Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, February 29, 1912, Page 10, Image 10

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ACT OF U MAKES
VV. B.AYER AIDTAFT
Leader of Portland Campaign
for President Raps Colonel
as Ungrateful Chief.
SACRED PRECEDENT UPSET
CTtaJnnaui of 1ocai OrganlssCkm !-
cJarra Rooasrveit'a Osuidldacv a
Violation of Venerated Caatom
Established by Washington.
StWHSTaVaTlOX TOTAL KOW LS
Eseraatv f the rvatstrallna of
yastarear. vhtak win b announced
tkia KonJu. tajllO voters of Maltao
aaaa Commit hav ilfB4 the rea-ls-trmuoa
koaaa Of thee 1T.TT1 ar
stavablloH. mr
1KI aeanmac.
Resentment asralnat tha ambition of
Colonel Jtooee-velt to sain a third term
aa rraaldant deeplta tha precedent
aetabllsned by Uaorxa Washington
and lived ap to by svary President.
Rooevelt. araa the direct cause
of W. B. Ayer consent In Monday te
xrlre np time from ble business affair
te accept the chairmanship of tha Taft
ratrpaljrn commit toe. This was his
statement yesterday wbao ha formally
tonk chants of the Taft campatrn head
quarters and entered Into the llTely
rampajfrn being carried on by the com
mit te.
"I am aa admirer and a supporter
of President Taft." said Mr. Ayer. "but
I should hare refused the to-
sltloa of chairman of the Taft com
mittee before Monday, when Mr. Room-
veil was not In the race. When he
shied his castor Into the ring; I fell
that the political situation had chans-od
to such a dos-ree that I woul.l b dis
loyal If I did not take an arttve txtrt
in the Taft campaign- It la not sp
much a matter of working; for rreal
dwit Taft as It la fizhtlns; this third-
two proposition.
Cvlaael Raises mm tTaurratefaL
Tlooswvejt has established himself
as a very unrrateful person, lie has
been as ungrateful to La Folleite as
he has been to President Taft and with
this In view It Is necessary for us to
combat his ambition to obtain a third
twm.
The announcement of Mr. Roosevelt
tlat he win be a candidate fur Presi
dent I consider a direct violation of
what la almost a sacred precedent.
Oeorae Washington was the father of
this precedent. As popular aa be was
and as capable as he was of gulding
the Nation through those trying times,
.he refused to accept a third term.
, "The House of Representatives In
reply to Washington's adJres made
this striking; declaration: 'For our
country's saket for the tsks of repub
lican liberty. It Is our earnest wish
tnat your example may be the guide of
our successors, and this after belnn;
the ornament and safeguard of the
present awe beeoioi the, patrimony of
tr deacendanta'
Jeffersea Ileaared PreeJdeat.
"Mr. Jefferson followed the example
cf Washing; ton. Many tlmea be put on
record hla approval of the limitation.
On January . 1S0S, ha wrote to his
friend Taylor: "Oeore Washington set
the example of voluntary retirement
after P1?ht yeara I shall follow It.
And a few more precedents will oppose)
the obstacla of habit to anyone after a
while who shall endeavor to extend
Ms term.' Again, on Juno T. 180T. he
wrote to Mr. Weaver: 'If soma period
be not fixed, either by the Constitution
T by practice, to tha services of the
Klrst Magistrate, his office. thouKh
nominally elective. will. In fact, be for
l.fe. and that will soon degenerate ln
N. to an Inheritance.'
"Perhaps the most striking; utter
ance la tha following, which Is found
la tha Kansaa Republican platform of
1ST: The unwritten law enacted by
the father of hla country in declining
a re-election to a third term Is as con.
trolling; as though it were Incorporated
la the National Constitution and ought
to never be violated.'
"The House of Representatives
lasxed tha following resolution on De
cember 15, 175. by a vote of XII to lit
',..,Tv.l Thtt In the onlnlon of this
X" House, the precedent established by
Washington and other President ot
the I'nlted State In retiring; from the
I residential office after their seoond
terra has become by universal consent,
a part of our republican system of gov
ernment and that any departure from
this tirae-honored custom would be un
wise, unpatriotic and fraught with
peril to our free institutions."
"ITesldent Roosevelt said In lo4:
On the 4th of March next 1 shall have
served three and a half years, and
these threa and a half rears constitute
my first term. The wis custom which
limits tho President to two terms re
gards the substance and not the form,
and un.ler no circumstance will 1 be
a cand.datc for or accept another nom
ination.' T. R. Declared a Violator.
"This last expression by Mr. Roose
velt shows clearly his 'views on the
Question of tho third-term proposition.
HecontMered In l0t that he was srv
las; his first term and he considers so
yet. I belteve. I do not think there
can be any doubt about the nomination
and rla.r:,on whl:h he eeeks being a
cirect violation of the country's great
est and most Important precedent.
"1 am in the rare to stay until Mr.
Taft l nominated and elected. I am
sacrificing m business affairs to do
th.s vorlc. but 1 feel Justified In tbe
f.-a of iu.-b. a condition. I will be In
the Taft headnuarters every afternoon
between 3 an. I o'clock at Kaat and
will be lUd to meet everyone Inter
ested in the present political situa
tion." roin file
AT
CAPITAL
Petitions of Two Portland Candi
date. Are ISecordrd.
K.IUU Or.. Keb. IS (Special.)
William C. Benhow. of Portland, today
declared himself as a candidate for Cir
cuit Jua. n iepartment No. 2. Multno
mah un!y. promising to administer
the oSice a-ronltnic to tho rules of law
and to aestit In every war to facilitate
the trial of causes and the Immediate
rendition cf just declslona
Thomas R. Hooker, of Fall City, ap
peared as a candidate for delegate to
lie RcpuMiean National Convention.
Oorge M. rtrown als announced hlm
s f as a candidate for re-election as
proerrutlng attorney In the Third Tros
cutlr.a Attorney District, comprised of
iKtuglaa. Cooa and Curry Counllea
Compieud peUUon of W. X. Alaataxg
i . 1 . nnnf l l m i
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TE.JFtES COMPLETED FOR
"
fa.
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WORKMK.sj CA1 BB
Workmen engaged In the work will
and Waldemar Seton were filed with tha
Secretary of State today. Roth are can
didates for the position of Circuit Judge
n Department No, 4. Muitnoman v-oumy
ind both are Republican
t A. Turner, of Salem, filed today aa
i candidate for the Legislature from
Marlon County. He adopts Statement
No, 1. declares that he will use hla best
efforts to reduce taxes and will oppose
the creation CI any new oiiicea or
1.1..1.1H mnA that he Is In favor of re
pealing old laws rather than enacting
new ones.
comer for flat salart
Candidate for County Clerk Port
Fllea Declaration.
"Flat salary. Interest money, fees and
ail emoluments belong to the county."
la the slogan adopted by Jacob B. Cof
fey. Mayor RushllghCe Police Commis
sioner, who filed with County Clerk
Fields yesterdsy notice of his candi
dacy for the Republican nomination for
County Clerk. Mr. Coffey Indirectly iU
tarka Mose lllocli. the Courthouse
money-lender. In the statement. "I
will not grant special favora to warrant
havera and loan aharka."
Tha charge has been mad that Mr.
modi's business Interests are furthered
by tha county officials now In office.
The new aspirant declares that he
will deposit funds entrusted to his care
In hanks of recognised standing and not
to bH personal account
BAR COMMITTEES NAMED
New Multnomah President Kee re
investigating Itody Intact.
The Investigating committee of tho
Multnomah County Bar Association,
which was only recently appointed was
continued with practically the same
personnel by K. E. Heckbert. the newly
elected president. In his appointment
of committees yesterday. O. N. Davis
Is chairman. The other members are
Harrison Allen. R. E. Moody. J. U.
Conley and W. A. Carter.
Other committees were sppolnted. aa
follow: Membership. R. P. Hurst, H.
K. lUney. R. W. Montague. W. Q. Hale.
W. H. Evans: entertainment. Harri
son Allen, J. F. Booth. C. P. Olson. E.
W. Hardy, Samuel White; auditing, J.
Sllvestone. O. O. tichmldt. R. C.
Wright: legislative committee, C J.
Schnabel. E. E. Coovert, W. M. Davis,
C. W. Fulton and J. B. Kerr.
Arrangements will be made as soon
as possible, by the entertainment com
mittee, for the annual banquet of tho
Bar Association, which will take the
place of th regular monthly meeting
in March.
Holler Skating- Record Broken.
ROCK ISLAND. 111.. Feb. IS. What la
aaid to be a new world'a record for two
miles on roller skates was mad here
last night by Louis Bradbury, the Mis
souri champion. He covered th dis
tance In I mlnntes, BO seconds.
Aftee much preliminary work, the task of laying the mammoth tmeses on which the lift rpan of the
new O -Tv r! N bridge will be constructed was completed yeoterda y without mlal.ap. The he a;ht of
" , fl' .Vi. its feet Thev weigh 97 tons. Tho cribbing; on the falsework enabled tha
contractor. Yh " re. tltorT hlghlr fhan was the original Intention. Thl. wa. don. at th.
m am s a at K ta lift stsafvj II a WMP-fT DPll VB rtfn sUlU as II 1 11 Ji uvaaa v s - ---
TRAVELERS SEE TAFT
GAIN BY "HAT IN RING
Nebraska-. Says Kooaerelfs Entry Is Boort for President Washington
Senator Predicts Incumbent's Nomination Others
Express Bams Views.
i(ff course you understand that Ne
J braaka la always Insurgent and
that tha Line between the old parties
have disappeared." said Dr. O. L. Si
mons, of Sidney. Neb. at the Portland
Hotel. "My part of th state Is so near
a part of Colorado and Wyoming thut
It is really a slate by Itself, with all
business and political Interests the
fame. Brytn, the original insurgent.
Is a dead issue; his unhealthy virus in
fected, u. but now w ar Republican
again. Roosevelt cam along and w
followed him with some satisfaction
and then felt safe when Taft was hla
suiresror. All the talk about Roosevelt
rurnir.g again looked like a boost for
Teft when I left home a week ago and
I am certain that It will have the effect
of making that district solid tor Taft."
Taft's Nomination Predicted.
ffX Southwestern Washington F. Ia
I Stewart Stat Senator, is and has
been of importance in th Republican
party of th state and la at present a
member of the Congressional commit
tee. In speaking at the Oregon Hotel
of the announcement of Colonel Roose
velt as a candidate for the Presidency,
Senator Stewart said:
"I always have been a pur Republi
can, with all thl progresslvenesa not
leading me from the well-trodden path
of the party. Poindexter and some oth
ers have been making a pretense of
being for La rollette and it fooled
some. When th same crowd comes out
and shouts for Roosevelt there will be
an awakening and th convention will
rtecMe for Taft. This Is th only con
vention we will have In the state, and
when It meet th Insurgents' and
prcgrasalvaa' will coma la and sag
CONSTRUCTION O I LIF1 SPAN OP
11 1
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" r -' 4 'Sa. i '- it
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...s-r-"et '
'J: '
SKK.si OX TOP VW TRISMUS, IflO FEET
be laying ateel at a height of 150 feet
ALL SEATTLE 1!
Elks and Admen Herald Big
Convention Vivaciously.
POTLACH ALSO BOOSTED
Xrw Xortlrcreat Pplrlt Permeates!
Whole Visit of Portland Men to
Paget Sound Metropolis.
Friendship Pact Made.
If there la any on la Seattle who
doesn't know that th National con
vention of Elka will be held In Port
land from July 8 to 11. he la numbered
among tha Inanimate, which Is Potlatch
for th lass classic expression, "dead
onea"
Likewise If th party of 130 Portland
Elka and Portland Admen who re
turned yesterday morning from their
successful Invasion of th Puget Sound
city ar not familiar with the fact
the th annual Potlatch celebration
will be held In Seattle from July li to
20. they, too, must be adjudged as out
casts -from the band of enterprising
citizens actuated by tho "New North
west Spirit."
This "New Northwest Spirit," which
was born at the meeting" of the Port
land Ad Club a week ago yesterday,
was given further Impetua by th visit
of tha Portland Elka and tha Portland
Admen to Seattle, Tueday. It was man
ifest at every function of th day and
developed to such formidable size that
It fastened Itself upon the minds and
the tongues of every one In th two
cltlea
Seattle ta Bead OOOO.
Through it. Influence th Seattle
lodge of Elks, which previously had ar
ranged to attend the convention 1000
strong, announced Its Intention of
bringing at least 6000 other citizens
with them and to noise the fact that
Portland Is to be th meeting place of
their order whenever possible.
Through the influence of this new
spirit six Portland citizens of consider
able Focal prominence were made to
pledge unceasing and devoted support
to th Potlatch. Dire penalties will bo
Inflicted on any of that sis should he
violate the pledge faithfully and sol
emnly made before the "Lord High
Priest" of the Order of Ben Bits and a
company of Knights of th Potlatch
assembled In sacred session befor an
for on little resolution that will ex
cuse their former conduct."
Colonel' Hat Aids Taft,
HEN I left home three weeks
ago my Impression waa that
all the New England State would cast
their electoral vote for a Democrat for
President." said William C. Withers, a
Boston manufacturer, at th Portland
Hotel. "Th Republican, of whom I
have been on all my life, have had
som kind of a hug buzzing around
them that had th infection of so-called
progrevslveness, but really that old
Independent feeling of not being bossed.
It only took Roosevelt to throw his
hat into th ring and make a demand
for them to rally around him to show
what their true feeling la He might
carry th voters of Harvard Colleg
and th suburban educational town, but
th cities, commercial and manufactur
ing, will be for Taft. Watch what I
say."
Rooserelt's Act Censured.
ILLINOIS 1 Republican under nat
al ural conditions, but that man Wil
son seems to have set th citizens crazy
to vote for him." declared M. C Bey
mer. manufacturer of railroad supplies,
at th Multnomah Hotel. "When I left
home a week ago w discussed th pro
posed declaration of Colonel Roosevelt
and we fully agreed that It would be
an Indorsement of President Taft and
that he would promise to Jump Into the
fray end fight for him to a finish. This
Is what he should have done, and that
little bunch at home, with all Its Influ
ence, has already formed a Taft ciu.
0
FTTH
NEW O.-W. R. & N. BRIDGE.
-
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.1
ABOVE U1LLAMETTE.
above th. river.
Interested audience of Elks and Admen
In th Elks' lodge rooms at Seattle.
Mercilessly Inquisitive and delight
fully personal waa the High Priest in
hla Interrogation of his six victims.
"It is charged," he said, as John B.
Coffey, police commissioner of Port
land, was led before him, "that to fur
ther your own political ambitions you
have made numerous attempts, through
your official position, to clean up a dis
trict known In Portland aa th North
End."
Mr. Coffey answered affirmatively.
"After gaining a reputation through
out the Northwest aa a chivalrous
Southern gentleman it Is charged that
you have deserted the religion of the
South and joined th Republican party
that you may be elected Sheriff," waa
a sample of the examination through
which Harry C, McAlllater, secretary of
th Elks' convention commission, was
conducted.
C H. Moore, district commercial
superintendent of th Pacific Telephone
at Telegraph Company, waa charged
with using the time of bis employera
In the aervlce of various commercial
and fraternal organizations of Port
land. He was made to promise to root
for th opposing baseball teams against
Portland If be falls to boom the Pot
latch. "You ar charged with being the
original knocker of Seattle," was the
blunt exclamation uttered to Tom Rich
ardson. Mr. Richardson nodded his assent.
"You ar charged with being tha
original dispenser of 'hot air,'" was the
next question and Mr. Richardson said
"Yea"
Wings Put on Hyland.
When George M. Hyland waa brought
In he was provided with a pair of
wooden wings, but before he was con
ducted through the examination the
wings were ordered removed to prevent
him from "flitting about too much," so
that he might stay and help exploit the
Potlatch. H was twitted about his
Congressional aspirations and about his
numerous fraternal and commercial
connectlona
Harvey O' Bryan was accused of un
due familiarity with John B. Coffey,
thus enabling him to be acquainted
with all the evils that the police com
missioner has been trying to "clean
up."
While thes initiation ceremonies,
which were conducted with elaborate
mock solemnity, were amusing in the
extreme, the meeting had its serious
side too. Orators representing both
Seattle and Portland were called to the
platform In the Elks' lodge room to ex
pound the, new doctrine of "Northwest
Spirit."
C. K. Henry, Tom Richardson, C. B.
Merrick, J. Fred Larson, K. Kubii and
others among the Portland delegation
spoke on this subject.
The chief musical feature of the night
was the singing by Frank D. Hennessy
and the quartet of tho Portland lodge
of Elks, composed of Joe Casey,
George Stahley, Ross W. FIshburn and
Jack Davidson. They sang all the pop
ular Elks' convention songs, out tooa
the meeting by storm when they Intro
duced a new one, written for the oc
casion. It la a march called "When Se
attle Elks Are on Parade." It has a
good, lively air and the words were
highly pleasing to Seattle folk.
JEWELERS PLAN MEETING
Committee to Draft Measure to Curb
Unprofessional Sales of Wares.
Memhera of the Oregon Retail Jewel
ers' Association will hold their annual
convention at the Muitnoman iiotei on
May 18-29. this being decided Tuesday
nt a meeting of the executive board,
of which the members are: President.
F. M. French. Albany: secretary, C H.
Williams. Condon; treasurer, E. J.
Jaeger Portland; first vice-president.
W. F. Sielschnelder, McMlnnvllle, and
William Anderson. Oregon City; A. S.
Huey, Roseburg; I. E. Staples. Port
land. The following oommlttee of Port
land Jewelers was appointed on ar
rangements. Frank Hettkemper,
chairman. E. J. Jaeger and L E. Staples.
The executive board discussed the
fraudulent advertisement and sale of
chesp Jewelery. which trafflo Is con
sidered by the board an obstacle to
legitimate trade. Municipal and state
laws have been found not sufficient to
properly protect th business from the
methods in question. A committee waa
appointed to have a measure drafted
for acceptance by th association to
be presented to th next legislature.
This committee comprises E. J. Jaeger,
C. H. Williams and F. M. French.
ANNOUNCEMENT OF RATE
REDUCTION.
The Northwestern Lino Makes) Con
cessions to Tonrista.
loe wuruiwcBiciji ...... ..
the sale of Colonist tickets from March
1 to April 15 from all Eastern points
to the Pacific Northwest. Take advan
tage of this golden opportunity to
bring friends or relatives West. Da-
. . r, , r t r T
posit your money wim rt . nuraw.
. n - rpvi.4 . . t who will make al 1
1V1 . J " ' -
Deoaasaxy arrangements by wire.
Till AltY 20, 1913.
d bbth runimnu
PLANS DAY 15 HERE
Committees to Comb City To
day to Enroll 10,000 in
Association.
BUTTONS GO AT $1 EACH
IThJrlwtnd Canvaas Is Outlined to
Align Multitude to Build Sfe
tropolls In Accordance
With Bennett Map.
OBZATEB PORTLAND FLAXS
DAT PROGRAMME.
10:80 to 10:8B Steamboat, factory
and train whistles and bells through
out elty announce the opening of
Greater Portland Plans day.
Canvass of the elty by members of
association oommlttee will continue
throughout tha day.
S P. M . Mass meeting at Multno
mah Hotel, where Bennett plana
will be shown and addresses on the
Or eater Portland movement will be
delivered.
Membership badges will be num
bered la rotation and no en will be
aaked to contribute more thaa ft
membership fee. whereupon he will
reoeive bis badge of membership.
V. V. Jones will preside over the
campaign with headquarters at
Fourth and Oak streets. Telephone
Main S821.
Excepting membership badges in the
Greater Portland Plans Association
which are numbered 1, IS. 23 and 10,000,
there will be afloat on the streets of
Portland today, for sal at the regular
membership fee of SL 10,000 badges of
membership In the Greater Portalnd
Plana Association. Every citizen of
Portland will be given an opportunity
to ally himself with the movement for
tha adoption and execution of the Ben
nett plans, and to contribute $1 to the
causa of th organization which is
trying to get them before the people
and adopted aa th plan upon which
Portland is to grow.
The four numbers aforementioned
were auctioned off at the meeting of
the Ad Club yesterday at sums ranging
from I2.E0 to $10, and are the only
buttons where tha membership fee ex
ceeds SI.
Vf any Aid Caavaaa.
In preparation for tho membership
campaign commercial organizations and
business men of the city have been
liberal in their support. V. V. Jones,
"general" in charge of tha campaign,
announced that S600 in advertising
space bad been contributed by Foster &
Klelser; that the City Council had
passed an ordinance appropriating
13000 for the publication of the plans;
that many of the merchants of Port
land had already placed orders for
badges and membership for their entire
staff of employes; that the Behnke
Walker Business College would send Its
students today to help In the canvass;
that the Rotary and Progressive Busi
ness Men's Clubs had volunteered 20
men each for the canvass, and that the
Ad Club has detailed 40 to help.
Fully 400 men will go forth Into the
different districts of the city today
when whistles and bells announce the
opening of the campaign. They will
travel In pairs and will not relax their
labors until they are prepared to return
to headquarters and announce that the
10.000 badges are sold and that the
membership of the association that Is
working for a "bigger and better Port
land is Increased to the number they
set out to reach.
All City freed to Aid.
While the Greater Portland day is
not technically a legal holiday, Mayor
Rushlight has lent the sanction of the
city to It by a proclamation giving It
recognition as a day In which the citi
zens shall turn their efforts to tho
common end of building up Portland.
"If 97 men gave J 21. 000 to prepare
plans for a more beautiful and more
practical Portland, you can give $1
to become a member of the association
pledged to carry out these plans."
'V'
J'i.t,i.i-;-.''i '1.
.. -fy, i ,
iv a it i
eia-Ui
Why turn yourself into a
medicine-chest, filling
it with every new concoc
tion that comes along?
Nature does the cur
ing, not medicine.
Ah yoar Doctor if
SUNSHINE
A N D
I
I Scott's Emulsion
is not Tha treatment for
Coaghs and Cold, Crippm,
and many other itU.
ail osoooists . 11-62
A Duty Dodger
Is our factory In Tampa, Fla.
The finest tobacco grown Vuelta
Abajo tobacco we ship from
Cuba In the leaf, thereby saving
cigar duty which fully equals the
tobacco's cost. This saving is not
ours H goes Into the cigar, 'Into
expert Cuban workmanship into
fragrance ami flavor ana Is
yours in
Van Dyck
"Quality" Cigars
3 - for -25c and Upward
M. A. CUNST CO. "The House of Stank".
Distributor
MILLION
ELIXIR sSENNA
WITH MOST SATISFACTORY RESULTS.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
IN THE CIRCLE.
Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna
Is especially adapted to the needs of
men, women and children, to cleanse
the system gently, yet effectively, to
dispel colds and headaches, to prevent
Indigestion, sour stomach, gas and
fermentation due to constipation and
biliousness. As it Is freedom every
Injurious or objectionable substance, it
Is equally beneficial for young and old.
NOTE NAME OF CO.
Printed straight across near the bottom and also
in the circle near the tcp of every package of tha
genuine; for sale by all leading druggists; regular
price 50 cenl3 per bottle.
Tha growing popularity of tho genuine Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna has lod un
scrupulous manufacturers to offer Imitations In order to make a larger profit at the expensa
of their customers. If a dealer asks which size you wish, or what make you wish, when
you ask for Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, ho is preparing to deceive you. Tell him
that you wish the genuine. Manufactured by tha
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO,
TO GET ITS BENEFICIAL EFFECTS. DECLINE Aa IMITATIONS,
That is the claim that will be urged
upon every one who la asked to be
come a member.
"Remember," said "General" Jones, In
his Instructions to his captains Wed
nefday night and In his address to the
A BLOOD MIICIWE WITHOUT ALCOHOL.
Recently it has been definitly proven by experiments on animals that alcohol
lowers the germicidal power of the body and that alcohol paralyzes the white oor-
nscles of the blood and renders them unable to take np and destroy disease germs,
disease germs causo the death of over one-half of the tinman race.
A blood medioine, made entirely without alcohol, which is a pare glyceric ex
tract of roots, such as Bloodroot, Queen's root, Golden Seal root, Mandrake and
Stone root, has been extensively sold by druggists for the past forty years as Dr.
Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. The refreshing influence of this extract is liko
Nature's influence the blood is bathed in the tonio which gives life to the blood
the vital fires of the body burn brighter and their increased activity consumes tha
tissue rubbish which has accumulated during the winter.
Mas. Haras. Dr. rierce s rleasant relicts regulate liver and bowels.
Ml STOMACH TROUBLE VANISHES
AFTER TAKING A LITTLE DIAPEPSIN
Indigestion, Gas, Heartburn,
Headache and Other Distress
Will Go in Five Minutes.
If you had some Dlapepsln handy and
would take a little now your stomach
distress or Indigestion would vanish
in five minutes and you would feel fine.
This harmless preparation will digest
anything you oat and overcome a sour,
out-of-order stomach before you realize
it.
If your meals don't tempt you, or
what little you do eat seems to fill
you or lays like a lump of lead in
your stomach, or If you have heart
burn, that is a sign of Indigestion.
Ask. your Pharmacist for a 60-cent
case of Pape's Dlapepsln and take a
little just as soon as you can. There
$42.30
LOS ANGELES
AND RETURN
VIA
SUNSET
0GDEN &
ROUTES
ACCOUNT THE
Rodeo Wild West Round-Up
Tuesday, March 5, 1912
Tickets on salo March 5, with going limit March 8, final return
limit March 31st. Three through trains to San Francisco daily, in
cluding Shasta JLimited, which connects with the "Owl" at Port Costa.
Call on City Ticket Agent, Third and Washington, for further par
ticulars, reservations, etc., or address
JOHN M. SCOTT, General Passenger Agent,
Portland, Oregon.
8FAMILIES
mm
tV' Contains six per i
JCENT. OF ALCOHOL
t ""ljt m & fjjjj
i bjhs -- - j fj:
EAtntW-eowriMnov, j;j
: " price. BO dura, V 0
miniattfe picnma
Of PACKAGE
Ad Club yesterday, "no one says these
buttons are worth $1 but membership
In the Greater Portland Plans Associa
tion Is worth many dollars' and this
button is merely a badge of membership."
Dr. K. V. Pierce, the founder of tha Invalids' Hotel and
Surgical Institute, and a physician of large experience and
practice, was the first to make up an Altesativb Extbact of
roots, without a partiole of alcohol or narootio.
" It is with the greatest of pleasure, that I write te let yon knew of
til a great benefit I reoeived from the use of your medicines and salf
trastment at home." writes Mas. W. Hbyxs, of Ladrsmith, B. C. " I Buf
fered for throe years from a running Bore. Consulted fom doctors bat
they failed to mend or give relief. Finally I was told 1 waa m consump
tion and would have to consult a specialist eoncerning my ear, that tha
dead bona must be cut out before the wound would heaL A kind friend
advised ma to write to Dr. Pierce, which I did, and after seven months'
nae of the treatment the sore Is healed, and I enjoy better health than I
erer did. 1 urusaed the wound with Dr. Pierre's All-Healing Salve and
took the 'Golden Medical LKscovery' and 'Pleasant Pellets' for mr
troubles. I shall always recommend your medicinee.
will be no sour rlsinsrs, no belching; of
undigested food mixed with acid, no
stomach gas or heartburn, fullness or
heavy feeling In tho stomach. Nausea,
Debilitating Headaches, Dizziness or
Intestinal griping. This will all go.
and, besides, there will be no undi
gested food left over in the stomach
to poison your breath with nauseous
odors.
Pape's Dlapepsln is certain cure for
out-of-order stomachs, because It pre
vents fermentation and takes hold of
your food and digests It Just the same
as if your stomach wasn't there.
Relief in five minutes from all stom
ach misery is at-any drug store wait
ing for you.
These large 50-cent cases contain
more than sufficient to thoroughly cure
almost any case of Dyspepsia, Indi
gestion or othpr stomach disturbance.
THE
"v way
SHASTA
$42.30