fs ••vr? fe" MEMffimi Lines Are Included in t Wilson's Prootematian. " $*• Pti'. DEUY MAY PREVENT DISASTER h£: ;5- •IVM Corporatlone Ampta Opportunity • to Adequately Prepare for the Rosumption of Their Bualness Under Owners' Control. h v 1 Washington, Dec. 25. »*- President Wilson announced that the railroads • would be returned to private ownerr Alp March 1. The president also announced that Hie railroad express companies would " . . |ja returned at the same time. In announcing these two decisions Of the president. Secretary Tumulty issued the following statement: "Last May, in his message to the 2" ogress, the president announced at the railroads would be handed fcrer to their owners at the end of this Calendar year. It is now necessary to act by issuing the proclamation, t The decision of the president with gtigard to the railroad properties was •at forth in the following proclamation : "By the President aC the Halted Jgtates of America: : A. "A proclamation : . ;.T f "Relinquishment of federal control c It railroads and systems of transporfitlon. "Whereas, in the erercise of authority committed to me by law, I have # heretofore, through the secretary of war, taken possession of, and have, ferough the director general of rail- Mads, exercised control over certain fmliroads, systems Qf transportation Had property pertinent thereto or Connected therewith, systems of coast- Wise and Inland transportation, engaged in general transportation and Owned or controlled by said railroads or systems of transportation, including also terminals, terminal companies and terminal associations, sleeping and parlor cars, private car lines, elevators, warehouses, telegraph and telephone lines and all other equipment •lid appurtenances commonly used tpon or operated as a port of such railroads and systems of transportation; and, ' 1 "Whereas, I now deem it needful desirable that all railroads, sys- 'Inns of transportation and property '(K>w under such federal control, be relinquished therefrom; now, therefore. Wider authority of section 14 of the federal control act, approved March 21, 1918, and of all other powers and provisions of law thereto me enabling, I, Wood row Wilson, president of the t United States, do hereby relinquish .from federal control, effective the first day Of March, 1920, at 12:01 o'clock a. m., all railroads, systems of transportation and property of whatever kind taken or held under such federal control, and not heretofore relinquished, ..and restore the same to the possession and control of their respective own- .ers. ••Walker D. Hlnes, director general Of railroads, or his successor in office. Is hereby authorized and directed, through such agent and agencies as he may determine. In any manner not t Inconsistent with the provisions of said act of March 21, 1919, to adjust, settle and close all matters. Including • ihe making of agreements for compensation, and all questions and disputes ' of whatsoever nature arising out of or Incident to federal control, until otherwlse provided by proclamation of p the president or by act of congress, ,and generally to perform as fully in all respects as the president is authorised to do, all the acts and things nec- * onsary or proper In order to carry into »• effect this proclamation and the relin- < jdulshment of said railroads, systems , ^ «r transportation and property. "For the purpose, of accounting and "'•i *>r all other purposes, this proclamar Don shall become effective on the first .••'-••V *ay of March, 1920, at 12:01 a. m. f (Signed) t ; f . "WOODROW WILSON." AND REDS BATTLE P- %,• , Engagement Fopght aJt lifli Juno- tlen for Poasoaaiiftn Road--* Rod Cross Trains 8afe. Washington, Dec. 29.--An engage- Klient between Polish forces and the ^lolshevikl at Taiga, the Junction on the trans-Siberian railroad for tne branch line of Tomsk, is said to have been fought December 23, according t:> Mate department advices. •. ' ^Trains bearing American Red Cross \aappHes succeeded in getting beyond ihe fighting linos. Irkutsk. Dec. 29.--Trygve B Hansen, United States vice consul at Omsk, and Jose H. Ray. consul at : Irkutsk, have safely passed Taiga. 48 'IStles southeast of Tomsk, together « tj^ih Red Cross trains. >/ To Meet In 1_ondon. Paris, Dec. 30.--The newspaper 4?Intransigeant says the next peace V conference will be held In London, not te Paris, because Lloyd George will be -anable to leave England on account of Irish situation. n OR. GIUSEPPE KlOm: Dr. Giuseppe Motta. un Italian Swiss, bae been elected president of Switzerland for the year 1920. WHY 0: S. OUSTS REDS WASHINGTON TELL3 FOREIGN NATIONS OF REASONS. State Department Aaki Safe Conduct POT Aliens Who Are Now on Wiy - Back to Soviet Russia. Washington, Dec. 25.--An explanation of the deportation of the 249 radical Russians on the transport Bnford was cabled by the state department to "various foreign caplAls." The message said precaution had been taken "to request for them safeconduct and humane treatment at the hands of the authorities under whose jurisdiction they will pass en route to soviet Russia." Conditions found on its arrival In Europe and future orders which may be given while it Is en route will govern the destination of the transport with Its cargo of deported radicals, Anthony Caminettl, commissioner general of Immigration, said. "It Is, of course, intended to deliver the deportees to soviet Russia," the commissioner added. The department's message follows: "There are being deported from the United States to soviet Russia about 250 citizens of Russia who are undesirable here. These persons, while enjoying the hospitality of this country, have conducted themselves in a most obnoxious manner, and while enjoying the benefits of living under the protection of this government have plotted its overthrow. "They are a menace to law end order. They hold theories which are antagonistic to the orderly processes of modern civilization. They have Indulged in practices which tend to subvert the rights which the Constitution of the United States guarantees to Its citizens. "They are arrayed In opposition to government, to decency, to Jostice. They plan to apply their destructive theories by violence In derogation of law. "They are anarchists. They are persons of such character as to be undesirable in the United States of America and are being sent whence they came. The deportation is-In accordance with the law. "Precaution has been taken to request for them safe conduct and humane treatment at the hands of the authorities under whose jurisdiction they will pass en route to soviet Rus- FAIR ESTATE IS SETTLED Mrs. W. K. Vanderbllt, Mrs. Pel rich < alp Other Heirs Reach Agr|^rr" ment After Fights . 7 . . San Franslco, Dec. 29.--A compromise In the contest over the will of the late James Q. Fair, former United States senator from Nevada, who left an estate estimated at $12,000,000, was filed here in superior court, ending years of litigation over the estate. The terms of the-settlement were not made public. In the agreement the principal heirs of Senator Fair, his daughters. ^jMrs. William K. Vanderbllt and Mrs. Herman Oelrichs and her son, Herman Oelrlchs, Jr., of New York, concede that the plaintiffs, seven In number, are entitled to be restored to their rights under the Fair will. lUTMBOIMLTI) ENS LABOR WARS i ' . .V Industrial Conference Recom< W^NaUoft-Wife^^r., t. a* SUM#'"4 ' ; •' T5" 4 '* Mexfoan Army Graft Mrs. Washington, Dec. 27.--The alleged |•« %i»ntinuance of graft in Mexican mlll- * t*ry circles has so aroused the civilian * population that the government kas H Mfieen forced to act to curb It, accord- '4et State Property Value. " ^ apHaglleld, III., Dec. 29,-The state * tax commlssion announced that the * Ki; atBbSIaod valve of all property In the capital stock of cor* 5,386. The value $3,391,897,444. fWg to Mexico City advices. Western Union Raises Pay. New York, Dec. 30.--Thirty-two thousand employees of the Western Union Telegraph and Telephone company will receive salary Increases, amounting to $5,000,000, January 1, It was announced here. Employees' in servlor' more than one year will receive 15 |gfr cent Increase, and those who have been In the' service more than six month* but less than a year will receive ajyo per cent Increase. Ex-Slave Dies at Age of 128. Parkersburg, W. Va., Dec. 30.--William Peyton, a negro, one of the oldest men in the! United States, died at Little Hocking, O., near Parkersburg, at the age of 128 years. In his ^rontl) Peyton was a slave In Virginia. - REPORT JUST MADE PUBLIC Invites FiMost Discussion From NtPn and Wpmen In Every Walk of Life --Plan Now In Its Elementary Stage. Washington, Dec. 30.--The creation of a national Industrial tribunal and regional board of inquiry and adjustment for the settlement of all disputes between labor and capital Is the chief recommendation In the preliminary report of President Wilson's second industrial conference Asserting that the public has long been uneasy about the power of great employers and is fast becoming uneasy about the power of great labor organizations, the report says the community must be assured against the domination of either, and provision is made for the representation of the public on the proposed Industrial' tribunal. The plan of the conference Is la reality a proposal for the creation of a national Industrial court with subsidiary agencies to assist it in maintaining peace between labor and capital, and thereby safeguarding the public interests. 'While the plan il now In its elementary stages the purpose of tnak* Ing It public at this time Is to invite the fullest discussion from men and women in every walk of life. The conference desires criticism especially, and when it reconvenes on January 12, it intends to take up all ideas that have meantime beetf submitted to It. The report says: "The national industrial tribunal shall have Its headquarters in Washington, and shall be composed of nine members, chosen by the president and confirmed by the senate. Three shall represent the employers of the country, and shall be appointed upon nomination of the secretary of commerce. Three shall represent employees, and shall be appointed upon nomination of the secretary of labor. Three shall be representatives of the public Interest. Not more than five of the members shall be of the same political party. "The tribunal shall be, in general, a board of appeal./Its determinations on disputes coming to it upon an appeal shall be by unanimous vote. In case it is unable to reach a determination, it shall make and publish majority and minority reports which shall be matters of public record." In providing for the operation of the proposed system, the conference suggests the division of the United States Into 12 districts similar, so far as boundaries are concerned, to those established under the federal reserve system. i Each of these regions would have a chairman appointed by the president. He would be the representative of the public Interest and would. serve for a period of three years, w«th ihe chief executive exercising the privilege of reappointment. As a bulwark to the regional chairman, the national Industrial tribunal could, at ^its discretion, choose one or more vice chairmen and provide for the establishment of additional regional boards. Somewhat akin to jury service Is the method suggested for the selection of representatives of employers and employees for the regional boards. The secretary of commerce and the secretary of labor would be authorised to prepare panels for the approval of the president, and upon service on a regional board a man's name would automatically go to the bottom of the list, thus insuring a complete rotation. OR. jLYMAN ABBOTT :r# • Dr. Lyuian Abbott, editor-in-chief of tbe Outlook for more than half a centtiry, who has just celebrated his 84th birthday. He is as keen and alert as ever and continues in Intimate touch with world affairs. || ' ijiMiii WOOD ALCOW PERIL u. S. SEEKING WAY TO STOP FAKE LIQUOR SALE8. Commissioner of Internal Revenue Roper Considers Means of Put. ting Curb on Traffic. "Washington, Doe. 29.--Daniel C. Roper, commissioner of Internal revenue, Is considering means to curb the unrestricted sale of wood alcohol which, in the guise of Whisky, already has caused many deaths throughout the country. When congress convenes on January 5 Commissioner Roper Is expected to send In a number of recommendations to safeguard the sale of the poison, and these will be speedily acted upon. The death roll of wood alcohol has assumed such proportions as to cause grave concern here among officials and members of congress. "Congress will be ready and willing to assist the commissioner of internal revenue In whatever plans he may devise to curb the sale of wood alcohol," said Senator Morris Sheppard, Democrat of Texas. Commissioner Roper, In answer to Inquiries, said that while he hed been making a thorough study of the manufacture and sale of wood alcohol, he had not yet matured his plans to the point that he felt he could announce them. Hartford, Conn., Dec. 29.--Sixty deaths are reported here, the toll of the "whisky" shipped to the nearby Massachusetts and Connecticut towns. The police and medical authorities expect that other deaths will be added, as there are many known to be blinded and 111 by tbe poison, and additional cases are being reported. 7"he deadllness of the beverage Is shown by the fact that of fifteen cases taken to one hospital in Springfield, Mass., fourteen have died and the last one Is not expected to live. SAYS VIRGO KILLED WOMAN JOHN D. GIVES $100,000,000 Rockefeller Gifts Make a Real Christmas-- Schools and Health Will ' Benefit by Present. New York, Dec. 27.--John D. Rockefeller has just given away $100,000,- 000--the largest recorded single philanthropy In the history of the world. Half of that sum goes to the general education board, Itself a Rockefeller creation, to be disbursed, fcjth principal and Interest, In co-operating with institutions of higher learning in Increasing the salaries of their teaching staffs. i The other $50,000,000 goes to the Rockefeller foundation, chartered "to promote tlje well-being of mankind throughout the world." Of this snip $5,000,000 In deference to a special request of the donor, is to be expended for the development and Improvement of the leading medical schools of Canada. Reds Near Odessa. London, Dec. 30.--Odessa Is being evacuated by the civilian population owing to the rapid advance of the bolshevlkl In southern Russia, according to a Constantinople dispatch to the |Ex change Telegraph company. HMuea vaiue ox an pi state, excepting Derations, is $1066.700,3 last Itir was placed at Woolens Taken in Holdup. i, Dec. 29.--Three armed am fetrackload of woolen goods jg- -^ 'yg*P»-as-lt was leaving the iWM x of lrote^ M*tm. intimidated the flfi rHh escaped with Leaves $1,000,000 for Diet reused. Cincinnati, Dec 27.--The will of Jacob O. Schmldlapp, Cincinnati capitalist, who died recently In New York, leaves an estate estimated at $1,000,- 000 in trust, the Income to be used for the "relief of suffering and distress." McClure Publications Sold. New York, Dec. 27.--Mc<5fnrt»s Magazine has been bought by Herbert Kaufman, It was announced by Frederick L. Collins, president of the company. All the stock pf McClure publications went to Mr. K^uftnan. Lynch Negro In North Carolina. Wilmington. N. C.. Dec. 30.--A negro named preen, charged with the murder of R. M. Brown, a white man, was taken from the police by a mob at Frankllnton, N. C., and hanged to a tree. • • • PMStdentfe Sixty-Third Birthday. Washington, Dec. 30.--President Wilson's sixty-third birthday was celebrated in quiet fashion at the White H^use. The president spent part of tbe forenoon downstairs in his wheel chair. Mrs. Tabor Confesses to Officer® of Van Buren County, Mich., That 8on-ln-Law is Guilty. Lawton, Mich., Dec. 25.--Sirs. Sarah I. Tabor confessed to the authorities of Van Buren county, the truth concerning the death and burial of her daughter, Maud Tabor Virgo, In a trunk In tne cellar of their home at Lawton. / Showing emotion for the first time since her arrest, the aged woman broke down at *2 a. m. and cried to Prosecutors H. FJ. Adams and Glenn Warner "Joe did It." 'Joe said he didn't wnnt any brats around his house," the old lady sobbed out to Prosecutors Warner and Adams. "Joe /Virgo did it; Joe and nobody else, and for three years he's dared me to teH It." A "I knew Maud was to Lecome a mother," she said. "Joe Virgo came to the nse and took Maud away in an auto the latter part of April and was gone three days. He brought her back the Saturday before the Mtjtpday. May 1, when she died."' Also Demands United States : . .'"iv ' • . *.(•« 1,500 Vote to Continue 3te«t" $tr!ke. Cleveland, O., Dec. 29.--Fifteen hundred steel workers voted unanimously to continue on strike and to remain away from their former employment until the strike Is won or officially declared off by the national officers. v k; New York Editor Dies. Miami, Fla., Dec. 29.--Col. Caleb Marsh Van Hamm, for several years managing editor of the New York American, died here after aa illness of several weeks. Wilson Holds Up Sugar BUI. Washington, Dec. 29.--President Wilson is withholding action on the Mc- Nary bill extending the life of tbe sugar equalization board until the board files a memorandum concerning the measure. French- Loan OvereubserHtMl. - New York, Dec. 29.--France's national credit loan was oversubscribed on the first day, according to cable advices received here. The advice added that the oversubscription had exceeded the best hopes of the government. L. & Arrest in Brown Case. IhoBt' Clemens, Mich., Dee'1"4®#.;-- Sheriff Caldwell arrested Lloyd Prevost and Mrs. Ruth Brown, who are suspected of having murdered J. Stanley Brown, the son of a deceased mlllonalre Detroit cigar manufacturer. S&-3-* I?.*,.M&f Rob Minneapolis Woman of Rings. Minneapolis, Minn., Dec. 29.--Ten thousand dollars' worth of diamond rings was the loot taken by a masked bandit who held up and robbed Mrs. & J. Nugent in her apartment house Some here. - * : Kills Two Children and Himself, Seattle, Wash., Dec. 27.--William Potter, a real ^tate denier, while delirious from thf effects of pneumonia, shot and killed two of his young children, ' seriously wounded a third and then killed hioself. NM : ON HONEYMOON "Winnie" Loveday Accused by y; , Police of Being' Society. "Raffles." 90MPERS EXPLAINS MEETM6 r • * • * , » American Federation of Labor and ; Rail Unlona Join in a Finish fight < _~Daniel Willard Calls on Labor Leader. •"WildhfrigtriiK Dec. SI.--Organized* la-^ bor united here to direct an unrelenting fight against return of fhe railroads to their owners March 1; and. If that cannot be averted at this time, to prevent enactment of railroad legislation which will include anti-strike provisions and penalties against workers who cease their employment. The American Federation of Labor, the four railroad brotherhoods and the ten railroad shopmen's unions affiliated with the American Federation of Labor jofned In the declaration of war and issued a statement asserting themselves in favor of a two-year extension of government control of the railroads In order that government ownership might have a fair test. The action was taken at a conference called by Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, who presided. Frgnk Morrison, secretary of the federation, also attended, together with 19 officials of the variops railroad organizations. An unusual circumstance during the conference was the arrival at the American Federation of Labor headquarters of Daniel Willard, president of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad. His coming apparently was unexpected. i Mr. Willard was ushered Into Mr. Gompers' private office and the federation president was sent for. He Immediately left the conference and was in conference with Mr. Willard for nearly an hour. Neither would discuss the subject of their talk, although It was Inferred that It had to do with the important subject of railroad legislation, in which both are vitally Interested. Mr. Gompers' statement at the close of the conference was as follows: "On Friday test a number of representatives of the railroad organisations, both shopmen and those In train service, met In ray office, and we discussed railrond legislation. I issued In Invitation to the executives of the ten shopmen's organizations affiliated with the American Federation of Labor and the four railroad * brotherhoods, asking them to meet me here today. We began our, meeting at three o'clock and adjourned shortly after eight. "The entire time of the conference was taken up with discussion of the parliamentary situation of the railroad bills in congress. "We reached these conclusions: "That It is the sense of the conference that control of the railroads by the government of the United States Rhould be extended for a period of not less than two years. In order that a proper test might be made as to government control. "That such a tent has not been given a fair opportunity during war times or since then. "That this conference Is opposed to legislation making strikes of workers unlawful. "That It is the sense of the conference that penalty clauses in pending legislation on the railroads against workers ceasing their employment should be eliminated. ' "That this conference favors the enactment of the beneficial features of the railroad bills which tend to establlfih better relations between the employees and the carriers, and that these beneficial clauses should be extended to the sleeping car and Pullman company employees." BETTER THAN FICTION ARMY HONOR MEDAL REFUSED Librarian at Washington 8purns Award as He Holds H(f . 5 ' Service Light: •• , Dec. 81.--WMle *«v«l officers have been rejecting decorations conferred on them by Secretary Daniels, it was disclosed that only one of the 7,200 persons awarded fcrmy medals has declined the honor. In recognition of his services In directing the collection and distribution of books to the soldiers, Herbert Putnam, librarian of congress, was awarded the distinguished service medal by Secretary of War Baker. Mr. Putnam politely declined to accept the decoration, modestly explaining that credit for the work was due not to himself alone but to the entire library service organization. Shoot Cashier; Qet $7,000. TWedo. o„ Dec. 31.--Seven men held, 'up the People's bank at Ottawa Lake, Mich., and escaped with $7,000 In cash and Liberty bonds after shooting Herman Rothfuss, the cashier. In their haste the raiders overlooked $20,000. Army to Resume Sale. Washington, Dec. 31.--Parcel post sales from army retail stores, discontinued December 10 to relieve the mails during the Christmas rush, will be resumed on January 1, It waa-announeed at the war department. HolAp Men Raid Cltfk. r v New York, Dec. 27.--Three holdup men entered the Eugene R. Duffy associated clvibrooms, lined up 18 mem- •bers at thei point of revolvers and eo> caped witty $2,000 In cash and peft rty. at. with) t M m "Kicks" in Load of Hay. Vanceboro. Me., Dec. 31.--One hundred.' and fifty cases of whisky concealed In a carload of hay In transit across the border here from New Brunswick, were seised by .* ^nlt^d States customs officer. v Iowa Yeggs Make Big Hauf. Council Bluffs, la., Dec. 81.--The Tingley (la.) Savings bank was robbed of $100,000 In cash and securities by "yeggs" who opened the door of the vault by cutting out the lock with ac •cetyteaa tar*. ' . Wins Beautiful Bride, Starts on Wadding Trip and Is Caught by Detectives-- Wife Decides Jo , '• v 'v, Stand by Him.- T!U* 'knightly antf rtfeanflc crook stealing hearts as easily as he steals the family jewels abounds In fiction and upon the moving picture screen. But little is seen of him in real life. Veteran police reporter® have long sought him in vain. But--at list an unusual type appears In the police records. Earl Winfleld Loveday is his name. In a vague way he suggests the "Raffles" and "Arsene Lupin" of fiction. Although only twenty- six years of age, ho has lived several existences. To his friends ha the upper stratum he Is known as Earl Loveday, formerly a popular member of Kenwood's younger set. To the police he is known as "Winnie" Loveday, "the greatest safeblower that has appeared In the underworld for twenty years," He is in custody to-day after a seven months' search on charges of being the leader of the band of three men who blew the powerful vault of the American Brass company In Kenosha, stole $30,000 in cash and Liberty bonds and shot to death Policeman Tony Singapore la the "get-away." . • "w, poized on Honeymoon. ' , But there is yet another chapter. It concerns Loveday's vain reformation, his wooing of little Carrie O'Neal, eighteen-year-old school teacher of Clearwater, Fla., a simple wedding In a little church at St. Petersburg, Fla., and the denouement and arrest while the honeymoon was still shining. The story was gathered from "Billy" Pinkerton, chief of the Plnkerton National Detective agency. "Loveday Is one of the most remarkable criminals I have met," said the veteran Plnkerton. "His technical ability would have won him a reputation and money in legitimate business. His uncanny mastery of safes and Vaults is startling. "After the Kenosha Job he maneuvered his way down to Tampa, Fla. ,.fv. f rfw.: J Get instant relief with 'Pape's Cold Compound1 Don't stay stuffed-up 1 Quit blowing and snuffling 1 A dose of "Pape's Cold Compound" taken every two hours until three doses are taken usually breaks op a cold and ends all grippe misery. The very first dose opens your clogged-tsp nostrils and the air passages of the head; stops nose running; relieves the headache, dnliness, fever* tahness, sneezing, soreness and stiffness, "Pape's Cold Compound" is tho Quickest, surest relief known and costs only a few cent3 at drug stores. It acta without assistance. Taptes nice. Contains ao quinine. Insist Oft P^e'al No Applause. **How*d yon make out tn vmtdeville?" "I think I pitched a ao-hit game," replied the twirler, gloomily. HURRY! YOUR HAIR NEEDS "MNDERIN?* Qaft rid of fwy bit of that isndmll and atop falling hair. IV step hair at once and-tM the scalp of every particle of dandruff, get a small bottle of "Danderine" at any drug or toilet counter for a few cents, pour a little in your hand and rub well into tbe scalp. After several applications all dandruff usually goes and hair stops coming out. Every hair in your head soon shows new life,1 brightness, tfcfckaeas Ahd mota --Adv. .vigor, comr. "Hello, Loveday,1* 8taa|e Said. There he lived at the best hotel knd won friends by his personality and his dancing. Then he purchased an or-, ange grove In Clearwater. He was living under the name of George R. Scott. Wedding Is Brilliant. "Then Carrie O'Neal, school-teacher and daughter of a,neighboring farmer, came into his life. Immediately Loveday 'fell.' He wrote his friends that Earl Loveday was dead. That henceforth he was George R. 8cott, farmer. All Clearwater folks attended the wedding In St. Petersburg, and beamed their happiness. "Then Loveday started to take his wife for a trip to California. Bat we were closing in on him. At Hot Springs, where Loveday stopped to wind up entirely his connection with his old friends, we caught up with him. J. C. Steele of our St. Louis office went to {nake the arrest. Police were ready to Assist him. Earl and the girl wife were sighted on the street. With hands on their guns the police advanced. They were ready for a fight 'Hello, Loveday,' Steele said. "But Earl pulled no gun. He just smiled wearily and took the girl's hands in his. She didn't know what to make of It. But I suppose that, womanlike, she understood. "'You'd better go 'home lb your folks,' said Earl. " 'No,' she said, after a little thought, Tm going with you.' "And, by George, she did," concluded Plnkerton. "She came through here with him, and she's going to stand by him. But we've got Loveday this time. It's the long trail for hlnk.1* Leech In Man's Windpipe. London.--A British surgeon hss successfully removed a living leech that had found Its way Into a patient's windpipe, i Kills Giant Eagle. Tuba City, Arix.--An eagle measuring seven feet from tip to tip of his wings, was killed by an employee on Ralph Alnsley's ranch near the Sutter tules. The eagle purloined a number of lambs and. after a watch which was set several days ago, was killed. Motive Misunderstood. Milwsukee.--Roy Brisback didn't ffice the looks of his employees horse, so he took him over to the bone yard and got his boss another horse. Now cfeMcgatf .with IMNMO stapling 7 . 'Hla Stand. . T • "Has four son selected m WftSc to liter • "Yes; he is going to ran for office." Garfield Tea, taken regularly, wig 4ftv» vest both liver and kidney disorders.--Adv. A Respite. • "Mrs. Jaggs tells me she is so *w>y now In her domestic life." - "Is her husband so good to hef^F "No, but he's been sent to HER FADED, SHABBY APPAREL DYED NEW "Diamond Dyes" Freshen Up Old* Discarded Garments. Don't wofry about perfect results. Use "Diamond Dyes,"' guaranteed to give a new, rich, fadeless color to any fabric, whether it be wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed goods,--dresses, blouses, stockings, skirts, children's coats, feathers, draperies, coverings-- everything I The Direction Book with each package tells how to diamond dye over fcny color. ' To match any material, have dealer show yon "Diamond Dye" Color Card. --Adv. if. • Suitable tio the Situation. -,1 •'Bill seems hopping mad." "He Is. He's got a jumping tQtth* ache." "Can't Cut Off My Leg" Says Railroad Engineer "1 am a railroad eogtneer; about 20 yeara ago my leg was seriously injured In an accident out West. Upon my refusing to allow the doctor to amputate it I waa told it would be impossible to heal the wound. I have tried all kinds of salvea and had many doctors in the past M years, but to ho avail. Finally I resolved to use PETERSON'S OINTMENT on my lea. You cannot imagine my astonishment when I found it was doing what over 100 things had failed to do. My leg is now completely cured."--Gus Hauft, 799 Myrtle avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. .Great tor piles, eczema, old sores and all skin diseases. 36 cents. Mail orders filled. Peterson Ointment Co Inc., Buffalo. N. Y. USED STEEL AND WOOD TANKS 1,^00 to 6,000 gallon*. Whole or In leattoa* Also 4 and 8 gallon heavy oak kega. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY--F. O. B. Cfctaa* GOETZ COMPANY SON. U Safe*. CHKA0O 30 i?oraCOUGHS IbJTCH? Money back wttlxtM OMtMO if HUNT'S SALVE ItkOe la the treatment of nOKMUIU, HINQWOaM[.,T Krrkjtc - Itching skin We ktSraf AiaMaifc•'a ***-; ordiraetfrow l ft ,»•-- Tl 50~Photoa of the Biggest--50 MOVIE STARS _ Bspeadneed tn Half tour on C*r*batf& . S»e* artists as Mary Plehfsnl, Pnaaiw Fklttwka, Charlie Chaplin, etc. Both mill aaS faaMle «tare Me a« her* In clasw MM By mail postpaM. SS cents, la oaia « •ea»y order. choi'inakii naoa., rasuwunu Dept. US. 6417 Harper Ave. Chleact FRECKLES FOR 8A1.K--% Motion, half to cvttfvatsou •inali houM, rout*, tftopkoit, food wattr •---•--- -- i OiwiSMt ;* . 1 tt £? jk^-i..m» n-*., m<i fy. ,ki. "a*-* 'feL V\.