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1 1 8T. CHARLES WfV3AS\5 WAS FORTUNATE It Was Lucky Day for Mrs. Wiethoelter When Sbe Read About Doau's "I had such awful cutting pains In the small of my back and hips, I tften had to cry out," says Mrs. Er nest Wiethoelter, 550 Madison St., St. Charles, Mo. "The pain was knife-like and I couldn't turn in bed, in fact I was almost helpless. My feet and ankles swelled badly, my hands were puffed up and there were swellings under my eyes. I often got so. dizzy I bad to sit down to keep from falling and my health ilra.Wlnktof was completely broken down. The kidney secretions pained terribly In passage and in spite of all the med icine I took, I kept getting worse until I was a wreck. "By chance I read about Doan'a Kidney Pillt and bought some. After I had used half a box there was a change and I continued to improve the pains, aches and swellings left and my health returned." Bworn to lefore me, WM. F. WOLTER, Votary Public. ALMOST TWO YEARS LATER, Mrs. Wiethoelter said: "I think as highly of Boon's as ever. When ever I have used them, they have benefited me.". Get Doan't at Any Store. 00c a Bos DOAN'S "85.V FOSTER-MILBURN CO. BUFFALO. N. Y. A Cruel Fate. "I understand some of the Germans Object to a court proceeding for Wil helm. They want to go ahead Imme diately and put him back on the throne." "It Isn't fair. No man should be put in Jeopardy of life and liber*j without some kind of a, trial." & l"i I RASCALS Biliousness, Headache, Colds, Constipation, driven out with "Cascarets" mm niinii"i""""i"i"Miiii Why take nasty cathartics, sickening ealts, or stomach-turning oils to drive these rascals out? Let gentle, harmless Cascarets remove the liver and bowel poison which is keeping your head dizzy, your tongue coated, your skin allow, your breath offensive, and your tomachsour. Get a box of Cascarets at the drug store and rid your liver, stomach and bowels of the excess bile, poisons, and waste which are keeping 1, flowUmr..iiiilii They cost so little and work while yon leep.Adv. Between Thieves. MI got this hat for sprinting." "Who did you beat?" The owner and three policemen.- ASPIRIN FOR HEADACHE Name "Bayer" is on Genuine Aspirinsay Bayer Insist on "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin* In a "Bayer package," containing prop r directions for Headache, Colds Pain, Neuralgia, Lumbago, and Rheu mutism. Name "Bayer" means genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians foi nineteen years. Handy tin toxes of II tablets cost few cents. Aspirin is trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Mono cetlcacidester of Salicyllcacld.Adv Naturally. "What became of the resolutioi about the club's aviation meet?" "It was adopted by a rising vote." The delightful thing about world elslonlng is that anybody can do it -Wltu or without mental effort. Cuticura for Sore Hand*. Soak hands on retiring in the hot sutl of Cuticura Soap, dry and rub in Cu Wcura Ointment Remove surplu Ointment with tissue paper. This i only one of the things Cuticura will If Soap, Ointment and Talcum are use? for all toilet purposes.Adv. How hard some men work in ordei to avoid working! Look out for liani times the days re Betting shorter. 48,000 DrugstoresSeBU? Five million peo use it to KILL JILL'S COLDS CASCARA^QUININI **OMH cold remedy for St years tablet formMfe, watt. opiate*breaks cp acdld in 2* hoiirarelieve* frijr-in 3 cava. "oney beck If rt Wis. The genuine bos hi3* a Red with Mr. JHre BiCtere. MOST IMPORTANT NEWS OF WORLD Big Happenings of the Week Condensed for Benefit of Busy Readers. TOLD IN A FEW WORDS Kernels Culled From News of Moment in All Parts of the World Of Interest to All the Peo ple Everywhere. Northwest The state game commissions of Washington and Wisconsin have agreed to swap fish for experimental purposes. Peter Engquist and John Larson of Duluth, drank the contents of a bottle of moonshine liquor and died nine hours later. The International Harvester com pany's plant at Dubuque was destroyed by fire of mysterious origin, loss being estimated at $300,000. Ten passenger trains/m the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railway in the northwest have been temporarily sus pended owing to the coal shortage. The Great Falls, Mont., camp of the American Legion has taken steps to see that "first paper slackers" em ployed in that city and county are replaced by service men. Dr. M. W. Roan, Bismarck, shot by a fellow huntpr W^Q ina Washington ne nreii i Oh the doctor thinking thatt he was shooting a coyotte, is in a serious condition at a Bismarck hospital. A joint meeting of the food control supporters of Minnesota, North and South Dakota, interested in the pro jected control of flood .waters in the upper Red River valley and upper Minnesota river region, will meet in Fargo next month. The Montana state supreme court has sustained the right of women to hold office in that state on an equality with men in the case in which the legality of the election of Nellie Sulli van as county auditor of Silver Bow county was contested. Local Fuel Administrator John R. Mcintosh said there are 2.500 homes in Butte, Mont., where coal is needed. The county is admitting families to the county hospital and the Y. M. C. A. has offered its buildings for the use of families without fuel. Mrs. Bertha Miller, 44 years old, and her daughter, 17, have been ar or passing rorgea cnecKs, Dy wnfen, it is alleged, they obtained clothes valued at several hundred dollars. The daugh ter and mother came from Bismarck, N. D. A statewide organization to be known as the North Dakota Good Roads association, which will bend its activities toward improving the high ways of this state, was launched at a meeting at Minot, called by the Minot Auto club. It was decided to call a state good roads convention in Minot, Dec. 2. The soft coal supply of Duluth and Superior, originally intended for the Northwest district, ordinarily supplied t'rom the Head of the Lakes, may be needed to maintain essential indus tries in Montana and Wyoming, ac cording to E. D. Brigham, chairman, and W. H. Groverman, Fuel admin istration member of the Fuel com mittee. Plans for the establishment at Hel ena, Mont., of a branch of the Ninth District B'ederal Reserve bank, were announced by John II. Rich, federal reserve agent for the district. The branch will be opened as soon as ar rangements for a building can be made. O. A. Carlson, chief federal bank examiner for this district, will ie head of the branch. Ernest Lundeen, former Congress man, of the Fifth Minnesota district, *ho was scheduled to speak at the jpera house at Ortonville, Minn., igainst the league of nations, was aken from the stage by American .egion men and escorted to the rail road depot. He was placed in a refrig erator car and the door fastened, fhe train was slowly moving eastward the time. A maximum wholesale price of ten ind ono-lialf cents a pound for all beet ugars at all points in the United states has been established by the )epartment of Justice. The House, by a vote of 203 to 159, assed the Esch railroad bill to ter ninate government control of the car riers and provide regulations for their supervision after control is ended. High power radio service open to he public with Norway, Sweden. Den mark and Finland will begin at once. Acting Secretary Franklin D. Roose velt announced, .with tin? rate 24 cents a word, except to Finland, which will be 30 cents. President Wilson vetoed the bill re storing to the Interstate Commerce commission its pre-war rate making power. Although President Wilson is show ing steady improvement, he is not yet completely out of danger of relapse, it is teamed. His physicians are still exercising the greatest care. He is progressing more rapidly than had been hoped. Attorney General Palmer told the senate that there are 60.009 soviet suspects in th* country and ihat Eorc adequate laws i ounishmca* and Dortetion are needed". Foreign THE TOMAHAWK, WHITE EARTH. MINN. Domestic Five hundred employees of Chicago's leading photographers are on strike. Policemen on duty at night in Chi cago will wear civilian clothes if rec ommendations of Chief Garriiy before the council are carried out. A 12 month industrial armistice to settle labor unrest was advocated by delegates to the 22d annual convention of the American mining congress at St. Louis. A S10.0C2 Christmas cargo of food, clothing and toys will be sent to nee.dy children of Germany by the Indepen dent German American Woman's club of Chicago. Seven occupants of an automobile, including six nurses, returning from a social affair, were killed when the car was struck by a train at a grade crossing near Buffalo, N. Y. Rioting between whites and negroes broke out at Wilmington, Del., follow ing the killing of one policeman and the wounding of another by negroes whom they were questioning regard ing a recent robbery. A warning that permanent prohibi tion .was not assured in the United States was sounded by Rev. Dr. Daniel A. Poling of Boston in an ad^ess before the National Women's Chris tian Temperance union convention at St. Louis. Curiosity, prompted by a desire to be near a spectacular blaze of four oil tanks, lured eight persons to their deaths at Hays, Kansas, and resulted in the serious injury of 26 persons, and the less serious injury of scores of others. Railroads have sufficient coal to operate for from 25 to 30 days, Walkei D. Hines, director general of railroads, declared on his arrival in Chicago to meet with regional directors, INU BU: eral frets** embargo .will be declared wnile the coal pile holds out, he said. Public Ownership League of Amer ica at the closing session in Chicago adopted a resolution urging congress to appoint a commission for convert ing the steam railway telephone and telegraph systems of tUe country into a branch of the postoffico department under government ownership. The total value of the new construc tion in Minnesota, North Dakota and South Dakota for the first 10 months of 1919 amounted to more than $&1,- 000,000, a total which has been ex ceeded only once before, in 1916, ao cording to building statistics. In 1910 the total for the 10 months period was $60,974,000. Activities against I. W. W. are being continued in different parts of Wash ington and Oregon. In Tacoma par ties were sent to nearby logging camps, where it was reported I. W. W. were arming. Sixty-six alleged I. W. W. were arraigned in Tacoim for violation of the state criminal i law. Captain Robert Hunter Fitzhugh, 83, author, educator, missionary, philan thropist and the last surviving mem ber of the staff of General Robert E. Lee, died at his home at Lexington, Ky. ratified the treaty of Bolivia has Versailles. Lettish troops still are advancing along the entire front west of Riga. General Judenich, commander-in chief of the Russian army of the Northwest, has resigned. Shortage of dwellings is' so serious in Spain that a society has been organ ized at Madrid to import wooden houses from America. A floating mine was declared re sponsible for the sinking of the Ameri can steamer Council Bluffs, off the coast of Holland, but the crew was saved. A delegation of French intellectuals will visit Mexico within the next few months with an idea of creating a better understanding between the two countries The Bolshevik! have been over thrown in Brest-Litovsk, a soviet wire less dispatch from Moscow admits. After fighting for eight days, the Bol sheviki withdrew. Representatives of Esthonia, Lctvia, Lithuania, Finland, Poland, Ukrania and White Russia have declared in favor of formation of a political and military alliance for defense. A bill embodying the British cabi net committee's report on Ireland, to be presented in commons in a fort night, provides for two legislatures with a supreme central senate, accord* ing to report. On the ground that the president alone could say when war with Ger many ended, the federal court of ap peals at New Orleans affirmed the sen tence imposed on Lucian C. Laughter, Tarrant. Texas, convicted of having violated in April. 1919. the Reed amendment and selective service act by taking liquor into Camp Bowie The frozen bodies of several Aus trian artillerymen, perfectly preserved, have been discovered by St. Bernard dogs in an Alpine trench near the summit of Stelvio pass, about 10,000 feet above sea level. It believed that a whole battery was buried in the deep snow. Searching parties al ready have uncovered seven bodies. An unmasked bandit entered the Trinity County bank at Weaverville, Calif., locked the cashier in a vault and departed with between $12,000 and $15,000. The International Red Cross at Ge neva received a telegram from Con stantinople dated November 9, stating that the plague had broken out in the Turkish capital, and asking for help. The Baltic conference at Dorpet has been advised that Finland has decided to aid General Judenich with \o00 volunteers in a new attempt to take Petrosrad within the next few weeks. SE ME REJECTS PEACE TREATY QUITS SINE DIE Pact Is Dead Unless Resubmitted by President at Next Session. BITTER BATTLE IS WAGED Should It Be Sent Back, to Body on December 1 There Would Be Great Delay, as Other Legislation Would Hold Precedence. Washington, Nov. 20.The treaty of peace with Germany was rejected by the senate. On the final vote taken on the Lodge resolution ratification was refused by the vote of 43 to 51. The senate then adjourned sine die and, the house having taken similar action earlier in the day, the extra session called by President Wilson to consider the treaty came to an end. Under the parliamentary maneuver ing of the Republican majority the treaty was forced into such a situa tion that it cannot be again consid ered unless the president should choose to re-submit it to the senate at the session which opens December 1. If re-submitted, It will again go to the foreign relations committee, where 2 nil probability it will be held for a long time while railroad legislation and other matters are being consid ered. Peace Resolution introduced. In the meantime, to meet the situa tion brought about by rejection of the treaty, Senator Lodge introduced just before adjournment a concurrent res olution declaring the war with Ger many at an end. This resolution will be taken up at the beginning of the new session and probably passed. The defeat of the treaty was brought about by the votes of 38 Democratic and 13 Republican senators. The Re publicans who voted against ratifica tion were senators who have been from the very outset of the treaty fight against the document. All of the Democrats except Senator Reed of Missouri were friends of the treaty, but yielded to the request of President Wilson for rejection of the Lodge res olution because of the reservations which it contained. The Republicans who voted against Senators SonD), Branaegee, i ernaia, France, Gronna, Johnson of Califor nia, Knox, La Follette, McCorraick, Moses, Norris, Poindexter and Sher man. Democrats who declined to obey ihe Instructions of the president and voted for ratification were Senators Gore, Myers, Owen and Pomerene. During the long debate that fol lowed. Senators Hitchcock, Swanson and others in the administration fol lowing made frantic but fruitless ef forts to effect a compromise on the Lodge reservations. They conferred with Senators Lodge, Watson, Lenroot and others, but made no progress, the Lodge forces standing firmly against any attempt to swerve them from the program to which they were com mitted. Efforts to Place Blame. In the speeches that were made while the final vote on the Lodge resolution was pending, senators on both sides made efforts to place the blame for failure to ratify the treaty. Some of the mild reservationists blamed the administration men for not having arrived at the conclusion earlier in the fight that ratification without reservations was impossible and asserted that if they had done so a ^omproinlse might have been af fected. In a final effort at conciliation Sen ator Pomerene at 9:15 p. m. moved to refer the treaty to a "committee on conciliation" consisting of six sena tors, including Senators Lodge and Hitchcock. This motion was defeated by means of a motion by Senator La Follette to lay it on the table. Senator Hoke Smith of Georgia then sought to avert the impending rejection of the treaty by suggesting that the senate adjourn over night so that both sides might get together. This motion was defeated by the vote of 42 to 4S. Original Pact Defeated. After the second vote on the Lodge resolution showed that the treaty stood no possible chance of ratifica tion. Senator Lodge yielded to a re quest made by Senator Underwood for vote on ratification without reserva tions. This was defeated, ,'iS to S3 By making" a motion to reconsider this vote :ind then lay th:*t motion on the table, which was carried. Senator Lodge placed the last barrier against any attempt to bring the treaty again Knew What He Was About. A member of a national medical as sociation tells the following story at the expense of a physician: "Are y*fl sure." nn anxious patient once risked, "are yon sure that I shall recover? I have hear*! that doctors have sometimes given wrong dias noses and treated a patient for pneu monia who afterward died of typhoid fevtr." -Yon have been woefully misin form d. replied the physician, indig nant I v. -if I treat a man for pneu- 1 I before the senate without action by the president. The great feature of the day's de bate was a speech by Senator Borah of Idaho, which was made at a time when it appeared as though ratifica tion might be accomplished. In his speech the senator warned the senate of the results that would follow- de- parture from the policies of Washing ton and other founders of the repub lic. His speech, stirring in its elo quence and forceful in its logic, made a profound impression upon the sen ate. Result of First Vote. Ratification of the peace treaty, with the reservations framed by the Republican majority and objected to by President Wilson, was voted down in the senate/ earlier in the evening, with the administration senators lin ing up solidly against it The ratification resolution, which would have required a two-thirds ma jority for adoption, mustered only 39 votes to 55 against it. Its supporters were 35 Republicans, 4 Democrats, and its opponents 13 Republicans" and 42 Democrats. A Democratic move to have the treaty referred to a conciliation com mittee composed of Democrats and Republicans was defeated. Way Clear for Compromise. The vote cleared the way for the consideration of possible compromise proposals acceptable *to the majority of the Democrats and the mild reser vation group of Republicans. Republicans against adoption were: Borah, Brandegee, Fernald, France, Gronna, Johnson of California, Knox, La Follette, McCormick, Moses, Nor ris, Poindexter and Sherman. In order to put the treaty into a parliamentary situation where an other vote- could be had after efforts at compromise the senate then voted to reconsider its action. The motion was made by Senator Reed, Democrat, Missouri, and was adopted by the vote of the Democrats and mild reser vation Republicans. The vote on the motion to reconsid er was 62 to 30. The effect of the reconsideration was merely to bring the committee resolution back to the same status it occupied before the ratification roll call. An effort by Democratic Leader Hitchcock to have the senate adjourn at this stage failed, the mild reserva tionists lining up with the other Re publicans against the adjournment motion, which was defeated, 51 to 42. Lodge Blocks Hitchcock. Senator Hitchcock sought to offer a set of compromise reservations, but a point of order by Republican Lead er Lodge blocked him. Vice President Marshall ruled that ho nocorvntions were in order,and that the treaty, by the reconsldera "tion, had been brought back Into com mute of the whole. Senator Lodge appealed from the ruling. By a party vote of 51 to 42 the de cision of the chair was overruled. The vote having established that'the treaty was in the senate itself and not in a committee of the whole Sen ator Hitchcock offered a resolution of unreserved ratification, against which Senator Poindexter (Rep.) of Wash ington made a point of order. The vice president overruled the objection and an appeal again was taken. The senate again overruled the vice president. Amendments Are Passed. By a vote of 50 to 43 the senate a third time overruled the chair's rul ing that amendments to the Lodge reservation might be presented. Sen ator McCumber (Rep.) North Dakota, voted with the Democrats to sustain the vice president, and Senators Gore. Reed and Shields voted with the Re publicans against it. Senator McCumber moved to strike out the requirement that the reser vations must be accepted by other powers. Senator Lodge made a point of order, which Vice President Mar shall overruled, and another appeal to the senate was taken. With the same lineup as before the senate again overruled the vice pres ident's ruling, thus cutting off the Mc Cumber motion. The vote was oO to 43. Still Alive, Says Hitchcock. Senator Hitchcock said, following the senate's adjournment, that the ac tion of that body on the treaty has not killed It, and that he expects It will be re-submitted to congress by the president at the next session. "The president can send it back," declared Senator Hitchcock. "I do not, however, know what course he will follow. 1 have not discussed that with him. and have not been in communi cation with the president since the action taken by the senate." Senator Lodge considers the treaty dead, as was shown by his reply when asked his opinion of the present status of the treaty. He said: "It is dead in this senate. They killed it. just as I told them they would if they voted against it." Senator Lodge did not deny, how ever, that the president has the power to re-submit the covenant. monia, he dies of pneumonia."Har per's. Russian Villages'Prey of Fire. The Russian village is built princi pally of wood and roofed with wood, or with straw and stones. For this rea son there are so many fires that, ac cording to statistics, one-fifth of all the peasant cottages burn down every year, or putting It in another way. every house burns down after live years. This seems improbable, but it is reliable information SAVED HER LIFE Morrison, Iowa."Dr. Pierce's remedies and the professional advice received from the specialists at Dr. Pierce's Invalids' Hotel in Buffalo, If. Y. (which I followed to the letter), saved my life when I was a girl and I have had cause to feel grateful for more than forty years. When I was about sixteen years of age I fell from my horse and was ter ribly injured inter nally. A short tims after this an im mense bunch formed on my right hip which doctors neglected to lance and consequently my entire sys tem was poisoned. I not only became terribly emaciated but my body was mass of running sores and my right limb drew up under me and became helpless. I was in bed for more than six months and all hope for my recovery had been given up when someone told my father about Dr. Pierce's Invalids' Hotel In Buffalo, where they not only manufactured soma wonderful remedies but also gave advlca free, so he wrote for advice, and In a very short time we were very thankful that ha did, because the first half bottle of 'Golden Medical Discovery* helped me so much that I was able to raise my head from the pillow, my appetite returned and I was able to sleep. Then the sores commenced to heal and I knew that I had started on the right track. "It took five years to brine me back to my original good health but I took no remedies but Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, 'Favorite Prescription' and 'Pleasant Pellets'with the approval of my doctor all the time. This was forty years ago and I am still in the best of health. I have never had any sign of a blood disorder since or any ailment due to impurity left in my system, and I 'feel quite confident in recommending Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery as a blood purifier. The 'Favorite Prescrip tion' I found equally as good In toning up the womanly organs, and I could not have kept house without the 'Pleasant Pellets.* Every member of my family has found them to be unequaled as a purgative and liver tonic, and we have often had to drive a good many miles from home to get them."Mrs. N. P. Jensen, P. O. Bos 100. HEADACHE Often Caused by Acid-Stomach Tef. Indeed, more often than you think. Because ACID-STOMACH, starting with in digestion, heartburn, belching, food-repeat ing, bloat and gaa. If not checked, will even tually affect every vital organ of the body. Severe, blinding, splitting headaches are, therefore, of frequent occurrence as a result et this upset condition. Take BLA.TONIC. It Quickly banishes acW Stomach with Its sour bloat, pain and gaa It aids dicestionhelps the stomach ge* full strength from every mouthful of loo* you eat. Millions of people are miserable, weak, sick and ailing because of ACID-. STOMACH. Poisons, created by partly di gested food charged with acid, are absorbed Into the blood and distributed throughout the entire system. This often causes rheu matism, biliousness, clrrhosia of the liver, heart trouble, ulcers and even cancer of the stomach. It robs Its victims of their health, undermines the strength of the most vigorous. If you want to get back your physical and mental strengthbe full of vim and vigorenjoy life and be happy, you must get rid of your acid-stomach. In BATONIC you will And the very help you need and It's guaranteed. So get a big so- iwr from your druggist today. If It tails to please you, return it refund your E ATONIC.money rOft *6ttc AtTO-STOMAOD all triads and pay top prices aid snake) sjsuck cash return*. TsUPPEIS* GUIDE sent free to all who shipand mention this ad. McMillan Fw ft WMI Ct, Miaaeapotis Miaaeseta Cuticura Stops Itching and Saves the Hair All druggtite Soap 25. Ointment 25*50, Talcums? Sample e-oh freo of "Cutlcexa, Dtpt. BMtoa." Embarrassment of Riches. Mrs. FarawayI' haven't seen your wife la the hotel. Did she come with you? Mr. NewgillYes, she's here, biit you're? not likely to see her. She brought so many new gowns with her she has to keep to her room all the time to make the necessary changes. WORSE THAN DEADLY POISON GAS Kidney disease is no respecter of per* bona. It attacks young and old aukev In most cases the victim is warned of the approaching danger. Nature fights back. Headache, indigestion, insomnia, lame back, lumbago, sciatica, rheuma tism, pain in the loins and lower ab dompn, difficulty in urinating, all are indication of trouble brewing in roe* kidneys. When such symptoms appear yon was almost certainly find quick relief in GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules* This famous old remedy ha* stood the test for two hundred years in help* ing mankind to fight of disease. It is imported direct from the home laboratories in Holland, where it has helped to develop the Dutch into one of the sturdiest and healthiest races bk the world, and it may be had at almost every drug store. Your money promptly refunded if it does not re* neve you. Be sure to get the genuine GOLD MEDAL Brand. In sealed pack ages, three sizes.Adv. The Kind. "What kind of stars take best in the melodramatic circuit?" "I guess shooting stars do." Thrift is steady earning, wise spending, sane saving, careful invest* Ing. and the avoidance of all waste. ca If thTTire, Itch, Smart or Born, if Sore, Irritated, Inflamed cr Granulated, ore Marine rf-eebee. Safe lor torAdnlt AtanDruexists. Writefar aa-ancwiMBK. AtaUl*ue*its Writefa jftaei^Book. nftn keaeajCMkkt* ^$ ana be will