peace Covenant Is Indorsed by ^ r ionized Labor i, V Rewrvation«.i # * • WMPERS BREAKS HIS 6AVEI •niWw* «f Federation Takes Floor When Opposition Shown to Committee'e Report--Outline of Proggram Fixed by Convention. ^ Montreal, June 22.--The American federation of Labor adjourned Its annual convention here after indorsing the League of Nations without reservations. ^he closing session of t5»e-two weeks' convention was a stormy one. Irish ' jjympathizers, supported by the profressive wing of the federation, op- Ijkxsed the movement to indorse the - irague. and throughout the debate on ie question President Samuel G091- ^ere had difficulty in maintaining or- ; - Ijler. His gavel was Smashed in his .effort's to quiet the procedings. f. The League of Nations issue arose *M|hortly before adjournment. Its opponents were unable to gather sufficient totes for a roll call, and a number of :.v|Hsh sympathizers Jumped to the floor . ind demanded that their votes be recorded as "no" in the records. President Gompers was compelled to jfeke the floor in support of the league Ifrhen It became apparent the delegates -#ere swinging to the opposition. Members of the executive council made emphatic appeals In behalf of the covenant. The report of the committee on international relations which was adopted teclared to reject the league would be •indorsing the policy of greed, hatred ind brutal war as the rale that guides lb the settlement of relations between tattoos." "It is not a perfect document, and . |»erfect1on is not claimed for it," the : report added. **It does, however, mark Ihe nearest approach to perfection that *ver has been devised for the prevention of war. It must meet with the Unqualified approval and support of the American working people." " "When has the American Federation of Labor failed to place itself on record for international peace 7" asked * fclr. Gompers. **I can't recall it The ' federation has endeavored to use its Influence and power to prevent war. Who has not struggled for such peace? x {Shall we now reverse the policy which we have supported?" Dan McKiUIp of Seattle led the opposition to the covenant, because, he said. It guarantees the territorial Integrity of the British empire. He also declared the American workingman does not understand the "foil meaning i of this league." Mr. Gompers and the executive council will leave immediately for Washington to put into operation the pro- „• gram framed by the convention. The first move, it was said, will be J launched against the Democratic na- \ tlonal convention to obtain lncorporas tlon of the federation's program in the party platform. They will urg€ also ' that the federation's nonpartisan po- V litical policy, which was unanimously (approved by the convention, be car- , rted out. Labor's program, as outlined by the convention demands, follows: Ratification of the peace treaty. , Government ownership, with demo- . cratic operation of railroads. Curb on profiteering and high cost of living. Jailing of food and clothing profiteers. " Right to strike and abolition of compulsory arbitration and anti-strike legislation. Hands off in Mexico by the United States government. , Indorsement of the Irish republic. Right of collective Mhrgaining. Advances in wages wherever necessary to maintain the American standard of living. Shorter work day, if necessary to prevent unemployment Montreal, June 21.--Samuel Gompers, veteran president of the American Federation of Labor was re-elected for the thirty-ninth time by the convention here. Montreal, June 18. -- Government ownership, with democratic operation of American railroads, was indorsed by the American Federation of Labor convention here after a bitter fight Out ernadjian, minister to the tTnited States from the new republic of Armenia, has taken his place among the accredited diplomats tn Washington. He was In the capital three months before he was recognized, or rather before recognition was granted Armenia by the United States. /'V TWo Regiments of Cavalry Reported Annihilated bjr,.L -BolshevUd. 165 CANNON ALSO CAPTURED POWER BILL IS SIGNED Measure Passed on Final Day of Session Approved. Expected Opponents of Measure Will Fight Against Attorney Q|p ' ' eral's Ruling. Washington, June 19.--President Wilson has signed the water power bill it was announced at the White House. The measure was passed on the final day of the last session of congress and the president affixed his signature to it under a ruling by Attorney General Palmer that he had until ten days after the adjournment of congress to act ' It Is expected that opponents of the measure may wage a fight against It in the courts on the contention that the Constitution provides that a measure not' signed before the adjournment of congress Is automatically vetoed. The bill providing for repeal of all war time legislation, except the Lever food and fuel control and the trading with the enemy acts was not signed. The water power bill provides a licensing system under which the water power resources of the country can be developed by private enterprise but subject to federal regulation and supervision. The bills which remained unsigned Will repose on the desk until congress convenes in cember. 6. W. PERKINS DIES IN EAST Berlin ftoeeives Alarming Vtoporta of the Military Situation on Polish- •, Bolshevik Front--Entire Country Excited. BertlQ. June21.--Alarming reports rf the military situation on the Polishbolshevik front are received from Bresluu. The Poles have suffered Important reverses, It Is said, and in some parts of the front large bodies of troops •nay be forced to surrender. Among the losses reported to have !>een suffered by the Poles, the report says, are two regiments of cavalry tfblch were annihilated and 30,000 prisoners taken by the bolshevlkl, who ilso cftptured 165 cannon. The fall jf Minsk Is expected, It is asserted. The front from Dunaburg to Podolsk Is yielding gradually, and belief Is expressed that Warsaw may be occupied fry -soviet troops. Gen. Haller's men it Czenstochow have mutinied and expelled some of their officers. Near Kiev the Poles have withdrawn to the line they, occupied on April 20, where the Thlrjl and Seventh army corps are surrounded and may be forced to capitulate. Fugitives from Kiev have arrived In Lemberg, telling of a lack of food and munitions and of wholesale desertions by Polish troops. Excitement prevails throughout Poland, the dispatch says, and state documents have been sent to Posen. The Polish minister to Germany told the correspondent he had received no such reports, and that he considered them "Incredible." New York, June 21.--The alarming views from Berlin concerning reported conditions on the Polish front are not shared by the official Polish bureau of information here, which stated that Its dispatches from Warsaw showed the Polish front was being strongly held some 850 to 400 miles east of Warsaw. This, It was pointed out, made it a physical impossibility for Warsaw to be threatened, as the Berlin reports asserted. The reports are attributed to exaggerated versions of the Polish evacuation of Kiev and the return of relief parties to Warsaw. Since then the line of the Bereslna and Dnieper rivers has been held by the Polish troops, the Warsaw mesage announce, thus placing a zone of several hundred miles between the battle front and the Polish capital. Now York Financier and Backer of Progressive Party, 8uccumbs at Stamford, Conn. New York, June 19.--George W. Perkins, financier, died today In the Stamford Hall sanitarium, Stamford, Conn. It became known June 11 that Mr. Perkins had suffered a nervous breakdown, but members of his family did not Intimate at that time that his life was in danger. The affection to which Mr. Perkins succumbed Is believed to have been the result of influenza and pneumonia contracted while serving with the V M f! A. in France during the war. . Cuts Rates on Vegetables. Washington, June 18.--Application of the American Railway Express company for permission to file a schedule providing for reduced rates and refrigeration charges on berries, fruits, melons and vegetables in carloads from southwestern points to points In Connecticut, Illinois, and Massachusetts, was approved by tlje interstate commerce commission. MEXICAN SOLDIERS IN WOT Governor of State of Colima Driven From Post by Rebellloua Troops. EH Paso, Tex., June 18.--The provisional governor of the state of Colima, Jose Chavira, named by Provisional President Adolfo de la Huerta. has been driven from his post by rebels among Mexican troops In that state, according to a report published by La Republica, a Mexican newspaper here, "ACE* | ON AVIATION BODY Capt Edward V. Rickenbaeker Named Member of Ohio Commission by Governor Cox. Columbus, 0„ June 10.--Capt. Edward V. Rickenbaeker, America's premier ace, was named a member of the state aviation commission by Governor Cox. The commission is said to be the first of its kind in the United States. $150,000 Liouor Theft bblcago, Junejp.--Solution of a whisky theft of $ia0,000 was seen near by the police in the detention of three men. The liquor was stolen from the storehouse of Oscar Goldman, at 2302 Milwaukee avenue. C.f B i Q. Switchmen Walk Out. Burlington, Iowa, June 21.--Eightyone switchmen employed by the C., B, & Q. walked out. The men are demanding $1 an hour for foremen and 95 cents for helpers. May Close Irish Railways. London, June 21.--It.wan announced fiere that the government Intends closing the Irish railways in the event the railway men persist in their refusal to transport soldiers and munitions. ' Train Hits Auto; One Killed. Muscatine, la., June 19.--Albert Rnssell van Dussen of Wilton, was Instantly killed and Fred Burkiman, a Moscow fanner, was seriously Injured when the car In which they, were rid- W was struck by a train. , 1,362^72 French Killed. Paris, June 19.--Final official statistics of the ministry of war fixes the total number of French soldiers killed during the great war at 1,362372. Of this number the details of the fate Of are unknown. Wilson Gets Medal. Washington, June 22.--President Wilson has received the* first "victory medal," an emblem which will be sued to all those entitled to it who served in the world war between April 8, 1917, and Armistice day. Army Strength 213,135 Men. Washington, June- 21.--Estimated strength of the army on June 17 was1 213,135 officers and enlisted men, of which 15,689 held commissioned grades, according to figures uude public by the war department. Seven Men Killed in Fighting at if-' ? ^hkv: Lcpdonderry Monday Afternoon. % l»»'orj.e v* . uUkiuot'i, -.hi) died in New York, was born in Chicago January 31, 1862. Mr. Perkins retired from business a few years ago. CHICAGO BLACKS RIOT Ncgros Slay Two Whites and Wound Many Others. JtottiorTPbsr. Great Lakes and CWtl(M • Killed--Policeman Wounded . • In Fight. ; • Chicago, June 21.--Two men were killed and a patrolman was fatally wounded in a race riot here last' night. The battle raged for more than an hour and hundreds of shots were exchanged. Quiet was reporter after a heavy detail of police was rushed to the scene. * Chief of Police Garrlty, who investigated the riot, said he had been unable to definitely determine what started the trouble. One account said a negro radical had addressed a crowd of whites and negroes and was in the act of burning an American flag when white men Interfered. Another account said several negroes were parading the street when a white man Jeered. Joseph P. Owen, the patrolman who was wounded, said the trouble had started when he reached the scene. He was felled by a bullet but could not tell who fired the shot. Other patrolmen who came to his assistance said there were two men dead In the street when, they arrived. One of the dead was identified as R. L. Ross, a sailor from the Great Lakes training station. The other victim was Joseph White, a cleric. At least a dozen persons were wounded, according to the police, although their names were not secure*! Several were negroes. The scene at the riot was in the heart of Chicago'* black belt where half a hundred lives were lost in a race riot last summer. TIED TO RAILS BY THUGS Missourlan Robbed by Two Outlaws and Then Put In Path of Train- Loses Hand and Foot. Excelsior Springs, Mo., Jane 19.-- George Underwood of Carrollton; Mo., was forced by two men to enter a motorcar here at night, was taken to a spot near the Wabash tracks half a mile from Excelsior Springs, robbed of $70 and was gagged and bound to the rails with barbed wire. A Wabash passenger train passing half an hour later cut off his left foot and hand. According to officers here. Mr. Underwood had sold two motorcars In Kansas City and it Is thought the robbers had knowledge of that fact and had expected him to have the money from the 1 sale with him. SLAY TO AVENGE *A MURDER Three Hundred and Fifty-Four Italian! Killed in Revenge for Bssad *•*' Pasha's Death. ;|- London, June 19.--A widespread movement to avenge the murder ol Bssad Pasha, Albanian leader, has be gun In Italy and Albania, according to dispatches from Teigrade. Thousands formed an organized mob in Tlrqpja, massacred 300 Italian prison ers and hauled 27 others out of a train at Kracber and put them to death. DETROIT IN FOURTH PUCE Now Outranks Boston, 8t Louis, Cleveland and Baltimore In Population. * Washington, June 21.--Detroit If now the fourth city in the country In population. The figures announced are 993,739, an Increase of 527,937, 01 113.4 per cent. Italy and Spain In Line. Mexico City, June 21.--Both Italy and Spain have granted recognition to the De la Huerta government and recognition Is about to be announced by Great Britain, according to semiofficial rumors afloat here. $1,200,000 Fire at Santiago, Cuba. Havana, Cuba, June 21.--Losses estimated at $1,200,000 were caused by a flre which destroyed the plant of the Santiago Electric Light', Railway and Power company, according to a die- ,,from Santiago. .,,.. No Vacation for Harding. Washington, June 22.--Senator War ren G. Harding, Republican presiden tial nominee, has abandoned his plan for taking a vacation and remained in Washington for further conference! with party leaders. "First Socialist Sheriff Dead. Milwaukee, Wis., June 22.--William A. Arnold, first Socialist sheriff of Mil waukee county and one time candidate for mayor, died. He was sixty-three years old. Mr. Arnold Is survived |>y his widow. ANNOUNCE EXPENSES Of U. S. *20,775,535,858 Left Trratury at Waah. ington From July 1, 1919, to May 31, 1920. Washington, June 21.--Government* al expenditures from July 1, 1919, to May 31, 1920, amounted to $20,770*- 535,858, according to a statement of the treasury, • Expenditures were heaviest during September, when $4,475,937,701 was spent, and lightest In November, when $611,301,764 left' the treasury. Exclusive of $1,503,947,752 expended by the treasury, $951,224,703 charged to federal control of railroads and the transportation act of 1920 was the largest single item of departmental expenditure. The navy department stood third In disbursements for the period, with a total of $723,717,269, and the department of labor last with $5,064,246. White House expenses were listed as ,702,830 and congressional at $17.- 681,120. Payments on the public debt amounted to $14,846,554,373. $560,000,000 HOUSING NEEDS New York City Conference Says • 160,- 000 More Apartments Are 1 Neede. New York, June 19.--At least 160,- 000 additional - apartments, ^ Involving an investment of $560,000,000, must be erected here to overcome the present housing shortage, according to a report made public'by Edward P. Doyle, secretary of Mayor Hylan's housing conference committee. DRIVE ON COAL PROFITEERS Attorney General' Palmer Instructs His Aids to Indict Dealers Who Overcharge. Washington, June 19.--A drive on profiteers In bituminous coal was ordered by Attorney General Palmer. All federal district attorneys were ordered to give special attention to charges of such profiteering and to seek Indict ment where Investigation warranted. POLICE QUIT STOP FRAY 81* Wore Killed During Saturday Wight and Sunday, Bringing Number of Deaths for Present Outbreak Up to Thirteen. Dublin, June 23.--Seven were killed In the fighting at Londonderry Monday afternoon. Pools of blood were found in many places in the afreets. Portions of the skull of a man who had been beaten to death were found. The unionists were well provided with rifles of the latest types and with ammunition, despite the assurance of the Carsotiltes that all arms had been withdrawn. , It .Is feared that all of Ireland will soon be ablaze with civil war, although republican leaders discountenance threatened reprisals in the south. Unionist volunteers are mobilizing In all parts of Ulster and will march, to Londonderry. Civil war conditions prevail in Londonderry and the authorities are powerless, It Is declared in an' Exchange Telegraph dispatch from Londonderry. The firing i& being maintained with desperate intensity., Business is suspended and the postmen are declining to deliver mall. WheiKthe troops stop the fighting Ip one zone", the dispatch adds, firing breaks out in another. " Londonderry, June 23.--Rioting between nationalists and unionists was renewed In this city. Rifle and revolver firing was almost continuous and as the people feared to venture out to work business was at a virtual setandstlll. The streets were deserted by all except those fighting or protecting van-1 tage points. The dock workers struck, declaring they would not handle freight until peace had been restored. The rioting, which started at two o'clock In the morning after the troops had been withdrawn following Sunday's battles, continued all day. Reports of additional casualties were received, but travel on the streets was so dangerous that it was impossible to obtain accurate details. Between five and seven o'clock In the morning three unionists were shot, one of whom was thrown Into the river. Thereupon a large body of unionists charged down Carlisle street, firing volley after volley toward the Sinn Fein stronghold In Bridge street The Sinn Feiners returned the flre. Five persons were killed, ten seriously wounded, several of tliem probably fatally, and about 100 others were less seriously injured In desperate rioting in this city Saturday night. The fighting was accompanied by several attempts at incendiarism, one of which resulted In the burning of a large store. Soviet "Envy" Is Recalled. Washington, June 22.--Ludwig C. A1. K. M irtens, who for more than fifteen months has been In the United States as the Russian soviet "ambassador," has been recalled by the soviet authorities, It Is learned In official circles. Finds $10,000; Is Given $12. Tork, Pa., June 22.--When Ellwood Landis, twelve-year-old newsboy, returned a wallet containing $18,000 to the owner he received a reward of $12 and a promise to pray for him. The boy found the wallet In a gutter. "Suffrage" Referendum in Maine. Augusta, Me., June 21.--A referendum on the act passed by the last legislature granting women the right to vote for presidential electors was ordered by Governor Mllllken in 1 proclamation Issued here. Takes German Premiership. Berlin, June 21.--Konstantin Fehren bach, president' of the German national assembly, has n eed to attemjy to form a ministry following a conference attended by Karl Trlmborn, th« .centrist leader, and President Ebert London Press Assails League. London, June 19.--Sharp criticism of the decision reached by the council of the League of Nations to postpone action on the plea of Persia for defense against the bolshevlkl 4£ ..expressed in some quarters here. • , Militia Gets 6,000 Vehicle*. : Washington, June 19.--Orders were Issued by the war department setting aside more than 6,000 motor vehicles for the National Guard. Distribution of the equipment will be supervised by 4be motor transport corps. 25,000 JEWS DIE OF TYPHUS Figures Taken From Six Weeks' Records at Kiev Cemetery Under Bolshevik Rule. Warsaw, June 23.--The cemetery records of Kiev show that 25,000 Jews died of typhus within six weeks. Just before the Polish occupation, according to a statement made by Superintendent Maudeber, director of Kiev, largest Jewish hospital. This statement was made to Col. Henry Shaw ef the American army, who is Investigating for the League of Red Cross Societies the deaths among the refugees. East* St. Louis.--Illinois farmers are making definite plans to market their grain direct to the manufacturer. Grain growers, farm elevator managers and stockholders from the Twenty-second congressional district, meeting at East St. Louis, unanimously adopted a farmers' program of grain marketing. This was the tenth of a series of hearings held in each downstate district. There are 700 farmers' elevators in the state, which handle 70 per cent of the grain ^shipped. The agricultural association will employ ten men to complete organization of elevators. I Washington, D. C.--Chicago, whose 1920 census was announced by the census bureati as 2,701,212, had during the last decade the second largest growth numerically in Its history, with an Increase of 515,929. It was the third time Chicago had shown an increase of more than half a million. Chicago's rate of growth was 23.6 per cent, which was 5.1 per cent less than the previous ten years and exceeded New York city's rate by 5.7 per cent, New York's 1920 rate having been 17.9 per cent. Evanston.---Mayor Barry I*. Pearsons Issued a notice that no firecrackers, skyrockets, torpedoes, squibs, roman candles, or other fireworks will be permitted In Evanston on July 4, and that disobedience of the official order will be punished by ducking the miscreants In the pond at Fountain square, or by Bome similarly severe disciplinary action. '^Electric sparklers, if not inflammable, are the only lireworks which will be tolerated," the edict reads. Champaign.--Directors of the Champaign county farm bureau have authorized the appointment of an agent who will buy supplies with finances of tho bureau and retail them to members, eliminating the middleman's profit". The bureau had handled seed and sugar in this manner, and. with the appointment of a buyer will enlarge upon the program. Springfield.--Forty-four, farm owners In Sangamon county, who have taken pride In their farms, have seen fit to christen them with a name and have it recorded In the county recorder's office. Among the varied lists of names at the recorder's office are: The Willows, the Lope Tree Farm, the Sangamo Farm. Danville.--Mrs. Cynthia Ann/Barkley, Danville's wealthiest woman, is dead at the age, of eighty-seven, after an illness of many years. She had been unable to walk for 18 years. There are no children and the wealth, estimated at $2,000,000, will be divided among two nieces, two nephews and a cousin. Chicago.--The greatest number of pupils to graduate from the Chicago schools will win their diplomas this month, according to figures made public by Superintendent Mortensen. Providing they are successful in their final examinations, 4,446 students will graduate from the high schools and 13.000 from the elementary schools. Chicago.--Coincident with the action of the city council finance committee In approving pay increases aggregating $1,441,466, Chicago's bankers announced they will refuse to lend the city any more money to tide over its financial difficulties. They have just reported a request for another'loan of $15,000,000 on tax warrants. CANAL SQUADRON FOR Q. S. Cruisers Will Be Kept in Zone for Emergency Duty in Central America. Washington, June 28.--A Special service squadron of cruisers and gunboats to have its base in the Canal Zone and to be held available for duty In Mexico, Central America and adjacent ports, Is to be organized about October 1, it was announced at, the navy department. QUIT MONTENEGRIN AREA Italian Troops Withdrawn as Serbian Forces Occupy Antlvari Dletrlct --All Foreign Soldiers Out. London, June 23.--Italian troops have been withdrawn from Antlvari, Dolclgno, and the whole Montenegrin coast, according to an official agency announcement at Belgrade. Serbian troops Immediately accupied the evacuated district. There now are no foreign troops In Montenegro. $17,000 In Boose 8tolen. , Chicago, June 23.--Seventeen thousand dollars' worth of liquor and groceries was stolen from the warehouse of A. Rusno, &Co., 466 West Chicago avenue. The theft was discovered when the warehouse was opened. Negro Lynched In Georgia. Savannah, Ga., June 23.---Phillip Galthers was lynched near Rlncon, Ga., after he had confessed to the murder of Miss Anza Jaudon, seventeen years old, last week. Gaitfeers was arrested near Stllson, Ga. Frustrate Red Plot. London, June 23.--The , Express print* a dispatch from Prague in which it is said that the police of Geneva had frustrated a plot of Hungarian communis to kill Az$J]sfl#kes Eugene and Frederick. y , Wilton Net ft CftmHfM#. Kansas City,. Mo., June 23.--Presi dent Wilson's nomination for » third term was declared to be an impossibility, because of the condition of his health, in an interview given out here tf Jouett Shouse. J. J Lincoln.--Logan county mai be sadly in need of a new jail, but vfllether It will be erected is a question. There is a resolution pending before the board of supervisors for the Improvemest, but objectors have asked for a legal decision and may attack the validity of the Jail building law. Quincy.--Fire whlA broke out In the sugar department of the N. Kohl Grocery company at Quincy, one of the largest jobbers In sugar and coffee In the middle West, destroyed the building and Its contents at a loss estimated by fire department officials to reach $250,000. Urbana.--Miss Thistle Daley of Urbana was named clerk of the Champaign county board of review. This Is the first time In the history of the state. It is said, that a woman has held this office. Galesburg.--O. E. Carlstrom, a member of the constitutional convention, was Indorsed as a candidate for governor of Illinois at a convention of the United Spanish War Veterans of Illinois at Galesburg. Chicago.--The price of Illuminating gas in Chicago was Increased to $1.15 per 1,000 cubic feet by the public utilities commission, with a minimum monthly charge of 60 cents. Murphysboro.--Five men held up the State Bank of Valler, 25 miles northeast of Murphysboro and escaped with $9,500 after locking S. Y. Long, the caslfler. In the vault. Jollet.--The Chicago Telephone company warehouse at Jollet was destroyed by fire with a loss estimated at $50,000. The building was struck by lightning. Urbana.--The University of Illinois was notified that it had been designated as "distinguished" by the war department, the highest rating given to schools. The Inspection was made by army officers on May 28. Chicago.--Chief of Police John J. Garrlty, In his campaign for national commander of the United Spanish War Veterans, has been assured that every Illinois delegate who attends the convention in St Louis next September will vote for him. The chief Is now Inspector general of the organisation and served with tho Second Infantry, L N. G. Bloomlngton.--Extraordinnry interest has been displayed In Bloomlngton banking circles over the outcome of the charges of embezzlement and falsifying accounts filed by the Rldgely National bank against Ralph M. Delckeri, teller, and Miss Jessie C. Conner, bookkeeper. Following a plea of guilty, Judge Louis FItz Henry, sitting In the federal court, sentenced Delcken to five years' Imprisonment !n the penitentiary at Fort Leavenworth, and his associate to one year in the same Institution. They were charged with •taking aWay with $»M>00. l*dfeE.FU* bsm's Vug»uM« Campoaadk' I | II Moskegon,.Mich.--"For six years t" Was so weak in my back at times that • 1 j iiriiii'""!!) eould hardly FIELD, 240 Wood l^diaE. Pinkham Vegetable Con* pound was qftcoo* mended to ma aai H made me good aai strong again so that I am able to do a& my work. I highly recommend yont> medicine and tea everyone I meek what It did for me. '* _ --Mrs. G. SCHOONKK, ve, Muskegon, Micfajy. Wom&nVPjreciouft Gift A The one which she should most res!# ously guard is her health, but she ofteA neglects to do so in season until soma ailment peculiar to her sex has fastened itself upon her. When so affe women may rely upon I^dia El ham's Vegetable Compound, a ren that has been wonderfully successful] restoring health to saffe If yoa have tibe slightest doubt thaiT Lydia EL Pinkham's Vegetable Com» pound will help you, write to Lydia % Pinkham Medicine Co (confidential) Lynn, Mass., for advice. Your letter will be opened, read fend answered by S woman, and held in strict confidence. "vV? 'Hi ' I./ • I 16799 DIED la Now York City alone from ney tacrable last year. Dcmta yourself to bacoma a victim neglecting pains and aches. Gh afaiost this trouble by taking GOLD MEDAL The world's standard remedy for kidney^ Hvtr, bladdsr and otic acid troubUsfr Holliuid's national rtnwdr since 1696* All druggists, thne sisae. Owirant--d» U(k far th* «MM GM MWtl« .my W* IHPftOVKD HOMES, healthful climate, pit roada, two cropa a rear; $10 acre. Intai State Salea Co.. Star City. Arkanaaa. Facilitating Parcel Post 8ervlce. An automatic weighing machine f# |- parcel post packages releases the cot» rect stamps when a package Is laid oB a plate and a key for itp zone W pressed. WHY DRUGGISTS RECOMMENB SWAMP-ROOT t Wm many years druggists have watahs# with much interest the remarkable recortf maintained by Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root^ the great kidney, liver and bladder medfr cine. It is a physidaa's prescription. Swamp-Boot is a strengthening see* cine. It helps the kidneys, liver and' bla% der do the work nature intended th<# should do. ' Swamp-Root has stood the test of yearl,' It is sold by all druggists en its merit and it should help yon. No other kidnty medicine baa so many friends. Be sore to get Swamp-Root and stall treatment at once. However, if you wish first to test ton great preparation send ten cents to Dr» Kilmer A Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for S sample bottle. When writing be sure sip B>antioo this paper.--Adv. tn the Blooil. / Willis--Bump says he comes of colfii nlal stock. Says his ancestors used duck the witches. i * Glllls--And their descendant dudp the collectors.--Judge. ^ • Sure Relief IMWGfSJKW 6 BCLL-ANS Hot water Sure Relief Shave, Bathe and Shampoo with one Soap.-- Cuticura riitlma a 1i I In f«m lie tm »f«l M --in rte i btlTghf Ibmomw Alright Earn Good Money Writ ins Nlcii. Tiekettb Simpler system of allow card writing, Baalt? learned: great demand. Write for parties* lars. Lampkin fchool. Zioneville, Indiana The Prime Requisite. > That portrait of Mrs. Gaddy is speaking likeness." "It wouldn't h* like her any other way." Generally* the man or woman says *1 don t care," is a liar. If eepVbur Eyfesi Cl*an Cl*ar Health]# fcr FTM Otn Bash Mwtea C».QIi«a« S<| ' • "V