• I® M &3 ,%4 V. ILLINOIS News Notes imiiifltiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiUB ! ? Aurora.--Fear of a cold winter in ffce Illinois state prison at Jollet ltd Frank Smith, colored, to confess '1MB was an escaped "lifer" from the Virginia state prison. "If L have to ,tferve anywhere, I want to go back and do It in Virginia where It's warm," fhnlth Bald. "Man, if they send me ie Joliet, ril Jnst plumb freeze to ^.teath." Smith said he was sentenced UK life imprisonment In 1905 for the murder of another colored man, and that he escaped in 1909. He was arrested in Aurora on a robbery charge. Danville.--Leon C. Tyler of Chicago, lliiate superintendent, delivered the Opening address before the annual conference of the young people's department of the Illinois Sunday School association. Other speakers included Rev. M. C. Tunison of Elgin, Mrs. H. J*forthcott, Chicago; W. C. Moore, .Kansas City, and S. A- Walte, To- •Tonto, Canada. .La Salle.--Construction of shelter houses is under way in Starved Rock State park following the closing of the perk fqr the season- A force of~20 men is at work under the direction of J, P. White, park custodian, making improvements In the pleasure ground. The cost of the improvements to be made this fall and next spring will be $£5,000. Springfield.--Maternity hazards are definitely on the decline in Illinois. The dangers and perils Incident to Motherhood are growing more rare llrom year to year. At least, this conclusion Is indicated by a special mortality statistical report which has Just been completed and released by the state department of public health. Danville. -- Ten "Danville youths, ganging in age from fourteen to sixteen, paid fines in police court as the fipsult of their Halloween celebration. The evidence showed that the boys engaged in such time-honored pr.nks •s overturningsoutiiouses, tearing off fates, pulling down fences and soaping windows. Chicago.--Halsted street In Chicago til one of the most noted streets in the 'gbtire world. Besides being the longest business street, it is lined by many famous Institutions and colonies. Street cars run practically the entire length of its 30 miles, making Its many interesting sights easily accessible to visitors at the metropolis. Oregon.--After a fight with a tramp to a box car in which she was beating fcer way toward Chicago, Olive Bullard, •fteen. escaped from the men when the train reached Oregon and found refuge tn a farmhouse. She wore boy's clothbig. The girl told the authorities she ran away from her father and brothers 1 to escape household drudgery. Edward sville.--Thousands of gallons of crude oil were lost when an oil pipe line near the Wood River refinery broke. The oil flooded lowlands, running In small rivers from the break. After the pipe line was repaired, the •pools of oil were set afire and the clouds of smoke from the burning liquid - could be seen for long distances. Springfield.--Two hundred ninetythree cases of diphtheria were reported In Illinois during the past week, according to the weekly report of the state department of public health at Bprlnglleld. The majority of the cases 6f the disease were among the school children of Chicago. Chicago.--Two hundred farm boys and girls, winners of counry contests in Jlub work, will be entertained by the lllnols Agricultural association, on the evening of December 5, during their free trip to the International Live Stock show In Chicago, given by fair associations and county farm bureaus. Edward8ville.--The Illinois Bell Telephone company must pay the city of Ed wards vi He 50 cents a year for every telephone pole within the city limits, under a recent decision of the Illinois Supreme court. Chicago.--Among the prominent contestants in the Duro-Jersey breeding classes at the International Live Stock exposition In Chicago, December 1-8, will he the entries of Chesney farms, Lake Villa, 111. Aurora.--Contracts have been let for additional buildings to be constructed _Jit the grounds of the Central Slates' Fair and Exposition association, to cost approximately $125,000. Springfield.--Contracts on sections of state bond issue roads In five counties have been awarded by the division of highways. The contracts amount to $430,000. Danville.--Rev. Dr. R. R. Biggar, in charge of the central Illinois churches as superintendent of the Presbytery, has accepted a call to the Cote Brilllante Presbyterian church. Mount Vernon.--Skilled dental surgeons are puzzled over the cutting of the third set of teeth of George Mc- Farland of this city. Springfield. -- Announcement that bids on 168 additional miles of bond issue paved road in IS counties, and approximately 30 miles of grading In five counties, will be received by the state division of highways, November 22, was made here by Frank T. Sheets, state highway superintendent. r Springfield.--Persons who buy auto- , mobiles at this period of the year, when ; it is nearly time to pay for the 1624 automobile license, rannot avoid buy ing a 1923 license, according to investigators of the state automobile department. Urbana.--The central section of the Illinois State Horticultural society will hold Its annual meeting at Jill nols university November 15 and 16. The session will be held in the vegeta ble greenhouse of the school. Vegeta ble growers from many parts of the state are expected td be present. Pontlac.--Eighty per cent of 1,600 boys in the state reformatory at Pontine blame poolrooms and evil companions for their downfall, according to the answers .to a questionnaire submitted by R#r. Jobs H. Ryan, chaplain. Galeebnrg.--A golf and recreation club for' fvann has been organised here to be known as the Knox County Golf and Country club. The 75-acre tract of land purchased by the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy railroad. Including a lake, has been leased for 20* years. The railroad reserves the right to the water in the lake for railway purposes. J. E. Wagoner has been chosen president by 000 members who have joined the club. Evanston.--Wrestling with automobile tire Inner tabes is one of the features of the conditioning .training of the grapplers on Northwestern university's mat team this fall. The tubes are used to strengthen the arms, neck, back, shoulder and leg muscles, according to E. A. Maynor, wrestling mentor of the school, who discovered the adaptability of the inner tube to physical culture. Waukegan.--The saxophones at the dance pavilion at Channel lake have play^i their swan-song. A permanent injunction against the crooning of jas* melodies far Into the night has been Issued by Judge Claire C. Edwards In Lake county court. The Judge ruled that the dance hall was a public nuisance and that the sounds of the orchestra disturbed the pence'and rest of people In the community. Springfield. -- Governor Small announced the appointment of W. H. Curran of Chicago as chief factory Inspector of Illinois to succeed Richard L. Dye of Jacksonville, who will become assistant dl rector In the state department of labor. Dye succeeds C. A. Townsend, former mayor of Auror^, who resigned to become an arbitrator for the state industrial board. Decatur.--An old livery stable regulation still applies In this horseless age, according to a ruling made by Judge Baldwin in the Circuit court here. The judge held that the rule under which livery stables $which rented rigs were not held responsible for the acts of those who rented them, applied in the case of rented automobiles. Springfield.--Distributions of 1824 automobile license application blanks was started here by the secretary of state's ollice. As has been the custom for the past several years, Sydney Gorham, Chicago attorney, is expected to renew his license No. 1. Informal requests for many renewals for 1923 license numbers have already been made. Poag.--Christ Hess and William Semsrott are objects of envy of Illinois nimrods. Hess and Semsrott had the good fortune to encounter a flock of big Canadian wild geese at close quarters while hunting. Each of them fired two shots and brought down eight of the geese. Five were killed outright, but three others managed to get away. Decatur.--A well only 14 feet deep which will supply 50,000 gallons of water a day has been dug at the eewage disposal plant here. The well is 12 feet in diameter and pierces a strata of water-bearing gravel about eight feet thick. Tests made over a period of three days and three nights showed no reduction In the volume of water from the well. Peoria.--Assurances that the contract for the new Peoria arsenal will be let within a few weeks, and that the building will be completed by next summer, have been received from state officials. The plans call for a building 175 feet by 175 feet, and ^hree stories high. An appropriation of $198,000 is available for the work. Chicago.--The Illinois Committee on Public Utility Information at Chicago has appointed Keith Spade as director of Its department of public .speaking, known as the Public Servicg^pea^ers' Bureau. Spade resigned ris secretary of the Monmouth Chamber of Commerce, November 1, to assume his new duties. Springfield. -- Route 3C, running through Adams county, will go past the Charles Seymour school of Paysoo, It was decided at a meeting in which Col. C. R. M'.ller, director of public works and buildings, and Frank T. Sheets, superintendent of highways, met a committee from Adams county. Galvn.--The proposed recreation center at Calhonn lake, south of this city, is practically assured. Nine hundred members have subscribed $13,000. A bathing beach, boating, fishing and swimming facilities are planned. A tract-of several hundred acres near the lake will he lease.l or purchased. Springfield.--Distribution of fish by the Illinois fish and game commls3fon Is nearing an end for this year. The car utilized for transporting the finny tribe has made about 500 trips during the season, carrying 25,000 to 50,000 fish on each trip. Chicago.--One of the strong contenders for the highest awards at the International Live Stock exposition at Chicago the first of next month will be the heard of Red Polled cattle, en tered by the Sunny Slope farm of Altona, 111. Springfield.--John J. Brenholt, Jr., of Alton has been appointed a member of the state industrial board by Governor Small. He succeeds C. H. Cunneman of Granite City, who resigned some months ago. Springfield.--The old tin derby, which liad such a wide vogue during the season of 1917 and 1918, is coming back into popularity in the mining districts of Illinois, according to reports received here. The pressed steel skyplece has been found to be very useful In , mines us protection against small falls of rock and Is said to be replacing the conventional miner's cap in Increasing numbers. Benton.--A bean lodged In the windpipe of Willis Overturf, one year old, caused his death. The ba'>y choked to death. The family lives near here. Mount Vernon.--Dr. Samuel Hancock, fifty, and his daughter, Grace Hancock, eighteen, were married In a double wedding here. They were married to Miss Flo Young, thirty, and E<?win Young, twenty-three, brothei and sister. The marriage makes Mrs Hancock her brother's mother-in-law. The couples will live In West Frankfort. • / Murph ysboro.--Mrs.. Mary Persch bacher. seventy-seven, mother of 1«. children, died here. Her mother, Mrs Phillip Patery of Lenzburg, nlnetj seven, still is living. B IS Secretary of Treasury Detail!* «k"?ftoposed Slashes, TotaHfHM 1323,000,000. Ludendorff and Hfttler in Jail and frobabty WW Shot, Says Report GERMANY UNITED BY MOVE Walter *. Qfihm of Scioto comfy, Ohio, is the 'first county agricultural agent who lias been awarded highest honors among the agents of the country by a committee of prominent agriculturists of the country for the soilfertility program which he has developed among the farmers of his county this year. Mr. Gahm will be a speaker at the annual meeting of the American Society of Agronomy to be held in Chicago, beginning Nov. 12. * U. S. MARKET REPORT Weekly Marketgram by Bureau of Agricultural Economics. Washington.--For th« week ending November 10.--LIVE STOCK--Chicago prices: Hog's--$7.66 for the top and 6.90@7.50 for the bulk. Medium and good beef steers. $7.76 @11.36; butcher cows and heifers, $3.10@>10.75; feeder steers. $4.50@7.76; veal calves, 97.00 9.75. Fat lambs, J10.75@13.00; feeding lambs $11.50@ 13.00; yearlings, $8,266 11.00; fat ewes. $4.00@6.75. FRUITS AND VEGETABLES--New York round white potatoes, $1.65@1.66; northern round whites $1.00® 1.20 in Chicago. 90 @ 95c f. o. b. Cabbage, Danish type, $13.00 @14 f. o. b. Northern stock $14.00 in Chicago, $10.00 f, o. b. Onions, yellow varieties, $2.60 @3.00 sacked per 100 lbs. Midwestern stock, $2.60® 3.25 consuming centers. Sweet potatoes, Virginia, yellow varieties. $3.50@4.25 per bbL leading markets. Apples, mldwestern Jonathans. $5.00@ 6.00 in Chicago; Northwestern extra fancy Jonathans. $1.75 @2.25 per box leading markets. GRAIN--Wheat No. 2 hard winter. S1.06%@1.10% Chicago; (1.0801.09, St Louis; $1.06@1.13 Kansas City. No. 1 dark northern spring, $1.12 @1.13 Minneapolis. No. S red winter, $1.12@1.12 St Louis. No. 2 yellow corn, $1.01 Chicago; $1.0501.06 St Louis. New corn. 78®89c St Louis. No. S white oats. 42%@43c Chicago; 44945c St Louis. HAT--No. 1 timothy, $23.60 Cincinnati; $26.50 Chicago; $20.00 Minneapolis; $24.50 St Louis; $19.00 Kansas City; No. l alfalfa, S24.D0 Minneapolis. No. 1 prairie. *16.60 Minneapolis; $14.80 St Louts. DAIRY PRODUCTS--Butter. 92 score, 51V4c. Cheese, at Wisconsin primary markets: Single daisies, 24Vfcc; double daisies, 24^4c; young Americas, 25%c; longhorns. 2414c; square prints SBf&c. United States Handed Its Hat by France, Bows Self Out Washington.--The United States formally declined. In effect, to participate In any expert survey of Germany's capacity to pay reparations, the scope of which Is limited as proposed by the French government. When M. Jusserand, the French ambassador, explicitly defied the P&nch position in conference with the secretary of state, Mr. Hughes Informed him that the limitations proposed would frustrate the purpose of the Inquiry suggested In the Hughes New Haven speech and reiterated in the American government'! reply to Great Britain Oct. 1,5, last. Ten Bandits Hold Up Kansas . „ Town of 500 and Loot Bank Ogden, Kan.--Ten bandits In wild west fashion held this town of 500 inhabitants at bay for two hours while blast after blast was set off at the door of the vault in the Ogden State bank. Guards stationed outside the bank kept up a heavy fire until their companions inside finally gained access to the vault and looted It. Bank officials estimate the loot at approximately $26,000. The bandits got approximately $2,000 in csfOi and $24,- 000 in Liberty bonds. Washington.--In a letter to Representative William Green of Iowa, acting chairman of the ways and means committee, Secretary Mellon pointed the way to a substantial reduction of the tax burden now borne by the people vt the United States and Issued a warning that the enactment of a soldiers' bonus law would not only prevent reduction but would necessitate Increases.-- Mr. Mellon recommended a net reduction of $323,000,000, and showing how It can be made and yet effect ah improvement of the present revenue enactments. He would make the following changes: 1. Reduction of 25 per cent tn taxes on earned Income, $97,000,000. 2.* Reduction In normal tax from 4 to 3 per cent and from 8 to 0 per cent, $92,000,000. f 3. Readjustment of surtax rates, 1102,000,000. -v 4. Repeal of telegraph and telephone tax, $30,000,000. 6. Repeal of admissions tax, $70,- 000,000. These reductions would amount* to $391,000,000. As an offset and to give a better balanced tax law, Mr. Mellon urged the following increases: 1. Capital loss limit of 12& per cent, $25,000,000. 2. Interest and capital, lo^s deductions, $35,000,000. 3. Community property amendments, $8,000,000. The total increase would be $68,000,- 000. Hnving made these recommendations, Secretary Mellon asserted that, although the burden of taxation is heavy and the revenues are sufficient to "justify substantial reductions and the people of the country should receive the benefits," no program, however, Is feasible If the government is to be committed to new and extraordinary expenditures.** J The newest photograph to reach this country of General Ton Lossow, who -eoinmands"tfaie royalist troops fe Bavaria. .1 MRS, STOKES WINNER United States Course Ignoro? Says Former President Wilson Washington.--Woodrow Wilson, addressing the American people directly, via the radio, for the first time since he left the White House, declared America's attitude after the World war was "deeply Ignoble, cowardly and dishonorable." France and ftaly, Mr. Wilson declared. In a discission of world affairs, have made "waste pr.per of the treaty of Versailles." The former president said the only way in which the United States could show Its true appreciation of the significance of Armistice day was by resolving to put self-interest away and to' formulate and act upon the highest Ideals of international policy. Single Ballot by Jury Exonerates Millionaire's Wife* * New York.--Mrs. Helen Ellwood Stokes won her fight to defend her character against charges of Infidelity brought against her by William Earl Dodge Stokes, her seventy-three-yearold husband. The Jury refused to grant Stokes a divorce which he had asked On allegations his wife had been Intimate with Edgar T. Wallace, California oil promoter. The jury was out an hour and seven minutes. Only one ballot was taken and timt unanimously in favor of the pretty defendant. Wl»en the jury filed In there was a tenseness in the courtroom. For the contending sides It meant the culmination of five years of the bitterest fighting. The clerk of the court asked Foreman Hitchcock of the Jury whether the jurors had reached a verdict What is your verdict?" the clerk then asked. ^ We find Mrs. 8tokes not guilty on count nine," Hitchcock said. This was the issue of whether Mrs. .Stokes had been gulUy of Infidelity with Wallace in his apartment at 13 East Thirty-ffth street, New York. This was rhe sole issue left to the Jury to consider. Stokes, sitting alone at his table, appeared much affected by the Jury's announcement. Tears were In his eyes. He was asked If he had anything to say. "That's all," the aged financier said. "I have no statement to make." Filipino Lower House Asks President Coolidge for Freedom Manila.--The lower house of the Philippine legislature passed a resolution instructing the presidents of both the house and the senate to petition President Coolidge to include a recommendatiqn in favor of Philippine independence in his next message to congress. England Roars Big Wetcom# to Returning Lloyd George London.--No conqueror returning from a victorious campaign ever had greater reception than that given former Prime Minister David Lloyd George, first by the people of Southampton and then by London. German Republic Banishes General Eric Ludehdorff Berttn.--Gen. Eric Ludendorff must leave Germany and remain out of the country until he receives permission to return. He "has agreed to do this In exchange for his liberty and assurance that no more severe punishment will be visited upon him. This inforina tion came from authoritative official sources. Whatever else fate may hold in store for Germany, the country at least will be rid of the man who probably more than any other single Individual has been a source of conspiracy and intrigue against the republic ever since its establishment. 52,121 Men Attend One Bible Class at Kansas City, Mo. Kansas City, Mo.--A world's record for Bible class attendance was established here Sunday morning when 52,- 121 men turned out for the Kansas City Men's Bible class. The monster gathering ended a five weeks' attendance race between the Kansas City • class and the Taubman class of l^ong ; * Beach, Cal. Tmhee Cuaanllrfoorrnniiaannss m--u--stered only 31,047, according to figures received here, giving Kansas City an overwhelming victory. Corey Fined as Gams Hog. Norfolk, Va.--W. Ellis Corey, millionaire steel magnate, was fined $47B by Judge D. Lawrence Groner In the United States District court here foe violation of the federal migratory bird law. It was Corey's second offense. Drys to Ask Congress for $20,000,000 in Liquor War Washington.--Comprehensive plans for running down *rum runners have been completed by the United Statep coast guard. Congress will be asked for an appropriation o* $20,000,000 for the support of the coast guard service for the next fiscal year, most of which will be spent In the purchase and construction of seagoing cutters speedy enough to overtake the fastest rum runners operating within the territorial limits of the United States. ^ Firs at Chicago Stock Yards. Chicago.--The burning of 11,000 tons of hay and other damage, totaling about $400,000, were the result of a spectacular fire In the barn of the Union Stock Yards at Forty-eighth and Aberdeen streets Friday. To Turn Sugar to Qol&- Berlln.--The German government. In Its efforts to fill an empty' treasury, has decided to export sugar to restore the exhausted funds of foreign currency, which is needed for the financial operation of the country. Navy Reaches Limit. , j,; Washington.--For the first tttnr In more than a year the navy is now up to its authorized enlisted strength of 86,000 men. More than 11,000 recruits have been added to the service since Jul? 1. I Shrlnera Visit Mexleo, ^ 3: Mexico City.--A delegation of fifty 8hriners from the United States has arrived. The group is headed by Vernon Hlnckle of Indianapolis, William Davis of Portland, Ore., and R. O. Cory of New York. ' earthquakes at Loe Angel**. Los Angeles, Cal. -- Light eerth^ quake shocks were felt In Log Angeles Thursday night. Glendale, Monrovia and outlying residence districts reported temblors, estimate^. bf to number twelve. and en King, Queen Qet Ovation. Cartagena.--King Alphonso Queen Victoria were received thuslastlcally on their arrival here to take part in the unveiling of a monu njent in memory of Spaniards killed or wounded In the battle of Manila. Debt Representatives Named Belgrade.--The Jugo-Slav government has appointed a commission to visit the United States to discuss 1fte Jugo-Slav war debt with Washington officials. The debt amount^ to p# Charles M. Schwab Bought Off Woman Twenty Years New York.--Charles M. Schwab, steel magnate, from time to time over a period of twenty years sent money to Mrs. Myrtle B. Hayes, who now Is under indictment for forcing his Indorsement to notes with which she attempted to finance a $5,000,000 hotel project In Brookline, Mass., he testified before a referee in bankruptcy. He' did this, he said, because In 1902 he had advanced the womau $2,000, <yid subsequent demands for money were based on the threat of publicity which wo|ild have resulted in placing an erroneous construction on his previous associations with ber. Munich^--Bavaria's royalist revolt died in less than twenty-four hours after its birth In a local bierstube. Its leaders, Adolph Hittler and Gen. Erich Ludendorff, have be*n ar^Mted „ Deserted by the tederatty appointed dictator, Von Kahr, whom they had considered faithful to their cause, the Fascist! met the relcbswehr in street battles, In various sections of the city throughout the day, causing a number of deaths and casualties on both sides. Hittler was seriously wounded while defending the Bavarian war office with his "die hard" troops, Offcer they had been forced l'rom a brewery," where they were besieged for hours by the relcbswehr with bayonets and bombs. General Ludendorff surrendered In the office of General von Lossow, who had promised to take up his duties immediately as Bavarian minister of war. Instead, Von Lossow, unknown to the Hittlerites, got into communication with reichswehr officials in Berlin, Nuernberg and other cities and swore fidelity to the republic. Former Dictator von Kahr slmulta- Jieously announced he had been forced, with a pistol at his head, to accept Hittier's coup d'etat temporarily, and that his speech, wherein he proclaimed his confidence In the return of the ancient German regime, was his wily alternative to Immediate assassination at the hands of Hittier's bodyguard. Martial law was declared for the whole of Bavaria. Death sentences will be executed within a few hour* after being pronounced. In Augsburg berr Hittier's troops attempted a coup similar to that in Munich, but they were met by policc and disarmed. The unsuccessful attempt to over throw the republic has cleared the po lltlcal atmosphere and made Chancellor Stresemann's position lncalculabl) stronger.. r r ; IrnlS • Ifcl oil » X IMS 'used to vork i factory, sad I It's Too Bad. One great hindrance to success seems to be that industry costs sm| much more effort than ambition.--Ne# York American. Federal Judge at Philadelphia Jolts U. S. Brewery Raids Philadelphia, Pa.--After prohlbltloc agents had announced the seizure o! 14 breweries In and near Philadelphia, Federal Judge McKeehan rendered e decision that It was illegal to seise the entire plants of brewing companies. Holding that a search warrant authorizes prohibition agents to seise only intoxicating liquors Illegally manufactured and the appurtenances nee essarily used In the manufacture, Judge McKeehan advised federal prohibition authorities to "use some dls cretlon and judgment" in the execution of such warrants and warnec them there Was a penalty of a fin* or imprisonment for exceeding theli Authority. Federal Reserve Board Rules Against All Branch Banks Washington. -- Resolution were passed by the federal reserve board settling for all time, so far as the board is concerned, the long-standing row over branch banking by member banks In the federal reserve system. Under the resolution state banks will not be admitted to membership in the system except on condition that they abandon branch banking. Part of the edge Is taken off this action, however, J>y a proviso that the board decision will not become effective until February 1, 1924. Until that time state banks with branches can come in. Fort In Rumanian Capital Blows Up; Many Killed Bucharest. -- Many persons were killed and scores wounded when Fort Domnesti, on the outskirts of the capital, blew up. For many hours the city was imperiled by bursting shells which fell at considerable distance from the fort. The material damage Is reported to be heavy. ' Unusual Olvoroe Sutfc St. Louis, Mo.--Divorce suits were filed in Circuit court here Saturday by two sisters against two brothers, alleging desertion.' The plaintiffs were Mrs. Leo and Mrs. Robert Augustus. . More Bloodshed in Ruhr as Hunger Renews Dusseldorf.--The disorders In th« Ruhr which had been calmed durlnf the last few days, breke out agali Friday night. F-ood nuts and unem ployment demonstrations are going oi In Gelsenkirchen, Recklinghausen Kray and Bochum. There was blood shed in all these towns, when the Ger man police under French orders at tempted to repress the riots and firel on the crowds. Army Flyer Is KiHed at " Chicago Armistice Day Meel Chicago.--Lieut. Benjamin R. Mc Bride, army flyer, was killed at Ash burn flying field .when his engine sputtered during a stunt and crashed 20( feet to the ground. During the afternoon Lieutenant McBrlde had beer one of the most brilliant flyers in the Armistice day air circus. The traged} was witnessed by 00,000 persons. Vigilantes Plan Drive on Klan Throughout the United States Washington.--With a national committee composed of educational, business md professional personages, the National Vigilance association has been incorporated here for an intensive country-wide campaign looking to the disintegration of the Ku Klux Klan and kindred organizations. jFormer German Crown Prince Is Again on Native Soil Berlin.--Crown Prince Frederick William Is again on German soil. Quitting Wieringen at four o'clock in the morning, accompanied only by his aide. Major Mundler, who has shared the crown prince's exile, the heir to the German throne crossed the frontier neax OMeasaal shortly aftar,fcgp Mo'doik. < . Mungps 200 Feet; Dtea, MttCtie* Field, N. Y.--Private A age Rasmussen was killed when he di^ng to ihe drag lines of the dirigible TC-2 after it was released by its ground crew and lost his grip after being lifted 200 feet in the air. Its sons win- Winter's Work Rlam Washington.--The bureau will include soil surveys in .ter's work, according to plans announced by the officials. More than one-third oV continental United States already bas,been covered. WoU'd Restore Howat Springfield. III.--Reinstatement of Alexander Hvwat, former president of the Kansae, district of the United Mine Workers * ( Amerh a*' will he pro- „ , , #osed a-t the loeeting »t tlf..e!^|. proximately $00,000,OOOf^>s 4kh«jtlve committee I in indiaimpoll& " . ' I " • " "" Church Favors World Coutt. Washington.--The Federal Council of Churches has issued a statement asking tlie public to urge President Coolidge to use his influence to brlnf about American membership in the •World court. ^ Oklahoma 'Lawyer Oklahoma City, Okla. -- t^ecoyelfl from his home by un unidentified telephone caller, Paul J. McCarthy, prominent local attorney and a veteran of the World war, wuf shot here and left to die lu his moving automobile. Cotton Hearing Concluded, Washington. -- The federal -trail commission completed Its hearings Into the cotton situation Thursday Most of the witnesses opposed an> material change In the cotton industry, it is said. Two Indicted for Duel. Cambridge, Mass.--Two indictments for dueling have been returned by the county grand jury here as one aftermath of the mysterious sinking of ^rum-running schooner. Thomas Doric and Olaf M. Anderson were indicted. hftdslnce T have dkXMmy! would not be witliai* « fartO* faiths boose now. It has stopbed the nainsall right and I.havB, fonnd^et that it is* twjoderful bo^r boflder, as it has nsdc i m w e O j t f c f o t a c t o t » the 'old reliable' wHfc bnwatter. •ndl am aim wfflin§ for* ^M^nsTYon eaa we tins letter asyoa wish is I^an fee*. Tyrone, Pa. Letters like this bring out ihe me«H of Lydia B. Pinkham'sVegetable CoSpound. Tbev tell of the rdfef from t u WOMEN! DYE FADED THINGS NEW Ml P» Worn, Shi " -y-. iment or Drapery. Bach lK-eent package of Dh Dyes" contains directions so simple that any woman can dye or tint any old, worn, faded thing new, even if she has never dyed before. Choose " any color at drug store.--Advertise- -v *' f fcnds That Meet. "Don't you fllnd it difficult to makis * * both ends meet?" .• "Not the end of my money and the end of the week." A 'Standard External Remedy C of known value--safe and eflfectlv®, It's "Allcock's"--the original and gen* vine porous plaster.---Adv. Already Had 8hopping Ha^lt. Shopper--I want to get a habit. '» Floorwalker--Yes, madam. Ridll|g or drug? H Is Your Work Hard? Is your work wearing you oat? Are you tortured with throbbing backache-- feel tired, weak and disooursged? Then look to year kidneys! Many oeanpetkma tend to weaken the kidneys. Constant backache, hsadaches, Jiwjnws aad rheumatin pains are the natural result. Yob suBer annoying bladder imgidarities; feel nervous, irritable and worn out. Don't wait! Use SOM'l Kidney FIBS. Workers everywhere recommend Doan's They should bdp you, too. A»Jc your neighbor^: x An Illinois Case J. M. Chapman, 1X5 Railroad St., White Hall, UL, says: "I had kidney trouble. My back ached and lfi I stooped sharp; pains caught me. My kidneys were in bad condition and the secretions were scanty and off color. I used several boxes of -- Pills and they cleared up the kidney trouble and drove the backache away." OstDeert at Am 9tm% «0e e Boa DOAN'S VSIV P06TER-M1LBURN CO, BUFFALO, N. T. Doan's Kidney JUgUlUtt&pOirTflEUQr I MA CORNS Stop their paili tn one minute ! Par quick lasting relief from <anmf " Ifer. Schoil's Zine-pads stop the pat* ^ in one tniaete by removing the •-friction ; Zbo-pedsere thin, safe, antis ^ .fcvlag. waterproof aad cannot pr dpee u3ection or any bad afttr-ena Tine sites for cornt callouses sat-> ^ 1 kanioaa.Cootbata trifle. Get a bos . l ^ ; ^atyoerdraggbt'sarihoedeakt^: ^ UrScholls ; Xino-pads Em*o*>e on - jhopmlm fcyeas , CROUP Blttt N«wYortr ASTHMA