13 T1TE "MORNING QREGOSIAX. "MONDAY. APRIL 3t 1911. . 6LASS.5H:.BLMAED BY COLLEGE WIPE Student's Allowance of-. $500 a Month Reduced to $5 a Week and Board. FATHER DELVES INTO PAST Mr. Ilrlrn Korhe ila.. - Who Yowng rortland Husband Ilia lf Her. Says 111 Trralmrni 1 Breaking lfrr .Heart. BASTOV. April 5. Miss Helen Roche Glut mH today that bar yunf Har vard student bun band. Graham Glass. Jr.. of rorUand. Or who only a month aso Impetuously sought her and made l.er r.'.s. wife, had deserted her. Ora harn Glass. Sr- nor husband's father. ha axserts. la responsible. Briefly, this Is Mrs. Glass story: -tiraham baa le:t ma- Two weeks ao hi father rami bora from Ma noma In orvffon. Ha cama irUr and ar ranced not to tiara his nam registered at the hotel where ha stopped. Ha was hare four days trying to dl UP my pant Th-n ha talked wllh Graham. Its robhed ma of my husband. IW-lnnj-Inx Taken Away. While I m away yesterday. Graham ram here with his father's Uyer and too, all h:a personal thlnfc. out of tha rlneet. 1 came noma Just as they left. Wriea they saw me tley a:ertd off furiously down tha atreet. "I love liraham and the way h I treettna me la hreahlnc my heart. I know liraNam mux tore n. for he broke of? an ensaaement to marry a irl attending- a -hol . aomew her In New Tor with hla Graham said lis father told him he Ud broken that sari's hert. I am sorry (or her. but Ura.iam Is niy husband. "U waa iorr about Graham" father. None of us knew he was In town not even Graham. On day he met Graham aa ha came out from hla cIj. Graham bad left ma that morning, bright and cheerful aa ar. H did not come horn and I ass terribly worried. Allowance Cat lHwn. Ttnatlj-. b returned and told ma hi father hd threatened to cut him off without a penny. When I married hlra be wa receiving a month, but aft. erwards h only got his board and lodg ing and 14 a week. Ha basn t given ma " a rent. 'Ttetectlvea hare been following ma ever alnra Graham left. I hare counted four different ones In one day. They seem to be working In relaja. We laughed at them." Graham Glass, father of tha young man. will return from the Kast today. It la presumed that h has been to Boa ton to stralahteo ut bis son's affairs. lra. Glass, last night, was not Inclined to dls-uss tha marriage or separation other than to aay It waa all a "boyish affair." DALLAS GETS INSTRUCTOR College ('alia Minister and Wife from Brarltlork. r. FMTTSItrRG. F"a.. April I Special.) Kev. Samuel II. Barlett. pastor af tha First I'nlted Krangeiical Church, t'orey street. North Braddork. and his wife. Mrs. Ida Blade Barlett. have ac cepted calls for their serrtree In the college town of Pallas. Or., be as pas tr of the I'nlted Kvantteltcal Church there, and aha aa a teacher. They will lear Sort h Braddork next September. Ir. Barlett waa Informed that the board of trustees of Dallas College desired him to take the chair f the bible la the college and at the same time Mrs. Itarlett was offered tha position of teacher of voire culture bnd also teacher of piano and organ In the musical conservatory of the college. MAKURA BREAKS RECORDS Antipodean IJner Three Data Ahead of Schedule at Victoria. VICTORIA. April I Breaking all records, the steamer Mtkurt arrived today from Australia three days In ed ven.e of her schedule. She beat the Te.-ord made by the turbine steamer Mo han la It by one day. There were passengers. Includ ing many prominent travelers bound to the coronation. ELECTION PLOT IS FOUND rerMnud Vr"TW T'.rwt Ts- v rinrt of the Third Ward on the last reg istration day. Detectives searching for Wilson tonight declare their belief that be had either been waylaid and killed r kidnaped and la held prisoner. "We have exhausted every meant of locating Wilson. said Edmund Adcock. one of the Merrlam lawyer- "We have examined This account) and also our papers and find them all right. We are positive he has been dealt with fotTTy. The Fire Ward chiefs know he baa valu able Information against them. He waa to appear next Wednesday In the fraud case pending before Municipal Judge Coil'tt. "Within the week "Wilson received niauiT threatening letter and was visited by several men who told him 'To keep band off or they would gel mm. -rolls to Be Guarded. Unknown to the henchmen of "Ilinky I'lnk" and "Bathhouse John" detectives of trie William J. Burns Agency have been among them every day and night for weeks. Arrangements nave been made for an army of secret service men to surround every polling place In tha Kirst Ward Tuesday anil to prevent the driving out of Merrlam challengers and watchers and to arreat any person at tempting to vote fraudulently. A reward of fov will be offered by the committee for Information leading to the arrest and conviction of any nersnn voting fraudulently or any eleotlon official found guilty of "crooked" work. F.verjr Voter to Be Scanned. The detectives have complied a list of 130 of Illegal voters In the Eigh teenth Ward and more than ISoO addi tional names have been added to a card Index system which contains a de scription of the voter for the us of the challenger. Armed with this In dex, tha challenger win acrmmis every voter enterinw a polling place andany man caught attempting fraud will be arrested at once. SEATTLE COMPOSER WHO COMPETES FOR $5000 OF! EP.ED TOR BEST AMERICAN OPERA. I ' . " CS&P v r , , v . - . V ' v - I. h-. ? - .. ' j. : . ' , ' "'"! .'A, r-' J- . rJ F': ' yr. vj : MR. MARV OPERA IS AMERICAN Seattle Woman Competes in $5000 Prize Contest. WHITMAN'S LIFE THEME lr. Mary Carr Moore Completlnf t'ompoaltlon Which l Aimed to Ileriect I.lfo of Farlj Da of Taclflc Xorthvet. crieriv W.ah Anrll iFDOclal.) Mrs. Mary. Carr Sloore. the talented musical composer or reame. tered upon tha competition for the i000 prlxe offered recently by the Metropolitan Opera Company of New York to tha American composer who .. . . wkl.K ahall ahall write ice oeei - - be typical In every respect of America. . nkn-.n martvr tn the march SaiTUH i ! in... . - - - of empire and one of th most fascinat ing of all the characters In American history. Is the theme of the grand Pra lust complete Dy jura. -""" - V. .. nnihr kfss. Moore Is the composer and Mra. Carr V "bf'- v. ..i.iR.T subiect 11- sr. " lustraUve of one of the largeat phaaea of National llf to th present time: and It la this phase of the pioneer, who waa not only pioneer but the prophet of progress aa well, that la exploited In tha new piece. Th, Coat of r.mplre." I the title se lected by Mra. Moore and Mra. Carr for . . k n-hltfn.n la tha figure around which all the other charactera are grouped, for there naa own fidelity to history In writing this opera. Whitman dominates the story and nls rellslou fervor ana paimniu 7 . .w. tha mastering emotions pictured In the work. With these are th struggiea sgainai .w. ..-. nt nature, the ln- meni. in - . trlgue and cunning of the conspirators and' tit final tragedy. . . . m-its s church scene. in oji . . .. for It begins at Rushvtlle. N. Y at the time Mrcu Whitman reiuma ... - ... vi.mi. Wm( ac tive vnuige irom -- rompanted by four blanketed Indians to aay good-bye before atartlng for the then far remote Oregon "They came with me to beg of you tha message of th Christ." saya Whit man, pointing to hla red brotners. And -nn It rievelona. Is tne mem - - -- --- - one of the Important themea of the opera. for It la typical oi m hiwvu.., -----which domlnatea throuahout. KIONnPlGliTES YET skrch xr LAS VKi.s vn- Dl'CTOK IS Kt'TIIE. Well-Know n Persona Suspected. Monnted Pollc Captain and Posse on Secret Mission. LAS VEGAS. N."3in April I. Though the abduction and ranaomlng of Wal lace Rogers, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Rogers, occurred three days ago, no new arrests have been made and the mystery surrounding the case seems to be deepening. Persistent rumors to day connect well-known persons In Las Vegaa with the abduction, but owing to reticence of the authorities, no official confirmation or denial can be secured. It has been reported of ficially, however, that several suspects are under surveillance. It became known today that only one man actually participated In abducting the child from home, and It Is believed the same man received th 11.000 re-r ward paid for the child'a reeov-y. There la doubt among the authorities that others aided In the kidnaping. Although everv member of the noted mounted police Is working on the case here with a large force of detectives, tha prospects for an early arrest are dwindling. This afternoon Captain Fornoff. of the mounted police, headed a heavily-armed posse In an automo bile for a point south of Las Vegss. Their destination and the object of the expedition, are known only to those In charge of the search. 1-ate this evening the posse had not returned. PRIZE CARR MOO HE. When King Edward was crowned an American, armed with a Jaf.er of In troduction from President Roosevelt, managed to bluff his way Into the Ab bey. He protested whenever an offi cer halted him. demanding to know "If they would dare Ignore a letter from the President of the United States." While they were seeking advice the American kept pushing forward and finally crowded In where he could wlt ness the ceremony. BOYS PLAY WITH DYNAMITE Mother Kalnt on Learning Son Uses Kxploslve as Baseball. SPOKAXK, Wash.. April ' S. (Spe cial.) Upon the discovery by Officer Jordan this morning that her aon Har old, age 8 years, with other boys In th neighborhood -had been playing with a stick of dynamite left In the street. Mrs. N. Johnson fainted. The explosive Is alleged by the po lice to have been left In the street by employes of Fife Brothers, contractors, doing Improvement work In that sec tion, where It was found by the email boys. Considerable excitement sprang up In the neighborhood following the discovery and cltlxens ' and police searched for more of the explosive. When Officer Jordan came upon the scene the boys, five In number, were carelessly tossing It among them. Now and then It was dropped upon the rocky street. He Investigated and his presence among . the lads attracted mothers from nearby homes. When the truth dawned upon thera pande monium broke loose. The dynamite was pliable from the heat of the boys hands. ECONOMY PLAN OPPOSED IVult growers light Renaming Park on Horticultural Board. of SALEM. Or., April (Special.) Pro test to the State Board against the re appointment of Charles A. Park, of Sa lem, as a member of the Slate Horti cultural Board, by frultgrowera of the state will result tn the Board probably allowing the frultmen to make formal assertions at a meeting In the near fu ture. It la understood that the growers ob ject to Park on the ground that he has not been sufficiently active In his labors on the Horticultural Board and that from time to time. Instead of seeing all of the money appropriated for that purpose, used to benefit the fruit Industry, has turned it back Into the general fund. This economical policy has not proved pleasing to many of tha fruitgrowers and some of them are desirous of having another man appointed. CLOSER UNION PROJECTED I'ormatlon . of Imperial Parliament of Great Britain Is Aim. VICTORIA. April i Sir Joseph Ward. Premier of New Zealand, accompanied by Lady Ward and suite. Including New Zealand's Attorney-General, arrived to day on the Moana. en route to the Im perial conference of over-seas premiers to be held in London next month. Sir Joseph will advocate tha formation of an- imperial Parliament In which all over-sess dominions of Great Britain shall be represented In proportion to population. The proposed Parliament would take over ail questions of foreign policy and defense, and seek closer union In trade laws and similar legislation. MILLIONS TO BE SPENT Olympla Begin Era ActlThy. of Great OLYMPIA. Wash.. April 1 SpeclaL Not since Oiympla was founded has it shown the signs of activity thai II Is dis playing at the present time. During tho coming Summer 1350.000 la to be spent by the atate for the erection of a Temple of Justice, th fire of the series of build tnKK forXhe new capilol; work is to be started on a tl0.O0 Federal bulldlTig within a .short time; plans are under way . ,i ...ii(n v nf new xioo.000 hotel: ior i ' mmiiw.-o . work hss been started on the new Ms sonic Temple, which will cost $00,000; the city is to build a new city hall that will cost JSO.0CO: two new concrete two-story atore and office buildings are to be erect ed at a cot of Jlo.OOO each; three n?w apartment houoes sre under way, an-1 & number of new residence ere belus planned. In addition to this. JDoO.COOMs being spent by the government and private propertv-holders in improving the water front, and wlien the work is completed Olymp'a will have a channel In the hc-ait of the city which will float a vessel drawing 20 feet of water at low tide, and the tide fkits. which have remained un improved up to thi time, will be mails Into fine factory sites. Then the city Is also going to spena J2S0.00O In etreet Improvement thl Sum mer, laying permanent pavement tn the down-loin business' districts and extend ing trie pavement on Main street out as fsr if Twenty-first street: Active work Is now under way for t':ie securing of a I11.0XI bonus for the exten sion of the streetcar eyatem arross the materway and up the Westpide hill. wn'ch means the opening up of a fine- m residence district. Application has be.in msde for a belt lin railroad frandilos over the new-msde land on the wat;r front. and work will be started on It within a short time. The backers propose to start construc tion aei oon as the city council grants the franchise. It lis common user clause In It. so that It will be Impossible to keep any new railroads that may come to the city from enjoying Its benefits: The spending of this 1.0N.000 or more has changed the entire atmosphere of the people of OlympiH. according to old-timer. The real eexate men are particularly optimistic, and point out the fact that Olympla has never had a boom In re cent years, and as a result property val ues are low. It la aald that farm prop erty can be eecured more reasonably In Thurston County than In any other sec tion west or tne uascaaes. CRACKSMEN QRiNK WINE UOBBKRS BREAK SAFE, THEN . SIT DOWX TO FEAST. Experts Make Raid on Table Supply House In Very Heart of Spo kane Police Are Xearhy. ' SPOKANE. Wash.. Anrll 2. (Special.) Undisturbed by the door Inspections or Merchant I'ouce uincer rine ana vi ficer Fuller, of the city force, master i t ki, mfirnlnv entered cracKaiuru caii .11.0 ...... ...... the Spokane Table Supply 8tore. Sprague and wail streets in me very nmi 1 . lv mnA tnri-mA I he holts In the Office safe, stealing 100, the proceeds of late evening sales. It was the second visit probably of the same men In 14 months. While they worked the pair drank three quarts of champagne, opened fancy sardines and m.aba-va anri nnrtnnlf of a lunch. De parting they left behind a suitcase con taining a l-pound sieage nammer wim a sawed -off handle, a rone-ladder and a brace, now in the possession of the po lice. Entrance waa gained by "Jimmying a hall door. Inside the robbers locked the door, a feature that afterwards de terred police investigation. Tactics employed by the pair and the workmanship of the Job lead the police to believe that the robbery was the work of the two men who, in January. 1!10. entered Greenough's and the Table Supply Store and secured In the two places $5000 In cash mnd diamonds. No explosives were used. The plugged hole used by the former visitant to secure a hold upon the locks was used, a drill being broken In the operation. The com bination was broken with a heavy blow from the sledge hammer. TEACHER'S ACTS SCORED SALEM HIGH SCHOOL PRINCI PAL MAY BE OCSTED. Citizens Petition Board Charging That R. L. Kirk Has Been "Rude, Tyrannical and Coarse." SALEM. Or.. April ?. (Special.) Charges that principal ttooen u. rvira of the Salem High 8chool has been "rude, tyrannical and coarse" to his pupils, 'and a petition that has been prepared for submission to the school board, asking that he be rejected by the board as a further favorable ap plicant and that he be given no place in the acnoois 01 in mji - dents In a campaign that has been started by leading cltlxens to make a change In the management "of affairs at the High School here. John Bain. John A. Carson. F. N. Derby and F. B. Southwick. all prom inent In the affairs of the city, are signers of the petition. The school board has given no ex pression as to what action will be tak en, buf. It is understood that Kirk will be given a full opportunity to place his side of tho case before the board some dav this week. Kirk came Into the limelight several months ago when be took summary action relative to a haslng affair when one of the High School students alleged that his hair had been shorn by a haslng party of upper classmen. There was much agitation over the question at the time, but it finally resulted In th offending students being rein stated. Some of the petitioners at the pres ent time say that Kirk's attitude to ward a portion of the student body has been such as to compel the par ents of those students to remove them from the High School and seek other educational facilities for them. CHINESE ATTACK AMERICAN Missionary Is Injured by Celestials Who Think Him Kidnaper. SHANGHAI. April 'The Rev. John Murray, of the American Presbyterian Mission at Tsl Nan Fu. was attacked by Chinese March 28. 17 miles north of that place. He was badly Injured about the head and body and was brought back to the mission by a gov ernment escort. He Is now considered out of danger. An absurd report naa Deen circuiaiea among the Chinese that Mr. Murray had stolen a child, and some of them set upon him while he waa engaged in making pastoral visits. His assail ants are under arrest and officials are displaying the utmost solicitude for his recovery. . Masonic Temple Cornerstone Laid. NORTH TAKIMA. Wash.. April 2. (Special.) The cornerstone of the Ma sonic Temple was laid today with im posing ceremonle. Officers of the grand lodge officiated, and Masons from all parts of the state were in attendance. Justice Chadwlck and Frederick Parker, an attorney of North Yakima, made ad dresses. I WIDOW OF YERKES DIES. IN NEW YORK Well-Known Woman Is Strick en With Heart Disease, Following Grip. TWO MARRIAGES RECALLED Her First Wedding Attracted Atten tion, as Pid Her Second, 'When She) Became Bride of. Play wright and Cast Him Aside. NEW TOr.K April 2. Mrs. Mary Adelaide Yerkes. widow of the late Charles T. Yerkes. died at her home in this city tonight. She had been in falling health since last November, i . v. - r f A -n ottark of STrlD. She seemed to be -unable to regain her strength and five weoks ago took to her bed wtth heart affection. At the death-bed when the end came were Mrs. Yerkes" three sisters, Mrs. o - -Klrm V.. StoktOH. of Philadelphia, and Mrs. Syms. of New York. When It was seen that the end was near, threo brothers wno live in Philadelphia were telegraphed for. Upon the death of Yerkes. four years ago. she received, it Is said, more than 3. 000, 000 as her portion of his estata and within twelve months she was Mrs. Charles T. Yerkes, Widow of Traction Millionaire, tVho Died Yesterday. married to Wilson Mizner, a Xew York playwright. It was barely a week later that they separated and divorce pro ceedings followed, which she won. Seclusion IJfe Seen. She returned to live In the seclusion of tho Yerkes mansion until it was sold by the executors and she then moved to the Madison avenue house in which she died. ii.. -i- i. - .....A v wll known. .11 1 Klines ' J ' ' 1 She had been known to tne American public ever since, 24 years ago, she be came the wile oi xers.es. ou the nature of that marriage that it served to cast her boldly in the public eye. likewise the prints, and she. re mained there to her death. She was married to Yerkes follow ing the latter's release from the Cherry Hill Penitentiary, where he had been sent after conviction for a crime in connection with a municipal franchise. She was Miss Mary Adelaide Moore, daughter of the junior member of the Philadelphia drug firm of Powers. Velghtman & Moore, and in order to make her his wife. Yerkes obV-lned a divorce from his first wife, who had been devoted to him while he was In prison and who had aided materially In obtaining a commutation of his sen tence. I Scandal Is Whispered. Mrs. Marv Adelaide Moore-Yerkes was very happy -with her husband for . V. wAririine-- Then. one night, a friend of Yerkes whispered a bit of scandal concerning her hus band In Mrs. Yerkes" ear. She listened and that whisper separated them for ever afterward. Mr. and Mrs. Yerkes never again dwelt under the same roof. Yerkes went to Europe and busied himself In the traction field there. About four years ago. after he had returned to the United States, Yerkes died from pneumonia, after a few days' Illness, at the Waldorf-Astoria. There was no reconciliation with Mrs. Yerkes. About a year after the death of Mr. Yerkes, his widow leaped Into the limelight by quietly and suddenly mar rying Wilson Mizner, a then obscure playwright, considerably younger than herself. Hardly had her friends recov ered from the shock of this news than they learned that her second marriage had been a failure. Her married life with Mizner lasted one week. Mizner Cast Aside. When the honeymoon was only be gun. Mr. Mizner was cast aside by his bride. She literally turned him out of doors, at the same time announcing to the rest of the world that she would have nothing more to do with him. In vain did Mizner hammer for admit tance on the front door of Mrs. Yerkos home. She heard him but wouid not respond. He told his troubles to the newspapers and cajoled, then threatened, his aloofUh bride but she only reiter ated her Intention of casting him away forever. Mizner, who is said to have visions of a slice of the Yerkes for tune kept up his efforts at reconcilia tion 'for a time and then, finally, sub sided. Mrs. Yerkes made good her an nouncements by divorcing Mizner a few months after the marriage. Mrs. Yerkes did not marry again. Her playwrighting ex-husband has made some strides in his profession since, be ing a co-author- with Paul Armstrong of "The Deep Purple," a play now en joying a run in this city. AMERICANS TO FARE BADLY Only One or Two to Sec Coronation of King George. LONDON. April 2. (Special.) Am bassador Held Is making preparations to withstand numerous demands that will be made upon him by Americans who are to attend the coronation cere mony. It is not possible that more than one or two prominent Americans will bo admitted, as all seats are reserved for officials. This means that thousands will be turned away, and their wrath will de scend upon Ambassador Reld's head. rr i I f T V3 X " at fa m ll in ' " i I rsr L J IsmafiSB Merchandise bf Annual Housefurnishing Sale Begins Today Lowest prices of year Rugs, Curtains, Draperies, Bedding, Beds, Linoleum; Yard Goods, Curtain Stretchers, Etc. MEDICAL PROBE ON Doctors of All Nations in China to Study Plague. AMERICA IS REPRESENTED Physicians Feel Hopeful That Con ference AVUI Lead to. Discovery of Curative Seruni- -Disease Is Like Consumption. PBKIX. April 2. The Chinese have made elaborate preparations for the In ternational Medical Conference to begin at Mukden tomorrow to Investigate the plague. Doctors of many nations are in attendance. Including some American delegates and several Russian women. Dr. R. P. Stromr. of the Bureau of Science In the Philippine Islands, will take a leading part, as he has been in Mukden recently making a bacteriologi cal study of the disease and endeavoring to discover an effective toxin. The In dian and other preparations have proved unavailing, and only masks have been found eftectlve In preventing infection. Many marmots, from which the dis ease was first contracted, have been col lected for experiment at the conference. Although no cure has yet been found, the doctors feel confident from the knowledge they 'have already gleaned that eventually they will find a curative serum. First Effort Fatal. a mAhreAir of the present epl- , demic. practically no knowledge concern ing Its treatment exisieo, aiiu mo in" methods employed on the lines generally adopted against bubonic plague proved fatal to several doctors. Dr. Kltahato. the noted Japanese bac teriologist, says that while no victims . -loiriiA reenver. this dis- ease Is more easily controlled than bu bonic, as the pneumonic Is contracted only from exhalations or expectorations, which can easily be avoided. The bac cili die quickly In dry air, therefore tto fear of dust storms that have been preva lent this season is groundless. Disease Wke Consumption. Dr. Kitaharo likens the pneumonic plague to consumption. Although It is a thousand times quicker In Its action. It takes exactly the same channels of transmission. He hopes the bacclli will be exterminated when the dry weather sets In. . The railway zones are now nearly Tree, but the Interior towns and villages still suffer greatly. Reports from the famine district say many missionaries are engaged in spe cial efforts to save children from starva tion. They have established orphanages and have been gathering up deserted children and those who have lost their parents. ' The distributing centers are unable .to supplv sufficient rice for food, but are giving out bean cake, generally used as Diamonds The Best Gift of All Aside from the sentiment conveyed there is no wear from constant usage. The price has more than doubled in the past few years, and will continue up ward, as the demand is increasing and the supply decreasing. We Buy Direct from the cutters and importers, paying cash; we save the middleman's profit and the discount; therefore, are enabled to sell for less. Call, Examine Our Stock Let's prove to you our prices are the lowest, quality the best. LARGEST DIAMOND sax Spring a fertilizer and to feed the cattle. Famine fever is raging and It is said the famine is worse than in 1908. TWO OUTLAWS SENTENCED Men Who Attempted to Hold Xp Siskiyou Agent Go to Prison. MEDFORD, Or., April 2. J. C. Can non and W. E. Davies were sentenced yesterday by Circuit Judge Calkins to from one to ten years In the state pen itentiary. , . . Cannon attempted to held up Agent Fred Gudman. at Siskiyou station, while Davies looted the house, but stopped when lie saw Gudman had but one arm. Deputy Sheriff Charles Gay and Louis Warner. Medford. took them to Salem Saturday, Great Britain export, about one-quarter of the coal It irnna. Constipation Vanishes Forever Prompt ReJief-PermaneBt Car CARTER'S LIVER PIL fsu. Purely i able act sur but gently M tlie liver. Stop after. dinner distress j: i cure muh- . - - , . . . SMlion improve the complexion og""" STeyes. Small Pill, Sau Dose, SssaU Pries' Genuine , oui beat Signature There's NoRisk If This Medicine Does Not Benefit, You Pay Nothing A physician who made a specialty of stomach troubles, particularly dyspep sia, after years of study perfected the formula from which Rexall Dyspepsia Tablets are made. Our experience with Rexall Dyspep Bia Tablets leads us to believe them to be the greatest remedy known for the relief of acute indigestion and chronic dyspepsia. Their Ingredients are sooth ing and healing to the inflamed mem branes of the stomach. They are rich in pepsin, one of the greatest digestive aids known to medicine. The relief they afford i almost immediate. Their use with persistency and regularity for a short time brings about a cessation of the pains caused by stomach disorders. Rexall Dyspepsia Tablets will insure healthy anpotite, aid digestion and pro mote nutrition. As evidence of our sin cere faith In Rexall Dyspepsia Tablets, we ask vou to try them at our risk. If they do not give you entire satisfac tion "we will return you the money vou paid s for them, without question or formality. They come In three sizes, prices 25 cents. 50 cents and 1.00. Remember, you can obtain them only at The Owl Drug Co., cor. ith and Washington sts. - DEALERS IN OREGON LITTLE V?.ts. ' LS neverf -. V S,. CM MKlI ii ii in