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MAN JOHNSON SEEKS SUPPOI11r. d*ipblican Colleagues Tell 1H1im They ve Not Enough Votes to Pass Atnendnment. 4 shington, Sept. 25.-While the dman peace treaty received only filof considoration in the senate to ,;ay, outside (levelopmen t s indicate(d hat the factions were lining up for e real light over the league of na tions covenant. The outstanding feature of the day iWas the announcement by Senator ohnson, republican, California, that .e 1would leave there tomorrow for the .1acific coast to keept up his at (#9k on the treaty, twhich was accept ed to mean finally that his proposed AMendnent to equalize the voting pO er of the United 'States and Great ,.;talin wVOuld not be called up for eeks hence. INext in public interest wvas the ftWq that Senator Ashurst, democrat, Alzona, had telegraphed President Vfilson that lie would vote for ratifl o6tion of the treaty, :believing he could retider the country and the world, he SAid, a great service by accepting it as .t is, without amendment or reserva tion. This definite statement from senator Ashurst was considered par LEOPARD CANOT CHANCE ITS SPOTS Mr. Dodson, the "Liver Tone" Man, Telle the Treachery of CalomeL Calomel loses you a day I You know What calomel is. It's rury; quick ,Aver. Calomel is < ngerous. It rashes into sour bile ikedynamit cramping and sickening you. Ca el Attaeks the bones and hould er h 'put into your system. When you feel biliou g h, con 'stipated and all knocked out a believe fou need a dose of dangerou calomel ust remember that your drug ist sells or a few cents alarge bottle of odeon's Liver Tone, which is entirely vegetable and pleasant to take and is a perfect seubstlItute for calomel. It is guaranteed ? to start your liver without stirring you tp inside, and can not salivate. Don't take calonell It can not be trusted any more than a leopard or a wild-cat. Take Dodson's Liver Tone Q'vhicb straightens you right up and a;nakes you feel fine. Give it to the Vehildren because it i@ perfectly harmless and doesn't gripe. The Ren Frosty IV ---no more barefoot ta --no more dressing -no more big fuel b -no more fires to bt I Simply roll out of your rooms made by the even day Cole's Orgi BURNS CHEAPE! AND BRIGHT. LJ I If last winter's fuel 1 why stand it again the time to stop was I sinall fuel bill this w remarkable fuel-se today. Cut Shows ticularly assuring by democratic lead ers because of persistent reports that lie 'would appose the pact in its prcs CIt form. Just before adjournment Senator Lenroot, republican, Wisconsin, made his position clear by reiterating that he would not vote to ratify the treaty if under Article 10 the United States was obligated to send its troops abroad to reserve the territorial integrity of members of tlie league. Senator New, republicaln, I ndiana, and Senator Smith, deimocral, Mary land, divided the debate of the day, the former attacking the treaty and tile latter defending it and urging speedy ratification. 3ut there was no apl)lause, the galleries evidently tak lng to heart the previols warning of the Vice president that this -would re stilt In ejection of those violating the standing rule of the senate. In the house, where treaty talk bobs up now and then, Representative King, reptiblican, Illinois, introduced a reso lution proposing -to support the body for the senators "standing for Ameri eanism." The resolution iwas thrown in the house hopper without discus sion. Under unanimous consent agree ment the amendments by 'Senator Fall, republican, Now lexico, proposing that the United.States -be relieved from service on foreign commissions creat ed under the treaty, will be taken up tomorrow for discussion. 'Senator Cummins, republican, Iowa, will speak against the treaty, and Senator Fall is expected to champion the cause of his amendments. No vote Is looked for until some time next week. Senator Johnson's decision to re sueni his western speaking trip set at rest a whirlWind of rumors concerning the -British and American voting amendment, which now both republi cans and democrats agree will not be ta up for some weeks. The general alk iwas that republican leaders frankly told Senator Johnson that they did not have enough votes to pass It, and that the senator replied lie would go out in the country and create such strong sentiment in its favor that the senate would not dare defeat it. No Worms In a Healthy Child All children troubled with worms have an un healthy color. which Indleates poor blood, and as a rule, there is more or I esstomach disturbance. GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC given regularly for two or three weeks will enrich the blood, im prove the dfestlod, and act as a General Strength ening Tonic to the whole systern. Nature will then throw off or di[pelthe worms, and the Child will be in Perfect health. Pleasant to take. 60c per bottle. ILKES& CO. iedy for ornings rips to the basement in an ice cold room - ills to pay id. bed and dressj in wvarm and cheerful md night heat of al Hot Blast IT COAL. CLEAN SES ANY FUEL. >i1l was hard to pay this year? Now is ~te. If you wa~nt a inter, you need this v in g heater. Act 1 ** .. saI Heater Satisfactin SENATOl DEFNMPS OMAHA LYNCHING Williams of EIssisiIpi Departs from Treaty Debate to Answer Horah. Real Issue of Treaty Neglected Whole Day. Washington, Sept. 29.--ace clashes, Senator Williams, Deinocrat. Missis silypi, declared in, the senate today, were all (ule to attemied outrages on white twolel by negroes. It was too far fetched, he said in answering Stn attor Ilorah, Republican, Idahio, to a ellipt to connect tle leagie( of nations with race riots. "I will go in the patlwas of Ieace as far as any man-[ would be willing to arbitrate almost anytling except outrages on a white woman by black or -white. I would surrender him as a criminal beyond the pale to the first crowd that came to get him," he said. "The condu- ' of the criminal at Omaha deprives ie of all inclination and power to say one word against the crowd that captured the criminal and punished the crime. Tace Is greater than law, now and then, and protec tion of women transcends all law, hu man and divine." "This miserable beast in Omaha paid a just debt for his crime. 'When it comes to violating innocent women, it is no time to go to court. But here we have men -pleading for 'law and or der while helpless women are being treated by beasts as they please, and yet these same men don't want any in ternational law. "The senator speaks of established law in the land and yet he's unwilling to stand for established laiw in the world. ",Washington and Jefferson sought a just and enduring peace. The Presi dent soughtit In Turope and the United States. le has spent energy, intellect and almost life. He has received currs es and calumny. Ihe senatur from Idaho has been preaching peace, peace when it comes to niggers,, when capital and labor is Involved, and yet when he conies to international affairs lie is standing in the pathIway of the very thing to which lie has paid so high an oratori cal tribute. lie wants America to stand Isolated. She couldn't do it forty-eight hours even if she wanted to." Senator Borah made sharp reply to Senator *Williams, discussing 'partict larly what the latter said concerning lynchings. If lynchings -were. confined, the Idaho senator contended, to those in cidents mentioned b ythe senator from Mississippi, the human race might be disposed td pass them by for one reason. "But the disease spreads and men are lynched for most trivial causes," lie added. "The record shows 217 negroes lost their lives the first year of the war, at a time when negro boys were giving their lives to the Republic and displaying great heroism overseas. There twas no intimation that they had been guilty of the particular cr'ime on which meni seek to justify lynch ing. "F want to say considiering the ulti mate welfare of the hluman family, there can 'be no justiflcation for the lynching or any person, and~ the man who preaches it is sowing the swind that r'eaps the whgirl- wind, no matter how black the skin of the victim may be. If the Republic dloes not 'protect the lives of its people the seedis are pilanted that ultimately wvill lead to its disintegration, Amendments Neglected. Not one -passing reference ,was made ill thle long peace treaty dlebate in the senate todlay to the thirty-odd~ Fail amundments, which Vice P'resident Marshall had ruled would be the spe cial and~ continuing or'der of business. The dilscussion emrbraed~ almost ev ery other .point. It covered all the grouind from .Omaha, Neb. to Persia, and Vice President Marshall's predic tion that the senate, once it took up the amendments would discuss every thling else undier the sun, was abund antly fulfilled. The dlisculssion cetn tered -about speeches by Senator B~orah, Rep~ublican, of Idaho, and Sen ator' Willilams, D~emocrat, of MIssissi-p p1. .bothl of whom digressed to touch upon0 recent evidlences of mob rule. Thore wereo no other speeches, but late in tile day there was more or less of a general deobate, with half a dlozen senators tryIng to spleak at once and persisting in their efforts to such ex teint that the VIce Presiden, r'appiing .iharply for ordler, declared the pro ceedlings 'were degenerating uinto a chorus. Tlhe Fall amendlments, introduced by lie Iteputblicean senator from New Mexico, a'nd designed to r'elieve the I 'n ited Stales from represntation on conmmissions created uinder t he t reaty of lpace w ithi Germnany3. mu tst come urp for a vote soonter or later. Th'lere have bieenf prommises of a vote onm ethlis week, biut tontighi D~emocratimc andl lie Puliclan liieaderms fiany con1' '01fessed that they had stopped making pr'edie tions. liig liit of Wt\indohw Shaes' to~ arrive this wveek{. S. M. & I. ii. WITIl(t &, ('0 \l ii I TALK about smokes, Prince Albert is geared to a joyhandout standard t just lavishes smokehappiness on every ian ga e enough to make a bee line for a tidy red tin an immy pipe-old or new I Get it straig that what you've hankered for in pipe or cigarette makin's smokes you'll find aplenty in P. A. That's because P. A. has the quality! You can't any more make Prince Albert bite your i tongue or parch your throat than you can make a horse drink when he's off the water! Bite and parch are cut out by our exclusive patented process! You just lay back like a regular fellow and puff to beat the cards and wonder why in samhill you didn't nail a section in the P. A. smokepasture longer than you care to remember back I Say Prince Albert everyhere tobacco is old. Tepy red bag, tfidy red tine. handsome pound ansd half pound tinr aumid*r-at -that clever, practical pound cetal glass hamidor with sponge moistener op that keeps the tobacco in such pefect co.:ditl. R. J. 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