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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 10, 1911)
THE MORXIXG OREGOXIAX. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1911. FACTS OUT SQUEEZED AT DANVILLE Grand Jury Gets Names of 72 Votesellers and Closes Im munity Bath. ELECTION JUDGE ON GRILL II Give Information Which Unable. Jury to I'rjr Into Klrottoa of Fverjr County Official 1 34 Iodk (uirnl't Are Volrd. BT II. M. UTTT.K. DANVIM.K. U:-. Krh. .-Spcll-- Wmll!on County grand Jury "rata -torttim'" closed to "Immunity balh- svers. Tne Tra"to a that the U rwtun of th now mtu-h-palron!sed In stttutton wrrt excee'ltr.jc'y busy furmu- l:;nc new "roKinc and Btjiieesins;' treatment, which they tijctl to brine irnt results. They prai'ttrei on one itepubtican worker." Clarence Pmttii. a, streetcar ciruiurtor. anj 7Z njm.s of vote-sellers are rumored to have bern obtained, the majority of them residents of the Swond Ward. In Vermilion H M. The treat mer.l lasted nraxly thre bourse. Tfsey rave Ci'.arle N'elssi a former l)mucratic- election Jl.lee at Weetvllle. a rUort taste of t:.i new exercise. hat Information was sotieered out of him la .'Tt. but before coin Into the In iutst:orlal chamber be saui he hal been :ii'n 111 by a cil-knina rounty f- rV la! Ik yars w Mie actinic a an election Ju.Ie. The story of N't, who la a farmer In leorg-etw n loan-.lp. created a n tlon. aa the offense of tampering with an election on?!rial la rrnt outlawed In 1 month. If the );r omaulers thla evl- !enre. th pat:i f" Koine; back Into lh rtrrtlon of fvfrv i ermUian County oft. clal may have been discovered. The i'l-y did not end Ita dav'a work with these spectacular matters. In the afternoon It voted 5 Indictment acatnst "vote traffic" witnnM who. th Inqule Itors i!lnl, bad trailer.,) falsely. At the end of the four hours' secret m1q M Indictments bal been rot-d out of a ttil of HI under consideration. TM was lb Orst real day of the In nulry. The arand Jury went ba k to tta business with a remarkable display of snap and enthusiasm. When adjourn ment was taken at nlrhtfall more bad been accomplished than tn the three. other day ! the week. Kx-State Senator Acton as taken be fore the court for refuslnc to answer questions, and explained taat aa lecal adviser of ex-County Treaeurer H. W H hillock, who was brin lnve.K cated, he coul.l not do so without betraying !) conndenee of hl client. ll.a pol ttoo waa upheld by the court. with the money In my pocket." said Wlilard. "three men were waiting; for in. 'We want you, Charley.' said one. and he pressed the end of a revolver against me. I thought they wera policemen and that I was under arrest. They joked me about getting away so easily. With a revolver pressed Into my coat we, walked bark of a policeman to an alley back of the hall Into the club, half a block from the cafe. Three Take Flundcr Away. "When we reached the alley, the men turned In. forcing me to go with them. One of them covered my mouth with Ms hand, one pressed the revolver against my ribs, and the third took the money away from me. They kept on Joking about how easy It was. "'Pretty soft. Charlie.' said the one with the revolver, and then the three walked away. I could not make any complaint about It. but had to hurry away to keep from being arrested my self." MAN HE SLAYS WIFE, SISTER. SELF Shooting Follows Quarrel; Child Only Person in House to Survive. RABBI WISE HOI AGAIN Only Kxcited Recital Given by Will . Wlndor aa lie Directs Care of Little One Is Explanation of Taklna; of Three Lives. I JKWISII CONVOCATION IX XKW VOItK MOMKXTOIS ONK. Ore-con I Well Advertised In Kust Where SjKciii of Law s lla Aroosrd Interest. WASCO RESIDENT IS DEAD Charles Adam. I'loneer. Stricken W ih Cerebral Hemorrhage. Til K MLUS, Or, Feb. .-(.-peclaI ) Cv.riea Adam, a pioneer resident of reion and for many ears a well ' known merchant of Wasco County, died mtMnlv from cerebral hemorrhage Wr lr.es.lay at the home of a relative. Mr. A.tams was born at Clearwater. Neb., tn 152. when his parents were traveling to Orrcon by ox-team. Thy located near Oregon Clrr on a dona tion lnnd claim. In Mil he came to Kastern Oregon and wninl In stoek ralslna- lie practiced dentistry for number of years In Th LallrS, then formed a partnershmlp In the mercan tile bualneea with Charlea Van Luyn and localed In Tygh Valley, where they continued until a year ago. Three sisters, Mrs. Lr. Meredith, Miss Iary and Miss Poltne Adiuns re side In 8 Uem and a brother. John Henry Adams In Portland. Kuneral services will be held In this city at 1301 Jack son street at 10:30 frldjy and Interment will be under th aueulcea of the Odd fellows Laxire. Kabbl Jonah B. Wise, of the Consre- gatlon Beth Israel, has returned from the East, where he visited friends and relatives and sat In the biennial union of American Hebrew Congregations In New Tork as delegate from his congregation. The convention was the largest Jew ish convocation ever held In America." said Kabbl Wise last nlxht. "The dele gates were laymen and rabbin represent ing liberal congregations from almost eery state. Iorliand and fan Fran cisco were the only Pacific Coast cities represented. The convention was mo mentous, discussing questlona as to the general welfare of the reform congre gations. The Hebrew I'nion College In Cincinnati, was. of course, the most Im portant topic. It la the only college thut graduates rabbis In thn reform church and is supported by subscription. Lrge new buildings are now being erected and the Institution Is In a flourishing con dition. The question of the Kusslnn pass ports won discussed by Louis Marshall. one of the most prominent attorneys of New Tork. As a result of the discussion a resolution was adopted asking that the same rights be accorded Jews enter ing Kuasla as are accorded other races, and sent-to President Taft. Immigra tion was discussed by Secretary Nagel. of the Department of Commerce and Itbnr. and there were other subjects of Interest brought before the convention. "In the convention and outside of It I heard much talk of Oregon- The state la well advertised and I was piled with many questions In New York and Ohio concerning our laws. The deadlock In the New Tork Legislature over the election of a I'nited States Senator caused many to ask questions about the 'Oregon system. In Ohio our laws were mentioned as the "Oregon system.' and so It was everywhere. I was called upon by the economic department of the Uni versity of Cincinnati to explain the workings of the 'Oregon system.' Hut the 'Oregon system' is not all that has brought our state to the front In the Krfst. The people want to know bout the resources of Oregon. Thor was much interest In the Oregon ex hibit In New York and 1 saw Oregon ap ples advertised In Cincinnati and they were selling for fancy prices. I was really amazed to learn that Oregon Is so well known In the Kaat." At the banquet given to the Union of American Hebrew Congregations. Rabbi Wise and Liuclua Solomons, the delegate from San Francisco, had seats of honor at the table, with Jacob 11. Srhiff. the toaatmaster; Theodore Roosevelt. Oscar Straus and other prominent men who spoke. Do YouEnjoy Your Meals? Oae of Ik Moat Important Qweetloaa t Caaslder la th Search for Happlaesa aad Health. The burning- question to you Is, "Are you getting out of life all the pleasure and the health you are en titled tor If not, why not? No matter whether every organ and member of your body Is In a sound state of health and strength. If your stomach is In any way disordered, you are not going to be "yourself." You are going to be a worried, out-of-sorts, nervous or eullen Individual, whose ac tions will reflect your conditions Inside, find people will naturally avoid you.. The world wants to smile and be cheerful, and unless vou are cheerful UP DIFQ RPinP PnilF d smile, at least occasionally, you nc uica Bcaiuc oruuac ,., hav. few frlendlPi rewer oppor. tunltles. no success, and you will go down In defeat defeated by dyspepeta and a bad stomach. A good and thorough digestion has a quick, wonderful reaction upon the brain. You must have noticed it many times, for the brain and stomach are as Intimately connected as a needle and its thread, one can hardly be used to advantage without the other. If your stomach Is slow and lazy In digesting your food, it will produce at once. a alow, lazy and cloudy Influence upon your brain. Mark It! If your stomach ha absolutely quit work, and fermen tation is poisoning your vitals as a re sult, surely your brain Is going to be sluggish and correspondingly depressed. No one need tell you that. But why continue to suffer all the miseries and torments that a dlsor dered stomach brings youT If your, stomach can not digest your rood, what will? Where's the relief? Where's the cure? Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets are the relief and the cure. Why? Because, as all stomach troubles arise from in digestion and because one Ingredient of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets is able to thoroughly and completely digest Jjuuu grains of any kind of food, doesn't It stand to reason that these little Dspepsta Tablets are going to digest all the food and whatever food you put Into your stomach? Science nowadays can digest food without hav Ing' to use the stomach for It. And Stuart' Dyspepsia Tablets are the re sult of this scientific discovery. They digest and digest thoroughly and well. anything and everything you eat. . So. If your stomach refuses to work or can t work, and you suffer from eructations, bloat, brash, fermentation. Biliousness, sour stomach, heartburn. Irritation. Indigestion, or dyapepsla of wnatever form. Just take one or two of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets, and see the difference. It doesn't cost you much to prove It. Then you can eat all you want, what you want, when ever you want, if you use these tab lets, and you can look the whole world in the face with a beaming eye and you will have a cheerful spirit, a pleasant face, a vigorous body and a clear mind and memory and everything will 'look and taste delicious to you. That's life. Get a package of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets at any drug- store on earth for aOc a package. Send us your name and address to day and we will at once send you by mall a sample package free. Address K. A. Stuart Co., 150 Stuart Bidg., Mar shall. Mich. KNTERPRlSli Or.. Feb. .-Hpcial "I want you to take thla baby. Its mother Is dead. Jlve the child to my people when they come. I quarreled with my wife and killed her. Mrs. Rlne hart butted In and I bad to kill her. too. I am going back now and finish myself." This brief recital of a tragedy, given in a high-pitched, excited voice, waa made early today by Will Windor, a young man employed by Fred Rlnehart, his brother-in-law, near here, as he burst in upon the family of George Richards, a neighbor. As he spoke he tenderly laid his little child on a chair and. before he could be detained, had burst through the door and was gone. Three liodlea Found. Riohurds Fummoned help and when, a short time afterward. Sheriff Edgar Mar vin, a deputy, the Coroner and the Dep uty District Attorney reached the' Rlne hart home, tliay found Windor and his young wife. dead, side by aide on a bed couch In the sitting-room, and. a few feet away, the body of Mrs. Wlndor'a sister, Mrs. Rlnehart. Windor had carried out his threat. While their child prattled and cooed at the Richards home. Windor had returned to the scene of his crime, covered -he bodies of his victims and reclined by the body of his wife to die. He hnd shot himself In the right temple with a SS cailber revolver, which was found at his side. Mrs. Windor had been dispatched during the quarrel with a bullet, which struck her squarely In the forehead. Mrs. Itinehart had beon shot in the mouth. Sh was found, face down ward, under a blanket in the sitting room. Rlnehart In Absent. Frederick Rlnehart. husband of Mrs. Rlnehart, and the head of the house hold, was not at horn when the shoot'' Ing took place. He had left 'at day break to get a load of wood. What started the quarrel which led Windor to slay his wife, her sister and then himself, will probably never be known, as all who heard It are dead. All that la known Is what the dead murderer graphically told when he darted Into the Hlchards home with his babe. It was evident that Windor lost no time In returning home and dispatch ing himself, for KIrhards Immediately notified the authorities. He evidently calmly covered his victims and then crawled over the body of his wife, on the bed couch. In order to die by her side. tenders whom Miller cussed for his act. Watching until his deliverer was out of sight Miller succeeded In throwing himself Into the river from the float at Merrill's boathouse. He was fished out by one of the attendants. BITTER FIGHT NOW ON GLOB GETS $1000 PIANO V. STrflER MARKS C;IFT SPLENDID IXSTKCME.NT OF riUXCIPALS KNOWN AT DAYTON Wife-Slayer and Two Victims Form erly Lived tn Washington Town. DAYTON. Wash.. Feb. . (Special.) William Windor was a resident of Day ton until recently. Chsrles Shaffer and Qeorge Wood, of this city, received word tonight of th tragedy near Enterprise. Mrs. Windor and Mrs. Rlnehart were sister and the two families lived In the same house. Frank Gemmel and Charles Schaffer left tonight for the scene of th trsgedy. Th two dead women were daughters of Mr. and Mrs. D- F. Dunlap, an aged couple. Will Windor Is a native of Co lumbia County and haa an aged mother living here. Mrs. Gemmel, Mrs. Woods and Mrs. Mel Burke, of Dsyton, are his sisters. Th bod lea of all will probably be brought to Dayton. KFFOKT MADE TO ANNUL. 3IAK KIAGE OF YOUNG CAMMANS. Ron Will Not Gel Cent While lie Re main With Wife, JParcnts De manding; He Renounce Bride. THEATRICAL STARS Members of "Three Twins' Company finest of Multnomah Club. oWIM I Manafactwrer Who Is Considering I Portland as Ixcallon for Factory Grateful to Commercial Rod jr. BIG TILE CONTRACT LET As guests of th Multnomah Amateur Athletic Club the members of th "Thr- Twins' Company, playing at th Het!l4 Theater, participated In the regular weekly social swtm held by the club at the Portland Swimming liaths last nlsht. Practically every member of th the atrical company visited th tank and with th Multnomah Clum swimmer, filled the place to overflowing. Ail of th regular swimming features comprised th programme. Th same of "foil j the leader." In which Instructor Cavlll set th pace, was enjoyed by all. and Mua Lmnamnre. Miss Clifford. Mr. Mor ley. Sir. Schwartz. Mr. I-avltte. Mr. WMutn and Mr. Cork, of the "Three Twlna" Company, vied with Mr. and Mrs. Watklns. Miss Jeffery. Mia Thomas. Mr. and Mrs. Holman. Kd Jor srensen. Dan O Nell. Date Welch. Lamts Thomas, liert Farrell and or mora other of th dub awtmmers. ALBINA MAN IN TROUBLE Employes Say Defendant Asa n 1 ted Tbcm With Shotgun. J. F. Duffy, a well-known resident of A'.blna. waa arrested yesterday by Dep uty Constable Nicholson, upon a com pialnt of G. R. Smith, charging klm with assault with a deadly weapon. Dufty wiil retaliate, be says, by filing axalnst Smith and another man a charge of at tempted highway robbery. The defendant, who Uvea at l3 East Fourteenth street North, recently ar ranged with Smith and his companion tn guarantee their grocery bill and gtve them cuartere ,a a log cabin on som land of his near th city In return for which they were to do sn agreed amount of grubbing. Duffy says that they did not work, and b went with a shotgun to order them off of his land. H al leges that they attempted to rob him until restrained by th sight of th weapon. RECTOR'S ROBBER ROBBED fOBtiivid V-m Ftr-t Page.) developments proved 'hat he bad told the t rut IV Doftus Is the keeper of a saloon In which Wlilar4 waa ia th habit ef spending mac a tttn. When th plot to rob th restaaraat developed. tard confided In bis friend Loft us and ought to borrow two revolver. "When I cam oat of th restaurant Th presentation to the Commercial Club of a ti"W piano, an exact duplicate of the one used In th Blackston Hotel. In Chi ago. was th result of a banquet given by th business men of Portland List night to J. V. Steger. president of th Steger llano Manufacturing Com pany, of Steg-r, 111., with offices In th eteger building, W a baa a avenue, Chi- caau. Mr. Sb'g'r haa been in the city for several da. with a view of establish ing a plana factory in Portland. Getting Intimation of the fact, a number of business men connected with the Com mercial Club decided to gtve Mr. Steger banquet and lat night the following gentlemen attended. Dr. J. R. Wether- Lee, toaatmaster; C. H. Merrick, F. C. Knai. F. A. Freeman. W. H. Fear. W. H. Duncklry, H. G. Reed, II. Keckwlth. l. O. Lively. W. K. Coman. R. B. MlUer. K. W. Foster. F. 8. Doernbeoher. G. F. Johnson. F. W. Graves, George Kl Ilrad ntck. II. Filers and R- W. Raymond. Speeches wer made by balf a doaen of the party. Mr. Steger. In replying, expressed his unbounded gratitude at hi treatment during his at ay In the city. Those present appointed a committee of three to pre pare a stiver plate, properly inscribed. In commemoration of toe event. "I am going back to take up thla fac tory question with my people." em Id Mr. Steger. "and It will be Settled tn 60 daya. F.verythtng looks In favor of Portland. I think a great deal of Portland. I was here some years ago and was much Im pressed with it then. xou r.ave the timber here, the raw material such aa we can use: you have good shipping facilities and I am very much In favor of th J city. If I located here, on or two ot those Interested will come her at one and commence build ing In Portland. "I consider this a aucssful city, es pecially when 1 take into consideration th progress you hav made In the last le years. You have put up excellent buildings and I would not be surprised If Portland should have wltMn 10 years a population of half a million people. When the Panama Canal Is completed It wl'.l be one great boom for Portland." Mr. Steger Is also president of the Singer Piano Company and president of the Bank of Steger, Steger, ilk Wcatern Clay Company to Make Material for Multnomah Hotel. Contract was let 'yesterday by Charlea K. Henry to the Western Clay Company, of Portland, for the hollow til that will be used in the partitions of the new Multnomah Hotel. The work will all be done In Portland, and the Job Is the largest single order of the kind ever placed here. The hotel will require ' 200,000 square feet of parti tions of this kind. Th plant of th Western Clay Com pany will be started at work on burn ing the tile Immediately, and the ma terial will be delivered aa It Is needed. During th Winter work has not been pushed on the hotel, but as the days lengthen the men will be employed longer hours, and It Is expected to have the exterior construction pretty wall along by the end of Summer. RURAL CARRIERS INVITED Civil Service Association, to Make Special Effort for Members. The United States Civil Service Re tirement Association last night re elected all its former officers with the exception of W. G. Shellenbarger, treasurer, in whose place K. IL Mesen- helraer was elected. J. W. Rowland, di rector, was succeeded by Louis Lam precht. It was voted to push the work act ively during the ensuing year and that special efforts be made to get the rural mall carriers Into the association as well aa the letter carriers of th small er cities ot the state. More than 100 new members were ad mitted last night, making the total membership more than 1U0. NEW YORK. Feb. 9.-Mrs. George Garamans, has engaged Attorney Gil bert Montague, of Manhattan, to annul the marriage of her son. Nelson to the former wife of Mayor Gaynor"s son, liurusi The ground of the action will be that the Harvard vtudent Is under age. "I will not give- my son one cent while he remains with Ills wife," declared Mrs. Gammans tonight. She added that he could return if he would come alone. It waa learned today that representa tives of the mother made an effort to prevent the issuance of the marriage li cense but arrived at City Hall too late. The couple had already called and ob tained the paper and Uie ceremony was performed before the minister in the case bad been located. Rev. Duncan McMlnah, who officiated declared the license showed each party was 1U, and that under the circumstances he could not have refused to act. Nelson Gammans with hiti bride is at the Hotel Manhattan. His honeymorn bliss Is fretted by the story that he is dependent upon the money of his wife, received by her from Mayor Gaynor at the time of the annulment proceedings. "The newspapers say I'm broke," he said, "but this is hardly a resort for vagrants. Is It? "Mayor Gaynor was good enough at the time of the annulment to give his daughter-in-law a little money to keep her on her feet, but she spent about all of It for necewarles. So I could not live on her money If I tried. "I understand that my relations over In Brooklyn have told people that I was over there yesterday looking for money. I did need money yesterday, but I'm at the Manhattan today and there you are. "I do not Intend to go back to my college work at Cambridge until next Fall and hope to finish my course in three years from entering, aa I intended." (everaiodc wears ffams- FOR Men, Women, Children MEN'S In black, black with white feet, tan, burgundy, dark blue, white, and pearl; four pair, guaranteed four months, $1.00. MEN'S Silk lisle hose in black and tan, guaran teed three months, three pairs for $1.00. LADIES' In black and tan, guaranteed for four months, four pair for $1.00. LADIES' In silk lisle, black, pink, tan, pearl, white, sky blue, lavender, guaranteed for three months, three pair for $1.00. BOYS', MISSES'-In black, light and medium weight, guaranteed four months, four pair $1.00. (SEE MORRISON-ST. WINDOW) Sam'l Rosenblatt & Co. NORTHWEST CORNER THIRD AND MORRISON BRIDGE WILL BE PUSHED WOKK OX BROADWAY STUUC- TCItE SOON TO BEGIN. Indiana Placed la JalK Deputy United States Marshal Ham' merslejr returned yesterday from th llets Indian reservation, bringing with htm Newt Sutton and Ira Wrong, who are placed In th County JalL Sutton la charged with having attacked Strong with a knlf. Strong la charged with having taken whisky oa tb Indian vattoo. SUICIDE ATTEMPT FAILS Machinist Twice Tries to Drown and Beats Inquiring: Policeman. After two unsuccessful attempts to end bis life In the Willamette River last night, George Miller, a machinist. 45 years old. beat Sergeant Golta over the bead with an umbrella when the ser geant met him at Front and Oak streets and stopped him to Inquire th reason for his wet, bedraggled and woebegone appearance. Miller waa locked np on a charge of being drunk. Miller first tried to Jump from the Morrison-street bridge but was hauled back to safety by one of th bridge OREGON IlEMEMBEBS GAMMANS StudunU Once Made Illm Execute the "Salome Dance." UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eugene, Or., Feb. 9. (Spec'al.) Nelson Gammans, the Portland boy now at Harvard who figures In a sensational elopement In the Kaat. entered the University ot Oregon In the Fall of l&e and remained through out his freshman year. Hazing had not been abolished when Gammans was at Oregon, and he was made one of Its victims In a novel man ner. Dragged out of bis living quarters by some of his follow boarders and togged In ballet clothes, he was made to do the Salome dance under the arc light one evening In front of one of the soror ity houses. This stunt waa perpetrated by several members of his own class because Gammans refused to comply with some class custom. Gammans was an ardent track enthu siast, and after A season's faithful train ing In the hurdles won several points In an lnter-class meet held that Spring. Girl Found In Opium Den. Fay Miller, who Insisted that she la 22 years old and looks more like IS. and Jim Dee, a Chinese, were arrested by Patrolmen Johnson and Shaffer last night In a raid on' an opium, den at 65 Second street. The girl la held on a charge of frequenting an opium den and Jim Lee on the charge of keeping th plaar President of Contracting; Company Has No Fear of Delays as Keetilt of Suits. Ia, S. Stewart, of Kansas City, presi dent of the Union Bridge & Construction Company, arrived In Portland last night and this morning will go to the City Hall to sign the contract for the substructure of the Broadway bridge. As soon as the contract la signed, he said, the work would beeln and actual operations would be started within a week or ten days. "The opposition to the Broadway bridge will not hamper the work," said Mr. Stewart at the Imperial Hotel last night. "It seems that about every legal obstacle Is now out of the way, we have no fear and the work will be pushed. That Is the only way for a contractor to make money. We have the City of Port land behind ua and there is no need for worry. Our part of the-bridge will be finished January 1, 1912, and the steel should be in place and the bridg-e opened in the folowlng March or April. "Just as soon as the contract is signed work will begin. Within 10 days, I think, we shall be at work on the piers and there will be no delay In finishing the job. Steel construction probably can begin next FaJl. If the question of ap proaches to the bridge Is settled with the railroads. Mr. Setzer. a member of the firm, who is in Portland, has arranged with the Northern Pacific for a strip of land for our yards and the city has pro vided another strip, so that we have am ple room. We have a fleet of boats on the river, so there will be no difficulty about transportation. Our timber and cement will be delivered by boat. "In the construction of the piers we shall bring 40 or 50 expert pressure men, 'sand hogs' they call themselves, who have worked for us for years, and a hospital lock Is now en route. The hos pital lock Is devised to save men who succumb to air pressure. By its use we can save practically every man. The lock Is placed on a scow near the work, so that when men are injured by tho pressure In the chambers, they can be removed quickly for treatment. There has been a great advance during the last few years In treating men who suffer from air pressure, and the fatalities that were recorded In the construction of the Cleveland and Chicago water tun nels will never be repeated. The sys tem now makes the work as safe as any work on the ground. " mm I'll i W M itHii I ill iillSR i.!l ! !i i: ; I 'I ! liil'iii Mir, l!ll:ililii!ii iljle-illlj. i: ii 1 1 !l .1 If! mm III Ml) niliiiiHii I'll: Hiir, "Nature's Gift from the Sunny South" ill! jjjir !Wfi ilii'l I Ill 'ilMli: IliWliI t;1 rlllZilHilii! llilir. It's too late to lock the stable when the horse has been stolen too late to care for your stomach when indiges tion is upon you. Why not take time by the forelock by dispensing with hog lard the breeder of nine-tenths of all indigestion, and insist instead that all your food be cooked with Cottolene a pure, vegetable shortening which makes healthy, digestible food ? Cottolene comes from the cotton fields of the Sunny South. It is a clean product, protected by patent air-tight tin, pails to insure . freshness and freedom from contamination. It is recommended by physicians as being fully as healthful as olive-oiL Made only by THE N. K. FAIRBANK. COMPANY .Makes Biscuits Lidhl and Fl; as the Cotton Bo lifiliiiiiliiiu 11 A