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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 18, 1913)
18 THE MORNING OREGONIAN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1913. STREET SITUATION PUZZLES SEASIDE Courts May Be Asked to End Dispute Over Taking Jog ) From Highway. ALTERNATIVE PLAN IS UP Citizens Consider Having Two Main Thoroughfares and One Wants Round - Cornered Block ( Method Adopted, SEASIDE. Or.. Nor. 17. (Special.) Flans to straighten and Improve busi ness streets of this place appear likely to become a matter for adjustment by the courts. Ever since Seaside, situated on the Clatsop Beach, became a city -with a future, property owners have been at ewords' points over the question of straightening Bridge street. There have been attempts and counter attempts to agree- to a plan to take the Jog out f Bridge street at the corner of Main. When fire swept Seaside of Its busi ness district, a renewed effort was made. For a time it looked as If this would be accomplished, but the plan fell through. Then came the construc tion of the Moore & Lawler concrete building at Bridge arid Main streets, and all the plans were abandoned. Mayor Alex. Gilbert, Sr., abandoned plans to construct a business block at i3ridge.and Main streets when hope of straightening the thoroughfare ap peared gone- Since then he and other property owners have refused to im prove their property until a permanent line was established. In the meantime there has been talk of cutting Court street through from the railroad tracks to the ocean and building another bridge across the Kecanicum River. There has also been some talk of moving the Spokane, Portland & Seattle depot. By making Court street the main thoroughfare, there would be a straight street lead ing from the depot to the ocean. The matter has been up before the City Council and signatures of almost all the property owners have been ob tained. On the east side of the river. Court street, where it is cut through, is a 40-foot street, and on the west pide it is 30 feet. The plan is to have a street that will be 60 feet wide. While these efforts are being made, O. F. Godfrey, one of the property owners on Court street, has come for ward with a plan, that, if it Is adopted, will give Seaside two business streets nnd an ocean-front driveway. Mr. God frey proposes to adopt the round-corner idea. Establishing a new line of Bridge street would not obliterate the Jog. but would reduce it so that it would not be so noticeable, as at present. Mr. God frey's plan has impressed favorably some of the property owners, but some oppose it. It is probable from state ments made by some that the ques tion will come before the courts. The fact that it would mean cutting away the fronts of some of the buildings along Bridge street is the chief objec tion made. JEWELRY THEFT REPORTED E. II. Bartholomew Says Sneak Thieves Get Away AVith Loot. E. H. Bartholomew, 205 Eleventh street, last night reported to the police the loss of. several hundred dollars" worth of jewelry. Mrs. Bartholomew, lie says, was absent'from the Uouse a few minutes, and when she returned she noticed that articles on her dresser had been disturbed. Opening her jewel iase she found her jewels gone. Among the lost articles was a gold bracelet, a ring set with a garnet surrounded by pearls, a pearl brooch and a Chinese dragon pin. Thirteen articles were missing. In his haste, however, the burglar missed a diamond ring and a diamond earring. These caught on the silk lin ing of the case and were not discov ered. The thief dropped the other ear ring on the floor, where it was discov ered later by Officer Bales. The police have no clew to the burglar's identity. BRIDGE BIDSARE RECEIVED Six ihrnis Seek Contracts on Colum bia Highway. i Six firms submitted bids yesterday for the construction of a concrete viaduct on the new Columbia River highway near Multnomah Falls. Bids were re ceived at the same time for a concrete fence along the sides of the bridge and for a small arch bridge and & girder bridge to span two gulches along the proposed route. The bids for the concrete viaduct, which will be 410 feet long, range from 8500 to $10,675. with similar variations on the smaller bids. Superintendent J. B. Small reported to the Commissioners that 4000 feet of the Base Lane road, east of the Sandy road, have been macadamized. This road will be a tributary to the new Co lumbia River highway. AGED MINISTER IS DEAD I'uncral or Her. Alphonzo Lo Roy Takes IMace Today, i T! v. Alphonzo Le Roy died Sunday at his home. 1563 East Stark, at the age of 81 years. He had occupied the pulpits of several prominent churches In Portland before he became too old to attend to duties connected with his charges. Dr. Le Roy was born In Paris, France, November 10, 1832. He was educated at Oxford University and aft erwards graduated in theology at Col gate University, Hamilton, N. Y. He lived in Oregon for 26 years. The funeral services will be con ducted by the Oddfellows in the chapel of Finley's undertaking establishment at 1 o'clock today. The body will be cremated at the Portland Crematorium. Jflght Course Widens. To the course in navigation which has been given in the night school in Portland this year, under the direction f John McNulty, nautical expert in charge of the United States Hydro graphic Survey, will be added next week a class in nautical astronomy, which is expected to become one of the most popular branches of the course. Mr. McNulty has announced that the classes will meet on Monday, Wednes day and Friday nights, and those who desire to enter the new classes will have the opportunity to register at Lincoln High School tonight and at the other meetings this week. Many who did not care to take the first work of fered in the course in navigation are planning to take nautical astronomy. MAP ILLUSTRATING to EXPERTS ON STAND Gun and Ammunition Men Tes tify for Defense. STATE THEORY ATTACKED Experiments Made With Arms at Pender Murder Trial to Show Ef fect of Shooting Woman on Witness Stand Confused. ST. HELENS, Or., Nor, 17. (Special.) Gun and. ammunition experts occu pied, today on the witness stand In the Pender murder trial, with the excep tion of a few minutes before adjourn ment, when Mrs. Frye, a neighbor of Pender's, told of seeing Pender on the Saturday following Labor day. She said she did not notice any scratches or blotches on his face. Mrs. Frye also told of having gone down to Pender's house on Saturday following that and that Pender's chickens had been killed and piled up around the place. On cross-examination she became con fused in her dates and the court re porter was instructed to make a copy of her testimony for the state's at torney by tomorrow morning. Sergeant Craddock, of the Portland police force, was the first witness called by the defense today and he continued his testimony concerning guns. S. J. Clifford and W. H. Hubbard. also of Portland, were on the stand as experts. The principal evidence of these experts was that the markings on the bullets fired from a particular gun may have been made by gas pits 1' (T ffT f l """ ' l l I I 1 i i I i i i " I I I I fmUX J ' j I PtAJf AS DRAWN BY O. V. GODFREY SHOWING INTENDED IIAT. I ......................................... ..................... ....................4 HOW I EARNED MONEY DURING MY VACATION By MA UK COHEN", (Winner Second Lincoln High School. Prize for Boyi.) I EARNED money during the Sum mer vacation selling newspapers In Portland at the Northwest corner ot Fourth and Washington streets. I consider selling' newspapers a very good thing, because It teaches a boy: First To be polite to each and every one of his customers. Second The value of money. Third Always to be on the Job; not expect that his customers should come to him. but that he must go to them. Fourtlw-It gives him a chance to get acquainted with the city's most popu lar men. There is good and evil In selling newspapers. Most boys are on the good side; some are on the bad side, but I always consider the good. Thero Is a place In Portland for the good which is the "Portland Newsboys' Association." They have a very good building which is equipped with a fine and large gymnasium, a reading room and a good-sized swimming pool, which Is about five feet deep at its greatest depth; so there is no chance of any boy drowning. They have about 100 members at the present time and they are always increasing. Each boy pays 25 cents a month for dues. They have a president, vice-president, etc., the same as any other club or association. Their honored president is Dorr E. Keasey, who is called by the news boys, "Pride of the Newsboys." Mr. Keasey was Rex Oregonua in the re cent Rose Carnival and also is a lead ing business man In the city. This association Is for the benefit of the newsboys only. This club Is kept up to keep the boys oft the streets at nights. They have a wonderful set of library books. Every boy takes a great Interest In these books, which are easy for each and every boy to understand. This association is In debt a few thousand, dollars, which thejr Owe on SEASIDE'S PROPOSED . STREET 1 v a f or may have been caused from the ri fling ot the barrel. This was given In refutation of the theory of the state, according to the testimony of the state's expert, that the marks on these particular bullets was caused by a gas pit in the barrel of the Riley re volver, and that any bullet fired from that revolver would have the same marking on it. At the conclusion of the expert tes timony it was agreed that the attor neys and detectives on both sides, with their experts, would retire to some se cluded place during the evening and make some experiments with all the guns and tomorrow promises to be an other day of expert gun testimony. It Is now thought that the trial will not be concluded before Friday or Satur day. TROLLEY FRANCHISE UP Ordinance on Oregon City lane Gets Readings Today In Council. At tomorrow's meeting of the City Council the ordinance granting a fran chise to the Portland & Oregon City Railway Company for an Interurban electric line from Oregon City to Port land will come up for first and second reading. The measure has passed through the remonstrance periods, has been given a public hearing and is ready for final passage. Following the first and second read ings it will go over for two weeks, at the end of which time it will come up for final passage. The franchise gives the company a right to construct and operate interurban tracks from the city limits on East Seventeenth street. North, to the Hawthorne bridge, west over this to the West Side, down Fourth street to Flanders and west to Twelfth street. Work on the line out side the city has begun. Out of Doors. "Possum Hunting in the South," "Troubles of a Game Warden." "An In formal Thanksgiving," "Goose Shoot ing in the Arkansas Valley" are some of the articles of good cheer in the November number of "Sports Afield.' Mark Cohen, Winner Second Prize in Kssay Contest. the building. Therefore they stage many plays In the local theaters, to pay off the mortgage. I will sell newspapers for a while longer, to help me go through high school. I sell newspapers now after school and I also sell The Sunday Ore gonlan each Sunday morning. I con sider The Oregonlan the best news paper in the Northwest. Although I am a newsboy, my folks subscribe for The Oregonlan at home. i ' - - lit I, .:"., - ! -. f if J ' V 1 1 S..:'.' ij I Mark Cohen. Winner Second I I Prize In Kssny Contest. t 1 ..i IMPROVEMENTS. r "DRYS" FIGHT BACK Oregon City Council Candi dates' Aid Asked. COURT RULING NO FACTOR Prohibitionists Want Prospective Orricials to Agree to Refuse Saloon Licenses Despite Possible Decision. OREGON CITT, Or., Nov. 17. (Spe cial.) Whether the Supreme Court of the state decides against or r the "drys" in the election suit, Oregon City may refuse to grant any more saloon licenses after January 1, when those now operative expire. A movement is on foot to have all of the candidates for Cotincllmen at tne next election in December consider a "statement No. 1," agreeing to vote against applications for licenses. The dry forces plan to draw up forms for the candidates to sign. The prohibition faction has taken this step in view of the possibility that the Supreme Court may throw out the election results on the ground that the balloting was illegal. The "drys" pro pose to find out how each candidate would vote were the saloon men to come In after such a decision and ask for the renewal of their licenses. v The faction believes that the Council has the authority to grant or refuse li censes without assigning any definite reason, whether the town Is "dry" or not, and contend that the people, hav ing expressed themselves on the ques tion at the polls, have the right to a "dry" town despite a possible ruling of the Supreme Court. The "statement" candidates for the Council will be asked to subscribe to will contain an expression of the opin ion on the possibility of the applica tion for liquor licenses and the action the signer would take, as a member of the Council, should the matter come to a vote. PROHIBITION 0 151) Kit HELD VP Temporary Injunction Is Issued in Sherwood liquor Case. HILLSBORO. Or., Nov. 17. (Special.) Judge Campbell, of Oregon City, to day granted a temporary-Injunction in the Sherwood liquor election case, de nying the County Court the right to ipsue the prohibition order until the charges of illegal voting could be heard in court. Sherwood's complaint, sued out by a Baloon-owner. alleges that 13 votes were cast by persons who lived outside the city limits and that enough of these were for prohibition to carry the election, the majority against the saloons being only four. The complaint named the persons ac cused of illegal voting. The injunction asked by W. V. Wiley, of Hillsboro, was refused and his attorneys will file an amendment in the case as soon us a thorough ex aminatlon Is made of the poll lists. Two of the saloon licenses expire early in December and the other three run until January 1, no matter what legal decision may follow. The County Court issued the prohibi tion order for Hillsboro this afternoon. Effort Slado to Save "Woman. NEW HAVEN, Conn., Nov. 17. The Falrhaven Woman's Political Union, through its president, Mrs. Sarah Dev lln, sent a letter to President Wilson yesterday, requesting him to use his influence to saTeMrs. Bessie J. Wake field from hanging next March for the murder of her husband. Governor Baldwin Is receiving many letters daily urging: him to intercede. BUND FUND IS JMJJtii. Contributor of $250 Toward Workshop Hides Identity. CITY INSTRUCTOR WANTED Press Club Will Petition Board of Education to Provide Teacher for Sightless Benefit Show at Theater Intention. From a contributor who specified as his only condition that his name should not be used, an addition of $250 was made yesterday to the fund that the Portland Press Club Is aiding Mayor Abee to raise for equipping a work shop for the blind folk of Portland. With the J50 given by Mayor Albee himself to start the fund, and the 5 subscription made on Saturday by Will lam Reid. 1350 of the $1500 required has now been contributed. In addition to this, the Hovenden Piano Company has offered to furnish a square piano to be used in teaching piano tuning to blind men with musical ability. J. F. Myers, blind himself, but an expert musician and piano tuner. who will give the piano tuning Instruc tion to the blind, has accepted the offer with gratitude. As an upright piano will also be needed in this work, an effort will be made to obtain one. Instruction to Be Requested. At the meeting of the Board of Edu cation Tuesday afternoon a committee from the Portland Press Uluo, neaaea by B. F. Irvine. J. E. Werleln and Mar shall N. Sana, will appear before The board to ask that an instructor for tne city's blind be provided. A trained in structor is needed who can devote nis whole time not only to teaching such trades as basket and broommaklng, rug weaving and the like, but to giv ing Instructions In reading and in the use of their fingers to the blind. Quarters for the proposed workshop and class room can be had in the mu nicipal repair shop at East First and Madison streets, so that all the School Board would have to do would be to provide the instructor and possibly a few books and necessary class-room equipment. It is thought almost certain that the Boa.-d will be willing to do this much for the blind of the city. In view of its policy of furnishing Instruction for adults in the night schools. Nothing has ever been done in Portland before for the blind, though In many other cities, including Denver and Oakland, such workshops as the one proposed are established. In these places the workshops have been found to be practically self-supporting, once they are established. Any deficit is made up by aid from the state. It is the intention eventually to obtain state aid for the blind of Port land, but in the meantime, they ar.s in need of help between now and the ses sion of the Legislature in 1915. TreSB Club Is Active. The Press Club is trying to arrange with one of the leading theaters of the city for the use of the theater for one or two nights for the benefit of tho blind fund. If this can be done, the regular performance will be given at the theater, but all the receipts above a certain amount will be turned over to the Press Club for the fund. Several of the blind folk of Portland are talented musicians. They are so enthusiastic over the plans for pro viding a workshop that many of them have volunteered to sing or play and several of them will appear in musical numbers between the acts. . Another who wtll be asked to help is Francis Richter, the blind pianist, whose musical education was made possible by assistance from the public. It is thought that he will be only too glad to take part in such . a benefit performance to help other blind folk who have been less fortunate. THREE GOING FROM CITY J. X. Teal, C. V. Ilodson, C. S. Jack son to Attend Harbor Congress. Portland will be represented at the National Rivers and Harbors Congress in Washington In December, by J. N. Teal, C. W. Hodson and C o. Jackson. The Portland Chamber of Commerce is one of the heaviest supporters of the Congress, and it is to a large extent through this lnnuence tnat appropria tions have been obtained in the past few years for river and harbor im provement in the Northwest. The coming session promises to oe the largest, and in many respects the most important convention held by the Congress since its organization about ten years ago. The opening address is to be delivered by President Wilson, j. R Knowland, Representative from California, will deliver an addross on the subject of Municipal or State owned terminals on the Pacific Coast n connection with the opening of the Panama JJanal. Samuel Hill has been requested ana will deliver his now famous lecture on the Columbia River. SCHOOL SURVEY REPORT IN Most of Committee's Recommenda tions Already Adopted. Copies of the report of the School Surrey Committee in bound and print ed form were sent to memnors ot tne School Board and Superintendent Al derman yesterday for the first time. Although the report was supposed to have been submitted on November 1, and it Is so noted on the booklet, the embers of the board and other school officials received nothing from the committee before yesterday except galley proofs of the report. As soon as a run supply or copies of the report is available they will be Dlaeed in the hands of the prin cipals of the schools and it Is the plan of the teachers and the superintendent to make a systematic study of the re port with a view to applying it to their work. A large proportion of the recommen dations of the committee had been adopted prior to the report by Super intendent Alderman and. the teaching force. COLE GETS NEW HEARING Judge Davis Finds Trial of Police Officer Was "Sot Regular, Because Mayor Rushlight, who pre ferred the charges, also sat as a mem ber of the board that passed final Judgment and discharged J. W. Cole from the police force. Judge Davis yesterday signed an order directing that the ex-sergeant have a new hear ing before the Civil Service Commis sion. Cole was charged with incom petency bj Mayor Rushlight more than a year ago and was discharged from the force after a series or hear ings. Petition for a writ of reviw was filed by attorneys for Cole and the matter submitted before Judge Davis on, briefs, City Attorney LaRoche filed Remarkable Catarrh Cure That Gets Right into the Affected Parts and. Stops Gatherings. : - (. 6. 8. 5 Wonder for the Eye. NoM and Xhromt. It Is definitely known that catarrh can fce cured by the Blmple process of Inocu lating the blood with antidotal remedies that stop Inflammatory conditions throughout the mucous linings of all the organs of the body. This is done with the famous Swift's Sure Specific, or as it Is widely known. S. S. S. It is taken Into the blood lust as naturally as the most nourishing food. It spreads its in fluence over every organ in the body, through all the veins and arteries, and enables all mucous surfaces to exchange Inflammatory acids and other irritating substances for arterial elements that ef fectually cleanse the system and thus put an end to all catarrhal pollution. S. S. S. cleans out the stomach of mucous ac cumulations, enables only pure, blood making materials to enter the Intestines, combines with these food elements to enter the circulation, and In less than an hour is at work throughout the body In the process of purification. Tou will soon realize Its wonderful In fluence by the absence of headache, a decided clearing of the air passages, a steadily improved nasal condition, and a sense of bodily relief that proves how completely catarrh . often infects the en tire system. Tou will find S. S. S. on sale at all drug stores. For special advice on any blood disease write to the Swift Specific Co., 223 Swift Bids.. Atlanta, Ga. Do not delay to get a bottle of S. S. S. from your druggist. Always insist that you want S. S. S. and nothing else. Beware of all. attempts to sell you a substitute. a demurrer to Cole's petition. In over. ruling the city's demurrer. Judge Davis said that to permit the complainant to sit in final judgment against the per son accused is contrary to the funda mental principles of public policy. OREGON "ALBUM" ISSUED Publication by State Immigration Contains Varied Information. The 'XDregon Album." which contains 192 half-tone views of Oregon farms, Industries and scenery, is ready for dis tribution by the State Immigration Commission, and 500 copies were dis patched to Chicago yesterday, where they will be used in the Oregon con cession at the Land Show. This booklet is one of the most at tractive that has been issued by the Immigration Commission and is ex pected to have a valuable Influence In attracting favorable attention to the state. The captions to illustrations are printed in German and English. The other pamphlets' were also issued yesterday the Statistlsches Jahrbuch and the "Auskunf tsbuch fur Deutsche Einwanderer" both publications being German compilations from' the material contained in the Oregon Almanac The first book contains statistical informa tion, and the second is an Immigrant's guide. - - Ashland Parks Attract Notice. ASHLAND, Or., Nov. 17. (Special.) In the current number of The Ameri can City, a periodical devoted- to monthly review of municipal problems and civic betterment,' there is a' brief article by W. 11. Day on the park sys tern of Ashland. The article is illus trated and shows by comparison the status-of the city parks past and pres ent. The Women's Civic Improvement organizations, aided by the park com mission, hava transformed waste places Into beauty spots. WELL KNOWN OHIO WOMAN Cared, of a Hacking Cough by Cham . berlain's Cough. .Remedy. Mrs. S. B. Raub. "I had what the doctors said was bron chitis about two 3Tears ao and was both ered almost constantly with a tickling sensation in my throat and a dry, hack ing cough," writes Mrs. S. B. Raub, Zanesville, Ohio. "I was afraid I was running into consumption. One bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy did me a world of good and two bottles of it cured me." Bronchitis is only another name ror cold on the lungs, or rather in the bronchial tubes, for which Chamber lain's Cough Remedy has proved won derfully efficacious. il For Sprains and Bruises The first thing to do when you meet with an injury is to soak a piece of flannel with this wonderful oil and wrap it over the place that hurts. It is' antiseptic, soothing and healing, and give &uick fciieii Jji bottle joc, Whs W- '-wam ('if -i . - - J "'WJjl) HOW THIS WOMAN FOUND HEALTH Would not give Lydia ELPink- ham's Vegetable Compound for All Rest of Medicine in the World. Utica, Ohio. "I suffered every thinj from a female weakness after baby came. 1 had nurnD spells and was dizzy, had black spots be fore my eyes, my back ached and I was so weak I could hardly stand up. My face was yellow, even my fingernails were colorless and I had displacement. I took Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound and now I am stout, well and healthy. I can do all my own work and can walk to town and back and not get tired. I would not give your Vegetable Compound for all the rest of the medi cines In the world. I tried doctor's med icines and they did me no good." Mrs. Mart Earlewinb, R.F.D. No.3, Utica, Ohio. Another Case. Nebo, HI. "I was 'bothered for ten years with female troubles and the doc tors did not help me. I was so weak and nervous that I could not do my work and every month I had to spend a few days in bed. I read so many letters about Lydia E. Pmkham s Vegetable Com pound curing female troubles that I got a bottle of it. It did me more good than anything else I ever took and now it has cured me. I feel better than I have for years and tell everybody what the Compound has done for me. I believe I would not be living to-day but for that " Mrs. Hettie Greenstreet, Nebo, Illinois. SMALLPOX AND DIPHTHERIA There is less dread of these diseases now than formerly, because everybody knows they can be prevented, one by vaccination, the other with antitoxin. You can keep from having colds, grippe, bronchitis, pneumonia, catarrh. typhoid fever, rheumatism, and other dangerous cold-weather ailments, if you put your system into a proper healthy condition to resist disease. Rexall Olive Oil Emulsion helna the body produce substances which prevent the growth of disease germs in the blood, thus putting the system into a healthy condition to resist disease. It will help you get well and strong if you have any of the above diseases, or other diseases. It is very good for children just at this season of the year to make them healthy and strong to successfully resist cold-weather ail ments. There's direct benefit tn von In warv Ingredient in Rexall Olive. OU Emul sion. The four Hypophosphites it con tains are used by leadlnsr nhvslcians everywhere in debility, weakness and liability to disease to strengthen the nerves. Purest Olive Oil. one of the most nutritious, most-easily-digested foods known, being taken with the nypopnospnites, gives rich tissue nour ishment throutrh the blood to the en tire system. You ' who are weak and run-down. and you who are apparently well row, but are liable to suffer from various cold-weather ailments, use Rexall Olive Oil Emulsion to get and keep well and strong. For the tlred-out. rundown, nervous, emaciated or debilitated the convalescing growing children ageil people it is a sensible aid to renewed strength, better spirits, glowing health. Rexall Olive Oil Emulsion klne of the celebrated Rexall Remedies is for freedom from sickness of you and your family. Pleasant-tasting, containing no alcohol or dangerous drugs, you'll be as enthusiastic about it as we are when you have noted its strengthening. In vigorating, building-up, disease - pre venting effects If it does not help you, your money will be given back to you without argument. Sold in this com munity only at our store The Rexall Store one of more than 7000 leading drug stores in the United States. Canada and Great Britain. The uwl Drug Co. stores in Portland, Seattle. Spokane. San Francisco, Oakland. Sac ramento, Los Angeles and San Diego. Adv. ENGLISHWOMAN SAYS IT REMIKDS HER OF HOME Strong Indorsement of Plant Juice Given hy a Benton, Wash ington, Lady. Mrs. E. A. Stone, who resides at Ben ton, a town about ten miles from Seat tle, has the following statement to make about Plant Juice, the new tonic. Mrs. Stone's husband is a miner, and they have lived in the State of Wash ington for the past twenty-five yearsi i "As a child In England I knew of no other remedies but herbal ones, and when I read the statements In the papers that your remedy was purely herbal, I decided to try It. I have been troubled for some time with -a weak stomach and constipation, also had dizzy spells, when it seemed I would faint. Plant Juice has stopped the dizzy spells, my head feels clearer, my stomach Is better and digests my food, my bowels are acting naturally, and I feel better in every way. I always knew that If I could get hold of a pure herb remedy it would help me." Plant Juice Is a purely vegetable remedy. As a tonic It has no equal; it eliminates all poisons from the blood, clears the liver, puts it into healthy action and eradicates all ma laria and biliousness. Those who suf fer from Indigestion, headaches, dizzy spells, spots before the eyes, no appe tite, sour stomach, gas or bloating after meals, constipation, poor clrci lation, a feeling of chilliness followed by hot flashes, will find that Plant Juice will do them more good than anything they have ever tried. For sale at The Owl Drug Company's Store. Adv. Down the SL Lawrence River To Europe Lets Than Four Days at Seal Om a me of th Cantdlfta Ftelfie Atlutte ImpraMM Ml wnjov 9 day' plelti ailice on the hlatorl St. Lw- ndn. Oca puitfi thortcaad to 1m Uab ft d&ya t boom to poor lor. Leave from qaiat ola Qrjetwe. Oftttor xol)aat itauitn trvm MoatrvaJ. ftptonrfld MdU ttTTmnean Barrio. Deacr4rti books fta4 atJ)4 ls famailoD am rtQuaat, Caii am, pboam or write FRANK R. JOHNSON, en era I A lent, Cormer Third mad tln Stm., portlmnd. On Or A mA Ticlfcct AsenU Dowager Queen Alexandra, of Englunil. discards two pairs of gloves dally 'during the year. She spends 9j-l0.iCO a year ia Pari Iqv drce and 3el