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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (March 31, 1903)
THE MOENTNG' OREGONIAN. TUESDAY, MAECH 31, 1905. SMITH MUST HANG His .Will Be First Execution at State Penitentiary, MEDICAL BOARD WiKS SUIT Sapreme Coart He-Ids There la Jfo Authority te'Issne Temporary li censes to Practice Medlciae HoHgrhteH Case Reversed. ' The rirfct of eelf-3cfwc rests upon the broad foundation ot necessity which Is evidenced by a real or an apparent exhibition of force, creatine a reaton able apprehension of Imminent danger. The Elate Board of Medical Exam iners under the act of 3869 has no au thority to grant a temporary license to practice medicine. It la error to permit a detective to testify that one -who was robbed did, on the following rr-ornlntr. identify a photograph as the picture of the person who committed the crime, this being; hearsay evidence. regular aad to Id proceeding- Into one of due regularity and perfect legal efficacy. . His erasure ... cannot rY any rule of ethics or practice, either in law or morals, operate to admit him as a res- ular practitioner of medicine and surgery; I so that he has never been by any act ot the board licensed generally to practice his profession, but by his own willful act he has procured the making up of a rec ord which Is false, ana witnout tne power of either the board or Its clerks to make." Thi onlnlon also holds that, since the license was admittedly fraudulent, the court will not require that he be given notice before his license can be revoked. State vs. HeagbtOB. State of Oregon, respondent, vs. Chick" Houghton, appellant, from Mult- nomah County, A. 3?. Sears. Jr., Judge, reversed and new trial ordered; opinion by Justice Bean. Defendant was convicted or robbing one Balch in the North End district in Portland, November 7. 1S02- At the trial Joseph Day testified that, on the morning after the robbery. Balch described to him the man who committed the crime, and when- a number of photographs were shown Balth, he picked out that of Houghton as the picture of the man who had robbed him. Objection was made and overruled, the court holding that the evi dence was material. The Supreme Court WHEAT FIRE AT CAYUSE BIGHTEEX THOUSAND . BUSHELS GO CP IS SMOKE. Three "YVarehoHses and as Elevator Bsra at a. Small Station Tvrenty Miles East ef Feadletea. PENDLETON. Or,, March 30. (Special.) Three warehouses and an elevator, con taining in all about 13.000 bushels of wheat, were burned at Cayuse this fore noon. The total loss Is estimated at more than $20,000. Cayuse is a small wheat station about 20 miles east or this city. and has no water protection whatever. Residents of the station this morning discovered smoke Issuing from the ware house of the Pacific Coast Elevator Com nany. and at once attempted to put It out. but. fanned by a terrific wind amounting almost to a gale, the names rapidly gained headway and in less than one hour the entire 600 feet of warehouses along the track were a mass of ruins. Kerr, Glfford & Co. lost about 6000 bush SALEM, Or.. March 30. (Special.) The Supreme Court today affirmed the judg ment of the Circuit Court of Multnomah County condemning George Smith to death. Smith will probably be the first person to be hanged at the Oregon Pen itentiary under the new law upon the subject. The Supreme Court upheld the Board of Medical Examiners In revoking the temporary license of Helnrlch Volp. who erased tho words of limitation, so that it appeared to be an unlimited 11 cense. The court holds that the board had no authority to issue a temporary license. The decisions of the court are In brief as follows: State of Oregon, respondent, vs. George Smith, appellant, from Multnomah Coun ty. M. C. George, Judge, affirmed; opinion by Chief Justice Moore. Defendant was found guilty of the mur der of Annie Smith In Portland, August 22, 1902, and was sentenced to be hanged. whereupon he appealed. Smith Is a col ored man, and Annie Smith, his wife, was white, and at the time of her death was an inmate of a house of Ill-fame. Smith's defense was that his life had been threatened by one "Kansas" Potello, and that at the time of the shooting he saw In his wife's rooms a man whom he took to be Potello, crouching behind door, whereupon he fired at the man. His wife stepped across the room at that in stant and received the bullet. Counsel for defendant asked that the Jury be instruct ed that, if they believe that Potello had made threats against defendant, to inflict death or great bodily harm upon him. he would have a Tight to use such reason able means to protect himself as. under tho circumstances, an ordinarily reason able man would have used If tho person In the room with the deceased had been Po telio. This instruction was refused, and In affirming the lower court's view, the Supreme Court speaks thus of the law of self-defense: "The right of self-defense rests upon the broad foundation of necessity which is evidenced by a real or an apparent ex hibition of force, to repel which and to allay a reasonable apprehension of Immi nent danger, superinduced by some overt act, force may also be used, but without such necessity the right to resort thereto does not exist. By imminent danger is meant immediate danger one that must be instantly met; one that cannot be guarded against by calling on the assist ance of others or the protection of the law." Tho clement of "immediate" dan ger having been omitted from the Instruc tion requested, it is held that the court did not err In refusing to give It as de sired. Speaking further upon the basis of tho right of self-defense, the court says: "The right of self-defense does not depend wholly upon tho belief which the person claiming it entertained, but wheth er or not there was ground for a reason able belief on his part that he was In danger of death or great badily harm. If the defendant's fear was not well-founded, ho. would not be guiltless. . . ." The opinion also examines the reasons ad vanced In support of the motion for a new trial, and holds that no ground for re - versal exists. Voli vs. Medical Examiner. Helnrlch Volp. appellant, vs. Board of MedlcaJ Examiners, respondent, from Multnomah County, M. C. George. Judge, affirmed; opinion by Justice Wolverton. On June 13, 1S9L Volp applied to the State Board of Medical Examiners for an examination as to his qualifications to re ceive a license to practice medicine and surgery. His examination proving unsat isfactory, the board Issued to him what was Intended to be a temporary license only, or a permit to practice for six months, in the following form: "This certifies that Helnrlch Volp, having passed a satisfactory examination in med icine and surgery before the Board of Medical Examiners, Is hereby authorized under the provisions of the act to regu late the practice of medicine In the State of Oregon, passed by the Legislature In February. 1SS9. to pursue the practice of medicine in this state under the condi tions of aforesaid act, till December 13, 1891." On March 30. 1SS5. Volp presented this certificate, with the words and figures "till December 13, 1891" erased, to tho secretary of the board, by whom It wis recorded. On July 2, 1S95, Volp filed the certificate In the office of the County Clerk of Multnomah County, and on July 7, 1S37, secured a certified copy thereof, which he filed in the clerk's office in Har ney County. On May 23. 1900, IV. L. Marsden made complaint to the board, charging Volp with having fraudulently changed the certificate, and the board gave Volp notice through the mall that on January 4, 1901, the charge would be In vestigated. The board revoked the li cense, and Volp brought this mandamus suit to compel tho board to reinstate htm as a duly licensed physician. He was de feated in the lower court, whereupon he appealed. He based his appeal upon two conten tionsfirst, that the board being without authority to Issue a temporary license, and having certified that the licentiate had passed a satisfactory examination and exercised Its authority to license, It must be held to have exercised Its powers legally and to have granted a full license; and, second, that the "board was without jurisdiction to revoke the license, because proper and legal notice had not been served. Volp admitted making the erasure, and said he made It because the board had no right to issue a temporary license. The Supreme Court holds that the board had no authority to Issue a temporary li cense, and that the license it did Issue was void. "The simple solution is that the board exceeded Its authority in issu ing the form of license adopted. It had so Intention of issuing a regular license. The applicant bad not come up to the pre scribed standard under his examination, and. acting upon a generous Impulse to ward him, so that he might yet have an opportunity of qualifying himself, and In the meanwhile engage in his adopted pro fession, the board gave him the permit to practice for six months. To construe such an act Into absolute regularity, and the permit of six months' duration into a lice cense ... would be to contort an ir- LATE WILLIAM R. DUNBAR REGISTER OP THE TJXITED STATES LAND OFFICE AT VANCOUV ER, WASH., WHO DIED X, AST SATCrVdAV. holds that Day's testimony was heresay, and its admission was reversable error. Houghton was charged with robbery from tho person by assault and putting in fear, and was coqvlcted of assault with intent to rob. The defense claimed. that this verdict could not be reached under the indictment. Having decided to reverse the case upon other grounds, the Supreme Court says that, "It Is perhaps unneces sary to consider whether the crime pf which the defendant was convicted was included in the one charged in the infor mation: but it is difficult to understand how robbery from the person by assault and putting In fear could bo committed without an assault with an Intent to rob." ThielscB-Gatch. . Henry B. Thielsen, petitioner and ap pellant; Claud Gatchv receiver of Gilbert Bros, et al., respondents, from Marion County, R. P. Boise, Judge; reversed. Opinion by Justice Bean. This was an appeal from an order of the Circuit Court of Marlon County sus taining a demurrer to and dismissing the petition of Thielsen for an order directing Gatch to pay out of the receivership funds as compensation to the petitioner and $304. q to reimburse him for expenses while receiver pendante lite of the same firm and property under appointment of the Circuit Court of the United States. The contention of respondents was that rlnce the suit In which Thielsen was ap pointed temporary receiver was dismissed the order appointing him was void for want of Jurisdiction, and the compensation and expenses should have been taxed as costs against the plaintiff in that suit. The Supreme Court holds that since the appointment was made in pursuance of an agreement ot the parties in open court that such an appointment was necessary In order to preserve the property pending litigation, the appointment cannot be held to be void, but that the value of the serv ices and expenditures by the court ap pointing him should be paid as though they hau been Incurred by the present re ceiver. Rehearing Denied. Petitions for rehearing were denied in the following cases: State ex reL A. W. Turner, respondent, vs. G. J. Gray, appellant. First National Bank of Portland, plain tiff, vs. Oregon Pulp & Paper Company et al., defendants. Cynthia I. McCall, respondent, vs. J. C. Porter, appellant. Winchester & Main, respondents, vs. Huldah E. Hoover, appellant. J. E. Culllson. respondent, vs. F. O. Downing, appellant. SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTISTS. Have Given Over Qmarter of Mllllosi to MlKBionn in Two Years. OAKLAND. Cal., March 3). Nearly $275,000 has been expended In foreign mis sions and 153 missionaries dispatched Into foreign fields hy the Seventh-Day Avent lsts within the last two years. This was the report made by President A. G. Dan iels at today's session of the biennial world's conference. With the arrival of several h elated dele gates, the session opened this morning with 139 delegates from this country and foreign lands In attendance. The most interest of all was attached to the report of President Daniels.. Besides the mis sionary work. President Daniels called at tention to the fact that the school debt, which a year ago amounted to 4350.000. had been completely wiped out by the special assessment levied for that purpose. Train Wreck in Nevada. TOANO, New, March 30. A "double header" west-bound freight on the South ern Pacific jumped a switch while pulling into the yards at Fenelon yesterday after, noon, and as a result traffic has been com pletely blocked since then. Both engines went into the ditch and half a dozen cars piled on top. tearing up and blocking the tracks so hadly it was necessary to build around the wreck for a distance of 2M feet. No one was hurt, though the fire man on one of the wrecked engines was thrown CO feet. els, the Pacific Coast Elevator Company about 7000 bushels, and the Interior Ware house Company about 6000 bushels, while tho buildings belonging to each were also destroyed. LEWIS RIVER BOOM. Operations AboHt to Begin on the Undertaking-. VANCOUVER, Wash., March 30. (Spe cial.) Tho building of the big log boom on the Lewis River at Its mouth will commence this week. The promoters of the enterprise are E. A. Frost, ot Chehalls, and George McCoy, of Napavine, two suc cessful sawmill men and loggers. The boom wilUbe a mammoth affair, and more than 6500 feet long. The piles for Its con struction will come from along the Cow litz River, and a large plledriver has been sent from Portland to the scene ot operations. Seven men have been engaged for a starter, all experienced in the line of work. It Is expected to be- able to handle the output of the various camps up the Lewis River, especially the logs that were burned in the forest fires last Summer. The building of the boom will be a good thing for the country tribu tary to It. It will especially benefit Clark and Cowlitz Counties. In these counties the forest fires raged with greatest se verity. The loggers say that they have long needed a boom at the mouth of Lewis River. case Is considered by Missoula physicians to be a remarkable, one. Wood was un dersolag aa operation la the hospital, and was uader an anaesthetic When the operation bad bees concluded respiration suddenly ceased, and the young man's heart stopped beating-. For half an hour, three physicians worked on him without a sign of life. They thought him dead. Suddenly e opened his eyes, and in re sponse to continued exertions on the part of the physicians, began to breathe. To night he is said to be on the road to re covery. DID NOT KNOW IT. H. B. and E. P. Parker Had Salmon la Their Possession. ASTORIA, Or., March 30. (Special.) The trial of H. B. Parker and E. P. Parker on the charge of having salmon In their possession during the closed season was held before Justice Goodman this morning, and the defendants were dis charged. Alex Olof, who was convicted a few days ago on a similar charge, testified that he placed the salmon in the defendant's hotel and they knew nothing of it The justice, in rendering his decis ion, said the evidence showed the de fendants had salmon in their possession and were technically guilty, but the evi dence also showed that they did not re ceive the fish and had no knowledge of Its presence, so were not really guilty of any Infraction of the law. Sebastian Glaser, Julius Garbe and John Denck, fanners, who had salmon In their wagon to take home, were arrested yesterday. They were released on their own recog nizance to appear for trial on next Fri day. Notice of appeal to the Supreme Court was filed in. the Circuit Court today In the case of S. Normlle'vs. the O. R. & N. Company. This was a suit brought to recover damages for the loss of a mule which was badly injured on the defend ant company's Wharf In this city while being unloaded from one of its steamers. The jury in the Circuit Court awarded the plaintiff damages for $150. The de fendant appealed the case to the Su preme Court, which reversed the findings of the lower court and taxed costs amounting to $190 to the plaintiff. It is from this mandate of the Supreme Court that an appeal is now taken. Forty tons of rails were taken to the Lewis and Clark River today for use In extending the Young's River Pulp Mill Company's logging road. This company has recently purchased a locomotive. which will arrive within the next few weeks. The plans for a 70-foot drawbridge to be built by the county across the Lewis and Clark River were received from the War Department by Judge Trenchard this afternoon. At the meeting of the Commissioner's court on next Wednes day, bids on the construction of the bridge will be asked for. The School Board decided at a special meeting held this afternoon that the school term should close on June 12, In place of being extended for two weeks. as was under consideration for the pur pose of making up for lost time by the schools being closed during the scarlet fever-diphtheria epidemic. In order to obtain authority for refunding the bonded indebtedness that will fall due during the present year, the board issued a call for a special election on the afternoon of Friday, April 24. Immediately after ward a special meeting of the board, will be held to take action In accordance with the result of the election. At the re auest of City Physician Pilklngton. par ents of pupils attending the Adair School were notified to have their children vac cinated on account of the prevalence of smallpox in the vicinity. Captain Simpson, owner of the Knapp ton sawmill, has decided that the plant will not be closed down as was reported, but will be operated indefinitely. The fir logs which he now has at South Bend will be shipped to Knappton via the L R. & N. Railway from Nahcotta, and he has made arrangements to purchase other logs there, as well as on the Columbia. Contracts were filed for record today whereby the Seaside Spruce Lumber Com pany purchases the timber on three 160 acre tracts on the Necanlcum River. The consideration Is $1600 per claim. W. W. Bowman, a wealthy lumber manufacturer of Pennsylvania, Is purchas ing 'a large tract of timber land on the Klatskanie River, In this county. Per sons who represent him assert that he will construct a logging road to the tract at once and -get out the timber to supply a mill, which he will erect at some point on the lower river. SLAIN FOR. HIS SAVINGS. Sheepherder Believed to Have Been Killed by His Employer. BOISE. Ida., March 30. William Kun nicke, who Is under arrest at Pierre, S. D., on a charge of having- killed his hired man and dismembered the body. Is be lieved to be the man of the same name who lived at Mountain Home, this state. several years ago. He was a shoemaker. HOPES TO FIND WATER. Artenlan Bore Near but became interested in sheep. He em ployed a young man as herder, who was circuit of what was formerly an Inland Expert Will Echo, Or. ECHO, Or., March 30. (Special.) B. F. Coplen, an expert on formation, for ar tesian water, who sunk the artesian wells at Pullman, Wash., and who for many years has been making extensive ex amlnatlons of the Columbia River basin, has been looking over the situation In the vicinity of Echo for some time with the view to getting four or five sections of land and putting in the necessary ma chinery for thoroughly testing the sub ject. He says that there is every indi cation that artesian water can be hod along the base of the Echo buttes. The formation here Is basaltic cap sur rounded on all sides by an older forma tion of the tertian age. This Indicates that the tertian formation here underlies the basalt, and the contact between those formations carries the subterranean water. The apex of the basaltic forma tion is found In the foothills of the Blue Mountains, and can be traced the entire Have you trlenss coming- trcm the jEast? If so, send their names to the Denver & Rio Grande cct. IK TWra atrtU In land. Of. THE LATE MAJOR w. W. McCAMMON, RETIRED. The late Major W. W. Mc Cammon. whose funeral was held In Vancouver Sunday, was born in the State of Missouri In 183S, and was 65 yeara of age. He enlisted in the Army and en tered the Civil War In 1S61, serv ing during the whole Rebellion with honor. After the war was over he came West, and had been stationed at Vancouver Barracks most of the time since 1SS4. He was Adjutant of the Fourteenth Infantry for 17 years, and promoted to be Ma-. Jor. In 1SSS he was in the Phil ippines with his regiment. where he took part in the campaigns, returning in 1899 to the post at Vancouver. In May, 1902. he .was retired. Major McCammon was universally esteemed in Army and social circles. a relative either of Kunnlcke or his wife. The young -man saved his money and Kunnlcke borrowed It from him. Finally the herder disappeared under suspicious circumstances. About that time, Kun nlcke was arrested for driving scabby sheep on the range and was put under ball to appear for trial. Neighbors had become suspicious concerning the disap pearance of the herder and they organ ized a committee to make an Investlga- J reached here at no very great depth. sea, being a little higher along, the foot hills of the Coeur d'Alene and Blue Mountains than It Is at the Cascades. This shows that the .flow of the basalt filling the Inland sea was westward. The Echo buttes are folds In the basalt extending north and south at the base of which the contact can be reached, which will furnish pressure from the entire con tact. He thinks this contact can be tion. The committee visited Kunnlcke to make inquiries.. That night Kunnlcke left town. It was learned a few days later he had sold his sheep and disappeared. CAME TO LIFE AGAIN. Physicians TheHght Him Dead, sat He Opened His Eyes. MISSOULA. Mont., March 30. After be ing dead half an hour, as supposed by three reputable physicians, Virgil Wood. a Missoula, came to. life again. ilia The Columbia River evidently flowed for a number of years, underneath the basalt, but in the course of time the basalt caved In, closing the subterranean channel in the Grand Collee. Evidence Is plain that the inland sea was much deeper and consequently the contact is much lower in the Big Bend than in this portlan of the country. As proof of these facts, he has gathered some specimens of the formation In the various local I ties. The specimens found here are con glomerate, consisting of basaltic matter IF "YOU WANT TO KNOW WHAT SMAKTLY DRESSED BOYS WILL WEAK THIS SEASON, ASK BEN SELLING ABOUT IT With Easter less than two weeks away it would seem the part of wis dom to make your selections now. Confirmation Suite In all the latest fabrics, including serges, cheviots and unfinished wor steds tailored with the same care as our men's clothing. as our men s doming, .nr. Suits. $3.95. S5. S7.50. $8.50 3-pc Suits, - - $5, $6 up, to $10 2- Russian Blouse Suits In serges, cheviots and the new HOMESPUNS, unlike those of. other-stores $6, $7.50 up to $10. X ' . .... . ; . - . . - - i ' "V hi Sailor Suits -In unrivaled'varieties and styles at our usual modest prices $2.50, $3.45, $5 up to $10; . BEN SELLING LEADING CLOTHIER and older formation. These, he claims, are evidence of the fact that the contact 13 not distant. If these ideas are correct It will prove a great boon to this country, as a strong flow of artesian water would reclaim thousands of acres of the finest produc ing land that is to he found anywhere. The land with water upon It Is the same kind of soil that is to be found on Butter Creek, which Is one of the greatest al falfa producers known. Besides climatic conditions are such here as to insure the maturing of any kind of fruit that grows In a semi-tropical climate. Mr. Coplen has devoted a great deal of his life to the study of earth forma tion and the collection of fossils' It was his statements that caused Professor Cope, of tho Smithsonian Institute, to send Professor Sternberg- with 10 men, In 1ST 6, to- examine and report upon the fos sil and earth formation of this portion of the country. He also gathered the largest cabinet ot fossils ever collected here. It consisted of three tons of fos sils and was purchased by Marshall Field and donated to the Academy of Sciences, of Chicago. "WIIiI MOVE FOR. SEW TRIAL,. "Woman. Sympathizers Attentive to Pleaa Armstrong. BAKER CITT. Or., March 30. The at- torneys for Pleas Armstrong have decid ed to move for a new trial before he is sentenced tomorrow morning, and in the event of the motion being denied they will appeal the case to the Supreme Court. The death watch will be placed on the prisoner tomorrow Immediately after sen tence. The prisoner is receiving many atten tions in the way of nice things to eat from women who sympathize with him. The Sheriff exercises every precaution possible to prevent the prisoner obtain ing anything that win enaoie mm to com mit suicide. Rural Delivery Route. "WAT.TA WAXXiA. Wash.. March 30. (Special.) Inspector ot Rural Routes E. C. Clement, of the Postoffico Depart ment, announced this evening that he would recommend that a rural route be established In Blue Creek district, the line to be 21 3-16 miles in length. This route has twice been rejected. The In spector's recommendation Is equivalent to establishment, and the route will be In operation by July 1. Sir LlanK Starts Kant. SAN FRANCISCO. March SO.Sir Xiang Chen Tung Cheng, the new Chinese Min ister to the United States; left for "Wash ington this afternoon on a special train. Sir Cheng Is accompanied by his official family and a number of students who will enter Eastern universities and col leges. The train Is scheduled to arrive In "Washington Friday next. There are to be no stops other than the ordinary" periods of waiting at points between this city and "Washington. Missionaries Off for China. SAN JOSE, Cal.. March 30. Fifteen missionaries who have been spending a few months at the Pacific Bible Training. School in Los Angeles, left today for Seattle, where they will take steamer for China. They will work under the aus pices of the South Chi Li Mission. In Northern China, where the Boxer out breaks took place several years ago. The missionaries come from all parts of the United States. Upper Colamhla Rising1. NORTHPORT, "Wash., March 30. (Spe cial.) The annual rise of the Columbia River has commenced at this point. The river has risen two feet within the past 4S hours, and Is still rising. The snow on the mountains north of here Is much deeper than usual, and the warm rains of the past two days have caused it to commence melting. Salclde by Poisoning. THE DAL7LES. Or., March 30. (Spe cial.) At an Inquest held today over the body of W. S. Morelng, who died sud denly at his lodgings last evening In this city, the facts were developed that ha had taken his own life by. poisoning. Morelng was a native of Iowa, about 50 years of age, a painter by trade, and had resided in thl3 city for some years. He leaves a sister In this place. Demand for Xetv BlaldingR. BAKER CITY, Or.. March 30. (Spe cial.) Contractors and builders are over crowded with contracts' for buildings to be erected in this city this season. Most of the new structures- are cottages anJ dwellings of some pretensions. The de mand for houses to rent Is greater than the supply, all of which goes to show that Baker City Is steadihj growing. 31111s Running Kali Time. BAKER CITY, Or., March 30. (Spe cial.) All of the sawmills in this city are now running on full time and the de mand for - lumber both, for local con sumption and for export Is In excess of the supply. Most of the lumber manu factured here Is sent to Utah, where a great deal is used In. railroad construction. Historic Cabin Bnrned. INDEPENDENCE Or.. March 30. (Special.) A fire last week destroyed the historic oldi log cabin this side of Hall's Ferry. D. C. Budd, an old bachelor, had resided there continuously for the past 40 years. Everything In the structure was consumed. "Will Join "Whaling Fleet. SAN FRANCISCO, March 30. The Arc tic whaling fleet is to be augmented by the schooner Gotama, which, will be fitted out for a cruise in the Northern seaa. She will bring back a cargo of walrus oil and Ivory, and will also cruise for whales. Address to Mason. INDEPENDENCE, Or., March 30. (Special.) Saturday evening Rev. E, C. Wlgmore, ot Monmouth, will address the Masonic Lodge here on "The Spirit of Masonry." 1 MEDICAL LAKE TABLETS FOR THE FAMILY, It k pleasant to leave one's chndrcn a fortune, but is infinitely better to Jeave them perfect health and sterling memories. fleHcal Lake Tablets taken regularly cends the father to bis place m to-day's business crash with strength to conquer. They fortify the hoase-iaother's nervous system to happily meet its ceaseless strata and care. They moald the platiic systems of the little ones to health's noble and abiding comeliness. The sparkling, eflerresctnt drink they form, becomes a family delight. There is no purer tome than Medical Lake Tablets, therefore no tonic more singularly adapted to all ages, for these tablets are just the highly concentrated properties of the waters of fledlcal Lake, Washington, whose remarkable health power is enthusin? the medical world. Medical Lake Tablets are the sure, quick care for ailments and diseases caused by Impure Blood and ImHfestlon. The bailders-up of firm, hard muscles ; the promoters of free, graceful gait, and fine carriage. Tkcy immediately allay feverish thirst, conquer La Grippe axd Malaria an assure restful sleep. ALL FIRST-CLASS DRUGGISTS SELL MEDICAL LAKE TABLETS, 2SC. A BOTTLE. MEDICAL LAKE PLASTERS. PERMEATING AND PArN-ERADtCATINO. nEDICAL LAKE SALTS FOR THE HYGIENIC ALLY LUXURIOUS BATH. MEDICAL LAKE SALTS MFG. C0M Sole Mfrs New York and Spokane, Wash.