IFOR OVER j 200 YEARS ! haarlem oil has been a world wide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid conditions. | j_ ^ HAARLEM OIL' j I . ~~l (correct internal troubles, stimulate vital organs. Three sixes. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine Gold Medal. “those , headcoUjL / At the first sneexe, begin spraying the nose and throat with Zonite twice dally. It will help materially to de stroy the seatof the trouble— usually germ Infections j somewhere in the nasal cavity. Zonite is the form of antiseptic which 'practically wiped Infection out of the hospitals in France during the World War. The Bulrushes Opposite Cairo lies the Island of Roda, where, according to Arab tradi tion, Pharaoh’s daughter found Moses In the bulrushes. At the southern ex tremity of this Island Is the Niloraeter, by which the rise of the Nile has been measured by the Cairenes for 1.000 years. It is a square well with an octagonal pillar marked la cubits lg the center. Values , Oar social order Is safe Just In so car as we can translate Its values into {terms of human life. The ultimate (values nre human values always; the {Sanctions of property Itself are sec Endary; our last claim to our pos esslons Is that we hold them for the ommon good.—Basil de Sellneourt. rr ■■■ I i \ i il—_____________ Land of Little Value The, public domain amounts to 182, 000,000 acres, the great bulk of which, pot yet allocated, lies la the states of California, Utah and Nevada. Some of It has so little value It has uot been surveyed. World*• Smallest Motor A motor of French manufacture for attachment to an ordinary bicycle, Is said to be the .smallest motor In prac tical use. The cylinder has a stroke of only 2.2 inches and a bore of 2 laches. Why Early timer? j In early times, people hated so vio lently that they ascribed to Hades Just {the kind of horrors they wunted to be (there. I Love and seasickness cannot he de jsertbed; they must be felt. I Natural ferocity makes fewer cruel ^people than self-love. Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION 6 Bell-ans Hot water _[Sure Relief ELL-ANS ; AND 75* PACKAGES. EVERYWHERE INVESTIGATORS DETERMINED TO SEE BANK BOOKS Irookhart Committee to Start Contempt Proceedings Against M. S. Daugherty Universal Service Washington, April 13.—^Contempt proceedings are scheduled to bo started In the Senate Monday against M. S. Daugherty, president of the Midland National bank at Washing ton Court House. Ohio, brother of Former Attorney General Harry M. Daugherty, because of his refusal to turn over to the-Brookhart commit tee the books and records of the hank. Chairman Smith ^W. Brookhart of the Daugherty 'investigating commit tee, said that action against Mel S. Daugherty Is a matter of Immediate concern. “Our committee will take every step possible to obtain the books of the Midland bank,” he said. ‘‘We will ask the Senate to order Daugh erty Into the hands oT the sergeant at-arms, to he held In custody until the books are produced. We have full power to have those books pro duced and we are determined to e*-' erclse that power, as we bellevo we have found the right road to the dis closure of additional official corrup tion. The evidence gathered at Washington Court House In a single day was nothing short of amazing.” Stone Interested Chairman Brookhart will confer with Senator Burton K. Wheeler of Montana, upon his return from Chi cago, where he has been seeking new evidence, when a definite line of procedure against M. S. Daugherty will he decided upon. Attorney General Harlan F. Stone is also manifesting a keen interest In ihe Daugherty investigation and he has arranged lor an early conference with Sentlors Brookhart and Wheel er, presumably to discuss with them ihe whole proposition. While there was a repor- that the new attorney general wili urge a curtailment of the activities of the committee, little credence was given to it and the in dications are the probe will continue unabated. Not Worried Over Order The Senate investigators are not disturbed over the temporary re straining orders obtained by M. S. Daugherty at Washington Court House which blocked their examin ation of the books and records of the Midland bank. Such action, they say. will in no way interfere with their prerogatives to bring the whole mat ter to the attention of the Senate and to urge steps in contempt pro ceedings similar to those taken against Harry F. Sinclair, who was recently indicted for refusing to give testimony before the Senate oil in vestigating committee and to pro duce certain books demanded by that committee. In the meantime, Owen J. Roberts and Atlee Pomerene, special counsel, are prepared to go before the spe cial grand jury, which is to lie nn pannelted next Wednesday, with evi dence asking for the indictment of A. B. Fall, former secretary of the interior; Harry F. Sinclair and E. L Dolieny, for alleged criminal act* In cornection with the leasing of the nnval oil reserves. Other govern menl officials may be caught in the dragnet which lias been thrown out by the special counsel. Senator William E Borah of Idaho, chairman of the special committee appointed to investigate the facts back of the idictment of Senator Wheeler at Great Falls, Mont., ex pects to start that inquiry next week. While subpoenas have been issued for a number of important witnesses, Senator Borah said it will be some days yet before they can reach Washington. THE BUSINESS BAROMETER THIS WEEK'8 OUTLOOK IN COM MERCE, FINANCE, AGRICULTURE AND INOU8TRY BA8ED ON CUR RENT DEVELOPMENTS. By Theodors H. Pries, Editor, Com merce and Finance. Copyrighted, Theodore H. Price, Pub lishing Corp., 16 Exchange Place, .• n. y. Because the authors of the so called Dawes plan are Americans, many of their countrymen think they can work miracles. Their scheme seems to be Ingeniously simple but it leaves two questions unsettled. One is, will it be accepted by all the parties in interest? The other is. what is the amount of the payment that it Imposes upon Germany? -This last question—"how much?" —is, in fact, the crux of the whole matter. General Dawes is a good negotiator and it Is probable he left it open so that there should be room fur bargaining. But bargaining, especially international bargaining. President Entertains Friends on Mayflower Washington, April 13.—The Pres ident and Mrs. Coolldge entertained a small party of personal friends on a brief cruise down the Potomac on the Mayflower Sunday afternoon. The guests were Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Stearns, Representative and Mrs. Fleetwood, Vermont; Col. Walter Scott, New York; Mr. and Mrs. EdWard T. Clark, Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Foster of the White House staff, and Raymond Robbins. TWO MAIL CLERKS HURT WHEN FLIER GOES INTO DITCH I!es Moines, la.,'•April 13.—(Spe cial!—Two mail clerks, C. A. Mc (yivfay and Lee Rowe, both of JJbia, la., were injured early Sun ay morning when tiha^Twln City flier, fanning between St. Louis and Min neapolis, was derailed and plunged down a 30-toot embankment u mile north of Grinnell, la. The mail car, In which the two men were working, is believed to have been the first to leave “the traces, dragging all the other cars with it except the engine and Pull man oars. Two mall earn, the day -coaches and the engine tender piled up at the bottom of the bank. Four hundred feet of track were torn up. McGIlvray received a broken leg and Rowe sevore bruises and lacera tions.* Neither is in a dangerous con dition. takes time and It Is not at all un likely that several months may elapse before any definite agree ment is reached. But this is not to say that the proposals that have been worked out with such care will be without con structive effect. They provide an elastic basis for amicable discutllon and this is a great gain. But they do not settle matters and those who had hoped they would electrify the markets have been disappointed. Markets Generally Quiet And just here It may be remarked that “electrified” markets seem to be a thing of the past. Cotton Is the only article that seems to fluctuate sensationally these days and if the bill prohibiting r hort sales of cotton should be passed by congress the electrical days of the Cotton Ex change will be ended. But while cotton has been going up most of the other markets have been static. The brokers who earn more commissions when fluctuations are wide are naturally dissatisfied when prices are stationary. But this i^not a condition that the merchant and the manufacturer object to. It Is, in fact, just what they prefer, pro vided the demand keeps up—namely, steady markets with a healthy move ment of goods from producer to con sumer. Most people seem to have confidence in present prices, but they do not look for much advance. Therefore, they are content to buy from hand to mouth and the coun try’s production is moving from first to last hands in a fairly steady stream that is flowing smoothly and without obstruction or congestion. It is an ideal condition, for, al though it furnishes no speculative excitement. it is "stabilization," which Is exaotiy what the economists have been so long clamoring for. Aside from cotton, which is again getting altitudinous and should now bo dealt in with caution, the mar kets call for but little comment. Corn and wheat are a shade firmer on a better export de.na.id. Tht government puts the April 1 condi tu n of winter wheat at 83 as against 7J.2 per cent, last year. The crop is estimated at 649,000,000 bu3iie's, which is 23,000,000 bushels 'ess than last year. The decrease is explained by the reduction in acreage. Raw wool Is higher, but woolen goods continue quiet. The agricul tural department estimates the world’s crop of sugar at 21,600,000 short tons, which is 1,200,000 tons in excess of last year’s production but the market was unaffected by the estimate and seems to be at or near intrinsic value. There is an entire absence of spe culation In coffee but a very strong statistical position. The two factors offset each other. The result is hand to mouth buying by consumers and a steady maiket. Cotton goods are perhaps quieter as buyers are confused by the ups and downs of "futures." Rubber has been dull. Here again we have a strong statisti cal position which Justifies higher prices with any activity. 8teel Quiet Steel Is a shade quieter. Rake ore Is 80 cents lower. Copper is steady. The offtake is large but the copper experts say that higher prices de pend upon an Increase in the export demand. Tito non-ferrous metals are lower. Distributive trade is called "spotty." On the Pacific cotsf it Is excellent but In the narihwest It la not so good. In the south and east It Is called satisfactory but not bsomlng. Foreign exchange ad vanced slightly as it became known that the Dawes report aimed at its stabilization. If there are any really vulnerable points In an otherwise satisfactory situation they are the automobile industry and the building Industry. The facts are hard to obtain but It seems to be true that the automobile manufacturers planned to produce mere cars than can be sold this year. It is now believed that they will cur tail their output. The overbuilding in progress is. however, a more serious matter as it was based on costs that presup pose higher rents than the public may be willing to pay when the new structures are ready for occupancy. LONDON FAVORABLE London, April 12.—Two days study <#f the reparation experts' report by treasury office officials has failed to uncover any Important proposals which are not acceptable to Great Ri Haiti. Liner Reaches Port After Hard Battle With Storm Universal Service London, April 18.—The liner Mau ritania was reported anchored at Cherbourg at 6:40 o’clock Sunday evening. Towed by five powerful tugs, the Mauretania had lain In the channel outside the harbor for 60 hours fight ing a strong westerly gale and nar rowly escaped being blown onto the French coast. \ Kills Man In Mystery _ w-mmsr* -4r \ Mrs. Beulah Annan, of Chicago, was arrested there after she shot arul killed Harry Halstead, police allege, In her apartment. She de c ared he Invaded! her apartment and sought to attack her and that she shot him. The police, however, aver there Is evidence both had been drinking, and the Incoherence of her story led to her arrest. Divorced Wife to Oppose Release of Slayer of White Stands to Lose Fortune if Former Husband Is Declared Sane BY JOHN A. MOROSO. Universal Service Correspondent. (Copyright. 1924) Philadelphia, April 13.—One of the most tragic figures that ever tried to win out in the old, old "Battle of Broadway" comes Monday before the court of common pleas In this city, asking that he be adjudged a sane man. llo Is Harry Kendall Thaw, the slayer of Stanford White, the New York architect. Thaw will have five psychiatrists to Swear that he is a Bane man. Against these he will have Evelyn Nesblt, one time his wife, to swear that he is insane and never was sane. She ought to know. She bore a child she says was ills, spent his money, went stone broke for the "big sugar" of her day and, strangely as it may seem, has pulled herself together and Is on the Job now to protect her in terests and the interests of her boy. Fortune Piles Up During his long years of incarcer ation as a lunatic, Thaw’s fortune has piled up. It runs into the mil lions now. He has had no chance to waste it for the last 18 years. If he is declared sane, he may make a will that will cut off the woman who saved him front the chair of death and his son, he denies. If he Is found stHl a lunatic, then Evelyn and her hoy will take his fortune at his death. Harry Thaw Is still a man of wealth—only that. To be free to come and go, to admire and to behold the many commonplace beauties of life, to watch rtte meetings of lovers as they pause In the crowded streets at this sweet time of year to drop into a picture house at his will, to wander here and to wander there, to linger at dusty bookstalls or staring into shop windows, to have a little Job and the capacity to get away with it, he would, no doubt, be glad to start life all over at 60 without a penny in his pockets. He 1b a white haired man now and with a pallor that comes of long con finement with lunatlce. Eighteen years have been clipped out of his life, years that have brought him nothing but the horror ef pursuit and the companionship of mentally do thorned peeple, first In Matteawan aslyum for the criminal Insane In New York, and then In Philadelphia. His wealth and the wealth of his father have given him nothing but shame and disgrace, sorrow and suf fering. His once beloved career, as a spender, sycophants, male and fe male, followed at hla heels ns starv ing dogs would a butcher's boy. he himself closed on the night of June 25, 1906, on the Madison Square Gar den roof when he shot and killed Stanford White, one of New York's most famous architects and bonviv ants. Thaw had reached New York after a wild European trip. In Monte Car lo he landed In a hospital. He did not have the strength of body and mind to stand dissipation. In Paris the same thing. In London the same Roads Report Increase In Surplus Freight Cars Washington, April 13.—Class 1 railroads of the United States had 348,301 surplus freight cars In good repair and available for service on March 31, according to reports filed by the carriers with the car service division of the American Railway association. This was an Increase of 35,208 cars over the number of surplus cars re ported on March 22, at which time | there were 213,093. thlg. Exhausted and wild with fever In the London hospital, he demanded that his room be lined with blocks I of Ice. He had the money with which to build an Ice palace. "Why should n’t he have a room of Ice when his head was throbbing so and his whole body was burning up? Broadway was ready for him. Metaphorically, welcoming arches were thrown across the Great White Way from Fourteenth street to Col 1 umbus Circle; and he accepted the welcome. There was waiting for him one who was at that time a picture of In nocence and charm, a girl of 15. danc ing In a gay show. Her features and her form were so exquisitely beauti ful that artists like Beckwith and Church had used her for a model. Stanford White, connoisseur of beauty In art and women, already had won her. Her hair as black as smoke in the night, her eyes limpid and violet, her under lip full and tremulous, her experience that of a woman much older, she held out her arms to the Pittsburgher and he rushed into them. Headed for Europe They tasted all of Broadway’s bit ter-sweet offerings and then headed for Europe. From Paris they went into Germany, after Evelyn Nesblt has told him of her experiences with the architect. Thaw never did things by halves. They took a castle. A hotel suite would never do for Harry Rnd Evelyn. The mind of the spender was then going fast. According to Evelyn's testimony under oath, he summoned her from her bed Into a great baron ial hall, suddenly drew forth r heavy whip and then began furiously to laah her. He would, and did, punish her be cause she had not come to him as a illy of the fields. Harry Thaw want ed everything and thought he had enough money to get everything, even decency. And so, too, he would punish Stan ford White for having been the In strument of his deprivation. They came back to New York and plunged Into Its high-roaring surf of folly, after which bath he killed his man. Once again the Thaw money goes to court, and should It be successful this time It must go to court again In this city, for hanging over Harry is a charge of assault, the beating of a boy with a lash, a protege he had started to educate and who. In Thaw’s insane egotism, may have needed punishment, as Evelyn and Stanford White needed it. The rich man’s son has left behind him a wake of wreckage, bitter sor row for his old mother the most ter rible of all. Evelyn Is no longer a beauty. Fat from It, she tried suicide once. She Is lighting on In her way. One of his lawyers was disbarred, sen to niackwell's Island and died shortly aftef serving his term. An other of his lawyers was disbarred and dropped eut of sight. What money the welcoming chorus girls, gamblers and hangers-on caught from Thaw's wasteful hands has long since bees spent. Monday, In Philadelphia, the one tragic sentence so long familiar to the Indulgent mother will ring through a court room: “Harry K. Thaw to the bur!" COOLIOGE GRATEFUL Northampton, Mass, April IS.— President Coolldge sent a telegram to hts old friends and neighbors ex pressing thanks for their support of him since he became president. i. ■ - ' i ■ ■ ■ ■■ Ask Ford to Lay His Cards On the Table Detroit, April 12.—Henry Ford has heen asked by William A. Comstock, chairman of the democratic state cen tral committee, to state definitely hits political Intentions, as a result of his endorsement at Monday's statewide primary for president on the demo cratic ticket. The request, made three days ago, remained unanswered to day. DEMOS TO PUT REFERENDUM IN 1924 PLATFORM National Leaders, in Confer ence at New York, Out line Campaign BY LOUIS J. LANG, Universal Service Corrcepondent. New York, April 13.—That the next democratic presidential nominee will run upon a platform of which a popular referendum plank will be a cardinal feature seeined^to ho agreed by national leaders in conference hero Sunday. Vice Chairman Kramer of the na tional committee and National Com mitteeman Mack of New York, among others, expressed themselves as heartily in favor of the proposi tion. They asserted that Gov. Alhert C. Ritchie of Maryland* had -sounded one of the most effective battle cries, when, at the national democratlo club Jefferson day banquet Saturday night, he said: “The people ought not to be made to live undjsr any constitutional amendment unless the^ have the op portunity to say whether they want it.” Kramer Goes Step Further The acclaim with which this senti ment was received by more than 1, 200 men and women In the Hotel Commodore banquet hall was accen tuated by national leaders who had a chance Saturday to digest Just what it meant. Kremer. in his command, went even farther than Ritchie had done. He urged a referendum on all Inter national as well as national prob lems. Kremer said: "The speeches at the Jefferson day dinner contained many planks which might well he Put in the national platform. Though there were live speakers and not one, apparently, knew what the oth er was to say, they seemed to pos sess similar Inspirations. “All drove home the issue of tag reduction. All urged that the dem ocracy enter upon the forthcoming contest with a demand for honesty and economy in the conduct of the government, a fair deal for business and a regard for state's rights.” Urge Unified Democracy “Behind these propositions all speakers maintained that unified democracy should plant itself and arouse the people in the campaign and at the polls to obtain their ap proval. “I was much Impressed with the argument of Governor Ritchie of Maryland for a referendum on all national problems. “Were my advice to he followed, the people should determine, by di rect vote, Just how far America should identify Itself with Interna* tlonal disputes. "Why should not the people, them selves, be asked If they prefer a league of nations, a world court, or a concert of nations, whose repre sentatives might finally arbitrate all International quarrels? ACCUSETWOOF CHOKING TRADE Federal Trade Commission Files Complaint Against Minneapolis Firms Universal Service. Washington. April 13.—The North, western Traffic and Service bureau and the Northwestern Publishing company, both of Minneapolis, Minn., are named aH respondents In a com plaint just Issued by the Federal Trade commission, charging unfair methods of competition In market. Ing of coal. It Is alleged that tha respondents, by co-operative means and math ■ ids, prevent wholeaalers of coat from selling In the territory served by tha respondents dtisct to consuu>era or to any other persons not retail deal ers In coal not qualified under tha designations of “legitimate" or 'Teg ular” dealers aa defined by the re spondent organisation. It is alao alleged that the par* l>ose and effect of the respondent^ co-operative methods were to enable) local dealers In their respective com* v munltles to control the price of coal to the consumer without interference from outside competition. London Daily Paper Sold To Group of Conservatives Universal Service. London, April 13.—Lady Barthurst. >\vner of the London Morning Post, announces sale of the paper to a group of conservatives, headed by 'he IHike of Northumberland. The reason given for the sale wae “heavy taxation.” Urge Reservoir for North Platte Project as ' ■ — —■» Washington, April 12. (I. N. 8.)— Extension of the North Platte recla motion project by the construction of the Ouernsey reservoir, was rec ommended today to the Secretary of the Interior Work by a special com mittee studying national irrigation problems. It was estimated that tha probable loss In the reclamation fund for the North Platte project would be |600,000^