ILLINOIS BREVITIES Ssafcit Pr: fr-ii 1# . mKS'zCv ' I--Adjt. Gen. Carlos El Black' has received a communication tram the adjutant general of the army, •Citing that Gov. Len Small is requested to Be',Set two candidates from among the enlisted men of the National Guard of the state, and to designate them for West Point entrance examination which is to be held in March, 1923. The appointments which will be available in July of next year, will be awarded to the qualified candidates In the order of merit established at this examination, which is competitive among all National Guard candidates throughout the United States. Bloomtngton.--Embezzlement to aid big family and wife's family .is admitted by Roy Smith, ticket agent for the Illinois Traction system here. Smith has confessed taking over $2,700 from the company since last March and, upon his admission, according to the police authorities, he was bound over under $4,000 bonds to await action of the grand Jury. He says he fully expected to pay the debt by serving 111 the penitentiary. Aurora.--A second crop of raspberries is now being picked la the Fox river valley. A similar phenomenon is not recalled by the oldest settlers. The hot September weather made possible the crop. Hardly a farm home but Is enjoying raspberry shortcake, usually a delicacy only Been on the table In July. ?eter Weil, a member of the East Aurora school board. Is picking a second crop of pears from a tree at his home. Chnton.--After blocking all communication with the outside world by catting telephone wires, si:, bandits demolished the vault of the New Canton State bank with four charges of explosive and escaped with the vault's contents, $3,500 in cash and a few Libefty bonds. The entire village^vas aroused by the explosions and two men fired at the bandits. Savanna.--A large black eagle, a bird rarely found in Illinois, was killed by Chester GiHogly, a fanner, who Is now watching for the bird's m«te, hoping to kill It also. The eagles have been preying on lambs, small pigs and poultry. The one killed by GiHogly measured 7 feet 7 inches from tip to tip of wings and weighed 12 pounds. Elizabeth.--Eastern buyers have been buying up the ginseng crops of growers. Howard Brothers, who have six acres of the plants, disposed of $7,- 000 worth, and Louis Rablinger, a Civil war veteran, who has grown ginseng for many years, sold $2,000 worth. The roots are shipped to China, where they art used for medicinal purposes. Springfield.--Sherman W. Searle of Rock Island, who was appointed to be assistant director of the department of public welfare by Governor Small, is a native of Rock Island county, his family having located there in 1839. Searle is a graduate of the college of law of the University of Iowa, at Iowa City. Champaign.-- Because of the heavy traffic caused by thousands of students passing Wright and Green streets between classes, the city council has set a speed limit of ten miles an boar for vehicles on Green street within In two blocks of the crossing. Bloomlngton.--W. S. Cain, for over 40 years special agent for the Chicago & Alton road, has resigned. Mr. Cain has to his credit the successful prosecution of hundreds of criminals found guilty of stealing from the Chicago ft Alton. Chicago.--Egg speculators in Chicago and other produce centers are being caught between surplus supplies of millions of dozens of eggs and lower prices, largely due. It is said, to the greatly Increased activity of the hens. Harvard.--J. Celvester Hoban is to oe honored with knighthood of St. Gregory by Pope Pius II, in recognition of his services in the campaign to raise $325,000 for war sufferers in Ireland. Danville.--Fish to the number of 100,000 were placed lr. the North Fork, Middle Fork and Salt Fork rivers by the state fish commission. The Ash were seined from the sloughs •)png the Illinois river. Urbana--Fathers of at least 3,000 University of Illinois students are expected to visit the university on November 4, which has been set aside as the third annual "Dads' day." Cooksville.--The State bank of vOboksville was looted and $560 in cash an unknown amount of Liberty bonds and other papers of value were - taken. Bloomfnton.--Yeggtnen visited Dana j . Mid blew the safes cf the Sauer grain Jpce and post office, taking $300 in (9|sh and a quantity at watches and j' CBtlery. Pana. -- Mrs. Margaret Schneider Pointing, eighty-three, widow of Torn Pointing, nationally known breeder of 'a Hereford cattle, died at Moweaqua. . Bast St. Louis.--The question of disiitolving the Central States Co-operative ' Wholesale society will be taken up at , the mutual meeting of stockholders to be held here October 29. Should this question be voted down, a suggested change in the name of the corporation will be considered, as well as *n Increase of capital stock from $100- 000 to $400,twM). ' Kockford. Herman Muller, seventy- , ',V four years old, and Miss Nellie Granke, , feventy-nlne, were united in marriage Jpr*. Both are residents of Rock coun- ; Wisconsin. Anna. Drs. Fred C. Qultzereau and | W. M. Diets, physicians at the Anna I hospital, were convicted on charges of practicing medicine without A state license and fined $100 and '•<'A grai,d J'11? Investigation Into fhafpes that neglect has caused suffer- • - ' %e amonn U»> «_ . . P.,-,. - •» Elgin. Delegates to the third annual convention of the American Luther league at Elgin pledged *1.250 toward flyfund of $25,000 to be raised tor the p V purpose of combating proposed leglsla- ' V-1lon various states against purochtal '%&#**.••• ... •i warns- Chicago.--The BMUt' ft TnrlvaS company, against wSMiM the govera-i ment filed a claim out of the handling of more tliaii $20,000,000 in salvaged iron and steel by that firm1 during the war, "settled" by sending;, the Department of Justice a check for $428,000. The settlement was "without prejudice to any further action that may be deemed necessary." Four officials of the company are under In dictment on charges of having defrauded the government of nearly $1,000,000 by making fraudulent Income, war profits and excess profits tax returns, Springfield.--The state department of public works and buildings has sent a letter to all road contractors in the state calling attention to the new road specifications to be usod on the state highway system in bids received after the last of this month. Tests on the Bates experimental road showed that the point of greatest stress In any road Is on the outer edges, and therefore the new specifications call for a thickness of nine Inches at the edge of the roads tapering to six inches in the center. Chicago.--Believed to have been carried for nearly three-quarters of an hour on the cowcatcher of a Rock Island engine, the body cf a man, supposed to be Simon Carter, Poplar Bluffs, Mo., was found when the train pulled into Englewood station. The crew did not know of anyone having been hit, but a watch which the man carried stopped at 5:27 o'clock from the force of the impact Springfield.--Plans for protecting farm lands and towns along the Illinois river from the annual floods that do thousands of dollars' damage are being considered by the Illinois Association of Drainage and Levy Districts. Representatives from drainage anl levy districts from up and down the river were here for the annual meeting of the association. Stockton.--"Baby Is in the tank and won't come out and play with me," lisped Inez, four-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Relnhard Lau, to her mother. The mother ran to the water tank, a large trough at which live stock was watered, and found -the baby, Irene, two years old, dead In about eighteen inches of water. Springfield.--The state department of public health has recommended the Installation of a filter plant at Carlinvllle to insure a Bafe wafer supply. The supply is now obtained from Macoupin creek, and the department declared the purification equipment now in use is inadequate. Springfield.--Orvllle F. Davenport, secretary of the Springfield chamber of commerce, has resigned to accept a position as organizer for the American civic bureau. His first work will be organization of a commercial association at Green Bay, Wis. Freeport.--The finding of a skeleton In a gravel pit on the farm of George Sprlngman may solve the mystery of the disappearance of Jacob Earlhelm, a Jewish peddler, 35 ;Tears ago. It Is believed Earlheim was robbed and murdered and his body barled in the gravel pit. Mount Carrol.--Tests for tuberculosis in Carroll county cattle herds have revealed the disease making serious inroads on live stock in sdrtie localities. Several carloads of condemned cattle were shipped from Thomson and vicinity to Chicago for slaughter. St. Charles--Anglers on the Fox river anticipate improved sport with the distribution of 50,000 black bass by the state fish commission. Pollution of the river has killed many fish, and fishing clubs have been active In a campaign to secure the restocking of the stream. Rockford.--Wendell Phillips Loom Is has received seven medals for courageous service during the World war. He has Just received two, one gold and one silver, from the British Royal Air force for distinguished sendee. He was a first lieutenant In the British air force. Galva.--The Hehry County Honey Producers' association, „at its annual convention, adopted a resolution ask-i ing the state to levy a tax of 10 or 15' cents on every bee colony in Illinois, fhe money thus obtained to be used in fighting bee diseases. Pana.--Bereft of her own puppies a hound dog owned by Walter Lytle, a farmer of Cold Spring township, near here, has taken under her care a litter of pigs left motherless by the death of their brood sow. Urbana.--Don Phillip Rupaslngha Gunawardena, a freshman In the college of commerce. University of Illinois, has the distinction of being the only man In the United States from Ceylon, a small island near India. Urbana.--More than 300 senior engineering students of the University of Illinois left the campus October 2fl for the annual inspection trip through manufacturing plants in Chicago, Milwaukee and neighboring cities. Centralia.--Chicago was chosen by the Baptist state convention, in se» sion here, as the location fbr the 1038 state convention. Kewanee.--Rev. I. L. Meltrtt has resigned the pastorate of Atkinson Congregational church to work In the .Mont Clare church, Chicago. Mount Sterling.--School fairs to stimulate the Interest of students In outdoor life are advocated by Aubrey E. Dtivldson, county agricultural agent of Brown county, at Mount Sterling, who has suggested that Brown county set aside a day when the children could bring in products of the field, garden, woods, orchard and home to display In school. Galena.--Northwestern Illinois' turkey supply will be very scant this year, according to poultrymen who ordinarily have many hundreds of fowls for the Thanksgiving market. Itock Island.--ROCK Island police, their hands on their hips Constantly in the last few weeks, In expectation of gunplay, received a riot alarm ffom the precincts of the city prison when a half-gallon of coufiscated home brew, stored in a cell, exploded, causing a uenr p uiic among omcers seated about the station. Martinsville.--Coles county Is short of corn buskers, according to a letter received by Worth W. Mejrrttt Clark county farm adviser at Martinsville. Melvln Thomas, farm adviser for Ooles county, asks far extra m fe-'Si $ 't-P * < < *** Secretary Hughes Notifies Powers That America Will Not Participate. * . . Capt. Napoleon Marshal, former commander in the Three Hutidred Sixty- ninth United States infantry, who has Just been appointed United States charge d'affaires In Hayti. U, S. MARKET REPORT OBSERVER WILL BE SENT Weekly Marketgram by Bureau of Agricultural Economies. Washington.--For the week ending October 2ft--HAT--Quoted October 25: No. 1 timothy, $18.00 Cincinnati, $22.00 Chicago, $22.00 St. Louis, $18.00 Minneapolis; No. 1 prairie, $16.75 Minneapolis, J1S.00 St. Louis. FEED--Quoted October 25: Fran, $22.50, middlings, $23.75; flour middlings, $26.00; rye middlings, $22.00 Minneapolis; 84 per rent linseed meal, $49.00 Minneapolis; '"white hominy .feed, $28.00 St. Louis; No. 1 alfalfa meal, $23.00 St. Louis. LIVE 8TOCK--Chicago prices: Hogs, top/ $9.25; bulk of sales, J8.4O&9.J0; medium and good beef steers, $7.25011.75; butcher cows and heifers, $3.60010.00; feedsteers, $6.65@8.00; light and medium weight veal calves, $8.00®11.00; fat lambs, $13.00014.16; feeding lambs, $13.00@14.50; yearlings, $9.25^13.00; fat eWes. $4.50ig7.75. GRAIN--Closing prices In Chicago cash market: No. 2 red winter wheat, $1.19; No. 2 hard winter wheat, $1.17; No. $ mixed corn, 70c; No. 2 yellow corn, 71c; No. 3 white oats, 43c. Average farm prices: No. 2 mixed corn In central Iowa, 58c: No. 2 hard winter wheat In central Kansas, 98c. DAIRY PRODUCTS--Closing price, 92 score butter: Chicago, 46c. Qheese prices at Wisconsin primary markets October 25: Twins, 25%c; daisies, 26%c; double daisies and longhorns, 25%c; square prints, 28%c. FRUITS AND VEGETABLES--Prices reported October 26: Northern potatoes generally steady; Chicago market slightly weaker, at 85@95c carlot sales; Colorado russets, $1.60^1.66 In St. Louis. Michigan domestic cabbage mostly $12.fl0@20.00 per ton bulk; carlot In Chicago at $8.00@9.00. Apples, mldwestern Jonathans, $4.50©6.00 In city markets; northwestern extra famcy boxed Jonathans and other varieties, $2.26 @3.25. Michigan Concord grapes mostly S0@80c per 12-qt. basket In consuming centers, I60.00@70.00 per ton f. o. b. Great Britain, Franca ind Italy Pre- 1 sertt Invitation to the Secretary Of . State at Washington Asking Co-operation. Washington, Oct. 30. -- Secretary Hughes hds Instructed Ambassador Harvey at London, Herrick at Paris and Child at Rome, to notify the British, French and Italian governments that the United States cannot officially participate in the Lauzanne peace conference because it was not at war with Turkey. ' In view, however,'of its Important Interests in the Near East, the yVashlngton government will designate observers to be present during the Lausanne negotiations. Active participation by toe'United States in the conference was requested earlier id the day *by the British, French and Italian governments through their diplomatic representatives. _ The invitation was handed to Secretary Hughes by Sir Auckland Geddes, the British ambassador, who was accompanied to the State department by M. de Charnbrun and Signor Rossi, charge d'affaires of the French and Italian embassies. The text of the invitation follows: "The governments of Great Britain, France and Italy arte inviting the government of Japan, Rumania, Jugoslavia, Greece and Turkey to send representatives to Lauzanne on November 13 to conclude a treaty of peace to end the war in the Ea$t. They are also Inviting the Russian and Bulgarian governments to send representatives at a date to be fixed to participate In the discussions which the conference will undertake in the course of Its proceedings on the subject straits. "The three principal allied powers recall that a representative of the United States government was present at San Remo in the final stages of the Supreme council which led to the drafting of the Treaty of Sevres in 1920. They would welcome the presence of a United States representative at Lauzanne in a similar capacity or in a more active capacity, especially in the discussion upon the question of the straits." OREGON TO DRIVE 0U1 I. W. W. Governor of 8tate Tells Adjutant General to Have National Guard In , Readiness. Portland. Ore., Oct 28.--GOT. Ben Olcott says the state Is ready to "go to bat" with the I. W. W. and that there is "no room" In the state for them. He Indicated he had Instructed the adjutant general to see that the National Guard is ready for service in case of necessity. One Man Is Killed and Two Wounded When Masked Men Attempt a Raid. Henryetta, Okla., Oct. 30.--A pistol battle In which one man was killed, another probably fatally wounded, and at least one other man shot ensued when a band of masked men called Thomas Bogus, constable, from a motion picture theater at Spelter City, near here and attempted to kidnap him in a waiting motor car. The man killed was Roscoe Atkins, one o^ the masked party. > BULGARIA IS AGAINST TURKS Premier 8tamboullnskl Announces His ? #plicy--Balkans Now Soll&fMr! , - • Autonomy in Thrace. Sofia, Oct. 30.--Outlining his foreign policy, Premier Stamboullnskl demanded the Near East peace conference establish an autonomy in western Thrace. He was speaking In behalf of Rumania, Jugo-Si&vla, £ul< garia. B00ZE UP TO HIGH COURT Fgja^gn 8hlps Are Given a on > Liquor Ban by 8ecreta#y ' * Mellon. Washington, Oct. 26.--Temporary suspension of the ship liquor ruling of Attorney GeneraJ Daugherty, Insofar as it applies vessels of foreign countries plying to and from Amer> lean harbors, was ordered by Secretary of the Treasury Mellon. LAW STANDS BY IRISH TREATY Unionist Party Will Make Pact Good In Letter and Spirit, Says British Premier. London, Oct 27.--One of the tasks of tbe unionist purjty, i^tf Is returned to power, will be'to make good the Anglo-Irish treaty both In letter and spirit and to co-operate with the new Irlrti government. This declaration was made in n manifesto Issued by Andrew Bonar Law. Bomb 8hakes Chlcagc Mansion. Chicago. Oct. 28.--/ bomb wblch shook .the homes of several men of wealth was exploded at the newly completed mansion of Bernard E. Sunny, chairman of the board of the Illinois Bell Telephone company. Roosevelt Monumerft Unveiled. Benton Harbor. Mich.. Oct. 28.--Th® first monument erected In Michigan to Theodore Roosevelt was uttv -lied here with elaborate cereironles ID RO< relt square, on the occasion of the late president's birthday. Reds Enter Vladivostok. Vladivostok, Oct. 27.--The troops of the Far Eastern Republic entered Vladivostok and received from the Japanese the keys of the arms warehouse, after which the last Japanese PISTOL FIGHT IN OKLAHOMA is . Capt, Robert Rosenbluth, Indicted recently by a federal grand jury on the charge of complicity in the murder of Major Cronkhlte at Camp Lewis, Washington, on October 25, 1918, surrendered to tbe authorities and was held in $40,000 ball by Judge Learned Hand In New York. TO BUILD NEW ROADS Highway - Engineers Weet at Washngton for Convention. \ Plan Network of 360,000 Ml les~«f l»- tariooking H Ighwayf in - ! ; United States.' . Washington, Oct. 27.--Construction of 180,000 miles of Improved roads will be completed during the next fifteen years by the federal gevernment, and an equal mileage of state and local roads, under the program of the federal aid highway system, presented at the opening of the second national conference on education for highway engineering and highway transport A letter from President Hardiug, expressing hearty approval of the plan for a national system of Improved roads was read to the conference. Officials of the Highway Education board estimated the cost of the federal government's share of highway improvement at $3,000,000,000, spread over the 15-year period. The average cost, taking into consideration all classes of highways from the most expensive to the cheapest, will be $17,- 000 a mile. One-third of the system, about 60,000 miles, is either built already or being built. GERMANY HAS CASH IN Ut S. Berlin Government Has More Than $100,000,000 in American ranks-- < •»» Alio Concealed Assets. NfcW York, Oct. ^26.--Germany IM£» been building up monetary balance* in the United States for the last' month and now has more than $100,- 000,000 on deposit here, It was learned by a canvass of New York banks. This does not take Into consideration a large total of concealed assets which cannot be traced, mere ly the deposits nt the big banks. TO PUNISH WAR GRAFTERS Daugherty Says Public Must Be PatimUt Until Cases Are Ready - ^ " • for Trial. Washington, Oct. 80.--Attorney General Daugherty declared that the government purposes to prosecute to the limit every one of the war transactions in which fraud or dishonesty have been practiced, but appealed for public patience while the government is making sure of Its evidence upon which to take the. war croeks into court. WOMAN SLAYS RECTOR, SELF Rev. Leonard J. Christler, Known as "Bishop of All Outdoors," Is the Victim. Havre, Mont. Oct. 28.--The deaths of the Rev. Leonard Jacob Christler, known throughput Montana and the West as the "Bishop of All Outdoors," and Mrs. Marguerite Carleton In the Christler home were so plainly a case of murder and suicide by the woman that no Inquest probably will be held, the coroner's office announced. Canadian Boat Is Released. Washlngtno, Oct. 28.--The Canadian schooner Emerald, recently seized about eight miles off the coast of New Jersey by prohibition officers, was ordered released by the Treasury department officials, whose action waa based on recommendations from Secretary of State Hughes. French Train Wreck In Snowstorm. Chatelaudern, France, Oct. 30. Thirteen deaths and many injuries resulted from the wreck of the Paris- Brest express, which collided with a tjreighfc> train near here. The wreck occurred by night and In a snowstorm. Mayflower Descendants to Organize^ Boston, Mass., Oct. 80.--Many signatures, Including that of Major General Wood, are attached to a petition filed with the legislature asking sanction for a corporation composed of descendants of Mayflower Pilgrims. . HARDING SETS AN EXAMPLE President Buys $1,125 in Saving Certificates From Secretary > Treasury Mellon. * Washington, Oct. 28. -- Pfesfctent Harding set an example in thrift by purchasing $1,125 in treasury saving certificates from Secretary of the Treasury Mellon, who called at the White House. The President paid only $924.50 for the certificates, which bear $200.50 interest before they mature In 1927. GREEKS RIOT IN ATHENS Mobs Demand Death of Statesmen Now Under Arrest--Destroy Por- ' •'*"*> traits of Constantino. : * Alifens, Oct. 80.--After llstenh*#!* a public oration by a prominent Venizellst, who 'acclaimed the achievements of the revolution and condemned the former regime, a great audience demanded the death of the statesmen now under arrest. Later they began rioting and destroyed al the portraits of Constantine. DE VALERA ILL IN HOSPITAL Former Irish Leader Suffering From Nervous Disorder--Prieet at Hi* Side. > MUl, Oct 26.--Eamoo de Valera has returned to Dublin. He is suffer* ing so severely from - a nervous disorder that a priest Is In constant attendance on him in the private hospital where he Is now. * The military are not molesting him, realizing that b? Is no longer an Important figure among those in armed opposition to the government. F They Take Cremona, Florence, Are Shot STATE AUTHORITIES DEPOSED Declare Movement Is Not Against >|(lng, but Intended to Give Italjr : " Full Liberty, Dream of 500,000 r Dead Soldiers. Oct. 30.--Ten thousand Fascist! gathered at the railway station to greet Benito Mussolini, their chief, who arrived 'here to become premier of Italy. He' was acclaimed with the wildest enthusiasm as savior of the country. London, tO«L 28.--Tbe Times prints a "message from Italy," without naming the source, saying: "Tbe fascisti at 11:30 (Friday night) began a concerted action on several towns. They are now masters of some of the chief towns like Florence, Pisa, and Cremona, Communications between north, south, and central Italy have been Interrupted. Everywhere In these towns they deposed the state authorities and assumed command. I* seems there was no resistance and no vconflict, except in Cremona, where six fascisti were shot Everything is quiet In Milan, where there is a great display of troops. There is no news from other centers." Benito Mussolini, head of thef fascist!, remained in Milan throughout all of Friday and had numerous conferences with fascisti leaders aud also a talk with a local prefect. A circular which the fascist! have distributed in Pisa and other places says: "Officers, soldiers, citizens: The fascisti movement is neither against the country nor against the king. We want his majesty to be really king of Italy and not to submit himself to state actions which are cowardly imposed on him by his present weak ministers. "We march on to Borne to give-Italy her full liberty; to give the Italian people an Italy as was dreamed of by the half million dead in the great war, and by our own dead who continued at war during peace. "Marching w Ith the sincere desire of peace and love, our greatest shout shall always be 'Long live the army; long live the king, and long Uve Italy.'" m % ONE BULLET KILLS TWO MEN Fifty-Cent Holdup Results in j^i|SM*th of Two Union**# * 4". (p«.) Citlzsns. the Uniontown, Pa., Oct. 30.--A bullet fired after a 50-cent holdup, killed two men here. Jake Miller, traced by bloodhounds, Is in jail charged with the shooting. Police say Joseph Brown held up Miller and secured 50 cents. Miller found Brown later hi. a card game and fired a bullet. The ball passed through Brown's heart and continued on through Edgar A. Blair's head, killing both. WORLD'S WETS FIGHT DRYS United States to Be Msde Center of War on Prohibition, Conference Decided. Brussels. Oct. 28.--A world fight against prohibition, with the United States as the center of the campaign, was planned at tbe closing session of the secret conference of anti-prohibltionists here. The meeting ended with a banquet last night. Rare old vintages, chiefly French, were served. TO PAY 0. S.--LLOYD GEORGE Former British Premier Declares ' America Must Be Psl4 fey th» r. English People. London, Oct 26.--America must be paid by the British and there must be closest Anglo-American co-operation in order to insure lasting peace in the world, former Premier David Lloyd George said In a spirited political speech before leaders of the national "liberal party. .. Falls Ten Stories, Unhuft" ^ Dallas, Tex., Oct. 80.--Manuel Hernandez, laborer, fell ten stories down an elevator shoft, landed In a wheelbarrow of mortar, and stepped out unhurt. He resumed work after he had scraped off some of the mortar. 1VAI IVl sS&itV i'SASSiM Greek Prince Arrested. Athens, Oct. 27.--Prince Andrew, brother of former King Constantine, was arrested at Corfu, charged with refusing to execute an order while leader of one of the armies, , and tli^p eoatributlnf to the Greek de^Htt. • Sixty-three Ships Use Canal. Washington, Oct. 28.--A new record traffic through the Panama canal Was established In September, according to an official report, which showed that 63 ships, parsed through tjto cqnjpJL ^ft Seotember. --• '- 'i. Obregon Troope Win.' •Mexico City. Oct. 80.--General Hernandez, chief support of the rebel leader, General Carrasco, was killed in a four-hour battle with federal troops In the state of Sonora. His band was completely wiped out NEW GOVERNMENT IN IRELAND Irish Republican Party Announces Ministry Headed by Eamon De Valera _Mary MaoSwiney in Cabinet London, Oct. 27.--The Irish Republican party has announced the forma tlon of a new government in Ireland, with Etfmon De Valera as president, according to advices from Dublin. The other executives Include Robert Barto^ Mary MacSwlney and Austin Stack. Your Most Vital Tour kidneys have tbe gr«st«t direct effect on your health. Inactive, ilo|> gish kidneys came more disorders than any other organ. Guard them ciaaely. If you hare headaches, backaches, or a pumness under the eyes--take Dodd's Kidney Pilb--DODD'S. Recommended by good druggists everywhere. Prompt relief or money back. Largs box 60c. If your druggists supply Is out, send 60c. direct to MOVS MEMCIMB CO, CeOU* ft •. -/.> To N I G hT Tomorrow Alright Bilious Attacks bowel lubricant Cause for Apprehension. A ". "You must have been right smartljp' agitated tuther night When the Whit«| ". * Caps came and drug your brothei^ln* law out to whip him?" inquiringly sai<| r ; ^ a neighbor. • "You bet your life I was!" replied*^ * Gap Johnson of Rumpus Ridge. lowed for a spell It was somebodjl/.-^.,^ trying to steal my dogs."--Kansas City " „ », Star., WL.DOUGLAS >5*6*7* *8 SHOES R& are actually demanded year after year by more people than any oth«| shoe in the world ---- BECAUSE: workmanahlp they ar« «neqeaM. Protection against muMOgaU « profits U guaranteed >T th* priee stamped on every ^fcarsof tatufactory Mnrrto* kin given them confidence la the shoes and in the praleuUon afforded by the Wi* DootlM Trade Mark. W.LDOUCLAS •J.'jj into all ot oar 1» storee a* factory eoet. We do noiyahe jpoYe one oiat of profit fe.oo ghoee are sold to T®*- " • Union to Open Bank. Chicago, Oct, 28.--Thd Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers expects to establish a bank In New York city within ninety days. Warren S. Stone, grand, .cblef of the engineers, lit an addrnui here. Vladivostok War Probable. Tokyo, Oct. 28.--General Dleterlcbs. defeated leader of the "Russian White guards, has allrned with Chang Tso- Lln, war lord of Manchuria, in an agreement to march on Vladivostok Slid oast tbe "rsd" Rich Man la JTailed. Kalamazoo, Mich., Oct. 28.^-A son* tence of 45 days in jail was pronounced here on Merrill B. King, president of the Rex Paper company, following conviction on .a charge of drtrlfcft whUs iap«lcat«* - . >*:v Governor Allen Wars on KliulL CofTeyvllle, Kan., Oct. 30.--Governor Allen announced that he had Instructed the attorney general to expel every Ku Klux official from Kansas on the grounds that It Is the "greatest cotse to a civilized people." Tariff Court Urge*. Vew York. Oct. 30.--The establlshm «nt of a "tariff court" Is being urged by the National Association of Manufacturers as a means to taking the tariff out of politics and insuring Just and adequate rates without injustices. Million Tan Dodgers. Washington. Oct'. 27. Mors than s million persoos - liable for taxes on incomes larger than $5,000 have dodged payment by concealing assets dr not making returns. It was learned at the Treasury J. P. Morgan Sees the Hope. Borne. Oct. at.--J- i'ierpont Morgan was received In audience by Pope Plus XI. Mr. Morgan, who was sponsored b7 Prpte»sor Lyvernatt, presented a s^clwI ftUMWft te tt# iRnmsn pontiff. • M ^ o<o«r U0 _s*on» rt I09«s It ^-d^s for ro« *o remember that when yw» bay sbofs a* oar story von ntww •niforn. No matter whereyom »»• shoj a521 ao mort l" than they do In Nawbglaad. COMPARE •hoee'wlthany |IOor|ia *om made. TV MKRCHAMTa: If me fan* tfm-ottr tin*. oMil B(•ir«trm»H• tUh a(At* Wwoardld*. MIta irtka mmd ijtainr tqkf tr hMifk%mt attta thm* ikar«d- nt pauitU cert. At ?liT£t&obX L£22& 'SIIr fMIVKi 7W 1 - ^ , 4 Cynical Rhadamanthus. Pulled iu for speeding the youn# - couple stood before the rural magfl^1:: trate. ' 1^*. '•! "Ten dollars for reckless driving.* said the latter. v/'Vjfj "But listen. Judge," pleaded th»?e^^ young man, "we were on ou- way j have you marry us." , -v ^ "Twenty dollars, then," exclaimed v ^ the magistrate. "You're more reckle^| ^ * than I thought you wer«.n-^-Bosto|lit Evening Transcript. In That Sense. yon believe In auto-suggestion "I generally follow any suggest! made by the motor cop, If that's what yon mean."--Boston Evening TraSr script. r =n Look to Your Eye* Beautiful Eyes, like fine Teeth, are the rwult of CotkMnt Cue. The d«dr u»e ofMmtm main E|«s dear and Radiant. Entoyabk. Haimkw. Sold and fcccommended by All DmagfaKa.