THE 3IORXIXG OREGOXIAX. SATURDAY, MAY 3, 1913. AO Yen Dlti& nknrfpJ UI'S STRUGGLE at Blood Disorders, WTH ILLNESS BEAR'S TRIP ROUGH DUFFY IS INDIGNANT FIRST ROYAL MAIL STEAMER FOR PORTLAND-EUROPE SERVICE LOADS GRAIN AND FLOUR FOR INITIAL TRIP. A Remedy That Has Shown a Most Remarkable Purifying Effect. Winds Encountered by Vessel Alleged Bigamist Says Com panion in Flight Sister. . on Voyage Northward. 345 PASSENGERS ON LIST CThlcago Club Woman on "Eugenic" Iectnre Tour ArriTe Wireless Strike Causes Little Trouble, Reports Purser Heywoort. The ittimtr Bear of the "Bis; 3" ar rived at 5:45 o'clock yesterday after noon Kith 345 passengers and 1100 tons of freight. Captain Nopander aid that the ship had encountered head winds and although the Bear had little trouble In passing: other north bound steamers. It was Impossible to keep her usual scheduled time except by forcing- her engines. As a result the steamer arrived at Alnsworth dock several hours late. C. F. Hryvood, purser, said that the Bear left San Francisco two hours late. through delay caused by loading freight. lie said the rough voyage caused considerable seasickness. Among the passengers was Mrs. Francis Shaw, of Chicago, who came from Los Angeles. Mrs. Shaw repre sents the Los Angeles Women's Clubs In Chicago. At present she Is on a lecture tour giving a series of talks on "Eugenics." Two new wireless operators arrived on the Bear, the former "S. O. S." men having left In San Francisco on ac count of the strike. Although there have been many changes due to the strike. Mr. Heywood said that there is little difficulty In acquiring new men to fill the old operators' places. TRAMP MAKES FAST TRIP Terrier Conies From Acapulco, .Mex ico, In 1 1 Days. The Norwegian tramp steamer Ter rier. Captain Thorsen, a two-year-old vessel of 3163 tons register, arrived on her first trip to Portland at 6:30 yesterday morning, docking at Inman Poulsen mills. The Terrier made a fast run from Acapulco, Mexico, covering the distance in eleven days and coming In ballast, having discharged coal In Acapulco which was loaded in Japan. Her first officer, Julius Johnson, was In Portland on the Tltanla In 1909 and said that he was glad to return. The Terrier received 300,000 feet of 1 imber at Rainier Thursday, and wl!l take on 3.600.000 feet at Inraan-Poul urn before departing for Melbourne. The Terrier Is an eleven-knot boat and hsd little trouble In catching the Matilda, now at Astoria, which left out of San Francisco about twelve hours before the Terrier passed the Golden Gate. One of her firemen said that the Terrier made seventeen knots while endeavoring to keep abreast of a coast ing passenger vessel for an hour. sniP GOES WITHOCT WIRELESS Manshu Mara as Freighter Only Ma; Sail Without Equipment, The Japanese steamer Manshu Mara, loading a full cargo of lumber for Shanghai at the Portland Lumber Company's dock, under charter to the China Export & Import Lumber Com pany, will have no difficulty over car rying no wireless equipment. The law requires all boats with pas senger licenses departing from this country must carry such equipment, and freight boats of certain tonnage after July 1, but as the Manshu Maru has no passnger license she may depart witnout further trouble. The Manshu Maru sighted an ice berg at 4o:24 north and 152:08 east. The Iceberg was 200 feet long. 40 feet wide and only a few feet protruded above the water line. CT I'' . I r 1 'tr- -sy - . , , -a V i ait STEAMSHIP H tllPAGrS. The steamship Harpagus will move from the Crown Mills to the O.-W. R. & N. dock at Alhlna today to finish loading grain and flour for Europe. The Harpagus is the first steamer of the Royal Mall Steamship Company to come to Portland to load for Europe. Captain H. Farquharson, master of the vessel, reported to John McNulty In the local hydrotrmphlc office, tliat lie had sighted a wreckage at 10 A. M., April 21, in lati tude 33:10 N. and longitude 1T0:0b having tlio appearance of a lower mast and topmast of a schooner attached. Bay: Daisy Gadsby. for Orays Harbor: Ava- lon, for Raymond: schooners Esther, Buhne, for Coqulllo River; Honoipu. for liana Tnkobtma. May a. Arrived ixlon, from Tmcoma. Tacoma. May S. Arrived Steamer Pan ama Mam ( Japaneee. from Yokohama. Columbia River Bar Report. Condition at the mouth of the river at 5 P. M-, smooth: wind, northwest, weather, cloudy. w. CAU5 E OT Tides at Astoria Saturday. Hla-h. Low. 11:28, A. M....6.0 feet 5:88 A- M.. .. 11:24 P. it 8.4 feet.o:2 P. M s miiea; Rnctaiirflnt Pirkp.ta flttafik Ha- trolman Stewart. ; .1.8 feet .2.8 feet Marine Xotes. The steamer Hoqulam cleared from Kalama for California yesterday. Captain Charles Nelson has suc ceeded Captain F. H. Sherman as mas ter of the steamer Tahoma. The steam schooner Tahoe arrived at Couch-street dock yesterday afternoon with a general cargo from San Fran cisco. The N'orth Pacific steamer Roanoke left San Francisco for Portland yes terday after undergoing repairs and will arrive Sunday afternoon. The steam schooner Temple E. Dorr arrived yesterday with a general cargo from San Francisco and will lake wheat on her return voyage. The Russian bark Marlechen, under charter to Clark-Wilson. Is loading lumber at the Pacific Export Lumber Company's dock for South Africa. The steam schooner San Ramon, built for E. J. Dodge, will begin run ning regularly between Portland and tan Pedro next week. The vessel will carry 45 passengers In addition to 00. 009 feet of lumber. The steamer C Ferdinand Laeis, third of the Hamburg-American fleet bound for Portland to be placed on the China run. ieft Hamburg yester day and Is due July SO. The Saxonla ailed March 21 and the Llthonla is due May 7 from Puget Sound. Movements of Vessels. ASTORIA. Or, May 2. Sailed it a A. M. steamer Iaqua. for San Dleso; steamer Wil lamette, for Paget Sound. Failed at 6:30 A. M-. steamer Iavertek, tor San Francisco. Sailed at T A. -M- steamer Geo. W. Elder, for San Diego and way porta. Sailed- at !:SO A. M.. steamer W. r. Herrtn. for Mon terey. Arrived at 9:30 and left up at 11:30 A. M.. ateamer Bear, from San Pedro and San Francisco. Sailed at 10:30 A. M., p.'hooner Irene, for San Pedro; ateamer Multnomah, for San Xle(to. Arrived at 10:43 A. M. and left up at i P. M., steamer Tahoe from San Francisco. Arrived down and sailed at 6:30 P. M. steamer Beaver, for San Francisco and 6an Pedro. San Francisco. May 2. Sailed at 2 A M., eteamar Kochelle. for Portland. Arrived at noon, ateamer Tosemlte, from Portland, for San Diego. Sailed at 11 A. M.. steamer Koanoke, for Portland. Sailed last nlsht, steamer Johan Poulsen. for Portland. Cooe Bay. May 2. Sailed at 11 A M., steamer Breakwater, for Portland. San Pedro. May 2. Arrived Steamer R'ee City, from Portland. Arrived yester day Steamer Siskiyou, from Portland. Bandon. May 2. Arrived at 8 A. M., gas oline schooner Tillamook, from Portland. Seattle. May 2. Arrived Steamers Ala meda, from Southwestern Alaska: Ctty of Pueblo, from San Franrleoo. Sailed Steam era Governor, for San Francisco: lnalga, .for Bering Sea; Northland. Southwestern AUeka; Leelanaw, for Skagway. Trieste. April 28. Arrived Argentine, from xew Tork. via Portland. Hamburg, April 20. Sailed Sebara, for Tacoma. Oenoa. April 39. Sailed Mere, from Hamburg and Jondoa. for an Francisco. Sydney. May 2. Arrived previously Moana. from San yranclaco. Raymond, Wash.. May 2. (Special.) stMm schooner Clnremont left this morning at 6 for Pan Francisco. Steamer Raymond left yesterday at li-.3u A. M. for San Fran cisco. Steam schooner Mayfair left yester day at e 30 A. M. for San Pedro. San Francisco. May 2. Arrived Steamers ( entralla. from Grays Harbor; Buckman, from Seattle; Adorna 'German . from Tal tal; Tosemlte, from Astoria; Peru. Pennsyl vania, from Ancon. Departed Steamers Henry T. Scott, for Everelt: Rochelle, Roan oke, for Astoria; Adeline Smith, for Cooe TANK MAY BE FORBIDDEN City Attorney Says Council May Prohibit Location. The City Council of Tortland has power under the charter to prohlbt the Portland Gas & Coke Company from erecting a -distributing gas tank East Twelfth and Clinton streets, ac cording to an opinion prepared yes terday by City Attorney Grant. The question was aaked him by the City Council, which has under consideration a protest of property owners of the East Side against the Clinton-street tank, which the company proposes to erect at once. Mr. Grant recommends that the Coun cil pass an ordinance to prohibit a tank from being erected within 500 feet of a residence or church. Such a measure, he says, could be enforced under the if 4mj.;k intkixjgkc:5, Due te Arviva. Name. From. D Pear Los Angeles. . In port Breakwater. . ..Cocs Bay May 8 Sue H. Elmore. Tillamook. ... May 4 Roanoke. ...... Gan Ulego.... May 8 Alliance.... .Eureka May 6 Rose City San Diego May T Oeo. W. Slider, .ban Ulego.... May 11 a a Depart. Nii- For rMs Harvard .T. to LI May 8 Camlna. ...... San Francisco May 4 WtraM ster. . . ."oos bay May 8 Sue H. Elmore. Tillamook. . . . May Bear... 1-oa Angeles. . May 7 Roanoke San Diego.... May T Alllarca Eureka May 8 Geo, W. Elder. .San Dlege. ... May 14 Karepeaa and Orleatal Serrlca, Ntrre. From Uare. Harpagus. ..... Seattle In port Xenrra,. ...... Vancouver.. . May Xlna. ......... Lnndon. ..... June 8 r-ttboiu Harrourg. ... May 12 Palls et Orchy .London June 2 t-aronla Hamburg. ... June 28 C. F. Laelsz Hamburg. ... July 80 Cr"n of c-stle. . Antwerp Aug. li Brtsgavla, .. . . .Hamburg. . . . Aug. 28 For Karrague..... -Orient May 8 Kentr. England May 18 Mi. home Hambutg.... May 20 Falla or Orchy -Orient. ...... .-une t Suronla. ....... Hamburg ... . July 8 C. F. latin. ...Hamburg. ... July 80 police power provisions of the charter. Many cases are on record." says Mr. Grant, "in which the question of the right to store lumber, wood, etc.. on property in certain localities has been decided against persons desiring to do the storing. The city has the right to prohibit the storage of all things dan gerous to the public safety. POLICE RESERVES CALLED ciaL) From a list of 20 applicants the local School Board today selected W. R. Rutherford, of McMinnville, Or, to be superintendent of the public schools of The Dalles. He will succeed A. C Strange, who resigned to accept the superlntendency of the Baker schools. Mr. Rutherford has been superintend ent of the McMinnville schools for three years and served In a similar capacity at Tillamook, Or., for three years. Galls and wild ducka. which frequent the Downa off the coast of Kent la large num bers, have been driven by the scarcity of food after tho recent hard weather to at tack the sorats used for bait In fishing. and In some eases have been caught on the nooka. Lonaeo Dally Mall. Eggs Are Thrown at Windows of Sixth-Street Eating House Pro prietor Displays Pay Checks to Show Sum Paid Waitresses. Trouble which has been brewing for several days at Sixth and Davis streets came to a head yesterday when pick ets in front of the Butte Restaurant, an' open shop resort, began hurling eggs at the windows of the premises. and a fight broke out which necessi tated the calling of police reserves. Patrolman Stewart was passing the place and Captain Moore was In the vicinity, observing the crowd, when the eggs were thrown. Stewart prap pled with W. Borstel. a member of the x. w. W whom he accuses of being the thrower, and started with him to the station. Then E. Schramm, It is alleged, stepped behind the officer and knocked him down. Taken by surprise, Stewart was felled twice and his helmet was crushed before he got Into action and clubbed Schramm Into submission. Riot Call Is Sent In. In the meantime a riot call had been sent In and every officer about tho station was hurried to the place, two blocks away. They arrested Schramm and Borstel, as well as A. West, a laborer, who encouraged the rioters, and J. Shaller, an expressman, who is held for violating the traffio ordinance. During the remainder of the day police were kept on the scene and compelled all persons, including the pickets, to keep moving. -The situation Is complicated by the fact that L w. W. headquarters is half a block away and furnishes recruits to the crowd in front of the place. A man and young woman are the de tailed pickets, and keep up a constant cry of "scab.' Every person who en ters the restaurant Is leered and of fensive remarks are yelled at the em ployes inside. Proprietor Shows Pay Checks. As a counterblast, the proprietor of the place has his windows plastered with placards. Informing the public that his -waiters are satisfied, and a number of checks, showing that the women are paid $10.50 a week, in addi tion to their meals, for eight hours. Frequent complaints have been made to the police that the peace of the com munity is outraged by the offensive language of the pickets, as well as by their causing the street to become blockaded. Three of the men arrested are held under hall of 8500 on charges of dis orderly conduct, and will be taken be fore the Municipal Court today. McMinnville Man Selected. THE) DALLES. Or, May 2. (Spa- LABORER GIVEN JUDGMENT Part of Plaintiff's Duty Consisted In Watering Milk. In the trial of his suit to collect $4,930, claimed to be due as back wages from Mike Tannler, a dairyman formerly residing on the Slough Road, for whom he worked eleven years and seven months, Gottfried Balmer test! tied in Judge Kavanaugh's court yes. terday that part of his duty was to put water In the milk which was sent to Portland for sale. He said he pat a half gallon of water in each three gallons of milk. Judge Kavanaugh decided that Balmer knew what he was doinjr when he hired out for $10 a month and gave him judgment ' for only $539, the amount still due on the $10 arrange meat Balmer contended that Tannler had taken advantage of his Ignorance to hire lilm at that figure and wanted $35 a month for tho time he worked for the dairyman. Tannler now has dairy ranch near Scappoose. Notes From St. Johns ST. JOHNS, May 2. (Special.) Judge Stroud, of Portage, Wis, father of ex-City Attorney Stroud, is visiting the family of the latter. The board of governors of the Com mercial Club will meet in special ses slon tomorrow at 8 o'clock P. M. The Mothers' Club of the local Worn en's Christian Temperance T,nion will meet in the Council chamber of the city hall Monday at 2:30 P. M. The Civic Betterment League will hold its regular monthly meeting Mon day at 8 o'clock P. M. in the Council chamber. The Northwest Steel Company has purchased 800 feet of river frontage along Linnton boulevard at the old city docks adjoining the Linnton-Port- land city limits. Surveyors are work ing on the ground now and it is under stood the company contemplates the erection of a factory on the nowly-ao quired site. The grounds will be filled with rock from & quarry nearby. Realty sales in lots and acreage are reported from Whitwood Court and Wlllbrldge during the week. Three new residences will be erected at Will bridge Immediately. J. F. GUlmore reports the sale of five residence lots in St. Johns within the week and homes are to be erected at once on all of them. Leo James Harrington, the little son of Mr. and Mrs. William C Harrington, died yesterday at 4 P. M. at the family residence, 224 Oswego street. The fu neral will be held Monday morning at 10 o'clock from St. Clement's Church, with Interment in Calvary Cemetery. In view of the bill now pending In the United 6tatea Senate for the coinage of half cents. It is interesting to note that the United Kingdom - coined In the year 1910. 2.688,000 farthings: In 1911, 8.19 800 farthing, and In 11)12, T.eesaOO farth ings. PICTTJEB SHOWING MOB HT FRONT OP NORTH END RESTAURANT, WHERE L W. W. PICKETS CAUSE DISTURBANCE. a-! r-.JA.'v ' V Ua.K . I ' - 1 I r J. - ?-aVl r - . ir- i i l IF ' U 4 W-9WsiaeK-ia fcaortliM-slswlai v 881 in ) i sa-mws'ssw-saaiU' WUJ "M- m. i rJ' V m mr''l"mmFm''m!?tt V .mv.. K I' -,. v . ..".iw . .'. ii y . .... m ' it : T 'I' , '1 tailsriwaiil OCALtif 1 ,hXTt -X: J " ' SCEXE OF IXCIPIEXT RIOT YESTERDAY IV WHICH A POLICEMAN WAS ARRESTS WERE BLADE. ATTACKED AXD THREE "WIFE'S" DOUBT ANNOYING Sheriff Believes Other Women In tended Victims of Man Brought Back From California on Charge of Swindling. The contention that the woman with whom he fled to California is not Ms wife, but his sister, and that the chil dren were hers and not his, is made by C. H. Duffy, alias Rev. E. L. Rich ards, alias Joseph E. Bills, who was brought back from California yester day by Sheriff Word and Deputy Sher. lit Curtis. He Is charged with marry ing Anna Bock, of Florida, using the name of Joseph E. Ellis, and swindling her out of $2625 and deserting . her after they reached Portland. The woman who Duffy says Is his sister Is being held In San Francisco for an order of the Federal Court re moving her to Portland as a witness against him on a Federal charge of using the mails to defraud women In all parts of the country through prom ises of matrimony. He used several aliases. Sheriff Word has nearly SO letters which passed between him and his alleged prospective victims. He thinks now that If he could only see Miss Bock for a short time he could fix everything as far as she Is con cerned. Others Believed Victims. Some of the letters held by the Sher iff were exchanged between Duffy and a woman who has a ranch in Texas. She Insisted all the way through that she would not sell the ranch or ad vance him any money until after their marriage. The Insistence was couched In gentle terms, but It was ' none the less rigid. Sheriff word declares that he has reason to believe that there may be an other woman In Portland who was bilked out of 81800 by Duffy. It has been learned that Duffy purchased from a stationery store near his former residence on the East Side seven thick tablets of writing paper In a single month. Indicating that his correspond ence was voluminous. 'Miss Bock, or Mrs. Ellis, as she supposed she was, tipped her sus picions off herself to Duffy's relatives by going to the address on the Last Side at which Rev. Richards was sup posed to reside and talking to a daugh ter of Duffy and a boarder." said the Sheriff. "The next day Duffy got out of town. Woman's Doubt Annoying. Duffy declares that the woman he fled with was Mrs. Josie Martzdorff, a sister, and that she was going to Sac ramento to live. He says that he told his wife (Miss Bock) that he would be out of town on business for a few days and expresses Indignation that she should have doubted him and caused his arrest. He has retained at torneys. He deolares that Miss Bock represented to him before their al leged marriage that she was worth 1150.000. Duffy is a middle-sized man. He says he Is 49 years of age, but looks several years older. He has Iron-gray hair, thin in spots, and Is not particu larly prepossessing either in features or figure. STRIKE MAY END SOON RAILiTtOAD OFFIOIAXS CONFER WITH EUSXTTRICIAXS. At Last Too Caa Get Rid of Blood Troubles S. S. S. The word medicine is one of the most abused in our language. There are certain medicinal properties Just as necessary to health as the food we eat. Take, for example, the well known tonic medicine S. S. S. This famous blood purifier contains medic inal components Just as vital and essential to healthy blood as the ele ments of wheat, roast beef, the fats and the sugars that make up our daily ration. As a natter of fact, there Is one Ingredient In S. S. S. which serves the active purpose of stimulating each cellular part of the body to the healthy and Judicious selection of Its own essential nutriment. That is why it regenerates the blood suppljr; why it has such a tremendous influence in overcoming eczema, rash, pimples, and all skin afflictions. And In regenerating the tissues 8. B. 3. has a rapid and positive anti dotal effect upon all those irritating influences that cause rheumatism, sore throat, weak eyes, falling hair, loss of weight, thin, pale cheeks, and that weariness of muscle and nerve that is generally experienced as spring fever. Get a bottle of S. S. S. at any drug store, and in a few days you will not only feel bright and energetic but you will be the picture of new life. 6. S. S. is prepared only In the labora tory of The Swift Specific Co.. 137 Swift Bldg., Atlanta, Ga.. who main tain a very efficient Medical Depart ment, where all who have any blood disorder of a stubborn nature may write freely for advice and a special book of instruction. S. S. S. Is sold everywhere by drug stores, department and general stores. Mrs. Stewart Tells How She Suffered from 16to45 years old How Finally Cured. Enphemia, Ohio. " Because of total ignorance of how to care for myself when verging into womanhood, and from taking cold when going to school, I suf fered from a displacement, and each month I had severe pains and nausea which always meant a lay-off from work for two to four days from the time I was 16 years old. "I went to Kansas to live with my sis ter and while there a doctor told me of the Pinkham remedies but I did not use them then as my faith in patent medi cines was limited. After my sister died I came home to Ohio to live and that has been my home for the last 18 years. "TheChange of Life came when I was 47 years old and about this time I saw my physical condition plainly described in one of your advertisements. Then I began using Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound and I cannot tell you or any one the relief it gave me in tha first three months. It put me right where I need not lay off every month and during the last 18 years I have not paid out two dollars to a doctor, and have been blest with excellent health for a wo woman of my age and I can thank Lydia E. Pinkham'sVegetable Compound for it. " Since the Change of Life is over I have been a maternity nurse and being wholly self-supporting I cannot over estimate the value of good health. I have now earned a comfortable little home just by sewing and nursing since I was 52 years old. I have recommended the Compound to many with good re sults, as it is excellent to take before and after childbirth." Miss Evelyn Adelia Stewart, Euphemia, Ohio. If yon want special adT Ice write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confi dential) Lynn, Mass. Tour letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. clals In the conference will submit the proposition made by the men to higher officials of the company. In a statement issued by the union it is alleged that seventy-six Portland, Eugene & Eastern Railway Company men are out and about sixty Home Telephone Company men. J. Mergan- thaler, vice-president of the Pacific I District International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, said that letters would be mailed today to all union men urging them not to patronize the Home Telephone Company. The union men believe that through a boycott they can compel the company to grant their demand of a minimum scale of J4 a day. The telephone management has announced that only five or six of its men are on strike. Letters to Be Written to Union Men Urging Men to Boycott Home Telephone Company. That there Is a irtosslblllty of an early settlement of the differences between the Portland, Eugene & Eastern Rail THE OREGONIAN ELECTION RETURNS The Cregonian will flash elec tion returns tonight on a screen at Sixth and Alder streets. The polls will close at 7 P. M., and the returns on the charter election will commence coming in about 8 P. M. and will bo flashed every hour thereafter. About 10:30 P. M. returns will commence coming in on the Re publican candidates. No information will be given over the telephone, as The Ore gonian telephones will be heav ily taxed in the work of gather ing the election returns. way Company and its sixty electrical workers who are on striae was indi cated yesterday when the men and of ficials conferred at the company's of fice. Before the strike order was is sued the railway authorities notified the union that it would deal directly with the meni A committee repre senting the strikers made , a proposi tion to the officials which will be an swered Saturday, May 10, when an other conference will be held. Several of the strikers said after the meeting that they believed a settlement would be reached. The men ask an Increase of from $4.25 to 4.50 a day and to be given ouble pay for overtime. The offl- MURDERER IS SENTENCED James Hammond, player of Ike Bloom, Gets Life Sentence. With the approval of District Attor ney Evans a plea of guilty to a charge of murder in the second degree was ac cepted by Circuit Judge Davis yester day from James Hammond, who on March 12 shot and killed Ike Bloom, a Front-street commission man. Ham mond was sentenced immediately to the penitentiary for life, the only penalty prescribed by the Oregon statutes for second-degree murder. He had been under Indictment for murder In the first degree and previously had plead ed not guilty. "There is no question In my mind that the man was off mentally when he killed Bloom, and I believe that we could not have got better than a second-degree verdict from a jury. probably less," said Deputy District Attorney John Collier. "In fact. 1 think the state is fortunate in that he was Induced to change his plea." By earning all possible merit marks for good behavior it will be possible for Hammond to gain his release from the penitentiary at the end of 15 years. He was under the influence of a drug wben he killed Bloom. Comfort Your Stomach We pay for this treatment if it fails to promptly relieve Indiges tion and Dyspepsia. Rexsll Dyspepsia Tablets remedy Itomsch troubles because they con tain the proper proportion of Pepsin and Bismuth and the necessary car minatives that help nature to supply the elements the absence of which in the gastric Juices causes indiges tion and dyspepsia. They aid the stomach to digest food and to quirkly convert it into rich red blood and material necessary for overcoming natural body waste. Carry a package of Rexall Dys pepsia Tablets in your vest pocket, or keep them In your room. Take one after eaoh heavy meal and prove our assertion that they will keep indi estiontfrom bothering you. We know what Rexall Dyspepsia Tablets are and what they will do. We guarantee them to relieve indi gestion and dyspepsia, or to refund your money, if they fail to do so. Doesn't it stand to reason that we wouldn't assume this money risk were we not certain Rexall Dyspepsia Tablets will satisfy you T Three sues: 25 cents, 60 eents, and J1.00. Tou can buy Rexall "93" Hair Tonic in this community only at THE OWL DRUG CQ. Portland, Ore. tores In Portland, Seattle, Spokane, 8as) Francisco, Oakland, Los Angeles and Sacramento. nera Is a Rexall Store in nearly very towa ' and olty in tha United States, Canada and Qraat Britain. There is a different KeiU Remedy for nearly every ordinary human ill eaoh especially designed for tho paruoulai U lor which it ta reoommended. t The &asall Stores are America's CraateaH Drug Ster fishwhoels, of which 23 are stationery and 9 are on scows. COST OF MARKET $20,000 City Engineer Investigates Plan and Gives Estimate. A public market such as has been planned alongside the west approach of the new Steel bridge would cost (20,000 to build, according to the esti mate of City Engineer Hurlburt, made yesterday after an investigation, of the market plan as outlined by Mayor Rushlight and the market committee appointed recently to. confer with the Woman's Republic, which organization is taking the initiative In the market move. The plan Is to erect steel piers to hold a market above the street on a level with the sidewalk of the bridge approach. The plan as prepared by Engineer Hurlburt shows a market 120 feet long by 36 feet wide. Seldom Wlllmore, an Englishman, enjoys the distinction of being the only Kuropean who has ventured to appear at the nativa bar In Eeypt. Mr. Wlllmore la a noted Arablo scholar, and his pleadings have filled the native ludzes with admiration, for rarely have they listened to such fluent, classlo Arabic. 1000 FISHING LICENSES OUT Opening: of Salmon Season Finds Colombia Fishermen Active. More than a thousand licenses had been granted from the office of the State Fish Warden on May 1, when the salmon season opened, for, various types of nets and traps. Nine licenses for canneries were issued and nine for cold-storage establishments. Glllnetters predominate among the fishermen on the Columbia, who began Thursday capturing salmon. To these 800 licenses have been Issued. For set nets 217 licenses have been Issued and 14 for seines. Aocordlng to the is suance of licenses there are 25 traps In operation on the Columbia and 32 pains In the legs, arms, back, stiff or .-..nan 1nlnt Contains no morphine. opium, cocaine or drugs to deaden the bain, it neutralizes tue n. m .... out all rheumatic poisons from the sys tem. . . fflnnyoB S xroexora xrrc Get the Munyon Remedy you need from vonr drnsrzlat. If he uaan t it e win send it to you postpaid. when in douDt wnac to use, ' hysiclans for free advice. Not a penny ebarired. All correspondence connaenuai. RESINOL RELIEVED ITCHING AT ONCE And, Cured Skin Humor In a Month. isLdsjtwpyrH "lam an old man and many of my trouble t fcg-j" never happened." -ELBERT HUBBARD THE white hair and wrinkled fates of our busy men and women tell of doubt, fear and anxiety more than disease or age. Worry plays havoc with the nervous system so that digestion is ruined and sleep banished. What oil is to the friction of the delicate parts of an engine DR. PIERCE'S golden Medical Hiscovery is to the delicate organs of the body. It's a tonic and body builder because it stimulates the liver to vigorous action, assists the stomach to assimilate food thus enriching the blood, and the nerves and heart In turn are fed on pure rich blood. Neuralgia "is the cry of starved nerves for food." For forty years ''Golden Medical Discovery" in liquid form has given great satisfaction as a tonic and blood maker. Jfow it can be obtained in tablet form from dealers in medicine or send 50 one-cent stamp for trial box. Write R. V.Pierce, Buffalo. I)K. PTERCE'S PULASA1VT PEIXETS Relieve constipation, regulate the liver, and bowels. Easy ta take aa candy. Brooklyn. Nov. 1, 1912. "At first little red spots were seen on my arms and body, which I noticed were get ting larger every day. They Itched me so much that I scratched myself until I bled. There were times when I stood up all night and scratched. 1 was troubled about three weeks. during which time I used , which seemed to do me no good whatever. Then, finally, I thought of trying Resl nol Soap and Resinol Ointment. As soon as I applied Keslnol Ointment I I felt much relief. After using it a few times, I noticed the sore spots slowly fading away, and in about a month I was cured completely." (Signed) Adolplt Schoen, 742 Shlpherd Avenue. The soothing, healing balsams in Resi nol Ointment and Resinol Soap, pene trate every tiny pore of the skin, clear ing It of all Impurities, driving away eczema, rashes, ringworm, psoriasis. and other eruptions, and making pim ples and blackheads impossible. Pre scribed by physicians for eighteen years. For free samples write to Dept. 16-S, Resinol, Baltimore, M'i. Trac tically every druggist sells Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap. f