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THE CHATTANOOGA NEWS THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 1918. KIDNEY SUFFERERS HAVE FEELING OF SECURITY Toq naturally feel secure -when you know that the medicine you are about to take la absolutely pure and con ta4na.no harmful or habit producing dross. Such a medicine la Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, kidney, liver and bladder remedy. The same standard of purity, strength and excellence is maintained In every bottle or bwamp-itoot. Swamp-Root Is scientifically com pounded from recetable herbs. It ia not a stimulant and la taken in teaspoonful doses. It Is not recommended for every thin. According; to verified testimony it is nature's great helper In relieving and overcoming kidney, liver and bladder troubles. A sworn statement of purity is with every, bottle of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Root. If you need a medicine, you should have the best. If jrou are already convinced that Swamp-Root is what you need, you will find it on sale at all drug stores bottles ef two sizes, medium and However, if you wish first to . try this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer A (Co, Blnirhamton, N. Y for a sample bottle. When writing he sure and mention The Chattanooga Dally News. (Adv.) DA VIES' LOYALTY STOOD ACID TEST President Wilson Outspoken in Favor of His Election to Senatorship. (By David Lawrence.) (Copyright, 1918. by New York Eve- ning rout company.) Washington, March 21. President Wilson yesterday took a hand in the fight for Americanism in Wisconsin. But what he did concerns not only that stats, but every district and precinct where the issue may be loyalty or dis loyalty in the congressional elections next fall. For Irrespective of whether Repre sentative Lenroot. who has been cam paigning on a loyajty platform, or James F. Thompson, candidate of the La Follette faction, wins the republi can nomination, the prpsldnnt is out spokenly and emphatically In favor of JAPS TOLD UNITED STATES IS ' TRYING TO GET KAMCHATKA of the Oerman propaganda so discredit the soviet government and encourage Japanese Intervention. ' M. Trotzky also asked the American military mission for ten American officers to assist nlm as inspectors in organis ing and training a new volunteer army, and has requested the services of Amer ican railway engineers and transportation experts to assist In the reorganization of I the railways. He also has asked for American railway equipment in the way of locomotives and cars. There bss been a marked change in the attitude of the entente allies toward the soviet government. The entente missions are no longer rushing away from Russia. The Snglisb, French, Americans, Italians and Siberians now have military missions in Moscow, and they are taking quar ters, as they expect to remain. There are many signs of renewed co-operation between Russia and the allies. HOLLAND REFUSES ALLIED PROPOSITION TJ. S. and Great Britain Begin Requisition of Dutch Ships at Same Hour. 4oo Rasas Bis I PsSB mMi Wn?nesta$ atth. Greet Northern en $our next "Jnrit toOo? GHEM'OsWiHEMN HOTTEIL Chicago OpposOitVoalQSDatr In tna Loon Hoc fotatU State Street asfaal csntrk tkr blocks from tJ oKnlswils detrict; two tsWks frern ,La Sell Street, the fmncist Osntar; cat tk main sactsotJ vest autatnoinU tharcsjghfsfae about sakKrty Utjsu all railroad stations. Expssiantgd tiaseJLua tar 1 I k is The HOTELl , For HEAL Comfort t ReammaiJb Rata Reports have been circulated in Japan that the United States la nego tiating with Russia for the transfer of the peninsula of Kamchatka. This peninsula Is located across the Bering sea from Alaska (indicated by the arrow). At a recent meeting of the Japanese peers' budget committee For. elgn Minister Motono was asked If America was trying to get Kamchatka, The report may have been the work of pro-Germans,, who are trying to create distrust between America ana Japan. N The United States has not even considered the acquisition of the penln suia, as far as can be learned. . the election of Joseph Davies to suc ceed the late Senator Paul Husting, democrat, . Mr. Davies, who won the democratic nomination, has yesterday received from President Wilson a letter, which Incidentally accepts the former's res ignation as a member of the federal trade commission, but a letter that will stand as a precedent for the political contents of next autumn. The president himself names the issue when he says "the'Mcl-emore ' resolution, the embargo issue, and the armed neutrality measure pre sented the first opportunities to sp iv the acid test in our country to disclose true loyalty and genuine Americanisms it should always be a source of much satisfaction to you that on the crucial propositions you proved true." That paragraph means that the pres ident is against Representative Lenroot because he did not vote right on the three measures mentioned. Reference RATES FBK DAT (i n ii uf) p - , - '; - .. vm u rem r mmu. V"" J- J ROW GIRS ACT MIR COMING OUT MEANS DANDRUFF "Danderine" will save your hair and double its beauty at once. The House of I HOTEL MARTINIQUE lay tor a ssa ai w m - U roadway. .SZd street, new Tork One Bloek From Pennsylvania Station. rVjuslIy Convenient for Amusements, Shopping or Business. 157 Pleasant Rooms, With Privsts Bsth, $3.50 Per Osy. 257 Excellent Roams, With Privsts Bsth, faoing strtst, southern ex poturs,J3.0O Per Dsy. 400 Baths 600 Rooms Eanfi Also Attrsctive Rooms From $1.&0. The Restaurant Prices Are Most Moderate Try this! Your hair gets soft, wavy, abundant and glossy at once. Save your hair! Beautify it! It is only a matter of ualng a little Dan derine occasionally to have a head of heavy, beautiful hair; soft, lustrous, wavy and free from dandruff. It Is eiisy and Inexpensive to have pretty, charming hair and lots of it. JiiHt spend a few cents for a small bottlo of Knowlton's Danderine now all drtiK stores recommend It apply a little as directed and within ten minutes there will bn an appearance of abundance; freshness, fluftlness and an Incompara ble gloss and lustre, and try as you will, you can not 11 nil a trace of dan druff or falling hair; but your real surprise will be after about two weeks' line, when you will aeo new hair tine and downy at first yes but really now hnlr sprouting out all over your scalp Dnnderino is, we believe, the only sure hair grower, destroyer of dandruff and cure for itchy sculp, and It never fails to stop falling hair at once. If you want to prove how pretty and sort your hair really Is, moisten a cloth with a little Danderine and care fully draw it through your hair tak ing one small strand at a time. Your hair will Je soft, glossy and benutlful In Jimt a few moments a dellghtrul surprise awaits everyone who tries this. (AdV.) WITH a i . J . i J K2 Sv. 1 and m PRODUCTS I ywir roof calls fer attention, act now. Yom can't tell how soon it may be a total saea. Carey Fibre Ceetinf spread on with a mop, rejuvenate old cxmposition rooi and aUs yrart of life, hmkt Pitch wul step any Wak. Apply ft b any kind of weather to any kind of roof. Spread with trowel 'Carey Black Aapkah Paint is a pwe ptesenrative and sure protection for metal surfaces. Carr Carbsn Pasot is for net MsrfBort, boilers and smokr-ttaclo. OtaWsal Caafiiif U a medusas priced coatinf fee gnaal use. Oor tx yxt Vine in the economical ccsmr vtiuii of roofs Is at your disposal, fhtm m aras at aisssf fa ree JdVo James UST.RIGHT Chattanooga SUPP (Po. ERVICE Tennessee indeed to those speclflo questions is In serted because, while Mr. Lenroot's record since war was declared has been in support of the federal government's war policies, Ho voted the way Ger many's propagandists wanted the American congress, to vote, so as to weaken the hand of President Wilson. ' Would1 Leave No Doubt. Mr. Lenroot's loyalty is not for a moment questioned here, but, the issue as seen by the president n not so much personalities as the necessity of making It clear to the country and the whole world that In a etate where disloyalty has croppsd out, no opportunity shall be given Germany to draw any satisfaction whatsoever out of the result. Mr. T.enroot, for Instance, voted for the McLemore resolution, whloh would have required American citizens to keep off of all belligerent ships, thus surrendering a right as precious to the United States as any right she has ever fought for on the high seas. Mr. Lenroot. in a Bpeech in congress. advocated an embargo on arms, which would have crippled the allies and left the free and democratic nations of the world, that had not been amassing war materials through a militaristic system, at the mercy of Germany, wfilch coun try was spending millions of dollars in the United States to bring about a dis continuance of what is a legitimate right of export for neutral nations. During tho fight on the armed neu trality measure, Mr. L,enroot voted for an amendment proposed by Kepre- sentativo Cooper, of Wisconsin, that would have nullified the bill itself, though, of course, he supported tho main measure. The amendment proposed "That no ship f American register, armed in the manner aforesaid, shall carry cargo consisting in whole or in part, of arms or ammunition consigned to a bellig erent country, or to a citizen thereof. This was virtually an embargo on arms Itself, but besides that Mr. Len- root's record didn't stand the acid test on other matters. lie recorded himself as "not voting on tho espionage act, which was aimed us much at disloyalists in Wisconsin ns any other part of the Union. Ho failed to vote on the soldiers' and s.'Ulors' insurance Mil. With a record like that, the president of the United States doesn't believe that a victory for Lenroot would mean an indorsement of the national admin istration. Indeed, the defeat of Joseph E. Davies, member of the federal trado commission, and a personal friend of tho president, would be heralded as a plain repudiation of the exeoutive. When Mr, Wilson speaks of how Mr. Davies ' proved true on various occa- sinus, he means those critical days when tho Americanism of members of hla own administration was being tested, when men were lining up every day for or naliiHt nn embargo, for or against tho McLemore resolution, and similar measures that signified . a craven neutrality. Opposed La Folletism. On all theso occasions Mr. Davies, who is closely associated with tho late Senator Husting,' endeavored to tell people in Washington that the major. ity of the citizens of WlHConsIn stood by Mr. Husting instead of Mr. I.a Fob let to. He worked tooth and nail against La Folletism, and recently, in an swer to a question, declared he would vote for the expulsion of La Follette, if the matter was ever presented while he was a member of the senate. Yesterday's letter from President Wilson has an importance that far transcends the election to be held en April 2 in Wisconsin. It means that the men who voted for the McLemore resolution and an embargo on arms aoainit the allisi. and aaaintt the armed neutrality bill, are going to find it difficult to come back to congress. Even though they have gotten on the bnnd wagon since the war was oe- rlnred. hn iisi'ntU)ilitlea of SO many to the Herman propaganda is going to be sulviected to the severest scruuny. Speakers of national Importance havo been selected to go to W lsconsin to help campaign for Mr. Davies. In deed, the president himself wrote to Vl.-e-rresldent Marshall, asking him to go to Wisconsin. The rrosldent made his position clear even before the outcome of the pri maries, for h believes a vote for Len root will not clearly vindicate Wiscon sin, while a vote for Davies will be a c!oar-cut victory for the war program of the government. Washington, March 21. Upon Holland's refusal, in the face of German threats, to put into effect her voluntary agree ment for restoring her merchant marine I to normal activity, tne ynitea- Mates government yesterday requisitioned all Dutch ships In American waters. At the same time Great Britain was taking over Dutch vessels in British ports. A total of seventy-seven ships of probably 600,000 tons were added to the American merchant marine by the requl--! sitlonlng.. Another 400,000 tons are put into the allied service by Great Britain's action. Most of them will be used in the food-carrying trade between the United States and Europe. President Wilson's proclamation taking over the ships was issued only after word Anally came from London that Holland's delayed reply was a rejection of the British-American demand. The govern ment had waited more than forty-eight hours beyond the time when Holland had been requested to make a decision as to whether she would carry out the original pact or submit to requisitioning. Every effort was made to avoid drastic action, as transfer by agreement was sought, rather than by selsure, although the lat ter Is an exercise of sovereign rights Jus tified in International law and practiced by all nations. Republicans Nominate Lenroot by Small Vote Milwaukee, March 21 .More or less complete returns from every county in the state last nifrht sustained the lead of Congressman Irvine I. Lenroot, loyalist candidate for the republican nomination for United States senator In yesterday's primaries. Belated returns gave him 68.532 votes. or 2,828 more than received by James Thompson, the La Follette candidate. Thompson did not concede defeat send ing complete returns, but at Marinette a I big meeting of farmers sreeted Lenroot. wno addressed them as victor amid pro longed cheers. Mr. Lenroot denied a rumor that to make certain of defeating Victor Berger, ine socialist candidate, who is now un der indictment for alleged violation of tne espionage act. he would withdraw in favor of Joseph E. Dales, democratic candidate. "The report that I would withdraw in favor of Mr. Davies is absolutely without foundation," he said. "We hnv mnrta the fight in the republican party on the inyairy issue, and have won t notwlth. standing the efforts of certsln parties to place the stamp of disloyalty upon the repuoiican party." On the face of the latest return. r.. vu-s iiaa m.iys votes, compared with "r viianes MCUartnv. Tha aama aaviccs maae the Berger vote 36,646. Allied Officers Go to Siberia for Inquiry Mow. Tuondsy. March 1 (Py the Assoc-in tod lVcs.) Leon Trotsky's reply to the entente Allies' Inquiries concerning reports that the bolshevllrl had armed thousands of (i.rnian and Austrian war rrlmmrrs In Siheris. who now threatened the Trsns-Slhertsn railway, was: Sn,1 trsine.1 officers and Investigate. I will civ vnu a tSaln." The offer was aocentrd. and tonight Pant. W illiam It. Wehator. of the Amer ican Red Croas. sn.1 Cant. W. L. Hicks. ef the Rrlllah military mission, left for Irkutsk. Trhlta and othrr pel"'" where Mie Hermans are reported to be provided wilh rifles. flell t.leoes and ammunition. The bolsheuk. rPrs charse that the reports of the menace of armed Ormsn and Austrian rrleonf is In Siberia is pa" , K 'OXVILLE LADY PRAISES A I M FOR RHEUMATISM People Unable to Get Relief With Vegetable Preparations Use Mineral Compound A MEDICINE MINED JUST LIKE GOLD With few exceptions rheumatic rem edies are vegetable preparations And in exceptionally persistent cases many people have found it impossible to get permanent relief from their use. This accounts for the enthusiasm of the people who have turned to Acid Iron Mineral, the remarkable product or a strange deposit found upon a Mississippi farm and now beinsr dis tributed world-wide by the Kenodlne Chemical Corporation, Roanoke, Va, Very Highly Concentrated. This strange mineral is extracted from the earth, placed through a pro longed process and in a highly con centrated form is bottled in generous sli bottles and may be procured at most any dmgRlst's. It is absolutely different and very economical, it really is an unusual and pleasant blood remedy and the results to be secured by people trou bled with uric acid, blotchy skin, rheu matic and nouralKlc pains and aches durlnjf damp weather are astounding if we may take the results of thou sands of tests In which it has proven the master of such troubles of the blood. Lady Here Indorsee It. Mrs. Martha rarlier, 620 Ijimar street. Knoxville, Tenn.. says: "I was troubled with rheumatism and nervous trouble. My shoulders would ache and rheumatism was so bad I could hardly get about. I was a total wreck and was so nervous and rundown I had no appetite or ambition for any thing. A friend tfld me of Acid Iron Mineral and having read a great deal about its discovery I took three bot tles and today I am glad to say, the rheumatic troubles have alt left me and with a good appetite anil steady nerves once more I want to praise It. It did me so much aood I want others who suffer to try this wonderful nWil- Irlne," enthusiastically slates -Mrs. Parlier. The mineral from w hich this re markable and, strange remedy comes Is mined and yet the liquid secured by the Ferrodlne Chemical Company's process is a renaisn coior. sirong in medicinal elements, hlphly concen trated and very cheap to take. A bot tle lasting several veeks can be bad from your driiRRlst for $1. Full di rections for use for blood will ne found with the bottle. Get a bottle today. (Adv.) Fold In Chattanooga by TJve & Let Live Drug Co.: Hast Chattanoom by Avondale rharmacy; Hiintsvll. Ala.. ty J. D. Humphrey & Hon, ana ;ooo dristglsts everywhere, (Adr.) vv no n . n o 'The WeD-known Cod Liver and Iron Tonic, Without Oil To MakeThem Strong Weakne8S is the one great drawback to health after sickness. It often seems as ' though strength never would return. In such cases Vinol is a real blessing. You see it contains the very elements needed to restore good digestion and a healthy appetite, which is quickly followed by rich blood and perfect assimilation of nourishing food, and ' in a few days one can just feel one's self "building up," and soon as strong as ever. There is nothing like Vinol to create strength for all run-down, nervous conditions, weak, women, overworked men, feeble old people and delicate children. WE WILL RETURN YOUR MONEY if Vinol fails to benefit you. Jo Anderson, Druggist, Chattanooga, Tenn. AVOSD REGRETS Attend a reliable school. Good teachers. Good methods. Good re sults. All our graduates have good positions. A visit to our school will convince you. Classes day and flight CHATTANOOGA BUSINESS COLLEGE SEVENTH AND MARKET STREETS. MAIN 2867 A Combination of Economy and Style Characterize the Spring Models of IVorld-Beafer GBofhes Maybe you've seen the word " Economy " so much you're tired of it - but who ever gets tired of the RESULTS of Economy? Anything yau buy here brings you the max imum savings. We make our clothes with that idea in view. Smart Styles in World-Beater Clothes $10 t $25 Boys' World-Beater Suits $3 t0 $10 ' Pay Cash and Pay Less. McCLUIRfE9 New Idea Clothing Store Moore J. Smith, Mgr. 815 Market St. S