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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 2, 1913)
THE MORNING OREGONIAN, THURSDAY. JANUARY 2, 1913. 1 ISRAEL ZANGW1LL DEFENDS COLONEL Famous Novelist Reveals Pre ! Election Attitude of Roose i velt on Suffrage. PEACE PROBLEM TALKED International Harmony-Is Moral Is sue, Says Author of "The Melt S lnjr Pot" Change In Human ;i Heart Xeoded, He Avers". . BY TV. A. M. GOODK. LONDON, Jan. 1. (Special.) "Tha effect of the present suffrage move- X ment in England is having effect everywhere before reaching Kngland," aid Israel Zangrwell. the famous novel- i it, whn I asked him what he thought of Colonel Itoosevelt's efforts on behalf of woman's suffrage, as shown by the large vote cast for the ex-President TT in the recent election. . Mr. Zangwill has his London "chara bers" in the picturesquely historic brick buildings of Bare Court, part of r the Temple Inn where only barristers - are allowed to live. His home Is at "Worthing, on the southern coast. That ! such a man should choose a hotbed ;j of musty precedent and dry formulae n.i Hare Court for his town home is delightfully paradoxical, for the only i iife Mr. Zangwill seems to have for the past is a klcking-off place for the - 3resent. There is nothing formal about the j, acknowledged leader of literary He 'T brewdom. In answer to my knock he X opened the door himself.- Pointing to a comfortable cushioned window seat lie finished dictating a pronouncement on foreign affairs to the representative of a leading Jewish newspaper. The Z novelist's chambers are furnished for work, not for play or ostentation, and In their notes .of quiet austerity are in Keeping witn their tamous occupant. f Ah he sat at the table with the Jewish i journalist he impressed one more as I r- public man whose fingers are constant ; ly on the keys of international thought and feeling than as a writer of aualyt 1 Jcal and keenly imaginative fiction. r ItoAaevelt la PratMed. Then he beckoned me to his side at " the table, and began talking in a me S lodloua voice, on the subject nearest his 'J : "The effect of the present suffrage movement in Kngland is having effect -V everywhere before reaching Kngland," he repeated. "To it, I think, is due j largely the vote cast for the principle ..' in the presidential election in America. I have seen it stated in various quarters 7 that Colonel. Koosevelt was accused of . adopting woman's suffrage just to help himself in the presidential campaign. ' and that lie was an anti-suffragist be ' lore it. This to my knowledge is not the case. It happened that while I was . -producing The Melting pot" in Ameri ca. my wife and I went to lunch with him at the Wlilte House. Mrs. Zang- r win sat next to the then President t" and found him quite sympathetic on "tfthe subject. We of the Men's League lor Woman's Suffrage were especially clad of his support. Whatever one may " say about Theodore Roosevelt, there is one thing that cannot be said, and that ;t is that he is not a 'manly man." No . longer, therefore, can we be scouted as 7 effeminate." f Mr. Zangwill spoke earnestly," with - out gosture,yet with a hint of gentle masterfulness, accompanied by a per f suasive smile. , It suggested a glint from the mine of that delightful humor which informs his books. I' "Could you give me," I asked, "a fur- ther Illustration of your contention that tile enect Ul lilts DUinnsc mv emeu . -; is felt more abroad that it Is in Eng. t land?" Chinese Women Interested. "I suppose," said Mr. Zangwill re . flectively, "it's accounted for by the fact that a prophet is not without honor save in his own country. Any way, its V influence is well nigh universal. It Is even said that some Chinese women have the vote. But I can tell you an J anecdote I heard the other day bear-i- ing on this very point. An English r lady while traveling In China visited a I girl's school and was Invited to say & few words to the pupils. "What shall 1 talk about?' she asked. 'Tell us l something about women's suffrage, please," was the astonishing rejoin u der." ! Everyone who takes even a remote interest in such things knows that Mr. : Xangwlll is not afraid of publicly tes- tifylng to his convictions. And while we were on the subject or women s 11 onffnira hn ornlnlneri. with a deliErht. 4 I" ' ' ' o 'J ful sense of boyish fun, that he had just walked in a suffrage street demonstra-i- tion, wearing a tall hat "to give It an V air of respectability." His male com- panions were a Catholic priest and Ce . ctl Chapman, the London police court ,; magistrate. Discussing American affairs in gen i eral Mr. Zangwill expressed himself ? very definitely. t" "I am in hearty agreement with . . Roosevelt," he declared, "in believing -' that the American Constitution needs X alteration. The idea of a perfect Cen stitutlon set up once and for all Is ri- diculous. If you plant an oak In a flower pot there is bound to come a J, time when the pot must crack." Peace Moral Issue. - Branching oft to the question of in v. ternational peace, . another cause to -: which he has given a great deal of earnest attention, Mr. Zangwill said emphatically: " "Nothing but a moral change in the masses can help the cause of peace. I venture to say tliat a- play like The War God' can do more good than all - the lectures and arbitration buildings. i In regard to that play of mine, it is in- teresting to recollect that just before ''" leaving London for his ill-fated voy- age. W. T. Stead wrote to ask me If he could do anything to bring it forward a in New York. Now Mrs. Elmer Black, I vice-president of the American Peace ' Society. Is making arrangements for i the production of 'The War God' In the United States. When it is produced, I shall go over there to rehearse it. "A change in the. human heart is needed," he repeated. "Norman Angell's j teaching Is no; enough. To say a thing ,f is economically unsound is no deter ? rent. Many of us go pn giving expen J sive supper parties we cannot afford, i And years ago I said that the Stock Exchanges were a great agent of peace , the bull and the bear lying down to t gether, not the lion and the lamb. The French, for instance, have so much J money invested in Russia, that no Rus- eian unrighteousness could induce the J Wrench to take up arms against them. 1 Therefore the fact that war is econom- ically unsound becomes an unrighteous V argument." J Time was up. Other claims were pressing on Mr. Zangwill's work-filled day and, with the courtesy of a perfect 2 host, he brought the interview to a close. Duma split in Turtles. ST. PETERSBURG. Jan. 1. (Spe clal. The distribution of parties in the Duma, In the final returns, gave 163 members to the Right, 144 Ka tionalists and Octobrists to the Center and 1:5 members to the Left. Since then the Right has undergone a rapid process of disintegration into various shades, the great majority grouping tnemselves as -Moderates." and the Right, properly speaking, being now said to consist of 33. On the other hand, the Moderate. Rights are to some extent combining with the Nationalists. If this process develops the Octobrist party will, as in the preceding Duma, be compelled to seek temporary alli ances as time and opportunity require. But the task of the Octobrist Center will presumably be a much more diffi cult one in the present House. At any rate, the dream of a stable Center remains a dream. The elections were greatly influenced by clerical and bureaucratic interfer ence. Unprejudiced observers in all the provinces report that the Opposi tion spirit and by "opposition" in this sense is meant dissatisfaction with the delay In reforms as distinct from a de sire to be identified with the parties that sit on the Left pervades all classes of the community. The gain of 112 seats by the Right in the provinces was achieved entirely by the vote of the parish priests, who in many cases acted under orders. In the large cities, however, notably in Moscow and St. Petersburg, the Octobrist candidates were defeaed by Cadets or Progress ists, because the city voter, being nat urally more advanced in his views than the provincial, disapproved of the ac commodating tactics adopted by the Octobrists under M. Gouchkoff in the Third Duma. In Poland" the city elections turned entirely on the Jewish question. The Jews in Warsaw succeeded in defeat ing M. Roman Dmowski, the National Democratic leader, who had proclaimed himself against any rights being given to the Jews. They elected a Social ist workman. In Lodz they elected a Jew. INQUIRY IS MYSTERIOUS LLOVD-GEORGE QC1ETI.Y GATH ERS ECONOMIC DATA. Opponents See Attempt to Mislead Ignorant Agricultural Laborers and Create Dissatisfaction. LONDON, Jan. 1. (Special.) Per istent efforts are being made to get some reliable information about the unofficial inquiry that Mr. Lloyd' George has set on foot with the scarcely-concealed object of discovering material on which to base an attack on landed property and landlords. The public knows that the committee was appointed with the approval of the Prime Minister, and that the Govern ment saw the questions which form the basis of the secret inquiry. But Mr. Asquith says that the Government is In no way committed to anything that Is reported or recommended, and last night the Lord Chancellor de clared emphatically that no one has any right "to make these inquiries on be half of the Chancellor of the Exche quer in his official position." Yet scarcely five minutes before he had laid down the Impossibility of "dissociat ing entirely, Mr. Lloyd-George from his official position." While, however, leaders and follow ers of the Government are darkening counsel in Parliament, the secret in quiry is going on all over the country. The imposing blue and yellow forms are beins left with gamekeepers, rad ical agents, head laborers, small shop keepers, and some farmers to be re turned when "filled up to a man, or more often a woman, living in a large town some distance away, who knows nothing about the country and only wants something that looks like ser ious statistical inquiry. This attempt to mislead public opinion, if it were not so fraught with mischief, might very well excite amusement. The complexity of the questions is such that the man able to fill up all the schedules properly ought to be at once an actuary, an agricultural expert. possessed of the memory of that oldest Inhabitant who always turns up as a witness in right-of-way cases, a sur veyor able to measure up the number of cubic feet in every cftttage room; an auctioneer; familiar with the details of local government; having access to the assessment roll, and possessing some skill as a psyohologlst. The forms are marked "Private and Confidential." They have a very offi cial look. They only want the Royal arms to convince even an eaucaiea casual observer that they are issued with Government authority. The in tention to mislead a class of people so little lniormea ana so naiurauy suspicious, as the agricultural laborer. is evident. There are two volumes ot these schedules. One deals with gen eral agricultural questions, rating, and the conditions of tenure; the other with housing problems and wages. The object of the inquiry is stated to be: "To obtain an accurate and Impartial account of the social and economic conditions in the rural parts of Great Britain." The adjectives must have been chosen by Mr. Lloyd- George himself. Nobody unpossessed of his lively Celtic imagination would dream of applying them to an investi gation pursued by such means and di rected to such ends. SUNDAY "MOVIES" TO STAY London Council Declares There Is Popular Demand for Them. LONDON. Jan. 1. (Special.) The agitation against the Sunday opening of the picture palaces in iajhouh no been very sensibly disposed of in the report of the theaters and music-halls committee of the London County Coun cil. The committee finds that notning has occurred to make it cnange its view that there is a public demand tor these entertainments, and tnat, pro riding this demand can be satisfied without necessitating compulsory Sun day labor, the entertainments fulfill a legitimate and useiui purpose. The decision Is not paiataDie 10 ine strict Sabbatarians, who think the day of rest should be transformed into a day of gloom, but it is in accoru wnu the desires of the public at large. As for the more interested opposition 01 the music-halls and theaters, the Lon don County Council committee points out that there is nothing to prevent them being used for concerts and pic ture shows under tne present, regum ttnna. and that consequently there Is no substantial ground for complaint that they receive inequality of treatment. Little Cordelia's Request. Judge. Little Cordelia's grandmother had an old-fashioned way of measuring a yard by holding one end of the goods to her nose and then stretcning tne piece at arm's length. One day Cor delia found a bit of ribbon. Carrying it to her grandmother, she gravely re quested: Grandma, smell tnis ana see now long it Is." A Strong Resemolance. Judge. "Say. Billle." said Tommy, "do you believe in Santa Claus?" "You bet 1 do!" returned Billle I've seen him. I peeked while he was fillin' my stockin' last year." 'What did he look like?" asked Tommy. "Well, if pa d had a twin brother Id ha' thought it was him," said Billie. ENGLAND PUTS BAN ON IRISH CATTLE Dublin Fair Ordered Discon tinued and Harbor Board Files Remonstrance. DISEASE SPREAD FEARED Thousands Marooned of Head of Livestock at Seaport Towns and Appeal Is Made to Mr. Red mond for Assistance. DUBLIN, Jan. 1. (Special.) Dis may is the only word which adequately describes the feeling today anion? Irish cattle traders regarding the latest de velopment In the foot-and-mouth disease epUlemic. The closing of English port3 to Irish cattle was, of course, anticipated from the statement of Mr. Kunciman in the House of Com mens recently, but it was not known sufficiently widely to prevent loss and inconvenience to those who brought cattle for the market usually held in Dublin every Thursday. Hundreds of animals were brought in bv train, but in the case of those driven by road tne ponce at outlying stations were able to intercept many, the various staions having received telegraphic in formation that the market would net be held. The conflict between th b Irish, and the English boards is also the subject of angry criticism. The present situation has caused the gravest concern, and it must mean financial ruin for many of those en gaged in the cattle industry. Tne order or prohibition was not re ceived at the market until 11:45 Wed nesday night, with the result that there was not sufficient time to com municate with owners of the stock already being conveyed to the market. Many hundred head were delivered, and when it was found that the market had been closed the vicinity of the cattle market was rendered a "con gested district' owing to the number of stock held up in the streets. It is anticipated: that . a large number of animals intended for sale as stock will have to be killed here and made the best of by the butchers. The consign ment of cattle in which one of the suspected cases of foot-and-mouth disease was discovered by the officers in Dublin is being detained at South Wall. Other stock consigned has been returned to the owners. Rem on mt ranee In Klled. At the meeting of the Dublin Harbor Board the following resolution was passed: "That this Board is strongly of opinion that the sudden action of the board of agriculture in holding up the cattle traffic of this port is not based on sufficient grounds, and they direct special attention to the opinion of the best authorities in this country that the alleged disease in ttie case of catt'.d, on which steps have been taken', is not such as to justify the action referred to." Owing to the English ports being closed against Irish stock, about 1200 cattle 700 sheep, and 500 pies are utopped at Waterford, and traders are viewing the situation with alarm. The Mayor of Waterford has sent a tele gram to Jofin Redmond" stating that the cattle traders of Waterford were up in. arms at the port being closed, and asking him to take the strongest measures possible to have it -reopened. The Irish cattle stopped at Dundee by order of the board of agriculture number 468. They were the first con signment from Leland since the open ing of the port for trade, and much dis appointment has been caused by the discovery which has led to he present situation. -Infected Carcasses Burned. The authorities are vigorously, fol lowing up their investigations into the outbreak at Boughton Aluph, near Ash ford, and are cremating the bodies of all animals found, on being slaughtered. to have the disease. Many of the sheep which it was hoped h'&d not taken it are found to exhibit the symptons. and steps are now being taken ta trace the whereabouts of any that have been sent away from the farm within a period which would render them suspect. The farmers in the immediate neigh borhood are making a determined on slaught on rooks, which are being killed iu large numbers. It is thought that there is great danger of the disease being carried to other farms by the birds picking up pieces of in fected straw or grass. I Infected animals have been found' at Newry and at Wallasey. SOCIALISTS ARE HOPEFUL German Party, More United Than Previously, Seeks Reforms. HAMBURG, JanT" 1. (Special.) As the dawning of another new year ap proaches, the million financial members of the German Social Democratic party are busy with conjectures as to what the future holds in store for them. With 110 Socialists sitting in the Reichstag, almost a third of the Imper ial Parliament of the Fatherland, it Is felt that progress along their chosen lines of legislation should 'be much quicker in 'the future than it has been in the past. It Is already freely said that the amount of reform obtained Is not commensurate with the strength of the party. This is true, and the reason for it is that the Marxian and Revis ionist wings of the Social Democratic party are continually at war. But there are signs today that the policy of the Revisionists, which is opposed to the irreconcilable attitude of the marxian Socialists, is in the ascendant, thanks largely to the able leadership of Eduard Bernstein. Developments in the new year will undoubtedly reflect this tendency in the Reichstag, and the first evidence of it will be a determination to work with the liberals on the question of the re form of the Prussian franchise, which the progressive parties stigma tize as an antiquated and reactionary system. The Marxian element has al ways been opposed' to any sort of co operation with less advanced politicians than themselves, but as failure has ac companied these tactics, it seems as if the policy of the Revisionists will ob tain the favor of the rank and file of the party in general. B0YNE BANNER IS CHEAP Historic Emblem Once Property , of "N"o Popery". Premier Killed. DUBLIX, Jan. l-tSpeciaD Irish men the world over will be interested to hear of- the sale at Steven's Auction Rooms, Covent Garden, of an historic silken banner 130 years old and com memorating the battle of the Boyne. Coming so soon after the signing of the Ulster Covenant it might reason ably have been expected 1 that a high price would have been reached as the result of brisk bidding from enthusias tic Orangemen. -But neither its hallowed associations C. E. Holliday Co. 355 Alder St, Corner of Park Annual Clearance - LADIES'. AND MISSES' SUITS Of the Better Class. . Formerly $25, now $12.50 Formerly $35, now $17.50 Formerly $50, now S25.00 Formerly $75, now $37.50 LADIES' AND MISSES' COATS Three-quarter and full length, in all sizes and materials. Formerly $22.50, at $11.25 Formerly $27.50, at $13.75 Formerly $35.00, at $17.50 ENGLISH RAINCOATS. V2 PRICE DRESSES In all wanted materials Char nieuse, Crepe de Chine, Velvet, Esponge, Serge, etc. for all oc casions, greatly reduced from former price. ' WAISTS with the battle of the Bojue. nor the farther historic Interest attaching- to the relic by reason of the fact that It at one time belonged to Spencer Per ceval, the Prime Minister at the head of the "No Popery Cabinet" who was assassinated in the House of Commons Just 100 years ago. were sufficient to send up the price to any fancy figure. The historic banner was knocked down for the modest sum of J6.25. The sale of the relic recalls the story of the man to whom the assassination of Mr. Percival was revealed in a vision on the niptat before the murder. He told his friends the following: morning of his startling dream, of the picture that was unfolded in it, and he even described the principal char acters in the terrible drama that was enacted in the House of Commons when Spencer Percival was sent to his doom. The particulars he gave were after ward fully corroborated in the accounts of the assassination that were pub lished. CH MEITTMEO ENGLISH WOMAX REPUDIATES SIK A. COXAX lOVUE. Report of Investigation Iaid Before Belgium Ruler Natives Dio or Sleeping Sickness. LONDON, Jan. 1. (Special.) Mrs. Marguerite Roby, who recently passed several months in the Lower Congo re gion, has returned from a visit to Brus sels, where the details of her journey have been laid before the King of the Belgians. Mrs. Roby does not repre sent Belgian interests in any way, but she is convinced that the stories of cru elty to the natives, so fan as the Kasal district Is concerned, ara mainly un founded. J "My. main reason for goinar out this time,' she told a press representative. "was because I wished to investigate the conditions after reading" Sir A. Conan Doyle's book, 'The Crime of the Congo.' I went right through Kasai, and far from finding the natives decimated and mutilated by the rubber traders I found that the only thing which disturbed the district was the dreadful disease of sleeping sickness. That has been working havoc with the people for the last 20 years. Through out my trip of three and a half months in the Kasai I saw no signs of famine stricken, unhappy natives, and in no village was it impossible to get food for my 60 or 70 porters. I took Sir A. Conan Doyle's book witn me. and inves tigated the allegations thoroughly. 'I believe that many of the accusa tions made in that book are absolutely unfounded. If Sir Arthur Conan Doyle will accompany me on my next trip in that region I am convinced that he would change his views on this ques tion very much indeed. In the Upper Congo the Belgians did not deny that cruelties were committed, but if Sir A. Conan Doyle went through the Kasai with me he would, I am quite sure, withdraw his book from publication. 'Dr. Morrison, the great American missionary, whom I met, told me that he ' had never seen natives mutilated or atrocities committed, but, like the stay-at-home people, he had 'heard.' Dr. Morrison said that he would be sorry to see any other flag flying over the country than that, already there, and he had always been loyal to the Belgian government. The truth of the matter is that the natives will not work, and the stories of the people dy ing from the effects of cruelty and famine are without foundation so far as the Kasai is concerned. I have known of cases where travelers had to wait months before they could get carriers for their luggage, while there were plenty of men about doing noth- f 25 Fur Neckwear Fur Muffs Fur Sets Ya off H. LIEBES & CO. . J. P. Plagemann, Mgr. Manufacturing Furriers Corbett Building: " 288 Morrison Street Raw Furs Wanted Highest Cash Price Paid for Prime Pelts I Anyone can make delicious, crisp wheat I f cakes by following this recipe-a new one j 1 received from a famous Vermont cook: 1 1 1-2 cups floor 4 even teaspoons baking powder 1-2 teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons sugar 1 1-2 cups milk 1 teaspoon melted butter or two of rich cream But cakes (V J 1 Your grocer has just received a fresh supply, right from Ver mont, where it ' grew. V Towle's is good all the time, v but if there's one time when it's better than another, it's , right now when the cool weather gives folks good appe tites. . Towle's Log Cabin Syrup is made on the scientific plan for 1 pp "From my camp to your table. " Jack Towle inu iniiii iiiuitEii:!ii; isiHiii i ii!iu i ing and able to take on the job. But they prefer to do nothing. "Sleeping sickness is the great enemy of the natives of the Kasai. I have seen them lying Inside and outside their huts, men and women, unable to help themselves, sleeping their last sleep." Referring to mission work, Mrs. Roby said: "The average missionary has a very good time, and lives in more than comfort. It would . open the eyes of many, perhaps, to be invited to lunch eon with missionaries and to find the table almost as good as at any first class hotel in Europe." Summer Bedspreads. Philadelphia North American. The sleeping apartments during the Summer should be made to appear dainty and cool. This is an easy matter and little ex pense is attached to it. After all the draperies used during the Winter have been stored away and the unnecessary articles of furniture dispensed with, clothe your room in its Summer garb. Purchase plain, barred or figured dimity, any color your taste may dic tate. From this fashion a cover for your bed. bureau, dressing table and the window draperies. Measure the length of the bed and allow three or four widths of material, according to the size of the bed. This may be finished by a ruffled flounce. plaiting or by a deep hem. Fourteen Established 50 Years Discount on all Fur Coats 201 off All Children's and Misses' Sets WHEAT CAKES Sift flour, baking powder, salt and sugar into mixing bowl; add milk very gradually, beating smooth. Add well-beaten egg and melted butter or cream. "Bake" on a hot griddle, slightly but evenly greased. Do not have cakes too thick ; as soon as lightly browned on both sides, spread one side with butter, roll them up and serve immediately on a warmed plate. aren't cakes without TOWLE'S El Towle Maple St Paul, Dept. lu. iiimn:ii!innmininifii:mi iiniE iiiiiii iiiiiiieiihii iiiiiiiiiiiniiiHiiiiiiiiiiuiiimiii m inches from the hem, or bordering, the ruffle, stitch bands of figured dimity. Cut these bands from a wide-striped design, which may be had in a great number of varieties. These spreads are easily laundered and may be kept fresh and clean through the hot, dusty Summer. Xot a Stem-Winder. Judge. Inquisitive Passenger And what Is that curious thing you are carrying? Sailor (with winch-erank) This, mum? It's the crank what they use for winding up the dog watch. plenty of m making- youngsters grow and keep well children need sweets and Towle's is fine for them. Their craving for Towle's is Nature's guide to the nourish- ment they need. And that flavor always like the "first run of sap" because " the Towle way of making syrup keeps the original mellowness 5 of the maple. H r To-morow morning will be a good E time to try this new Wheat Cake ES Recipe. Order a can of Towle's Log Cabin Syrup from your 5 grocer to-day and give the family E5 a treat. We are going to print jjji more recipes, too. Cut this one E5 out and paste it in your cook- S book then watch for the others 2 . U T,,.!, The Log Cabin Can is M your guarantee of purity E and superior quality. "Jack Towle" will send you a valna- E ble recipe book and a miniature can . 3 of Towle's Log Cabin Syrup for five ; 2 -cent stamps, to cover postage send EES to-day. Address Jack Towle,care of 55 Products Co. Minnesota Modern Pugilism. Father I can't understand why you want to be a prizefighter! - Son Easy! Because it's all prize and no fight!" They Add to Your Motoring Comfort New Robes $4 to $25 Western Hardware and Auto Supply Co. Seventh and Pine Streets DON'T BE BALD Xearly Any One May Secure a Splendid Growth of Hair. We have a remedy that has aided to grow hair and prevented baldness in 93 out of 100 cases where used accord ing to directions for a reasonable length of time. That may seem like a strong statement; it 1b, and w mean it to be and no one should doubt It until they have put our claims to an actual test. - We are so certain Rexall "93" Hair Tonic will cure dandruff, prevent bald ness, stimulate the scalp and hair roots, stop falling hair and grow new hair that we personally give our posi tive guarantee to refund every penny paid us for H in every Instance where it does not give entire satisfaction to the user. Rexall "93" Hair Tonic is as pleasant to use as clear spring water. It Is delightfully perfumed and does not grease or gum the hair. Two sleR, 50c and 1. With our guarantee back of it, you certainly take no risk. Sold only by The Owl Drug Co. stores in Portland, Seattle, Spokane, Sin Francisco, Oakland, Los Angeles and Sacramento, . A -fSS "Every Ug&lkMr Auto" i