." Secretary Daniels emphasised that, contrary to the popular impression, Admiral Sims throughout the war was subordinate to Admiral Mayo, commander In chief of the Atlantic fleet. He Indicated that on the question of the distribution of destroyer strength as well as on other questions Admiral Sims was overruled by Admiral Mayo as well as the department. "Every naval order, every document bearing on the navy's war activities," Mr. Daniels continued, "is open to the light of day, and the more thoroughly the entire record is laid before the people of this country the greater the pride they can have In the achievement of their navy. The country will be entirely reassured." Secretary Daniels said that in the first summer of the war, Admiral Sims was given the title of commander of the United States haval forces In European waters, hut that as a matter of fact "his duties were not afloat." "The business of Rear Admiral Sims was to obey orders," declared the Secretary. "His duties were to make recommendations, give us all the Information and all the facts and 4hen carry out instructions from the department. . 'The country and the world know already that the Job of the navy was very well dyne. Whether on the 27th of June or the 27th of July, or some particular date, we should or should qot have sent so many destroyers to a certain place, or whether they could be made ready at that time, or whether It was Important to retain some to protect our coasts, were, of course, matters of naval strategy. There may be differences of opinion between naval officers as to these matters, but there is nothing about this big job the navy did that I am not willing but gfad and happy for all the people in Americato know about." Portland, Me., Jan. 21.--"I did not say that our navy was a 'floating death trap' in my speech at Boston," Maj. Gen. Leonard Wood said when informed that he would be asked to appear before the house naval committee to explain his statement quoted to that effect "What I did say was that the ships that were filled with untrained men in battle were floating death traps." I ILLINOIS | State News it Italy Decorates Americana. Washington, Jan. 20.--Eleven Amert can army and navy officers, Red Cross and other officials, have been awarded decorations by the king of Italy, which are now being delivered through the Italian consul. Ship Named by Mrs. Wilson. Philadelphia, Jan. 17.--The 7,825- ton cargo carrier Clearwater, Hog island's eighty-first vessel, which was named by Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, was launched there. Alas Eleanor Davles of Washington was the sponsor. Ex-8oldier 8hot Down In Duel. Phoenix, Ariz., Jan. 16.--Rivalry for a girl's hand was responsible for the shooting of Henry O'Brien, recently discharged from the British army, and the arrest of Dr. Thomas Campbell of Wickenburg. Townley Asks for New Trial. Jackson, Minn., Jan. 17.--Attorneys for President A. C. Townley of the National Nonpartisan league and Joseph Gilbert, league organizer, convicted of disloyalty last summer, Aled a motion for a new trial. 'r Mexico 8eeks Colonists. • San Antonio, Tex., Jan. 20.--Two thousand Hungarian colonists are to be granted land by the Mexican government, according to a Mexico City dispatch to a Mexican newspaper published here. Seven Die in Fireworks Blaze. Alx Les Bains, France, Jan. 19v--• Sfven persons were killed and many Injured In an explosion In a fireworks factory here. Thi^e adjoining factories were destroyed and the walls of a number of houses were oraeked. Mines Are Scattered by Storm. Blockholm, Jan. 19.--Many marine mines, which were carried away by the heavy storm which has prevailed over the North sea for several days, Bre flfatlnfe through the Senndlnnvl^t} straits, according to report' Warship Entertains in 8paln. Valencia, Spain, Jan. 21.--Officers of the United States battleship North Dakota entertained the governor, captain general and a large number of citizens on board the warship. The .Neftb Dakota will sail for Gibraltar.. DOWTHING a ,1 Two Perish in Fire. * Calgary, Alberta, Jan. 21.--Two mefi were suffocated, five firemen were Injured and a loss sustained of nearly a half a million dollars, in a fire which destroyed the Empire and Grand Central hotels and three stores here. Caryl B. 8torrs Dies of Wound. Minneapolis, Jan. 21. -- Caryl B. Storrs, dramatic critic of the Minneapolis Tribune for twenty years, who was found in his room here with a bullet wound In his head, died without recovering consciousness. ., Plght Partition of Turkey. Constintinople, Jan. 21. -- Protests against the reported intention of the peace conference to dismember the Turkish empire and to internationalize this city were voiced a* a **«at mass meeting bere. J " - . . 4* -«• , -W' \ . ininnmniimntf it» Chleago.--One hundred and fifty miles of newly paved streets Is Chicago's program for the ye^r. Freeport.--Rabbits are dying by thousands throughout nflrtherp Illinois, hunters say, as a result of the long-continued cold weather and the deep snow. East Mollne.--Citizens of East Moline want a new name for the city. The name suggested is that of Deere, in honor of John Deere, the pioneer implement manufacturer. Decatur.--Macon county is the first in Illinois to possess a woman for the position of circuit clerk and recorder. Miss Lelah Foster, who has been deputy, has been appointed to the position by Judge Whitfield. Mount Vernon.--What Is, declared by lawyers and judges to be the first advance of its kind In the history of the itate of Illinois was the appointment of Mrs. Julia E. Rutherford as one of three commissioners in a suit for the partition of land. Centralla.--Preparations for the first dairy show to bo held in southern Illinois, January 20, 21 and 22, are about complete. On those dates the Illinois State Dairymen's association will hold Its annual conventloli in Centralla. Many prominent dairymen speakers will address the convention, according to announcement - Chicago.--The city council license, committee engaged in seeking to fill the gap left by the loss of saloon license fees decided, as one alderman said, that "what's sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander," and adopted a resolution to license reform organizations. The resolution proposing a tax on reform bodies of not less than $50 was unanimously adopted. Chicago.--A hundred per cent increase In the number of new cases of infliieifta during the last week caused Health Commissioner John Dill Robertson to take energetic measures to prevent a recurrence of the epidemic In Chicago. An outbreak of the disease at the Great Lakes naval training station, where many cases are under treatment forced the naval health authorities to quarantine the station and cancel all leaves. Camp Grant, Rockford.--Soldiers will be taught to be farmers here in the "University of Khaki," according to orders issued, adding agriculture courses to the camp school's curriculum. The courses are designed to fit men for farm agents, county agents, stock breeders and creamery managers. A farm has been selected within the reservation and it will be fully equipped with the different breeds of live stock and a full line of farm machinery. Waukegan.--The Northern Illinois Poultry Fanciers' association, contrary to the custom of many years, this winter will not hold its annual exhibition at Waukegan. George H. Bairstow, president, declared that there are not enough birds in the district to make a creditable show. M. P. Dilger, veteran fancier and leader In the association, states that since tfc war feed has gone so high chicken raisers have thinned down their flocks. - Danville. -- Vermilion county may become an important sheep center If plans adopted by 100 boys in McKendree township are carried out. These boys, ranging in age from sixteen to twenty years, have each signed a note to cover the purchase of a ewe and the youths will endeavor to raise a flock of sheep with the ewe as the nucleus. The plan Is part of the Junior extension service of the University of Illinois. Next fall there will be an1 exhibit of the sheep, with $100 for first prize. It is proposed to organize similar clubs in every Illinois county. Peoria.--Peoria, where alcohol once was king, is quickly forgetting its old ruler. The Municipal hotel, anent the city jail, whose berths were nightly filled with weak individuals with craving for strong drink back in 1917 and 1918, no more houses the delin quents in such proportion as in the days of yore. Police records show the least number of intoxicants in the last two months than in the history of the bastile. Cobwebs are actually forming in the cells. The cause? Prohibition and the "good-natured" alcohol concoction. The poison booze perhaps had more to do with it than anything else, says- Chief of Police Rlioades. Even the old "soaks" won't drink any more because they are afraid of It, he says. And the arldness Is sort of cleaning the city's morals. "Crime of every sort has shown a remarkable decrease since prohibition went Into effect," Chief Rhoades said. "And I venture to say the morals of the city have improved 100 per cent." Danville.--Up to date, Justice Henry Hall of this city has married 2,765 couples. He has seryed the township as Justice for 42 years and Is believed to have served longer in this capacity and married a greater number of people than any other similar official la the state. Duquoin.--Typhoid fever Is raging In Zelgler, a small town near here. Each week brings In the report of many new cases. Scarlet fever and diphtheria have also broken out there, and the mayor has Issued a proclamation ordering every one vaccinated. The city's water will be Investigated. Effingham.--The First National bank of Effingham changed hands when the heirs of the late Joseph Partridge sold a controlling interest to nine Effingham business men for $65,000. This Is the largest bustness deal ever made in the county. Aurora.--A herd of wild deer has been seen at Bald Mound near heret The surprised farmer who made the discovery informed a state deputy game warden who warned that any one hunting the deer would be prosecuted. The deer are not from any of the privately owned lodges county, Investigation show* Kit my fi>MMIIIIII!||||||l By LydiaL Pkldkaa's VcfetaiU CMppani Wis.--"After the birth of ldrerj j had displacement aai was so weak I couldn't do anything I found a book about Lydia E. Pinkfa a m's Vegetable C o m p o u n d s o thought I would try it, ami after taking it I soon felt better. That was fifteen years agQ and I have felt well ever Isince except that 1 had a slight attack of the trouble some time ago and took some more of your Compound and was soon all right again. I always recommend your medicine and you may publish my testimonial for the benefit of other women. "--Mrs. JTJIJES BERO, Jr., £. 1, Box 99, Casco, Wis. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Con* pound, made fromnatfoeroots and herbs, contains no narcotic or harmful and today holds the record of bein^1 most successful remedy for female ilia In this country, and thousands of voluntary testimonials prove this fact If you have the slightest doubt t&aft Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will be!o you, write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential) Lynn, Mass., for advice. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by ft woman, and held in strict confidence. False Teeth Held Firmly in Placo Prevents Sore Gump Promotes Mouth Hygiea* Brings Health and Cenfect At leading druggists J everywhere, 35c, or Send 10 cents for trial sample Corega Laboratory, Cleveland, O. Si ITCH! noney mck without QtltltfOtt if HUNT'S SALVE fall* la th« treatment of ITCH, KCZKKA, RING WOBM,TETTER or other itching akin dlaeaae*. Price 7Hc at drupfflats, or direct from 1.1. IMnttft MMm C*.,Sk«nn«,Tn. 8arcasm. Father (sternly)--Toung mattf $ saw you put your arm around my daughter, last night Youth--I suppose you noticed how) she struggled, too.--^Stanford Chapaivj ralf GREEN'S AUGUST FLOWER. \ Constipation invites other troubles which come speedily unless quickly checked and overcome by Green's August Flower which is a gentle laxative, regulates digestion both In stomach and intestines, cleans and sweetens the stomach and alimentary canal, stimulates the liver to secreto the bile and impurities from the blood. It is a sovereign remedy used in many ( thousands of households all over the, Civilized world for more than half aj century by those who have suffered1 with indigestion, nervous dyspepsia* sluggish liver, coming up of food, palpttation, constipation and other Intestinal troubles. Sold by druggist* and dealers everywhere. Try a bottMU take no substitute.--Adv. His Branch. . "If you had to enlist for overseas! duty again, what branch TOMtf$ yovi choose?" "The peace delegation." : . A postal card to Garfield Tea Co., Brook*! lyn, N. asking for sample will repaj| you/--Adv. Wasteful Methods. "I see where they are making roads' out of old shoes in Great Britain. ' "What reprehensible extravja^CLCe I*" SEE SHABBY, FADED # GARMENTS TURN NEW •Diamond Dyes" Make Old ApparSl Fresh and 8tytlsh. Don't worry about perfect results. Use "Diamondv Dyes," guaranteed to give a new, rich, fadeless color to any fabric, whether it be wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed goods,--dresses, blouses, stockings, skirts, children's coats, feathers, draperies, coverings-- everything I The Direction Book with each package tells how to diamond dye oyer any color. To match any material, have dealer show you "Diamond Dys^ Color Card* t--iAdv. The Kind. "Margaret has a film in her eye/" "Poor thing. Is it a cataractT* \ "No; a motion-picture play." rf" sv-g&adw' Catarrh Cannot Be Cured by LOCAL. APPLICATIONS, aa tbS9 cannot reach the neat of the dlaeaasw Catarrh la a local disease greatly Influenced by constitutional conditions. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE will cure catarrh. It is taken Internally and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE la composed of some of tbe best tonic« known, combined with some of the belt blood purifiers. The perfect combination Of the ingredients in HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE is what produces such WOOderful results In catarrhal conditions. Druggista 76c. Testimonial* tree. F. J. Cheney a Co., Props., ToUdo, OWs The End of the Year. "Cold, embers ! Did you ever hear of cold embers?" "Sure--November and December 1"---Cartoons. It is said that several pounds o#saa> sge may bo mailt' from one dog pound. mmi I# «•' Mornin FCeepYbui i g h t r n i n g N ] CeepYour Eyes ji«an -- Cl**r Health) VMM SrMH tm» Si * WII*H Qw.PI Iwsa S«