TTir MOTSXIXO OHEGOXIAX. TUESDAY, FEBKUAUY 6, 1913. ,1155 WILLIAMSON TO BE BRIDE SOON Sister of Victim of Fast Cure Admits Man in Australia Brought Back Life. OLD NURSE URGES MATCH rrniMHil That Came When Dorothy Was Xrar Death Itora Starvation Brought Hope to ratlent. Sentence Kxpcotrd Tomorrow. TACOMA. Wash.. Feb. 1. (Special.) Blushing- Dorothy Williamson. sister of Claire, lor vbou death Linda Burfleld Hiutrd. the Oliala starvation spectal lst. was convicted of manslaughter, to day admitted that there is a man In Australia who Is waltlna- for her "yea" to make him happy. It was his pro posal, said her old nurse. Margaret Conway, today, that brought Miss Wil liamson back from the valley of the shadow. It came but a few days after the little English heiress, wasted to skin and bone, had been rescued from Ftarvatlon HelKhts at OUala and broua-ht to Tacoma prior to her going to British Vtce-Consul C. E. . Luclen Agassis' home. "And so you are really going back to Australia to be married?" was asked Mle Williamson, at the Agassis horn today. ora Favers Match. "Oh. but I haven't accepted him yet." she blushlngly demurred. Miss Con way winked. "It's the very best thing for her." she said emphatically. "Be sides It was the very thing that mad her hang on to life." The man's came was not divulged, but he is said to be Independently wealthy. Though his proposal was the only one to be considered seriously yet there have been others, and from ab solute strangers, since the case was given publicity. 'From all over the country have come lettera of sym pathy from men and women and In some of the former were offers of mar riage. -It was so ridiculous. said Miss Dor othy, quaintly, "to think of absolute strangers proposing to me." Reverting to the Hasxard trial. Miss Williamson shuddered, and the color faded from her cheeks. "Oh. It was terrible." she said. "I am not fully recovered from the awful strain of It all yet. Sometimes I feel weak and tired. I kept up while I was on the witness stand, but afterward came the reaction and now that the verdict la In has come another reaction. Bsrlal Place I'ikitwa, "We are g'ad of the justice that has been given to us. but then, you know, not all the punishment In the world will bring back to life the ona that Is dead." "Where Is Claire burled?" Miss Wil liamson was asked. Silence made It plain, without the after acknowledge ment, that neither the sister nor Miss Conway believe they saw Claire's body aft.r death and that they think the rrt'.iatlon of a body said by "Dr." Har sard to have been that or Claire was a my tli In South Tacoma Cemetery are the ashes." said Dorothy finally. "You do not believe they are the ashes of Claire?" "No." said the two women, emphat ically. ,orothy Williamson now weighs 110 pounds, her normal weight, and still clings to her veffetenan beliefs. "Just because Mrs. Hasxard abused the vrreterlan theory and fasting is no r.aion why I should change my own Ideas." she said. "I eat all the simple foods, but I don't care for meat, so why eat that?" Miss Williamson and Miss Conway expect to remain in Tacoma. with the exception of visits to British Columbia friends, for some months, after which they will visit Dorothy's aunt. Mrs. Klizbeth Iluddr. a?d cousins at Eltoro. Ca After that th little heiress will return to Australia to visit her aunt at Sydney. Mrs. Elizabeth Langley. and but the wedding date remains to be s-f. Mrs. llaxzard. who Is suffering a nervous breakdown. Is still In the cus- today of a woman Deputy Sheriff at Tort Orchard, the 110.000 appeal bond required by the court not having been filed today. Sentence probably will be rassed on Mrs. Hasxard Wednesday. SENTENCES TO BE SERVED lleddrrlr. Hynrs and Smith r"all In Appeal on I-and Fraud Conviction. SAX FRANCISCO. Feb. 4 A. H. Hedderly, Richard' llynes and William IL Smith must serve the sentence Im posed upon them after their conviction in 10S on charges of having defrauded the Government out of lands In Ore gon, according to a ruling of the Uni ted States circuit Court of Appeala to day. Smith was fined $5000 and sentenced to two years In prison. Hedderly 15000 and six months In Jail and Hynes 13000 and three months. The cases wera ap pealed on an alleged writ of error. LA FOLLETTE MEN GIVE UP iContlaned From First sn for supporting La Follette was due to the fact that they understood Colonel Koosevelt was not a candidate and that he would not accept the Presidential nomination under any cir cumstances. Now that matters have changed In that respect, their attitude also has changed, snd. as said. It Is not alone the breakdown of Senator La Follette that has brought about the newer de velopments. While the statements which have emanated from the la Follette bureau have until tonight emphasised the per sonality of the Wisconsin Senator as the leader of a movement. It Is regarded as highly significant that the manager of the campaign Is now directing his efforts to secure support for "prin ciples." The announcement that Mr. l.a Foll'tte's name will be kept In the rif- snd that It will be presented to snd b voted upon at the Republican National convention In Chicago Is thought to he mainly for the purpose of maintaining as compart as possible the La Follette forces until the La Fol. lette movement ran be turned over to the Koosevelt forces. SKVATOU STAYS. SAYS HOCSKli Campaign lna; r Says la follette Will Slay In Kace. WASHINGTON'. Feb. S. Senator La Follette. deplte 1)1 health, will not withdraw from the race for the Repub lican nomination for President. This I was made clear In a statement Issued tonight by Colonel W. L. Houser. the Senator's campaign manager and chair man of the "progressive" Republican committee. The statement In part fol lows: "Senator La Follette finds It neces sary to take a few weeks' rest. This may prevent his making speeches In the states which are to hold early primaries, and his friends In those states will make such a campaign for him as In their Judgment will serve best the 'progressive' principles which his candidacy represents. "Senator La Follette was urged to become a candidate by the most active progressive Republicans of the coun try, because they believe that he, bet ter than any other man. by the whole courne of tils political career, repre sented these principles. He would never have consented to stand as a can didate excepting In good faith. "Although he finds his plans Inter fered with by his temporary Indisposi tion. In fulfillment of the Implied pledge which his candidacy made to those who have always believed In the sincerity and constancy of his purposes, his mime will be presented to the National Republican conventions and delegates will make an aggressive contest for his nomination and for a strong progres sive platform. To this end. the 'pro gressive' Republican campaign com mittee will devote Its best efforts. "Whatever time Senator La Follette can devote to the campaign after taking a needed rest for a few weeks DIVINO VENUS" CHOSEN FOR MODEL FOR PANAMA PACIFIC EXPOSITION POSTERS. : .-, v . . -.-v . : ! ii s:. i tl A.bfIE NEW TORK. Feb. 5. (Special.) Charles R. Macauley, the artist who has been commissioned by the directors of the Panama Exposition to draw the exposition's official poster, has chosen Miss Annette Kel lermann. "the, diving Venus," an expert swimmer In vaudeville, as his model for the "Spirit of the West" The choice of Miss Kellermann has been ratified by th i officials, and Macauley will begin his work this week. The poster will be In five colors, and It Is expected It will re quire a month to draw It. Messrs. Shubert. under whose management Miss Kellermann Is. have given their consent to her posing, and she will receive no remuneration for It. Miss Kellermann Is an Australian by birth, but her mother Is a Callfornlan. will be given, subject to such demands as his official duties make on him." MRS. HAIN3 IS BRIDE BOSTON MAX WEDS EX-WIFE OF ARMY OFFICER. Central Figure In Killing of William Annls and Reginald Bolles Mar ried at Milton, Mass. BOSTON, Feb. 5. Claudia C. Libber Halns. who was the central figure In the Army tragedy four years ago. which resulted In the murder of Wil liam E. Annls by her husband. Cap tain Feter C. llalns, was married to night at the home of her parents in Milton to Reginald Fairfax Bollcs, a Boston artist. Captain Halns obtained a divorce from his wife two years ago, naming Annls as co-respondent. The divorce was not contested. Mrs. Halns re turned to Boston to live with her par ents. At the ceremony tonight the only witnesses were Mr. and Mrs. Charles IL Llbbey, parents of the bride, and Mathew BoUes, of New York, brotner of the bridegroom. BoUes la a Harvard graduate of the class of 100 and has considerable rep utation as an Illustrator. He has a studio on Ipswich street. He will make his home with his bride in the Back Bay. Captain Halna was pardoned recently by Governor Dlx. of New York, for the slaying of Annls, which occurred at Flushing. L. I August IS. 108. RULERS VIEW LAUNCHING Flrl Hattlcs-hlp of Spain's New Nary Takes Water. FEKROL, Spain. Feb. 5. King Al fonso and Queen Victoria era present today at the launching of the battleshtp F.spana. The fclrpana Is the first of the battleships of the new Spanish navy to take the water. King Alfonso waa present at the laying down of her kee.1. in July. ISO. The Espana Is a four-screw steel vessel. 43a feet In length. Her dis placement Is 15.450 tons and her esti mated speed It. 5. knots. She will carry eight 13-lnch guns. 30 4-tnch guns and a number of quick-firers and machine guns. Centralla to Meet Vancouver. CENT KALI A. Wash.. Feb. 5. (Spe cial.) The aeml-final lnterscbolastlo debate between the Centralla and Van couver high schools will be held In this city next Friday night. Both schools have two victories to their credit. Centralla has defeated Kent and Hoquiam. while Vancouver has de feated Sunnyslde and Kelso. Castle Rock and Montesano are the only two other teams remaining In the race and the final debate will be between the winner here Saturday night and the winner of the debate between the other two undefeated teams. Boy Rob Lawyers' Ofrice. OREGON CITY. Or, Feb. 6. (Spe cial.) Lewd with Hutson. 10 years old, was arrested today by Policeman Cooke on a charge of having robbed the law office of W. S. U'Ren and C. Schuebel. The boy, who escaped from the Boys' and Girls' Aid Society in Portland last Friday, admitted to Chief of Police Shaw that he had entered the office and stolen li.lS. which he gave to the Chief. Vancouver Bank to Build. VAXCCWVER. Wash, Feb. 6. (Spe cial.) A five-story brick building. 60 by 100 feet. Is to be built at the cor ner of Main and Fifth streets. The Cnlted Slates National Bank, now at the corner of Third and Main streets. In Hotel Columbia, will cccupy the new building. The ground floor will he used by the bank and the upper floors will be for offices. ARTIST SEES VISION Beautiful Woman of Mystery Lost to Harrison Fisher. HE TELLS OF 10 LOVELIEST Painter Gives List of Nine, but Says One Vbo Surpasses All Others on Earth He Cot Only Fleet ins; Glimpse of at One Time. NEW TORK. Feb. 5. (Special.) One glimpse of a woman whom he de clares to be the most beautiful on earth has caused Harrison Fisher, the famous artist, to declare he will not rest until he has found her and por trayed her on canvas. Who she la or where she lives Is a mystery to the K1XLLI.NA'.. artist, but that one fleeting Impres s on of her loveliness baa burned Itself Into his brain and he aays he knows of nothing ho would not give to know her name. Mr. Fisher was talking of the ten most beautiful women, according to his standards, but he says the list is far from complete without the name of this one most beautiful of all, the one who passed beyond his grasp like a ship that passes In the night. The artist says he has racked bis brain to disclose her Identity, has looked through the photographic galleries and magazines, but nowhere has he had an inkling as to who she Is. All he knows, he says. Is that she Is a prominent society wo man somewhere, and that she Is the most charming vision of womanly beauty that has ever crossed his path. Harrison Fisher says he could almost paint her from that one fleeting glance, so vivid an impression did It make upon his memory, but that the portrayal would - be so far Inferior to the real woman, unless she were present to pose for him. that it would be folly for him to try. In giving his list of the ten most beautiful women whom be has seen, the artist does so with the distinct under standing that It Is lacking the name of the one who should head It. The list follows Miss Catherine Clements, his model. Mrs. John Jacob Astor, of New York. Miss Catherine Force, sister of Mrs. Astor. Mrs. Philip Lydig. of New York. Queen Wllhelmlna of Holland. Klyse Shultx. of California. Dorothy Jardon, the actress. Geraldine Farrar. the singer. Miss Coyne, model. HRSL THURSTON FRAIL SISTERS TESTIFY is SUIT CON TESTING WILL. Witness Says Legator A-soribed Her Marriage to Efforts of "Purple" or Mrs. Tlngley. SAN DIEGO. Feb. 5. Mrs. Carrie Wallace and Mrs. Eben Sankey, both of Seattle and sisters of the late Mrs. Harriet F. Thurston, were witnesses for the contestant in the Thurston will suit here this afternoon, Mrs. Wallace testified that her sister during life waa always frail. By the will In which her .sister be queathed the bulk of a $347,000 estate to Mrs. Katberlne Tlngley, head of the Universal Brotherhood and Theosophl cal Society, Mrs. Wallace is to receive fsOOO. Mrs. Eben Sankey, another sis ter, receives 12000. The latter added confirmation to Mrs. Wallace's testi mony this afternoon. The testimony of Mrs. Alicia Vasquea Pierce, divorced wife of the ex-secretary of the Brotherhood, related a con versation between Mlsa White, an In structor at Point Lorn a, in congratulat ing Mrs. Thurston on her then recent marriage to aged Clark Thurston. "Don't congratulate me; congratulate Purple.-" she did it." Mrs. Thurston is reported to have replied. The contest ants maintain that "Purple" Is the name by which Mrs. Tlngley Is some times called. FILM MAKING PORTRAYED Vita graph Compay Agent Says Rose Festival Will Be Pictured.. Crowded to the doors was the wel come extended to C. L. Fuller, of New York, at the People's Theater last night, when he described to the audi ence the making of the Vltagraph motion-pictures. A long film waa used to Illustrate Mr. Fuller's lecture. "The Vltagraph Company." said Mr. Fuller. "Is the latest Improvement In the manufacture of moving-pictures. Our pictures are shown in 14,000 amusement houses throughout the I'nlted States and we employ 600 peo ple, among them a boy actor of 18 years, who receives a big salary. "In making pictures. It exposures to a second are made. A single picture takes from 10 days to one year to be manufactured, according to the sub- Ject portrayed. One negative each second Is printed, and 1.000,000 feet of film Is developed in an hour. Our studio accommodates 1000 persons at a time. The costume room alone repre sents an Investment of $1,500,000." Mr. Fuller showed various parts of the 'Vltagraph factory. A yard nearby, where a scene from Pagllacci was be ing enacted, was shown and rehearsals of a Pullman car scene. Before the performance Mr. Fuller said that he bad visited Portland ex pecting to remain a few hours and he haa already stayed for five days, so much Is he Impressed with the city and the hospitality of Portland people. He will return next June to take a complete set of pictures of the Rose Festival, which will be sent all over the Cnlted States and other countries as well. His next lecture will be de livered In La Grande, under the aus pices ot the People's Amusement Com pany. Through the hospitality of Mr. Ful ler, the entire row of box'ss were re served last night for the members of the Portland Press Club and their families and friends. I WITNESS SAVS SNEED SHOT MAX TRYING TO RCX. State In Texas Murder Case Shows That Defendant Waited Com ing of Victim. FORT WORTH. Tex., Feb. 5. That Captain A. O. Boyce tried to run away when J. B. Sneed was about to shoot him was brought out at the murder trial of 8need today. Ireland Hampton, a state witness, also testified that the meeting of the two men was not accidental, as the defense contends. He said that short ly before the shooting he saw Sneed looking through a window of the hotel lobby, where the tragedy occurred. S. M. Cherry, of Galveston, a travel ing salesman, testified he was standing near the main entrance of the hotel when he heard pistol shots. He turned to see Boyce in a "stooping ' position, as though rising from his chair." The witness said he also say Sneed five or six feet from Captain Boyce. Sneed was still shooting. He saw Cap tain Boyce fall and then he followed Sneed as the latter walked out of the hotel, called a policeman who made the arrest. The first hint of the "unwritten law came in cross-examination of Edward Cobb, of Wichita Falls, a state witness. He said that less than an hour before the shooting of Captain Boyce, either the captain or Edward Throckmorton had declared "within 30 days Al Boyce. Jr., and Mrs. Sneed will be reunited." Throckmorton died suddenly last week after a mysterious Illness, sup posed to have been brought on by al cholic poisoning. He was to have been chief witness for the state. SEA WASHKUPBODIES TWO MEX. LASHED TO SPARS MAY BE OF ALSEX'S CREW. Grew some Find First News From Vessel Missing Since December 18 on California Coast. SAN DIEGO, CaU Feb. 6. Hope for the safety of the crew of the lost schooner Alsen was about given up here today when word waa received that two bodies had come ashore off Santa Catrina, nearly 200 miles south of here, on the Lower California coast. The bodies were lashed to spars, ac cording to telegraphic advices re ceived from Ensenada today by A. Sandoval, owner of the missing schooner, and are believed to be those of members of the crew of the ill fated vessel, which cleared from En senada December 18 last and has not been heard from since. Three vessels are now searching the coast for trace of the schooner. The search has been on for the past two weeks, but no trace of the ship has been reported. The vessel had a Mexican crew of six sailors and a Mexican captain. CANNERY WILL BE OPENED Centralla Fruit Growers Association to Lease Plant. CENTRALIA. Wash, Feb. B. (Spe cial.) At a meeting of the Centralia Fruitgrowers' Association In this city Saturday it was decided to reopen the cannery owned by the association here, which has been closed since last Sep tember. Owing to a debt of $2100 the association does not think it advisable to operate the concern Itself, but has decided to lease the plant to outside parties for one year at a nominal rental. If the lessee makes a profit from the concern the association ex pects to sell additional stock and raise the debt on the plant. The association has $650 in new cans on hand, which by selling to the les see would reduce the debt to $1500, leaving only that amount to be raised by stock subscription. The Centralla Fruitgrowers' Association was organ ised several years ago and Its mem bership Includes practically all of the growers In this section of the state. MRS. J. G. GAULD HOSTESS Big Reception to Follow Equal Suf ' frage Lecture Tonight. The president of the Portland organi sation is Mrs. Solomon Hlrsch. Mrs. J. Andre Foullhoux Is secretary, and Mrs. Frances Wilson Is treasurer. Wil liam D. Wheelwright will Introduce the speakers and Joseph N. Teal will give an address. More than 200 guests have been asked to the home of Mrs. James G. Gauld. at the head of King street, tonight to hear a lecture which Is to be followed by a reception given under the auspices of the Portland Equal Suffrage League. The speakers will be Mrs. Greely, law yer and one of New York's most ardent suffrage workers, and Miss Anita Whit ney, of San Francisco. OFFICE CHANGES PLANNED Tourist Travel Prompts Removal of Validating Quarters. Removal of the Portland validating office from the Union Station to the business district of the city is the problem that will confront the North Pacific Coast Passenger Association at Its meeting in Seattle today. William McMurray, general passenger agent of the O.-W. R. & N. Co.; W. E. Coman. general freight and passenger agent of the North Band road, and John M. Scott, general passenger agent of the Southern Pacific, are the Portland men who will attend the meeting. On account of the constantly increas- THERE IS absolutely no word to express the efficacy of Scott's Emulsion in the treatment of COUGHS, COLDS BRONCHITIS CATARRH, GRIPPE AND RHEUMATISM all omuaoimra 11-51 lng tourist business, together with the probable heavy travel to Portland for the Rose Festival and the Elks Na tional convention, the location of the office in the business section is con sidered desirable. G. B. Kerth,, city passenger agent of the Canadian Pa cific Railway, who had charge of the office last Summer, has recommended that It be transferred from the depot, where It has been situated for the post few years. Portland passenger agents have not formed an opinion on It but It is probable that If the office is re tained at the station a branch will be established in the business section during Rose Festival and Elk con vention weeks. The office is main tained by the Transcontinental passen ger Association and will open. for the 1912 Summer tourist season some time m May. . Dates for the sale of low rate round trip tickets from points in the North west to the East will be set at the Seattle meeting today. GIRL S? LIKE VETERAN SHE EXJOYS CIGARETTE IX VESTIBtLE. Women Stare, Men Offer Matches to Dainty Miss Who Refuses to Tell Name hut Insists on Rights. SAN FRANCISCO. Feb. 6. (Special.) Passengers In a crowded Market street car were shocked and entertained at . 6 o'clock this evening when a fashionably gowned and petite young woman boarded the pay-as-you-enter vehicle, advanced to the front platform with her escort, and, after selecting a dainty cigarette from a Jeweled case In her chatelaine, proceeded to enjoy Its fragrant fumes with the nonchalant air of a veteran smoker. Her fellow - passengers glanced, looked a second time and then stared, while the male slaves of the weed on the front platform volunteered to as sist with everything from a match to the "makings." The original maid refused to tell her name or that of her escort but between Inhalations expressed the opinion that modern woman's rights had given her the privilege of Invading the compartment dedicated to Lady Nicotine. "No, I am not trying td Imitate Frau Dreschke," she said, "and I am not seeking notoriety. Women had to smoke second handed In streetcars for a good many years and I can see no reason why they should not be per mitted to Indulge in the habit them selves as long as they do It In the proper place, as I am doing." The curiosity of the crowd became so unpleasant that the young woman was forced to leave the car. EDWIN SWETLAND DIES PORTLAND COXFECTIOXER PASSES AWAY", AGED 70. Founder of Swetland. & Son, Xatlve of Springfield, Mass. Funeral Will Be Wednesday. Edwin Tayson Swetland, -aged 70 years, founder of the business of Swet land & Son. died at 2:45 P. M. yesterday at his residence. 248 East Sixtieth street, after a long Illness. Mr. Swetland was born In Springfield, Mass., April 9, 1842. It was there he learned the confectionery business which he followed for several years before coming to Portland In 1885. Shortly after looatlng in this city, he eHtabllshed the Morrison-street bouse which bears his name. At Spring field. November 24. 1862, he married Laura Qulmby, who, with one son. Lot Q. Swetland. survives him. A brother, Louis E. Swetland. died January IT. Funeral services will be conducted at Finley'a chapel at 2 o'clock tomor row afternoon i by Rev. William G. Moore, pastor of Mount Tabor Presby terian Cbuch. Burial will take place at Rlvervlew Cemetery. v WOODMEN TO FIGHT RATE Assembly Seeks Aid to Defeat Pro posed Increase in Charges. MINNEAPOLIS. Feb. 5. Thousands of circulars have been Issued by the Modern Woodmen Assembly, organized here January 31, to fight the adoption of increased Insurance rates of the Modern Woodmen of America. The circular asks all councils to send delegates to a mass meeting on Feb ruary 22, when plans will be made for fighting the so-called Mobile bill adopt ed by the organization at the conven tion in Chicago recently. More Coal Found In Alaska, CORDOVA, Alaska, Feb. 5. A large body of anthracite and semi-anthracite coal has been discovered at the head of White River, Yukon Territory, Canada, a few miles from the summit of Skoiai Pass. The new fields are within 50 miles of the great Chitlna-Kotslna-Nlzlna copper district of Alas ka, where extensive mining operations are In progress. The new coal areas were discovered last Fall, and without making public announcement a com pany made locations and set a large force of men at development work. William Hardin Sentenced. OREGON CITY, Or, Feb. 6. (Spe cial.) William Hardin, a rancher of the www Sole Agents TRADE MARK '.' LipmanJfVblfeSCb Castletott Hertje$ Direct from the mills. No middleman's profit figured in the prices of these Castleton serges. ' The) come direct from the most extensive manufac turer in this- country a firm noted for the careful choice of yarns and the pains taken in every step of manu - facturing. Castleton serges are hard-twisted serges that are never knotrn to fail in wearing -qualities. Right in Color Texture Quality and Wear The Castleton Serges Always a satisfactory material for sturdy wear Cas tleton serges will be of even greater interest to you, as navy serges are at the very pinnacle of fashion as the fore most material for the Spring of 1912 for tailor-made suits and dresses. Castleton Serges in Navy and Black Superior Worth at $h$1.25-$1.50-$1.75 Yard JL Stesdttan&afz of! ZfteriL Only-. Bull Run district, was today sentenced to 20 years In the Penitentiary by Judge Campbell, on conviction of crim inally attacking his step-daughter, Eva Phelps, now Mrs. Eva Woods. The at tack Is said to have been made three years ago. Hardin was arrested soon after, but the charge All the Tone Quality of the $200.00 Instruments in This One at We agree to deliver this perfect outfit free on three days' trial, including the twelve double-disc records This beautiful instrument is finished in the choic est mahogany or quarter-sawed oak, polished like the costliest piano, wonderfully constructed tone chamber, tone-controlling doors, perfected sound-bar, in fact an unexcelled sound-producing machine, at. this unusually low price. Call, write or phone Graves Music Co. Ill 4th St. Tel. A or Main 1433. Talking-Machine Headquarters IVature's t- , i 4 : T . . . . . , . drake ana stone root, goiaen seai, urcjm sij ' . , , . R. V. Pierce made a pure tflyoeric extract which has been favorably known tor over forty years. He called it " Golden Medical Discovery." ... This " Discovery" purifies the blood and tones up the stomach and the entire system in Nature' own way. It's just the tissue builder and tonic you require when recovering from a hard cold, grip, or pneumonia. No matter how strong tbe constitution the storoaoh is apt to be " out of kilter " at times ; in consequence the blood is disordered, for the stomaoh is the laboratory for the constant manu facture of blood. Dr. Pierce's liolden Medical uisoovery stronincu. . . . i . i UlnnA Klna tha livar and "Dome caueo. is l. by a friend to try safe In saying It T. G. Kent. Esq. satisfactory.' HEADACHY, BILIOUS, .CONSTIPATED, TONGUE COATED? CASCARETS SURE Turn the rascals out the headache, the biliousness, the Indigestion, the sick, sour stomach and foul gases turn them out tonight and keep them out with Cascarets. Don't put in another day "of distress. Let Cascarets cleanse and regulate your stomach: remove the sour, undigested and fermenting- food and that misery-making; a-as; take the excess bile from your liver and carry off the decom posed waste matter and poison from the Intestines and bowels. Then you will feel gTeat. A Cascaret tonight will straighten you out by morning a 10-cent box means a clear head and cheerfulness for months. Don't forget the children. "CASCARETS fSole Agents REGISTERED 'was dismissed. The defendant, who nas oeen out u owv .. to Jail after being sentenced and bis attorney. Grant B. Dimiok, announced that an appeal would be taken. Judge Campbell fixed bond at J10.000, but tlje prisoner had not found a bondsman, late tonight. Which Includes 24 Selections of music (12 double-side records) -and- you can pay for the outfit at the rate of $5.00 a month. Is Xlie Best. . fii UnnHrnnf oueen's root, man j -a i.hmkirl. Of these Dr. purs ic in snape iu , ...... UBUVH - , kidneys to expel the poisons from the body. The weak, nerv ous, run-down, debilitated condition which so many people experience at this time of the year is usually the effect of poisons in the blood; it is often indioated by pimples or boils appearing on the skin, the face becomes thin you feel blue. "More than a week ago I was suffering with an awful cold In my head, throat, breast, and body ' writes Ma. Jambs G. Kent, of 710 L. Street, S. E.. Washington, D. C. ji q'tro. ovjluo , t j i nV J a bottle of your ' Golden Medical Discov- Is the greatest and best medicine that I ever took, my neanu is muiu using your medicine. It does all you claim lor it and is 10 CentS. Never gripe or sicken. WORK WHILE.YOU SLEEP