Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, April 16, 1910, Page 12, Image 12

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    12
THE MORNING OREGONIAN, SATURDAY, APRIL ''16, 1910.K
WALKS 127
MILES -TO COURT
Oregon Homesteader Arrives
in Portland Ragged
and Footsore.
SET FOREST FIRE; ADMITS
Hearing of Secret ' Indictment
Against Him, Cnrry County Resl
' dent Hurries to . Surrender.
Doesn't "Wait on Officials.
Traveling 127 miles on foot from his
wooded homestead in Currx County, in
' the southwestern corner of Oregon to
Grants Pass, where he was able to se
cure railroad transportation, Edward O.
' Gardner yesterday surrendered in the
Vnlted States Court to answer the
! charge of having wilfully set out a forest
fir In August of last year.
Ragged and footsore, his face gaunt,
wrinkled and brown from exposure to the
weather, Mr. Gardner appeared In com
pany with his attorney, C. M. Idleman.
There had been no expensive expeditions
; from the office of the United States
I Marshal In search of the lonely habita
tion where dwelt the man who was for
' the second time attempting to secure a
: foothold on the gTeat haJf-heznlsphefS
governed by the Stars and Stripes.
Along the underground wire by which
news travels In the backwoods. Ed
Gardner became aware of the fact that
'he was wanted by the Government, and
he came.
Homesteader Says Not Guilty.
As he appeared In court. Assistant Dis
trict Attorney Evans appeared throujrh
another door, the arraignment was held
and Homesteader Gardner pleaded not
guilty to having caused the destruction
of a largo part of the Siskiyou National
Forest by a fire which is alleged to have
been wilfully set by him.
Looking at the hardy pioneer of the
woods, and in response to the suggestion
of" the office of the District Attorney,
Judge Bean ordered that Gardner be re
leased upon his own recognizance.
"I don't want to talk about the case
now," said Mr. Gardner. "'I was ad
vised by one of my friends that the grand
Jury had returned a secret indictment
against me, and I came here as soon as
possible. There -was a fire in that dis
trict in August of last year for which
I was responsible.
"It happened this way: I was up in the
woods and was smoking. When the pipe
was apparently empty I knocked it out
against the heel of my shoe, and went on
about my business.
Xot Single Tree Killed.
"Later a fire broke out and burned
the undergrowth over an area of three
acres. It did not kill a. single tree. When
I heard through some of my friends here
that I- was wanted I came overland. I
might have gotten here by boat but could
not figure that to be the better and
quicker way."
When asked why an arrest had not
been made In the case. United States
Marshal Reed responded by saying that
he had not notified Gardner of the war
rant for his arrest being issued, nor did
he explain why he had not sent a deputy
to apprehend the prisoner. Assistant
District Attorney Evans also denied that
Information as to the action of the grand
Jury had been furniBhed from that
office.
Mr. Gardner has been divorced, and at
that time surrendered all his worldly
possessions.' He is now trying to again
get started on the West Coast and is la
boring among the sawmills and Indus
tries of Curry County for the chance-
MME. OTHICK IS COMING
Apollo Club Announces Soloist for
Concert May 9.
The board of directors of the Apollo
Club announce Mme. Ijotta Ashby Othick
as soloist of the forthcoming concert to
be given Monday evening. May 9".
This will be the first -appearance in
Portland, of Mme. Othick and it may be
safely predicted that she will only dupli
cate her recent triumphs in Seattle. Her
work measures up to any of the best con
cert singers and compares very favorably
with such opera stars as Mmes. Gadskl,
Eames. and Schumann-Heink. Especially
remarkable Is her recent and sudden ad
vance Into the ranks of great opera divini
ties which is without precedent or par
allel In the music annals of the North
west. Mme. Othick Is a distinctly Western
product. In commending her recent work
with the Seattle Symphony Orchestra
the Seattle Daily Times says:
"Mme. Othick's voice Is wondrously
beautiful its purity ind clarity, its tre
mendous dramatic power, its1 range and
sympathy, all qualify her for the artistic
and adequate handling of the greatest of
soprano roles In grand opera. Her per
sonality is not less winsome and charm
ing, while her art, as shown strikingly in
the tremendous fortura manner In which
site Jtook the climax (in arpeggios) in the
Weber aria from "Oberon" will be readi
ly conceded the equal of any of the stars
from New York or even Europe who
have been heard", here in the past few
years."
WOMEN NON-PRODUCERS
Protest Against Above Phrase.
What of Child-Bear ing?
PORTLAND. Or., April 15. (To the Edi
tor.) I ask that Th Oregrmian oblige
Us raanv int rented women readers to print
a protest sent by the president of the Ore
gon State Equal Suffrage Association, to
register their objection against being rated
in the census as non-producers.
Every one of the many -who are making
this request, by letter, telephone or repre
sentative of some home-keeping mother or
grandmother who is too busy In her so
called "ungalnful" occupation to call In
person, requests m to say for them that
they have and are doing their full share of
work In' state and Katlon as producers of
the men and women of the future; that they
have done and are now doing this necessary
work at their personal bodily peril; that
tha mothering and rearing of children is the
most gainful of all occupations and ought
to be so recognised. In -addition to these
labors, many thousands of women are labor
ing daily In the home to provide for the
comfort and well-being of men, and be
sides, are often engaged in extra work. In
doors and out, to raise money to pay taxes
for the support of government, the preacher
and foreign missions and help to meet all
sorts of current expenses unless, as does
happen, the husband Is sometimes bereft
by death or desertion. In which case he
soon tires of hiring a housekeeper and seeks
a wife the only "servant without wages"
now existing under the Stars and Stripes.
To all of this I say in reply, so that
every voter, as well as every woman who
reads The Oregonlan, can understand, that
I am glad the census Is bringing women to
their senses, xna toast way to make an un
Mi
just law obnoxious is to enforce it. A wo
man from Idaho called yesterday at suf
frage headquarters to know what Oregon
women are doing for the suffrage campaign.
She was answered, "We are doing as tha
women did in Idaho. They got the ballot
through the votes of men. "We are attempt
ing to do likewise."
An editorial in- The Oregonlan of yester
day cites the fact that women who live
in boardlng houses are non-producers. But
these women are too few In number to be
Justly compared, to the tens of thousands of
Oregon mothers who make the homes of
the land and produce and, rear the men
and women of tha Nation.
If everybody interested would read the
full text of the dispatch from Washington,
XX O, which appeared in The Oregonlan
this morning under the heading, "President
Hissed By Suffragists." nobody could fail
to see that tha President of the United
States, who honored the National Woman
Suffrage Convention by 'welcoming It to
Washington, . C, was not hissed by the
promoters of the suffrage movement, but
by Its "fool friends," chiefly outsiders or
new converts, who embarrass every worthy
movement by the exhibition of more seal
than discretion. i
Nobody expected the President, backed
and sustained as he is by a rabble of antl"
voters on the one hand and a "trust" of
millionaire voters on the otKer. to take
any other than a politician's view of the
possible extension of the electorate to a
voteless class who have no power, to keep
him in office. -
That the suffrage movement. In reality,
received a great forward Impulse by the
President's welcome Is shown by the alarm
of the nine anti-suffrafflste of New Tork.
!r " v '
Edward G. Gardner. Who Travel
Over One Hundred Miles Afoot
to Surrender to Court In Portland.
who sent him & letter of protest which Jre
had. the good Judgment to ignore.
Yesterday I was besieged all day by suf
fragists mothers In every instance save one
'Who protested against being classed by
the census as "non-producers."
. ABIGAIL SCOTT DUNIWAT.
INTEREST IS DEFAULTED
Paget Bound Telephone Misses Pay
ment, Pending: Suit.
Interest payments for the, Puget Sound
Home Telephone bonds were defaulted
yesterday, owing- to the suit recently In
stituted by the Portland Home Telephone
Company in the Federal Court at Ta
coma, asking for the appointment of a
receiver. As many of these bonds are
held in this city, the announcement -con
cerns a large number of Portland people.
The Portland company brought ult on
Wednesday, April 13, the avowed object
being to "squeeze the water out of the
bonds" and force the Tacoma company
to pay its indebtedness to the Portland
company.
Failure to pay interest does not mean
that this payment is lost to the bond
holders. It is understood, that the pay
ment is merely deferred until after the
affairs of the Sound company are ad
justed by th receiver.
The suit was instituted by the Hill in
terests in the Portland company. It 1b
believed that the receivership win end
within 90 days and that the interest will
be paid then. Tha bonds have been, pay
ing 6 per oent interest semi-annually ever
sinoe Issued and this is the first time in
the history of the company that the
bondholders were unable to collect their
money.
CHAMPOEG MEET PLANNED
Celebration Will See 100 Pioneers
In Attendance.
Commemorating the 67th anniversary
of the convention and in honor of the
tenth anniversary of the erection of the
monument that now marks the spot of
the convention, a grand celebration will
be held May 2 at Champoeg, scene of the
famous Champoeg convention.
It has been estimated that over 100
pioneers will go out to Champoeg from
Portland. The Oregon Historical Socie
ty will be well represented.
P. H. D'Arcy, of Salem, will act as
chairman and Willis S. Duniway, of
Portland, will give the annual address.
A danoe in Buttevllle will follow the
celebration.
It is desired to make the celebration in
the line of a lunch basket affair. Spe
cial transportation arrangements have
been made to reach Champoeg. The
Oregon City Transportation Company
boat will leave Portland at 6:45 A. M..
and round-trip tickets Will be sold for
50 oents. Those traveling by the Oregon
Electric may catch the steamer at WH
sonvllle at 11 A. M. The flyer, leav
ing Portland at 9:15 A. M. will stop at
Wilsonvllle to connect with the boat.
The celebration is being held by F. X.
Matthieu's Cabin, No. 12. Native Sons
of Oregon. F. X. Matthleu Is the sole
survivor of the Champoeg convention.
RIOT PROBE NEARLY OVER
Grand Jury at St. Johns Examines
90 Whites and 30 Hindus.
After finishing its work of investi
gating the Hindu riots at St. Johns
yesterday afternoon, the grand Jury
went across the river to investigate
the county rock crusher. Deputy Dis
trict Attorney Garland remarked he
was well satisfied with the results of
the session' and expected several in
dictments to be reported after five
more witnesses had been examined la
Portland. A great number of wit
nesses, 90, was -examined and many
hundred dollars is said to have been
saved to the county. Besides the white
witnesses, 25 or. 30 Hindus, some of
whom were recalled several times,
were on the stand.
Mr. Garland also said that several
participants in the riot who had left
St. Johns had been .located, and were
being watched pending the report of
the grand Jury.
1 ' - i
A Healthful Hint.
A bottle of the Hood Brewing Com
pany's famous Bock Beer to ward off
that tired feeling. Phone E. 139, B 1319.
Chamberlain's- Stomach and Liver
now" inTunaoiy oring . relief to
women suffering from chronic consti
pation, headache, biliousness, dizziness,
sallowness of the skin and dyspepsia.
Sold by all dealers.' i
WIMTO BE RUSHED
Bull Run Pipe Line . May Be
Completed in November. .
BIG FORCE TO BE EMPLOYEd
Northwest Bridge Company la Constructing-
Easy Grade Wagon '
- Roads Over Which Material
Will Be Conveyed.
Despite the fact that the contract for
the laying of the additional pipe line
from Bull Rim to Portland calls for the
work to be completed in October, 1911,
the assurance is made through the
Northwest Bridge Works, which will
construct the line, that the work will
be completed by November of this year,
should no unforseen delays arise. The
contract for building the pipe line to the
new city reservoir, a distance of 24
miles, was awarded to the Shaw-Batcher
Company, of Sacramento, on its bid of
1,269,782. This contract will now be ex
ecuted by the Northwest Bridge Works,
of Portland, which is closely affiliated
with the Shaw-Batcher Company.
It Is on the assumption that by fast
work much more can be accomplished
than by slow, and that fast work is
cheaper than slow, that the sub-contractors
have decided to rush their work
to an early completion. Despite the fact
that this Is the largest contract ever
awarded for a single piece of work In
Portland, the contractors are not at all
dismayed by the immunity of their task,'
but are already preparing to assemble
their material, teams and labor for car
rying the work to a hasty completion.
A great portion of the supplies will
come from Portland and vicinity, the
labor will come from Portland, and in
fact the great portion of the. money to
be expended will be spent in Portland,
the pipe being the single exception. .
Full Flow of Stream Taken.
This pipe will be furnished by the East
Jersey Pipe Company, of Paterson, New
Jersey. It will be "lock and bar" pipe.
and a total of 11,000 tons will be. re
quired to lay the line between the two
points. Two sizes will be used, 14 miles
of the line being laid with 44-inch pipe
and 10 miles with 62-lnch pipe. This pipe
comes in 30-foot lengths, and Is specially
treated with a coating of liquid com
pound to prevent corrosion or electro
lysis. ,
These pipes will make a great drain
on the waters of the limpid Bull Run
on the slODes of Mount Hood. The
present line supplies Portland with 25,-
000,000 gallons every 24 hours. The
additional line will send in an addi
tional 60,000,000 gallons every 24 hours
and so great will be the tax placed
upon the clear mountain stream that
practically every drop of water in Bull
Run 'will be diverted into the great
flumes ,at low water.
The amount of work necessary in
the completion of this pipe line can be
comprehended by an outline of the ma
terials to be used and the labor to be
employed. According to John Bowles,
of the Northwest Steel Works, which
is interested in the sub-contracting on
this work, the hauling of the pipe will
require the services of 100 teams for
five months. Between 15,000 and 20,000
cubic ' yards of gravel will toe required
for filling around the pipe, and the
movement of this gravel will require
an additional 100 teams, while the dirt
work and excavating will require 100
teams and two immense steam shovels
of the trenching pattern. These steam
shovels will start at Lusted and the
reservoir, and by working ten hours a
day, can remove the dirt in 150 days.
The aggregate weight of the materials
and gravel used in constructing the
line is placed at about 60,000 tons, all
of which will have to be" moved by
teams.
Roads Built to Haul Material.
To facilitate this work, the North
west Bridge Company is now building
roads along the working line. s These
roads will be built with a maximum of
five per cent grade. It would be im
possible to transport the immense
amount of material over the roads
now found: along the proposed pipeline.
This new road will be completed by
June 1.
The work of excavating the ditch for
the pipeline is one of the Immense
tasks in connection with- the new wa
ter supply for. Portland. A "total of
250,000 cubic yards of material will
have to be removed and about one
quarter of this will be stone and rock
work, and will require drilling and
blasting. For taking the pipe over
ravines it will be necessary In places
to construct Bteel trusses and bridges,
and this material will all bo supplied
by the Northwest Bridge Company.
Tarda will be established at different
points along the O. W. P. for the as
sembling of, material. The contract
ing firm will start laying pipe from
both ends on July 1. From that time
until November the mountains to the
east of the city will be the scene of
a great amount of labor after which
the company in charge of the work ex
pects to be able to turn over to the
city a line which will supply enough
pure- water to Portland to meet the de
mand for at least a decade to come.
FUGITIVE ARRESTED AGAIN
Edward Patterson, Escaped From
Denver, Taken at Kansas City.
Telegraphic advices received by Con
stable Wagner yesterday announce the
arrest of Edward Patterson in Kansas
city. Patterson Is wanted here for the
alleged theft of J665, said to have been
taken while he was in the employ of
Thomas Murphy, a horse-dealer at Nine
teenth and Washington streets. Patter
son had been sent to Seattle to sell a
load of horses. It is said, and after get
ting the money for the animals returned
to Portland, made some sort of excuse
about delay with the money, and fled.
Through the innocence of his 4-year-old
daughter, Patterson's location was dis
covered, the child babbling on the day
Constable Wagner visited Patterson's
wife and the latter had denied knowledge
of her husband's movements, that'
"daddy" had gone to Denver, and that
they were preparing to pack their be
longings and follow him there.
Patterson was located in Denver, ar
rested, released upon his own recog
nizance by the Chief of Police of Denver,
and violating his parole, fled to Kansas
City. He was captured there and Is
being held awaiting the arrival of Dep
uty Constable Rennick, who was sent by
Constable Wagner to Denver to bring
him back.
Medford Depot Makes Progress.
MEBTORD, Or., April IS. (Special.)
The foundation of the new $50,000 South
ern Pacific depot has been completed.
Contractor 'Blgrham has arrived with a
crew of bricklayers who will work on
the walls. A large crew is. getting- out
Kranlte for tha building.
- . -vv'S'" -
' ' - TW'-C i - ' ' J" . "....V: ' .-S. V jf a-. i .
Filled with butter and piled one on top of the other,
these cartons would make a perpendicular column 34 times
as high as Mt Hood.
The paper they contain would make a wrapper for the
Wells-Fargo, Corbett, Oregonian, Board of Trade and a
half dozen more of Portland's biggest sky-scrapers.
Laid but on Portland's streetcar tracks, these cartons
would cover every rail, and still leave enough for several
carloads of White Clover Butter.
The- White Clover Butter they will contain would
spread a slice of bread for""every one of Uncle Sam's 100,
000,000 people, and each of the 100,000,000 would pronounce
the butter as delicious as butter can be and when it's
White Clover brand it's superlatively delicious.
It takes a good many cartons to hold all the White
Clover Butter made by the Townsend Creameries for the
LIMIT FIXED AT 75
Portland Business Men's Ex
cursion Plans Complete.
VALLEYS WILL BE SEEN
Schedule Arranged With View of
Giving Opportunity to Travelers
of Seeing Great Resources
In Daylight.
The excursion of Portland buFlness
men through the three great valleys of
the' Willamette, Umpqua and Rogue
rivers, and on to Klamath Falls, posi
tively will be limited to 75, according to
a statement made yesterday. The few
reservations left - will be taken without
delay it Is believed.
The train will be equipped with every
modern convenience of railroad accom
modation and the schedule has been bo
arranged that every moment of the four
days' of daylight will be siient In the
populous sections of the Willamette,
Umpqua and Rogue River Valleys and
Klamath Falls.
The special train will pull out of the
union station at 5:36 P. M. on Monday,
April 25. Dinner will be served on the
run to Salem and the evening will be
spent at the capital city.
Exactly at 10:30 o'clock Salem will be
left behind and Just after breakfast the
next morning the Rogue "River' Valley
will be entered, the first stop being made
at Grants Pass, and the entire day until
IX o'clock at night will give the 75 rep
resentative business men of Portland the
best opportunity they have ever had to
see the resource of the Rogue River
Valley.
Resources to Be Seen.
The scenic portion of the trip, of in
terest to the tourist, but of only inciden
tal interest to Portland citizens on euch
a trip as this, will be traversed at
night.
Early on the morning of the 20th, after
breakfast, the party will arrive at
Klamath Falls, and from 7 A. M. until
6:80 P. M. will have an opportunity to see
that city and thte section of which it is
the metropolis.
Returning the members of the party
will find themselves in the delightful
valley of Umpqua, reaching Roseburg
after breakfast, to spend two hours in
that thriving city.
From noon on the 36th until evening
of the 28th numerous stops will be made
In all sections of the Willamette Val
ley, the party spending the night of the
28th a Albany. In speaking of the ex
cursion Manager Richardson of the Com
mercial Club said:
"No trip ever planned before has given
Portland business men eurh a chance to
see so much of productive Oregon In
broad daylight. No other state in the
Union could offer a four days' trip of
such diversity. .
"Portland business men taking this trip
will not only find reasons for being proud
of Oregon, but It will give them renewed
and Invigorated confidence in the future
of Portland, for behind the growth of
this city and adding to Its support and
substantiability are a great number of
communities who are giving the entire
20th century world new patterns In mod
ern progress. Great dairy and' orchard
sections which are not only the pride of
Oregon, but of the United States, are
embraced in this trip.
Schedule to Be Maintained.
"The entire cost is included In the
ticket for $53 transportation, Pullman,
meals and tips. The great state educa
tional institutions and centers of culture
throughout the state will be seen on this
trip. . .
"The Southern ' Pacific Company has
figured out a schedule which is admir
able, and has given advance assurance
that it will be kept to the minute, the
trains arriving and departing exactly on
time from every station."
Following Is a list, of names added yes
terday to the excursion list, bringing the
total to 57: William Albers. Albers Bros.
Milling Company: TT. C. Campbell, Pa
, dflc Urldgo Company ; R. G. Callvert, of
A, CARLOAD
Just Received in Portland
The Oregonian; John K. Carroll, of the
Telegram; Clyde livans, of Campbell &
Evans; F. Frledlander; F. D. Glbbs. Tull
& Glbbs; Ralph M. Hoyt, Edwin S.
Hooker, of Hartman & Thompson; J. H.
Mackenzie: R. B. Miller, traffic manager
of the O. R. & N., and J. H. McClung.
Safecracker in lioie .Prison.
James Dunbar, alias Whitey Will
iams, believed by Sheriff Stevens- to be
one of a gang which blew up the safe
of Harlow Bros.' general merchandise
store at Troutdale two years ago, is
said by Deputy Sheriff Archie LeonaTd
to be serving an Indeterminate sen
tence of from 10 to 25 years in the
Boise penitentiary under the name of
Fred Harris for having blown a safe
of the Boise Ice-cream Company, at
Ik
herman Wl&y Co.
MORRISON AT SIXTH ST.
Grand opera at home
Home is more comfortable than an
opera house, and a better place to
enjoy the magnificent voices "of the
world's greatest opera stars.
You can bring to your own fireside for
an evening's entertainment on the Victor,
more famous artists than the largest opera
managers can afford to bring together for
even a single performance-
Think of the pleasure of hearing1 such a talented
group as Caruso Calve, Eames, Farrar, Gadski,
Homer, Plancon, Schumann-Heink," Scotti,
Sembrich and Tetrazzini whenever you want,
without going1 a single step away from home.
Doesn't that make you want to hear the Victor!
Stop in any time and satisfy your desire no
obligation to buy.
Victor, $10 to $100. Victrola, $125 to $250. Terms
to suit.
STORE OPEN TONIGHT
2lt E .kr-." WRCOMEB N mum Of
a m t-H wyIW I0BES. THESE IS NO
sealed f ijji " " r f; i m fm mn
POXES I J;;v' ihcbeasin. pemumir
I . .1 " V"""1, T" ""' " -i : '"V'turr V V-' '?;' !"UH) -Jt;waj!. laiimaq.
Photo by
OF CARTONS
for White Clover Butter
fancy trade in fact, it takes so many that the carload
brought here last year did not last. For several weeks the
butter has been sold without cartons, but this new supply
means that every housewife can procure her favorite brand
in the dust-proof cartons she likes so well.
raiTE
CARTON BUTTER
The Original Carton Butter of the Pacific Northweat
Manufactured Solely by
T. S. TOWNSEND CREAMERY CO.
Butter and Ice Cream
Main Offices Portland, Oregon
Boise on the night of October 22. Dun
bar was arrested after the robbing of
the Harlow store, and the taking of
property belonging to the postofflce,
which Is in the same building, but the
evidence was insufficient to convict.
Worse Than Bullets.
Bullets have often caused less suf
fering to soldiers than the eczema. 1
W. Harrlman, Burlington, Me., got in
the army, and suffered with, forty
years. "But Bucklen's Arnica Salve
cured me when all else failed." he
writes. Greatest healer for Sores,
Ulcers, Bolls, Burns, Cuts, Wounds,
Bruises and Piles. 25c at all drug
gists. One's too big one's too small! The
Gordon stiff hat in one-sixteenth sixes Is
Just right.
OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE
V
KUer, In O. R. & N. Freight Tarda.
CLOVER
Painless Dentistry
and K.4.Lr t -
iahod io one das
Wo will shis mo a mod
22k (old w porcelain
crown for $3.50
llalir IVr.,. fi Dfl
22kBridffeTMtl3.55
RnM Kilns 1. fl fl
Eouml rilDnca 100
' t 581lvr filling .911
flnlty Filling. 2.50
. , jujod Rubber .
a nan larmam rarruat FimlMt Eirr'tlon .S II
WORK GUARANTEED FOR 1 TWK
Ptlnleas Extraction i ree when platen or bridro wortr.
1. ordered. Consultation Free. Vjo cannot get beMe
ulnln. arirk done anywhere. . AU work fully ttinr.
cm teed. Modern elect no egmpmnnw
Wise Dental Co.
?r2.B PORTLAND, OREGON
H0CB8: A. H. to . U. Bandar. to U
Srrfii1; rficf ieftircc an1
causes life-long misery.
Children become strong
and lively when given small
doses of
Scott's Emulsion
every day. The starved body
is fed; the swollen glands
healed, and the tainted blood
vitalized. Good food, fresh
air and Scott's Emulsion
conquer scrofula and many
other blood diseases.
FOB SALS BY a IX DRUGGISTS
Send 10c.. name of paper and this ad. for oar
beautirul Savings Bank and Child's Sketch
Book. aoh bank contains a Oood Lack fenny.
SCOTT & BOWNE. 409 Parl St. N. V.
Regulate
the Bowels
"I have been troubled with
'constipation for several years,
and have tried a great many
kinds of pills, as well as medicine
from the doctor. Nothing
seemed to help me until I be
gan taking Dr. Miles' Nerve and
Liver Pills. I found the little
pills very effective, and I am
thankful that at last I have a
reliable remedy."
MRS. F. M. DUNKINa
LeRoy, Ills.
- Dr. Miles
Nerve and Liver Pills
simply cause the bowels to move
in a normal manner, and with
out the griping effects of cathar
tics and purgatives. That's why
they are so universally used by
women and children. The
longer they are taken the less
are needed. Natural conditions
gradually being restored.
Sold by druggists everywhere. If first
package does not benefit, your druggist
will return your money.
MILES MEDICAL. CO., Elkhart, Irvd.
5A - 1
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