fnE MORNING OKEGONIAN. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 17, 1912. 3 HELP ALSO GIVEN .TO T1NGLEY RIVAL Woman TheosoQhist Easily In . fluenced in Business, Says Witness. SPIRITUAL TEMPLE BUILT nre in Mrs. Tbarston-Patterson's family Declared to Have Ambi tion to Be Head or Cni Tersal Brotherhood. fAN DIEGO. Cal.. Jan. li. Judge Van Etten. of Kingston. N. T several years ago counsel for the late Mrs. Harriet P. Thurston, whose will be queathlng her property to Mrs. Kath- erlne Tingley Is now being contested In the Superior Court here by her son. George U. Patterson, followed Theo dore L. Leake on the witness-stand for the contestants this afternoon. His testimony tended to show that Mrs. Patterson was easily Influenced and careless In her business dealings and that much of her property was placed In the name of Mrs. Mary Uastle. for whom Mrs. Patterson' built a spiri tual temple on her Golden Hill prop erty. Mra. Tlnaley Ceatradtcted. Several times during; the afternoon Judge Van Etten flatly contradicted the testimony of Katherlne Tingley. who aald that George Patterson was addicted to drink and that Mrs. Tingley had once detected liquor on Patterson's breath. Judge Van Etten described how he had accompanied Patterson on several trips and aald that during all the time be had never known him to h under the Influence of liquor, (peaking further on the condition of Mrs. Patterson's mind. Judge Van Etten nkt that on one occasion Mrs. Pat terson gave him J 17. POO and did not want to lake a receipt for It. She asked that it be placed to the credit of Mrs. llastie. Judge Van Etten will probably con tinue on the stand tomorrow. wara Said Be Ambit loam. That Mrs. Ilastle. who was a nurse In the family of Mrs. Patteraon for several years, wanted to become leader of the Cnlversai Brotherhood and Thee. aophlcal Society, succeeding Mrs. Kath erlne Tingley. was the belief of Mr. Iake. In a letter be wrote to Mrs. , Patterson which was Introduced In evidence at thla morning's session. This and the admission from Leake that between him and the wealthy Pennsylvania widow. Mrs. Patterson later Mrs. Thurston), there existed a warmer relation than Is usual .between architect and client were the features of the proceedings. possesses more strength than the ordi nary man. domlnatea the courtroom. Keenly observant of every move by counsel for the state, of every answer made by a juror, she is always ready to partake In her own counsel' con sultations. "And." she declared this afternoon. "1 have not lost a moment's sleep nor shed a tear thus far, and don't expect to." All day long Mrs. Hazxard sat beside her attorneys, toying with articles on the table or with the fringe of her dress, staring out of the window when not consulting with her attorneys. Al though she kept her eyes often lowered or apparently away .'from the scene, they invariably returned to rest on counsel for the state or on jurors when either spoke or replied. Hnbss Powerful Ms a. S. C. Haxzard. her husband, was In court only for a few- minutes in the morning. Haxzard is a big six-foot-two giant with ruddy cheeks Snd weighs close to 200 pounds. He was an instructor at West Point for 12 years. "And yet they say I have hypnotised him. said Mra. Haxzard this after noon. "Why, one look at him ought to convince anyone of the falsity of that statement. Besides, it surely would be most difficult to Influence a ATTEMPT TO FREE Tl 11 li SUCCEED Counsel for White's Slayer Ad mits Action Is Being Pre ' pared for Client. WIFE WILL NOT OPPOSE t. . -. I I - if, t J '. - ,&fZvr:.-.-:::3;.i. : r - t .v Jl District Attorney Powerless to In tervene Dr. Flint Insists Mat teawan Inmate Is as Crazy as Ever and as Dangerous. . ireeaon t feet tri f she Is I now n ILL J Mrs. E. R. Thomas, tl'lane Paris fhopplas; May Be Curtailed by lluabaads Creditors. I adverse testl I I procedure ap I I At Shearn's c i I what would SMOKE DEALS DEATH TO 2 Woman and Man Asphyxiated Fol lowing Cpsettlng of Lamp. SAX FRANCISCO. Jan. 1C The bodies of Mrs. Jennie Sonberg and Ed ward Conner, a lodger, were found In he Sonberg home today when the po lice forced an entrance to Investigate neighbors' reports that Mrs. Sonberg h4 not been seen for several days. Pmoke asphyxiation from a Are started br an accidental! y overturned lamp given by the police as the cauae of their deaths, which are believed to nave occurred Sunday night. Fire had burned a large hole In the Boor, and Oiled the house with smoke. out had finally smouldered out. man who has had 12 yeara of the se verest Army training. She laughed merrily. T shall have to study to see if I do have aypnouo power, she declared. British VIce-Consul C. E. Lucien Ag assls was not in court today nor was the state's star witness. Miss Dorothea Williamson, slater of the victim. .LLOWANGE MAY BE COT Is COURTS THItEATEX TO CCHTAIL MRS. THOMAS' SIIOPPIXG. Creditors of lluwband Ask That He He rot on 910,000 Yearly In come. So Rest Can Go for Debts. NEW YORK, Jan. 16. (Special.) SWEDISH WOMEN TO VOTE Cr,Klltor" of nr nsDnJ may mdi I rectly compel Mrs. E. R. Thomas, whi Sex on Equality With Men. Say Speech From Throne. STOCKHOLM, Jan. It. Women henceforth are- to take a full and equal share with men In the political life of Sweden. The speech from the throne at the opening of the Ktksdag today contained the announcement that a bill was to be Introduced enfranchising women and making them eligible at elections to the Riksdag on the same conditions as men. Every Swede more than 14 years of age and not under any legal disability has the right to vote for members of the second chamber. MANTELL MARRIES AGAIN Actor Who Recently Lost Wife by Death Take Another. PUEBLO. Colo, Jan. 1C. Robert Bruce MantelL tbe actor, was married In the county court here today to Miss Genevieve Hamper, of Detroit, a mem ber of his company. Every effort was made to keep the marriage a secret. Mr. Mantel! recently waa bereaved by the death of Ma wife. Marie Booth Rus sell, well known on the stage. BABE'S SLAYER SENTENCED Wife of Italian to Be Tried Later for Share In Crime. SANTA BARBARA. Cal.. Jan. 1.- John Rnrh. the Italian convicted last week of having murdered his newly horn Infant because, he explained, liv ing was to expensive, was sentenced today to life imprisonment in San Quen. tin. Mis wife, accused of the same crime, will be placed on trial January I j. MRS. KAZZARD STILL GAY trr.unvt Fr-m First Pse. end as you aeem to think It will?" Mrs. Haxzard threw her head back confidently. "There Is no such thing as 'if."" she said. "Besides, don't you know there l a whole lot In being right with yourself? If one Is rlj-ht that way then nothing else matters." Such is the confidence of the woman who Is facing the gallows on the state's charge of murder in tbe first degree. She sees only victory : reverses are always dead and burled. Sleep Is t'atiwubled. Iesplte the fact that the examina tion of the Jurors today brought out more and more plainly that the prose cution will insist on the extreme pen alty. Dr. Haxzard. who . asserts she ho waa the beautiful Miss Linda Lee, of Kentucky, to reduce her orders for smart gowns and frocks and svelte millinery from Paris dressmakers and modistes, for the courts of New York are being asked to cut his allowance to 1 10.000 a year so that $150,000 of hla annual Income may be applied on pay ment of bis debts. Before be died. General Thomas pro vkied a large Income for hla son but stipulated that the principal be held in trust. He realised bew more or leas Irresponsible his son was. Notwithstanding the caution of the General. E. K Thomas involved him self In business to the extent of more than $1,000,000. His creditors have be come anxious and want the courts to turn over a large part of Thomas' In come until the $1,000,000 Indebtedness is paid. E. R. Thomas is now living at his mothers borne in Paris. His wife also Is In Paris. It has been reported from time to time that the couple was es tranged and had separated, but these reports are denied. PORTLAND WOMAN AIDS Mrs. Clara Waldo Makes Annual Gift of $100 to O. A. C. OREGON AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE. Corvallls. Jan. It. Announcement has been made of an an nual gift of $100 by Mra. Clara Waldo, of Portland, and one of the regents of the Oregon Agricultural College, to the girls of the college. The money has been placed at the disposal of the girls of the present senior class who sre to decide upon the best ways and means of making It available for the girls through contests to be inaugu rated by a committee of the senior girls. It Is anticipated that part of the fund will be used for prizes In debate and oratory to stir up Interest In these matters among the co-eds and part of It will be used as prizes for certain other contests of merit. Mrs. Waldo has given an additional 1100 to the Waldo Hall Club In order that the club should be .able to give their annual dance. This year, owing tc the steady growth of the size of the college. It was found Impossible to give both the dance and the reception as is usually done. However, with thla added gift from Mrs. Waldo, the club will bold a dance In the near future. WOMEN'S VOTE ERRORLESS Fresno Men. on Other Hand. Have Many Spoiled Ballots. FRESNO. Cal.. Jan. Is. Of S00 women women registered (or the special elec tion today 117 voted, while of about tovo men only 00 cast ballots. It was said by precinct officers that no women made mistakes and railed for new ballots, while many men made er. rors. In one precinct five out of 4a men -called for new ballots. NEW YORK. Jan. IS. (Special.) Piece by piece the Impediments legal and otherwise to the liberty of Harry K. Thaw are being removed. A new plan by Clarence J. Shearn. counsel for Thaw, promises to give to the slayer of Stanford White the right to walk from the doors of the State Hospital for Criminal Insane at Mattea wan a free man. Moreover, under Shearn's plan the District Attorney Is powerless to object and It seems likely that the latest move will succeed. Exactly what course will be pursued by Shearn has not been revealed, but it Is learned that the greatest Im pediment to Thaw's liberty has been removed the danger of testimony from Evelyn Nesblt Thaw that she Is afraid of her husband nd that he has threat ened to kill her should he regain bis freedom. Financial considerations af- he younger Mrs. Thaw. First, s about to sue for a divorce, is receiving $70 weekly, and $200 additional monthly from the elder Mrs. Thaw and it is pointed out that she cannot afford to oppose the wishes of the slayer's mother. In Thaw's former attempt to obtain his liberty his wife used this testimony against him and It was regarded as decisive. There are two courses of procedure open to Shearn. Which will be em ployed has not been said. Shearn may bring habeas corpus proceedings and then call for a trial by Jury to deter mine his clients sanity. Or he may be discharged upon the superintend ents certification of recovery, approved by a trial judge. - Matteawaa Officials Chauge. The fact that there have been cer tain changes In Matteawan recently leads to the possibility of the second course of action being pursued, while the removal of Evelyn Nesblt Thaw a adverse testimony may make the first ppear the more advisable. office It would not be saia be done, but It was ad mitted that an action is In preparation and would be brought shortly.. In either rase the District Attorney, who has the case at his finger tips, would be powerless to Intervene. The Attorney -General alone holds that pow er. Inasmuch as Thaw Is not held as a criminal, has been convicted of no crime and there are no Indictments standing against film. Dr. Austin Flint, the noted Insanity expert, who has appeared for the prose cution in all actions against Thaw, not only declared his belief that Thaw was a dangerous paranoiac and a pub- tnenace. but he said that in event White's slayer were given his liberty he would fear for his own life, as he believes that Thaw regards him as his worst enemy. He said that should Thaw be released he will certainly apply for a permit to carry a Tevolver and would shoot Thaw down If the man now at Matteawan approached him. Dr. Amos T. Baker, until recently first assistant physician at Matteawan, expressed similar views. Dr. Flint gave out the following statement: Thaw Believes. He Haa Mlaslou. "Thaw has been a potential par anoiac since early childhood, with a bad neurotic heredity. Before he killed White he had become possessed of fixed, systematized delusion that he had mission to protect American girls from debauchees, although at that time, as appeared in evidence, ne was fiaggellatlng helpless young women in considerable numbers. These he lured to apartments which he had occupied for many years In disrcDutable flat. All this appears in the habeas corpus proceedings before Justce- Mills at White Flams. "The circumstances of the killing of White are already well known, and the motive was clearly delusional. The theatrical character of the murder was characteristic. It was a typical par anolac murder. Thaw regarded this homicide as praiseworthy, and . re-1 peatedly called It. as appeared in the testimony, 'an act of Providence.' He Is absolutely Incurable and high ly dangerous If released. In my opinion, In cae he should be liberated, he would soon be guilty of some' criminal act of violence, probably a nomiciae. ne would drift back to New York sooner or later and would appear on the so called White Way. "It Is probable that he would repeal his manv previous exploits in attempt Ing to 'clean out" a. saloon or a dive. and In such an event he would probably be killed by some tough In 'self de fense' And this among certain classes would reflect honor upon the Individual fortunate enough to do the killing. Enmity Transferred te Him. I am Informed and believe that Thaw has transferred his enmities en ttre.lv and absolutely to me. He re gards others who were Instrumental In securing his confinement In Matt wan as persons who simply did their duty. But au present It appears that he regards me as his chief persecutor. I should not hesitate to take measures to protect myself if he should be at large and I should meet him." When Dr. Baker was a diced as to nis opinion he unhesitatingly replied that Thaw waa an incurable and highly dan gerous. As he had Thaw In charge since his. Incarceration until he re signed his post, only four months ago. he has intimate knowledge of the man's physical and mental condition. "My Ideaa In this case are a matter of public record, and I do not consider It improper for me to tell you that Thaw Is a dangerous paranoiac and should not be permitted his freedom," he said with emphasis. "He is Just as Insane at this moment as he was the day he was admitted to the asylum, and would be a menace to the publio In event of his liberation. "Unquestlonsbly he should be kept In confinement. Every effort should be made In this direction, and I believe it would be advisable for the Attorney General to appoint Mr. Jerome to look after the people's Interests. He Is ex tremely familiar with the case" Only Three More Weeks of Our Great Winter Removal Sale Every Article Reduced All Goods Purchased Through January Will Be Billed to You March First Dainty, Fresh Combination Suits A Special Sale Offering Every Garment Represents New Spring Merchandise Which Has Just Been Received $1.25 Combination Suits Final 89c Combinations of corset cover and drawers or corset cover and skirt Made in the newest cuts. The corset covers are trirhmed with dainty lace, insertion and medallions or embroidery edge. The drawers are finished with lace edging or plain hemstitched and tucked ruffles. All finished at the waist line with embroidery beading and ribbon. " ' $1.75 Combination Suits Final $1.19 Crepe and fine longcloth corset covers and drawer combinations daintily trimmed with tor chon and val laces, also fine embroidery made with fancy yokes trimmed with dainty medal-, lions or embroidery insertion, ribbon and beading. Drawers in the new skirt or ruffle style, edged with embroidery, rucked or lace ruffles, and beading and ribbon at waist. , $2.25 Combination Suits Final $1.59 Combinations of fine corset covers and drawers. Some are all-over embroidery, others with yokes of fine embroidery and embroidery edged. Still others with dainty lace, embroidery, in sertion, beading and ribbon yokes. , - i Drawers are all edged with embroidery or lace trimmed -ruffles. $3.50 Combination Suits Final $2.29 Voile and fine longcloth corset covers and drawer combinations. Corset covers daintily trimmed with lace insertion, beading and ribbons, also embroidery and medallions.- . Drawers edged with fine lace and embroidery. m ' . $4.50 Combination Suits Final $3.49 . Corset covers' and drawer combinations in princess styles, showing the newest imitations of baby Irish lace with insertion and medallions. Drawers cut in new skirt styles trimmed on the side and edged with lace. 'Also embroidery and Jace trimmed corset covers and daintily trimmed drawers and all-over embroidery in dainty patterns. . JL 1 rm wn &iGb. ' e Merchandise of TVleril Only WOES ARE RELATED Husband Thought $25,000 Legacy Not Enough. DIVA TELLS ASSOCIATES Singer Says Spouse From Whom She Will Seek Divorce Looked After HI nisei r Too Much to Please Her. CHICAGO. Jan. IS. (Special.) Do mestic differences In the life of SI me. Krnestlna Schumann-Helnk and Wil liam Rapp. Jr.. her third husband difficulties which, according to the con tralto s own statement, sre soon to re sult In a divorce were disclosed to day by associates of Mme. Schumann- Helnk In the Chicago Grand Opera Company. They were recited to her Intimates by Mme. Schumann-Helnk just before the Christmas holidays. 'He was in charge of my affairs and was asked to look after my children, said Mme. Schumann-Heink, "but he was looking; after himself too much to suit me. "1 carry life Insurance which costs 120,000 a year to keep up. I thought I would surprise- him one day. I took out a policy In his name for 125,000 I presented It thinking it would please him. -He. tore It up before my face and threw it at my feet. 'It Is not enough,' he said. "I married him so he could take care of my boys. He did not. Pouf! Why should I stay married to him? So get a divorce." connections were wiped out, the Puget Sound Independent Telephone Company or King County filed a complaint with the Public Service Commission today, demanding long distance connections with Portland to the south and Belling ham to the north. The company for merly had the use of three wires be tween Seattle and Tacoma and thence through to Portland, but now It says all service Is cut off. . The plaintiff company- is composed of rural lines in King, Snohomish and Skagit counties. The defendants named are the independent Telephone Com pany, the Sunset Telephone and Tele graph Company, the Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Company and the North western Long Distance Telephone Com pany. The company asks that the old rates be restored, that Joint rates be put In where needed, and "that physical con nections be ordered. The case will be heard at an early date, as It is the first one involving the crippling of service by reason of a merger. The complaint says that 5600 phones have been cut out of long distance connection. HOME WORKER HELD Radowitz, formerly German Ambassa dor In Constantinople and Madrid, died today. He was probably the last sur viving colleague of Prince Bismarck In the building up of the German Empire. He retired from active service in 1908. Solicitor for Nazarene Society Is Jailed. BAD CHECK CHARGE MADE FRITZI SGHEFF KICKED DAXCKK IX PKI5IA DOSXA'S OWN COMPANY INJCHES HER. HUSBAND GIVES HIS SIDE Rapp Says Schumann-Helnk and Her Children Insulted Him. NEW YORK, Jan. 16. (Special.) 1111am Rapp, Jr., denies that he is Jealous of the children of his wife. Mme. Schumann-Helnk. and he declared that he had left his wife four times before she announced her Intention to seek a divorce. Mr. Rapp explains that because the singer was the money winner of the family, he was subject to constant insults and humiliations by her and her children, and it be came unbearable. He says Mme. Schu mann-Helnk Is now worth S500.000, al most all of which, he intimates, is due to his management of her affairs. It was I who left Mme. .Schumann- Helnk. not she who left me, said Mr. Rapp. "Four timea before I had left, but always she got me to come back with promises. Now It Is too late. Since my marriage I have never had a home I could call my own. My. wife was the bread-winner, I was her em ploye, and she and her children never lost an opportunity to tell about it, to humble me, to Insult me. I stood It as long as I could and then I quit TEXAS WANTS SOLDIERS Job ortered to Northern Pacific. OREGOXIAN NEWS BUREAU. Wash ington. Jan. 16. At the request of merchants of Portland and Puget Sound, the Postofflce Hepartment today ofTered the Northern Pacific the maxi mum price for carrying malls over Its Connell branch from Adrian to Con nell. The contract will be awarded If this price Is accepted. Burleson Protests Against Removing Troops From Border. WASHINGTON. Jan. 16. Represent ative Burleson, of Texas, today pro tested to President Taft against a re cent War Department order removing the Sixth Cavalry and the Twenty third Infantry from the Texas border. Mr. Burleson told the President con ditions In Mexico should be Investi gated further before any more troops were sent out. The President will take the subject up with Secretary of War Stlmson. Bruise, Not Severe, Is Result of Ac- "t cldent While Comic Opera Is In Progress. PROVIDENCE, R. I.. Jan. 16. (Spe cial.) Fritzl SchefT, the prima donna of "The Night Birds," the current at traction at the Providence opera house, was a victim of an accl dent In the second act of last night's presentation of the comic opera, when a dancer of the company, turning handspring, kicked her on the hip. The injury was not serious, said the doctor who was called to attend Mile. SchefT. Two "peasants" were presenting version of a country dance when the accident happened. Mile. SchefT was seated at one side of the stage. One of the two dancers misjudged the amount of room he had for his spe cialty, and his acrobatics resulted In his feet striking Mile. Scheffs hip with considerable force. Mile. SchefT rose to her feet quickly and her chi.ir top pled over backward on the stage. Persons In the audience thought that she would faint, but she walked off the stage and the dancing continued. A physician found the injury a muscle bruise and not serious. TRAIN HITS RUNAWAY GIRL Injuries Received After Escape Fron Training School Are Fatal. CHEHAUS, Wash.. Jan. 16. (Spe cial.) After breaking from the State Training School, Magnolia Moss, a col ored girl, 16 years old. was injured this morning, four miles south of Che halls, while. It Is believed, she was at tempting to board a moving train. The girl died from her injuries at 10 o'clock today. The Moss girl and Olene Cochrane. 16 years old, also an inmate of the chool, escaped together. They were found on the railroad, and the Coch rane girl said that they had gone to sleep near the track and that an en gine had passed over the Moss girl's right arm. She was reticent about ex plaining the manner of the accident. "Paptain" H. Kunkel, Whoso Home Is Said ( to Be in Portland, Not " Known to Ixcal Head of Army. Arrest Made in San Jose. SAN JOSE, Cal., Jan. 16. "Captain H. Kunkel, who represents himself as an authorized solicitor for the Naza rene Home for Needy Women and Chil dren in San Francisco, was arrested today on a warrant from Monterey charging him with passing worthless checks. The officers here also charge that last night he gave the proprietor of a saloon a fictitious check for 6 Letters in his possession bearing th name of "Colonel J. H Pomeroy, dl visional commander," vouched for Kunkel as an earnest, faithful Chris tlan. Another letter, dated Albina, Or., and signed "Colonel Young, divisional commander," gives that city as the lo cation of the home. Kunkel wil lbe turned over to the Monterey authori ties. , General William Stacey, heading th Nazarene Army of America, said las night at the headquarters of the arm at 142 Russell street that Colonel J. H. Pomeroy, of San Francisco, had written him about Christmas in regard to Henry Kunkel. This man Kunkel, said Stacey, had been appointed to a cap taincy In San Francisco, but Just be fore Christmas Colonel Pomeroy wrote that he had disappeared, taking with him a captain's coat, hat and badge be longing to one of the other officers. "I do not know who Colonel Young Is," said Stacey, further. "If he were associated with the Nazarene army would know it." ' NO GASGARET USER EVER HAS HEADACHE A lO-trnt Bnx Will Keep Tonr Liver, Stomach and Bowels Clean, Pure and Fresh for 3Ionths. RULERS TO BE WELCOMED England Prepares for Home Coming of King George and Queen Mary. LONDON, Jan. 16. King George and Queen Mary, who are now passing through the Red Sea, are to have a great welcome on their arrival In Eng land. A great naval review at Spithead Is to be held February 4, and t;ie London public Is prepared to accord the King and Queen an enthusiastic reception on their way from the static- to Bucking ham Palace. After the return a thanksgiving serv ice Is to be held at St. Paul s Cathedral. The Spring months will be spent in re turning coronation visits to all the continental courts. Bismarck's Colleague Dead. BERLIN Jan. 16. Joseph M. Von TENOR IS CALLED TO WAR PHONE COMPANY PROTESTS King County Line Wants Long-Distance Connections Restored. OLYMPIA, Wash., Jan. 16. (Special.) Declaring that when the Independ ent Telephone Company was sold at Tacoma by order of the Federal Court last December that Its long distance Alfred L. Costa Regrets He Quit Stage Duels for Service in Tripoli. CHICAGO, Jan. 16. Alfred L. Costa, tenor with an opera company, has re ceived notice from the Italian government- to return to his native country at ' once to Join reserve forces being mobilized to - further prosecute the war against Turkey in Tripoli. The singer admitted the authority of Italy to summon him home for emergency service, but he could not conceal his disappointment at the thought of leaving America at this particular time. Costa said he thought the tallest men should be called first. He measures five feet. He served two years in the Royal Artillery. In Wasae. Auitrln, It is the custom to tip the streetcar conductor In addition to paring- far. Bad Blood Is the cause of all humors, eruptions, boile, pimples, scrofulo :s sores, eczema or ajt rheum, as well as of rheuma tism, catarrh and other troubles. In the opinion of many that have taken it. Hood's Sarsaparllla Is the greatest blood remedy for all these troubles. It has received more than forty thousand testimonials In two years. "My children had sores on their heads, arms and limbs, and nothing did them any good until I gave them Hood's Sarsacarilla. In a. very short time after I oegan giving them this medicine they were well." Mrs. Hannah Auble, Fairmount, N. J. There is no real substitute for Hood's Sarsaparilla Get it today in usual liquid form or chocolated tablets called Sarsataba. Sick headache, billlousness, dizziness, coated tongue. , foul taste and foul breath always trace them to torpid liver, delayed fermenting food In the bowels or sour, gassy stomach. Poisonous matter clogged In the in esttnes, instead of being cast out of Ithe system, is reabsorbed into the blood. When this poison reaches the delicate wiain ujtsuu jl causes congestion ana that dull, throbbing, sickening head ache. Salts, cathartic pills, oil and purga tive waters force a passageway for a day or two yes but they don't take the poisons out and have no effect upon the liver or stomach. Cascarets immediately cleanse and regulate the stomach, remove the sour, undigested and fermenting food and foul gases, take the excess bile from the liver and carry out of the system all the decomposed waste matter and poisons in the intestines and bowels. A Cascaret tonight will surely straighten you out by morning. They work while you sleep. A 10-cent box from your druggist means inside clean liness and a clear head for months. Ask any of the millions of Cascaret users if they ever have headache. Effect of Great Kidney Remedy Js Soon Realized I feel it my duty to let you know what Swamp-Root did for me. I was bothered with my back for over twenty years and at times I ."Id hardly get out of bed. I read your advertisement and decided to try Swamp-Root. -Used five bottles, and it has been five years since I used it, and I have never been bothered a day since I took the last bottle of it. I am thoroughly convinced that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root cured me and would recommend it to others suffering as I did. My husband was troubled wK.i kid ney and bladder troubles . d he took your Swamp-Root and it cured him. This was about five years ago. You may publish this-letter if you choose. Very truly yours. MRS. MATTIE CAM FIELD, R. F. D. No. 3, Gobleville. Mich. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 13th day of July, 1909. ARVIN W. MYERS, Notary Public for Van Duren Co., Mich. Letter to Dr. Kilmer & Co.. Binchamton, X. Y. Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do for You. Send to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingham- ton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. It will convince anyone. You will also receive a booklet of valuable Information, tell ing all about the kidneys and bladder. When writing, be sure and mention The Portland Daily Oregonlan. Regular fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottles for sale at all drugstores. The Wretchedness of Constipation Can quickly be oreacoma by CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS. Purely vegetable act lurehr and Beady on lbs lira. Cure Butouaoeai, Head, ache. .-wstsav. S :jr IVER ff rnsA B1 PILLS. I Deo, and hwgrsrinn. They do their duly Small PuVSaaall Do, Small Price. Genuine mutbear Signature ; I r