fflSMUt McHENBY PLAINDJ TT.T. At once! Relief with "Pape's Cold Compound" The first dose eases your cold! Don't •tsy etuffed-up! Quit blowing and •milling! A dose of "Pape's Cold Compound" taken every two hours nto- ® three doses are taken usually breaks up a severe cold and ends all grippe misery. Bellet awaits you I Open your Hogged-np nostrils and the air passages of your bead; stop nose running; relieve the headache, dullness, fever- Ighness, sneezing, soreness and stiff* •feso. / "Pspe's Cold Compound" Is the quickest, surest relief knc^n and costs «Bly a few cents at drug stores. It acts without assistance. Tastes nice. Contains no> falaJiMw Insist Pftpe's!--AdT. mm rnmmmm New t«e m h die EnglandHoHand-Uniteri States Celebration. . _ SHIP'S 3001)1 Plans Announced for Celebration In Honor of Pilgrim Ptihers--Main American Events Will Be"If* Boston and Plymouth. •' ^ f Encouraging. 'Shall I settle the bill now, doctor V "Not necessary. I canarrange with fcur widow." Catarrh Cannot Be Coretf' r> by JLOCAL APPLICATIONS, aa they canaot reach the Mat of the disease. Catarrh is a local disease, greatly Influenced by constitutional conditions. HAUL'S CATARRH MEDICINB will cure catarrh. It is taken internally and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System, HALLS CATARRH MSOICINE IS Composed of some of the best tonics known, combined with some of the best blood purifiers. The perfect combination Of the ingredients in HALL'S CATARRH MKOICIN K is what produces such wondernd results in catarrhal conditions: Dranrists 75c. Testimonials free. V. J. Cheney & Co., Props., Toledo, Ohio. The High Price of Husbands. fco that's her husband--is he worth Ch?" "Oh, yes. Her father gave a ondred thousand for him." • WOMEN NEED SWAMP-ROOT thousands of women have kidney sat Madder trouble and never suspect it. Wrens' complaints often prove to be MtUag else but kidney trouble, or the tesult of kidney or bladder disease. If the kidneys are not in a healthy eofidition, they may cause the other organs to become diseased. ^aiu iu the back, headache, low of ambition, nervousness, are often times symptom* of kidney trouble. Don't delay starting treatment. Dr. Kilmer's Bwamp-Root, a physician's prescription, obtained at any drug store, may be last the remedy needed to overcome each conditions. Get a medium or large size bottle im- •edtttely from any drug store. . However, if you wish first to test this Esat preparation send ten cents to Dr. Imer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be awe and fgpntion this paper.--Adv. ^ *nie secret of success lies In doing KJfell what you can do and cutting oat what you cannot do. •m SWITCH OFF! Put aside the Salts, OH, , Calomel, or Pills asd ^ n*(i take "Cjucarets.7 - f-i-i New Tork.--The three hundredth anniversary of the Pilgrim Fathers, tentative plans of which have just been announced here, will Include celebrations in England, Holland and the United States, and will continue from May to December. 1920. \ A four-day program in Leyden, Amsterdam and Rotterdam, whence the Pilgrims sailed three centuries ago to the American wilderness, where they might And "freedom to worship God," will start on August 30, when committees from the United States and Sag* Hand will be received at the University of Leyden. Scholars Will Deliver Addresses. Addresses commemorative of the Occasion will be delivered by scholars from the three countries. Including the rector of the university, Dr. Rendel Harris of Manchester, England; Viscount Bryce, and a famous American who has ficrt yet been designated. The next day, August 31, the birthday of the queen of the Netherlands, will include, besides a congress In the town hall, a religious memorial service In the Pletersklrk, in which Rev. John Robinson, who led the separatlonlsts from the Church of England (the Pilgrims) to Holland in 1009, was buried. One of the features of the holiday at Amsterdam, September 1, will be a meeting in the Rijksmuseum, the unveiling of a memorial window in the Bagljnekerk and a reception. The next day there will be an aquatic pageant in Rotterdam, the visitors traveling In the morning from Leyden to Delftshaven if possible by boat along the way the Pilgrims went. Then there will be trips to the religious havens of Rotte.Uam, a memorial service in the church at Delftshaven, and at 7 p. m. the English and American contingents will depart for Southampton. The celebration in England will st»ii In May. 1Q20- with m^vtings In the home of Robinson j Ausierfieid, Boston and Sheffield. From August 4 to, Septqpber 20 there will be cermonles In Cambridge, London, Southampton and other places, culminating In the sailing of the new- Mayflower, which will carry the returning American committee and British delegations who are to participate in the program on this side of the Atlantic. Main events of the American celebration will be In Plymouth, Mass., and Boston, where historical nageants will be held, followed by a big reception In New Tork. Vice President Marshall Sight FaHs As Artist Paints Heroic Nurse London.--While engaged on a large picture dealing with fbe fate of Edith X. Cavell, Mr. Van Ruith, a veteran painter, discovered thst hi- "yeslght WEfailing. Oculists predicted th«t the painter. v»iso b* of age, would lose his sight In a few months. Nevertheless he persevered and added the last touches to his work on the anniversary of the armistice. is honorary chairman of, the committee having the local program In charge. The foreign visitors will then be taken on a tour of the United States. On November 24, 1920, there will be a universal observance of Thanksgiving day In England, Holland and the United StatesjV . 'f v ?»» Soap Bubbles Kept Scientific Society Gives Information on Sir James Dewar's 'test. ALWAYS MYSTERY TO SCIENCE When Bubble Becomes Very Old It Offers Only Possible Example of , the Molecule Visible to ths Naked Eye. Philadelphia, Pa.--Facts about the prodigious strength of soap bubbles, proved by experiments In which bubbles were kept Intact for more than a year and subjected to all sorts of weight strains, were made public here for the first time by the Franklin Institute, one of the oldest scientific societies In the United States. Important to Chemists, Coming on the heels of the snnouncement of Einstein's discoveries of the gravitational bending of light, the exploitation of the soap bubble Is on the other end of the scale as to size, yet, according to scientists, Is dt tremendous Importance to chemists, physicists and research workers In the strength of materials and essential elements. The man who made the expert- DESTROYER NEST ON THE PACIFIC COAST Are you keeping your bowels, liver, kad stomach clean, pure and fresh with Ofscarets, or merely whipping them Into action every few days with Salts, Cathartic Pills, Oil, or Purgative Waters? .Stop having a bowel wash-day. Let Qftscarets gently cleanse and regulate the stomach, remove the sour and fermenting food and foul gases, take the access bile from the liver and carry oat of the colon and bowels fell the constipated waste matter and poisons So you can straighten up. Ca sea rets tonight will make you fed great by morning. They work while Fdh sleep--never gripe, sicken, or cause any inconvenience, and coat so little too.--Adv. ment$ universally recognized as one of the leading scientists in the world. He is Sir James Dewar, LL. D., D. Sc., F. R. S., Fullerian Professor of Chemistry, Royal Institution of Great Britain, and an honorary member of the Franklin Institute. The soap bubble is a simple thing, yet it has always been more or less S mystery to scientists. They consider It perhaps the best phenomenon existing for the study .of the habits aart Idiosyncrasies of the molecule. Scientists now claim, on the strength of the experiment made by Sir James Dewar, that when a soap bubble becomes very old, say in three or four days, it offers the only possible example of the molecule visible to the naked eye. Most parts of the bubble are estimated to consist of about one hundred layers of molecules. But by various methods of treatment the bubble is Induced to perform "stunts" until In black spots wfaick appear It represents only a single lay* er of molecules. Remarksbls Strength. This layer Is so thin that Sir James estimates it would take one and onethird million like it, superimposed, to make an inch. Yet, when the soap bubble Is permitted to mature In air that has been freed of its natural enemies, It is so strong that It will support drops of water many times Its own weight before breaking. Sometimes a bubble is torn from its supporting ring by the weight before the molecule* release their bulldog grip. Bird In Jail. Bath, Me.--Cramped quarters were furnished in the Bath jail recently for the oddest prisoner ever harbored there. The inmate had been arrested In the neighboring town of Woolwich and turned over to the Bath police for safe keeping. He was not a tippler, hut a crippled crane, and measured from ten to twelve feet from tip to tip of the wings. After being on exhibition for 24 hours the bird was liberated, all fines being remitted on dltion of good behavior. . ,, Sharp Difference of Opinion Over Question of Submitting Pact to the People ?W»en half a dozen woSien get tolikher thef all talk at once. If they dblnt they would never get through. n; is so obvious--isnt rrr • J I s o b v i o u s that every machine tttJst be kept clean, otherwise It will step one day. If you clean your automobile carefully, you must not forget that your stomach Is also such a machine. Trlner's American Elixir of Bittar Wine is the best cleaning remedy, (adlgestion, constipation, gases, headaches, insomnia, all will vanish as eoon as the intestines will be clean. No wonder If so many thousands of clients are satisfied with Triner'a remedies. Mr. Martin Netry, P. O. B. Tl, Oakley, Mich., wrote us on Dec. 0: "I api using your excellent American Elixir of Bitter Wine for several years aad I am very satisfied with It as well as with Trlner's Liniment which Is very praiseworthy, being excellent especially for stiff muscles." Tour dealer has :.ow after the inventory a full stock of Trlner's remedies, please pay a visit to his store.--Joseph Trlner Company, 1333-43 S. Ashland Ave., {P^cago, III.--Adv. ji labor agitator Is one who refuses • * the good work go otut \ f: ' "Hornets" of the new Pacific fleet, the swift destroyers, photographed from an airplane flying over them at anchor In San Diego harbor. Peculiar Bird. Stanford, Ky.--Mrs. Roberts, who lives just beyond Rowland, caught the other day a peculiar member of the bird or fowl species, known as a grebe. It has something of the appearance of a duck, but can neither walk nor fly. It Is carried from one place to another on land by heavy wind and Is much more at home on water than on land. It was brought to town and exhibited by N. W. Fowle and was later purchased by Sam Gentry. ' * • INDIAN PAINTINGS ON CLIFFS Owner Offers Them to State or National Authorities to Include in Park. Austin, Tex.--The most remarkable Indian paintings or photographs In the Southwest have been offered to state or national authorities, provided the cliffs upon which .they are drawn are inclosed in a park and adequatelyguarded, according to J. E. Pearce, associate professor of anthropology of the University of Tekas. These paintings, which are owned by E. D. Sims of Paint Rock are located along the banks of the Concho river near Paint Rock, upon every available surface for,a half-mile. They are in deep red. with an occasional black figure or character. . All phases of the early tribes are represented, Mr. Pearce declares, and so much valuable historical material is included in these paintings that Mr. Pearce will have them copied In scale for a report to the Smithsonian Institution, for which ha Is doing research work. • BIRDS SHOW INCREASE Beneficial Effects of Migratory Act Being Felt Waterfowl Have Been Breeding Rap- Mty Under Protection. «*» Declares. Washington.--The beneficial effects of the migratory bird treaty act are beginning to be felt The United States department of agriculture, through Its bureau of biological survey, has conducted investigations of the breeding areas of ducks in North Dakota and Nebraska. Compared with former years, a gratifying increase of breeding waterfowl, particularly In North Dakota, is evident The fifth annual series of counts of birds of all species breeding on selected areas in various parts of the United States contained a large proportion of reports showing Increases in bird population. The total number of reports received, however, was not large. Many of the persons who had formerly taken part In the annual bird counts were unable to find time for the work required by the fifth count "Many species of migratory birds," reports the chief of the bureau of bio* logical survey, "have had a marked Increase under the existing treaty act Waterfowl formerly driven to the fat North by spring shooting have remained In steadily Increasing numbers to breed in localities where none had previously nested for many years." Grasping Lsndlady Sentencsd. Budapest Hungary.---Dr. Charlotte Szecsi, a physician, has been sentenced to two months' imprisonment because she refused to rent an apartment to a tenant unless he would buy her fur: niture for 100,000 crowns (nominally $20,000). The action of the court Is In line with the effort to provide housing for the over-Congested city. Old Convict Is Let Out V; RECIPE FOR GRAY HAIR. jTb half pint of water add 1 we. Bay Sia, Junall box of Barbo Compound, and % aSTof glycerine. Apply to the hair twice a wsek until it becomes the desired shads. Any druggist can put this up or you caS Mix it at home at very little cost. It will fpadually darken streaked, faded gray hair, gpd will make harsh hair soft and glossy. It will not co'or the scalp, is not sticky ss i f/f|eay, and does sot rmb off.--Adv. I ' |t Is surprisingly how slow a V, J. Releassd From Pennsylvsnia Penitentiary After Passing 33 Years Wife Murder.. • . • a Harrisburg, Pa.--After serving thirty- three years in the Western Pennsylvania penitentiary on the charge of murdering his wife, William Josiah McMeen, who went to the institution as a youth of twenty-four, was recently released, a gray-haired, feeble man, old before his time. Convicted upon purely circumstantial evidence, at the time when Grover Cleveland was serving his first teiro as president McMeen has been a model prisoner and th* pardon board of the State has recommended that he be liberated. By a trielr at fate John J. Patterson jr., a boyhood chum of McMeen's, is district attorney of Juniata County, from which county the prisoner was sent to the penal institution. Under the law Patterson was compelled to appear before the state prison board and oppose his friend's release, but It was granted despite the objections. McMeen has served longer in the penitentiary than any man in the custody of the state today. A position Is awaiting him in a coal yard in Juniata County when he la finally given his freedom. . In 1885 McMeen purchased some strychnine In Harrisburg and sent It to his wife to kill rats, as be said. His wife put the strychnine In grape jelly, which she was making, ate some of the jelly and died. Designed for garages Is a new lire pall made to contain two chemicals in separate compartments which, thrown together on an oil fire, unite and form a flame-smothering foam. Building materials are tested -Ibr hfcrdness in a European tnstttnte by subjecting them to a sand blast at a pressure of two atmospheres. "nwM * 'ifflTiiiTiTri: Hirer; pr TOTiTTrotinmH i Chimney Found Choked With Honey Orland, Cal.--A chimney of the W. E. 8pence residence here, Idle during the summer months, was found to be choked with honey when an attempt was made to start the first winter fire. Bees had chosen the spot as their home and had completely sealed the chimney top after storing pounds of honey. m M WMIQ'H*U Bear Meat's Worth. Ladysmlth, Wis.--Even bear meat Is sky high these days. A fefv years ago Bruin was so common in this district that a big chunk could be had almost for the asking. Two big bears were killed near here a Short time ago and the carcasses were brought to a local butcher. He got 25 cents a pound for the choice cuts. Sheep owners have suffered considerable losses froa bear raids this fall. If jflkTlN puiffflnfr Chief Executive Against Alt Compromise in 8enste, While Mr. Bryan ^gpiM Aecspt Reservations^ a Csrtain Character. Washington, Jan. 9.--President Wilson's decision that the League of Nations issue should be placed before the voters as a "solemn referendum" and William J. Bryan's contention that the Democratic party cannot go before the country on that question, but should accept such compromises "as may be possible," were the win surprises of the conclave of party chieftains which found its climax in the annual Jackson day dinner. PRE8IDENT WILSON'S LglTKR. Congratulating the party upon the opportunity offered to be of service to the country in the matter of the League of Nations, Inasmuch as its "Ideas best fit It for the task of leadership in such a work," the chief executive wrote practically as follows: "The United States enjoyed the spiritual leadership of the world until the senate of the United States failed to ratify the treaty by which the belligerent nations sought to effect the settlements for which they had fought throughout the war. "It is inconceivable that at this supreme crisis and final turning point In the International relations of the whole world, when the results of the great war are by no means determined and are still questionable and dependent upon events which no man can foresee or count upon, the United States should withdraw from the concert of progressive and enlightened nations by which Germany was defeated and all similar governments (If the world, be so unhappy as to detain any) warned of the certain conse quences of any attempt of a like iniquity, and yet that is the effect of the course the senate of the United States has taken with regard to the treaty of Versailles. "We Are Still at War." "Germany is beaten, but we are still at war with her, and the old stage is reset for a repetition of the old plot, It is now ready for the resumption of the old offensive and defensive alliances which made settled peace impos sible. "Without the covenant of the league of nations there may be as many secret treaties as ever, to destroy the confidence of governments In each other, and their validity cannot be questioned. None of the objects we professed to be fighting for has been secured or can be made certain of without this nation's ratification of t h e t r e a t y . . . . ^ World Peace Depends on U. 8. "The question Is whether this cotintry will enter and enter wiole-heartedly. If It does not do so the United States and Germany will play a lone hand in the world. The maintenance of the peace of the world and the effective execution of the treaty depend upon the whole-hearted participation of the United States. I am not stating it as a matter of power. The point Is that the United States Is the only nation which has sufficient moral force with the rest of the world to guarantee the substitution of discussion for war. If we keep out of this agreement, If we do not give our guarantees, then another attempt will be made to crush the hew nations of Europe. Believes People Deal re Ratification. "I do not believe that this is what the people of this country wish or will be satisfied with. Personally, I do not accept the'action of the senate of the United States as the decision of the nation. I have asserted from the first that the overwhelming majority at the people of this country desire the ratification of the treaty and my impression to that effect i^as recently been confirmed by the unmistakable evidences of public opinion given during my visit to seventeen of the states. "I have endeavored to make it plain that if the senate wishes to say what the undoubted meaning of the league is, I shall have no objection. There can be no reasonable objection to interpretations accompanying the act of ratiiication itself. But when the treaty is acted upon, I must know whether it means that we have ratified or rejected it. / "Submit Treaty to People." "We cannot rewrite this treaty. We must take it without changes which •Iter its meaning, or leave It, and then, after the rest of the world has signed It we must face the unthinkable task pf making another and separate kind of treaty with Germany. "If there is any doubt as to what the people of the country think aa this vital matter, the clear and single way ont Is to submit It for determination at the lieit eieclioii io Ui« voters of ths nation, to give the next election the form of a great and solemn referendum, a referendum as to the part the United States is to play la completing the settlements of the war and in the prevention in the future of such outrages aS Germany attempted to perpetuate. No Moral Right to "Retreat" "We have no 'more moral right to refuse now to take part In the execution and administration of these settlements than we had to refuse to take part in the fighting of the last few weeks of the war, which brought victory and made it possible to dictate to Germany what the settlements should be. ... |. .. "This, in my judgment is to be the great privilege of the democracy of the United States, to show that it can lefd the way in the solution of the great social and industrial problems of our time, and lead the way to a happy settled order of life as well as to political liberty. "The program for this achievement we must attempt to formulate, and in carrying it out we shall do more than can be done fn any other way to sweep out of existence the tyrannous and arbitral? forms of power, which, are now masquerading nndw th* nape of popular government" ^ t " MR. BRYAN'S POSITION. William Jennings Bryan, in that part of his address which had to do with the party's position on the League of Nations, said: "A democratic president was the spokesman of the United States In holding out to a warworn world the hope of universal peace, and he brought back from Paris the covenant of a League of Nations that provides means for settling international disputes without a resort to force. He did the best he could, and succeeded better than we had any right to expect when we remember that he fought-single-handed against the selfish interests of the world. "The Republican party. In control of the senate, instead of ratifying at once, or promptly proposing changes that Mt deemed necessary, has fiddled while civilization has been threatened with conflagration. Compromise or Issue st Polls. "The Democratic plan has been rejected, and we must face the situation asit is. We must either secure such compromises as may be possible, or present the issue to the country. The latter course would mean a delay of at least 14 months, and then success only In case of our securing a two-thirds majority in the senate. "We cannot afford, either as citizens or as members of the party, to shsre with the Republican party responsibility for further delay; we cannot go before the country on the Issue that such an appeal would present. "Our nation has spent lOOtfOO pre« clous lives and more than $20,000,000- 000 to make the world safe for democracy, and the one fundamental principle of democracy is the right of the majority to rule. It applies to the senate and to the house as well as to the> people. "According to the Constitution, a treaty is ratified by a two-thirds vote, but the Democratic party cannot afford to take advantage of the Constitutional right of a minority to prevent a ratification. A majority of congress can declare war. Shall we make it more difficult to conclude a treaty than to enter a war? "Neither can we go before the country on the issue raised by article X. If we do not intend to impair thA right of congress to decide the que^ tion of peace or war when the time for action arises, how can we Insist upon a moral obligation to go to war which can have no force or value except as it does Impair the independence of congress? We owe it to the world to join in an honest effort to put an end to war forever, and that effort should be made at the earliest possible moment Should Raise Voles for Jurtlee. "What plan can a Democratic party have other than one that contemplates the popular election of those delegates who, in the influence they will exert, will be next in importance to the president himself? And what policy can the Democratic party have within the League of Nations other than one of absolute in* dependence and impartiality tetweeis the league members and the league? Our nation's voice should at si times be raised in behalf of equal am exact Justice between nations as th only basis of permanent peace; it should be raised in defense of the right of self-determination and In proclaiming a spirit of brotherhood as universal as the peace which we advocate." "aw. Nm fs Mhl woman passes through the ihwgm timki. dk life, are the three periods ef Kb trim health snd strength srs SHSt seeded to withstand the pala sad eaoeed hy severe steals ur» ncrcc t FtfwtM rnin^MS w nonalcoholic remedy that any sffiag wrasm <•»«• wiMy ink*. it Is prepared from roots aad herbs eontataaag teals properties «f the suit pteaoaaeed dkmacter. It is not a seerst tssMdy, teeasee He ingredients are printed on wrapper. Qaincy, DL--*T was suffering iatsuee^ with ulceration and pains, indicating displacement, aad was so we&keMd, zsadofrn and nervous that I could not even do my awn housework when I commenced to take Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pres c r i p t i o n , G o l d e n Me d i c a 1 Discoveajr and Pleasant Pellets. For one whole sammer i took s complete coarse of treatm e n t w i t h t h e s e medicines (ex a c 11 y following instructions), on wrapper aronndL the bottles) and from a miserable aad ftffiicted woman I was transformed into * new being, full of health asd strength, with no sign of inwvd trouble wbatevw. "I feel most grateful for what Dr. Pierce's medicines have done far mo sad take pleasure in telling others about it" --Mrs. Anna Littleton, 416 Vine St. East St. Louis, III.--"Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery has been used by oar family for three generations. My gi >nd mother used it. Mother used it for a madown condition and cough and it strengthened her and built her up. I have need it myself after having la grippe and found it a true builder."--Mrs. fssri Gale, MPennsylvania Ave. ' After Three Physicians Failed Dodd's Kidney PQla ] - Prompt Relief Here's one of the many noaollcttsl testimonials which reach us from every section of the United States. Thousands upon thousands have been relieved of their kidney complaints and there is as reason why Dodd's--standard for two generations--won't five you **« ssims prompt benefit. Mr B. C. Blrchler of Fulda, Ind-. writes, "In the year 1906, I waa very low with a severe attack of kidney trouble and three noted physlciana had given aa up expecting death at any moment; bat death did not come and I itasered tor several months until accidentally one day 1 found an old Dodd's Almanac in my house which described symptoms exactly as mine. I then procured a box of your pills and took a double doee and ths second day actually felt relieved. After a week I felt so good that I was clad to be alive. I continued using them for a " and they cured me. This was fourteen years ago aad I can truthfully say I have never yet been laM up with the same disease. A severe attack of •flu* last winter affected my kidneys to a certain extent so I bought three boxes of your pills and used them Car my whole family with the same good re- '• suits.' If your dealer can't supply you sen# •Oc In stamps to the Dodd's Medicine Co- Buffalo, N. T. Tell us the name of jromr druggist. HOME MADE TEA FOR CONSTIPATM* la ussd by entire famlllee beeaiM|W^| it la purely vegetable, doee the wsric and costs very little. 1 ^ 4 Why psy high prices for Liver aad Bowel remedies when none are better than Dr. Carter's K. and B. tea, wh|cfa la purely vegetable, can be brewed at home, and a small package will last a long time. Thousands of old people will tell yon they have been drinking it for yeara, and after the liver and bowels have been pat In flne condition In a few days by a before bedtime cup, that only an cup is afterwards necessary to keep oas feeling flt and flne. People who drink a cup of Dr. Oar* ter's K. and B. Tea once in a whye, setdroni. if ever, have any bllioua_ attacks, sick headache or sallow skin. It's good for boys and girls, eepedally those wfce are peevish and fretfuL Druggists have been selling it for many yeara. S. € W<tUa A Co., La Roy, N. Y. Raise Goiaea Pifs tar Bs We can use thousands ef them. We supply you with foundation stock. One female can earn froaa six to tan dollars Kr year. Some females have tame at a ter four times a year. Bia money to them. Easy to raise. Send for paroctt. lara and book. Price Mc. DR. DAVID ROBERTS LABORATORIES DEPT. A, WAOM8HA. CTISCONSQA • 1 : AM|S£' GERARD WOULD YIELD P0IMTS Former Ambassador to Germany Willing' to Accept Compromlae «a League of Nations Pact. __ James W. Gerard, former American ambassador to Germany and an announced candidate for the Democratic nomination, was a speaker at the twin Democratic banquet and took Issue with the administration on the treaty issue and urged a compromise for the sake of world peace, even yielding et far as to accept the reservations. Although he thought it a "great pit; that the great man in the White Hou» cannot rejoice over the adoption of the league with a world breathing thanks for our freedom from war," Mr. Gerard in his speech made It clear that he was willing to yield in the treaty deadlock, and, that failing, he urged the world to fall back on the Bryan arbitration treaties of 1914, which. If adopted, he said, would have prevented the world war. GETTING AHEAD jcmmabt<d WO l> la yi» y *}£5gt HITCHCOCK FOR P01JL TEST Senate Administrstion Leader Would Have Treaty Fight Decided by c, Vote of the People. Cfeadtor Hitchcock, administration leader In the treaty fight voiced support of the president's suggestion that the league Issue be sent to the people for determination if necessary. The senator said he hoped obstacles to rat- ITATLOA^et TIBE treaty CODU be aver- A Siylii: come, and be believed they would be. "In any event" Senator Hitchcock said, "the Democrats are cm solid ground. They have worked earnestly for ratification, first without conditions, and finally with reasonable reservations. They have refused to accept reservations that nullify and destroy, forced on the senste by the votes of fifteen senstors who want taf kill the league. But they are willing to meet half way in honorable compromise Republican senators who faver the lea«|^ it»n>iie>i»ti«i.k>iSis MMtoillvtKUkmhalS aitMMMr MS IkwM kr a MMSsi. KRIEBEL & CO 1 n \ m Pn t U.\ * 137 Sow La Salle St, Salesmen Wanted f Full titae--eiile line. Each sale |R.» a«a» ^ mission. Cominuous montiily tweewalgUa | Two to live sales daily ea^. Drug, eeady, -"p •aloon, grv>o»*rv, cigar storey totals. OottMt || aad keep 95,00 each sale. * ; --J SulAe, A-3624Citt«eittewilw„ QfclffcflL Children's Cough* sesy b* checked ami motm asrir tbe threat «lksa •iU to pjcuptly *» «Wd S