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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 21, 1912)
TIJE 5IO"-.ivi; OKK;OXIAX. SATURDAY, TJECE3IBER 21, 1912. 6NEH 10 INTERSTATE SPAN Formal Movement Starts Washington to Get Bill Up in Legislature. in $25,000,000 BONDS IS PLAN rrwsranimc for Statc-AVIdc Good Komls Work I Ajrrcrd To Vnanl moiifly and I'Hciric Highway rian Is Well Supported. SEATTLE. Wash.. Dec. 20. (Spe cial.) Indorsement of an appropria tion by the next Legislature for the construction of a bridge across the Columbia Hirer at Vancouver. Wash.. nrnvMixi that the State of Oregon con tribute Its' share toward the cost, in connection with the building of the I'arlfin Hitrhwav. and indorsement of the -Inland Empire Highway and its connecting link via the Suoquaimie rasa were given last nigrht at a meeting of representatives of the New Peattle Chamber of Commerce, the Seattle Commercial Club. the Vancouver (Wash.) Commercial Club, the Seattle Automobile Club, the State Good Roads Association and of the King County Clark County and Lewis County Legis lative delegations. While making the reservation that the resolution. which was carried unanimously should not be considered binding upon the floor of the Legisla ture all the representatives present air reed 11 Don the programme outlined Apparently every one present at the conference also agreed that the proper course for the Legislature would be to submit a bond Issue of 130.000.000 or 25.000.000 to the people for the carrj-lng out of a state-wide pro gramme" of road construction; failing this, those present will support the 7Programme for the Pacific Highway from Blaine to Vancouver, the Colum bia River bridge and the Inland Em pire Highway, which, with its eon nectlng link, the Snoqualmie Pass road, will connect Seattle with Spo- kane. The Senators and Representatives ... from the southwest stated that if this - programme received, the . support of i- King County the Columbia River high--way project, which the southwest fa ; vors as against the Inland Empire ;r route for the cast and west highway, v would not be allowed to stand In the . way. AL ADAMS' DAUGHTER WEDS Mrs. Xapolcon and John Stacey Brown, Both Divorcees, Marry. ''; NEWPORT. R. lTfec. 20. While the Tdate of details of the ceremony ' are not known. It is believed here '' that John Stacey Brown. formerly H Newport attorney, and Mrs. Evelyn Armit Napoleon, daughter of Al Adams, ""policy king." have been quietly raar- ried, possibly in New York, within the ' last' fortnight. Both Mr. Brown and Mrs. Napoleon, were divorced in the r Superior Court for this county within T the last two years. Mrs. Napoleon has been living In New York and Mr. Brown, when he left this city, informed his friends that he Intended to go to San Francisco to practice law. That this is still his . intention and that the wedding had . taken place was evidenced today when there were seen at the freight depot i 20 large rases of furniture and house hold goods addressed to Evelyn Stacey Brown and consigned to San Francisco. Mrs. Napoleon was a resident of this city for several years and when she left she had household effects packed and stored. It is these that have now been prepared for shipment to Califor nia. SQUAW 109 YEARS OLD DIES Maggie Adams, Mother of Tillamook Tribe Passes Away. BAY CITY, Or7Dec. 20. Maggie Adams, mother of the Tillamook tribe of Indians died at her home at East Garibaldi Thursday at 2 o'clock. She was supposed to be 109 years of age. Earliest white people coming here remember her as a very old woman when they first saw her. She remem bered clearly the coming of the first white man to Tillamook Bav and she spoke of many shipwrecks unknown to people of the bay district. Mrs. Adams is supposed to have come here from Puget Sound country as she always said she' was a Siwash. She came here as an escaped slave from some Columbia River tribe of Indians. Her husband died many years ago and she is survived by 11 children of a family of 24. Little is known of her history and she always refused to be photographed. ZEDNICK MAY LOSE PLACE Washington Board of Control in Deadlock Concerning Manager. SEATTLE, JVash., Dec. 20. (Special.) After deliberating six hours behind closed doors the student board of con trol failed to elect a graduate man ager. Of the five candidates in the race, Zednlck was leading, but the greatest secrecy was observed and no final result could be obtained. Fraternity politics and politicians have been fighting Zednick for four years and from appearances tonight he may be beaten. VIOLET ASQUITH COMING Premier's Daughter to Be Guest of Bryces In Washington. LIVERPOOL. Dec. 20. Miss Violet Asquith, daughter of the British pre mier, sailed from here yesterday on board the Celtic for America. The Countess of Aberdeen, wife of the Lieutenant-Governor of Ireland and former Governor-General of Canada, will join Miss Asquith when the vessel arrives at Queenstown. Both are to be the guests of Ambassador and Mrs. Bryce at Washington. MRS. SARAH BEEBE IS DEAD Castle Rock Woman Passes Away Two Years After Golden Wedding. VANCOUVER. Wash.. Dec. 20. (Spe cial.) Mrs. Sarah B.-ebe. wife of Guy Beebe. of Castle Rock, and mother of Mrs. Joseph Carter, of this city, died at midnight Wednesday at St. Joseph's Hospital after a two weeks' - illness. The funeral was held yesterday at 2 o'clock from Knapp's Chapel, Rev. Ellsworth B. Collier, rector of St. Luke's Episcopal Church, officiating. Inter ment was in the city cemetery. Mrs. Beebe was 71 years old. a na tive of Ohio. In April. 1910, at Castle Rock, she and her husband celebrated their' golden wedding anniversary and all of the family were present except a son. who was killed in a passenger train wreck near Florence. Mont., in the Bitter Root Valley, in 1897. He was the engineer. A quarter of a century ago Mrs. Beebe, with her family, came West and lived at St Johns, Or., until eight years ago, when she removed to Castle Rock. Besides the husband, Mrs. Beebe Is survived by two sons. Wallace Beebe, of Portland, and Collin Beebe. of Mis soula, Mont, and six daughters, Mrs. Olive Muber, Mrs. Mattie Hatch and Mrs. Lcttle Scott, of Castle Rock; Mrs. Joseph Carter, of this city; Mrs. May Booth, of Grants Pass, Or., and Miss Lottie Beebe. of Castle Rock. CASE FIXES PRECEDENT HARRY SCHLOSS IS CONVICTED OF WHITE SLAVERY. Court Rules That In Cages of This Kind Wife Can Be Forced to Testify Against Spouse. With the conviction. Thursday night of Harry Schloss. for white slavery, in the United States District Court, Assistant United States District Attorney Evans closed his career in that court as a prosecutor. His record while acting as Assistant District Attorney shows that In every case he conducted in the Fed eral Court, he obtained a conviction. The Schloss trial was noteworthy be cause it established the precedent that In cases of this character, marriage of the victim by the one accused of white slavery does not act as a bar to the wife's testifying against her nusnana. Schloss attorney announced that an SDDeaV would be taken. The defend ant's ball was placed at JoOOO. which he was unable to furnish. He was locked up in the county jail. The trial, which was marked by sev eral exciting Incidents in which the defendant's wife fainted twice on the witness stand, came to a dramatic close when the girl attacked Gussie Gould and Sadie Miller, who had testi fied against her husband. It required the court bailiffs and two deputy mar shals to remove her hands from the women's hair, and she fought them for some time in ber anger. As soon as the Jury had retired for its deliberations Mrs. Schloss was ar rested on a charge of perjury and Is beinir held In default of 13000 bonds to await the action of the Federal grand jury. .She collapsed while being taken to the county jail. Schloss was charged with naving brought Anna Kurtxmann from Chicago to Portland for Immoral purposes. Just before the trial the couple were mar ried at Oregon City, the purpose being that, as Schloss' wife, the girl could not be forced to testify against him, al though she had made the original charge against him. The young woman told a harrowing tale to the grand Jury of Schloss's alleged treatment of her. Placed on the witness stand at Schloss trial, she first announced her marriage and then Schloss' attorney objected to her testifying on the ground that a wile cannot be forced to testify against her husband. Judge Wolverton, who pre sided, decided that under the white liva traffic act this rule was excepted. citing a ruling In a similar case in the United States District v,oun lor uit Eastern District of Pennsylvania. The marrying of the complaining witness has been the defense In many white slave cases in the past, but under this ruling hereafter it will not have the intended effect either in Federal or State Courts. ARMY BATTLES OfflRD lXOTSORE AND TIRED, SUF FRAGETTES PLOD 22 MILES. Up Hill and Down, in Mud and Snow, Women Trudge Wearily Toward Albany, Almost Spent. rTBUt-iT.l. V "V Ttpc. 50. It was two hours after dark and snowing when the suffragette "army." which is now . mar r A lhanr to deliver & mes sage to Governor Sulzer,. marched Into this city tonight. Winding roads stretcnea J. repuiea miles Into 22 and the four survivors oi the band of 3 women who started from New York on Monduy limped in here at 7 o'clock tonight, scarcely able to Irag their feet another step. t, Ua firutNluv of actual hard ship that the marchers have experi enced, an up and down hill journey over muddy roads in rain and snow. T. . ...... .-: mllAa ... n .-a m a H In nitch X lie 1 .1 l eijk mile. . . v - ......... ... , darkness, ankle deep in mud. and In the race ot a Ditier nonneiiniei. x footsore, weary women refused offers of a "WW' from two passing automo biles for they have vowed to travel we entire distance to Albany afoot. Miss ttosana ivuc. i . . expedition, who for two days nas ii. i .i,h nornfiiiw hllstered feet. " .... , J almost collapsed when she led her fol lowers Into the notel wnere iney injra for the night. "Will you go on tomorrow?" sne was asked. w will march until we drop," re plied the suffragette leader. Miss Jones went lmmeaiateiy m oeu. fw. 1 v. , r.D Uo.la YJflrriv StuhbS addressed a meeting of veteran fire men, while Lavina Docks, the fourth marcher, talked at a gathering of local suffragettes. MRS. F. R. SEARS IS DEAD Mother of Society Girl Athlete Is HI Only Short W hile. BOSTON. Mass.,Dec. 20. Mrs. Fred erick R. Sears, mother of Miss Eleanor E. Sears, the society girl athlete, died yesterday at her home on Beacon street, from pneumonia. Her condition was not regarded as alarming until within 48 hours before she died. Bulgarians Talk but Little. New Orleans Picayune. The Bulgarians, who are bearing the brunt of the war against the Turks, are said to be the quietest people on earth. They talk little, and never loudly; even their children play noiselessly. The women do most of the work, and In all instances are the packhorses, and a wife never ventures to walk alongside her lord and master, always she brings up the rear. The men drink and smoke but little and care but little for amuse ments, except card playing. In Sofia, the capital, everybody is In bed by 9. They can hatch up a plot to assassinate a Turk without batting an eyelash. It took the Bulgar 600 years to make" up his mind to shake off the Sultan's shackles, but when once decided, he did the job almost over night. Appropriations for Irrigation projects are qucnt Increase of cultivable land and a de crease In chances of famine or scarcity. BRIDAL COUPLE AT CHURCH, KIDNAPED Bible Class Members Are Vic tims of Co-Students After Ceremony. SECRET PLANS GO AWRY Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Haffenden Are Taken on Ride About Town In ' Cbais Drawn by Donkeys and Their House Placarded. To be kidnaped lust as they were coming out of the church to the strains of Mendelssohn's wedding march was ihn fate that befell Mr. and Mrs. Clar. ence Haffenden Thursday night. Both bride and bridegroom were members of the Busy Bible Boosters, of the First Methodist Episcopal Church South, but thev had omitted to Inform their com rad'es of the class of their nuptial in tentions. In fact, they had gone out of their way to prevent the news being 'noised around. One Booster, however, with a regular nose for news, found out the horrible secret. Then followed a hasty consulta tion and a plan of campaign for just and sure retribution. All werit well in the church, but just as the happy couple came out of the porch a sight they never will for get greeted their eyes. The famous pair of "Jacks," otherwise the two donkeys and that famous buggy that Invariably goes with them, were drawn up outside the church. Around the buggy were grouped enthusiastic h.n,i, a hiAa hand and all Tara- phernalia incidental to the proceed All over the East Side and the West the happy couple were carried, or rather dragged against their will, and fina'ly allowed to go to their home on Rodney avenue ana Kusseu street, thinking in blissful ignorance that peace was theirs at last But these indefatigable Busy bioi Boosters ' were not done with. Like the villian of the melodrama they said "Ma Hn" rieenlv a brace of times in their boots. Then they stole a ladder and as they crept . away they left a sign on the house. The sign reads "Just Married." EX-INDIAN HEAD HIT HARD Committee Finds Valentine Guilty of Violation of Law. WASHINGTON, "Dec 20. Robert G. Valentine, who recently resigned as Commissioner of Indian Affairs, was censured in a report yesterday by com. ittee on expenditures in the Interior Department after an investigation of charges against Mr. Valentine. The committee's report said that he delib erately violated the civil service laws. The committee found that Val entine had caused improper expendi ture of public funds, precipitating the removal of the general superintendent of logging In the Indian Service on false rumors and. was guilty of crimi nal violation of the law in Introduc ing and disposing of liquor on an Indian reservation. The report will be submitted to the House immediately after the holiday recess. The Department ot Justice, after an Investigation of some of the charges against the former Commis sioner, dismissed them. The report characterized as vicious impropriety" letters sent by Valentine as Commissioner to the superintendent of the La Pointe Agency, in Washing ton, suggesting the collection and sub mission to him of material which might be used against J. R. Farr, a timber expert who had saved millions of dollars to the Indians, and to James A. Carroll, a Government timber In vestigator. "Damn him, I want to get him out of the service," is a remark attributed to Valentine regarding Farr, after Farr left him. following an introduction in complimentary and commendatory words to Fred II. Abbott, now acting Commissioner. QUESTIONS ARE INVITED State Official Urges All IVuhgrowers to Consult With Him."' OREGON CITY, Or., Dec 20. (Spe cial.) A. C. Goodrich, State Horticul tural Commissioner for the First Hor ticultural district, which comprises Clackamas, Multnomah, Columbia, Clatsop. Tillamook, Washington and Yamhill Counties, is anxious that every man who plants a fruit tree will avail himself of all the information avail able in the Commissioner's office. "Comparatively few people, outside of the professional orchardlsts, realize that the State Horticultural Depart ment Is In existence and both ready and willing to extend a helping hand to the grower of fruit trees, whether that grower Is nursing a lone apple tree at the back of a 25-foot lot or is the owner of 1000 acres," Said he, In Oregon City Thursday morning. Together with Oscar Freytag and several leaders of the Oregon City Commercial Club. Commissioner Good rich is arranging a lecture itinerary that will cover every point of Clackamas- County. KAISER'S WORDS STARTLE Emperor Makes Sweeping Criticisms of "Gymnasium." BERLIN. Dec. 21. (Special.) Al though much greater liberty exists in Germany than was the case ten or even five years ago as to what may be writ ten and published concerning the Ger man Emperor, no little surprise has been caused by the publication of sev eral decidedly outspoken letters of his authorship in a biographical work just Issued in anticipation. of the 25th anni versary of his . Majesty's accession, which Is to be celebrated next year. One of the letters is remarkable, not only on account- of the very plain spoken style In which it is drafted, but probably much more on account of the attack that It contains on an Important part of the German educational system. The Emperor criticizes the German "Gymnasium" with a spirit and inde pendence not often met with in the more modern pronouncements of Ger mans of authority on German institu tions of today. He also appears in the light of a precursor in condemning the long hours and pettifogging and pedantic spirit of the classical educa tion as It is generally administered in Germany. As was stated some time ago, the number of suicides of school boys continues to- Increase, and this fact, which forms one of the questions of the day, is universally attributed in a large degree to the strenuousness of the schoolboy life. The following is the most remark able passage in the letter referred to: "So at last somebody has been found who is willing to take-an energetic stand against the most fossilized of all systems: a system that is calculated to destroy all spirit in the scholar. I am fortunate enough to have been able to convince myself of its harmful working on the youth of the land, by two and a half years' experience of it myself. Of the 21 scholars in our class, 19 wore glasses, and three of these had to wear an extra pair when they went to the blackboard. Homer, the master of the poets, Horace, Demosthenes, whose speeches should inspire everyone who read them how were they Interpreted? with spirit and enlightenment? Far from it. With the scalpel of the gram marian and the fanaticism of! the philo logist every syllable was dissected and examined until one had quite lost the wish to look for the. real contents. One could weVp over It. "What trouble the Greek and Latin essays cost us. and what nonsense they were! And the results! If one had read Horace all his spirit disappeared through the very terror of the mind. May we be freed from such stupidities! A war to the knife on such education! The only result of such methods Is that the youth of today learn the grammar and syntax of Greek better than the Greeks learned it themselves, and that they know the Generals and battles of the Punic wars, and even the positions of the troops, but know nothing about the battles of the Seven Years war, not to mention the campaigns of 1866 and 1870." TUBERCLE DOOM SEEN METCHXIKOKF SCRE SCIENCE WILD ROUT WHITE PLAGUE. Most Famous of Idving Biologists Finds of 90. Per Cent in Europe Affected Only 15 Per Cent Die. LONDON, Dec. 21. (Special.) A few days since an elderly man, whose silky white beard and brown-gray hair "cut long" and hanging thick at the back of his head stood before an audience of fashionable people in the new lecture theater of the Royal Society of Medi cine. He was Professor Metchnlkoff, head of the Pasteur Institute in Paris, and the acknowledged chief of living biologists. Many years ago, in Odessa, while studying the life of the water flea, he made a revolutionary discovery that parasites In the blood of the tiny Insect were being devoured by th phagocytes, or white cells, in the flea's blood. That discovery gave scientists new Ideas as to the manner in which dis ease might be fought, and now Metch nikoff is working for and looking for ward to the discovery of bacilli which may be employed to wipe out the dis ease of tuberculosis by preventing it. He has discovered so much during the last quarter of a century that he believes that the conquest of tubercu losis will not take very much longer. "The progress In the warfare against tubercle up to the present," he said, "Justifies the hope that in the not far distant future the great animal homo sapiens will triumph over the micro scopic plant, bacillus tuberculosis." He traced the history of the study of tuberculosis from the time when it was regarded as "a disease of the nutrition of the organism," and recalled how Koch. 30 years ago, discovered the ba cillus which is the agent engendering tuberculosis. "Tubercle is a very common disease," he said, "but it does not kill rapidly. The bacilli of tubercle take months or even years to cause fatal injury after thev have effected their entrance, rne eater-cells, or phagocytes, of the ani mal bodv wage a constant war on them. Often the phagocytes conquer the in truding bacilli, and the disease is stopped. 'Lately it has been shown mat evi dence of tubercular disease, healed and oast, is nearly universal In all adults dying from other causes than tubercle in our town populations. "Ninety per cent. of the adult popula tion of European towns is shown by Plrquet's test to have incurred infec tion by Koch's bacillus. Yet only 15 per cent die. while tne rest recover ana often have not been aware of illness of a tubercular nature." It has been discovered that attacks of less virulent forms of tubercular dis ease, from which the patients recover, confer immunity against the deadly lung tubercle, or phthisis, and a re markable proof of this was found in a comparison of the Kalmuk Tartars with the town populations in Kussia, wnicn Professor Metchnikoff made is montns ago. Out in the wilds the Kalmuks rareiy die of tubercle, yet when young Kal muks are sent into the Russian towns to be educated they become Infected more readily, and die In greater propor tion than do the children of the towns. Bv applying Plrquet's test, .the pro fessor found that the town population was almost universally "tuberculized," but that the Kalmuk children were not. KAISER WOULD RULE SKY Twenty Zcpjx-Hn Airships May Be War Service. BERLIN. Aec. 21. (Special.) It is confidently believed in the quarters - i . . . . i,...Dtai4 tiot Vi u nrA. duction at a German "Aerial Navy Bill" is certain, and mat mo 0111 anti m necessary supplementary estimates win come before the Reichstag In the Spring. It isAtated on reliable authority that the recommendations of the German office and admiralty include tne (atlon, as a beginning, of a fleet of n .irchiTin of about 920.000 iT.vin fa.t n nnrirv and capable of raveling at 51 miles an hour and re- nainlng aloft for rour aays ana tour lights without an intermediate land- i n.t.A n m .Ian tn he Pnnnl)ln of carrying and discharging one ton of explosives. Germany is secretly training air pi lots in large numbers. At the present moment. Great Britain has no more .on .f.r-tivd Aeronlanes. and at the lowest estimate Germany has 120, besides possessing some lot more oi older types. Germany aimed at the be ginning of this year to possess 400 mil itary aeroplane pilots, and the writer is advised, irom irusiwormy uuit that she possesses nearly this number already. It must not be assumed that they are all of the first class, but a large number of them are experiences cross-country fliers, and many have AVn.i.nAA in nco nf homb-droDDinfi: H H l V. kuw ' " - Instruments and In the employment of guns on aircran. wany "-u" planes carry wireless apparatus. So great Is the enthusiasm in Ger many that the national fund, started this year, has already reached a total of $1.500,00,0, showing that previous patriotic efforts. Including the great Zeppelin fund of four years ago. havl not exhausted the Fatherland. Two separate gifts indicate the national spirit: The Essen Electrical Works and the Essen City Council each gave $25,000. But the gifts range from halt a mark upwards. In Germany there are 75 aeronautical societies and clubs, with upwards of 70,000 members. The Kaiser has given various prizes, and the keynote is always the direct encouragement of German brains and German hands, even though temporary delay may be incurred thereby, or in some point there may be Inferiority to France. .Germany is also far ahead In defences against aircraft. Nearly four years ago the leading ordnance firms, such as Krupps and Ehrhardts brought out sev- 050 -.thse bel. Alder and 7orrson. Phones Pacific, Marshall 1 (one). Home, A 6281. This Saturday Special Sale of Extra Choice "Jones Quality" XM AS LAMB AND PORK WITH SUGGESTIONS Roast Hind Quarter Lamb Roast Leg of Lamb Browned Potatoes Rack of Lamb Broiled, Mint Sauce Roast Shoulder of Lamb Sage Dressing Roast Breast of Lamb Breaded, Tomato Sauce , or Roast Leg of Pork Roast Loin of Pork Apple Sauce Roast Shoulder of Pork Onion Dressing SPECIALS PLAINLY PRICE MARKED AT MARKET BREAKFAST Suggestions not required JONES' PURE PIG PORK SAUSAGE Favorite style, 25c the lb. package A gift appreciated Jones' "Pride of Oregon" Brand Hams and Bacon TUESDAY SPECIAL "Jones Quality" Christmas Prime Roasting Beef, Suckling Pigs Jones' Market Where only the choicest grade of Quality Meats are sold eral types of guns designed and MA11TAi ti- lilcrh-ancrlA fir a and tro- I ill-11 H Ifu aw rj vided with special projectiles. Tne jaiest announuciiicin o -"- - ri nncfir nf "Wo r lifts ordered UCrillUU iuimoii j - " a new military Parseval airship, to be reaoy next way. GALE GRIPS NORTH DAKOTA Forty-five-Mile, Wind Whips Snow Over Prairies. r .vi. iprtTJTffl TV Tipr- 20. A blizzard Is sweeping North Dakota with the wind blowing a m-mue gaie. mure than a foot of snow has fallen. Kail way traffic has not as yet been serious ly crippled. Proof Positive. Lippincott's. "Am I the first girl you ever kissed? "Supposing I said yes"?" "Never mind supposing. Am IT' Supposing I said 'no'?" "There! I knew I wasn't." Ayer 1 Oierrv 5 Pectoral No sense in trying this thing, that thing, for your cough. Carefully, deliberately select the best cough medicine, then stick to it Ask your doctor about Ayer's Cherry Pectoral for throat and lung troubles. LZJnfc A LIBERAL OFFER ( We Guarantee io Relieve DyapepMa. If we rui im .Ticuinuc ...... UM. Tn iinnuAstlnnablv nrove to the Peo ple that indigestion and dyspepsia can be permanently relieved and that Rex .11 rtvsTMinRiL TnhlAtA will brinir about this result, we will furnish thenedl- cino absolutely tree 11 it iaus 10 give satisfaction to any one using it. The remarkable success of Rexall Dyspepsia Tablets is due to the high degree of scientific skill used in de vising their formula as well as to the care exorcised in their manufacture. whereby the well-known properties oi Bismuth-Subnitrate and Pepsin have been combined with Carminatives and other agents. Bismutn-SUDnuraie ana repsm arc constantly employed and recognized by the entire medical profession as in valuable in the treatment of indiges tion and dyspepsia. The Pepsin used in Rexall Dyspepsia Tablets Is carefully prepared so as to develop its greatest efficiency. Pepsin supplies to the digestive apparatus one of the most important elements of the digestive fluid. Without it the diges tion and assimilation 01 iuu i e im possible. The Carminatives possess properties hinv. oiH in roHflvlne- the disturbances and pain caused by undigested food. This combination or. inese mgreaienui makes a remedy invaluable for the complete relief in indigestion and dys pepsia. We are so certain of this that we urge you to try Rexall Dyspepsia Tablets on our own personal guaran tee Three sizes. 25 cents, 50 cents and 1.00. Sold only by the Owl Drug Co. stores in Portland, Seattle, Spo kane. San Francisco, Oakland, Los An geles and Sacramento. Julius Kessler Announces That the Trade has made no reply to his challenge on the age of all other whiskies bottled So all fair-minded men will agree to the undisputable proof that W. H. McBrayer's CEDAR BROOK must be "the world 's finest whiskey." Our records have proved that: More 7 to 8 year-old W. H. McBrayer's Cedar Brook Whis was hottled in bond (2.956.- 944 bottles) in 1911 in our one Cedar Brook Distillery than all other brands combined, includ ing all advertised, popular brands made in Kentucky, Maryland, Pennsylvania, and all over the U. S. bar none I Cedar Brook is therefore the oldest and best on tbe market. The Distiller Rothchild Bros., Distributers TheFinest Gift for the Holidays Not a Seed in"Sunkist" Luscious Thin-Skinnecl Juicy. Buy "SUNKIST" ORANGES .by the Box of Your Dealer. No other Christmas Gift so Appreciated. "SUNKIST" Wrappers bring Rogers Famous Guaranteed Table Silverware. Send your name and fulladdressfor free Premium List and Premium Club Plan. California Fruit Growers Exchange 139 N. Clark Street Chicago. I1L (W) The Hof-Brau Will Serve You CHRISTMAS DINNER Table d'Hote or A La Carte. Whichever Way You Desire. NONE BETTER in ii .i ii.iii.iij i .mi - " mam I, niiiii m ii im i n ii i f i iii ii iii fnifiim mm 7 j? in bond. j i yj i n lit JifaMii mk am vi itt-wiai-naitTyn-iHaai'M-n