Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, February 15, 1912, Page 4, Image 4

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    TIIE MORNING OREGONIAN, TITTTRSDAT. FEBRUARY 15, 1912.
TAFT ASSAILED BY
T. R. COMMITTEE"
Administration Charged by
McCormick With "Political
Suicide and Murder."
HEADQUARTERS ARE OPEN
Hwrnt Dr-KTlrr From L Kollnto
S-aW of Tollllcal Paranoia
of President Roosevelt An
nouncement Fxpectrd.
WASHIXQTOX, Fb. 14. A state
ment lsued tonlarht at the WashlnRton
offices of th "Roosevelt National com
mtttee." In tha Interest of Colonel
Roosevelt, and lined br Uedlll Mc
Cormlck. declared that President
Taft's Administration has embarked
upon a policy of "political aulclde and
murder.
President Taffa New fork speech.
In which he referred to "political neu
rotics." is criticised, a la Secretary
MaeVeacn's speech at Lansing-, in
which he declared that Mr. Roosevelt
would not and could not be a candidal
for tha Presidency.
Mr. McCormick. who recently with
drew from Senator Jjk Follett's cam
paign, has opened offices in a down
town office bulldlnsr. Tha statement
waa Issued from there.
Paklle AuMsewit Kitertel.
Until tonlsht there had been no
Roosevelt "headquarters" here and
the offices are not now known aa
such, but the ex-Presldent'a frlenda
ray they will be as soon aa the Colonel
makes a public announcement of Ms
position, which ihey think will be
soon. The statement follows:
"The Administration has embarked
on a policy of political 'suicide and
murdT' munler. If possible, and aul
cide if necessary. In Its effort to dis
credit the trienda of Mr. Hooaevelt It
has soucht to destroy the Republicans
who favor bis candidacy and to cs-st
Ita lot with the moribund reactionary
leaders of the Republican party, at
the risk of logins; the aupport of tha
Treat mass of progressive voters
throughout the country.
MarVrast Declared Mlalaforaae.
"Not content with viciously attack
Ira; the progressives in on speech. In
another It haa snujrht to divide th
Republican opposition to the President
by confusing; facts with reference to
Senator Cummins. Senator La Follett
and Colonel Roosevelt. It Is not cred
itable that th Secretary of th Treas
ury could have mad such Lansing
speech If he had not been misinformed
aa to facta.
"Th country will not be confused
bv the President' characterisation of
Colonel Roosevelt's supporters aa po
litest neurotics. It has noticed that
th element which opposed President
Taft's nomination In 101 are back of
th movement for hla renomlna Hon,
under th leadership of th extreme
reactlonariea In th IIous and Senata.
-Pallttrat PranU Charge.
"Those Republicans who really se
cured hla nomination and election are
now opposed to his renoralnation. At
first they were mostly disappointed by
th Administration' vaccilatlon and
hoped that th Administration event
ually would adopt a consistent and
progressive course. But what at first
they took for temporary weakness they
hav now discovered to be a political
paranoia. MKDILL. M CORMICK."
Later a second statement was given
out at the "headquarters," analysing
th political situation aa favorable to
th nomination of Colonel Roosevelt.
CHINESE RESISTS ARREST
Patrolman Valle Bitten bj Oriental
WIm Carries Kevohrer.
After putting op a fight In which th
left land of Special policeman Vail
waa badly chewed, a Chinaman who
gave bis nam at th police atatlon aa
Sam 8!ng. and was later Identified by
Seid Hack. Jr.. a Chines merchant, aa
t-'m Lee. waa arrested by th special
officer on a chars of carrying con
cealed weapons- A revolver and a
number of cartridges war taken froaa
his person.
The arrest waa made at Second and
Salmon streets, near the homes of a
number of wealthy Chines merchants.
When the policeman arrested Sam Lee,
another Chinese, who hla name aa
Low Gum. attempted to prevent th
arrest. Veil alao arrested him.
Feld Rack Identified Sam aa a can
nery foreman, who la. he says, em
ployed by Moy Back Hln. Imperial Chi
nes Consul, aa a foreman In th Twin
W Company store at Sit Second street.
BOYCOTT BILL' OPPOSED
Manufacturer' Council Say Sher
man. Law Would Lose Form.
WASHINGTON". Feb. 14. Denouncing
th Wilson anti-Injunction and antt
eonsplracy bill aa a menace to th
Governments power over all combina
tions. Jamea A. Emery, counsel for th
National Association of Manufacturers,
today told th House Judiciary commit
tee that th measure "would take th
teeth ut of th Sherman law."
Th measure haa th Indoraement of
th American Federation of Labor and
would prevent th Issuance of Injunc
tions in labor dlsputea and make th
boycott legal.
GEORGIA INDORSES TAFT
White and Negroes Equally Repre
sented on Ielceatlon.
ATLANTA. Hi.. Feb. 14 President
Tilt waa Indorsed unanimously by th
Republican Stat convention, which met
here fxiey and selected delegates at
large to the National convention. Th
delegatea were Instructed to vote for
the renomlnatlon of Mr. Taft.
Negroes composed mora than half of
th membership of the convention and
Lincoln Johnson, a negro, was mad
permanent chairman, None of th con.
testing delegates waa seated. Equal
representation waa given th two racea
on the Chicago delegation.
ASHLAND HOSTJO EUGENE
Visitor Lunch at Hotel and F.njoy
Auto Trip Through City.
J15HLLVD. Or. Feb. 14. (Special.)
Aahlaad waa "at horn" to th tourlu g
delegates of th Eugene Commercial
Club. 25 In number, today. Th visit
ors war given a luncheon at the Hotel
Ashland shortly after their arrival at
noon, following; which greetings wer
exchanged.
Afterward the guests wer taken for
an automobile drive about tha city to
see points of Interest and note the
substantial progress and development
of what they declared waa the Gem
City of Southern Oregon, which they
found Indulging In a maximum amount
of sunshine, with early fruits and
flowers and vegetation In general
decked In their first Spring garbs.
Grants la Flans to He Host.
GRANTS PASS. Or.. Feb. 14. (Spe-
claL) Tha Eugene Commercial Club
members will be royally entertained
when they return this way next Fri
day and stop to mix with the Grants
Pass cltlxens. Th members of the
Commercial Club are preparing a big
surprise and welcome to the visitors
that will end with a feast and smoker.
Th executive committee on programme
Is giving the finishing touches to a
literary and musical programme that
will last throughout the evening's
entertainment.
ROTARY CLUB ELECTS
FRANK I.. RIGGS IS NEW FKESI
PEXT CUOSEX.
REBELS GIVE MODE
E
US
FOR ALARM
Library Site and Columbia Bridge
Conforming With Bennett Plan
Approved Eight Speak.
Frank L Rlrfra was elected president
of th Rotary Club at its annual meet
ing and banquet at th Multnomah
Hotel last night, to succeed Dwlght Ed
wards, the retiring executive. C. V.
Cooper was elected vice-president. O.
O. Walker was re-elected secretary and
J. L Wright waa named treasurer. Th
votes In th election of trustees ran
fairly close for th 12 candidates, th
following being chosen: C V. Cooper.
C B. Merrick. O. O. Walker. J. C. Eng
lish. Phillip Groesmayer and C. T.
PralL
Early In the evening Mr. PralU an
nouncing th entrance of Arlxona Into
statehood with a brief apeech. led th
assembly In a rising toast to the "lat
est star added to the flag of th Cnlted
States."
A. G. Clarke, president of th Port
land Ad Club, bore greetings and good
wishes for the coming year .-for th
Rotary Club In behalf of the organiza
tion he represented. The Ad Club plans
to establish censorship over advertis
ing of th city and to endeavor to dis
courage false and "fake" advertising
methods.
James P. Stapleton, chairman of the
bridge committee of Vancouver. Wash.,
spoke of the efforts being made to
build a bridge across tha Columbia
River, connecting Vancouver with Port
land. He declared that Southwestern
Washington turns to Portland aa Its
natural market place and that a bridge
across th Columbia River would bring
that territory practically Into Port
land's dooryard. Ha asked th Rotary
Club to lend Ita assistance to hasten
the success of th movement.
Other speakera wer - Monroe Gold
stein, representing th Multnomah
Hotel Company; Eugene Brookings, or
th Progressive Business Men's Club;
George Hyland. representing C. K.
Henry, of th Portland Realty Board:
H. R. Denny, of th Seattle Rotary
Club, and E- Holer, of Salem.
Resolutions wer adopted favoring
th selection of th library site In ac
cordance with th Bennett plana, and
th erection of the Columbia River
bridge In accordance with the plana
suggested In Mr. Bennett's diagram.
In compliment to th Rotary Club
th hotel management furniahed musi
cal numbers by th Italian trio and
other aingera.
The retiring officers of the associa
tion this year are Dwlght Edwards, O.
G. Walker (re-elected). G. W. Hoyt. W.
W. Robinson, IL V. Carrington and C
N. Stockwell.
COLCMBIAXS TO VISIT COCXCIIi
AT ASTORIA.
Portland and Other Cities to Send
Big Ielegatlon on Steamer Pot
ter Satnrday Xlglit.
Astoria baa been selected by th
Knights of Columbus for th first big
pilgrimage of tha 1913 period and ar
rangements wer mad yesterday to
charter th 0.-W. R- i N. at earner T.
J. Potter to carry the crowd. L'p to
last evening 1J0 reservations had been
made by members of Portland Council,
extra accommodations had been ordered
br Knights from Baker. The Dalles,
Medford. Eugene and Albany and there
are others to be heard from throughout
th slat, ao it la thought over 100 will
go-
Tn honor of tbe visit of outside mem
bers Astoria Council is planning a re
ception and aa the principal feature 35
candidates from th city and other
points on th Lower Columbia will be
Initiated. Astoria being th abiding
place of District Deputy O'Brien h la
to hav charge of tha exercises, as
sisted by offloers of other councils.
J. F. Slnnott. chairman of tha com
mittee on arrangements from Portland
Council, says that the potter will leave
Ash-street dock at 11 o'clock Saturday
night and the Knlghta will be in As
toria early Sunday morning. Mass will
be attended there In a body and the first
degree will b exempltf'ed before noon.
Th second and third degrees are to b
conducted tn the afternoon and th
day's programme will terminate with
a banquet. Th steamer la to start on
the return ao that the time of arrival at
Portland will be ( o'clock Monday
morning.
Mexican Government Is Con
cerned by Situation Now De
veloping in Coahuila.
TORREON IS SURROUNDED
PEOPLE'S COMPANY MEETS
Prosperous Tear Reported Five
Directors Elected.
Th annual meeting of the People's
Amusement Company waa held yester
day afternoon at th assembly room of
tha Commercial Club, with Fred IL
Rothchild presiding and D. Soils Cohen
as secretary. There waa a large at
tendance of stockholders. The various
reports showed that the year had been
a prosperous one for the company and
that during th past 12 months a num
ber of valuable theatrjal propertlea
had been acquired, th principal acqui
sition being th new People's Theater.
In tbla city. Comparisons revealed th
fact that th standard of pictures in
Portland waa a degree higher than
that of any city In the Cnlted Statea.
Th following directors were elected
to act for th coming year: Fred H.
Rothchild. A. Berg. Dr. Holt C. Wilson.
D. Soils Cohen and E. Shalnwald. Th
board will meet In a few days to elect
officer.
I'prUIng Spreading In Other Sec
lion of Durango French Mine
Manager Telegraphs His Con
sul for Protection.
MEXICO CITY. Feb. 14. While in
creased activity Is reported from the
Southern states, where the govern
ment is waging a campaign of exter
mination against Zapatistas, th situa
tion In th Stat of Coahuila caused
greater concern in the capital today.
From Torreon and Durango th newa
waa of a serious character. Rail com
munication with Torreon la Interrupt
ed and th number of rebels on all
aides of tha city is said to bo increas
ing. . Torreon Is garrisoned by 600
men and their officers appear confident
tbey will be able to repel an attack.
Rebels Raid Mlalng Cam.
South and east of Torreon. In Du
rango, the rebels, meeting with little
opposition, are In control of a large
area. Velardena. a rich mining camp,
was raided yesterday and five of tbe
eight rurales there joined th rebels.
The rebels secured a quantity of am
munition. Th Velardena mining camp
was forced to contribute S000 pesos and
from other sources 4000 pesos wer
obtained.
A federal reverse was reported from
Jojutla today, a fore of rurales being
defeated near the town. The losses
wer not given.
Abraham Gonzales, Minister of th
Interior, today resumed the Governor
Generalship of Chihuahua.
Peaceful Methods I rged.
rasaual Oroxco Is ready to begin a
more active campaign against the reb
els, but a local political club has asked
him to try again to restor peace In
the state by a friendly conference.
The manager of Las Palomas mine.
a subject of France, telegraphed to th
French Consul at Chihuahua, request
ing protection for his life and the in
terests for which he Is responsible.
From Puebla reports indicate the
Zapatistas are becoming more active.
A passenger train from Vera Crus was
flred unon last night, resulting in the
death of a child and the wounding of
three persons. More haciendas in th
region were raided and It waa reported
that the Indiana on Mount Mllntsl
wer preparing to loin In th revolt.
INDIANS GREET PRATT
FOCXDER OF CARLISLE 6CIIOOI,
VISITS CHEMAWA.
Retired General Says Only Way to
Civilize Redmen Is to Keep
Them From Their People.
SALEM. Or. Feb. 14. (Special.)
Coming back to th school which n
waa mainly Instrumental In estaDilsn
lng. General R. H. Pratt, founder of
the Carlisle Indian School and for
many years head of that institution,
appeared before the Indian pupils at
the Chemawa Training School today
and waa accorded a rousing reception
both bv th pupils and th faculty.
Although now an old man. General
Pratt still has marked signs or that
virility which supported him through
the long fight which he waged to es
tablish plana for the education of the
red man. and for his non-reservation
plan, which was blocked by th In
dian Department, but for which he is
still urging and fighting.
General Pratt declares that tn only
way to civilize th Indian Is to bring
him to civilization, and tn oniy way
to keep him civilized la to have him
stay.
General Pratt haa been retired from
the United Statea Army for seven
Tears, being relieved from duty July
L 104. 11 severed nis connection
with th Carlisle Indian scnooi in
February, 1903.
Tha aystem of educating and Indus
trializing the Indians waa established
practically through th guidance of
General Pratt, and h is known In th
Indian service as the father of th
movement.
General Pratt suggested that th old
Carlisle baxracka In Pennsylvania. In
tha Cumberland Valley, be utilised aa
a training school for Indians, and he
lobbied a bill through Congress, and
Carlisle Indian School, now on of th
largeat In th East, waa established
with General Pratt at Ita head, where
be remained until his retirement.
Th school waa established In 17
and shortly afterward General Pratt
conceived th idea of having similar
schools throughout th country and th
school waa established at Forest Grove,
which was later moved to Chemawa.
IVDIAX EDUCATOR IX CITY
Founder of Carlisle School Tells of
Starting Cbemawa Plant.
General R. IL Pratt, U. 8. A., re
tired, one. of the moat famous officers
of the service in th Una of work to
which he was attached, has been at
he Multnomah for a few days, coming
from Palo Alto, CaL. on a pleasure trip.
General Pratt is known as th father
of th Indian school system of th
country, having been In charge of th
Carlisle Indian school from tha time
It started until his retirement In 1903.
The other Indian achoola of th country
wer established under his direction
with th success of all directly at
tributed to him.
' While not exactly an Oregonlan,"
he said. "I first started to read Th
Orogonlan in 18S4, when I had an aunt
living at Forest Grove and who wanted
me to come out and live with her. She
sent me the paper regularly and I be
came enthusiastio over the country and
would have made It my home if th
war had not broken out a few yeara
later. After taking charge lot th
Carlisle school and it had reached a
development that Justified the Govern
ment establishing others of th same
kind. I recommended one for Oregon
and fixed Forest Grove as the best
place for It. It was located there,
but later removed to Salem. I doubt
the wisdom of this removal, but the
school is a fine on and compare fa
vorably with the on at Carlisle."
Liu
BAM pmM
Absolutely Pure
The only Baking Powder mado
from Royal G rape C ream of Tartar
NO ALUM. NO LIME PHOSPHATE
School furniture Is needed in Jamaica be
mui of the Inorease of pupils ayrlnji re
eBt yeaxsw
FLAW SEEN IfJ CASE
Evidence in Brandt Trial Said
to Be Based on Hearsay.
GRAND JURY INQUIRES
his home, where the stranger remained
several days. Upon awakening Tues
day morning Marshal Zoller missed his
gun a shirt and a pair of overalls
and found that his guest had departed.
Residents having seen Spannbauer head
for St. Louis over the Oregon Electric
tracks. Marshal Zoller pursued hiin and
found him in possession of the stolen
property.
Police Report Tpon Which ex-Valet
Was Sentenced Alleged TCntrue.
Prisoner Remains Locked In
Tombs All Day.
NEW YORK, Feb. 14. Tha grand
Jury took up th Brandt case today
and developments caused District At
torney Whitman to express satisfac
tion tonight.
With only on witness examined, th
grand Jurors wer said to hav heard
that th police report upon which
Brandt was sentenced, making him out
as having a criminal record, was based
on hearsay and was untrue.
Folk K. Brandt, the central figure,
In tha case, remained locked In the
Tombs today pending the decision of
Supreme Court Justice Gerard on ha
beas corpus proceedings.
The minutes of th grand Jury
which Indicted Brandt were mado pub
lic today. They showed that only
two witnesses were examined, Mortimer
L. Schiff. former employer of Brandt,
and a private detective. Brandt's coun
sel contend that this evidence does not
show that he committed burglary in
the first degree, to which he? pleaded
guilty.
DIX REVOKES DESIGNATION
Richard Uand Xamed to Review
Brandt' Application.
ALBANY, N. Y Feb. 1 i.-Go vernor
Dix late tonight revoked the designa
tion of Justice Gerard, of New York,
as commissioner to review th appli
cation for clemency made by Folk E.
Brandt and designated Richard L.
Hand, of Elizabethtown, as such com
missioner. The Governor received a telegram
from Justice Gerard expressing the
opinion that he could not serve legally
as commissioner. '
GUEST ROBS MARSHAL
Gervals Official Bilked by Fake
Settler Lands Him in Jail.
GERVAI8. Or., Feb. 14. (Special.)
William Spannbauer, who posed as
a prospective settler here and who was
made a guest at the home of John
Zoller, City Marshal and nlghtwatch
man, waa arrested here today for rob
bing his benefactor. He was fined 325
by Recorder Marigold and in default
of payment was sent to the County
Jail at Salem.
Spannbauer Is a countryman of
Marshal Zoller, and upon arriving here
last week said he was In quest of a
farm on which he desired to settle.
Marshal Zoller thereupon took him to
PIONEER OF 1849 IS DEAD
Joseph Klrkwood, of Yamhill Coun
ty, Is Stricken.
Joseph Klrkwood, a pioneer of 1346
and one of tha famous characters
among th early-day Oregonians, died
Tuesday at bis home near Hopewell, in
Yamhill County, aged 91 years.
Mr. Klrkwood was born in Scotland
April 1. 1S20. and came to the United
States with his parents in 1825. Be
fore 1846. the year of their emigration
to the West, they lived successively at
Boston, Wheeling, West Virginia, and
Independence, Missouri. The emigra
tion across the plains was made by Mr.
Klrkwood with his father and two
brothers. Mr. Kirkwood came direct to
Oregon from Fort Hall and tha re
malnder of the party went to Cali
fornia, taking into that state the first
wagons brought across the plains to
that state by emigrants.
Joseph Klrkwood was joined in Ore
gon In 1849 by his brother John. Tha
two brothers settled on donation land
claims In Yamhill County, where they
resided to the present time. John Kirk
wood survives his brother. They mar
rled cousins, and the wife of Joseph
Klrkwood, whose maiden name was
Louisiana Matheny, died in 1906, in tha
60th year of their married life. They
celebrated their golden wedding In 1897,
Joseph Klrkwood and his brother
John built the first threshing machine
ever made in Oregon, In the late '60s,
and tor years took prizes with their
machine at the State Fair, until out
stripped by the finer machines import
ed from tha East. The old threshing
machine la still kept at the Klrkwood
ranch near Hopewell.
Mr. Klrkwood was strong and active
up to tha last months of his life and
was accustomed to walk two miles from
his ranch to Hopewell and carry back
the provisions he purchased upon his
shoulders.
The funeral will be held today and
the body will be buried at the pioneer
cemetery at HopewelL
Mr. Klrkwood is survived by the fol
lowing children: Henry, Joseph, Daniel,
Thomas. John and Fred Kirkwood, Mrs.
Ellen McDonald, Mrs. Etta Majors and
Mrs. Lilly Bronson. Two children, a son
and a daughter, are dead.
BARON SANDHURST NAMED
Successor to Earl Spencer as Lord
Chamberlain Appointed.
LONDON. Feb. 14. Baron Sandhurst
has been appointed Lord Chamberlain
In succession to Earl Spencer, who re
signed February 9. The resignation or
Earl Spencer was attributed to the
widespread criticism of the conduct of
censorship of plays. Ill health was giv
en as th primary reason ror his retire
ment. Baron Sandhurst, who succeeds him,
was formerly Governor of Bombay and
served both Queen Victoria and King
L-l,r1 am Trfjrrt In Waltins. Me acted
as civil attache to president Taft's spe
cial representative at the coronation of
King George.
HDDW HE CilED
his CATOSMH
I had all the symptoms which accompany Catarrh, sach as
mticous dropping back into the throat, a constant desire to
"hawk and spit, " feeling; of dryness in the throat, scabs form
In; in the nose, sometimes causing it to bleed and leav
ing me with a headache. I had thus suffered for five years, all
the time trying different local treatments of inhalations, snuffs,
douches, etc., with no real good effect. Of course I was great
ly discouraged. As soon as I heard of S. S. S. I commenced its
use as yon advised and after using it a short while noticed a
- change for the better. I continued to take it believing the
trouble was in the blood, and S. S. S. finally made a permanent
cure for me.
JUDSON A. BHIXAM.
sa Randolph St., Richmond, Va.
The symptoms Mr. Bellam describes in his case of Catarrh are
familiar to everyone who suffers with this disease. For five years he
had endured discomfort and suffering. and was greatly discouraged
as one treatment after another failed to cure him. When at last he
realized that Catarrh is a blood disease, he knew that the former
treatments had been wrong, and only a blood purifier like S. S. S.
could produce permanent good results.
Catarrh comes from impurities accumulating in tke circulation,
and as the blood goes to every portion of the body the catarrhal mat
ter irritates and inflames the different mucous surfaces and tissues
causing an unhealthy and inflammatory discharge, and producing the
other well known symptoms of the trouble.
S. S- S. cures Catarrh by cleansing the blood of all impure ca
tarrhal matter, and at the same time building up the system by its un
equalled tonic effects. It goes down into the circulation and removes
every impurity. In other words S. S. S. cures Catarrh by purifying
tne Diooa so mat tne mu
cous surfaces and linings
or tne Doay are an sup
plied with healthy blood
instead of being irritated
and diseased with catarrhal
impurities. Then the in
flamed and irritated mem
branes heal, the discharge
is checked, head noises all
cease, the stomach istnnprl
up, throat is no longer clogged with phlegm, but every annoying symp
tom is corrected. A special book on Catarrh and medical advice free
to all who write.
THE 5 WET SPECIFIC CO.. ATLANTA. GA
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Bottles
exchanged.
5009 Gallons California
Port, Sherry and Angelica
In Sanitary Glass Containers.
Our low rent price per gallon 75d
Half gallons 50&
No Extra Charge for Containers.
Always a full quart of Sunnybrook or Guckenheimer
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Rapid
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E CITV
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17 N. First, Cor. Burnside
Phone
Your
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Main
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A 7775
1 1 U-l 1 1 1 1
uninroTimi no
uHun, muiuLonuii ui
CONSTIPATED BOWELS CASCARETS
That awful sourness, belching of acid and foul gases; that pain in tha pit
of the stomach, the heartburn, nervousness, nausea, bloating after eating,
feeling of fullness, dizziness and sick headache, means indigestion; a disor
dered stomach which cannot be regulated until you remove the cause. It
Isn't your stomach's fault.
Try Cascarets, they cure indigestion, because they immediately cleanse
the stomach, remove the sour, undigested and fermenting food and foul
gases; take the excess bile from the liver and carry oft the decomposed
waste matter and poison from the intestines and bowels. Then your stomach
trouble is ended forever. A Casoaret tonight will straighten you out by
morning.
10 CClltS. New grip or sicken.
"CASCARETS WORK WHILE YOU SLEEP.'
THESE SIX LETTERS
From New England Women
Prove that Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Com
pound Does Restore the Health of Ailing Women.
Boston, Mass. "I was passing through the Change of Life and suffered
from hemorrhages (sometimes lasting for weeks), and could get nothing to
check them, f began taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
(tablet form) on Tuesday, and the following Saturday morning the hem
orrhages stopped. I have taken them regularly ever since and am steadily
Tcfrtainly think that every one who is troubled mI wm should giva
your Compound Tablets a faithful trial, and they will find relief, lira.
Gkobgb Jubt, 803 Fifth Street, South Boston, Mass.
Letter from Mrs. Julia King, Phoenix, R.I.
Phoenix, E.I. "I worked steady in the mill from the time I was 13 years
old until I had been married a year, and I think that caused my bad feel
ings. I had soreness in my side near my left hip that went around to my
back, and sometimes I would have to lie in bed for two or three days. I
was not able to do my housework. , ,, .
" Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has helped me wonderfully in
every way. Yon may use my letter for the good of others. I am only too
plad to do anything within my power to recommend your medicine, airs.
JuiXa. Ens, Box 2S3, Phoenix. E-L
Letter from Mrs. Etta Donovan.Willimantic, Conn.
"Willimantic, Conn." For five years I suffered untold agony from female
troubles causing backache, irregularities, dizziness, and nervous prostra
tion. It was impossible for me to walk np stairs without stopping on tha
way. I was all run down in every way. .
I tried three doctors and each told me something different. I received
no benefit from any of them but seemed to suffer more. The last doctor
said it was no use for me to take anything as nothing would restore mo to
health ain. So I began taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
to see what it would do, and by taking seven bottles of the Compound and
other treatment you advised, I am restored to my natural health. Mrs.
Etta Dokotait, 763 Main Street, Willimantic, Conn.
letter from Mrs. Winfield Dana. Augusta, Me.
Augusta, Me. "Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has cured tha
backache, headache, and the bad pain I had in my right side, and I am
perfectly welL" Mrs. Wihfield Daha, E.F.D. No. 2, Augusta, Me.
Letter from Mrs. J. A. Thompson, Newport, Vt.
Newport, Vt "I thank yon for the great benefit Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound has done me. I took eight bottles and it did wonders
for me, as I was a nervous wreck when I began taking it. I shall always
peak a good word for it to my friends." Mrs. Joes A. Thompson, Box 3,
Newport Center, Vermont.
Letter from Miss Grace Dodds, Bethlehem, N.H.
Bethlehem, N.H. " By working very hard, sweeping carpets, washing,
ironing, Hfting heavy baskets of clothes, etc., I got all run down. I was
sick in bed every month.
" This last Spring my mother got Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound for me, and already I feel like another girl. I am regular and do
not have the pains that I did, and do not have to go to bed. I will tell all
my friends what the Compound is doing for me." Miss Gbacie B. DoDD3,
Box 133, Bethlehem, N.H.
For 30 years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound has been the standard remedy for fe
male ills. No one sick with woman's ailments
does justice to herself who will not try this fa
mous medicine, made from roots and herbs, it
has restored so many suffering women to health.
r--Write to LYDIA E.POXKA5I MEDICI5EC0.
trJ? (CONFIDENTIAL) LYS, MASS., for advice.
Your letter will be opened, read and answered
by a woman and held in strict confidence.
WW
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