30, 1911. 450 NEEDY ARE PUT RIGID INSPEGTION OF HEAT WANTED RECEPTION TO BE GIVEN DEPARTING MISSIONARY VaUey Eeridents Will Pay Respecta to Elder and Mrs. Oeorge W. Pettit, Who Leare Soon for India. ON CITY'S PAYROLL Present Lax Plan Followed by City Is Denounced by Dr. C. S. White. Destitute Gather at City Hal! as Early as 6 A. M. to Report for Work. MRS. EVANS IS RAPPED SKILLED LABORERS APPLY T,viv-n nnrr.nvTlW SiTTl?T)AT. 8 J - I 3leo B-tn Tmk of Bulldlnr Road way to Mount Tabor Park Few Hobo to R IMachmcgrd That Family nridt May I-anor. cxirrinrr ron i jrr TO MIOVIDB WORK FOB CITY'S KfcKUV. craat. work for mora of Port land's an.TTtpWr.d the Exaeutlr Board yeetanleir took extraordinary actios ta a blanket ortJ.r. lttln contracts to the loaraet raaponalbie bldrt.rs tar all e.wr work planned frr th. Fprtn. Thla may enre to avoid rurth.r appropriation for employ""!. In all. contrail w.re lat tr about IIM.M worth of exten sion and tn. contractors will ba ak.4 to (tart work aa aoon aa poa sible. Tha blanket order cor.re tha foUowrna ewra: Eaat Twanty-firat and Bimark .treats. Eaat Twantr flrat strl. East Tw.nty-aocond atraat. Eaat Ftrty-flfth straat. Eaat Forty-alxih strw. Eaat Forty-seventh atraat. WHIawrtlu4. YamAlU, Mor rlMO, Klrbv and Frarmaa striate. Eaat ScTtntMsl!) atraat. Eaat E!(h iMBth etraat. Eaat Elxhtntb, and Karl atraata and Eaat Twantlato. Tha larsaet contract In the list la that for Waauxwra Ian J, Involving about IHItti Skilled laborara of almost vry claaa rood in Una with plck-and-shovel workers yesterday at th City Hall and ecrambled-for the hardest kind of day labor at II 50 and 13 a day. Mora tun 450 mm took advantage of tha city's 114.000 appropriation for tha re lief pf the needy and aa a reault the sear roadway to Mount Tabor Park la rapidly becoming a reality. The rush of the unemployed went be yond expectations by mora than 100 hhoo. It had bwB expected that not more, tfian :0 would report for the work and that a irrrat many of them would ba hobo dealroua of (retting- a f-w days' easy work wttb a fair amount of money. Instead of tramps. t:ie ma)rlty of those who reported at trie office of Superintendent Mleche were m.-n with fa ml lie. killed srksirs la Llaa. In line were many skilled carpenters. Iron workers, plasterers and the like, ho declared that they hav been un all to obtiln employrrwot. In Una alo wre many boboa. It waa appar ent from the names and addresses given tri.it tiiey were "floaters. " and It U the opinion of uprlntenlnt Mlsche that almost all of them will leave) tha city whrn they are pal. I off tonlirht for yrvatrnlay and today's work. This was one of the extHfctations when the city appropriated lne 110.00 rellof fund. Tl laborers beatan to assemble at the City Hall aa early as o'clock yes terday morntnic and when the doors pf the Park lrrtmrnt wria opened more than 130 men were watting. Po-llt-nmon were on hand to keep order and to prevont the men from getting put of Una. A clerk In the office took tha name and address of each man as be filed through th door and recorded whether th applicant was married or Uncle and the number of children each had to support. Th men the-n re relved tickets entitling them to two flays' work. Moaat Tabor Wark 9-eaaa. From tha City Hall each labor boarded a streetcar and went to tha trrita of th work at Mount Tabor Park. Shovels and picks had bean fur nished by tha various departments of th city and each man waa given tools and put to work grubbing stumps and clearing for tha new roadway. Between s A. M. and noon th num ber of men at work was Increased to tiO and by night there were 475 at work. At no time tn the morning were tbera fwer than SO men In line. Tha Intention of Mayor Rushlight and others In charg of tha work Is to tat the full gang work until tonight, when all will be discharged. They will p asked to report axaln Tuesday morning at the Park Superintendent's office In th City Hall and tha men of families will be hired again. All eth ers will be refused employment. In vestigation of all th men engaged yes terday was begun by a force of clerk and by Tuesday every cas will be checked. Only th needy will ba em ployed. Superintendent M'.sche said last night that the men who reported for work were nearly all good laborers and no trouble was experienced in getting them to work. It was not found neces. tary to discharge any during the day. as every man worked diligently. Inas much as the number of men obtained at the first call more than doubled ex pectations no new laborers will b em ployed before next Tuesday. MRS. R. B. RICHARDS DEAD I'ioner-r Woman, S, Passes Away at Red Bluff, CaL Mrs. Ro B. Richards. 73 years old. widow of Judge Solomon Richards, of this rtty. died at the Tremont Hotel. In lied Uluff. Cal.. December JS. Mrs. Kit-hards left two months ago Ti lth her daughter. Miss Roae C. Kaiser, to pass the Winter In California and was taken I'.l at Hed Bluff. Mrs. Richards was a pioneer of 185. crossing the plains by team with her husband. Andrew Kaiser, who tn l'ie early '60s formed a partnership with Mr. Fisher In th confectionery business on Front street. ?he is survived by a sister, four brothers, two sons L. S. Kaiser, chief rk in th water department of the city, and IKx-tor William F. Kaiser, of Hid.l'.e. Or, and a daughter. Miss Rose C Kaiser, of this city. Th funeral will be held from Fin-1-y'e undertaking parlors. Interment w 111 b mad In Greenwood Cemetery. AUTOPJANO $5 Rental. Free rauale rolls, free cartage. All money paid as rental can apply on y.irchase prlc If desired. Kohler 4k Chase, t'i Washington s treat. Better Pianos for Kent at Kharmaa. Clay 4k Co, Morrison at fclata. RE3IDE.NTS of Forest Orov. MrMii vlll. Dallas. Gaston. Cornelius. Hlllaboro, Vancouvor and Oregon City will come to Portland In tiro to attend the reception which Is to be given Elder and Mrs. Georg W. Pettit at Woman of Woodcraft Hall. Saturday night. Elder Pettit who for two years hss been pastor of the Central Seventh Day Adventlst Church, at East Eleventh and East Everett streets, will leave Port land with Mrs. Pettit Sunday mornlng at 10 o'clock for Bombay. India, where they are to work as missionaries. They will go by way of Chicago, will spend four days In Washington. D. C. two days In Xew York City, two weeks In England, and plan to make a short visit to Palestine. For 0 days after their arrival In tfc field their address will be 1 Banks road. Lucknow. India. Lucknow being th headquarters of th denomination In India. Elder and Mrs. J. Mark Corner also will go with th party. Mr. Comer has held ministerial positions at Cottag Grove. Marshfleld. Medford and Eugene. H cam to Oregon from Minnesota two years ago. Mra Comer was formerly Miss Lola Renlck. a nurse at the Port land Sanitarium. They hav been vis iting friends In Minnesota and Dakota during the last few weeks, and will be Joined by Elder and Mrs. Pettit at Washington. D. C. There will b nlna missionaries In the party which will sail on th steamer Baltic from Xew York City at noon. January 11. Eight of these will go to India, and on to Africa. Th latter Is Dr. E. W. Myers, of Vancouver. Wash. Other 3e ta Par Bast. With the party for India will b Professor Walter Mead and Mra Mead, of Washington. D. C. They will bav charge of a denominational school for English sneaking person, at Missouri, tn th Himalaya Mountains- At this place a denominational sanitarium Is maintained for workers who may break down on account of th unhealthful climate of India. Another trained nurse, besides Mra Comer, will b in th rarty. On of th eight will be Miss Rachel Jones, of Washington. D. C. who ha been doing Bible work In Northern New England for th last year. Sh will work In Bombay or Calcutta. Elder Pettit, whose place as pastor of the church in East Portland Is taken by Elder Mliton H. St. John, was edu cated In Oregon, passing three years between 1903 and 1907 In the Portland I'niverslty, a Methodist Institution at University Park, which, was sold to th Catholic and Is now Columbia I'niverslty. He passed two years In Walla Walla College, at College Place. Wash- and waa granted his first minis terial license by the North Pacific "ABSENT GURE" HO CURE TXBKRCCLAK 3IAX TREATED BY CHKISTIAX SCIENTIST. Physic-Ian Finds E. C. Morller Crit ically 111 IL . Jane. Practi tioner, Falls to Keport Case For six week E. C Moeller, a mar ried man SS years of age, living In a single room st 6 Thirteenth street North, has been under the care of a Christian Science practitioner. He Is seriously 111 from tuberculosis. After Moeller had gone to the office of H. D. Janes, a practitioner In the Henry building, he became too weak to travel down town. At that time Mr. Janes Informed him, says Mra Moeller. that absent treatment would be Just as satisfactory for his case. One week's treatment was taken, th price by a pre-arrangement to b $10. which was paid. Finding that but llttl apparent rood had been achieved. Mrs. Moeller con sulted a prominent local physician seven days later, and an Immediate diagnosis of tuberculosis was given. Prior to this time, Mra Moeller de clares sh had received no warning that tuberculosis was a communicable disease and because her husband suf fered from chills and a high fever she kept th door and windows closed, while a hot fire was kept going in th room. Mra Moeller says no Instruc tion were given her regarding steri lisation and sh waa not Informed such precautions wer necessary. Further more, th cas was not reported as turberculosls to th City Health Office. Thla Is a violation of th city's ordl nsnces. With th asslstanc of a visiting nurse, Mr. and Mrs. Moeller have moved Into other quarters. "For six weeks my husband had been going daily to th offic of Mr. Janes." laid Mra Moeller. "At th end of that time be felt too weak to continue so 1 to d my husband that we bad better call In some other doctor, even If only for my personal satisfaction. He de murred at this: so, for seven more days, at the end of which I became certain he was losing ground. I called In a chvslclan. who diagnosed th case as active tuberculosis. At the same time he advised m not to pay th last week's dues." The following details of Moellers esse were given by the physician in question: "I found Moeller suffering from rapid tuberculosis when I examined him De cember 1. H had been having hem orrhage sine the Fall of 1907. and an examination of th sputum revealed the presence of 0 active tuberculous bacilli to the new. "His cough, prevalent since 107. had become chronic. His actlv Illness com manced tn August, since which time b has been losing weight rspidly. H has a high temperature varying from 100 to 103. with profuse sweats at night, accompanied by a violent cough ' . .- J.-) ' ' 1 f :' j 1 Nr.-(. k. Union Conference In the Spring of 1. He passed the Summer of 1900 with Elder C. J. Cole in tent meetings at Gold Hill and Central Point. Southern Oregon. Baxaroer Paaaed la Teat Work. II married Miss Clara A. Downs, May IS. 1901. That Summer he engaged In another tent effort with Elder Cols at Brownsville. He was elected secre tary of th Western Oregon Mission ary Society In the Spring of 1912. hold ing this position until the Spring of 19o. During that time he served on the Western Oregon conference com mittee for two years, and at different times was educational secretary, reli gious library secretary, conference sec retary, secretary of the Legal Associa tion of the Western Oregon Confer ence, and for eight months manager of the Portland Branch of th Pacific Press Publishing Association. He was a member of the original conmlttee of three which selected th location of Laurelwood Academy. At Elder pettlfs request, the recep-. tfon to himself and wife Saturday night has been made a public on, not only members of th church being Invited, but friends of the pastor throughout th city. Elder P. A. Hanson, presi dent of the conference, will speak on Th Missionary's Training," and Elder St. John will trace briefly tha Journey to India and rh work of Elder Pettit when h arrives. Elder C. W. Flalx. of the North Pacific Union Conference, will speak on "The World-Wide Mes sage. and Elder A. M. Dart will speak on "Th Reunion." and Elder Pettit will say his farewell to his friends. and hectlo flush. Cavities at tha apex of each lung marks emaciation. There Is also shortness of breath, and. In fact, all th typical symptoms of a violent general tuberculoua Involvement-" Last night a reporter for The Ore gonlan called up Mr. , anes and rend him the foregoing In substance. He declined to make any statement, adding that had he been called upon he could have told his story, which, he said, differed radically. "However, it won't be too late for me to tell my story later," ha s&ld. FEW MILK SAMPLES BAD Test Show but 7 Per Cent of Supply Is Below Standurd. That Portland's milk supply has tak en a remarkable change for the better in the last few months Is apparent from a general test which has Just been completed by City Milk Chemist Calloway. Sixty-two sample of milk were collected recently from dairy wagons coming Into the city and each sample was analysed. It was found that but 7 per cent of the samples were below the required standard. Five of these were skimmed milk and the other four had been watered. The average butter fat In all the samples. Including those below stand ard, was 1.85 per cent or .83 per cent above the required amount. The aver age of solids not fat was 9.01 per cent which was .6 per cent abov th legal requirement. This shows that th campaign of the Milk Inspection Department of the Board of Health to bring about better milk conditions has been eucceesfuL The dairies the milk of which was found below standard will be ordered to lmprov their product or go out of business. TIMBER DEALER IS DEAD Oliver G. Walker, Siskiyou Sheriff for 1 8 Years, Passes Away Here. Oliver O. Walker, a Portland timber dealer died Thursday afternoon, at the family home In Ardenwald. The fu neral services will be held today at the Crematorium at Sellwood. at 3 o'clock. Mr. Walker was prominently Iden tified with th lumbering business In th Northwest for the past ten years. He and a son. B. F. Walker, operated under the firm name. Walker Walker. Mr. Walker was Sheriff of Siskiyou County. California, for IS years before coming to Portland. He Is survived by his widow and two sons. B. F. Walker and Burnett Walker. Burnett Walker Is a student at the Washington High School. . $3 PIANO RENT. All money paid as rent can apply on purchase prloa If desired. Ask about our drayage plan. Kohler as Chase. IT Washington street. Physicians, Cattlemen, Officials and Others Attack City Law aa Men- Three Xamed to Draft Stringent Measure. To devise means that will replace the pr r.t dead-letter meat-Inspection c y ance with one that will safe-guar- 1 e city from the consumption and 1. M:'chuse of diseased and Impure meat, a meeting was called yesterday afternoon In the office of Dr. Calvin 8. White. State Health Officer. In th Selling building. Representatives of th health bureau, meat Industry, city officials and others attended. After Dr. White and a number of other speakers had pictured vividly tha manner In which the health of the city was Jeopardised by the present system, op motion of Postmaster Mer rick, a committee of three was ap. pointed. by the chairmsn, O. M. Plum mer, to draft a substitute measure for the one In existence. The committee which consists of Dr. R. J. Chipman, a member of th City Board of Health; Dr. C. H. Wheeler, City Health Offi cer, and Dr. Calvin S. White, will pre pare a measure ready to submit to th City Council at its next meeting. Market Iaapeetora Berated. Incidentally, Mrs. Sarah A. Evans, Market Inspector, and Joe Singer, ad ditional Market Inspector, were grilled by practically every speaker and It was especially urged that the new ordi nance be of such a nature that will permit the meat Inspector's office to be taken out of politics. "In place of the present market In spectors we want to have two well equipped veterlnarles. We want men who will know what they are doing not persons who will fool with spa ghetti and such truck as that woman and Joe Singer do," was one comment made by Dr. White. Dr. White was most emphatic in de claring that the plan suggested was not one demanding higher funds from the city. "There is no attempt to create poli tical offices." he said, "but there Is a desire among a great number of us to have an ordinance that will prevent tuberculous butcher's meat from be ing sold In the butcher shops of the city, as It is at present the case in a great number of instances. Oaly SlOOO la Needed. T doubt very much," he continued, "whether such an ordinance as we con template will call for more than $1000 additional appropriation to that at present allowed th market lnspectoi-'s office." The purpose of the proposed ordi nance is not to establish post and ante- mortem inspection at fixed points on ) the line 01 the Federal inspection re quired on Interstate business, but to demand that before carcasses are sold In the city, their organs shall be In spected. That this may be done, dif ferent Inspection centers will be main tained in various parts of the city, and shippers will be required to ship organs for examination at the same time that tha carcass Itself Is placed on board the cars. It waa pointed out by Dr. White that a great number of the turkeys sold In Portland for Thanksgiving were tuberculous. Infection would be pos sible, he contended, merely from be ing shipped in the same car as that containing diseased cattle. Hoar Cholera Peril Seen. Hog cholera was presented as an other danger to the ultimate consumer. The physicians admitted that In the greater number of tuberculous cases the process of cooking destroyed any danger. It could not be saVd In so many words that cooking was an in fallible panacea for any possible dan ger, particularly in the cose of hog cholera. Sausages and lard, it was asserted, were made in Portland in stables and similar places and the proposed ordi nance will be designed to do away ab solutely with such manufacture. The situation as told by Mr. Plum mer Is: "Cattle shipped to Portland are ap parently good and they show no signs of disease that can be detected from externals, yet we have found after death they were in a bad state of con tamination." Mr. Plummsr presented several pic tures showing the diseased organs of a prlxe-wlrtning steer that was be lieved free from the slightest vestige of disease. Botchers Favor Inspection. The butchers of the city are aa a unit in favor of inspection," Mr. Plummef said. "If any for a moment stood out against It, he would show his own hand as a dealer in contami nated meat. Th situation we have to face is possible opposition of Front street commission men and the oppo sition of the farmer, who as aoon aa he learns there Is anything the mat ter with his cow, ships it into Portland to one of the commission men. "If this meat were Inspected there would ba no danger to the health of the city, such as Is at present only too menacing. "There is more In this than meets the eye. If there is tuberculosis In cattle, there is also tuberculosis In the poultry and hens raised adjoining, for the disease Is communicable. "There are but few Infected areas In Oregon and with a short period of inspection, we shall be able to get the whole problem under control." In answer to a question, Mr. Plum mer said that so far as he knew Portland was the only city of mor than 5000 population that did not In sist on meat Inspection. Free Examlnartloa Provided. Physicians declared that while cook. Ing destroyed the germs of tubercu losis, cooking did not destroy the ef fects of cholera in hog's meat and that the eating of such meat resulted in sickness. D. O. Lively said that there was no real opposition to the proposed meas ure, the only opposition being that of inactivity. Mr. Merrick incorporated In nla mo tion a request that th committe con sult with any Federal inspectors in th city as well as with on of th Deputy City Attorneys. Th body waa also advised to consult th ordinances existing in other cities. As th ordlnanc was tentatively framed, ther will b no expense for examination of carcasses and the two Inspectors will at one visit conveniently-arranged locations for the pur pose of examination as aoon as noted. : mxvV&imZ? Machine. y- s Ti-iWs K:".vy.' is the manner in which the many thousand pounds of Cocoa beans are daily roasted. It is only by the use of great uniformity in the roasting; of the ii Chocolate Kiates VIt 1b th. .1 1 ft', Y-lwi.Ln white, two cupfata of powdered .agar and one-third of a cap nf "GHIElKDElXI'S COCOA." mixed well together) add on. teaapoonful of vanilla. Drop UtU. lamp, of case, into a sreaaed paa and bake la a moderate hot OT.n. etrdfr ml h fmjtry Chtfmt DEED GANG SOUGHT Grand Jury Hears Seattle In former to Trail Swindlers. BIG EXPOSE MAY RESULT Dyer, Long Ileld In Jail, Likely to Be Indicted aa Forger of Instru ments Clique Said to Have Bilked Many Here. Intention of the December grand Jury to take up In the last moments the investigation of alleged deed for geries which has been awaiting action for many months, was shown yester day when Joe Dyer, an alleged member of a gang of real estate swindlers, was taken before the Jury by Deputy Dis trict Attorney Page. Dyer has been in jail here for several weeks, having been brought back from Seattle, and nego tiations have been under way to have him reveal the inside workings of the gang. It now appears that these efforts have been successful. to some extent. It is officially given out that Dyer went before the Jury in his own be half and that he remains stubborn In his denials of relations with any clique of forgers. It is expected that he will be Indicted by the present grand Jury and that from that point will start an investigation which may Involve a number of attorneys, real estate men and others in an extensive swindle. Deed Forged Is Chars. Dyer recently turned state's evidence against George Sanborn, another of the gang which operated here, and waa in strumental in having him sentenced for a long term in Seattle. The in formant was then brought here to answer to a charge of procuring a forged signature to a false deed. The charge is that Banborn went to the office of Attorney D. A. Tufts and sought to have him affix his notarial seal to the signature of one Peter A. Hope. Tufts refused because the signer was not present to acknowledge the signature. Sanborn went away and re turned with a man whom he introduced as Hope and who acknowledged the signature. This man has been identi fied by Tufts aa Dyer. The deed was passed through a number of hands until It reached an Innocent pur chaser, who waa swindled Into ex changing A genuine deed to other property for It. This was the most recent phase of a network of similar swindles, of which nearly a doren have been reported to the authorities. Through notarial ac knowledgments, description of prop erty and other details, one transaction has been linked with another, showing that in the beginning all the deeds emanated from one source. That source now Is sought by the authorities. Woatsa Steaoa-rapner la Case Information has been gleaned that a y6ung woman stenographer, ap parently acting for herself, drew all or nearly all the papers, but pending the discovery of those behind her, her Identity is being withheld. The exposure of the swindles came befor much, if any. of th property obtained in exchange had been turned into cash, and In consequence little harm has been done, aU the victims being abl to vacate th deeds which they gav In exchange for th worth t 1 1 IN interesting feature in the making of Ghirardelli's Cocoa machines, scientifically constructed, that perfect cocoa bean is obtainable. Uniformity has always been a dhtingukhlng characteristic of QhirardclW Cocoa it Is always the same. And it costs leu than a cent a cap. of foar ems. D. Ghirardelli Co. thl PaH HIM. Sine 1852 less paper. Several months ago a number of persons were arrested, but it was found that nearly all were either innocent purchasers or more or less Ignorant catspaws of the real swindlers, none of whom la in custody except Sanborn, now serving sentence for similar frauds In Seattle. SIX .DIVORCES GRANTED One Wife Freed From Husband Woo, She Says, Is ex-Convict. Iuclnda Breaxeale testified before Judge Gatens yesterday morning that she was married to William Breazeale at Vancouver, Wash., June 10, after only a few weeks' acquaintance and that she discovered a short time later that her husband was an ex-convlct and a habitual drunkard. She was al lowed a decree of absolute divorce and permission was given her to resume her maiden name, Luclnda Hollenbeck. Dlnn B. Johnson said that Wilda Johnson had often declared that she "hated the ground he walked on" and had finally deserted him. Nuptial knots were cut for him also. Mary Frances Monaghan testified that her husband. Matthew P. Monaghan, had Sara A. Noonen as his affinity. She was al lowed to resume her maiden name, Frances Bergan. Other decrees allowed were: Annie Alice from George Edwards, desertion. Permission was given the plaintiff to resume her maiden name. Annie Alice Cross. Mina E. from Marcus W. Melvln, cruel and Inhuman treatment, infidelity, aiajlsstwaaiwasBSsaaasaraWawiPBWlva , J ' r'rmii ' 11 in' fttnr -a-ftr'vf .' i. Hii"';-. Jiv :itUtjVnTiU!s ' L ;' ' '1') jiri bit1 1 -1 m n 1 r -" - -f -t r ii " " " :h ": ' .,., k -.1.-, . a. h . ' -vtJi- IN THE THICK OF THINGS OR THE THIN OF THINGS? It takes the steady nerve, the elastic step, the energetic body to meet modern conditions, and the quick mind grasps the fact that body and nerves must be properly nourished. Weak, hesitating, doubting natures are those who lack vitality. Their kingdom is the crust or outer edge the thin of things. SCOTT'S is the vitalizer for all ages. It feeds nerves, body and brain with pure, wholesome food -tonic It does not stimulate it nourishes. ALL. DRUGGISTS Satt Franelsc PA threats to kill and failure to support. Mrs. Melvin declared that her husband had once left her for 23 months with only 25. Rose from Alec Welsman, desertion. John F. from Katie Ryan, desertion. They were married in July, 1908. Mr. Ryan is a retired sea captain well known all alonir the Pacific Coast. NOW IS THE BEST TIME to secure extra value in slightly used pianos that were taken In exchange during our Christmas season. Nearly all makes are represented, the variety and quality Is exceptional. You will buy here if you wish to save money. Sherman, Clay & Co., Morrison at Sixth. $3 PIANO RENT. All money paid as rent can apply on purchase prloe if desired. Ask about our drayage plan. Kohler & Chase, 87 Washington street. CARD OF THANKS. To our many friends in Albany, Woodburn and Portland who extended to us so many acts of gentle kindness and sweet sympathy in our sorrow, we wish to convey to each and everyone our most profound appreciation. We assure them It was a ray of sunshine in the darkness and gloom of our bereave ment. MRS. DORA WORLD FLOOD. MRS. L. E. FLOOD. MR. PHILIP FLOOD. TO CTJRE A COLD IX OVB DAT. Take LAJtATlVE BKOMO Quinine Tablets, rjrugffiata refund money if it falls to cure. E. W. GROVE'S signature is on each box. S5a ll-4 1 i .1 t