Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, December 28, 1908, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE 3IORXIXG OKEGOMAN, MONDAY,. DECEMBER 28, 1903.
CASTRO: LOOTER OF
POOR VENEZUELA
E
I went to the University of Michigan to
begin a three years' course. I have never
been 111 a day in my life, but I believe
that If I were to become ill the first per
TYPICAL VENEZUELAN SCENE, POSTION OF VENEZUELAN ARMY, AND PORTRAIT
OF NEW EXECUTIVE
son I should want to see would be my
TO LEAVE CUBA!.:
sister.
"When my sister became really ill she
houpht of me. After I arrived here she
.old me that shewas thinking intensely of
me at about 11 o clock Monday night. It
was about that time that 1 received the
Impression, or whatever you want to call
It, that she was very 'ill and wanted to
see me."
Mr. Rich said he and his wife until now
had not believed in psychical phenomena.
They could not understand Miss Bruce's
reception of the mysterious message, he
added, on any ground other than that of
telepathy.
1
Evacuation of American Army
of Pacification Begins
New Year's Day.
Unknown Ten Years Ago, Now
a Prominent Figure in
News of the World.
BRITISH PEERAGE HOMME
EVENT WITHOUT CEREMONY
a-"
FORTUNE NOW $60,000,000
TROOPS
PBEPAB
if m
: s.' ::..-:.nrttNW.v;"'-'i
I n ! .
' ' - -.4
Departure of United State Forces
Marks Actual Independence of
Island Pijulace Hails Kvent
With lemontration of Joy.
HAVANA. Pre. 27. New Tear's day
will witness the boctnnir.gr of the evacua
tion of Cuba by the army of pacification,
which ha been In possession of the
Island since the beeinnlnff of the pro
visional government. In October. Ilv6.
The first provisional regiment of ma
rines, numbering !. which will be
among the first troops to leave, are now
concentrating from various posts at Camp
Columbia.
About half this regiment will sail in
January on the cruiser Prairie, which ar
rived here Christmas eve. bound for
Newport News. The Prairie will return
about the middle of the monh and em
bark the remainder. The final embarka
tion will not ocur until April 1.
Troops to Leave Quietly.
The embarkation will be effected
as little ceremony as possible and
with
it is
probable that their departure will b
made with as little notice as1 marked
their landlnc. The purpose in deferring
the departure of a portion of the 17th
Infantry until April 1 has been the sub
ject of considerable speculation, but It
is believed this was agreed upon at a
conference between Governor MagonA
and President-elect Gomez. It is not
thought to be a measure of precaution,
for which not the slightest necessity Is
apparent, but it probably Is for the pur
pose of keeping the barracks and quar
ters in good order until It is possible to
turn over to the Cuban authorities a
model camp for occupation by the new
permanent army under command of Gen
eral Pino Guerrera. the nucleus of
which will be formed, it Is Intended,
with the present corps of Cuban artil
lery and lott members of the Rural
Guard.
Action Pleaslnff to Ciihnn.
Cubans are greatly pleaded by the de
parture of the American forces, as mark
ing the complete establishment of Inde
pendence. All phow the kindest feelings
toward the troops.
Headquarters of Companies A, B, C, D,
Twenty-eighth Infantry, w-ill embark on
the transport Sumner at Matanzas, on
December 21. The transport will proceed
to Havana and embark Companies F. G
H. stationed at Guanajay, and Company
B. stationed nt Guires. The Sumner
also will sail from Havana January 1 for
Newport News, the ultimate station of
these companies being Fort Snelling,
Minn.
From that time on. the transports Sum
ner and McClellan will he employed In
the embarkation at Intervals of the re
mainder of the Army.
Hates When Troops AVill Embark.
Battery F. Third Field Artillery, for
the Washington Barracks, and the Fif
teenth Cavalry, now stationed at Cien
fuegos. Flaretas and Santa Clara, des
tined for Forts Meyer and Sheridan, will
sail February 2. The headquarters Army,
Eleventh Cavalry, now at Columbia and
Pinar del Rio. the Mountain Artillery
and Fifth Infantry, now at Cardenas.
Pagua and Calharien, for Plattshtirg: the
Eleventh Infantry, now at Santiago and
Hotguln. for Fort D. A. Russell, and the
Seventeenth Infantry, now at Caniaguey,
for Fort Mcpherson, will leave Havana
about January 27 for Newport News.
This leaves only two companies of en
gineers and two battalions of the Seven
teenth Infantry, under Colonel Pitcher,
which will remain at Camp Columbia.
These troops will not embark until April
1, which will complete the evacuation.
DRAWN Bf PSYCHIC FORCE
COLLEGE GIRL ANSWERS CALL
FROM SICK SISTER.
Hear?. Spirit Voice in Night and
Goes to New York to Find
Woman Seriously 111.
NEW YORK. Dec. (Special.) In
obedience to a psychic communication, the
first she had ever received. Miss Cath
erine Bruce, a student in the University
of Michigan, came to New York from
Ann Arbor, Mich., to find her twin sis
ter, Mrs. Charles J. Rich, of ) West
"ll'th street, ill with pneumonia. Miss
Bruce said that while in a sorority bouse
in Ann Arbor late Monday. night a voice
which she thought was that of her twin
sister had said to her:
"Come to me. I need you."
Disturbed by this message, the young
w."nian immediately sent u telegram to
her sister. The telegram was received
and ojened by Mr. Rich. His wife had
been ill for several days, but the physi
cians In attendance had said that the ill
nes.; was not grave. Knowing that the
examinations at t!ie end of tile hrst
semester in the University of Michigan
were at hand and that any Interruption
in the college work of his sister-in-law
might be prejudicial to her chances of
passing those tests, Mr. Rich telegraphed
to Mls Bruce:
Jeanette slightly 111. No cause for
alarm."
Mr. Rich told his wife what lie had
done, and she agreed with him that it
would be unnecessary for her. sister to
come East. Miss Bruce, however, was not
sufficiently reassured by the telegram,
and came here and went at once to the
apartment of her sister and her brother-in-law.
There she found that her sister's
iHntss. although it was not critical, had
become more serious than had been at
first supposed. Wie said:
"I have never been a believer In psychic
phenomena or thought-transference of
any sort. I have never given the subject
any attention. My sister and I were al
ways together until last September, w hen
CLAIMANT APPEARS TO THE
TITLE OF BAROX SACKVILLE.
Says He Is a Son of the Former
American Minister AVlio Was
Married to Spanish Dancer.
LONDON, Dec. 2S. The romantic and
extraordinary story underlying the dis
puted claim to the Sackvllle peerage and
estates at Knole. Sevenoaks. was un
folded In the chancery division before
Mr. Justice Eve.
The following are Involved in the case:
The late Baron Sackvllle: Died In Sep
tember last, aged 81, having spent 41
years in the diplomatic service, bis last
appointment being as Minister Plenipo
tentiary to the United States.
Ernest Henry Jean Baptlste West:
Claims to succeed the late Baron In the
peerage and the family estates, alleging
that he was a legitimate son of Lord
Sackvllle by a secret marriage.
Josephine Duran de Ortega: Claimant's
mother, now dead. A beautiful Spanish
dancer, alleged to have been secretly
married to Lord Sackvllle.
Edward Lionel Sackville-West: Son of
the late Lord Sackville's younger brother;
aged 41: Major In the West Kent Im
perial Yeomanry; formerly regarded as
the heir-presumptive; defendant in the
present proceedings.
Knole House. Kent: The Sackville
home, one of England's oldest and most
famous mansions, full of art treasures,
with a park of 1000 acres.
Sackville-West in Washington.
The late Lord Sackville is well remem
bered In tho United States through the
sensational circumstances under which
he ceased to represent Great Britain at
Washington. In the Presidential cam
paign of 1SSS. when Cleveland was the
P'mocraticcandidate for re-election, and
General Harrison was the Republican
nominee, nno Murehlson. of California.
wrote to the British Minister, who was
then Sir Lionel Sackville-West, asking
his ndvice as to how a Briton, naturalized
in America, should vote, having the in
terests of his native country at heart.
Sir Lionel replied that he would make no
mistake In voting the ticket of the party
in power.
Publication of the letter led to the Is
suance at once of the Minister's pass
ports by the Administration. At the
same time his -recall was ordered from
London, and he took an early train for
Montreal, sailing thence for home.
Receiver for Rents Asked.
The claimant. Ernest Henry Jean Bap
tlste We.st. whose legitimacy Is in Issue,
asked for the appointment of a receiver
and manager of the rents and settled
funds pending the result of what prom
ises to be protracted litigation.
Ogden Iawrence, K C for the claim
ant, said that the main object of the
present application was that the rents
might be kept safe, and that the tenants
might not have to pay twice in case of
the claimant's success in the pending
proceedings.
Justice Eve asked who was In posses
sion now.
Mr. I.awrence said that when Lord
Sackville died his nephew, Edward Lionel
Sackville-West. was living with him. and
that nephew claimed to be the person
entered In title. He would succeed If the
claimant Ernest were found to be Ille
gitimate. Since the late Lord's death the
nephew and his wife had l"ft the mansion
house at Knole. which had been closed,
and the whole of the rents and property
were being managed by Mr. Glasler. who
was agent for the late Lord Sackville.
Cose Pending In Probate Court.
Mr. Lawrence said he wanted the ques
tion of legitimacy to be tried by a Jury,
the title and estates depending on It.
A petition entered in the probate and
divorce division In October. If07. to ob
tain a declaration of the claimant's le
gitimacy, is still pending.
Proceeding to explain the facts of his
case, counsel said that the claimant was
born at Arachon. In the Gironde. on June
24. lSiin. his father, the late Lord Sack
ville, then being the Hon. Lionel Sackville-West.
fifth son of Lord Pe la Warr,
who was at the time first secretary to the
British embassy at Tarls. v
His mother was Josephine Duran de
Ortega, who had been an accomplished
and beautiful Spanish dancer. The birth
certificate of the claimant, signed by his )
father, was read: also the certificate of
baptism, which took place on July 11.
1S;9. the god-parents being the Duke of
Saxe-Coburg-Gotha and the Countess de
Bion. On the baptismal document the
parents were described as the Hon. Lio
nel Sackville-West and Josefa de Ortega,
YACHT TO JUNK HEAP
Constitution, Built to Race Sham
rock, Is to Be Broken Up.
New York World.
Xow conies the passing of another
American Cup yacht. The famous Con
stitution, predecessor of the Reliance,
was sold to Edward S. Reis & Co., 32
Broadway, by the American Cup De
fender Association, the syndicate which
built her, of which August Belmont was
the head. She will be broken up for
junk, like Thomas W. Lawson's Inde
pendence. Lipton's Shamrock II, and
other celebrated racers. The Constitution
is high and dry in the yard of the
Thames Marine Railway Company, In
New Ixindon, Conn., where she has been
since her last race with the Reliance In
lft).
She will be cut in four sections, each
of which will be put on, a lighter with a
derrick and brought down the Sound and
East River, to the foot of Broad street.
There everything in her construction will
be broken up and sold. There is t2j.0)
worth of so-called Junk in the yacht.
There are 100 tons of lead. 31) tons of
bronz. 25 tons of steel, 3ft tons of sails
nd 3) tons of miscellaneous materials.
including anchors and chains.
Mr. Rels has bought nearly a score of
famous yachts in a few years. Some he
has sent south and sold for tarpon fish
ing, as told In the World last May. and
others whose bones were getting brittle,
he-has broken up. In cases where their
years have not told on them their size
has kept them Idle In some shipyard.
A cup defender is an expensive play
thing because of the large crew required
to man her. The Vigilant and Colonia
were changed Into schooners which re
quire less of a crew than a sloop of
equal slze but neither is as large as the
Constitution. The Constitution measures
$9 feet S Inches on the surface of tho
water, but from her bow to her stern
she is 132 feet long. She has a beam, of
25 feet 2 Inches, a draught 19 feet 7
Incha. &nd baa IS feet o fict h. i
K 'i i 'iT"sr
V7
NEW CAPITAL CITY
Scheme to Center All State
Institutions.
J. F. BROWN'S IDEA UNIQUE
Spokane Banker Would Concentrate
Ail Public Buildings ut Some
Point to Be Decided Upon
by the Legislature.
OLVMPIA, Wash., Dec. 27. (Special.)
J. J. Brown, millionaire banker of Spo
kane and member of the hoard of regents
of the state college at Pullman, has de
vised a plan, which has several new fea
tures, for concentrating all the public
Institutions of this state in one locality.
He has discussed the matter with Gov
ernor A. E. Mead and other state offi
cers and Is disposed to urge the Legis
lature to adopt it.
Mr. Brown's plan provides for the pur
chase by the state of five or six sections
of land, with the expressed intention of
locating a capital city thereon. He
would have this tract beautified and
platted and the large portion not needed
as sites for state institutions sold to
the public. The revenues from the sale
of the platted lots would be devoted to
the erection of a state capitol and other
public buildings.
The plan. Is not conceived for imme
diate needs, but looks far into the fu
ture. As he would have it carrired out
the srtate institutions would remain where
they are until outgrown by the needs
of the state, but as often as new build
ings were required the would be located
in the new capital city. It is his con
tention that a capitol building, at least,
could bo thus built from the sale of the
platted lands and that the concentration
of the Institutions in one locality would
mean a saving of millions of dollars In
future expenditures for maintenance.
Some such tract as that embracing
American Lake. Stellacoom Asylum and
the wveral small bodies of water in that
locality Is suggested as available, the
state's holdings to extend to tide
water. Officials here with whom the subject
has been discussed are far from optimis
tic over the chances of Inducing the I
legislature to take up such a plan.
Fourteen state Institutions are scattered
among 12 counties, many of which are
of the bigger counties in population. It
Is conceded that each of these 12 coun
ties would oppose any plan that would
encompass the loss of the Institution lo
cated therein, even in the distant fu
ture. The three normal schools are lo
cated in Whatcom, Kittitas and Spokane
counties; the two insane asylum in Spo
kane and Pierce counties; the two sol
diers' homes In Pierce and Kitsap coun
ties; the penitentiary in Walla Walla
County; state training school in Lewis
County; reform school in Snohomish
County; school for deaf and blind in
Clark County; university in King County:
state college in Whitman County and the
state capitol in Thurston County.
Thirty-one of the 42 members of the
Senate are. from counties which now have
state institutions located in them, while
in the House membership of 95 there are
61 from the same counties. Even with
the location of the new capital city con
ceded to Pierce County, a majority of
the members of the legislature would
naturally be opposed to the measure.
EXILES BACKjJAILS EMPTY
(Continued from First Page.)
lions to settle the differences between
Venezuela and France and Holland.
CASTRO'S EXTUADITIOX ASKKD
Demand of Gomez, However, to Bo
Opposed by United States.
WASHINGTON. Dec. 27. (Special.)
News contained in a special cable dis
patch from Caracas today to the effect
that Acting President Juan V. Gomez, of
Venezuela, may demand the extradition
of President Castro, is considered here as
Important from more than one point of
view.
Aside from the complications which
may result In Venezuela from such a
move, officials here foresee difficulty in
obtaining the consent of Germany to
allow President Castro to be taken out
l I I ll V 'rx Iff h' M H if
MOOT CALVARY CHAPEL, CARACAS
PRESIDENT SIMON'S BODYGUARD.
of the country as well as a decided
divergence of opinion between the acting
president of Venezuela and the State
Department.
Despite the grievance of the t'nited
States Government against President
Castro, the State Department, if It fol
lows precedent, will strongly oppose the
extradition of the Venezuelan president.
Any effort on the part of S-enor Gomez
to obtain the sanction of the United
States will be met with the barrier of
precedent regarding extradition for politi
cal offenses which the State Department
has established, and it is said here today
that the State Department can readily
refer to many similar attempts at ex
tradition which have nearly embroiled the
United States in war with foreign powers
because of the strict adherence of the
Secretary of State to the rule that for
a political offense committed In a foreign
country there is no law of extradition
applicable.
What the attitude of Germany will be
In case Acting President Gomez makes
request for extradition Is discussed in
official circles here.
ABRUZZi TO CLIMB PEAK
ADVEXTrKOVS ITALIAN" PLAXS
COXQUEST OP HIMALAYAS.
Will Try to Reach Greater Height
Than Any Former Moun
taineer. ROME, Dec. 26. (Special.) The Corri
ere Delia Sera is informed that the Duke
of the Abruzzl has decided to undertake
a climbing expedition to the Himalayas.
His Royal Highness will start from Italy
with some companions, two guides and
six porters, strong mountaineers from
the Aosta Velley, toward the end of
March, and will arrive at the foot of the
great range at the most convenient sea
son for climbing one of the highest
peaks, which ' may be Mt Everest. In
any case, said the guide, Guiseppe Pet
lgax, who will accompany the duke, to
a representative of the Corrlere, there
are in Nepal many virgin peaks, and
even without climbing Everest it Is al
ways possible to attain a greater height
than has so far been reached. The
other guide enlisted in the expedition
is Cipriano Savoy. Both guides -went
with the duke on his memorable expe
giitttxn toward the North Pole.
o 7 - ' ' I
!: . , - 'f V !
t ' M I - t
0 i t I
t t ' ' ' h " I
1 t - J I
lM ? -
t PreNident Simon.
a
PLAN APPEAL COURT
New Division of Judicial Work
in Washington.
SIMILAR TO FEDERAL PLAN
Scheme Is to Relieve Supreme Court
ol Work and to Expedite Judi
cial Decisions Bill for
Legislature to Discuss.
OLYMPIA. Wash.. Dec. 27. An im
portant bill that will be presented to the
coming session of the Legislature will
provide for the subrnlssion of a constitu
tional amendment to the voters which
will create a district court of appeals in
this state.
The features -of the bill have been de
cided upon by leading members of the
SLate Bar Association although the as
sociation has not taken it up as a body,
and the drafting of the measure is in the
hands of an officer of that organization.
The bill will call for the creation of
three district courts, two of which will
sit in Western Washington and the third
in Eastern Washington. Each court is
to have two judges who will receive a
salary of 15040 each. The third member
of each District Court will be one of the
regular superior judges or a member of
the Supreme Court as convenience at the
time of sitting may p-nnlt. The Quirt
of Appeals will be empowered to sit also
as a trial court In the event'of laxity of
business. The present Supreme Court,
under the provisions of the new measure,
will remain unchanged as to number of
justices, but by the relieving of that
judicial body of a large part of Its labors
It is believed the business of the court
will permit the members to participate
In the hearings in the Court of Appeals
at intervals. With such an Appellate
Court In existence the Supreme Court
would consider onlv cases in which law
points were involved. The App?llate Court
would be the final arbiter In all cases
where the Issues were questions of fact.
In one district the court would sit in
Seattle, Everett, Belllngham or any
other city selected in its discretion within
a prescribed district. In Eastern ash
lngton tjie principal places for holding
court would be Spokane, nana uaiia
nd North Yakima; and In the south
western district the court there would sit
in Tacoma, Aberdeen and Vancouver.
Tha general plan Is very similar to that
under which the United Spates Circuit
Court of Appeals is organized.
Members of the bar have been consider
ing the advisability of creating some such
Appellate Court In this state for some
time, as a result of the growtn ot nusi-
ness in the state supreme uoun wuicn
It Is claimed is now of such volume as
to be bevond the power of the seven
judges to handle expeditiously. The bill
Droviding for the submission ot sucn con
stltutional amendment will probably be
prepared by C. Will Shaffer, secretary
of the State Bar Association, and state
law librarian.
Another measure to be presented in
which the State Bar Association is in
terested. Is a bill that will provide for
the establishment of county law libraries.
The Plan is to increase the Superior
Court fees and devote the increase to the
establishment of libraries in each county.
Kindness Makes Him Bright.
St. Louis Cor. New York Times.
Miss Gladys Williams, a teacher in the
St. Louis County Public Scnool, in a
paper read at the county teachers'
meeting, told how the word "Dear"
made a dull pupil become the leader
of his class.
"An 8-year-old boy had been in my
class nearly a year without snowing
any capacity for absorbing knowledge,"
she said.
"He just wouldn't study, and I had
about given him up as hopeless. But
one day he did something that pleased
me, and I said to him, 'that was very
nice, dear.'
'At recess he came to me smiling
and said:
' 'Teacher, you are the first one that
ever called me 'dear.'
"He was so proud of It that he asked
me to write a letter to his father certi
fying that I considered him a dear. His
brother heard of It, and he worked hard
in the hope that I would speak kindly
to htm, too. After that those two boys
were the best pupils I had, and there
was great rivalry between them."
Out of every million
through the postofflce It
Anlv on anu ULrAv.
letters that pass
Is calculated that
Sidelights on Vanquished Dictator
Show Him in Anything hut Fa
vorable Light as Tax-Dodger
and Worthless Extortionist.
WASHINGTON. Dec. 27.-(SpeciaU
Since Cipriano Castro. President of
Venezuela, nas lett his country but
sngnt regret over his departure and
Hiioscquent vicissitudes have been ex
pressed on the part of the people over
whom he has tyrannized and whom he
una impoverisnea. since 1899. when, at
the head of a revolutionary army, he
drove his predecessor. President An-
orade. from the capital and made him
self absolute ruler of Venezuela. Cascro
seems to have had but one object In
view, namely, to enrich himself. And
in this he has succeeded to an amazing
extent.
Naturally no person knows, nor can
an estimate he made .of the wealth
wnich Castro has garnered at the ex
pense of the poor and rich alike among
me Venezuelans. It Is pretty definitely
Known that for years he has been send
ing vast sums of money to England
ana tins fact lends color to the belie
that his departure for EuroDe. ostensi
bly to consult a noted physician con
cerning a serious malady, was only an
other of his tricks, perpetrated In or
der safely to escape from the country
which expects to see him no more.
Ten years ago Castro was practically
unknown. Born of obscure parents in
trie province of San Antonio In 18(10,
he grew up practically without eduea
tion. He drifted to the province of El
Gachero and divided his time between
sampling coffee beans for a German
firm at Maracaiho and running a small
cattle ranch near San Cristobal. He
had the reputation of carrying on a
smuggling business along the Colom
bian border, and one of his favorite
tricks to escape paying taxes on his
cattle was to drive them Into Colom
blan territory -whenever the tax col
lector came around.
He was not the only one in the
Andes who resorted .to such measures,
for the government officials were mcr
clless in their taxation methods and
robbed the people to enrich themselves.
A rural wit once remarked that Castro
ought to be exempt from taxation on
his cattle, fts anyone could see by In
specting the brands that they did not
really belong to him.
As a tax dodger Castro was emlncn
Iy successful until one day the Vene
zuelan officials and the Colombian offi
cials got together and Castro and otli
ers found themselves between two tires
Unable to pay, his cattle were confis
cated.
Having no means of support, Castro
raised the standard of revolt, gather
Ing about him the mountain men, who.
like himself, were discontented with
the government. In three weeks he
had captured the capital of the prov
Ince, and with his army, which was
being augmented constantly by whole
sale desertions from among the govercv
ment troops, he marched on Caracas.
He opened the jails as he progressed,
and with 600 or 700 followers met the
remnant of loyal troops at Valencia
and won an easy victory. Andrade was
a well-intentioned but weak man and
unpopular with the politicians because
he was honest. Disgusted at the treacri
ery of his troops and his officials, he
fled to Haiti, and Castro promptly en
tered Caracas and proclaimed himself
president.
Some years previously he had served
in the federal congre.s as representative
from his province. He was uncouth and
dlrtv and cordially hated by his col
leagues. Having come Into power he
did not hesitate to wreak vengenaee or.
those of his former fellow legislators
against whom he had entertained and
nursed a bitter feeling. Some were Im
prisoned, some assassinated and some ex
iled. He began at once the reign of ter
ror which he since has continued.
Gradually he effected a system of
spoliation which In the end gave him an
almost complete monopoly of every Im
portant Industry in the country. He
bled the poor and rich alike from the
cradle to the grave. He owns the only
flour mills in Venezuela and he runs tho
only undertaking establishment hi that
unhappy land. There is but one brewery
and that belongs to Castro. The duty on
Imported beer Is so high that nobody
can afford to drink it. and it is a case of
drink Castro beer or go without. He
sells all the Ice used at 5 cents a pound.
The national cigarette factory is an
other of Castro's institutions. It sup
plies all Venezuela with cigarettes. The
importation of cigarette papers and to
bacco is prohibited. To roll one's own
cigarette is a prison offense. Pipes are
under the ban.
Castro gets a share of the receipts of
all the theaters and controls the Bank
of Venezuela and the Caracas Bank. He
also controls the only newspaper al
lowed to be published in the country,
and the people are fed with laudatory
editorials which compare Castro to Julius
Caesar. Hannibal and Napoleon. Tha
versatile President also owns the elec
tric light industry, and the duty on gas
AFTER THE GRIPPE
Tinol Bestored This Man's
Strength
"Several years ago I was attacked by
a severe case of grippe, which left me
with a hacking cough, soreness in my
chest, and bronchitis. I took nearly
every kind of cough syrup sold on the
market, besides medicine given me by
physicians.
I received no permanent relief until
my druggist asked me to try VInol,
and after taking three bottles I was
entirely cured.
I believe Vinol to be the greatest
blessing ever offered to the public, as
it does what is claimed for it." R. E. R.
Hicks, Maplesville, Ala.
The reason Vinol cures chronic
coughs, colds and pulmonary troubles
Is because it contains tonic iron and
all the healing and body building ele
ments of cod liver oil but no oil.
Vinol is also unexcelled as a strength
builder for old people, delicate children,
weak and run-down persons, and after i
sickness.
Woodard, Clarke & Co., DrngglsU,
Portland.
166-170 Third Street.
Pre-Inventory
Half-Price Sale
Of interesting items in Men's
Furnishings :
$10.00 House Coats. . $5.00
$ 6.00 Bath Eobes. . . .$3.00
$ 5.00 Fancy Vests. . .$2.50
$ 3.00 Wool Sweaters $1.50
$ 2.00 Holiday Suspend
ers $1.00
$ 1.00 Fancy Neckwear 50
$ .50 Fancy Neckwear 25?
WE ADVERTISE
FACTS ONLY
and pip hiii oi!pimq is so hipli that every
body is i-oinpi'llod to buy rlrtru: power
from Castro. All tin paper in the coun
try comes from CH.-nro't paper mills.
Foreign made envelopes cost 10 cent
each because of high duty.
Cnstro collects his tinnl perquisite
from the citizens when they die. Hole
owner of the only undertaking estab
lishment in Venezuela, he charges from
$2X) up for a funeral. Those who nr-3
too poor to a fiord f um-raKs rrnift pay
him Jllo before the bmjy can he con
sinned, coffinli-ss. to t!if earth.
Mrs. i 'astro also own. a trust. She
has the only public market in Vene
zuela and receives a percentage on every
sale.
Castro left Venezuela a 1 must secretly
after issuing: an official denial that he
was goinff. The country is impoverished
and facing- serious difficulties, while
Castro is reveling- in luxury at Berlin,
an object of curiosity, but rmt of re
spect. Bathe daily !
It is the finest kind of
health-insurance; and
the cheapest.
All you need is a bath
tub, water, a cake of
Ivory Soap and a coarse
towel.
Ivory Soap is far
and away the best bath
soap there is. It floats.
It lathers freely. And
a cake of it is so large
that it covers a lot of
surface, quickly and
thoroughly.
Ivory Soap . . It Floats.
19
New Cuban
Tobaccos
TIT Til are pleased to announce
yy that we are using the new
' r :
crop ol Havana tobaccos
in our Jose Vila Cijjars. These
Tobaccos are fully cured and in
prime condition and equal to the
celebrated 19U5 crop. You may
have had cause to complain of
your favorite brands. Jose Vila
will please you.
This Is the Cigar that
received FIRST AWARD
for General Excellence
BERMM.Ci DR0S
Makers
Tampa. Fla.
j ELMHURST k
ur,j.l9 ,U ofcJU-y Aj-'
SAPOLIO
FOR TOILET AND BATH
Delicate enough for the softest
kin, and yet efficacious in removing
any stain. Keeps the skin in perfect
condition. In the Bath gives all tha
desirable after-effects of a Turkish
bath. It should be on every wash
atand.
4XJt GEOCILRS AND DRUGOTHT
n
U Maker.
g Tampa. Fla. V
CAMPBFXL- 13 B
If i)ilrihulr. . M