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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 14, 1906)
THE MORNING OREGONIAN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 190. ORGANIZES PLOT IT Oil LIFE t Bombthrowing at Rheinbot at Moscow Denounced as Fake. BOMB COULD NOT HURT HIM Police Chief's Novel Scheme to Re trieve Failing Political TFortunes. Kills Assailant, Tliough He Promised Him Liberty. MOSCOW, Nov. 13 General Rheinbot defends his action in. shooting the terror ist who threw a bomb at him after the latter had been seized by two policemen on the ground that Mazury was making a desperate effort to escape, and succeeded In drawing a revolver and firing a shot at the prefect of police. A daughter of General Benevsky, ex-Governor-General of Amur Province, has been condemned to ten years' imprison ment at hard labor for participation in the plot to kill ex-Governor-General Du bassoff, of Moscow. Mile. Benevsky's hand was blown off while preparing the bombs. This led to her detection and im prisonment. Mile. Benevsky, who is beau tiful, was married in prison to another political prisoner. A revolutionist, supposed to be Ma zury's accomplice, was killed today by falling four stories while trying to escape from the police station over housetops. General Rheinbot has received hundreds of messages, including a personal commu nication from Emperor Nicholas through Premier Stolypin and a dispatch from Count Witte, congratulating him on his escape. Bombthrowing All a Fake. r In Epite of these congratulations, which give color to the official version of the attempt on the prefect's life, there are ugly rumors in Moscow that General Rheinbot was himself the author of the plot against his own life. He is thought to have schemed to retrieve his failing fortunes and to stave off retirement, it having been decided upon in official cir cles to relieve him from duty. These suspicious rumors are supported by circumstantial evidence. General Rheinbot. at the time the attempt was made, was following an unusual path on foot through narrow alleys. The bomb exploded in a manner described as highly suspicious. Pieces picked up on the spot show it to have been nothing more than Imitation, without effective covering, and perfectly harmless. It failed to explode until it had rolled to the opposite side of the street and to a safe distance from the prefect. The original theory was that the bomb did not go off because the dyna mite in it was frozen. Now the police ex plain that it was a fuse bomb, and the Social Revolutionists- discarded such mis siles long ago. Killed Man to Silence Him. On account of indignation aroused at the statement that Rheinbot shot down his assailant while he was being held by two policemen, a statement is issued to night to the effect that the bomb-thrower, when he was killed by the General, was struggling to escape and that he also fired at the prefect, but the revolver which he is alleged to have used has not been found. It is declared tonight that the man did not have a revolver, that he tired at nobody, and he had been prom ised he would be allowed to escape. Gen eral Rheinbot. however, is alleged to have shot him to get rid of him. The claim" made by the police that the man was a brother of Vladimir Mazury has been disproved. BOMB TOO COLD TO EXPLODE Kennenkamplf "s Narrow Escape Due to Weather. IRKUTSK. Siberia. Nov. 13. It was owing to the chilling of the explosive that the bomb thrown at General Ren nenkampff. Governor of Trans-Baikalia. failed to injure him. Rennenkampff's two aides-de-camp escaped with slight contusions. The General has been on the Terror ists' death list for some time, on ac count of nis severity in repressing, mu tinies and armed revolts in Trans Baikalia, in . December. The would-be assassin lay in wait for the General on Amur street, where he is accus tomed to promenade, and as he ap proached the Terrorist arose from a bench, threw the bomb and started to run. but was immediately captured, the General aiding- in seizing him. A revolver was found on the prisoner's person. Within four hours after throwing the bomb he was placed on trial before a drumhead court-martial. The prisoner, who has not been identified, admits that hr is a member of the Social Revo lutionary organization. VITTE RETURNS TO RUSSIA May Run for Parliament and Join Democrats. ST. PFTERSEURG. Nov. 13. The ar rival of Count Wine here yesterday created scarcely a ripple on the surface of Russian politics. In contrast with his reception after his return from Ports mouth, when a throng gathered at the railroad station to greet him and the street in front of his house was blocked the following day by the carriages of hish personages coming to pay their re spects to the man of the hour, the Count was met at the depot only by Baron Aide and a few reporters, and he received very few callers this morning. The rare arrivals were closely scruti nized by agents of the secret police on account of the reported- threats of assas sination. Count Witte denied himself to repoAers and declined to make a state ment regarding his rumored intention of resigning his seat in the Council of the Empire and being a candidate for election to Parliament. The Constitutional Demo crats are eager to receive him into their ranks in case he decides to be a canrB date. ST. PETERSBURG. Nov 13. Count Witte. the ex-Premier, will shortly be received by Emperor Nicholas at Tsarkoe Selo. Relieve Jews From Restrictions. ST. PETERSBURG. Nov. ' 13. It Is authoritatively state! that measures for relieving the Jews of many of their disabilities will be published as tem porary legislation before the convocation of Parliament, as foreshadowed in Pre mier Stolypln's communication of Septem ber 6. The full extent of the reforms is still a matter for discussion by the Cabi net, but they comprise permission for Jews to live in the country as well as in the cities within the pale, and the re moval of certain restrictions placed on Jewish merchants and artisans in cities , mm outside the pais. The full settlement of the Jewish problem is left to Parlia ment, the government not being willing to' venture deeply into the matter for fear of stirring up a storm of anti-Semitic opposition. Conscripts Refuse to Take Oath. MOSCOW, Nov. 13 During the swear ing in of conscripts here today, disorders broke out, over half of them refusing to take the usual oath of loyalty to the Em peror on account of the phrase pledging them to defend 'His Majesty against all interior enemies. Troops were summoned, but bloodshed was averted. THE IRISH IN AMERICA. Their Wonderful Adaptive Natures Are a Marvel. (Philadelphia Record.) In the light of the phenomenal role which the Irish play in America, the five million original settlers and descendants have made the most of their numbers In the New World. As it is, they represent a population today greater than that of the whole United States at the begin ning of the century; and have taken the bulk of the inhabitants from Ireland to this side, leaving a minority which, in the intensity of the struggle forced upon it. wilL drift here for a decade with undimin-' ishing rate. No page of history reveals a migration so stupendous. The figures are astonish ing. From 1S-W to 1S60 not fewer than two millions of Irish immigrants crossed the ocean to settle in the United States; from 1S60 to 1SS0 an additional million made a fresh start in life in the great Republic over the seas, and from 1SS0 to the present time another million was added to our population. Since I860 the average has been half a million a decade. The 12 agricultural states, represented by Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, Illinois, Wis consin, Missouri. Iowa, Minnesota, Kan sas. Nebraska, North and South Dakota, contain one-fourth of the five millions. Of the portion settled in the North At lantic states, but one-fifth are on farms; but this tendency to crowd into the towns disappears when the surroundings are agricultural, as is shown by the large percentage over 50 of those who have taken to farming in the 12 agricultural states above mentioned. It is only because the bulk of the Irish in America are not in the midst of farm ing districts that they are less an agri cultural people than the other immigrant elements added to the population. They have found an outlet for their energies in the congested districts, and their won derfully adaptive natures have allowed them easily to enter upon the industries of the people among whom they were thrown. It is in the Eastern states that the Irish promise to ultimately constitute a ma jority of the population. This is already the case in three New England states and in many New England cities. In New York City they are barely behind the Germans, and also slightly so in Chicago. BLACKMAIL JPLOT EXPOSED Mineowners of Joplin District Are Threatened With Death. . JOPLIN, Mo., Nov. 13. L. H. Hoge. In spector of the Postoffice Department, has uncovered a blackmail plot directed against the wealthy mine-owners of the Missouri-Kanses lead and zinc field. It was planned to secure thousands of dol lars from these men. T. W. Lewis, a miner living in Dune weg. was arrested . today by Inspector Hoge. He is charged with sending threat ening letters through the mail. The let ters were sent to T. F. Coyne, a wealthy mine operator of Webb City. Mo. Lewis was bound over to the January term of the grand jury. November 5 Coyne received a letter from Lewis stating that unless he sent the writer $350 forthwith, he would be blown to atoms with nitroglycerin. The letter stated that the writer was a mem ber of an organized band whose purpose was to get money from wealthy mine- owners of the Joplin district. CLEVELAND AFTER TRADE Trainload of Merchants Will Tour West and Southwest. CLEVELAND. Nov. 13. With a view to trade extension in the far West and Southwest the Cleveland Chamber of Commerce today decided upon an ex cursion which is to visit the principal cities of that section and which will go as far as the City of Mexico. An excep tionally equipped train is to be provided and ft members of the Chamber of Com merce, merchants and manufacturers of this city, will compose the party, which is to leave within two weeks to exploit the advantages of trade here. WERE ROCKEFELLER'S FISH Angler Must Pay 18 Cents for Them and Heavy Costs. ALBANY. N. T., Nov. 13. The Court of Appeals today affirmed tne judgni-ut of the courts below which awarded Wil liam Rockefeller 18 eenta damages and STSK1.31 cost's against Oliver Lamora, of Franklin County. Lamora caught fish in that part -of the middle branch of the St. Regis River flowing through the great forest preserve of Mr. Rockefeller In th-3 Adirondack. Seen Through Small Telescope. CAMBRIDGE. Mass.. Nov. 13. A comet which could be seen through a small telescope was discovered Saturday night by Holger Thiel at Copenhagen, accord ing to a dispatch received today at the Harvard College Observatory from Pro fessor Kreuntz. of Kiel. Germany. Two observations were made of the comet, one at S hours, 12 minutes and 12 seconds P. M. (eastern standard time), in right as cension, 9 hours, 16 minutes, 21.3 sec onds, declination plus 12 degrees, 16 min utes, 50 seconds: the second at 11:13:09 P. M.. in right ascension. 9 hours. 16 rrjin utes. 13.3 seconds, declination plus 12 de grees, 28 minutes, 31 seconds. CAMBRIDGE, Mass.. Nov. 13. A tele gram has been received at- the Harvard College Observatory from Professor W. W. Campbell at Lick Observatory, stating tha.t the Thiel comet was observed No vember 12 in right ascension. 9 hours. 21 minutes. 62 seconds, anrl declination plus 14 degrees. 2 minutes and -42 seconds. Big Fox Chase in Kentucky. BARDSTOWN". Ky Nov. 13. The great est gathering of members of the National Fox Hunters' Association ever assembled on a s-imiiar occasion is here for the big chase which began early today, and which will be followed by many festivities dur ing the week. Scenting conditions for the chase were not the best, the weather be ing cold, clear and dry. Drops Dead Running for Train. TRENTON, N. J.. Nov. 13 H. C. Sweat man, of Philadelphia, dropped dead here today while running to catch a train. He was S5 years old and was one of the heav iest dealers in malt in the United States. Cement Storehouses Burn. EASTON. Pa.. Nov. 13. Fire tonight de stroyed the two large storehouses of the Nazareth-Portland Cement Company at Nazareth, near here. Loss $175,000. OS HOPES DASHED Denatured Alcohol .Cannot Drive Out Standard. TAKE TIME TO DEVELOP IT Cannot Be Sold Now for Less Than Forty Cents a Gallon, hut the Price Will Fall as-Pro-duction Grows. OREGONIAN NEWS BUR BAIT, Wash ington, Nov. 13. Denatured alcohol is. or is going to be, a good thing, but it will not, as has been claimed by Its friends, revolutionize the fuel market of the United States and force the Standard Oil Company to the walL It is improbable that denatured alcohol will affect the price of petroleum or gasoline in the elightest degree, at least for years to come. The removal of the internal reve nue tax on denatured alcohol on. January 1 will merely put on the market a com modity that is in many ways preferable to petroleum or gasoline, but which is today too expensive to compete with these old-established fuels. When the denatured alcohol bill was pending before Congress last session, its friends made all sorts of claims for it; they drew vivid pictures of the farmer making his own fuel from the waste pro ducts of his farm; they told of the in finitesimal cost of making denatured alco hol, and predicted that the removal of the internal revenue tax would not only ACCEPTS CALL TO OREGON CUT PASTORATE. Bev. E. C. Oakley. OREGON CITY. Nov. 13. (Spe cial.) Rev. E. C. Oakley, of Eu gene, has formally notified the First Congregational Church of this city . of his acceptance of the call to the pastorate of the Oregon City Church, tendered about two weeks ago. Rev. Mr. Oakley1 and wife are expected to reach this city about January 1. The family consists of three sons, one of whom is married and resides in the East, while the other two sons are attending college and will not join their parents here until the close of the school year. Rev. Mr. Oakley began his relig ious work at Detroit, Mich., and af terwards came West, serving for ten years at Tacoma and four years at Oakland, Cal. For the last two years past he has- served as pastor of the Eugene Church. Rev. Mr. Oakley is a man of scholarly attain ments and comes to Oregon City with the reputation of being one of . the best pulpit orators in the state. make available a new fuel, that could be manufactured wherever crops will grow, but that it would force down' the price of petroleum and gasoline, and even compel a drop in the price of coal. Now that the bill has become a law and the subject of denatured alcohol has been carefully studied by Government experts, the conclusion is reached that some ben efits will accrue from the new legisla tion, but nothing like the benefits that were promised. Dr. H. W. Wiley, chief of the Bureau of Chemistry. Department of Agriculture, after devoting an entire Summer to the study of denatured or 'commercial" al cohol, has just completed two pamphlets describing the manufacture and uses of this coming fuel. In concluding his re port to the secretary he says: The benefits which are to accrue from the use of industrial alcohol free of tax have probably been overestimated by the people at large, and especially by the farm ers, but that material benefits will accrue is not a subject or doubt. These benefits will come, not suddenly, but slowly, as ag ricultural . products are more abundant. technical methods cf manufacture improved, and the method of utilizing the Industrial alcohol better understood. Our people should not ba disappointed, however, shoula many years elapse before the magnitude of the product used for industrial purposes reaches the figure already attained by Ger ma'ny and some of the other European na tions. When industrial alcohol is made at i price at which it can compete with ' pe troleum and gasoline it will doubtless be preferred for illumination, heating and mo tive power, because of Its greater safety and more pleasant oaor. under the present conditions it Is not probable that indus trial alcohol can be' offered upon the mar ket at much less than 40 cents per gallon. It is believed, however, that by paying at tention to unused sources of raw materials and increased production thereof with im proved methods of manufacture and dena turing, the price can be very much dimin ished. As the price falls the quantities used for industrial purposes will corre spondingly increase, so that small profits both to the farmer and to the manufacturer will bring large returns by reason of the greater quantities of the materials handled Of the raw materials which can be util ized for the manufacture of alcohol, Indian corn is by far the most abundant and the most promising source at the present time The average price of potatoes must be very much decreased before raw material of this kind can come into competition with Indian corn as a source of alcohol. promising sources which are not now utilized for the manufacture of alcohol in this country are the potato, sweet potato. yam, sorghum, molasses from sugar factor ies and the Indian corn stalk. In opening his report. Dr. Wiley de fines denatured or "industrial" alcohol "The process of rendering alcohol unsuit able for drinking is called 'denaturing,' " says he. "and consists essentially In adding to the alcohol a substance soluble therein of a bad taste or odor, or both, of an intensity which would render it impossible or impracticable to use the mixture as a drink." The-Commissioner of Internal Revenue has authorized the use of methyl alcohol and benzine as de T naturing agents, ten parts of the former and one part of the latter to 100 parts alcohol. When alcohol from a certain plant is to be used for some specific pur pose, special permits may be obtained to use some other denaturant. Once dena tured, alcohol cannot be used in drinks. but Dr. Wiley points out that there are many technical uses of alcohol in which the pure alcohol only can be employed, and it is a question to be decided by the Internal Revenue bureau whether such use of pure alcohol can be permitted under the existing law" that is, whether pure alcohol can so be used without pay ing the revenue tax. This Is one of the things Congress over looked in framing the new law, and Inas much as it was intended to cheapen the cost of alcohol used in manufactures of everything except beverages, it is not improbable that this oversight may be jemedied. if the Internal Revenue Com missioner concludes laai no is wimuui. authority. Dr.' Wiley, in his report, defines alco hol, explains Its method of manufacture, roes into detail describing, the derivation of alcohol from starch and 6ugar-produc- insr plants, and then at some length re cites the composition of alcohol-producing crops, not only those likely to be used in the manufacture of alcohol in the immediate future, but other crops that can be used if necessary. Indian corn i now and will probably continue to be the main source of alco hol manufactured in the United States, because of its abundance and cheapness, and also because of the large percentage of alcohol-yielding substances which it contains. A bushel of corn weighs 66 pounds and will produce 19 pounds or 2.7 gallons of alcohol. If the average price of corn is placed at 40 cents. Dr. Wiley figures that the actual cost of raw materials used in the manufacture of corn alcohol -will be approximately 15 cents a gallon. He believes, however, that the cost of manufacture, storage, etc., will more than double this amount, and bring the market price close to 40 cents a gallon- ' Potatoes, on the other hand, will yieW only 6 pounds,or 3.6 quarts of alcohol to the bushel, and the average price per bushel being 61.7 cents, it is evident tfcat alcohol made from this source would be much costlier than alcohol made from corn. However, imperfect potatoes, and those ordinarily used as fodder, might be manufactured into alcohol, especially in localities where corn is not grown to any extent. In the main, however, po tatoes for alcohol manufacture will have to be produced at a cost of not to exceed 15 cents per bushel before they can com pete with Indian corn for the manufac ture of industrial alcohol. Rice is not used extensively in this coun try in the manufacture of alcohol, though it has the largest percentage of ferment able matter of all cereals. It is not prob able, says Dr. Wiley, that rice will ever be used to any extent in the commercial alcohol trade. The same is true of rye. notwithstanding its general use in the manufacture of whiskeys. It is a fact that industrial alcohol is not extensively manufactured from rye in any country. Sugar beets may figure more or less in the industrial alcohol business in the future. It has been found tha,t a ton of sugar beets yields 18 gallons of alcohol, and many beets of the poorer grades may be used for this purpose, though not desirable in sugar manu facture. Iu the South the sweet potato will be used more or less extensively in alcohol manufacture, though up to this time it has been used very little in this country for this purpose. A bush el of sweet potatoes weighing 55 pounds will yield, seven pounds or a little over one gallon of alcohol. There are possibilities of manufac turing industrial alcohol from the stalks of sweet and field corn, which contain large quantities of sugar and starch. If these stalks could be used economically they might be profitably employed in this new industry. Dr. Wiley says that the technical difficul ties, however, attending the utilization of the stalks are so great that it is doubtful whether means can be devised whereby their use may be made profit able tor alcohol making. Nevertheless he beiieves the subject will bear in vestigation, because if the stalks can be used they would place at the dis posal of the manufacturer an almost inexhaustible source of raw material. He thinks there is no immediate pros pect of the economic utilization of this material. When the price of molasses falls as low as 5 or 6 cents a gallon it may be considered a profitable source of alcohol. A gallon of molasses weighs 11 pounds, but it requires three gal lons of molasses to make one gallon of industrial alcohol. The Pacific Coast country will be in terested in experiments with wood pulp and sawdust which can be worked over to produce alcohol in limited quantities. The woody substances are known to contain cellulose matters which under the action of dilute acid and heat can be changed into sugars. By proper chemical treatment wood pulp and sawdust have been made to yield alcohol, but Dr. Wiley states that the experiments have not been very successful, though some chemists claim to have secured alcohol in paying quantities from this Source. One ex perimenter, Simmonsen by name, claims to have secured six quarts of alcohol from 110 pounds of dried shavings. Classen, another experimenter, claims to have obtained 12 quarts of alcohol from the same quantity of wood shav ings. "That alcohol can be made from sawdust and wood shavings is un doubtedly true," says Dr. Wiley, "but whether or not It can be made profit ably must be determined by actual manufacturing operations." All these topics are discussed at con siderable length in the report made by Dr. Wiley, and the process of manufac ture is set forth in detail and in lan cuaitc that is readily . understood. In deed, the reports of D,r- Wiley were' prepared primarily tor tarmers wno contemplate the manufacture of dena tuied alcohol, and in a word Dr. Wiley's advice to such farmers is "Don't." He declares that the manufacture of alco-. hoi on a small scale Is not likely to prove profitable. The regulations gov erning the manufacture of alcohol un der the new law do not contemplate that every farmer shall make his own fuel: the minimum still authorized by the Department is one making from seven to ten gallons of alcohol per day. Moreover, these stills must be conducted according to law and under the supervision of Internal Revenue inspectors, all of which would be a drawback to the farmer. It Is evl dent." says Dr. Wiley, "that the farmer must be content with producing the raw materials and that he cannot look forward to becoming a practical dis tiller." The second bulletin on "Industrial Alcohol" deals largely with the uses to which alcohol can be put after it has been "denatured." The introduc tion of foreign substances does not In terfere with its use as fuel, for light ing or for power purposes, and it Is expected that alcohol may many times replace kerosene and gasoline in these lines. The alcohol flame itself is nearly colorless and cannot be used for. il luminating, but its intense heat can be applied to other materials to pro duce incandescence, as gas is used in the well-known Welsbach and similar lights that are widely used In the cities of today. Where engines are employed On the farm, run by oil or gasoline, it Is predicted1 that alcohol will be extensively used in the future, even to the running of gang-plows, threshers, etc. These facts and many more are given in Dr. Wiley's report, which has been prepared for general distribution- and can be had on appli cation to the Department of Agricul ture, Washington, D. C. In Algeria three or more wives live in tho same hut. The older wives do the work, while the younger ones wait on the master of tho house. E Congress , Debates Commit tee's Draft of Bill. HAS COMMUNITY A' VETO? Pennypacker Plea for the Insane Bouses Men Who Object to Al lowing Them to Propagate. Child Marriages Void. PHILADELPHIA. Nov. 13 The Na tional congress on uniform divorce laws, in session in this, city, today adopted about one-third of the proposed uniform bill as drafted by, the committee ap pointed at the meeting held in Washing ton nine years ago. The portions adopted include seven clauses under which an nulment of marriage may be obtained and six causes for absolute divorce. Governor Pennypacker took exception to the clause which provides that, if either party, unknown to the other, was insane at the marriage, it should be an nulled. The Governor held that the clause not only gave the same party the right to begin suit, but also to a commission for the lunatic. This Would give a com mission appointed by the court a right to begin suit In the name of ' an insane party, even if the person not insane did not want divorce. He argued that mar riage was a personal relation and a third person had no rights in the contract. Rights of the Insane. Seneca N. Taylor of St. Louis and C. LaRue Monson of Wllliamsport, Pa., clashed with the Governor on the subject. Mr. Taylor said the third "party is the public, and It has a right to forbid the propagation of children from the insane. The question of property rights, he also said, was Involved. Mr. Monson said the clause was the only protection for an insane person against a designing man or woman. He cited a case where relatives ana friends were helpless to protect an Imbecile who had married a designing woman. The clause was adopted. There was also opposition to the clause annulling the marriage of a girl under the age of 16 and a youth under IS, -but the clause was adopted. Six Causes for Divorce. Though personally opposed to divorce. Bishop Shanley voted for, the sections in behalf of his state because the other dele gates were not present. The bill drawn by the committee names six causes for "which divorces can be granted infidelity, felony, bigamy, deser tion, habitual drunkenness and intoler able cruelty. The committee recommends that the various Legislatures be asked to agree on-a period of residence before ap plication may , be made for divorce. These Yomen Saw Bonaparte. NEW TORK. Nov. 13. Two women, whose added ages are said to be 215 years, are inmates of the Home for the Daugh ters of Jacob for Old People, in this city. Mrs. Aronwald claims she is 104 years old. and Esther Davis says she is fust seven years older. Both of the old wo men have married. They have seen five generations pass away. They have seen Napoleon Bonaparte, both having been in Paris when the famous soldier was mak ing history in unmaking nations. "o Demonstration at Tangier. LONDON, Nov. 13. j..ie reports from Tricked by Dyspepsia The Doctor Couldn't -Tell Where the Trouble Lay. "For the past seven years I have been a victim of dyspepsia and chronic constipation and have consulted tne most noted specialists to be found on diseases of this character.. None, how ever, seemed to locate the difficulty or give relief. In addition to this medical treatment, I have resorted to the use of many remedies and have given them faithful trial, but all to no purpose. "Upon the recommendation of a close friend, I purchased a 53c package of Stuart's Dyspepsia. Tablets and in less than five days noticed that I was receiving more benefit than from any remedy I had used before. I continued to use the tablets after each meal for one month and by that time my sto mach was in a healthy condition cap able of digesting anything which my increasing appetite demanded. "I have not experienced anyt return of my former trouble, though three months have elapsed since taking your remedy." We wish that you could see with your own eyes the countless other bona-nde signed letters from grateful men and women all over the land who had suffered years of a'gony with dys pepsia, tried every. known remedy and consulted eminent specialists without result, until they gave Stuart's Dys pepsia Tablets a trial. Like the doc tor above, they couldn't locate the seat of the trouble. Dyspepsia is a disease which has long baffled physicians. So difficult of location is the disease that cure seems next to miraculous. There is only one way to treat dyspepsia to supply the elements which nature has ordained to perform this function and to cause them to enter the digestive organs, supplying the fluids which they lack. Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets alone fill these requirements, as is shown by the fact that 40.D00 physicians in the United States and Canada unite in recommending- them to their patients for stomacn disorders. We do not claim or expect Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets to cure anything but disordered conditions of the sto mach and other digestive organs, but this they never fail to do. They work upon the inner lining of the stomach and intestines, stimulate the gastric glands and aid in the secretion of Juices necessary to digestion. Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets are for sale by all druggrists at 50 cents a boxi One box will frequently effect a perfect cure. If in doubt and wish more adequate proof send us your name and address and we will gladly mail you a sample package free. F. A. Stuart Co., 61 Stuart Bldg., Marshall, Mich. BOONEKAMP ' Ri ft ptc and Cordial. On Sale everyiclxere. .UYTIES BROTHERS. 3 I General Agents, New York. TILLMAN BEVDEL, 8 an Francisco, facia a Slops Distributers. ORG THOUSANDS HAVE KHMEY TROUBLE MP .BOUT KiW II Weak and unhealthy kidneys are responsible for more sickness and suffering; than any other disease, therefore, when, through neglect or other causes, kidney trouble is permitted to continue, many fatal results are sure to follow. Your other organs may need attention but your kidneys most, because they do most and should have attention first. If you are sick or "feel badly," begin taking Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder remedy, because as soon as your kidneys begin to get better they will help all the other organ3 to health. A trial will convince anyone. The mild and immediate effect of Swamp-Root the great kidney and bladder remedy is soon realized! It stands the highest because its remark able curative power has been proven in thousands of the most distressing cases. If you need a medicine, vou should have the best. Wilson. Conn.. Feb. ISth. 1906. Dear Sirs: "A man could not be in any worse condition than I was with kidney and bladder trouble. I doctored with several good doctors and one physician told me I had BriEht's Disease and that I would not live over six months. Another told me It was gall stones. I had severe pains in my kidneys all the while, could not stoop over, would be dizzy, could not lie down without someone helped me up; my back was weak and pained me: urine was as thick as cream and it would- scald me some thing dreadful. I had to get up many times In the night to urinate. I took Swamp-Root and today I am a well man and never felt better. All of my troubles have gone and show no signs of returning. I take my oath that Swamp-Root put me where I am today and I can prove it by acquaintances. Very trulv yours. E. H. RAND. Swamp-Root is not recommended for everything but it promptly overcomes EDITORIAL NOTE. In order to prove the wonderful merits of Swamp-Root you may have a sample bottle and a book of valuable information, both sent abso lutely free by mail. The book contains manv of th thousands upon thousands of testimonial letters received from men and women who found Swamp-Root to be lust the remedy they needed. The value and success of Swamp-Root are so well known that our readers are advised to send for it sample bottle. In sending your address to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghampton. N. Y., be sure to sav vou read this generous offer in The Portland Daily Oregonian. The genuineness' of this offer is guaranteed. Gibraltar that preparations are being made for an Anglo-French demonstration off Tangier are officially declared to be erroneous. TJnveiling of Law ton Monument. INDIANAPOLIS, Nov. 15. President Roosevelt will be asked td deliver the address at the unveiling of the monument to General Lawton, being erected here by the people of Indiana. The ceremony wiil take place next Memorial day. Famous Opera Singers Arrive. NEW TORK. Nov. 13. Among the pas sengers arriving on the Kaiser Wilhelm II from Bremen today were several of the I WILL CURE YOU When I have accepted your case for treatment you may look for ward to a complete and perma nent cure, and with the very first treatment the curing will begin. This is pretty definite talk upon what is commonly regarded as an uncertain and speculative matter. But I am in a position to speaK aeunueiy ami positively. With me the cure of men's diseases is not uncertain or speculative at all. MY FEE ONLY I have treated so many cases that I know just what I can do and what I cannot do. and I never promise or attempt too much. I accept no. case in which I have doubt as to mv ability to cure, and results are always eiual to the claims I make. Following are some of the diseases I cure, and reasons why my cures are certain. Contracted Disorders In no other ailment peculiar to men is a prompt and thorough cure so essential. Contracted dis orders tend to work backward un til the most vital nerve centers be come involved in the inflammation. Then follows a chronic stage tnat stubbornly resists all ordinary treatment. Safetv demands that everv vestifce of infection be eradicated at the earliest possible moment. My treatment is thor ough. The remedies employed have a more positive action than has ever before been attained, and so perfect is my method of applica tion that even chronic cases yield completely. I alao cure to stay cured "wealtneB," bydrococele, specific blood poison and all men's disease. Consultation and Advice Free The DR. TAYLOR Co. 234VX MORRISON STREET. Cor. Morrison and Second Streets, Portland, Oregon. Hours 9 A. M. to 9 P. M. Sundays 10 to 1. kidney, liver and bladder troubles, the symptoms of which are obliged to pass your water frequently night and Jay, smarting or irritation in passing, brickdust or sediment In the urine, headache, backache, lame back, dizzi ness, poor digestion, sleeplessness, nerv ousness, heart disturbance due to bad kidney trouble, skin eruptions from bad blood, neuralgia, rheumatism, diabetes, bloating, irritability, wornout feeling, lack of ambition, may be loss of flesh, sallow complexion, or Bright's disease. If your water, when allowed to re main undisturbed in a glass or bottle for twenty-four hours, forms a sedi ment or settling or has a cloudy ap pearance, it is also evidence that your kidneys and bladder need Immediate attention. Swamp-Root is pleasant to take and is for sale at drug- stores the world over in bottles of two sizes and two prices fifty cents and one dollar. Re member the name, Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root. r.id the ad'dres, Binghampton. N. T., on every bottle. famous singers who will appear during the opera season beginning in this city, November X. They were Caruso. Scotti, Stracciari. Rossi. Van Rooy and Muhl man, Bessie Abbott, Belle Allen. Gales tina Boninsegua and Geraldine Farrar. Granite Tombs for the McKlnleyg. WINDSOR. VU Nov. 13. A contract has Just been placed with a local gran ite firm for furnishing the material for the sarcophagi in which the bodies of the late President William McKinley and Mrs. McKinley will rest in the mausoleum at Canton, Ohio. Green granite quarried from Ascutney Moun tain will be the material used. Cured The DR. TAYLOR. Leading- Specialist. WEAKNESS LOSSES GONORRHOEA SYPHILIS GLEET PILES Varicocele This most prevalent of all dis eases of men is also the most ne glected, either through dread of the harsh methods of treatment commonly employed, or. through Ignorance of the grave dangers that, accompany the disease. As varicocele Interferes directly with the circulation and process of waste and repair throughout the generative organs, the necessity of a prompt and thorough cure cannot be too forcibly emphasized. I cure varicocele in one week by an absolutely painless process. Mv cures are thorough and absolutely permanent and are accomplished without the use of knife, ligature or caustic. EE N rJi You tI0- When