THE MORXPfG OREGOXIAX. WEDXESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1915. - " n . , , . a END OF SLAUGHTER OF GAME IS ASKED Dr. W. T. Hornaday Appeals for Protection of Species Becoming Extinct. RESERVE CHAIN PROPOSED Naturalist Sa.vs Sanctuaries May Be KetablUhed on Poor Iand, Prohibition on Hunting Placed and Revenue Source Created. Oregon can have an important part In protecting grams birds and gamo animals from extinction it it electa to devote its non-asrrlcultural lands to this purpose, says Dr. W. T. Hornaday. naturalist and zoologist, who lectured hefore an appreciative audience at the Central Library Monday night. rr. Hornaday proposes that the land within the forest reserves of the West.' ern states that cannot be used for oth er purposes be used for the protection of wild life. He pointed, out that numerous beautiful and valuable species of birds and quadrupeds al ready have been made extinct by the destructive methods of so-called sports men rind predicted that many other fine species that now are pursued ruth lessly and slaughtered without reason will become exterminated unless or ganized action is taken. Forestry Official Consulted. In this connection he outlined a defi nite plan for the creation of "a great annual eupply of big game' which plan ho has proposed to officials of the Xational forestry bureau. He was in conference Monday with Thomas P. McKenzie, assistant supervisor of the forestry service in this city, and it is probable that the forestry officials will co-operate with him In carrying for ward his plan which, in brief, he out lined as follows: A Federal law empowering the Secretary of Agriculture to select and delimit areas In National forests suitable for game sanctu aries. These sanctuaries shall be established by Presidential proclamation. These, sanctuaries shall be so located that they wil not occupy lands chiefly suitable fur agriculture. These sanctuaries shiftl be located where they will interfere to the least extent prac ticable v.'lth the grazing of domestic stock, especially he stock of actual Bettlora, These sanctuaries rhall be established wltli the approval of the Governor of each state concerned. It Is expedient to establish a large num ber of sanctuaries of medium size rather than a few large preserves. Chain of ITrberve Proponed. The ideal condition would be a chain of sanctuaries which in time would restore game to all the intervening territory. Administration will be vested In the Sec retary of Agriculture. .Boundaries are to be settled after full consideration of all Conditions. PreU.itory animals are to be killed. The object of these sanctuaries is to pro vide breeding places for game which will spread over adjacent territory, where it will be subject to the regular "Open season provided by law. This will prevent danger of overstocking the ranges. It will there fore not be the general policy to extend these sanctuaries. Dr. Horaaday's lecture was supple mented by an Interesting and instruct ive series of stereopticon views show ing the effects of the unnecessary slaughter of game anlroals, and by way of contrast, the results, of systematic protection and propagation. Rxtlnvtlon of S proles , Cited. ' He showed, . by these illustrations, how certain species of grouse have been actually exterminated by lack of legal protection, and predicted that within a ehort time tne sage grouse, common on the plains of Kastera OreV gon. will be extinct if it is not afforded " absolute protection. " "It is a question even now, he de clared, "whether we will be able to save this bird." He related the experiences of the State of Vermont in dealing with the white-tailed deer, which, in '1176, was entirely extinct in that state. Then a email herd was imported. Within 22 years the species had become so numer ous that regulated killing was per-. nutted. Aow the State of Vermont derives a substantial annual revenue from its game. Similar conditions pre vail in the State of Maine, he explained. I'ongrreaa Expected to Help. Dr. Hornaday, who is one of the best-known naturalists in the coun try, is making a tour of the West for the purpose of inducing citizens of the West to interest themselves in the plan to preserve the game animals. He ts confident, he says, that Con- gress, if properly appealed to, will en act the legislation necessary to cre ate the game sanctuaries that he pro poses. "Congress has a perfect record on that subject," he said. "It never has been approached with a legitimate and a reasonable plan for protecting wild life to which it has not responded." Monday Dr. Hornaday, who is superintendent of the New York Zoo logical Gardens, visited the zoo at Washington lark. He urges the city to enlarge and extend its zoo. He says It is one of the best assets that a city can have. RACER PLUNGES, 1 MAY DIE Two Speed Cars at okune Fair Go Through IV nee. SPOKANE. Wash., Sept. 14. R. L. Wiliiams. a mechanic riding with Oral Palmer, was probably fatally injured here when Palmer's car plunged through the fence. The accident was the first of two which occurred at the opening day's motor races, held in connection with the interstate fair. Neither of the oc cupants of another racing car, which went through the fence, was hurt. TURKISH TOWN IS AFLAME i Kef i i--men t Preliminary to Kali of Dardanelles Is HintPd. LONDON. S?pt. 14. The town of Phocaea. Asia Minor. 25 miles nortn west of Smyrna, is reported to be In flames. A Renter dispatch from Athens say It Is inferred that the Turks are di stroylnK coast towns and retiring Into' the interior in expectation of the fall of the Dardanelles. BRITISH "PLOT" SCENTED Baltimore German- Americans De nounce Money Lending jtrfieme. BALTIMORE, lid.. Bept, 14. At the closing exercises last nieht ef the 15th annual Uerman day celebration at a suburban resort, a resolution denounc ing .England wait rea4 to mora than' 30.000 persons and unanimously adopted. The gathering, which was under the auspices of the Independent Citizens Union of Maryland, was addressed by Dr. C J. Hexamer, of Philadelphia, president of the National German-American Alliance, who introduced the reso lution. Copiee will be forwarded to President Wilson and Secretary of State Lansing. - f The resolution declares In substance that a "nefarious - plot" Is being for mulated to rob the American people of their savings deposited in banks for the development of American industries and to hand these funds over to Eng land to enable her to continue the war "to control the commerce of the world for all time." "Be it resolved," the resolution reads, that, we, -30,000 true Americans, today assembled to observe the 101st anni versary of the American victory over ODDFELLOW OP 31 YEARS STANDING IS DEAD. Edwin Charleioo. Edwin Charleson, an old resi dent, died yesterday at his home, . 114 Bast Twenty-sixth street, at the age of 71 years. He was born In Ohio in 1844, and came to Portland 35 years aso. Mr. Charleson was a charter member "f the Third Presbyterian Church. He had been a member of the Oddfellows' Order for 35 years. He is survived by the following children: Ralph S. and Miss Viola, Portland; Mrs. A. D. Soper, Chicago; Dr. Vernon Charleson, Hrea, Cal.; Mrs. H. R. Templeton. Vancouver, Wash. The funeral will be held today at 2 o'clock. the British at Baltimore, do solemnly declare our abhorrence of the unpatri otic and pro-British scheme, and we earnestly call upon the President of the United States and the Secretary; of State to thwart this evil conspiracy." BOY FOUND. BY DETECTIVE Information Given by"H. II. llawley Leads to Kamily Jieuiiion. II. II. Hawley, city detective, yester day was congratulated on his part In the finding of tie raid Warner, kid naped last February from Oakland, Cal., and recovered from the home of Mrs. Lewis Cohn at Milwankie, Or. On the information that he furnished to the Clackamas County authorities, the lad was restored to his mother, who took him Monday to their home in Oak land. On February 6 the Portland police received a letter from Mrs. Warner of her son's disappearance and Detective Hawley was placed on the case. On August 15 he made a report, telling where the boy was to be found, even to the postofrice box and telephone of the Cohn house, in Clackamas County. This information was for.wardrt to Mrs. Warner at Oakland, and she came North. It was on the suggestion of the Portland authorities that she took the matter up with Sheriff Wilson, of ClHckamas County. The house had been pointed out by Detective Hawley and all that remained was to conduct the mother to the place. . MRS. EMERY OLIVER DIES Wife of Railroad Builder Passes at Sacramento Home. Relatives of Emery Oliver, of this city. Monday received the news of the death of his wife, who passed away at Sacramento. Cal., Saturday night. Mr. Oliver Is a brother of J. Oliver, postal clerk of the O.-W. R. & x. Co and of Charles Oliver, of the Portland water works. Hamilton Oliver, of thi3 city, is a nephew. Emery Oliver was formerly a civil engineer of Portland and was con nected with O.-W. R. & N. Co. Several years ago the Olivers left Portland and moved to Oroville, Cal., where Mr. Oliver was prominent in the construc tion of the Western Pacific Railroad branches. For the past two years they has resided in Sacramento. Mrs. Oliver before her marirase was Miss Annie Sylvester, of The Dalles, and there are a number of her relatives residing in that place. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver have two sons, Gradon. aged IS. and Boyd, aged 15. For some time she had been ill. but the immediate cause of her death was tuberculosis. Among their most Intimate friends in Portland are Dr. and Mrs. W. H. Boyd. AGED MAN IS FOUND ILL Fred Brower, 75, Tells Police or Scanty Fare and 'Hardship. An-old man of 75 years, giving his name as Fred Brower,- Monday was found sitting ou .-the curb at East Thirteenth and Harney streets. He was completely exhausted and complained of a pain in his right side. He was first taken to the fire station at Thirteenth and Tenino streets and later to the police station for a medical ex amination. Brower told the police that he has been getting what few meals he has eaten by splitting wood and that he has been sleeping wherever he could. He says he has a daughter 'by the name of Mrs. Josephine Buttier, living at Cedro-Woolley. Wash. ARMED MOB STORMS JAIL Sheriff Spirits. Man in Woman's Garb Out or City. NOWATA, Okla.. Sept. ft.A mob of several hundred armed .men stormed the county Jail here last night in search of B. I Harkins, who. is charged- with assault on a 12-year-old girl. Anticipating mob violence. Sheriff James Mier dressed his prisoner as a woman and took him by automobile to an adjacent city. . Portuguese Again In Revolt. FAR13, Bept. 14. A new inaurrea. tinnery movement has broken out not only In Lisbon, but In the principal provinoial cities of Pertugal, eaya a dispatch, to the Journal from Madrid, x 1K : : I y? ' i I i r o , 1 ? ' ' . - 1 j : I -v v...., " : J i ' -J X A " '') - 3 r ' r ? - " - - RUMOR PREVAILS OF DISASTER IN LONDON Despite and Because of Rigid Censorship, Story of Ca - tasirophe Grows. ZEPPELIN RAID NEWS BARE Persistent Talk Continues' in .New York. That Something Has Hap pened " In England Xewspa pers Suspended,- Is Report. NEW YORK, Sept. 14 (Special.) That something approaching a catas trophe may have occurred in London as a result or the latest Zeppelin raid is Indicated from well authenticated rumors current here. Outside of the bare announcement that the east coast was again visited Sunday night the' third raid within a week and the twenty-first since the beginning of the. war no word has been allowed to come through, except the statement that there were -no casualties and that the damage was slight. Inquiries to London buslnes houses and correspondents, however. Indicate that everything Is not right and that something grlve may have happened. Messages have gone unanswered or have been . suppressed by the British censor. Even the newspapers and banking houses, whose cable service usually is fairly prompt, have fared no better than private individuals. All Word of Raids Suppressed. Repeated attempts of The Tribune to get in touch with its London corre spondent as to the situation finally brought the following reply: "Can't send any news, either cable or mail, of Zeppelin raids aside from official announcement. In the local cabls office, there was persistent talk that something-momentous had happened in England, al though what it was ever, the "wire gossip" of the operator, generally too elusive even for the censors, could not determine. There was a rumor, however, that the London newspapers were to be sus pended, presumably the better to fore stall any leaks in information and and hints of the real damage done by the German bombs. Mall Scanned Closely. Unusual precautions have also been taken with the outgoing mails to pre vent the leak of any knowledge that might aid or encourage the Germans. All letters are subjected to close scru tiny and those in any way suspected are held up until whatever information they contain is valueless. Military observers here were inclined to le skeptical tonight as to a success ful aefense, under present methods, against a Zeppelin raid They pointed out the difficulty of locating the night flyers if clouds offered the slightest kind of concealment, while any aero plane patrol was equally futile. Not only could the Zeppelin foes locate the airmen by their motor exhaust, but its quicker rising power also gave it an advantage. Now that the Germans have suc ceeded, after rrumerous attempts, - in. locating London and charting the way' on their air maps, these observers loolc for Increasing raids and Ihe execution of enormous damage. KITCHENER LISTS NEEDS Many '-.More Troops Are Necessary for Continent. LONDON, Sept 14. Lord Kitchener has Just presented to the Cabinet his estimate of the number of British troops it will be necessary to maintain on the Continent next year, according to the Parliamentary correspondent of the Daily Chronicle, who declares the estimate greatly exceeds the number already in the field, large as that is. The correspondent adds that he has learned on Indisputable authority that David Lloyd George, Minister of Muni tions, who formerly was a supporter of the voluntary system of enlistment, now has become converted to compul sion, not so much for military reasons' as for industrial. He is said to believe the munitions problem can be settled in no other way, since acceleration Is impossible without a relaxation of all restrictive -labor regulations and with out the utilization of a far greater ex tent of unskilled labor. During the past month the number of recruits has Bensibly diminished, but men still are offering their services faster than they can be equipped. The Chronicle's article is considered here to be significant, as that paper has not advocated conscription. STRIKE EXTENSION IS PLAN Gompers Said to nave Ordered Or ganization at Munition Plant. LOWELL, Mass., Sept. 14. Arrange ments to extend the strike at the big plant of the United States Cartridge Company hero were made -at a meet ing of the employes last night. . Four hundred workers struck at midnight Monday night to enforce a de mand tor a 15 per cent increase In pay and Sunday night off with pay. Last night the strikers asserted that 900 men and 400 women had signed an agreement to form a union. It was also seated that President Samuel Gompers. of the . American Federation of Labor, had ordered the New England or ganizer, Frank E. McCarthy, to come here to help in the work of organiza tion. LEASED WIRE RATE IS CUT Postal Company Announces Another . Reduction in Xight Press Prices. NEW TORK, Sept. . 14. (Special.) Clarence H. Mackay, the president of the Postal Telegraph Cable Company, announces that' the company has made a second reduction in the leased wire rate for the press at night, this second reduction being one half of the present rate. This second reduction now makes the night, rats one-fourth of what it was 60 days ago. MrMackay in making this announce ment said: "Our wires are idle at night, and so we can afford to transmit news freely andcheaply. Wo have decided to do so; 'the whole public will get the benefit." Moral Squad Captures Three. Lieutenant Harms and Patrolman Martin, of the moral squad, yesterday morning raided a house at 829 Front street and arrested Bessie Green on a charge of eonductinc the place and Lena, Gold, George Kros and Harry Gia nelii on vagrancy charges. Woodard. Clarke's 50th Annive mm Offers Many Special Bargains to Our Patrons To day Stock Prices Get Pocket Flash Lights Will save matches light expenses and accidents. Priced from fo aa 75 to &O.UU Leather Goods While They Last 16-inch Fitted Bag-, was $18, now. 16-mch Tan Cowhide Bag,- was $6.75, now 18-inch Tan Cowhide'Bag, was $12.85, now 16-inch Black Walrus Bag, was $12.50, now 20-inch Tan Cowhide Bag, was $15.00, now....;.. El ii New Creations in Fulper Pottery Now on exhibition in our Art Salon, on the Second Floor. New Brass and Bronze Ware 50 Extra Stamps on all framing orders for balance of week. We Deliver Mazda Lamps and Charge no More See Our Basement Electrical Dept. ROBBER'S RETREAT MARKED BY SHOTS One Occupant of House, Not Meddlesome, Sleeps Through Battle. DARING CLERK LIGHTS GAS Rays Draw Kaln of I 'ire and Almost Cause Another Tragedy Woman Has ThrilllfSg Experience In tracing Police Rifles. SAX FRANCISCO. Sept. 14 Out of the welter of thrilling features to tlie battle between a force of policemen and George Nelson, bank robber, Satur day night, yesterday emerge many ex citing:, some amusing experiences of the occupants of the house where Nelson made his stand until he killed him self. They were cut off from escape by the'rain of bullets police rifles and the wicked accuracy of Nelson's auto matic revolvers. One man who tends to his own af fairs so closely that he evinced no interest in the battle was found asleep in the house after the firing had ceased. He is T. M. Sehon and he said he wasn't & meddlesome man. He stayed in bed on the second floor of the house and arose only to get his revolver. Then he went back to bed and tried to sleep. , "It was none of my business," he said. Invalid Unable to Move. A hail of police bullets found the room of C. A. Nack, a veteran of the Franco-Prussian War. He is an in valid and was helpless. Although he couldn't escape himself, he forced his wife to leave the room against her protests. He lay there throughout the night with the intermittent bullets spattering against the walls. It was George Klyer, a clerk, -who had the temerity to light a gas Jet in his room during the battle. He picked 76 bullets from police rifles out of the walls of his room. The police thought Nelson was there. Myer dropped sprawling on the floor and crawled to safety. "It was like the fellow who lit a match to find the gas leak," said Klyer. He was with Macbeth a few minutes before the latter was shot. Two Flee Untouched. With the bullets raining into their rooms. C. Harvey and his wife fled, untouched, to a neighboring room to safty. After one fusillade of shots after midnight, a woman stepped through a door. Sixty police rifles were leveled at her. The crowd screamed: "It's a woman T' The searchlight brought the figure into sharp relief. It was Mrs. Annie Kelley, a roomer.- Then she walked from the house nonchalantly. "I only knew I couldn't sleep because there was some klna of a racket." she saia, so i started for a friend a house. In one of Nelson's pockets was found the photograph of a young Russian girl, ritten in Inn. on its back were these lines) June 5, ISIS, Hw shall I greet Up on Soap at Remarkably Low 10 Extra Stamps Free With Each Special Soap Sale 3 bars Lurline Soap o rf for ..ZOC 8 bars of Ivory rE? Soap for aDC 25c bar Floating f r Castile Soap. . . : .1 OC 10c Lister's Anti- yt septic S'p,3 in box Al-C 10c Valiant's Juni- y per Tar Soap 1 C 25c Parker's Tar f a Soap JL&C 15c Liebig's Skin r a Soap, 3 for 54C 25c Resinol Soap o for 15C 10c Woodlark Almond Cocoa Soap, 4 r a for-. Z4C 5c Fairy Soap, six r)r cakes for iJ3C $1 bar Conti Cas-ry tile Soap OC 10c Bon Ami, 4ng cakes for .JDC 10c Sapolio,4 cakes OP- for ZOC Colgate Sh'v'g S'p, q C 5c, 8 cakes for. . jJC 25c Colgate's Shav- on ing Stick UC 25c Colgate's Shav- 0T ing powder a&iC 50c Synol Soap 07 for...: OC 25c Lee's Tar Sham- q poo Soap X OC 25c Pears' Scented w Soap J. OC Williams' Barber Bar Shav ing Soap, 5c, six.(T7 for C 25c 4711 White Rose i - Glycerine Soap. . J. OC 10c Jergen's Bath OP? Tablets, 3 for. . . ZuC Slain Floor Basement $10.75 $4.45 $7.70 $7.95 $9.50 A BOOK SAVED IS OF . SKTKRAL you? I greet as a friend should, with a warmth as that of the sun: with depth and with width as that of the in finite, endless ocean, and with the de votion of the waves and the greatness of the typhoon. REVA." This other scrap of the figurative language of the Orient was written by Reva "Opponoff. whom the police have questioned. She Is employed in a tailor shop here at a small wage. She told the police that she knew Chelsa kin (Nelson) and Juber. the man under arrest here, who involved Nelson. She denied any knowledge of the third man. "Charley." whom Juber Involved as the third man in the Los Angeles bank robbery. Hugh Macbeth, proprietor of the rooming-house in which Nelson fought, died last night as the result of wounds received while attempting to leave the house amid a fusillade of bullets di rected at the bandit. Macbeth died without regaining con sciousness. An hour before death came Chief of Police White received the fol lowing telegram from Miss Ollie Mac beth, the dead man's daughter, directed to her father from Boise. Idaho: "Papa. dear. I'm on my way. Fight hard. (Signed) OLLIE." Shortly after death the body was placed on a bier in the morgue a few feet from the body of Nelson, who com mitted suicide a few hours, after Mac beth received his mortal wounds. FAMOUS MINER ARRESTED "Swiftnater Bill" Gates Charged With Neglecting; Son. SPOKANE, Wash., Sept. H. William C. ("Swlftwater Bill") Gates, who gives his address as the Western Hemisphere, and who has had one of the most spectacular careers in the mining his tory of the Northwest, was arrested here on a warrant from Seattle, sworn to by Mrs. Iola Beebe. Mrs. Beebe is grandmother of Fred Gates, the 12-year-old son of Gates. She charges that Gates has neglected to support the child. Gates said tonight he had given Mrs. Beebe between $10,000 and $12,000 for the care of the child. Gates at one time owned rich min ing properties in Alaska. He lost most of his fortune in an unsuccessful water transportation company. HEAT KILLS SIX IN OHIO Four OtheT3 in Cleveland Are Pros trated by Temperature. CLEVELAND. O.. Sept. 14. Four per sons were prostrated and the death of six children was attributed to heat yesterday. The temperature was at 97 degrees, the hottest day of the year. U-BOAT SUNK BY FRENCH German Submarine) Is Torpedoed, Says Athens Dispatch. PARIS. Sept. 14. A German sub marine has been torpedoed and sunk by a French torpedo-boat patrol be tween Mytllene and Tenedoa, says an Athens dispatch to the Journal. Auto DriTer Itetrlst Police. Herman Glerman, a horse dealer, at tacked four patrolmen who attempted to arrest him at Frent street yes terday meraing en a charge of driving his car without lights, and was sub dued only af lei tiia officers had hand- AUDEK STREET AT WEST RUBK - -MAESMALL 4-7QO - HOVffi A 6171 J Drug Dept. Gallon Domestic Ammonia r rv for 50c Gallon Formaldehyde tr for S2.00 Gallon Liquid Toilet and r r Bath Soap aD I.OU 5 pounds Chloride Lime for dOC Gallon Witch Hazel (I 1 O E? for tfrl.ZO Pint Corbolinium r r" for ZOC ' Main Floor Homeopathic Dept. Mezzanine Floor We have the only exclusive Homeo pathic Department in Portland. For Cold Rooms Hotpoint El Radio Small Electric Heater, for bedrooms, bathrooms and offices; connected with ordinary light socket; 5-year guar- ch r- rr antee &O.l)0 Basement FREE To School Children Cut out this coupon and get FREE one of our Sherwin-Williams Brighten-Up Pocket Mirrors. None given without the coupon. Present coupon at our Paint De partment in the Basement. Good while they last. Basement H. GREEN STAMPS rOI.I-AR EARNED cuffed him. they reported to head quarters. Patrolmen Converse. Cooper, Morris and White made the arrest. CORRECTING A MISUNDERSTANDING We offer the explanation below for the benefit of those who are contemplating building homes, and for those who have been un der the impression that this or ganization simply finances and constructs homes for those who own shares in the company. Yes many have come to us ba lieving this. We finance and build homes for anyone anywhere in Portland. We will build upon the lot of the client or upon one he may select in any first-class district, or upon one of the many we own. We will build according to the client's plan, or make a plan to fit his ideas. We maintain our own architectural department. Every part of plan and cost esti mate is approved by client before any obligation on his part is in curred, or construction begun. Client may have the benefit of our easy payment plan of a small amount down and balance month ly like rent, or a cash basis. In either case the house has exactly the same value. All material and labor is con tracted for on wholesale basis. Each and every home we build carries a written guaranty for one year, assuring client of first class materials and labor. THIS SHOULD MAKE IT WORTH YOUR WHILE TO IN VESTIGATE OUR METHODS. The Oregon Home Builders Oliver K. Jeffery, President, 13th Floor Northwestern Bank Bldg. mm DRUGS xsWJ V iai Id Hi Free lO 2PM Stamps with all ice cream and soda purchases in our Tea Room or at the Soda Foun tain from 2 P. M. until we close at 9. REFMRKA CASE of Mrs. HAM Declares Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Saved Her Life and Sanity. Shamrock, Mo. " I feel it my duty to tell the public the condition of my nealtn belore using your medicine. I had falling, inflamma tion and congestion, female weakness, pains in both sides, backaches and bear ing down pains, was short of memory. neither RfrrpTurtJi noi energy. There was always a fear and dread in my mind, I had cold, nervous, weak spells, hot flashes over my body. I had a place in my right side that was so sore that I could hardly bear tha weight of my clothes. I tried medicines and doctors, but they did me little good, and I never expected to get out again. I got Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetahla Compound and Blood Purifier, and I cer tainly would have been in grave or in er asylum if your medicines had not saved me. But now I can work all day, sleep well at night, eat anything I want, havo no hot flashes or weak, nervous spells. All pains, aches, fears and dreads are gone, my house, children and husband are no longer neglected, aa I am almost entirely free of the bad symptoms I had before taking your remedies, and all is pleasure and happiness in my home." Mrs. Josie Ham, R. F. D. 1, Box 22, Shamrock, Missouri. If you Trant special advice write X-ydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co, (confidential) Lynn, Mass. Horn to Absorb an Unlovely Complexion Th face which la admired for Its beauty must have & satin -smooth skin, pink and white and youthful looking. The only thins I know of that can make such a complexion out of an aged, faded, or discolored one I mean & natural, not a painted, complexion is ordinary mercolized wax. This remark able substance literally abeorbs the unsightly cuticle, a little each day, the clear, healthy, girlish skin beneath gradually pcaptns out until within a week or so it Is wholly in evidence. Of course such blemishes as freckles, moth patches, liver spots, blotches and pimplee are discarded with the old rkin. If you will procure an ounce of mercolized wax at the druK store, use like cold cream every night, washing this oft mornings, you'll find It a veritable wonder-worker. Another valuable natural treatment Is a wash lotion to remove wrinkles which can be easily prepared. Dissolve 1 oz. powdered saxolite In V4 Pt. witch hazel. Bathe the face In this and you'll find it "works like magic." Phyllis Moon in Town Talk. AUv. It has been estimated toy engineers that one waterfall In lie land can o made to produce 60,000-horsepower and another fcO.OuO, . r r ..r a J J