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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 23, 1913)
TJIE SUXDAY OltEGONIAX, POllTLAND, NOVEMBER 23? 1913. MANY ASK DATA OH COMPENSATION AG T Employers in AH Manner of Lines Wonder if It Af- fects Them. COPIES ARE REQUESTED Commission Receives Inquiries From Various States, Porto Rico and British Columbia Few Workmen Write. SALEM, Or., Nov. 22. (Special.) The . Oregon State Industrial Accident Com mission, composed of Harvey Beckwlth, ex-president of the Portland Com merclal Club; C. D. Babcock. .a former newspaper man, and William A. Mar shall, a member of the Portland Typo graphical Union, and one of the lead lng union men of the Northwest, has received numerous letters regarding the operation of the workmen's com pensation act, which was approved by the people at the recent special elec tion. While the Supreme Court has held that the compensation and con tributes features of the law will not become effective until July 1 next year, the Commissioners will be busy until that time familiarizing? them selves with their duties and conducting an educational campaign among the em ployers and employes. The following, statement was made by the Commission todayr "The first letter to be received by the Commission was from the pro prietor of a lumber-yard and furniture store. in one of the smaller cities, who stated that he favored the new work men's compensation law and desired to become subject to its provisions. Law Is Optional. "The new Oregon workmen's -compensation law. recently approved by the people at The special election, was drafted with reference to the occupa tions recognized as peculiarly hazard ous. While the law is an optional one, employers and workmen engaged in the hazardous occupations named in the act become subject to the law on July 1, 1914, unless the employer has served upon the Commission notice to the ef fect that he elects to contribute to the industrial accident fund, or the work man notifies his employer to the same, effect. "On the other hand, employers and workmen engaged in occupations not specifically defined in the act may be come subject to the law by filing with the Commission written notice to that effect. "Until the provisions of the law in this respect are generally understood It will be a question with some em ployers and their workmen whether they become subject to the law auto matically on a certain date if they take no action, as in the hazardous oc cupations named in the law, or whether their particular occupation is one re quiring affirmative action on their part before becoming subject to its provisions. Many Make Inquiries. "This uncertainty is being experi enced in Oregon as in other states where elective compensation laws have been enacted. Questions in this con nection have been varied and interest ing. One correspondent made Inquiry as to whether window-cleaners and Janitors come within the scope of the act. Another desired to know t he status of a boarding contractor, while several asked as to the classification of stump-pullers and operators of don key engines used in clearing and grad ing land. "Under the Illinois law. It Is said the letters of Inquiry received ranged from trustees of cemetery associations to pro prietors of swimming pools. In the sev eral weeks since the special election the correspondence of the Oregon Commis sion has included letters with reference to the hazardous occupations of bank ing, brewing, dealers in pig Iron and sea coal, manufacturers of coin-making machines and macaroni, and even house-movers and real estate brokers occasionally have made inquiry as to certain phases of the law. : "Among the questions arising were those of interstate commerce, or wheth er a small motor used for polishing Jewelry should be classed as power driven machinery; what provision must be made for first aid to Injured work men, or whether certain steamboat lines are subject to the Oregon act or to the admiralty law. I Copies of Lan Asked. ' "Interesting, too, were the requests for copies of the Oregon law from dif ferent states of the Union and from the Kmployers' Liability Commission of San Juan. Porto Rico. Manufacturers' asso ciations and labor- organizations in dif ferent states and in Rossland, B. C, also desired information. . ; "Encouraging to the supporters of the new compensation act are the many letters received favoring the new law. Employers In some cases stated they would willingly pay more than their present liability Insurance rates be cause hey are convinced that under the compensation law a larger propor tion of the money will be received by the injured workman than is now the case, and that all workmen will be com pensated rather than a portion only, as under the present system. ; "Other employers who expect to ac-' ccpt the provisions of the act are plan ning to so arrange their insurance as to have It expire on the first of July of next year. Many Aak About Bene-ntM. 1 "In many Instances employers stated that they had heard only the arguments of those opposed to the new law and desired at the first opportunity to learn what benefits will result from an ac ceptance of Its provisions. "Even Japanese merchants and Chi nese proprietors of hopyards evidence their interest in the new legislation. Oue such writer, referring to the num ber given to the bill, at the time it was Introduced in the House, described the law as "hop bill No. 27." Another em ployer desired to know "the require ments enacted from me as an em ployer.' "So far the letters have been received from but few workmen and it is be lieved that when the laW"becomes oper ative next July very few employes will be found to be opposed to the new sys tem. In Illinois, of more than 1,000,000 workmen affected by the compensation law, only 614 registered their objections to its provisions." had been in the habit of mixing the two woods as they came from the mill. The association adopted a rule that grading standards be amended to in clude hemlock, in a percentage optional with the mills and their customers, so far as concerns two-by-fours and two-by-slxes. A committee will be named to con sider whether hemlock should be al lowed to be mixed with fir in uppers and dropsiding. It was decided to have a more careful standard for grading common boards to be reported when the new rules are made in 1914, and an attempt will be made then to grade red cedar boards, which are not graded at all now. Manager Miles reported stocks at the mills decreasing since August. For the first ten months of .this year- he said the lumber cut of the Northwest ex ceeded 1912 by 12.4 per cent, and ship- ments exceeded those of 1912 by 8.84 MOTHER IN TEARS SEES LARKIN GIRL GRADES TO BE CHANGED Hemlock and Fir Discussed by Lum bermen at Tncoma. f TACOMA. Wash., Nov. 22 (Special.) The West Coast Lumber Manufac turers' Association at its monthly meeting Friday devoted most of its at tention to hemlock and fir grading rules. It developed that some of the Oregon mills had been causing trouble by specializing in hemlock common di mension that they sold cheaper than fir. Other mill men explained that thoy VETERAN OF" 13 BATTLES AND OLD RESIDENT OP ORE GON DIES. ,---(" -'- , " " , , ' 1 '- - -x i -'-V - , , ; is' -1 : , " s ..-5 .'V- ' '.-V.'i'.'.-V.'V-'-' v ' --V-''j3 Sff- - - - John G. BleakacT, of Waua County. SHANIKO, Or., Nov. 22. (Spe cial.) John G. Bleakney, a resi dent of Oregon since 1870, died at his home near Bakeoven, Was co County, Tuesday morning, No vember 18, aged 81 years Mr. Bleakney was born-in In diana County, Pennsylvania, In 1832. Moved to Illinois In 1856, and settled in Henry County,' where he remained until the Civil War, when he enlisted In Com pany E, Twelfth Infantry, Illi nois Volunteers, and served until August, 1861, when he was mus tered out at Cairo, 111., and on the same day re-enlisted In the Nineteenth Regiment, Illinois Volunteers, and served until the close of the war, having passed through 13 of the hardest-fought battles of the Civil War. He is survived by a wlow, three sons, two brothers and two sisters. per cent, the gain In cut in feet being given as 233,791,935. It was decided to try the plan of having inspection bureau officials try to obtain figures of cut, stocks on hand and shipments at the mills. It was reported that the principal loggers would shut down De cember 15 for at least 60 days to give the market chance to stiffen. The report of the advertising com mittee showed the fund had now reached $33,000, and that the loggers recently had subscribed $2000. Reso lutions honoring the memory of the late Cyrus Walker, of Seattle, and F. C. Shoemaker, of Raymond, were adopted. The next meeting will be held In December at Portland. PiESIIIUllOll IS OFFERED INDICTED DIRECTORS WILLING TO RETURN f 704,000. "Lucky" Baldwin's Danarnter Blocka Part of Plan to Rehabilitate $20,000,000 Investment Concern. LOS ANGELES. Nov. 22. An offer to return 700,000 shares of Los Angeles Investment Company stock, which at today's stock market quotations was valued at. $704,000. was made today to the new directors of the corporation by Charles A. Elder, ex-president, and co-officers and directors now under a Federal Indictment charging them with having used the malls to defraud. The offer was made at a meeting of the new directors with D. A. Ham burger, the new president, in the chair. Elder said the ex-directors would re linquish everything they possessed in an effort to save the 20,000 stockhold ers of the $20,000,000 corporation from financial loss. One of the plans of the new officers to ' bring the affairs of the corpo ration out of financial chaos was frus trated today by the announcement that Mrs. Anita Baldwin McClatlghrey, daughter of the late E. J. (Luck'y) Baldwin, declined to permit the abroga tion of a contract by which the com pany was to buy La Cienega rancho, a property of 1200 acres devised by her father to herself and her sister, Mrs. Clara Baldwin Stocker. FRENCH MINERS STRIKE FIFTH OF 200,000 IN DOCAI DISTRICT REFUSE! TO WORK. Owners Declare ' Coal ' Required for Country Cannot Be Mined With Eight-Hour Day. DOUAI, France. Nov. 22. About 40, 000 of the 200,000 coalminers in this district have struck work and refuse to re-enter the mines until their de mand for an eight-hour day has been granted. The movement is spreading rapidly. A committee of miners requested the Association of Mine Proprietors today to appoint delegates to discuss the sub jects at issue with the men. The re quest was refused, because the pro prietors asserted a bill fixing an eight hour day for workmen Is pending be fore the French Parllmanet and may be voted any day. Therefore the pro prietors say It is useless to discuss the matter. In the meantime 5000 miners are daily Joining the ranks of the strikers. The proprietors assert that under an eight-hour working day it will be im possible to mine the coal required for France, as, owing to the recently in troduced three years', term of service In the army, there are fewer miners than has hltherton been the case, and therefore the men must work overtime. Order has been maintained except at Lens, where country constabulary were stoned by the strikers when they en deavored to protect miners who were willing to go down the pita, , Plea for Interview Wins After Board Refuses to Grant Parole. GOVERNOR TO AID APPEAL Promise Is Mad at Searing to Be come Surety on Bond Indus trial Workers Do Not Try to Force- Release. SALEM, Or- Nov. 22. (Special. 1 The tears of a mother pleading that she be permitted to see her daughter, whom she had not, seen for four years, won the hearts of tne State Board of Con trol today, and Mrs. Emma Thompson was given an interview with her eldest child, Lillian Larkln, an Inmate of the State Industrial School for Girls. The Board, however, denied a parole, after a session of almost two hours. In which a committee of four, headed by Mrs. Jean Bennett, a sympathizer of the Industrial Workers of the World, of Portland, pleaded that the girl be re leased. No attempt was made by the Indus trial Workers of the World to free the girl today by force, as was intimated by the committee which called at the school and upon the Governor yester day afternoon. -. . West to Provide Appeal Bond. Mrs. Bennett declared that she would appeal from the decision of the court in Portland which committed the girl to the school on a charge of vagancy. Governor West said he would become surety of the appeal bond, and It Is evident that a further fight will be made in the courts. Various humors of scores of Indus trial Workers of the World being in the city today were unfounded, and there was no semblance of disorder. At the close of the conference Mrs. Thompson threw her arms about the neck of Mrs. Lola G. Baldwin, super intendent of the Municipal Bureau for the Protection of Women in Portland and chairman of the ffdvistory board of the State Industrial School for Girls, and begged that she be allowed to see her daughter. Mrs. Baldwin comforted the woman, and it was after that the board decided she could see the girl. Mrs. Bennett Barred. Mrs. Bennett asked that she be al lowed to go to .the school with the mother, but the board denied the re quest. Instead she was accompanied by Secretary Goodln, of the board, and Mrs. Baldwin. Mrs. Bennett Insisted that she be allowed to go with Mrs. Thompson to protect her from the "gunmen" whom the Governor had stationed there. Gov ernor West denied that there were gunmen there. Mrs. Bennett said he told her yesterday that. he had sent gunmen to the institution.. The Gov ernor said he had sent a guard from tne penitentiary to the school after the committee had threatened to bring a bunch of persons here to free the girl. Mrs. Bennett. F. E. Hals and T. D. ; Ransley, members of the committee, Bald that the girl had been "railroaded j Into the school and that the mother was a fit person to be her custodian. Mrs. Baldwin said that the girl had been held in Jail at Vancouver after she had left a private home in Port land with a soldier. She declared that the Chief 'of Police of Vancouver had taken much Interest in the case and made a determined effort to capture the soldier. When released, after serving a sentence of 13 days, the chief asked the Portland authorities that she be detained upon her arrival there. C. B. Aitchlson, member of the State Railway Commission, testified that the girl had been employed at his home two years. He said she left there the morning of the day she became of age. The girl was romantically Inclined, he said, and fond of stories of army Ufa, Although she was advised not to read the sensational books she pur chased, she continued to read them. THEORIES NOT WANTED JOHNSON OBJECTS TO "DREAM. BOOK" CONSERVATIONISTS. Illustrations of Unfairness of Forest Administration Found In One Washington County. OREGONLVNr NEWS BUREAU, Wash ington, Nov. 22. "Conservation pf natural resources has come to stay," said Representative Johnson, of Wash ington, in a speech In the House today, "but the country should not be forced to take it all at once. The present system is the result of the application of the theories of dreambook conser vationists." Johnson criticised severely the man ner in which Glfford Pinchot had "steam-rollered" the recent Conserva tion Congress, practically denying the West any voice In its proceedings, and said that If the organization were wrecked no one but Pinchot would be to blame. "The whole proceeding in the recent Conservation Congress," Johnson con tinued, "is a sample of what may be expected under increased power of Fed eral bureaucracy. The voice of the West is like the peep of a canary com pared with the Niagara-like roar of the oracle conservationists of the East. ' Johnson said the present system of forest administration was unfair to the West, in that the states In which the reserves He receive practically no rec ompense from the loss of taxes. In Mason County, Washington, where road construction costs $12,000 a mile, he said the county's share of the receipts from timber sales in forest reserves last year was $24. He criticised the system which, under the guise of ex tending valuable aid to the states, was in reality a farce and Impracticable. SHERIFF DEMANDS THAW Answers Filed in Federal Court by New Hampshire Officer. . CONCORD. N. H.. Nov. 22. The deliv ery of Harry K. Thaw into the sole cus tody of Sheriff Drew, of Coos County, for the purpose or turning tne prisoner over to New York, State, was asked for late today. The request came in the form of an answer filed In the United States District Court by the Sheriff to the deposition for a writ of habeas cor pus presented a few days ago by Thaw's counsel. This writ was asked for after Gov ernor Felker had acceded to New Tork'B request for extradition of Thaw in con nection with charges of conspiracy aris ing from his escape from Matteawan on August IT. Mo GRAY ORCED - TO - VACATE At Morrison and Broadway! Never before in ray history have I offered to you such immense reductions on my entire stock of high-grade merchandise ! My 20-year lease on the Broadway Building has been canceled; and I am forced to vacate this beautiful new store at Morrison and Broadway in exactly 70 days. .''Chesterfield" Clothes, Puirdshings and Women's High-Class Apparel at these . truly remarkable reductions. Come now 1 While the selections are still practically com plete. Terms of Sale Strictly Cash. Famous "di.esterfi.el'd" Suits and .Overcoats All Sacrificed! America produces no finer ready-for-service Clothes! Years of "making good" have given my "Chesterfield" make a reputation for style and quality that's spread throughout the Northwest. Think of being able i;o buy at such sacrifice prices, on the very threshold of Winter! . $20.00 Chesterfield Suits, Overcoats $25.00 Chesterfield di o 7c Suits, Overcoats. . . P 1 O D $14.75 $30.00 Chesterfield doo CA Suits, Overcoats ipO.OU $35.00 Chesterfield .Suits, Overcoats. $26.50 $40.00 Chesterfield d9Q CA Suits, Overcoats. ., v'v $45.00 Chesterfield J?Qf Cf Suits, Overcoats. . . 404-.Ov Men's Underwe'r TJnion Suits and separate gar ments, in fine cotton, wool, silk and linen. $ 1.00 at $ .75 II $ 1.50 at $1.15 $ 2.00 at $1.35 $ 2.50 at $1.75 $ 3.00 at $2.25 $ 3.50 at $2.65 $ $ $ $ $ $10.00 at 4.00 4.50 5.00 6.00 7.00 8.00 $7.25 at at at at at at $2.85 $3.25 $3.75 $4.50 $5.25 $5.75 Fine Half Hose All Grades of Cotton, Lisles, Silk. 25c Hose 35c Hose . 50c Hose . 75c Hose . $1.00 Hose 20c .25c .40c .50c .75c $1.50 Hose $1.15 $2.00 Hose $1.45 $2.50 Hose $1.85 $3.00 Hose $2.25 $3.50 Hose $2.50 $6-$7.50 Sweaters S4.45 $9-$10 Sweaters SG.95 $12.50-$15 Sweaters S9.45 $17-$20 Sweaters S12.95 $25 Sweaters S16.50 New Fall Shirts $1.50 New Fall Shirt for S1.15 $2.00 New Fall Shirts for $1.65 Men's Neckwear 50c Neckwear 40 $1.00 Neckwear 65 $1.50 Neckwear $1.15 $2.50 Neckwear SI. 75 $3.00 Neckwear $2.25 1D-.llo W i Broadway Building Broadway at Morrison '09 KIDNAPING CLEAR After 14 Years South Bend Boy Hears of Mother. STORY READS LIKE NOVEL Lad Snatched From Mother's Arms Well Cared For for Time Dnt Pat Into Training School by Ruse, W1U Return to Home Now. v SOUTH BEND, Wash.. Nov. 22. (Special.) Snatched from the arms of his mother wnen 6 years old. kidnaped by a man named Hurley, supposedly his father, spirited away in a bugrgy under fire of peace officers, driven all night, finally wakingr up in Chicago, and after 14 years of separation from his mother, and abandoned five years ago by his kidnaper, John James Hurley, aged 20, now employed as assistant baker In the South Bend Baking Company's plant, will start back to his childhood home In Punxsutawney, Pa., within ten days to meet mother, brothers and sisters and to learn from his mother's lips who he really is and what is his right name. The story told by this young man reads like a novel. In -e 14 years that he has been separated from his blood A 3 .. v- ,: iT - - i - Jolan Jamn "Hnrley," Who Wan Kidnaped 14 Years Asro, Finds Mother by Letter to Police. relatives In Punxsutawney he has trav eled the length of the continent, re ceived a good religious and school edu cation at Catholic boys' schools In three or four states of the Eafct and West, and upon i bandonment f lVe years ago was placed In the State Training School at Chehalis by some ruse of his kid naper. Back In Punxsutawney 14 years ago domestic quarrels made him the bone of contention and led to his sensational kidnaping. On October IB, this year, young Hur ley became restless under the strain of so many years' speculation as to who he really is. In desperation, he wrote to the Chief of Police of Punxsutawney, Pa., asking if the Chief remembered the Incident of a 6-year-old boy being kidnaped about 14 years ago, and if so If the boy's mother was still alive, her name, address, etc After a lapse of several weeks Hur ley received a telegram from the Chief that he had found the writer's mother and that her name was now Hughes. Then came a telegram from the mother, hysterical in tone, and letters from his mother and sisters. Grover Noonan, proprietor of the bakery, has taken a keen interest in the young man's, case and has kept the wires hot between South Bend and Punxsutawney until he has so well es tablished the relationship of Mrs. Hughes and young Hurley that a ticket is now on the way with money to re unite mother and son. A letter received late today by the Chehalis postmaster from Mrs. Mar garet Hughes, of Sagamore, Pa., veri fies the boy's story. Sheephreedlng Aided by Bill. OREOONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash ington, Nov. 22. Senator Chamberlain today Introduced a bill appropriating $10,000 to aid the Agricultural Depart ment In Importing sheep for breeding purposes. The department desires to aid farmers and rangemen in obtaining types most suitable to their particular requirements. At the Ohio state experiment station, at Wooster, the crops have averaged, for a term of years about twice aa much to the acre aa tne usual yield of all grain flelda In Ohio. PiNDELL FORGES BUSY COSWIRMATIOJf AT SPECIAL! SES SION TO II E URGED. Members of Committee Talk of Ask ing Investigation of Letters on Postofflce Appointments. WASHINGTON, Nov. 22. Democratic Senators friendly to the appointment of H. M. Plndell the Peoria publisher, as Ambassador to Russia, let it be known today that they would make an extreme effort to secure the confirmation of his nomination before the end of next week. Should the Senate fail to act before the special session ends on December I, the nomination would fail and Presi dent Wlson would have to make it again to the regular session. The foreign relations committee will take up the Pindell case Wednesday. Several members of. the committee have served notice that they will ask for an investigation of the correspond ence between Mr. Plndell and an Illinois Representative Involving an alleged discussion of Postofflce appointments. These members probably will ask that the nomination be referred, to a sub committee. Republicans behind the request for an Investigation would not Indicate to day how far they would go should a fight develop on the floor of the Senate. H.D.l. lull Slaisdar GspitaSs; d Stem Cere How many hospital patients, suffer ing the frightful itch, the raw scorch ing pain of skin disease, have been soothed to sleep by a soothing- fluid washed in by the nurse's hands? That fluid is the famous JX D. D. prescription for eczema. the sTrpxx'V'Xsrxra xnntss of on ef our prominent Catholic institutions (name of nurse and institute on appli cation), writes regarding a patient. "The disease had eaten her eyebrow away. Her nose and lips bad become disfigured. Since the use of D. D. D. her eyebrows are arrowing, her nose and face have assumed their natural expression," How many eczema sufferers are pay ing their doctors for recrular treat ment and ar being treated with this same soothing, healing fluid? B& GEO. T. SICKUtSSOR frankly writes D. T. D. Is superior to any thing I have ever found. Boft and soothing, yet a powerful agent" To do the work. D. D. D. Prescrip- ' tlon must be applied according to directions given In the pamphlet around every bottle. Follow these di rections and see! And It certainly takes away the itch at once the moment the liquid is ap plied. The skin is soothed calmed so thoroughly refreshed delightfully cooled. All drurrlsts of standing have the famous specific as well as the efficient D. D. D. Skin Soap. But we are so confident of the mer its of this prescription that we will refund the purchase price of the first full size bottle if it falls to reach your case. You alone are to ludge. Huntley Drug; Co., Wash, at Fourth. Woodard, Clarke A Co.. Druggists, Wood lark bids.. Alder at West Park. D. D. D. Prescription for 15 years the standard skin remedy MOTHER! GIVE SICK ONLY CALIFORNIA CROSS CHILD SYRUP OF FIGS" If Fretful, reverts h. Constipated, Ba tons or Tongua Coated, Give "Fruit Laxative" at Once. No matter what alls your child a laxative should be the first treatment given. Look at the tongue, mother! If coated. It is a sure sign your "little one's" stomach, liver and bowels need a gentle, thorough cleansing at once. When cross, peevish, listless, pale, doesn't sleep, eat or act naturally; if breath Is bad, stomach sour, system full of cold, throat sore, or If feverish, give a teaspoonful of "California Syrup of Figs," and In Just a few hours all, the I clogged-up, constipated waste, sour bl! and undigested food will gently move out of the bowels and you have a well, playful child again. Sick children needn't be coaxed to take this harmless fruit laxative. Mil lions of mothers keep It handy because they know its action on the stomach, liver and bowels Is prompt and sure. They also know a little given today saves a sick child tomorrow. Ask your druggist for a RO-cent bottle of "California Syrup of Figs," which contains directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown-ups plainly on the bottle. Beware of counterfeits sold here. Get the genuine, made by "California Fig Syrup Company." Re fuse any other kind with, contempt. Adr. SAGE TEA KEEPS YOUR HAIR DARK When Mixed With Sulphur It Brings Back Its Lustre and Abundance. Gray hair, however handsome, de notes advancing age. We all know the advantages of a youthful appearance. Your hair is your charm. It makes or mars the face. When it fades, turns gray and looks dry, wispy and scrag gly, just a few applications of Sage Tea and Sulphur enhances its appearance a hundredfold. Don't stay gray! Look young! Either prepare the tonic at home or get from any drug store a 60 cent bottle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Rem edy." Thousands of folks recommend this ready-to-use preparation, because it darkens the hair beautifully and re moves dandruff, stops scalp itching and falling hair; besides, no one can pos sibly tell, as it darkens so naturally and evenly. You moisten a sponge or soft brush with it, drawing this through the hair, taking one small strand at a time. By morning the gray hair disappears; after another applica tion or two, its natural color Is restored and. It becomes thick, glossy and lus trous, and you appear years younger. Adv. AVOID CATARRH Breathe Hyomei It Medicates the Air You Breathe and Instantly Relieves. Why continue to suffer from catarrh, stopped up head, husky voice, and oth er troubles of the breathing organs, when there is an absolutely certain, scientific remedy at hand. , Hyomei is the remedy. It Is a pleas ant, harmless and antlseptlo medication which you breathe through a small In haler. Breathing a few times dally through the Inhaler charges the air with this germ-kllling antiseptic Ca tarrhal discharges, sniffles, foul breath, watery eyes and the formation of crusts In the nose are promptly re lieved by this medicated air. It Is guaranteed to do it, or money back. A complete Hjromei outfit, consisting of a strong, hard rubber pocket Inhaler and a bottle of Hyomei costs only tl, and extra bottles, if afterwards needed, are only 60 cents each. Druggists everywhere sell Hyomei. Use Hyomei - for bronchitis, coughs and cold in the head, husky voice, croup of infants, and any inflammatory dis ease of the breathing organs. Adv. Simp'e Herb Quickly Relieves This Dread Disease. Diabetes has heretofore been considered Incurable, and the only bop held out to the afflicted haa been to prolong their years by strict diet. A plant recently discovered In Mexico, ' called Diabetol Herb, has beea found to be a specific In the treatment of diabetes, quickly reducing the speclrlo sravlcy and sugar, restoring vigor and building up the aystem. Thla harmless vegetable remedy should relieve the patient of his worst symptoms, In the most aggravated cases, within a week, and to prove It, we will mall the first 600 package tor 25a, with free booklet or spe cial values to the diabetic, containing latest dlot lists and exclusive table of food values, giving percentage of starch and sugar (car bohydrates) in 2fW different foods. Tell your afflicted friends of this offer and send 25c today for a fuli-slzed to a package. AMES CHEMIOAli OO.. box Whitney Point. N. T.