Stomach Cataiih j Cause* untold mlseiy and suffering, •II of which to needless. Pe-ru-n* acts aa quickly and surely on ca*V tar-h of the stomach and bowetoj* aa in cases oljOAv^ that eoeamoa^r^^^a farm. > catarrh. II jGvSr in J&USE K^Pfiftyyeam S^k^^P'Exerdiea a sooth ^Bfc^Tng. healing effect up ■ron all muooua lining*, r Belching gas, sour stom MM ach, nausea, vomiting, cramps, pains In tha abdo •BL^V^ men, diarrhoea, ©onstlpa Vri tlon are all symptoms oi • mffWijh catarrhal condition in tha • organa of disaatioh. * w?**-'*r 1 Don't raffer another day. /« K&foU It to needless and dangj MBSgE**J\J] OU3. TwogeneraUanahav* Hlmin y I found Pe-ru-na just tha WHaBlmkJS I medicine t, ended for suah * mr I disturbances. i, WR Sold Everywhere ^ 1EL..J Tablets or Liquid The Only Sure Way. "Why not go to the races?” “What /or?” “To pick up a little change.” “I'm not a pickpocket” j Mrs. W. H. Avis Council Bluffs, Iowa.—“A few years ago after motherhood I could not gain hack my strength. I developed quite a severe case of woman’s trouble, suf fered with bearing pains which would be so severe I w-ould have to lie down. I became so weak that all I wanted to' do Tfras lie and rest. - It seemed that every spark of .yltality had left me. I consulted a doctbr and he said nothing but an operation would help me, but I would not consent. I had seen Dr. Pierce’s medicines adVertlied, so at once began taking the ‘Favorite Pre scription’ and the ‘Golden Medical Dis covery’ and it was not long until I noticed my appetite was returning, I could eat, so I knew the medicine was doing me good. I took about twelve bottles and it was well worth it for it completely restored me to health, without the operation.”—Mrs. W. H. Avis. 314 S. 19th St. All druggists sell Dr. Pierce’s Fam ily mcdlclripo—tnhWx nr liouid. --— - - WCoated Tongue J ■ Nature*s Warning of || ■ Constipation H ■ When you are constipated, Jj SI not enough of Nature’s ||| ffl lubricating liquid is pro* ■ ■ duced in the bowel to keep ■ ■ the food waste soft and K ■ moving. Doctors prescribe K ■ Nujol because it acts like ES. fl this natural lubricant and I ■ thus replaces it. If H ,_v Nujol is a | H lubricant—not b ® » medicine or H W laxative — bo f cannot gripe, p g A LUBRICANT-NOT A LAXATTV^^ COCKROACHES WATER BUGS ANTS ass—S■■ IV • -w • ■* EASILY KILLED BY USINO STEARNS’ ELECTRIC PASTE It also kills rats and mice. It force* these pests to run from building for water and fresh air. A 35c box contains enough to kill 50 to 100 rats or mice. Get It from your drug or general store dealer today. READY FOR USE-BETTER THAN TRAPS WL.DOUGLAS $5 *6 *7* *8 SHOES « W. 1). Douglas shoes are actually de manded year after year by more people than any other shoe in the world. W.L. DOUGLAS terlal anil workmanship are l unequaled for the price It is M worth while for you to know £3 that when you buy W. L. R Douglas shoes you are get- R ting the benefit of his40years L ex|>ertenoe in makingtbebest K shoes possible for the price. W.L. DOUGLAS 1 worth the p rice paid for them. Wear them and save money. A Protection against unreason- £ able profits is guaranteed by SB the price stamped on every W.L. DOUGLAS^,9 g£23IV2S& 110 of our own stores In tbe It'. L. Douglas name large cities and by shoe deal- ond portrait is the era everywhere. Ask your hf£‘t~nl.,h?J •hoe deafer to show JOuW.L. Stands ‘or Douglas shoes. Only by ex- the highest standard •mining them can you ap- of quality at the lotc preciate their value. Refuse «< possible cost. The substitutes. Insist upon hav- 2SJ5?/.®!!* *ric} u ing W.L Douglas slices with fhT,X P °n the retallprice and filename --— stamped on the sole. The " *•* taf nk ■ fHrikhik retail prices are tbe same »nk fsr ciUI*t everywhere. 0, / j9 TO MERCHANTS - If no exsfxtJ dealer in your town handies r i**V£enrLCaA£H> W. L Douglas shoes, unte to- President V day (or exclusive rights to W.L. Douglas Shoe Co. handle this quick selling, JO Spark Street quick turn-over line. Droekton, Maes. Refreshes ffiary Eyes When Your Eyes feel Dull curd Heavy, use Murine. It In* •tantly Relie vest aatTiredFeelina —Makes them Clear. Bright and Sparkling. Harmless. Sold and Recommended by All Druggists. NEW GROUP TO SUCCEED FARM BLOC Progressive Senators Organ izing as “Independents” for Work in 68th Congress Bloc to Continue in House. BY JAMES R. N0UR8E, Universal Service Correspondent. Washington, Nov. 13.-*-The tusk of organizing the independent or pro gressive senators chosen at last Tues day's election Into a cohesive group to hold the balance of power In the new senate already has been started. It Is expected there will be at least 16 or 17 senators in the Independent organ ization. Reports reaching the capitol today were that oommunleatlons have been passing between the newly elected senators and that by the time the 68th congress meets they will come Into office fully organized and ready to take up the program of progressive legislation which will be agreed upon. It Is Intimated that. In the Senate at least, the farm bloc will pass out of existence and will be replaced by the new organization of independents. 'Most of the independents are from agricultural states, anyway, and or ganizers .of the new group believe the work for which the farm bloc was formed can be carried on more ef fectively by permitting the bloc to be merged into the Independent organ ization. Leaders of the farm bloc In tlxe House are planning to carry on Its work with a definite program of leg islation in the interest of the farming population. . Senator Btfrah of Idaho, who has just won a notable single handed vic tory over the republican machine In his state, reached Washington today and began to take an interest in the work of getting the progressives to gether. While Borah does not as sume to be the leader of the inde pendent group, It Is conceded that his expierence In the Senate will be of considerable value to the organizers when they get ready to combine forces. Stick to Seniority nuie. Senator Borah announced as a first step in the direction of a solid pro gressive front in the next Senate that the progressives will have nothing to do with the proposal made by Senator Medlll McCormick in his letter to Sen ator Lodge for abolition of the sen iority rule in the selection of commit tee chairmanships. TShe progressives now in the Senate have most to gain by continuance of the seniority rule, the senator pointed out, because La Follette is the ranking republican on the finance committe and Borah is the ranking republican on the foreign rela. tions committee. Wiping out the sen iority rule at this time would benefit only the old guard and! enable it to capture some of the chairmanships for which progressives are slated. Opinion generally among republi can senators regarding McCormick’s suggestion was that it is an old guard move with the specific purpose in view of keeping La Follette from get ting the finance committee leadership. Longworth Unsatisfactory. Representative Nicholas Longworth of Ohio, husband of Alice Roosevelt, appeared tonight to be out of the run ning for republican leader of the House in the 68th congress. Inquiries directed in authoritative quarters elicited the very frank in formation that the progressives and farm bloc members will not accept the son-in-law of the former presi dent because they regard him as too reactionary'. Indications also were that Repre sentative Sydney Anderson of Min nesota, who frequently has been men tioned as the next likely aspirant for *the leadership, could not be elected. Anderson would be bitterly fought by the Wisconsin delegation and other progressives,-it was declared. The G. O. P. leaders must have the support of the Wisconsin members to organ ize the House. The name of Representative Wil liam J. Graham, of Illinois is being thrown out by. the farm bloc repub licans as a feeler. If he^can develop sufficient support to make him a probability, the farm bloc and pro gressives may unite behind him. Any aspirant with this joint support prob ably would get the post. Mann or Gillett Speaker Selection of the new leader is be ing connected up with the speaker ship in the discussions of the House members who have returned to Wash ington since the election. If Speaker Gillett should agree to support a man for leader who is acceptable to the progressive and farm bloc, one bloc leader asserted today, he wwtild be re-elected. But if Gillett should con tinue to support Longworth for lead er, a straightout fight would be made by the progressives and farm bloc members for both the speakership and leadership. In the latter event Representative James R. Mann would be the most likely choice for speaker, which would eliminate Graham as a leader ship possibility, both being from Il linois. The farm bloc feels very friendly to Mann. He has exerted his powerful influence in behalf of mea sures backed by them on a number of occasions, several times saving the day for them when it appeared they were aboue to lose. * “TIGER” EARLY RISER. Aboard the Steamship Paris, En route to New York, Nov. 13 (A. P.)_ Almost every passenger abroad the steamship Paris is honoring the max im “early to bed and early to rise" in order to watch Georges Clemen - ceau take his early morning walk on the decks. The former French pre mier gets out of bed at 5 o'clock, paces up and down the ship a while and then goes back to his cab. . One is lucky to catch a glimi.se of him after that. HOXIE PHOTOGRAPHS THE VOICE. For photographing tho human volco and reproducing It, not as a pic ture, but as the sound of the voice itself, a ne\V device, known os the Pallo-Photophone, has been perfected by Charles A. Hoxle, of the General Electric Co., Schenectady, N. Y. It is believed the machlno will make the talking;-motlon picture a reality. Returns From 1922 Harvests Should Be Much Better Than 1921, Econom ist Asserts. Universal Service. Washington, Nov. 13.—Pointing out that the prosperity of the country de pends upon the purchasing power of its payrolls, Roger W. Babson, the Boston economist, today warned against wage reductions. He was ad dressing a meeting of Washington business men. Mr. Babson predicted a more pros perous 1923, but said that it is likely to take the United States two or three years more “to get\out of the woods,” and perhaps longer if Etirope is again plunged into war. As to commodity prices, he sees an increase for a year or so, then a long pull downward, comparable to what followed the Napoleonic and civil wars. Stating that farmers will get about 30 per cent, more for their products this harvest, he continued: "Considering the fact that producing expenses have been less, the net prof its of this year's tiarvests should be much more than 1921. This means that at least one third of the people in the United States are going to have a greatly increased buying pow er this fall and winter. Barge crops are a souece of real wealth. They help everyone. "Employment conditions are very much better. Where 6,000,000 peo ple were out of employment two years ago less than a million are out of work today. ' - “if the railroads now come into the market for new equipment and sup plies there should be very little un employment during the next few months. This must mean better busi ness because the purchasing power of the people ultimately is determined by the total payroll of the people.” HALL GRAND JURY MEETS THURSDAY Immediate Action in Case De cided On by Officials Monday Night. Universal Service. New Brunswick, N.* J., Nov. 13.— The Somerset county grand jury will meet Thursday morning to receive evidence in the investigation of the murders of the Rev. Edward Wheeler Hall and his choir singer, Mrs. Elean&r R. Mills. That announce ment was made tonight by Wilbur A. Mott, in charge of the investigation. Alfred B. Gibbs, foreman of the grand jury, was notified that the body will be called together and summons to the 20 men and three women com prising it will be sent out tomorrow. Officials said that the grand Jury will be asked to indict a woman and two men. They have made no effort to conceal their intention of naming Mrs. Frances Stevens Hall, widow of the rector; a vestryman of Mr. Hall’s church and another man whom the authorities have declined to describe. Decision for immediate action by the grand jury was Interpreted in some quarters as the answer of the state to the counter attack of Mrs. Hall against the chaige of Mrs. June Gibson that she saw Mrs. Halls at the murder scene when the crime was committed. FATHER DRIVING WAGON CRUSHES CHILD TO DEATH Yankton. S. D.( Nov. 13 (Special.)— Paul Madsen, 4 years old, son of Soren Madsen, farmer north of Yankton, was killed Suturday eve- ' ring when a wagon loaded with corn ran over hUn. His head was com pletely crushed. The lad may have been lying in the road asleep, after watching his father pick corn. Dark ness prevented seeing him, and the tragedy was not discovered until the boy was missed from home and a search made. MUSSOLINI PLOTS ROLL IF MEDIATOR New Italian Premier Attempts to Bring England and France Into Ac cord, BY WEBB MILLER, United Press Staff Correspondent. Paris, Nov., 13.—Premier Mussolini, of Italy, moved today to mediate be tween the Turks and the French and British. The fasclstl chieftain suggested that a meeting of foreign ministers be held next week end at Nice or Lausanne. It was at the latter place that the meeting between allied leaders and Ismet Pasha was to have been held this morning. This parley was postponed when France and Britain failed to agree. Premier Poincare conferred with Lord Hardlnge, British ambassador here, but refused to accept Lord Osirzon's Invitation to come to Lon don for a conference on the Turkish crisis. However, he stated he favored a meeting of allied leaders before the peace parley is held with the Turk ish representatives. England and France are deadlocked over the conference at Lausanne as Turkish leaders warned that the Kemalists, restless because of post ponement of the meeting, were (near a clash with allied forces In Constan tinople. Curzon Wants Agreement. Lord Curzon, British foreign sec retary Insisted that the English not attend such a conference until the French and British agree on a pro gram. The French hold, along with the Turks, that the conference should be held as soon as possible. Curzon’s attitude would necessitate another postponement from November 20, the new date set. Curzon fears that holding the con ference on such short notice would result In French domination at the peace table. A cabinet meeting was called for today to dlscusS his atti tude. - Ismet Pasha, In an Interview with the Matin's Lausanne correspondent, warned that the Constantinople situ ation is serious because of the post ponement. -y— REFET PASHA ARRESTED. Athens, Nov. 13 (U. P.)—Refet Pasha, governor of Constantinople, has been arrested by British soldiers, according to an unconfirmed dispatch from Greece sources today. SNQW STORMSMSOLATE FOUR TOWNS IN UTAH Washington, Nov. 13.—An effort to restore transportation and communi cation between the Isolated Unitah valley, in Utah, and the outside world severed by snowstorms, was made to day by the postoffice department, when in response to appeals it or dered a caterpillar tractor into action to break down the snow drifts block ing the only road into the valley. Separated from railroads by high mountain ranges, the valley is de pendent upon road transportation for its supplies. Storms whh h swept the west recently blocked its inlet, and the towns of Vernal, Duchesne, My ton and Roseveldt have lately been deprived of their normal daily quota of 10 tons of supplies delivered by mail. EXPLOSION KuZs FOUR. Corning, N. Y„ Nov. 13 (A. P.)— Four men were killed und three in jured late last night as the result of the explosion of a locomotive boiler at Moreland, 13 miles from here. PREDICTS PHILIPPINES WILL GET INDEPENDENCE Washington, Nov. 13 (U. P.)—The granting of independence to the Philippine islands by the next con gress was forecast by O. DeVeyra, resident manager of the Philippines * here. "I have carefully analyzed the re turns and I am satisfied there will be sufficient votes In the new congress to pass a Philippine Independence measure through both Senate and House,” He Veyra declared in a state ment. FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF t ENJOINS DOCTOR FROM F F MAKING FACES AT HER F F - ♦ Fs Cedar Rapids, la., Nov. 13 F F (Special).- -If there Is anything F F Miss Maud Wymer dislikes, ft F F is for a person to make faces at F* F her on the street. She says F F Dr. 11. N. Grimm has been F F guilty of this offense. This af- F F ternoon she w'ent into superior e F court and obtained an tnjune- F F tion against him, which not F F only restrains hint from muk- F F lng faces but from sounding F F his automobile horn when he F F passes her. F FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF EXPECT FALL OF Chancellor Issues Ultimatum Threatening Resignation —Hunger Riots in Gorman Cities. BY KARL H. VON WIEGAND. Universal 8ervico Correspondent. Special Wireless Dispatch. Berlin, Nov. 13.—U Is expected the next 48 hours lwll decide the fate of the Wlrth cabinet. In many quarters its fall In that time Is predicted. Chancellor Wlrth tonight deliver ed an ultimatum to the social demo crats that unless they withdraw their objections to the entrance of the peoples party, which Is the Stln nes Industrial party. Into the govern ment, he will present the resigna tion of the government to President Ebert forthwith. Wlrth demands that the so-called Stlnnes party become a part of a coalition government. The social democrats answor with the threat that they will withdraw from the cabinet In that event because the peoples party objects to the use of the gold reserve In the Relchsbank In an effort to stabilize the mark. The social demoracts tonight In formed the chancellor thut If the In dustrial party will switch on that point the social democrats will con sider the withdrawal of opposition to their entering the government. A new note containing newly for mulated phonoaals for the stabiliza tion of the mark was sent to the rep arations commission In Paris tonight.' The chief feature of the proposal is that the government is now willing to mobilize the Relchsbank gold reserve in an effort to bring about stabiliza tion. President Havensteln of the Relchsbank, In a letter to the gov ernment, offers to place half the gold reserve, approximately 500,000,000 gold marks, at the disposal of an In ternational syndicate toward stabil ization of the mark, on the condition that a moratorium Is granted to Germany. _A_ FOOD RIOTS IN CITIES. Universal Service. Berlin, Nov. 13.—Symptomatic of times and conditions In Germany, hunger riots are reported from Duea seldorf, Cologne and Hamburg. In Dusseldorf there Is considerable plundering of shops. The police are powerless and the municipal authori ties have sent a request to the allied commission for permission to bring In 300 police reinforcements. The re quest has been refused. In Ehrenfeld, members of the police force have been dragged from their horses by mobs. » Efforts of the German government to stabilize the mark, together with the advice and assistance of the group of International experts who met here last week, are a dismal fail ure. That conclusion, It Is learned, was arrived at at a meeting of department chiefs of the foreign oflce after a re view of the efforts and results of the past fortnight. The financial situation is consid ered practically hopeless and unsolv nble under present conditions. The opinion Is freely expressed in bank ing circles that the mark must in, evitably decline still further. ASKS ACQUITTAL OF MRS. CLARA PHILLIPS Defense Attorney Charges Peggy Caffe Responsible for “Hammer Murder.’’ Bos Angeles, Nov. 13 (U.P.)—Al berta Meadows, Indirectly, and Peggy Caffee, directly, were responsible for the tragid "hammer murder,” De fense Attorney Herrington declared today, demanding the acquittal of Clara Phillips. He told the Jurors they must acquit' Mrs. Phillips because the evidence against her was Insufficient and be cause she was mentally unaccount able at the time of the murder. Mrs. Alberta Meadows* indirectly precipitated the series of events that ended In her death when she told Ar mour Phillips that his wife had been unfaithful to him, Herrington as serted. He then launched into a bitter at tack upon the evidence of Peggy Caffee, alleged e.ve witness, who he charged "has perjured herself again and again.” POISONED BOOZE KILLS THREE NEW YORK MEN New York, Nov. 13