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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (March 22, 1915)
THE MORNING OREGOXIAN. MONDAY. MARCH 22, 1915, 8 GERMANS LA TO V E BELGIUM Von Bissing Says Laws for Protection of Workingmen , , Already Bear Fruit. DIFFICULTIES ARE SEEN Social Reforms Promised and Atten tion Already Is Being Given to Restoration of Agriculture and Industry. BRUSSELS, Feb. 28. (Correspond ence or the Associated Press.) Some Idea of what Germany is trying to ac complish in Belgium is contained in an interview with General von Biasing, German Military Governor of Belgium, recently granted to a number of Ger man newspaper men. 'In everything that we are undertak ing here," says the General, "all our re lations would be simplified if the Bel gians only knew what is eventually to become of them. "But they are such children! We have all had the experience of seeing the Belgians, on days when we can hear the cannonading from Nieuport and Ypres. believe that the Germans have been defeated and that the allies are moving on Brussels. What children they are! "Because smallpox vaccine has been introduced Into Germany, some evil Joker spreads the report that the Ger mans intend to inoculate the Belgian children with poison, and as a result, under the guidance of teachers and par ents, the 'endangered' children leave the schools." Characteristics Good and Bad. General von Bissing reports finding both good and bad characteristics among the Belgians good in that they love their country and are inspired by a. lively patriotism and that they work gladly, though without the German energy: bad in that they seem to have an easy-going carelessness for the fu ture, which often results In badly reared children. vWe must strive." says the Governor, "to make it possible for Belgium to raise its own food supply at as early a date as possible. For this reason 1 have supported all agricultural inter ests, and have made every effort to alter the nature of Belgium's products. 1 have endeavored to restrict the pro duction of sugar beet by one-half at least, so as to permit in its stead the raising of grain and potatoes. lruca gardening and the raising of vegetables and fruit also are being encouraged. Among the difficulties encountered in restoring Belgium to something ap proximating a peace status. General von Bisslne cites the country s abso lute dependence on the importation of Taw materials for the continuation of its Industries, and the exportation, at present cut down, of its products. He declares that the German government will be the last to stand In the way of the exportation of any products excephl those of which Germany ltseir has neea. Social Laws Amended. "There is still much to b.a done in Belgium," concludes the Governor, "for we are really on the threshold of our work. Our Improvement of sanitary and veterinary work already bears fruit. Prostitution exists to an alarm ing degree, but we have already ac complished its restriction to some ex tent. "We have begun with heretofore totally unknown social laws to limit labor by women and to protect children and women. These are but beginnings, to be sure, but they are beginnings that Already are bearing fruit even though the Belgian worker lacks the intellect and comprehension of social laws pos sessed by the German workingman. I.aw3 for the protection of labor are unknown here. We who come here come to appreciate that with astonish ment. "But I say: Stick it out! German ways and means and German character, German strength and German work will come to honor in Belgium, just as they will be victorious all over the world!" RUSSIAN FRONTIER COLD (Continued From First Page.) short legged, broad backed Polish and Russian women and patronized by beaming German soldiers, who paid pfennigs for cups of scalding tea that. If it was not much as to flavor was at least warming, and therefore a bless- For hours upon hours we shall go r-lunging through regions as silent as the desert, the black, motionless arms of windmills standing stark against the stray sky: gaunt crosses, garlanded with wreaths of oak leaves, rising by the roadside, and wan blue and white vtatues of the Virgin, with a child in her arms. Sometimes the snow has drifted over the naked body of the child in her arms, making a piteous coverlet for the body; and all over the pcene blackbirds, wheeling In leisurely circles. They seek the carrion of war. We shall see ruin, grime and wretch edness among the native population of this doubly stricken region stricken by war and stricken by ignorance and we shall see enormous activity on the part of the invader. People Live Amid Wreckage. By the time we have gotten little more than half the way to Lowlcz we shall And every town more or less shot to pieces: sometimes only on Its outskirts, sometimes the very vitals of it torn asunder by bombardment churches un roofed, inns with only two walls stand ing, houses with only the four-mouthed center chimney marking the place where families used to gather round the fire. Somewhat before Klodawa this begins. nd after Klodawa every town and vil lage straight on to Bolimow is this way dozens of them, I should say. Yet in none Is the destruction by any means total. Always something and often much has survived bombardment and street lighting, and amid tho wreckage life resumes, and the people go about their tasks, and dark-eyed children play ehrllly in the snow. ' We shall pass thousands of brown coated prisoners, being marched into Germany live abreast in columns a mile long sallow. Inscrutable looking men; no sorrow in their faces, no signs of the wretchedness they must feel just faces, unwashed and patient. Such things we shall see and hear on the ride to Lowlcz. I call it a ride worth taking. All Are Bound for Russia. The German soldier at the auto wheel leans forward and throws everything wide. The other German soldier by his side plays a warning tur-a-loo on his horn. Tho German Lieutenant on the back seat with you shifts his body deeper Into the sacklike fur rug which comes up to his armpits. Early as it is, frosty Posen Is already belching forth wagon trains, automo biles and occasional detachments of troops. All are bound for Russia Lodz, Lowlcz, Bolimow. Mlawa and a dozen other towns that are only names to the American reader. They stream through the great Warsaw gate and out over the wide, white, intrenched plains lying: to the east of the city. The fog envelopes them and they are lost to view. All the auto headlights are blazing, throwing a yellow glare far along the narrow streets of the black town, and the hoot ing of motor horns is incessant- We glide into the white fog, and in tho fog lies tho secret of the cold. , a curious and most damnable cold, that strikes to the vitals. Every tree on the wide plain is etched in frost against the sad sky. Fifteen minutes after the start you look at your coat and dis cover that the frost has turned it white. The cold is as clammy as death. In America I never felt anything just like it. It makes kilometers seem leagues, and the strange part is that the roofs on the stone cottages are covered with bright green moss and the roads are for long stretches quite soft so soft. an oflicer tells you, that on some days it is impossible to move the heavy guns. Chauffeur's Feat Savea Party. Autos faring back from Russia come looming up at us the way ships at sea loom out of the fog. and Sometimes the atmosphere is so thick that these re turning autos are almost upon you be fore you know it. In this wild Lowlcz ride there were escapes that I shudder to remember. Once when we were far beyond the German frontier we rushed up a high hill and cleared the brow of it at a swift pace. Just over- the brow half a dozen German military autos had halt ed for slight repairs, and they blocked the road as effectively as overturned carts used to in a Paris uprising. Every man in our car took a short breath and made his mind ready for the worst everybody too startled to be frightened except the soldier-chauffeur, who was neither startled nor frightened. What he did nobody ever precisely learned, but he must have wrenched his onrushing car into a sharp turn, for the next thing we knew the car, right side up and everybody in it safe, was plunging over the furrows of a Russian wheat field. The car had swerved abruptly from the middle of the blocked road, leaped a ditch and landed in the field. The chauffeur made a circle in the field, jumped , the car across the ditch again, and, without coming to a bait during one instant of the maneuver, took us sailing down the hllL I never saw a prettier feat outside a circus. The German officer in the back seat, who had spoken not a word for 20 kilometers, shouted "Bravo!" and leaned forward and gave the sol dier one pat on the back. As for the soldier, he had spoken never a word during the whole business, and at the officer's pat he only made a swift sa lute. In the rush .of departure from the blockaders there was an explosion of the German language from the ser geant who sat by the soldier-chauffeur. As for the captain and me, we agreea that we should never find more fitting occasion for a drink from the flask of port wine. Castle Contains Tragedy. Our good-by to Germany on the trip to Lowicz was a breakfast in a chill stately residence they called it "the schloss." but it was part chateau and part castle which stands in a great park a few miles on the German side of the frontier. Living there Is an old Polish-German Count, very feeble, who is a retired officer of the German army; a Count in middle life, a third count, also an officer, who is past the first flush of youth, and a fourth Count- or Count-to-be who is the heir of them all, a polite, gentle, winning litttle boy. Four generations under one roof, as I figured it out, and all four of the fam ily highly individualized persons. I don't give the name of the family, be cause I don't wish to connect a tragio tale with people who were kind to me, though everybody in Poland knows the tale. It was only last Spring that Count No. 3 shot to death his wife and his nephew, for reasons, to his proud and 'outraged soul, sufficient. He was ac quitted of murder on the grounds that the provocation was so terrible that he was temporarily Insane. Since the war broke out he has served with desperate valor and has won the iron cross of both classes. ,A taciturn individual, the avenger seemed to me as I sat next to him at breakfast in the long, high, cold dining- room; looked like a football player 11 his woolen jersey and leather waist coat, and questioned me rather too closely. I thought, about my passports and destination; civil, though in a gruff way, and constantly pressed hot tea and cold moat on me. Little Boy Presides at Table. A eentle lady, who might have been the avenger's aunt, sat at one end of the table. She spoke charming Eng lish, as did the little boy. who presided like a young prince at the other end, and who one instant asked me "grown up" questions about America, and the next gravely recommended to my at tention some cakes that looked like our doughnuts. He was the darling of the party, a grave, sweet, composed little gentleman who, you somehow felt, would have either a great or a sad future in the world. He did not relax his ceremonious manner until, in the moments of parting, I asked him to ac cept a little enameled American flag I was wearing on my overcoat. Then his grave, beautiful eyes were really child like at last, and he ran down the long central hall of the chateau to show the trinket to some governess. I suppose. He had told me he had two governesses, and that they kept him pretty busy.. Anyway, when he came back to renew his solemn farewells he was without the flag. After I had got back Into the auto I could not get that boy out of my mind for miles, and caught mrself muttering. AMERICAN TRADE iS NVITED BY RUSSIA Country Is Heavy Importer and Boycott on Germany Is Declared Permanent. CREDIT AGREEMENT URGED United States Must Arrange Matters to Meet Custom of Czar'B Coun try to Retain" Commerce, Says Petrograd Merchant. "Poor child! Poor cnna: nae a. uuu dering old man. COTTON CROP GREATEST STATISTICS INDICATE 204,731,000 POINDS OVER 1911. Feature of 1914 Yield I Increased Production In California and Arizona Yet In Infancy. WASHINGTON. March 21. The greatest cotton crop ever produced in the United States was grown in 1D14. Census bureau statistics issued today, giving final ginning figures, officially place the 1914 crop as a record, with IS.102,143 bales of 500 pounds each. That is 204.721.000 pounds more than produced in the great crop of 1911. In addition to the great production of lint cotton, a record quantity of linter cotton, extensively used in the manufacture of military - explosives, was obtained. This cotton amounted to 395.732.000 pounds and brought the total 1914 crop to 16,893.604 equiva lent 500-pound bales, or 8.446.S03,500 pounds. A feature of the crop was the great ly increased production in California and Arizona, two states where the cot ton growing industry is in Its infancy and where a superior quality of the staple is raised. California's production amounted to 49.835, while Arizona's crop was 7142 bales. Unofficial estimates place the value of the crop, which this season has been greatly reduced bv the effect of the European war. at $570,000,000 for lint. The value of the seed is estimated at $134,000,000. These together make the estimated value of the crop to farm ers $704,000,000. compared with $911, 000.000. the value of the 1913-14 crop, estimated in the same manner. Italian farmhouses nMd improvlnr. ac cording to the opinion of the government, which has offered 7S5 in premiums to he awarded ffr encouraging the construction of model taim buildings. BT RONALD R. M'CORMICK. (Staff correspondent of the Chicago Trib une. Published by arrangement with the Tribune.) ON BOARD S. S. ADRIATIC, Nearing Liverpool. Feb. 16. Tremendous trade between Russia and the United States will be a natural outcome of the great war, according to R. C. Martens, a mer chant of Petrograd and London, who is returning to Europe from -a business trip taken with this end In view. Mr. Martens says the Russian people will hereafter refuse to buy German man ufactured articles and also will refuse to purchase merchandise from other countries through German agents. He declares that three-fourths of the exports from the United States to Ger many are consigned to that country for eventual consumption in Russia; like wise that a similar proportion of im ports from Germany to the United States comes origlnaly from Russia, Therefore, he says, the United States must develop direct trade with Russia not only in order to extend the Ameri can markets, but even to hold those we had before the war. Sales Company Is Advised. Mr. Martens' plan is to organize an American company to promote and handle the sale of American-made goods In Russia. This company not only would devote itself to the exten sion of American trade, but would do so much more efficiently and econom ically than do the German middlemen, who have had this function in their hands. Mr. Martens' suggestion is that Amer ican manufacturers seeking Russian markets shall pay to the export com pany an annual sum of $1500 each. With this in hand the company would maintain a general office in Petrograd and branch offices at appropriate cen ters in the empire. Credit Arrangement Proposed. The men in charge of these offices would canvass the Russian territory for orders and requests for bids and forward these to the main offices at home.. To the manufacturer's bid will be added the freight and duty, and a delivered price will be presented to the purchaser. Upon each sale a commis sion will be charger the purchaser, 25 per cent of which will be paid to the seller. According to the plan, the export company will co-operate with the seller in getting credit with Russian banks when necessary, as Russian custom gives the buyer three, six and even nine months to pay. It is emphasized that ex porters must conform to the habits of foreign people in order to get their trade. In time the company hopes to have money enough to extend its own credit when needed. Russians 9Teed Tools Most. The articles which Russian needs most and America can best supply are tools of all kinds, from heavy ma chinery to tack hammers, everything useful In farming and lumbering, au tomobiles, road.-making machinery and electrical equipment. Proof of the need of such a company to handle and extend America's trade in Russia, Mr. Martens says, lies in the fact that only our great trusts have been able thus far to afford the machin ery necessary to do business in the country whose business methods and processes of thought are as different from ours as the two governments are different. Goods can be sold in Russia only through a large organization employ ing the ablest and most experienced Russian managers. The plan seems logical and is certainly worth investi gating. Half of Trade Held by Germany. In 1912 Russia's total Imports were $510,771,200. of which the imports from Germany were more than 50 per cent, or $267,343,700. The imports from the United States were only $44,000,000, and Great Britain $71,000,000. The total Russian exports in that year were $709,501,700. of which Germany re ceived about one-third, or $238,677,600. The Russian exports to the United States in that year were a little over $9,000,000 and to Great Britain $168. 000,000. Details - of the imports into Russia are interesting. The tables show the total imports of various articles and the amount of the imports from Germany. This tabu lation will make clear the vast field of opportunity tor supplying the needs of Russia, now that Germany has been cut off from trade with that country: LEATHER, BELTING, ETC. Total, about $12,000,000 Germany , 411, 365 COTTON GOODS AND YARNS. Total, about - $12,500,000 Germany 8,700.001) IRON. Total, about Germany Total, about Germany . . . COFFEE. . .$12,200,000 . . ,300,0UU ..$ 4.000,000 .. 3,000.000 .$ 2.600.0H0 14o2,Ouu RESIN. Total, about Germany Oil JSTC. Total $ 2.50O.OO0 Germany 1.100,000 SILK. Total S13.S0O.OU0 Germany B.ilOO.OUU SILK (MANUFACTURED). Total $1,250,000 Germany 1,020.730 KNIT GOODS, ETC. Total $ 4.300,000 Germany 3,000.000 CHEMICALS AND PH ARM. PRODUCTS. Total, about $13,000,000 Germany S.UOo.OUII FERTILIZERS. Total $ 4.600,000 Sheep on Carey Act Land Opposed. SALEM, Or., March 21. (Special.) The State Desert Land Board today wrote to Louis Sharp, chief field di vision. United States Land Office, Portland, asking that he take immedi ate action to prevent the use of large tracts of Carey act land for sheep grazing. It is declared that the settlers on the land depend for their liveli hoods on the raising of cattle, and if sheep are allowed to graze on them the settlers will be irreparably dam aged. Irrigation Plant Sold. NORTH YAKIMA, Wash., March 21. The assets of the Hanford Irrigation & Power Company, estimated to be valued at more than $1,000,000. were sold today to Henry K. T. Lyons, of Denver, who was represented by J. J. Blake, of Boise, for $356,000. : lue Sieat teat costs least The right time to build, remodel or repair is now! Building material is low, skilled labor is abundant, trained architects have time to most ably plan and contractors to carry out work well and cheaply. The man who wants to build for him self or for bona-fide tenants can buy to lasting advantage, as all future rents or loans will "neces sarily be based upon the low valuations now available and investments so made will yield proportionately higher perma nent returns. A n MERICAN x DEAL Radiators IBoilers ' n . IT "Radiators are made in any shape to fit your plans or room spaces" Raw material costs less than in 10 years past, labor is more productive, and with greater output (sales in 1914 were the largest in our history), we are able to put the price within reach of all. No one in the world offers equal value in neating devices! Do you realize that this ideal heating outfit is the ONLY equipment you can put into a building that will never be worth lea than you pay for it, and will in a century or so of use repeatedly repay its original cost through fuel savings? Can you possibly INVEST money better or more safely than that? IDEAL Boilers and AMERICAN Radiators supply the heat that costs the least also because they make every pound of fuel yield double the volume of heat. They silently and steadily meet trie suaaen weather changes, warming all rooms, bays and halls genially alike.. They protect the family health with cleanly warmth no ash-dust, soct or coal gases reach the living rooms which saves much wear on furnishings and decorations. They are absolutely safe. They have every practical improvement, designed by experts in our factories in America and abroad. They bring quicker buyer or larger rental for your building, or secure a larger loan. They cost less or no more than ordinary types, yet are fully guaranteed. Made in sizes for flats, stores, schools, churches, public buildings, farm and city homes, old and new. Don't wait until you build old heaters need not be disturbed until ready to put fire in the new outfit bf IDEAL Boilers and AMERICAN Radiators. Start right away to benefit from the heat that costs the least the heating which guarantees comfort and economy to the end of your days. Write us for "Ideal Heating" catalog (free.) Puts you under no obligation. Now is the time to buy. Iron prices now rule lower than in ten years past! A No. C211S IDEAL Boiler and 270 eq. ft. of 38-in. AMERICAN Radiators, coating the owner $ 1 40, were used to heat this cottage. At this price the goods can be bought of any reputable, competent Fitter. This did not include coat of labor, pipes, valves, freight, etc., which are extra and vary according to climatic and other conditions. IDEAL Boilers arc afer and easier to run than stove. Accept do substitute. liasassjaaW K Learn about this unfailine:. stationary Vacuum Cleaner, at $150 Our ARCO WAND Vacuum Cleaner has been in steady use for over three years, and no failures. It works through an iron suction pipe running to each floor of home or other building. Keeps all rooms thoroughly cleaned of dirt. dust, cobwebs, moths, insect eggs, which are drawn to sealed dust-bucket in i Dasement or siae-room. deanea 01 aire, aust, codwcds, mouia, uiki. w . - . without repairs, as long as the building it cleans. Sold in sizes at $150 up. Ask for new catalog (free). 11 Sold by all dealers. No exclusive agents. American radiatok company Writ Department N-I2 816-822 S. Michigan Ave, Chicago Public Showrooms at Chicago, New York. Boston, Providence, Philadelphia, Washington, Baltimore. Rochester. Buffalo, Phurghlevtla. Cmcomati. Detroit. Atlanta. Birmingham, ruouc a-"- (Orleans. IliaMDc4is7MuwaukeTbmaha, Minneapolis, St. Paul, St. Louis, Kansas City. Denver, Settle Portland. Spokane, Los Angeles, ' " " ' ' a? tt : aa .- i-va. t Dm. RxismI. FOrrirt tTVJr-saTTlaV sUllaUs. Vienna null r mm isnr, hsuuuu vufca muuumk r - FLEET IS WAITING Bad Weather Delays Further Attacks on Dardanelles. BRITISH LOSS IS 61 MEN Superiority of Fire of Fleet Over Fortresses Declared by British Admiralty to Have Been Shown. New Dangers Admitted. LONDON, March 21. The Admiralty tonight made the following announce ment: "Unfavorable weatner has inter rupted the operations In the Darda nelles and as seaplane reconnaissances have not been possible, the amount of damage done to the forts by the bom bardment of the 18th cannot be ascer tained. "No great expectations should, how ever, be based on this, as, owing to the losses caused by drifting mines, the attack was not pressed to Its conclu sion on that date. "The power of the fleet to dominate the fortresses by superiority of fire seems to be established. Various other dangers and difficulties will have to be encountered, but nothing has hap pened which Justifies the belief that the cost of the undertaking will ex ceed what has always been expected and provided for. "The British casualties in the per sonnel are 61 men killed, wounded and missing. "Admiral De Robeck has telegraphed to the Admiralty as follows: " 'I desire to bring to the notice of your lordships the splendid behavior of the French squadron. Their heavy loss leaves them quite undaunted. They were led into close action by Bear Admiral Guepratte with the greatest gallantry." " ALL GIRLS WIN IN DEBATE Boys Also Have Xo Place in Clacka mas Writing Contests. OREGON CITT, Or., March 21. (Spe cial.) Not a place In the annual dec lamation and short-story writing con tests of the Clackamas County School League, held last night In the Oregon City High School, was won by a boy. Miss Lorraine Lee, 14, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Lee, of Canby, won second place by her recital of "The Famine." and first in the short story division. Miss Vivian Robbins. of Molalla. by her dramatic recital, "Daisy's Practice Hour," won first in the declamation contest. Miss Leora Griffiths, of Oak Grove, won third place in the decla mation contest. Her subject was "The Friend in the Mirror." In the short story contest. Judged by Lewis E. Reese, of Oak Grove, Miss Lee won first and Miss Margaret Toedtimeir. of Sherwood, second with a story "For the Lilies of France." 20 SEEK MISSING TRAPPER Searching Party Near Detroit Fears Accident to Mountaineer. ALBANY, Or., March 21. (Special.) A searching party of 20 men is hunting for W. F. White, a trapper who has been missing from his home at Detroit, eastern terminus of the Corvallis Eastern, for three days. White and an other trapper named Hare left Detroit last Wednesday to make the rounds of their traps. They parted at French Creek to di vide their work, each taking a different route. White failed to appear at their meeting place, and after waiting some time Hare returned to Detroit. Noth ing has been heard from White since. He had a gun and dog with him. As he was an experienced mountaineer it is believed he could not have lost his way, so the supposition Is that he met with an accident. Day Warmest March 21 Recorded. ALBANY. Or.. March 21. (Special.) With the Government thermometer here recording a maximum temperature of 78 degrees this afternoon, Albany today experienced the warmest first day of Spring in its history. It was almost uncomfortably warm this after noon for people out walking. The same maximum temperature reached today was recorded here yesterday. GEORGE W. PERKINS SAYS BUSINESS TROUBLES ARE FUNDAMENTAL. Financier Proposes Federal Regulation of Interstate and International Con cerns Need FnlI Publicity. WASHINGTON, March 21. (Special.) "It is not the trusts that have made the times; it is the times that have made the trusts." This Is the view of George W.- Ter kins, multi-millionaire and founder of some of the largest industrial corpora tions in the country. Perkins Is in Washington. Since his retirement from active management of corporations he has given deep study to some of the Jlls which he thinks afflict the business of the Nation. "Something Is wrong in the country." Mr. Perkins declared. He contends that the trouble is not superficial, but fun damental that is, ""a contflct between economics new and economics old." Mr. Perkins proposes two remedies for the evils: - First, Federal regulation of great In terstate and international Industrial concerns. Second, complete publicity as to the affairs of these concerns. The desired reform can be brought about," he declared, only by the sober, able business men of the country taking affairs out of the hands of theorists and professional politicians. Canadians Still in English Camp. LONDON. March 6. (Correspondence of the Associated Press.) Although it QUARTER CENTURY SUFFERING OF STOPPED BY AKOZ MINERAL REMEDY Mrs. E. Freund, 283 Halsey Street, Portland, Gratified for Relief She Got From Rheumatism. So gratified was Mrs. E. Freund, of 283 Halsey street, Portland, from the relief she obtained by a few weeks' use of Akoz from rheumatism, which she had been a victim of from a quar ter of a century, that she writes the following about the benefit the won derful California medicinal mineral gave her: "For 25 years I have been a sufferer from rheumatism. It seemed to have settled in one of. my hands, and that member was badly crippled. In that time I have taken many remedies that did not give me much relief. Akoz, which I started on In the latter part of February, has done me more good in that length of time, some three weeks, that I am confident thai I sfeeia. in the end be entirely freed from my suffering. The swelling in my hand Is rapidly going down, and the pain has almost all disappeared. The water made by using the Akoz mineral pow der, taken internally, has not only assisted in relieving the external signs of my ailment, but my general health Is much improved and I feel much bet ter than I have for some time." ' This is but one of the thousands of letters received by the Natura Co.. tell ing of the wonderful relief Akoz has afforded those suffering from rheuma tism, stomach, liver, kidney and blad der trouble, eczema, ulcers, catarrh, skin diseases and other ailments. Akoz is sold by all leading druggists, where further Information may be had reariUttaI this advertisement. was recently onk-iully Hnuuunced Hint the Canadian contingent iid been transferred to the continent, tlicro aio silll about 10.000 ot them at Die Sulip bury camp, including one brigade of infantry and all the cavalry and artil lery. ' DANGEROUS DEBILITY Debility may result from a number of causes worry, after-effects of acute Illness, lack of nourishment due to disordered digestion, or anything that makes the blood thin, thereby pre venting It from carrying health and nourishment to the tissues of the body. The symptoms of debility vary but weakness Is always present, often a tendency to fatigue easily, ringing In the ears, black spots passing before the eyes, weak back, dizitnens. wakeful ness caused by inability to stop think ing, and unrefresliing sleep. Debility is dangerous because it weakens the body's defense against disease. For instance, debilitated peo ple take cold easily and Winter Is al ways a trying time for them. When one cold follows another the system surely needs building up. The treatment of such run-down conditions with Dr. Williams' Pink Pills is based on sound medical princi ples and common sense. These pills build up the blood so that It nourishes every part of the body, nerves as well as muscles and brings vigor, strength and health. Mention this paper and we will mall you the booklet "Building Up the Blood." Address: Dr. Williams Medi cine Co, Schenectady, N. Y. Your own druggist sells Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. f Dr. PAUL C i A I fcJ5 TUN VUAIU Oil' HllVKvr DK.K TlVl'ltt IN ruillLAMI. A s T o 11 I A I Have Cut Prices 1 will save fou u cents or evsry dollar on the best dental work made by human hands and without pain. My offer Is for you to ko to any dental office and get prices, then come to me and I will show you how to save a dollar and 1 make a dollar on your dental work. My Price Will Surely Suit Yob My Y ork Will Surely Pleas You ALL WORK GUARANTEED. Paul C Yates EViSr? fifth aasl MorrUoa. Opsaalta Peat office.