Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 5, 1905)
THE SUNDAY OREGONIXK, PORTLAND, FEBRUARY 5 190. TO BREAK GONTROL Britain Proposes Christian Gov ernor for Macedonia. NEW MOVE AGAINST RUSSIA 4taly Alone Agrees, Hoping to Weak en Austro-Russian Influence Russia and Austria Bring New Pressure Upon Turkey. LONDON, Feb.. 4. The Associated Press learns that - Foreign. Secretary Lansdowne has definitely proposed to the concert of Europe the appointment of a Christian Governor-General of Macedonia with powers and responsibilities similar to those of Prince George of Crete. Thus far the exact acknowledgments Indicate little sympathy with the British proposi tion, with the exception of Italy, which approves of It, perhaps because she sees therein a chance to overthrow the pre domlnent Influence of Austria and Russia In the Balkans. Lord Lansdowne has also made known that the British government opposes the Austro-Russian scheme for financial con trol, considering that the finances of Macedonia should be controlled by an International commission of all the pow ers signatory of the Berlin treaty and not by Austro-Russian civil agents. WILL INSIST ON REFORM. Russia and Austria Threaten Vigor ous Measures Against Turkey. ST. PETERSBURG,' Feb. 4. The Rus sian and Austrian Ambassadors at Con stantinople have received orders to make extremely energetic representations to the Sultan against any further delay in carrying out the reforms In Macedonia, and to threaten Turkey with the em ployment of the most vigorous measures. This step has been occasioned by the reports from Macedonia to the effect that the performance of the Murzstcg agree ment made between Russia and Austria Hungary Is being opposed continually by the Turk's traditional policy of passive resistance, and that by non-accomplishment of the measures' of reform the agi tation has been increased. Distrust on the part of Bulgaria and Servla of Tur key is constantly growing, and the ef forts made by the commissioners ot gendarmerie sent to Macedonia to intro duce order are frustrated at every step. The efforts of the powers to improve their facilities for observing and con trolling the district under revolt meet with obstinate resistance, and the conse quence Is that the hopes of the powers to restore order In Macedonia by means of the reforms decreases day by day. In addition to this, the Sultan's dis trust of the powers is constantly encour aged by his entourage, afid his dislike of the reforms is approved. The situation in Macedonia has, . therefore, again be come critical. REBELS IN ARGENTINE. They Attack Police Posts, and State of Siege Is Ordered. BUENOS ATRES, Argentina, Feb. 4. An insurrection has broken out in this province. Several police posts have been attacked by bands of about 30 men each, but the assailants nearly everywhere were repulsed. Two posts which were sur prised were recaptured, by the, police. An attack on the arsenal was repelled. It is rumored that two regiments of troops have mutinied and are marching on the cap ital. The Argentine government, which ap pears to have been acquainted with the plans of the leaders of the plot, took timely measures to suppress the upris ing, and it seems to have complete con trol of the situation. As a result of the insurrection, the gpv ernment has Issued a decree establishing a state of siege of 30 days throughout the whole republic, and has ordered the mob ilization of the National Guard. This decision was reached at a council of Ministers held this morning, under the presidency of Manuel Qulntana, Pres ident of the republic. The troops remain ing loyal to the government have been sent to meet the mutinous troops, who are marching on Buenos Ayres. Up to the present the city is quiet and bears Its ordinary aspect. Information received here from the Provinces of Mendoza, Cordoba and Santa Fe are contradictory. It is dif ficult to secure definite information, and many rumors are current. It is reported that the artillery stationed at Rosario, in the Province of Santa Fe, has joined the Insurrectionists. President Qulntana and the Cabinet are holding a continuous session at the Government House. The members of the Cabinet assert that the revolution ary movement is bound to fail, as it is j j directed by only a. few influential per sons, and that an attempt to overthrow r" the government will not meet with any degree of popular approval. Banks are open and trains running. The revolt at Bahia Blanca, in the Province of Buenos Ayres, has already been crushed and, according to the latest reports, which are considered re liable, the movement in the interior is dying down and the principal centers remain loyal to the existing regime. According to official information, one battalion of infantry and a company of engineers, which revolted, have re turned to barracks at Campo del Mayo and readily submitted to discipline. Troops from one of the provinces have been dispatched to this city. The Santa Fe . police have succeeded in suppressing the outbreak at Rosario. Minister of the Interior Iustillo de clares he has the authority of Presi dent Qulntana for the statement that order will be restored in 24 hours in the Provinces of Mendoza and Cordoba, where the rising occurred. The other provlces are quiet. The banks, railway companies and great commercial houses here have collectively cabled to Europe In order to allay undue anxiety. President Qulntana declares that the insurrectionary movement Is directed by persons who are irresponsible and without influence. The whole fleet re mains loyal. Much praise Is given the firemen and sailors, none of whom abandoned their posts. Governor Freyre, of the Province of Santa Fe, who was In Buenos Ayres, has returned to Rosario on a torpedo boat. Many citizens have called on the Chief of Police and volunteered their services in aiding the authorities to suppress any new insurrectionary movement. They were thanked and In formed that the government had at its dlspo'sal ample forces. Secretary of "War Godoy is preparing to nominate superior officers to command the Na tional government. The movement was instigated by the Radical party, which was assisted by sections of the military. A few 'per sons were killed or wounded during the disturbances. v- A decree has been issued prohibit ing press comments on the situation. Dock Laborers Cause Riot at Brest. PARIS, Feb. 4. Published reports of the disorders at Brest aro greatly ex aggerated. A small party of docklabor" ers continuing the strike agitatljon. MILLIONS SUFFER EVERY WINTER FROM La Grippe Is Epidemic Catarrh. Pe-rnisa fen-Wed Specie For This Phase of Catarrh. GRIP is acknowledged by all physi cians to be the most difficult of dis eases to treat. Nearly every physician has a different treatment. There has been no common agreement as to the best way of handling this scourge of the civilized world. In 1850 Dr. Hartman introduced Peruna as a catarrh remedy, and as soon as la grippe came to be recognized as epidemic catarrh. Peruna gradually came used as a la grippe remedy. From that time, the use of Peruna as a la grippe remedy has steadily grown. Now it is the recognized standard rem edy of the world for la grippe. Not only is it prompt and efficient in its action in the acute stages of la grippe, but, for Lhe after-effects of la grippe, no better remedy can be found. As a rule, la grippe leaves its victims in a very bad state of health. The ner vous system 'Is disturbed, and especially the digestive and nutritive organs are deranged. This condition has produced a host of chronic invalids in all sections of the country. In no other class of cases has Peruna been able to accomplish more remarkable cures than In these cases. Peruna at once removes the catarrhal I marched past the Russian Consulate last night and the police drove them off. A few men were bruised during the scuffle. The affairs is considered insignificant. WAIT FOR-ACTUAL RESULT. Socialist Leader Advises Miners Not to Resume Work. BERLIN, Feb. 4. Herr Hue. a Social ist member of the Reichstag, speaking to a miners' assemblage at Reckling Hauser. Westphalia, yesterday, said the strike was as good as won, but that the work men could not act on the expressed desire of the government that they return to work Immediately In view of the expec tation that a law regulating work In the mines in accordance with the workmen's desires, would be adopted. He added that the strikers required some guarantees. To so-called Christian unions and the Socialists, who have acted together throughout the strike, appear to be sep arating again. The unions favor going to work, relying on the government's promises to legally rectify the miners' wrongs, while the Socialists urge standing out for active results and distrust the general promises of the Ministers. Interior Minister Von Hammersteln and Commerce and Industry Minister Moeller are ln the strike region, personally Inves tigating the -situation. The strike ln Silesia is not spreading. The miners are disposed to wait and see what happens in the Rhenish districts. KOSSUTH MAY TAKE OFFICE. Son of Emperor's Bitterest Enemy In vited to Palace. VIENNA, Feb. 4. In view of the recent victory of the Hungarian independence party. Emperor Francis Joseph extended an Invitation to Franz Kossuth, a son of the Emperor's most bitter enemy, to meet him either at Vienna or Budapest y The news has created a deep impression in both countries. It Is not yet known where the audience will occur. It Is be lieved that there is a possibility of Kos suth being appointed Hungarian Minister of Finance. REVOLT IN VENEZUELA. Money and Arms Secured for Out break by Revolutionists WILLEMSTAD, Feb. 4. There is good reason here to believe that a revolution in Venezuela is contemplated. A revolu tionary agent, who has arrived at Wil lemstad from Colombia, reports that money and arms for such an undertaking have already been secured. The agent will leave here for New York soon. SHALL STRIKE CONTINUE? Committee of German Miners Will Submit Question to Convention. ESSEN, Feb. 4. The Essen strike com mittee has called a meeting of delegates of all the miners' unions for next week in order to decide whether to continue the strike. The committee will begin next week to supply money to strikers. The relief fund now reaches $250,020. Coalheavers Join. Strike. MANNHEIM, Feb. I Eight hundred coalheavers have struck because coal was being shipped Into the strike region. The heavers at Lldwlgsbafen have joined the movement. Panama Circulates Own Coin. PANAMA, Feb. 4. Beginning today Colombian currency is being exchanged throughout the whole Republic of Pan ama for Panama coin. More Bombs in Paris. PARIS, Feb. 4. Two supposed bombs 'were found, oneon the Rue Lines and the other on the porch of a church in Belleville. Cardinal Satolli Recovering. ROME, Feb. 4. Cardinal SatollL, who has been 111 for some tune with an attack of influenza, is progressing satisfactorily. GRIP. Allium ill m - condition of the mucous membranes, in vigorates the digestive organs and gives tone to the nervous system. This makes Peruna an ideal remedy for the after-effects of la grippe and re leases an untold multitude from the grasp of this inexorable enemy to the human family. GrtTr Worse la Spite of Doctor's Dally VIhIIh Able to Do Her "Work Soo After BeglsBlBg Uae of Fe-ra-na; Sirs. Jane Gift, Hebbardsvllle, Ohio, writes: "Six years ago I had la grippe very bad. The doctor came te see me every day, but I gradually grew worse. I told my hus band I must get relief. "One day I accidentally saw a testi monial of a woman who 'had been cured of la grippe by Peruna. "I told my husband I wanted to try it. He went directly to the drugstore and got a bottle. "I could see Improvement in a very TOO BIG A CONTRACT Hannaford Opposes Govern ment Rate-Making. NO COMMISSION CAN DO IT Northern Pacific Traffic Director Gives Reasons for Not Allowing Interstate Commission to Do So Opposed to Rebates. MISSOULA, Mont, Feb. 4. Vice-President J. M. Hannaford, of the Northern Pacific Railroad, who has been making a tour of the Western divisions, expressed himself today as opposed to giving the Interstate Commerce Commission power to regulate rates. He said: "Forgetting whatever Interest 1 may have ln the railroads, and looking at It from an Impartial standpoint. It is hard for me to see how a commission at Wash ington, D. C, can Justly name the rates in all parts of the country, thousands of miles away. Gather any number of men there at Washington from any walk in life, and they certainly cannot do better at making rates than the railroad men who have made It a special study and, for that matter, their llfework. I have' spent about 30 years In the railroad busi ness, and I assure you that I do not want to be on a commission with such a Job ahead of me. "Every section of the country will be appealing to the commission on real or Imagined grievances, and it Is only nat ural that there would be friction and enmity Incurred between the commission and the traffic managers. Instead of the harmony which should exist. "As a railroad man, I am interested only in making rates along our line, and I let the fellow In Texas or New Mexico make rates for the patrons along his road. What makes a big difference upon our rates has no bearing upon him. A certain amount of money has to be earned by every railroad. It must make the operat ing expenses of the whole road, and ought to give a fair return on the capital invest ed. Hundreds of miles of our 5000 miles of track do not pay operating expenses. Every honest traffic manager must so ad Just the rates- that the traffic can best afford to make up the losses and after ward reduce those rates as fast as con ditions will warrant. "I am opposed to all secret discrimina tion and rebates, and every railroad man is. There are none In this section, be cause the competition Is not keen enough and the Great Northern officials are as anxious to keep out of the hands of re ceivers as we are." Vice-President Hannaford and party left for the East tonight OPPOSE ESCH-TOWNSEND BILL Cassatt and Spencer Say It Does Not Protect Raljroads. WASHINGTON, Feb. 4. President Cas satt of the Pennsylvania Railroad, and President Spencer, of the Southern Rail way, called at the White House today at the Invitation of President Roosevelt and discussed the proposed legislation looking to the regulation of freight rates. It may be stated on authority that the two rail road presidents expressed a perfect will ingness to co-operate in the matter of legislation that protects both sides1, but they made known to the President that In their opinion, the Townsend-Esch bill, which will come up for consideration In the House on Tuesday next, furnishes practically no protection to the raCroad interests. When asked if those interests Intended short time and was soon able to do my work. I continued using it until I was entirely cured." La Grippe Causes SctIobs Derangement. Mr. John Miller. Lilly, Ohio, writes: "I was taken sick two years ago with la grippe, which finally ' ended in my being troubled with gall stones. "I was examined by a physician who said I had gall stones, but could not cure me. "I took several bottles of your Peruna, which cured me entirely." Ln Grippe and Catarrh Comb t Bed. Mr. Samuel M. York, Union Grove, Ala., writes: to fight the proposed legislation, one of the officials said he did not know that there was any movement of that kind on foot "Of course," he. added, "Congress will do what it thinks' best" After the interview. Messrs. Cassatt and Spencer were among the President's guests at luncheon. DEFENDS ARMOUR CAR LINES. President Robbins Says Rates Are Open and Business Costly. WASHINGTON. Feb. 4. George B. Rob bins, president of the Armour car lines, was heard by the House committee on interstate and foreign commerce today. He said the refrigerating charges were based on the cost of Ice, supervision and general expense. Mileage charges alone, he said, did not afford remunerative com pensation for the service, owing, among other things, 4-0 delays. The ArmourK he said, had made volun tary reductions n Icing charges. He de clared that thelrUarltfs were printed and circulated. He said there was no secret about the tariff. Mr. Robbins denied that the Armours engaged In the fruit business. They en gaged in produce in a small way, he said, prior to last May, at which time they withdrew from that business. He said they dealt In butter, eggs and poultry. He denied that his company had dlscrimiit ed ln favor of the Pennsylvania Railroad. 'He said that a number of their cars were tied up ln the South because of the cold snap. The car business, he declared. Is conducted on Its own base. Mr. Robbins was asked about a number of rates and he explained that they va ried as conditions varied, pointing out the difficulty ln obtaining Ice at some points. Mr. Robbins made a general denial of charges made against the Armour car lines. He will continue his statement next week. TO VOTE ON RATE BILL. Republicans in House Summoned to Attend on Monday. WASHINGTON, Feb. 4. Representa tive Tawney, the Republican whip of the House, today notified all the Re publican members to be in the House at 2 P. M. Monday, to vote on the rule for the consideration of the railway mt bill. To Act Promptly on Rate Bill. WASHINGTON, Feb. 4. Representative Hepburn today Introduced a resolution to provide a rule for the consideration of the Interstate commerce bill, providing that It shall be ln order to proceed with It upon the adoption of the resolution. Kills Himself on His Birthday. NEW YORK, Feb. 4. Charles I. Steel, a wealthy retired business man of Benson hurst L. I., has shot himself and prob ably will die. Steel, two grown daughters and his aged mother were in the. midst of a dinner at home, .this being his 53th birthday, when a process-server called him to the door and delivered a summons. Steel thanked the server, conducted mm to the door, and returning to the dining room, asked to be excused a moment. With the summons unopened In his hand, he went upstairs to his room. A moment later the people at the table heard a shot, and rushing upstairs found- Steel shot through the breast He 'said he had fired the pistol himself, and offered no ex planation. Sale-of Choice Paintings. NEW YORK. Feb. 4. One hundred asd two paintings and pieces of sculpture col lected by the late J. W. Kauffman, of St. Louis, have been sold at auction here for $176,700. The highest price, $9600, was paid for "Return From the Pasture," by Emlle van Marcke. Senator William A. Clark, of Montana, was a leading buyer, and bid Jn four important works, Bonnat's "Little Roman Girl," for $4100; "Return ing From PastureEvening," by Anton Maure, for $73): "An Unusual Example," by Corol; "An Italian Maiden," for 54400, and Tro von's "The Watering Place," for $S000. THE IDEAL REMEDY PRAISED BY ALL S Be Grip Claims 100,000 Horns Should be Protect "I was taken with la grippe and catarrhal deafness. I wrote you for advice and followed your directions. "After taking two bottles of Pe runa, I found myself well of la grippe, and my hearing was fully restored." V. S. Marshal of Alabama Highly of Fe-rn-Ba. Hon. Dan. Cooper, U. S. Marshal for the Northern District of Alabama, writes: "Your remedy for catarrh and la grippe,- Peruna, has done me so much good" that I cannot speak too highly of it" La Grippe Leaves Catarrit of the Throat. Mls3 Caroline Webber, 236 Troop Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y., writes: "After having the grip, I was much In need of a tonic. "I had a cough which it seemed almost impossible to get rid of. I took Peruna -with excellent results." Recommend Pc-rn-aa ,for La Grippe and Catarrh. Hon. J. P. Megrew, Supt U. 3. Capitol GREAT FIRE BLAZING Birmingham IsThreatenecf With Destruction. WHOLE BLOCK IS BURNED Fire Starts in Produce Store and Spreads With Great Rapidity Beyond Control at 2:30 A. M. Help Asked For. BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Feb. E.-Fire started soon after midnight. In the store of Franklin, Stiles & Franklin, produce commission merchants, on Morris avenue and Twenty-first -street, ate Its way into Robert Garty & Co.'s wholesale notion four-story building on West avenue and Twenty-first street at 1:30 o'clock this morning. The fire at 2:30 o'clock is beyond all control and after a hasty consultation it has been decided to ask assistance of Montgomery and Chattanooga. Fanned by a strong northwest wind, the entire block from Twentieth to Twenty-first street on First avenue back to Morris avenue Is doomed. It Is esti mated the loss will be at least $300,000. The amount ot Insurance carried by the different firms cannot be obtained owing to the great excitement. Among the buildings burned are: Dr. C Dozeler'3 medical Institute; Tomllnson building, occupied by the Colby Decorat ing Company and offices; the Erb Produce Company and the Cooper Produce, Com pany; the F. F. Norton & Son Produce Company. New York Chinatown on Fire. NUW YORK, Feb. 4. A six-story build Ing In Mott street Is giving the firemen summoned by three alarms a hard fight 77 9 Cures Colds and For the Grip, take "77." For a CoW, take "77." For Influenza, take "77." For Catarrh, take "77." For Sore Throat, take "77." For Loss of Voice, take "77." For a Cough, take "77." For Sore Chest, take "77." For a Chill, take "77." If you have any of vthese trdubles, Dr. Humphreys' "Seventy-seven" is the remedy and cure needed. '77" will break up the Grip or Cold and prevent an attack of Pneumonia. At Dm exists, 25 cents, or mailed. Humphreys' Homeo. Medicine Co., Cor. Wil liam and' John Streets, New York. OilrfDP PERU-NA. Victims Eacb Year. Every Frondefl With Fe-rn-na to Its Members. Police Force, Washington, D. C. writes: "Having suffered from the grip, I was advised by a friend to use your Peruna. "I also took it for my catarrh, and I can. cheerfully recommend your remedy to any one suffering from the grip and catarrh." Less Than Two Dottles ot Pe-ru-na. Mr. Lyman B. Smith, 163 Montcalm Ave., Detroit, Mich., writes "Two years ago I had a serious attack of la grippe and was confined to my ted. Less than two bottles of Peruna cured. "Since that time, I have taken It a doz en times, and my friends have taken it, and it has helped them all." Convinced of Pp-ru-na's Merit. Mrs. M. Riley, 310 Second St, S. E., Washington, D. C, writes: "I have used your Peruna for catarrh and the grip, and since using it, I feel like a new woman. "I am thoroughly convinced, after giv ing it a fair test, that it is one of the best remedies I ever tried." Suffered With La Grippe Seven Winters Mr. Frank Bauer, Minnelska, Minn., writes: "For seven Winters I had suffered with la grippe and by each attack was con fined to my bed. The loss may reach $100,000. There are several tenement houses In the vicinity. Shirt-Factory Is Burned. FORT WAYNE, Ind., Feb. 4. Fire of unknown origin tonight destroyed the Par agon Shirt & Waist factory on East Co lumbia street entailing a loss of $110,000. GUESSING' ON DECISION.. Paris Speculates on Probable Result of North Sea Inquiry. PARIS, Feb. 4. The close of the testimony before the International com mission inquiring into the North Sea incident has been followed by a rather noticeable diminution of the confidence In British circles connected with the case and a corresponding elation on the part of the Russians. The French press, which is strongly pro-Russian, gives marked prominence to statements that the Russians have virtually won their case, the usually conservative Temps and Journal asserting positively that the majority of the court now fa vors the iRussIan theory that torpedo boats attacked Vlce-Admlral Rojest vensky's squadron. However, inquiry in well-informed circles does not show any real basis for these reports. On the contrary, intimations are made that the tendency within the court 13 rather in the opposite direction. The reports favorable to the Russian view result mainly from the posltive ness of the testimony of Captain Clado and other Russian officers that they saw torpedo-boats attack the squad ron, whereas the strongest British wit nesses did not swear that no torpedo boats were there, but merely that they did not see them there. The Impres sion seemed to prevail among the audi ence in the court that the commission ers were likely to accept the directness of the Russian witnesses rather than the qualified negative given by the British fishermen. However, those Intimately familiar with the commissioners say that this Impression is not warranted, as the commIsIsoner3, being skilled naval technicians, are disposed to differ from Captain Clado on a number of the most Important technical points. These per tain chiefly to his ability to see a torpedo-boat at night two miles away and his statements concerning the effects of searchlights. It Is known that some of the commissioners consider Captain Clado's statements to be at variance with the accepted principles of naval science. How far this will influence their ultimate verdict Is not yet clear, but it appears to show that the com missioners do not share the prevailing Impression that Captain Clado's testi mony was decisive. GREAT RELIGIOUS REVIVAL. Torrey and Alexander Arouse London " to Its Center. LONDON. Feb. 4. Royal Albert Hall, with a seating capacity of at leasflLOOO, was well filled tonight when R. A. Tor rey and Charles M. Alexander, the Amer ican evangelists, opened one of the most remarkable religious revivals in the his tory of the metropolis or the United King dom. Lord Kinnalrd, president of the Evangelical Council, presided. The audi ence was drawn largely from the West End, and included a number of people prominent In social life. The music to night was furnished by a choir of 3000 voices, conducted by Mr. Alexander. Seldom has the vast hall presented such a scene as when the audience Joined In the chorus, and 10,000 voices swelled In the well-known harmony. Owing to the num ber of other speakers, Mr. Torrey spoke briefly, and after the famous hymn writ ten -after President McKinley's message to his mother when she was dying, "Tell Mother I'll Be There," sung as a solo by Mr. Alexander, the benediction was pro nounced. Tomorrow the work will begin In: earn est As a further evldenco of the nonsec tarian naturo ' of this movement, the bishop ot London himself wrote to Lord "Last Winter I was again attacked with la grippe. I had a terrible cough. "I asked my wife to get me a bottle of Peruna. I took It four times a day, ac cording to directions. "The fifth day j. rook an ax on my shoulder and went out into the woods to chop wood. "I had another slight attack, but as I had Peruna In the house, It caused ma but one trying night." Pe-ru-na Builds Health and Strength. Mrs. Nancy Power, 263 Yamhill st, Portland. Or., Vice President Social Eco nomics Club, writes: "When I had recovered from a severe attack of la grippe, I found that my strength did not return as quickly as I should wish, and on the advice of a friend I took Peruna to build up my health and strength. "I am pleased to state that it has made mo feel very much better than JC have felt for years." Saved From the After-Effects of La Grippe. Miss Nellie J. Brady, Hotel Irvington. Los Angeles, Cal., an enterprising solici tor and member of the Fraternal Union of America, writes: "I had the misfortune, in common with many other people, to contract la grippe the past Winter, and after trying numer ous remedies, was Induced to try Peruna. which I did, much to my satisfaction and relief. "Am pleased to say that the complaint was not only routed, but a continuance of the medicine fortunately saved me from the irritating and often fatal after-effects ot the disease." Pe-ru-na Cures La Grippe and Cough. Mrs. Mary Frost, Monrovia, Kan., writes: "I had la grippe last Winter, with a severe cough, which I could not seem to get rid of. "I took Peruna. In a short time It had rid the system of all traces of la grippe and made me perfectly well and strong. "I also gave it to my daughter, who had la grippe, and almost coughed her self to death, and It had the same bene ficial results in her case." Cured by Three Dottles of Pe-ru-na. Mr. Joakim Zimmerman, Collinsville, 111., writes: ' "I have taken three bottles of Peruna and am well again. I also had la grippe when I began taking it. "Whenever I feel badly again, I shall take Peruna." Keeps Pe-ru-na In the House. Mr. M. E. Morrow. Supt. of State Road, Glenwood Springs, Colo., writes: "I had a severe attack of la grippe last Winter, and could find nothing which seemed to give me any appetite or strength, or build up my system ln any way, until I got a bottle of Peruna. "I three days' use of It I became much improved, and after using the second bot tle I was able to attend to my business as usual. We keep Peruna as our family medlcine." Address Dr. S. B. Hartman, President of the Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio, for free medical advice. Kinnalrd, extending the heartiest welcome to the Americans. One of the most remarqable things about the meeting la its organization. Al ready sums 'amounting to $6000 have been collected, and $23,000 more Is needed before the preliminary expenses are paid: but a much greater sum will be forthcoming if wanted. The London newspapers have all taken up the revival, and are printing col umns of descriptive matter. Williamson at Tantalus Dinner. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash ington, Feb. 4. Representative William son tonight attended the annual dinner of the Tantalus Club, of which he Is a member. The club Is made up of new Republican members of Congress. Hood's Sarsaparilla keeps the blood pure and the whole system la perfect order. Take only Hood's. NERVOUS DYSPEPSIA A CURE FOR ALL Not a Patent Cure-Ail, Nor a Modern, Miracle, but Simply a Rational Cure for Dyspepsia. In these days of humbuggery and de ception, the manufacturers of patent medicines, as a rule, seem to think their medicines will not sell unless they claim that It will cure every disease under the sun. And they never think ot leaving out dyspepsia and stomach troubles. They are sure to claim" that their nos trum Is absolutely certain to cure every dyspeptic and he need look no further. In the face of these absurd claims it is refreshing to note that the proprietors of Stuart, s Dyspepsia Tablets have care fully refrained from making any undua claims or false representations regard- Ing the merits of this most excellent! remedy for dyspepsia and stomach trou bles. They make but one claim for it. and that Is, that for Indigestion and various stomach troubles Stuart's Dys pepsia Tablets Is a, radical cure. They go no farther than this,' and any man or. woman suffering from Indigestion, chron ic or nervous dyspepsia, who will give the remedy a trial will find that nothing is claimed for it that the facts will not fully sustain. It 13 a modern discovery, composed of harmless vegetable Ingredients accept able to the weakest or most delicate stomach. Its great success in curing stomach troubles Is due to the fact that the medicinal properties are such that It will digest whatever wholesome food la taken Into the stomach, no matter whether the stomach Is in good working order or not It rests the overworked organ and replenishes .the body, the blood, the nerves, creating a healthy appetite, giving refreshing sleep and the blessings which always accompany a good digestion and proper assimilation of fool. In using Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets no dieting Is required. Simply eat plenty of wholesome food and take these Tablets at each meal,' thus assisting and resting the stomach, which rapidly regains Its proper digestive power, when the Tab lets will be no longer required. Nervous Dyspepsia is simply a condi tion in which some portion or portions of the nervous system are. not properly nourished. Good digestion invigorates the nervous spstem and every organ in the body. Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets are sold by all druggists at 50 cents per package To make man better, maki trade better. To make trade better, make goo'ds better. Schilling's Best: biiypoTder ftrrorijf extract pfc ' soda. toSe Your grocer's; moneybarJe,