# y Higotiations in Progress for Hm Loans to Include Interest. PAYMENTS TO RETIRE BONDS fatal Amount of Loan*, if Paid In Full, With Interest, Will Retire t Approximately Half the t$S> tional War Debt. Washington, Sept. 21.--The allied governments will owe the United giates nearly $12,000,000,000 for loans made to them during tlie war by the time they are scheduled to resume interest payments in 1922. Negotiations are still in progress between Great Britain, France and the other allies on the one hand and the United States treasury on the other in regard to placing the loans on a new basis with interest due, but unpaid, included in the principal. The United States loaned a total of 18,534,622,043 to nations at war with Germany, distributed as follows: Loaned. Repaid. . .Kr77.0tt0.000 $64,184,000 .. 2,*7.477,800 12.117,000 .. 1.W.33S.986 .. 3SS,745,(HH> .. 187.729,750 .. SO.524,041 .. *R,7S0,4« .. . 15,0(10,000 .. m.ooo.ooo .. Hj,000,000 26,000 IflOre Than 350 Other P Are Injured by Mysterious Mt" ;..w>w Explosion*^ m mow 096,000 1.794,180 600.000 6K^sK •• - Debtor. 3wt Britain ?rkact i.. ^taly Selgtum ......... Kuasia ' sectao-Slovaklft Serbia Roumanla Tubt Sreeee Uberia By virtue of the accounts repaid, the total outstanding principal of the loans to now $9,455,401,528. Cuba is paying Its interest regularly. Russia paid interest up le November 15, 1917. The other debtors paid interest in full up to the spring of 1919, when they ceased to pay on account of the unsettled exchange situation and sought a threefears' suspension of Interest payments, now the subject of the negotiations with the treasury department. Hie debtor nations undertake to pay in full eventually both the principal and the interest arrears, compounded semi-annually. The interest accruing between April, 1919; and May, 1920, totaled $463^15,- 613, distributed as follows: Raid. Oreat Britain .1211,828,890 fl.200.333 jgjwtt arwrar* * Belgium Russia ............. Oaecho-Siovakla ........ Serbia Roumaaia :uk« --ii......£ Greece Liberia 79.595,5® 16,822,078 9,399,346 2.515,00* 1.340.6M 1,163,339 500.888 144,808 •nnui 2S1.380 W' d*:- m w Vp till May 15, 1918, the various Inns bore interest at varying rates per cent, but on that date, by arrangeine& t with the debtor nations, a uniform rate of 5 per cent was fixed for •O loans. Interest becomes, due every six months, two-thirds Being paiyabie on May 15 and November 15 respectively and the remaining one-third on April 15 and October 15. This arrangement gives the debtor governments greater freedom, both as to time and the number of securities or amount of exchange to be purchased, while it enables the United States government to retire on a more even basis a certain number of short-term treasury certificates of indebtedness, thereby avoiding in both instances, an undue disturbance of the mopey market. _ The proceeds of the payments of interest and principal by the allied nations will be employed by the treasury department to retire Liberty and Vic tory bonds. The total, amount of the leans, if paid in full, with interest, will enable the treasury to retire ^ppr<t|itnntely half the natldtSkl debt created by the war. TOO ARMY AVIATORS KILLED CMef Quartermaster Fuller and Chief Machinery Mate Arthur Loee Lives Near Penaacola. Washington, Sept. 21.--Two naval ••rers were killed when a seaplane was overturned in a sudden storm off the Pensacola (Fla.) naval station, the navy department was advised. The •ten were: Percy McDonald Fuller, ehief quartermaster, and Charles , Bradford Arthur, chief machinist's •ate. Tom \Vatson of Georgia, whose victory in the Democratic primaries In all probability ibeans he will be the new United States senator from his state. " 4 » i ivr?V S1"'1 "" LAUDS u, s; TROOPS General FayoHe of France Calls Yanks Magnificent. Commander at Cantigny Says No Soldier Was Better Than American > During the War. Paris, Sept 2a--"The American doughboy need not take off his hat to any soldier of any of the armies engaged in the great war. There were some as good as he, but none better." Thus spoke Gen. Marie Emile Fayolle of the French army, who In the closing phases of the war used in the counter-offensive against the Germans alongside the French troOps seven American divisions. The general was talking on the eve of his departure for the United States, where he is to represent the French army at the convention of the American Legion in Cleveland. "The Americans were simply magnlficent," continued General Fayolle. "As a matter of fact, some of them were brave even to such an extent as one might call it rashness. "You know, it was under my command that the Americans received their baptism of fire at Cantigny. Then again on July 18 they were with me in the offensive between Solssons and Chateau-Thierry." "Magnificent! MarvelousF Fayolle kept repeating. The general is tall and straight. He stands six foot and is youthful of spirit in spite of his sixty and more years. He said he would study the organization of the American Legion for the purpose of ascertaining whether many of the organizations of the French army cannot be grouped into a similar body. MINE STfilKERS IN RIOT Six _ Companies . of Alabama Guard CaUad Out--One Killa^ Twe • Wounded. Montgomery, Ala., Sept. 18."--Six companies of the Alabama national guard, called into service last night by Gov. Kilbj for duty In Walker and Jefferson counties where bituminous coal miners have beeo on strike for two weeks, were expected to reach the strike area. The troops will be under the command of Brig. Gen. Robert E. I Steiner, who planned to establish temporary headquarters at Birmingham. He expected later to shift his headquarters to Jasper. L. M. Adler, general manager of the Corona Coal company, was shot from ambush and Instantly killed yesterday near Patton." Deputy Sheriffs Sullivan and Coker, who were with Adler in an automobile, were seriously 'wounded. MORGAN FIRM MEMBER Federal Ofdoera Find Evidence to <h» w* Conclusion That the Mystsrl- PLANE BREAKS ALL RECORDS pk. ||. 8» Mail Machine Travels a* the , Rate of 141 Miles an Hour. ..... New York.* Sept. 21.--Traveling at the rate of about 141 miles an hour, a '$*.* mail-bearing hirplane broke all speed i & isecords by making the trip from Cleveland to Mineola, L. I., In 3 hours l|nd 1 minuted The scheduled time to traverse the 425 aerial miles between the two cities is four hours. U. S. Population Over 105,090,090. gpi Washington, Sept. 21;--The total fpopulation of the United States, exv elusive of outlying possessions, will be ^ * found to be almost 105,768,100, accordi, b«g to unofficial estimates by atatls- " ticlans of the census bureau. Burglars in Hotel Adlon. Berlin, Sept. 21.--Walter Brown of fhe American relief commission and general Dickinan of the allied commission were ^mong the victims of an *arly mopting robbery by a band of Itarglars at the Hotel Adlon. f Strike Delays Fur Auction. St Louis, Sept. 20.---The fall uclion at the International Fur exchange Scheduled to begin October 4, has l«een j>ostponed because of the strike of garment maker* at some of the Eastern manuafctories. , , Club Elects Gen. Nicholson. New York, Sept. 20.--Brig. Qen William J. Nicholson, former commander of the 157th Infantry bfitade, ^k*venty-nlnth division, was elected president of the Army and Navy clob America hem. INDICTED IN OIL STOCK FRAU0 Corporation and Nine Individuals Ao> cused by a New York Grand •' Jury. New York, Sept. 17.--Conspiracy to defraud oH stock investors of $120,000 Is charged against one corporation and nine individuals in a federal indictment returned last August and unsealed here. Defendants named ' In the Indictment are the Pennsylvtmla-Kentucky Oil and Gasoline Refining corporation; ]L. M. Stephens, J. M. DuBois, C. M. Watson, A. E. Kenney, Frank Hicks, James L. Holland, Frederick W. Rogers, Edward Gerard and M. E. Tallman. The paper was unsealed and made public by Judge William B. Sheppard, sitting in the federal district court, on request of United 8tates District At* torucy Simmons. End Cincinnati Rail 8trik% Cincinnati, Sept. 21.--The Cincinnati Yardmen's association voted to end the strike begun last April. Leaders said that as the men in Chicago had decided to return to work it would be futile to continue the strike here. To Buy Liberty Bonds. Washington, Sept. 21.--Secretary Houston of the treasury department hopes to see the government buy In upwards of $200,000,000 worth of Liberty bonds during the current Ibwd year, which ends next June 30. Blast Laid to Reds. New York, Sept 20.--William J. Flynn,^hief of the bureau of investigation, department of justice, declared he was positive that a bomb had caused the explosion in Wall sfrsot which took a toll of 37 lives. 3££c«i& Steamer Burned in Dry Desk. Baltimore, Sept. 20.--The steamer Kershaw of the Merchants and Miners Transportation company was destroyed by Are in the yards of the Balti more Dry Docks and Shipbuilding eonftpMjr. IIS"*:' |jfcie Detonation Was Caused by a Huge Bomb. Mnr York. Bept. 18.--Thirty-six per soils are known to be dead, five others are missing and believed to be dead, and more than 360 persons are known to have been wounded in an, explosion bet'veen the United States subtreasnry building and the office of J. P. Morgan & Co. at Broad and Wall streets. The damage to the great buildings Is estimated at $1,000,000. The Morgan building appeared « shambles and part of the front of the subtreasury across the street was torn away. After hours of investigation, city and federal officers and William J* Burns said they had found efidenct to justify the conclusion that the mya» terious detonation was caused by a huge bomb loaded with T. N. T. (trlnlr trotoluol), titan of explosives, re-enforced with^ iron slugs crudely manufactured from old-fashioned tenement house window weights. The weight of overwhelming evidence caused the authorities to give over their earlier theory that the explosion was caused by an accident to a dynamite-carrying truck. Every available detective and department of justice agent in the city was set to the task of ferreting out the band of anarchists believed responsible for the outrage. Scattered bit? of the truck and the horribly mangled form of a roan horsS were found In the street after the eXr plosion, while rude bomb slugs were found in Wall street, in adjacent thoroughfares and embedded in the walls of the Morgan and other edifices, which were pitted as by a shrapnel bombardment. At the morgue, where there were 36 mutilated bodies, including those of four women and one boy, Chief Medical Examiner Charles N. Norris Bald: "In several of the bodies we found parts of iron, such St might have been made by breaking up sash weights. There Is no doubt that a bomb was the cause of the explosion." Evidence gathered by the department of justice indicated that the plotters, In an effort to carry out numerous radical threats of a forcible demonstration against the house of Morgan, carefully manufactured a hundred- pound bomb, loaded it on a truck, either hired, or stolen, and drove their deadly burden Into the financial district. William J. Burns, house detective for J. P. Morgan & Co., declared that he is certain that the explosion was by design. Mr. Burns said: MA bomb caused the explosion. There is not the slightest doubt about this. I might be closer to the truth perhaps if I said a wngonload of bombs. "From my investigation I am certain that the bomb was in the wagon which was destroyed. There la no other reasonable theory. "The pieces of window weights picked up in the nearby office buildings, where they had been hurled by the explosive, could have no other connection with the disaster than to be parts oi the bomb and used as its pmjectilejB by some one who had schemed to do the* greatest possible damage that conld be Imagined." The bomb, he believes, was brought to the corner in a wagon which was abandoned by the four men who brought it,' It was composed of a high explosive and had window weights for missiles--thus it was merely a mobile high explosive shell of greater dimensions probably than any that were ever thrown in the world war. One other theory Is offered. That Is the explosion was an accident occasioned by the colliding of a wagonload of explosives with an autotnobile. A messenger boy declared that a few minutes before the explosion he saw the wagon that carried the explosives abandoned at the curb in front of Morgan's by four men. These four, he said, were Joined by two others. This description, however, it i* pointed out, would fit the theory of either accident or design. Every reserve of the New York police force is in the area. A battalion of federal troops from Governor's Island is standing guard with fixed bayonets. One of the injured was Junius Spencer Morgan, sot) of J. P. Morgan. Joyce, a clerk in the Morgan house, was killed. Russian Bolshevik, Unbalanced >» by Propagaada, Chicago Detectives. ?•V REFUSER TO Oe, WUCE •: i • Twv Negroeg Klff Street Car Condtid. tor on South Halstec! Street Line •---Saved From Lynching by /f . c Promp Action of Police. * b Latest $nta&Wffr ner; May i «teil Cajivass. - LEWIS LEADS THE 0«i)CMfS Peter A. Waller of Kewanee Boosts Lead Over Hie Chicago Rival, Burke, in the Senate Raoe-- t May Require Official Count. , Carlos Vallejo has been sent to the United States by the government of Argentina to make an exhaustive study of agriculture In this country. He will study riot only the United States department of agriculture In all its branches of activity, but also farms and farming methods. ' Senor Vallejo is attached to the Argentine legation In Washington. t , ASK JAP EXPULSION Veterans of Foreign Wars Adopt Resolution.; ^ • :t. ' ' '• Declare Japanese Are Not Assimilable --Fighters Reviewed by General Pershing. Washington, Sept. 17.--Exclusion of all Japanese immigrants was urged in a resolution adopted Unanimously by the Veterans of Foreign Wars, holding their annual encampment here. Abrogation of the "gentlemen^s agreement" with Japan, and amendment of the federal Constitution so as to make children born In this country eligible for citizenship only If bothparents are eligible were also favored. The resolution Introduced by Commander J. W. Jones, Portland, Ore., declared, £he Japanese immigration question was of national scope and not confined to the Pacific coast. "The Japanese question is a source of acute pnd constantly increasing Irritation," said the preamble, "and In time this irritation cannot fall to end in grave International friction unless vigorous steps are taken to allay It. "We acknowledge and respect the virtues of thrift And Industry which characterize the Japanese race, but if* the Japanese are not assimilable, these virtues instead of being a contribution to our national character, are a weapon." More than 5,000 men who had fought on foreign soil participated in a parade down Pennsylvania avenue. President Wilson watched the procession from the east portico of the White House, Near the capltol the veterans were viewed by General Pershing and Secretary Daniels. Later Mr. Daniels addressed them from the steps of the capltol. U. S. NEED FEAR NO PANIC CMeego, Sept. 22.--Police bnllwi brought an abrupt, end to resistance On tfle part of two men, one a lunatic and the other a suspected criminal. One is dead; the other is expected to die. The lunatic was Michael Drinzeika, a Russian unbalanced by radical propaganda, who had attempted to Institute a reign of terror in a West side neighborhood. The suspected criminal was Oscar Brown, colored. Browii was the man killed. \ 'The Russian was ..released six months' ago from an asyium in l^enn-*: fiylvnnla, where he had been placed asa result of threats to "blow up the tJriited States." He came to Chicago, where he had many friends and a sister, Mrs. Luzike Mflsaloci, living ut 60S West Eighteenth street. Within a short tinie after his" arrival Mrs. Masaloci percolVed that her brother Was still dangerously Insane and forbade him her house. Mrs. Masaloci lives on the second floor. The lunatic went to a rear door sbput nine o'clock In the morning und demanded entrance. I'll show you I mean business," he said, and began shooting through the doOr panel. Mrs. Masaloci told him that if he would stop shooting she woittld open the door. As he entered •Shi said: - 3 ••There's a letter for you from Trotzky in the front room."- ^Iichael was deceived and wenf past he? Into the apartment. Mrs. Masaloci promptly stepped out and turned the ket, locking her brother In. Then, scnenmtng for help, she ran Into the strteet, Detective Sergeant George Lyman and James Sullivan were rushed to the house from the Maxwell street station. They drew their revolvers and started up the stairs, Lyman in the lead. Get back!" offered the lunatic, and aimed at Lyman. The detective sergeant responded with a shot, which struck Drinzeika In the head. He was takeir to the County hospital, where It was said he would die. Brown, the other target of police bullets, was felled whet) he did not raise his hands when ordered to by Patrolman John Shannon of the Clttage Grove avenue' station. The negro was standing in front of 3322 South State street. Shannon became suspicious of his actions and began to question him. The negro made a motion toward a hip poeket. Up with 'em!" ordered Shannon. Brown did not comply and the patrolman fired. The negro fell with a bullet in hfs right lung. • Two negroes killed a street car conductor at Forty-fifth and Halsted streets and a riot call was sent to the polijce to prevent a mob from lynching the two. Police reserves from all parts of the city were rushed to the scene. t The dead conductor was Charles Barrett, and It Is said 1»e was kllied by the two men followlng-an on the car. Chlease Banking Business Conditions Have Improved 100 Per Cent Sinee September 1. Chicago, Sept 20.--The United States need fear no panic witjj the national debt at $24,000,000,000 and the value of the produce that will be harvested from the country's farms set at $26,500,000,000, • by Secretary of Agriculture Meredith, Harry H. Merrick, president of the Great Lakes Trust company, told the members of the Executives' club at the luncheon here. "Even If the government financiers wanted to, why should they try to pay off this debt In ten years, as their program calls for?" be asked. "The national debt has been overestimated by $10,000,000,000. The authorities forget that the foreign countries owe us money and it is only a question of time until they will pay it. . "What the United States needs," ha said, "is a reformed income tax and excess profit tax. The business conditions in this country have Improved 100 per cent since September 1. Our sun' has come from behind the cloud and we are safe." .... insult Offered U. 8* Washington, Sept. 20.--An attempted violation of the American consulute at Oenoa, Italy, by workmen displaying red flags during the funeral of workman was reported to the state department here. Blast Is "Red Call to Anna.1' Chicago, sept. 20.--The Wall a tret explosion In New' York is merely a signal to the Internationale that the reds of America are not apathetic, but axe on the Job, to p»e opinion of frank Oomerford. Proposed Census Scares Jape. Tokyo, Sept. 18.--Japan's preparations for beginning the first cenans on October 1 are causing many persons extreme perturbation. The authorities are kept busy issuing tr&uouilixing notoa * ; v 1 Opens 3,000,000 Acres of Land. Washington, Sept. 21.--Nearly 3,- 000,000 acres of land In Wyoming, California and Montana were classified during August, by the-department of Interior under the stock-raising homestead law. Red Executes 100 Marinee. London, Sept. 21.--A Helslngfoia dispatch to the Central News says that adntlral Baskolnlkey, command ing the Russian fleet, has executed 100 marines for refusing to obey a mobllisttlon order. Nurse Home After Terror In Orient. Philadelphia, Sept. 18.--Miss Mary Super, formerly a nurse In the Chll dren's Homeopathic hospital in this city, is back home, considerably shaken by her experience at the hands of Turkish nationalists in Hadjin. Plane Falls Into Abyee. Oeneva, Sept. 18.--A large hydroairplane, which was last see& over the Alps last week In the region around St Gothard, la missing. The machine ts believed to have fallen into an Trainmen Expel 86 Lodges, Cleveland. O.. Sept 18.--Eighty-six lodges of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen have been expelled from the order for participating in the unauthorized strike of switchmen last SKtsg. W. O. Lee anaounesd. TO RESTORE ITALIAN PUNTS Genaral Confederation of Labor Guaranteee Return to Normal Conditions in Shops. Rome, Sept. 22.--The Messagero says that It learns that the general confederation of labor has ordered the workmen to leave seized plants and resume normal work. The confederation has guaranteed that order will be «preserved, the (newspaper adds. Representatives of the employers and workmen agreed that the increase granted the workers shall be retroactive to July 15. SHOT BREAKS UP RED MEET Firing of Piatol Causes Reign of Confetatsorln tfaxlean Comm^m Gathering. - Mexico Sty, Sept. 22.-^)W(foSl«b reigned at the meeting of the "communist meeting of the Mexican proletaria" when, during a sharp debate, some one fired a pistol into the air. There was no casualties, but the meeting adjourned, soon after the Incident. , Peoria Country Club Burns. Peoria, 111.. Sept. /22.--Fire originating over the kitchen of the main clubhouse of the Peoria Country club burned the structure to the ground. The loss is estimated at $150,000, exclusive of the private stock- in iockers. Mrs. Bergdoll Goes on Trial. Philadelphia, Sept. 22.--Mrs. Emma C. Bergdoll. mother of Grover and Efwin Bergdoll. convicted draft dodgers, was placed .trial In the federal court here charged with conspiracy in aiding them to evade service. 3C Millerand to Be Candida#! HParis. Sept. 22.--Premier Alexander Mlllerand agreed to be a candidate for the presidency of thi repnbllc, to suceed Prestdent Deschanel, who has tendered his resignation, according to an official announcement y Schude Given Three Veartfc* Chicago, Sept. 22. -- Schude. who confessed to impersonating Arthur Kincafd, American army lieutenant, was sentenced % to' three years In the federal prison at Fort Leavenworth. UNITED STATES SENATOR. Republican. Democratic. WttJIam B. Mdtlnley....Peter A. Waller GOVERNOR. Len Small James Hamilton Le^jt . v i LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR. Fred E. Sterling .Walter W. Williams SECRETARY OF- STATE. touts L. Emmeraon....Arthur W. Charles ,. STATE TREASURER. JB. £. Miller Wm. Ryan, Jr. • AUDITOR PUBLIC ACCOUNTS. Andrew Russel James J. Brady . ATTORNEY GENERAL. Edv/ard J. Brunduge James T. Burns CLERK. OF SUPREME COURT. Charles W. Vail George P. -Johnson •L* ^MINCES FOR CONGRES8. REPUBLICANS6*/ At Large. William E. Masoh, Stepfcen A. Dap. t * Dlat <- 1-M. B. Madden 2. J. R. Mann. S-W. W. Wilson, •--J. Golombleweki C--J. Gartensteto. & *-J. J.'G en-man.' 7--»-M. A. Mich'elaon. 8--Dan Parille. 9--Ferd A. Britten. 10--C. R. Chlndblom. 11--Ira C. Copley. 12--C. E. Fuller.. 13--J. C. McKensie. 14--W. J. Graham. 18--E. J. King. 18--Clifford Ireland. 17--Frank H. Funic. 15--J. G. Cannon. 19^-Allen F. Moore. JO--Guy C. Shaw. 21--L. E. Wheeler: DEMOCRATIC, tAt Large. William N. Baits. •*4 S. Schneider. v Diet. .J--J. A, Gorman. 2--J. J. J„eddy, 3--T. M. Crane. 4--J. W. Rainey, 6--A. J. Sabath.; •--J. McAndreWS. 7--W. J. Cullerton. 8--S. H. Kunz. •--E. L. McGan(. 10--John Haderleln. U-No candidate. 12--No candidate. 19--No candidate. 14--No candidate. 16--W. F. Gllroy. 15--J. E. Houston. 17--Frank Gillespie. 18--A. E. Smith. 1ft--E. F. Poorman. 20--H. T. Rainey. 21--T. L. Jarrett. 2-W. A. Rod'nbei*. 22--R. V. Gustin. 23-^E. 24--T. Brooks. Williams, 2S--A. Gravenhorst. 24--A. R. Co*.' 25--8. B, Deniaoh.' IJ8-J. H. Clayton. Chicago,- Sept. 20.--Apparently the official canvass will b^ necessary to determine the result of the hottest tight for United States senator and governor that Illinois ever has seen.1 According to the latest returns Small was leading Oglesby for governor by 8,895 Votes with eleven precincts out of 5,737 in the state still to be heard from. * For the senate, McKinley had a lead of 11,000 with few missing precincts. The figures on the contests are as follows t Governor--Cook county, 2,205 precincts: Oglesby, 110,114; Small, 191,- 6*5. Downstate, complete: Oglesby, 239,- 474; Small, 155,497. Grand total: Oglesby,. 339,579; Small, 348,474. Senator--Cook county, 2,205 precincts: McKinley, 107,432 ; Smith, 186,- 888. Downsfate, eleven precincts missing: McKinley, 232,873; Smith, 145,- 726. Grand total, 5,302 precincts: McKinley, 340,305; Smith, 329,305. ~ ' Lewi* Is Nominated . For the Democratic ticket ft apparent that the regular Democratic btate ticket, headed by former Senator James Hamilton Lewis fyr governor, has been overwhelmingly Indorsed'. Congratulations were showered on the former Illinois senator soon after first returns showed the trend of Democratic sentiment. The sediment for the regular ticket, which apparently nominated Peter A. Waller for United States qenator, carried with it Walter W. Williams for lieutenant governor, Arthur W. Charles for secretary of state, James J. Brady for auditor of public accounts, and William Ryan, Jr., for state treasurer. Waller Increases Lead. Peter A. Waller of Kewanee Increased his lead over Robert E. Burke of .Chicago in the race for the Democratic nomination for United States senator with the arrival of additional returns from downstate. "With returns in from 3,014 of the 5,- 069 Illinois precincts Waller Was leading Burke by 1,321 votes. Returns from 2,130 out of 2,473 Cook county precincts gave Burke 39,313,1 Waller 38,482. Returns from 911 of the 3,174 precincts outside of Cook county gave Burke 12,689, Waller 14,- 841. James Hamilton Lewis received 91,- 249 votes in 3,115 precincts of the state, against 17,272 for O'Hara for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination. James T. Burns for attorney general was unopposed, as was George F. Johnson for the office of clerk of the supreme court. Slaying, slugging, shooting and kidnaping macked She primary election in Chicago. Valuable Assistant. "What do you think of that new clerk of yours who looks like a movie atari" "He seems to have made qnite an Impression on our fair stenographer," •fid the tired business man. "You didn't hire him to break hearts, I hope7" "No, but competent stenographers are hard to get If I can keep him from showing favoritism, I may be able to hold my present force together for at least si* months."--Birmingham Age- HWhy'They 0* lt.V-..;^# Love is the acceptance of an overestimate of one's self. People are often surprised that tills woman has iharrled that man. In such cases the explanation is simple enough: The man has lied.--London '•sit?1"i-w**' •.•"fii 'nit i . Qualtfle*. ' - * "Women are going to help ewforcs the prohibition laws." "My wife covld take high rank as S breath smeller."--Louisville Ckmrler- Journal. 1to fort* to suffer ao have barn troubled sfech aii- , eta. If m w , LySi dHitisl) be opened read and answered by * woman and held J& strict confidence. BadSfomaGh Sends for fONotttfhs ? Cmtomki B>(« Sbr I»f " "Over a year ago,w says Mrs. Dot* Williams, "I took to bed and for 10 months did not think I would live." Eatonlc helped me so much I am now up and able to work. I recommend It ; highly for stomach trouble." Eatonic "helps people to get well by"', taking up and carrying out the excess? acidity and gases that put the stomach' : out of order. If you have Indigestion, sourness, heartburn, belching, food.ro- \ peating, or other stomach distress, take; an Eatonic after each meal. Big box? costs only a trifle with your druggist'sguarantee. 5 V" . HOK$IE'S CROUP REMEDY Savea life, suffering and non«r.. He opium. No nauaea. sore, awitt ana eeM. ft OM FRECKLES '« Small Block Ky. Otl 8toek paying; * Iv. Large daily production. On pipe line. > right future. Management the best. Pric»; SI.00 per share, cash with order. W. A. * Pollard. Leases-Stocks. Bowling Green, Ky. i WANTED--Energetic men and woman distribute samples and* take orders for the 1 biggest selling household neceMlty en mar- vis'. ket. 15 to $10 a day sure. The ItoMFyW v' Co., 1136 Wrightwoort Ave., ChiCftfo. III. ~-- -r 1 1 True Enough. •%' It was a hot day and the teacher %' was endeavoring to teach his uBappre- ^ dative class the rudiments of geom- • etry. ^ With the point as center," he began placing one leg of the compasses -a : onthatpont. Then he turned to the C boys to make some remark, inadver- , tently letting the compasses slip. % Immediately the black sheep of th» flock raised his hand and waved It' ;:- Wildly. ' "Yes, Johnson y said the master. .x "Please, sir," came the prompt re- '•'V' J * $ ply, "you're Tit-Bits. oft your dot 1"--London Every man you. "hear something" about has probably "heard something" about you. 1 * . s j >i--n A dealer in onions is a good Judge ef scullions.--French Proverb. Wfcy That Lame Back? Morning Baseness^ sharp ti when heading and an all day ache; eaeh is cauae enough to m kidney complaint. If you feel tir the time and are annoyed by •pelle, beadachee and irnmlar kidney aetion. you have additional pro should aet quickly to prevent proof and kidney ?y PflU, trouble. Z7«E DOM'I the remedy that is reeby gmtefal nous Kidney ommended everywhere users, Ask your neighbor! An Illinois CAM Peter Seeger, painter, m Eleventh St, Stre»> tor, HL, says: "A hard cold settled In my Joints and back. My back ached so it was h a r d to g e t a r o u n d to do my work. My muscles were contracted and hurt every move I ( made. I took about two boxes of Doan's' Kidney Pills and they completely cured me." CetPe--ft alitor SNM^SSII el DOAN'S SOSnt-lflLBURM Ca.MMLQ.lll> When considering your health, purity^ and freshness should be your supreme^ aim. We do not know of any medicinal , preparation that ca» equal the power^ and effectiveness In regulating tfesi bowels, stimulating the liver, tiie kidneys^ sweetening the or nslnf and enriching the BULGARIAN BLOOD TEA fkb-pore all-h4rb preparation ettr--'"g hot at bedtime kills s warnlght and guards against tnfloeoaa, grippe, and pneumonia. It Is the Favorite Family Medicine in millions of happy homes; physicians and,4piggisti» - heartily recommesd It Sold by druggists and grocers everywhere. dear Baby't Skin With Cuticura Soap and Talcum SSc, TakaaiSe. W. N. Un CHICAGO, NO.