*' "*" ; -r^ • . : v ** _ •'%£ " •" -w ': -?••' ' *ms mirem • WAnroEAi.BR, •ifa!iiiiTr'«^!-'5^»";*a!> " ':* * rrrr^rr. JAMES B. DUKE DIES; GAVE AWAY MILLIONS former Head of American To- ~~~~ bacco Company Succumbs to Pneumonia, New York.--James Buchanan Puke, formerly president of the American Sjobacco company, died at his home here. He had been ill for several weeks with bronchial pneumonia. 9 Present at the bedside Were the wife, Mrs. Nannie Lee Holt Duke, and their twelve-year-old daughter, Doris. James B. Duke rose from such poverty that toe was often called "one of ."•'i-lfce last ot the log cabin successes of American life." He was born in 1S57 /. 'flin the small farm of his father, Washington Duke, a few miles east of Durr.- ifciana, N. C. Denied the advantages of higher education, Mr. Duke had a clear conf *5eption of its value, and in the fall of 1924 made perhaps the largest ^Sftngle gift oh record for its furtber- • .'iince. The chief object of his bounty : !'%a» Trinity college at Durham, N. C., SUCCEEDS PALMEU CHICAGO GRAIN PIT BOWS TO U. S. DECREE Limit Is Placed on Markets Fluctuation---Reform Ruler Adopted. Elmer Crowley of Boston, operating manager of the American Export line, was elected president of the Fleet corporation to succeed I^eigh C. Palmer, who was removed by the. shipping board. . . .• , . JtmM B. Duke. Jong known as an excellent "small college" with an honorable record of Intellectual service. It was his desire to see the "Old North State" provided with a university that would rank with the great institutions of New England and the middle states. Accordingly he created a trust fund of $40,000,000. Estimates of the amount of Mr. Duke's fortune have ranged from $100,000,000 to $150,000,000. Mr. Duke married in Camden, N. J.. in 1904, Mrs. Lillian N. McCredy, i divorced wife of William D. McCredy. a MISSING MAIL FLYER FOUND DEAD IN PLANE Believed to Have Crashed Into Mountains During Fog. Bellefonte, Pa.--Crushed amid the giant trees on the side of dittany mountain, the wreckage of a government mail plane disclosed the l*ody of Charles H. Ames, the pilot for whom thousands have been searching nine days. It was evident that Aires, for six years a pilot, was flying low on the niglit of October 1 while en route from New York to the West with a cargo of mail. Air-mail officials expressed the belief that the hirdman. confused by a dense fog, had piloted h:s ship into the mountain side, meet ing instant death when the plane crashed into the forest. When found the dead pilot was seated in the cockpit, his right arm raised to his face as If to ward off a blow. His legs were entwined about the control stick and his parachute was strapped to his ba<?k, with two flares, the aviators' signal of distress, lying by his side. The gas tank contained sufficient fuel to carry him some distance, and all switches of the motor were on. This led the mail officials to believe that death was instantaneous. Coroner W. R. Heaton, after examining the body at an undertaking es- New York broker. About a year later j tabiishment here, said that Ames he obtained a divorw in New Jersey. [ death was "due to a fracture of the naming Mai. Frank T. UwE;oo<a_ \ freer*; bone." There was a bad cut In July., 191T. llr. I>Uf seamed 1"* airman's forehead and bruises Nannie Le* R** frr-ret.t, • <* *5ae ?*<*. 0:-er parts of the body Ga. Last J&sm 3i«f- It's; I«Ktoe • wet* tajaarke*! startimI ran ?• «c muta l»«r f Ii^Kt in ihf rear section of the Tbe 11 Toarists Dromrn When Boat Capsizes aI Florida Melbourne. 1 la.-->:*f a party of tourists were the boat, Clara B-, capsized attempting to turn in a rough sea just outside Sebastian inlet. Three others aire missing. The majority of those in the party were tourists from Kansas and other western states, guests of the Melbourne Farms company, which brought them to Melbourne to look over the company's properties. The dead, whose bodies have been recovered, were: Mr. Ituckles, Wichita, Kan.; Miss Dreiling, Wichita, Kan.; Mr. and Mrs. Barton, Wichita, Kan.; Miss Larson, Wichita, Kan.; Mrs. Lock D. Davidson, Melbourne^ Harry Roach, Melbourne; Donald Boach, twelve, his son. Melbourne; Frank Driscoll, Melbourne; Harry Coppock, Kansas City, Kan.; A1 Wagstaff, Kansas City, Kan.. The missing are Mr. Salmon, Mr. Husted and Mr. Albertson, all of Wichita, Kan. •wTer'te*! t!?e IS poaches of usidl Ames started on the trip. HfT were sent on to Chi I <f lypm ^p^CZECH MINIS|^^ Chicago.--Warned twice W Secretary of Agriculture Jardine, the last time less than two weeks ago, that Its long-promised housecleaning would have to begin Immediately, the Chicago Board of Trade adopted stringent rules to prevent market manipulation and other practices complained of. One of the new regulations places in the hands of the directors of the board almost complete control of the market during wild price swings. On ten-hours' notice, "without appeal to the members as a whole, the directors may place nn arbitrary limit on price fluctuations. Thereafter they may prohibit trading during any day at prices above or below a certain percentage of the closing price the night before. To declare such an emergency, twelve directors must be present and two-thirds must vote In the affirmative. Heavy penalties are provided for violators of this rule. A second rule provides for creation of a business conduct committee of five members, who will have full power Omaha, Neb. -- American Legion's to regulate the ethics of trading j geventh annual convention ended with to protect interests of the public. the elevation of John K. (Go-Get-'em) Under the third new rule, the 600 McQuigg of East Cleveland, Ohio, flftyout- df-town members of the board are nine-year-old lawyer und banker and allowed to vote by mall. The first and wounded over-seas engineer officer, to Dr. Zadnek Sierlitiger, the new Czechoslovakia!! minister to the United States. , "GO-GET-'EM" M'QUIGG NEW LEGION HEAD To Meet in Philadelphia, in 1926 and Paris in /92f. second rules were passed by a vote of nearly 5 to 1; the third by 2 to Is It is believed that other grain exchanges will adopt similar revisions, border. the honor of national commander. Commander McQuigg also served in the Spanish-American war and on the Minneapolis approved almost the Identical set of rules. The belief Is general tflat the changes will end the war between grain exchanges and farmers' organizations, which began with postwar deflation in the prices of agricultural products. The government, will keep close watch on the board. French Cabinet Desires Time to Study Debt Terms Paris. -- "Continued negotiations" wjth the Mellon proposal that Frahce pay $40,000,000 yearly for five years as a basis, but with the hope behind it that the American negotiators will make further concessions to the French viewpoint before many months have expired, is France's only answer to the Washington project for a temporary debt arrangement. As foreshadowed. Finance Minister Caillaux merely submitted the Washington project to the cabinet presided over by President Doumergue, without a recommendation one way or the other. At the same time he outlined the advanrages and disadvantages of the plan, the principal of the former being that, once accepted, the idea of the consolidation of commercial debts becomes a fact This prevents France's $400,000,000 debt covering the purchase of war stocks from maturing In 1929. Most of the reports and resolutions adopted had to do with services for World war veterans or Interests peculiar to the Legion. One, however, sought to have the Legion go on record as favoring United States adherence to the policy of the World court of the League of Nations, but was amended so as to favor adherence to a court of international Justice. The next meeting will be held In Philadelphia in 1926. and that of 1927 was awarded to Paris, France. The Rev. William Patric of San Francisco was elected national chaplain. A sister of the late Jack London was chosen to head the Women's auxiliary of the American Legion. She is Mrs. Eliza London Shepherd of San Francisco. BLAMES NAVY FOR LANSDQWNE'S DEATH Widow of Commander of Shen• andoah Testifies He Objected to Trip. G]S{pvs ^(uggets From Illinois Washington. -- Charging the navy with full responsibility for the loss cf the Shenandoah, Mrs. Margaret Ross Lansdowne, widow of Commander Zacha.'y Lansdowne, captain of the destroyed airship, reiterated und r oath before a naval court of inquiry that the navy had sent the airship on Its disastrous Mid-West trip over her husband's protest and for political* purposes. She reRd a prepared statement. "Ima ediately after the wreck of the Shenandoah and the death of my husbanu I stated in the newspapers that my husband was ordered by the Navy department to proceed on this flight to the Middle West in spite of protests made by him to the department and that the flight was made solely for political purposes," Mrs. Lansdowne res a. "Secretary Wilbur was Quoted In the press as saying that uy Yjsband had made no protest against going .t this time: and one of my reasons for appearing before this court is to emphasize the fact that my statement has been substantiated by official correspondence read Into the court record." Mrs. Lansdowne then read from a letter written to her husband from the chief of naval operations, dated August 12, 1925, in which the recommendations of her husband that tbe flight be made in the second week in September and that a trial flight be first made to Detroit before the regular trip were disapproved. In the letter It was stated that various state fairs occur the first week of the month and that the fairs must be flown over as scheduled. It was further stated that the department felt a trial flight to Detroit was not necessary. "Because of weather conditions daring the long thunderstorm period iu the Middle West the long legs on rigid schedule and the untried mast, ray husband was very much opposed ft) this flight and protested as vigorously as any officer Is allowed to do to hi3 superiors." Farmers Demand Carb on Foreign Price Dictation Washington.--Farm legislation to make It impossible for foreign markets to set the price of American grain products, thereby assuring the farmer of good prices, will be demanded of the next congress by the farmers of the Northwest. Senator Cummins £Rep., Iowa), told President Coolidge. "What the farmers want," Senator Cummins stated later, "is some assurance that prices will be kept up where they can make a good living. They are tired of having their grain prices dictated to by foreign markets. They want legislation which Will eliminate the foreign grain markets; as a factor in determining American grain prices. Chicago Near 3 Million Population, Census Figures Washington.--Chicago now has a population of 2,995 239, the governent bureau of the census estimates. The 1920 census gave Chicago 2,- 886,121, the estimated Increase In five years being 109,118. Th£ bureau made public the. 11*25 estimates of population of cities of 10,000 or more inhabitants. Among the larger cities estimated were Philadelphia with l,979,3ft4, Detroit with 1,242,044, Cleveland, 936,- 485; St. Louis, 821,543; Baltimore. <96,296; Boston, 781,329; San Francisco, 557,530; Buffalo, 538,010. and Washington, D. <\, 497.906. No estimates are given on New York and Los Angeles. Other cities reported were: Cincinnati, Ohio, 409,333; Columbus Ohio, 279,836; Toledo, Ohio, 287,380. Gunman Kills U. S. Officer Chicago.--Martin J. D-urkin, an al leged automobile thief and gunman who last December shot three policemen when they tried to arrest him. shot and killed Edward C. Shanahan, an operative of the federal Department of Justice, in a pistol battle. Princess Cantacuzene Married to Bruce Smith Washington.--The marriage of Princess Bertha Cantacuzene, eldest daughter of Prince and Princess Michael Cantacuzene, to Bruce Smith ol" Louisville, Ky„ took place at the home of the bride's grandmother, Mrs. Frederick Dent fJrant. Only a family party witnessed the ceremony, which was that of the Episcopal church with Dean Brateiiahi of the 'Cathedral of Saints Peter and Paul officiating. Mr. and Mrs. Smith left in the afternoon for a trip to Canada before go in,' to Louisville, where they will make their home. Court Frees Former Governor Olympia, Wash.--The ruling of the Pierce County court exonerating former Gov. Louis F. JIart, charged with soliciting a brib<^n connection with the liquidation o^the Scandinavian- American Bank of Tacoma, was affirmed by the State Supreme court. Worthington, Con Man, to Prison on Stretcher Chicago.--John W. Worthington, the •'Wolf of La Salle Street," is now in the federal penitentiary at Atlanta. His plea for a stay so that he might die in Chicago having been denied by the Federal courts. Worthington left the Dearborn street station on the Dixie Flyer. He was carried into court on a stretcher. In a puilman drawing room with him were Deputy United States Marshal Andrew Jostock and Dr. Edward I. Sloan, the government physician who had pronounced him able to stand the trip to Atlanta. The Wolf had finished the task he came to Chicago to perform, that of making a will to dls-^ pose of his fortune, estimated at $2,-.^ 0A0A0A,0/W00k , khe. .s.a. 1id.1 . MIf osat. .o.4f Lhits. fJo rt4u..n e"' will go to his two daughters. Eighteen Killed, 40 Hurt in Rioting at Florence Paris.--L'Humanite says 18 persons were killed and 40 wounded in the Florence rioting. Following the killing of one of their leaders, Fascistl started a reign of terror against Free Masons of Florence. The London Dally Express says the Fascist reprisals in Florence for the assassination, October 3, of Cavalier Luperini. a member of the Fascist party directorate, included the killing of a number of anti-Fascists and tbe former Socialist deputy, Pilati. Christy Mathewson, Idol of Baseball Fans, Is Dead Saranac Lake, N. Y. -- Christy Mathewson is dead. Baseball's "Big Six" lost his fight against tuberculosis. More than five years ago the great pitcher, loved and honored wherever the game Is played, began what was to be a losing struggle. Gassed in the World war In France, where he served with distinction, Mathewson returned from overseas to coach with the Giants, the dub with which he won his fame, but the illness which was finally to take his life forced him to retire for recuperation in 1920. Volstead Gets Post in Northwest Dry Army St Paul, Minn.--The Pioneer Press says Andrew J. Volstead, father of the prohibition law, has been appointed head of the legal department of the Northwest dry enforcement district by Gen. W. F. Ithlnow, regional director. "Maurice Silverman, first assistant chief of the Northwest dry army, definitely removed and will be succeeded by Major Wilcox, head of the United States Steel corporation secret service bureau in DulutV the article adds. Sees Doom of Electric Roads Unless Given Aid Atlantic City, N. J.--"We are not crying 'help the railways,' but we do say that without co-ordination and co-operation from the public und the authorities they cannot continue to exist except as municipal undertaking and only by Increasing the general tax roll. To have public transportation cease means decreased values in every other kind of prosperity, public and private alike. The problem is one that cannot be solved by railway management alone. The public and its representatives must lend a helping hand or the industry In many localities is doomed." The future of electric railway transportation In the United States was thus epitomized by B. C. Cobb of New York In an address before the American Electric Railway association in convention in this city. Prof. C. D. Herron Is Dead Munich, Germany.--Prof..'George D. Herron, who was a friend and collaborator of Woodrow Wilson, died here of heart disease. professor Herron was born at Montezuma, Ind., January 1, 1802. Eighteen Indiana Aliens in Prison to Be Deported Gary, Ind.--Eighteen Lake county aliens, confined in Indiana prison, are to be paroled by Governor Jackson and turned over to the immigration authorities for immediate deportation. Twelve others, from other parts of the state, will be affected by the governor's move to rid the state of undesirable aliens. Noel, Confessed Kidnaper, to Be Tried for Murder Newark, N. J.--Harrison W. Noel, ;onfessed kidnaper and slayer of giv year-old Mary Daly of Montclalr, N. J„ and murderer of Raymond Pierce, ne- ?ro taxi driver, whose car he used in kidnaping the child, is sane, and must stand trial on a charge of murder in the first degree for the killing of Pierce. Judge Edwin O. CafTrey, In the Court of Common Pleas, made the ruling. Col. Mitchell Refuse* to Testify Before Board Washington.--"I've been under coercion ever since I was ordered to Washington. Threats of court-martial ere hanging over me while I was' testifying before the President's aircraft board. Do you think I'd give the navy a chance to get statements from me that the War department might use against me? Not on your life." This was the statement of CbU William. A. Mitchell after lie had refused to testify before the naval court of inquiry itavestlgatlng the Shendoah disaster. •> Auto Employment Is Largest in History Detroit, Mich.--More men are employed in the automobile industry in Detroit plants now than ever before in tbe history of automobile making. Tbe number of employees increased last week by 2,422. The totul employed now is 260,316» This Is an increase of 34,320 over the corresponding week of 1924. All plants are running at capacity and enlarging theinfacllitlea, Wins Roosevelt Prize Washington. -- John Rusell Pope, New York architect, was awarded the $20,000 prize offered by the Roosevelt Memorial association for the best design submitted. Heads Disciples of Christ Oklahoma City, Okla,--Dr. A. D. Hamon, president of Transylvania college at. Lexington, Ky., was elected president of the international convention of the Disciples of Christ. British Labor Leader Dies Ixmdon.---A message from Amsterdam to Labor headquarters says Fred Bramley, well-known labor leader, died there suddenly. Heads M. E. Mission Body Eau Claire, Wis.--Mrs. Austin T. Webb of Chicago was re-elected pres ldent of the northwestern branch of the Woman's Foreign Missionary society of the Methodist Episcopal Cburch here. Storm Kills Five in Gotham New York.--Five persons were killed and more than twenty injured in New York city, hundreds of small boats and some big barges wrecked in the Hudson by a terrific wind uloTm. Gov. Pinchot III With Flu Dubois, Pa.--Gov. GliTord Pinchot* touring the state by automobile, was advised by physicians to go to bed, after they discovered that he was suffering from a light attack of influenza. To Borrow $727£00,000 Brussels.--Albert Janssen, Belgian finance minister, sailed for the United States to discuss loans of $727,500,000 tor the Belgian rehabilitation progf »m with American hunkers. Bancroft Left $1,899,716 Chicago.--Careful investments by the late Edgar A. Bancroft, American ambassador to Japan, had raised the value of his estate to $1,899,716 at the time of Ids death. It was revealed when an inventory was filed in the Probate court. Buys Building for $17,000,000 New York.--August Heckschner, milllonalre^ president of the Amahna Rol ier company, bought the 32-story build lug at 61 Broadway for $17,000,000 cash. Mrs. F. G. Pohndorff Killed New York.--Mrs. F. G: Pohndorff, wife of the vice president of the Royal Baking Powder company, was killed w lien a limb stripped from a tree by a storm crashed tit rough the top QNf her outomobile and struck her. s Grapes Cause Car Shortage T Lo*e* £y* ™ Op«rc"*am Boise, Idaho.--Shipment of KrnL L \ K 1 athert»e from California is do^inK frel ht ^ r' ' A" B,ake' „ ,r r„ „ mlv„^ more than 50 per cent of Idaho's gen- -- - * eral crop, J. L. Priest of the* Union Quake Destroys Historic Vote Santa Barbara, ?al.--The record of .Santa Barbara county's unanimous vote to enter the Union was partly destroyed In the earthquake. Pacific system said. Sues for Buffalo Bill's Grave Denver, Colo.--A suit against the city of Denver seeking to gain title to the top of Lookout mountain, where Buffalo Bill is buried, was filed by W. M. Marrs of Denver. eye in an operation for a tumor, it was learned, Three Killed, Forty Hurt in Ammonia Tank Blast St. Louis.--Three known deaths occurred in a terrific explosion that enveloped the tkn%dr^ Lacledo Gas Light building in the downtown business district here. The list of injured who received hospital treatment stood at forty. The dead are Mrs. Anna Stoll, clerk; Carl T. Brewer, engineer; Armund Marquardt, maintenance man. Company officials said the explosion apparently was caused by an expansion of ammonia fumes in pipes leading to a refrigerator plant la the basement of the building. O. K.'s Harding Memorial Washington.--The Harding Memorial association authorized expenditure of $550,000 for a memorial to President Harding. Grading will start next month and construction in tbe spring of 1926. Enrollment figures at Knox college at Galesburg were broken this year with a total registration of 638 students. The enrollment last year was 635. Mrs. Mary Richard, fifty-seven, of Carbondale died as the latest of those whose deaths have been ascribed to Injuries received in the tornado of March 18. Illinois fruit growers in many connties received more than $200 an acre from their pear orchards this year, according to a report of the Illinois Agricultural association made public at Centralia. Five armed bandits entered the Illinois Central freight office here, held up five employees, then knocked the combination • from two safes and escaped with $3,000. Announcement of the appointment of two Evanston boys to- West Point Military academy by Vlte President Charles G. Dawes was made. The youths, Charles Keller and Edward Irving Sachs, are to fill vacancies maturing next July 1. Men of every age appear off the list of officers elected at the closing session of the Veterans of All Wars held at Qulncy. F. Mensendlke of Camp Point, eighty-three years old, was named chaplain for the year. Frank Meyers heads the organization. The centennial program of Jacksonville was completed with the unveiling of granite markers at the spots where Daniel Webster spoke in 1837, where Stephen A. Douglas began the practice of law, and on the site of the first home of William Jennings Bryan. Employment In Illinois factories showed an increase of 2.4 per cent during September, according to a survey of the industrial conditions released by the Illinois department of labor. The gain is said to be.the largest experienced in Illinois industries since early 1923. The city of Urbana applied to Judge Franklin H. Boggs for a writ to close moving-picture shows here on Sundays. The petition- is directed against the proprietors of the two movingpicture houses. The movie men de^ Clare they will carry the case to the Supreme court" if necessary. Home and foreign Methodist Episcopal missions will receive more than $6,000,000 which has been raised in the last fiscal year, members of the Rock River annual conference of the church were told at Elgin by Dr. Dan B. Brummitt, editor of the Northwestern Christian Advocate. A statewide survey of new Industrial opportunities, including photographic and blue-print descriptions of all the plants left idle by the war, Is to be undertaken by the Illinois Chamber of Commerce. This organization has as its goal the making of this state the center of manufacturing in the United States by 1940. Marking the tenth anniversary of, the opening of the Dixie highway from Chicago to Miami, Fla., William Edens, Illinois director of the Dlxl#4 Highway association, and a number of other motorists left Chicago bound fof Miami. In Indiana they Joined the Dixie highway motorcade. Hundreds of tourists from Illinois, Indiana and Michigan took parti V Before daylight In the Williamson county jail at Marlon, which has been their home for more than a year, Robert Tate and his wife, Ruby Herrington Tate, convicted of poisoning Joseph Herrlngton, Mrs. Tate's first husband, said their last good-bys and were taken away to separate penitentiaries. Mrs. Tate was taken to Joliet and her husband to Chester. The policy of sending to the legislature men who are drys merely for the sake of office and who oppose other measures for which the church stands was condemned In resolutions passed by the Rock River conference of the Methodist Eplcsopal church, held at Elgin. The conference will meet next year in Embury church, Freeport, and in 1927 in First church. Oak Park. The government bureau of the census at Washington estimates the population of cities and towns in Illinois as follows: Alton, 26,797; Aurora, 40,- 254; Belleville, 26,909; Berwyn, 18,856; Bloomington, 30,421; Blue Island, 18,- 184; Carey, 15,572; Canton, 11,027; Centralia, 14,082; Champaign, 18,191; Chicago Heights, 22,117; Cicero, 62,- 238; Danville, 37,021; Decatur, 50,359; East St. Louis, 71,425; Elgin, 28,291; Evanston, 43,883; Forest Park. 13,133; Freeport, 20,688; Galesburg, 24,822; Granite City, 18,166; Herrin, 13,323; Jacksonville, 15,931; Joliet, 40,578; Kankakee, 18,470; Kewanee, 19,733; LaSalle, 13,907; Lincoln, 12,443; Mattoon, 14,739; May wood, 14,245; Mollne, 33,910; Murphysboro, 12,524; Oak Park, 51,428; Ottawa, 11,542; Pekln, 13,324; Peoria, 81,564 ; Quincy, 37,478; Rock Island, 40,073; Rockford, 76,462; Springfield, 63,023; Streator, 15,076; Urbana, 11,348; Waukegan, 22,023. Three true bills, two of them said to charge murder, were reported v.oted by the Lake county grand Jury at ^Waukegan in connection with the From School Teacher to Great Eminence A young man who was brought up «a t farm, qualified for district school teacher, then managed to save enough money to put hitt , thru medical c4fc> lege. Later, he moved to Buffalo, N. T, and today the nam# of this man. Dr. R. V. Pierce, la known throughout the world. His Go 1 d e n Medical Discovery is the best known blood medicine and tonic. More than fifty million bottles have been sold. If your dealer does not sell the Discovery, in liquid or tablets, you can obtain a pkg. of tha tablets by sending 65c to the Dr. PierCfe Clinic, in Buffalo, N. Y. -r DISTEMPER^ COMPOUND ^ Keep your horses working with "SPOHN'S." Standard remedy for 32 yeait for Distemper. Strangles, Influenza, Coughs and Colds. Give to sick and those expowd. Give "SPOHNTS" for Doa Disbyrourd^ st. ffnot, Sa write%r tm feo^oklet on dh mMNKMnLcuak OOSWEH FOR OVER 200 YEARS haarlem oil has been a worldwide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism!, lumbago and uric acid conditions. sourness ^ HAARLEM T>IL correct Internal troubles, stimulate vital organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine GOLD MEDAI* Magnanimous Owner--Didn't you promise ®e ta win this race? Jockey--Yes. . » Owner--And dldnt I promise to fir# you If you failed? Jockey--Yes, but as I broke mf promise, I won't hold you to yours. Hope thinks nothing difficult; spair tells us that difficulty Is lnstor* -mountable.--Watts. Sure Relief 6 BELL-AN* Hot water Sure Relief ELL-ANS FOR INDIGESTION 25t and 75$ Pkgs.Sold Everywhere iHWOESTKw Quick Safe Relief CORNS In one minute--or less--the pain ends. Dr. Itholl't Zino-pad is the safe, sure, healing tt--tmcnt for corns At drug and shoe atonst mschoii's ZinO'pads Put one on- tAfe pain i» gone Bandits Miss $2,000,000 Los Angeles.--A band of robbers which held up a mail truck here and escaped with six pouches of registered slaying of Mrs. Lily Holt, whose husinall allowed a mall truck to pass ' * -- -J - ° The Household Necessity For cuts* burns* blisters, raihtf* wound*, or skin trouble* of toy kind. Soothing and healing* Keep It alway* the houie. In tubes or botrlet. Look for CM trademark "Vaseline" on every package. It is your protection* llicMbrodgh M%> Co. (Cont'd) State Street N«w Yocfc Vaseline PETROLEUM JELLY Compers Bad Breath and is Popular Agak which was carrying $2,000,000 in bonds and securities. May Eliminate President Buenos Aires.--The proposal to eliminate the presidential office, which is only ornamental, is gaining headway in Uruguay, according to the newspaper Telegrafo. O. K.'s Harding Memorial Washington.--The Harding Memorial association authorized expenditure of $550,000 for a memorial to President Harding. Grading will start next month and construction in the spring of 1826. New Polish Envoy Named Warsaw, Poland.--The cabinet approved the appointment of John Clechanowski as Polish minister to the United States to succeed If, Wroblewski, resigned. N. Y. Budget $428,000,000 New York.--The New York budget will be increased $25,000,000 to $425,- 000,000 for 1926, the largest In the city's history^ according to an advance estimate hand, Arthur, and a daught^' by a previous marriage, Clara Harcq, are held in Jail. Tbe letter's husband has been OUt on bond under an accessory charge. Dwight J. Anderson of Chicago has be*n appolnteJ assistant director H the state department of reglstrati mi and education, Governor Small announced at Springfield. Miss Helen Hood of Chicago was re-elected president of the Women's Christian Temperance union of Illinois at the state convention held at Champaign. Other officers re-elected were: Mrs. Atta Root Edwards of Pinckneyville, vice president; Mr& Eppa Marshall, Chicago, corresponding secretary, an.l Mrs. L. Belle Goodman, Champaign, treasurer. Veterans of the Civil, Spanish-American und World wars were convened at Qulncy at the second annual reunion of the Veterans of All Wars. El^ht .Civil war regiments were represented. "The day I started taking Carter's Little Liver Pills," says Mr. John Perry of New York City, "my habitual bad breath and bad stomach stopped. I strongly recommend them to all those afflicted with these nasty troubles. I assure you that my own case was a bad one, causing me untold embarrassment, and Carter's helped me right from the start," , Bad breath comes from sour stomach and can usually be relieved quickly by Carter's Little Liver Pills. They are wonderful for constipation, •ick-headache and indigestion and they physic the system in a mild and gentle manner, no bad after effects. Recommended and for sale by *| drug (tores, y / & '4