Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 28, 1916)
DRGES FAIRBANKS' F EXPRESS ELATION Indiana Committed to Candi dacy as Long as Favorite Son Stays in Race. T. R. HOLDS INTEREST, TOO Iloosior Republicans Give Tariff First Place Among Issues, With Emphasis on Preparedness and Foreign Policy. BY ERNEST BROP3. Managing Editor Indianapolis Star. INDIANAPOLIS. Feb. 2-. RfP ur ticans of Indiana will P""" Cnar" Warrfn Fairbanks as a. candidate lor the Presidency at th Clilcago 5"TieJV tion in June. Friends of .Mr. Hirtank., are eiaiea TlirJ JlUlv-N ii yr unuu.i iv.-T-t - - - mm mill II lllll III! ml i HETS'RY MORGENTHAU, AMERICAN AMBASSADOR TO TURKEY, RETURNS FOR A SIXTY-DAY VISIT. who have w k h-t Hnvplooed. and be l.eve he will be a formidable factor in the convention. Kir. Apart from the candidacy of Mr Fair banks Indiana's delegation will go Pledged to rote for him as long as he stavs in he race most interest at taches here to the probable course of Theodore Roosevelt and the possibility that he will be the nominee The Progressive party is building a tate-wlde organization in Indiana. J. Franv Hanly. ex-Governor, who is Na tionally known now for his advocat or prohibition, has been entered in tne primary lift as the only Progressive candidate for Governor, but there Is a ouestion whether he will remain as the rarty nominee after the state conven tion Hanlv announced when he ac cepted the offer of the Progressives to become their candijate for Governor that he could not agree with some of the radical provisions of the party e Platform of 1912, including the initia tive, referendum and recall. Should the Progressives reiterate their faith in these doctrines, it Is probable Hanly will withdraw from the ticket. Progressives Favor Roosevelt. Working along the lines of the an nouncement made by the Progressive National executive committee at Chi cago sev.l weeks ago. Progressive leaders h fe and throughout Indiana are trying o hring about the nomina tion of a Presidential candidate and the adoption of a platform acceptable to both Republicans and Progressives, progressives remaining in the rank and file ,-eir number Is problematical are strong for Roosevelt, and there is a feeling among many Republicans that If Roosevelt is the nominee he will command a united Republican party. Elihu Root has enjoyed the confi dence and esteem of most Republicans of Indiana, although men in the pro gressive wing of the party incline to the belief that he could not draw the support that would go to Fairbanks or RoosevelU because of his activity in the 1912 convention. Justice Hughes has a large number of admirers In In diana, but his name has not been dis cussed in connection with the Presi dency because Republicans here view with earnest misgiving any attempt to inject politics Into the United States Supreme Court. Burton. Knox, Borah and Weeks have not figured conspic ously In the discussion of Presidential possibilities in the state. Senator Cummins has many staunch friends in the state, but there is little enthusiasm over him as a Presidential candidate. Tariff to Be Leading Issue. The present disposition of the Re publicans is to give the tariff first place this year, with emphasis also on preparedness and a constructive foreign policy. It is admitted, how ever, that the developments of the war may change the relative bearing of these issues before the Presidential campaign is In full swing. The Republican attitude on the tariff is that protection, properly adminis tered, is indispensable, especially after the war is ended, and that the present prosperity of the country is due to the war and comes in spite of the Demo cratic attempt to open the United States to the competition of the world. K. C. Toner, ex-Progressive state chair man and now active in the Republican party, characterized the present activ ity as "shotgun prosperity," and his view is shared generally by Repub lican leaders. Preparedness both military and eco nomic, are live topics in Indiana, al though not in the same degree as on the Atlantic Coast. Criticism of the Wilson Administra tion's policy toward Mexico is general, but there is little likelihood at pres ent, so far as sentiment here is con cerned, that the Mexican question will become an issue of transcendent Im portance. Republicans will use it as an illustration of what they declare is the characteristic vacillation of Woodrow Wilson The part the European war will play as a Presidential issue Is not deter mined. Indiana, with a strong German element in its population, is more evenly divided than Atlantic Coast states as to the merits of the diplomatic course necessitated by the war. Rep resentative German citizens have dis couraged any attempt to make the acts of President Wilson a campaign issue although there is no ignoring the fact that thousands of voters of . German extraction in Indiana look with dis favor on both Wilson and Roosevelt. Primary liw to Have Flrat Trial. Indiana will test for the first time, March 7, a state-wide primary law of intricate requirements. It Is estimated that the enforcement of the law will cost the counties of the state more than $500,000. Candidates for Gover nor and Senator are spending many thousands of dollars to make the ante- primary campaign. Ballots of extra ordinary fcize will be needed, especially In the Republican party, in which the contest for office is spirited. The pri mary law provides for a preferential vote on President and on United States Senator and Governor, the ballot for the latter offices being decisive If any candidate polls a majority of all the votes cast. Congressional, legislative and county candidates are to be norm nated in the primary. Traditionally. Indiana is a pivotal state. There are so many conditional features of the situation now that it would be rash to hazard an opinion on the outcome of the election this FalL An outright reactionary for President would mean the forfeiture of Indiana's 15 electoral votes at the start, and a state ticket of anti-progressive cast might also spell disaster, except In the event of a general Republican landslide. The war remains as a factor to deter min Issues and party alignments, and between now and September, when the campaign will be under way,' much may happen to upset all present calcula tions. Republicans generally feel they have at least an even cnance to win. Expert to Teach Prunning. xtcwmotttH. Or.. Feb. 28. (Special.) Under the auspices of the Monmouth Grange, Professor W. S. Brown, of O. a r will conduct a pruning dem onstration class In orchards near Mon mouth on March 1 and 2. These classes 1 m 1 i I iff i " 4 - -L f ? $ "? Cms,'' -" VS. lit rr i n in. KM'H i iT , r'""---alii. iiiiiIVri'iiTi Lit 4 rl a GRASS All charge purchases today and tomorrow go on March statement payable April 1. Yes! Double Stamps With All Photo Finishing Orders. iMRIUlnOR AND MRS. HENRY MORCEMHAU. Sneciai ) Henry Morgenthau, American Ambassador to Turkey, after 28 months in the Sifl davislt "board Sthe steamship Frederick VIII. on which vessel thu . wm t the Ambassador on tne Bnip. ins A.uuau -- j - """"r.r- Mr. Morgenthau is here for a 60-day rest, and says he does not want the NEW YORK, Feb. 26. ( made His wife. Mrs. Morgenthau. met the Ambassador on the Bhip. citizens appointed by Mayor MitcheL war office. PLAN HELD DRASTIC Oregon Members to Oppose 20-Acre Cultivation Clause. CUT-OVER AREA AFFECTED Belief Is That Prohibitive oh o Clearing Will Prevent Devel opment and Keep Lands Off of Tax Rolls. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU. Wash ington, Feb. 27. The Oregon wB' sfonal delegation to a man is prepared to oppose the recommendation of the Secretary of Agriculture that a Provi sion be inserted in the pending land grant bill requiring each homesteader on grant lands to clear and place under cultivation not less than 20 acres be fore submitting final proof. If such a provision is insisieu un Congress. the delegation tuiitc..u.. r,r the cut-over lands can be suc cessfully homesteaded and. In the case of lands where timber Is to be removed before the lands themselves are to entry, as provided In the Chamber lain bill, there will be no settlement or development after the timber is This, they fear, means that ' .., tha tQT large areas never win 6" " rolls. Fomt Reserve Move Opposed. The delegation also is prepared to protest against the Inclusion oi 1 . r.nt lands In forest reserves. and Is reasonably well satisfied this proposition can be defeated in commit tee. Regarding tne cuiuvnu"- ment. however, mere is i i h.nna of the determination of the conservationists to require culti vation on the part or an nomraic, The same influences that have pre vented the amendment of the cultiva tion clause of the nomesieau .. " feared, will be able to force the inclu sion of a cultivation clause In the land grant bill. ' Representative sinnou, " " " " watching the land-grani p.ui.". closely, has discovered that the Secre tary of Agriculture has recommended the adoption of the amendment to the Chamberlain bill, proposed by the At torney-General, wnicn win the completion of contracts to purchast some 80,000 acres of grant lands, the amendment which previously has been Indicated as having been drawn pri marily in the interest of C. A. femitt. Without discussion of the purpose of this amendment, the Secretary of Ag riculture, in his report to Congress, says: "This provision appears neces sary for the purpose of securing tne complete disposal of the matters In litigation now before the Department of Justice, and no doubt will receive the favorable consideration of your committee." x Hearing to Continue Today. Representative Hawley will complete his statement before the public lands committee tomorrow, and will be fol lowed by Senator Lane and Representa tive McArthur. Senator Lane said today he was dls nneeri to believe that timbered lands. suitable, when cleared, for agricultural purposes, should be opened in the first instance under the homestead law. He ihinVs the settler is entitled to the timber on the land, for from tlje sale of timber he can possibly raise suffi cient revenue to clear the stumps after the timber is cut. If logged-off lands are opened to homestead entry, he in sists it will cost 1200 an acre to clear th land, and this expense will dis courage homestead development. Suffrage Plan Rejected. SAX FRANCISCO. Feb. 26. Woman. miffraee. as a National Issue, was i turned down bare Saturday ty the mem bers of the Democratic state central committee, who voted down a resolu tion asking Congress to pass on to the different states for ratification the Sutherland-Mondell woman suffrage amendment. The resolution was submitted by three women members of the Califor nia Civic League. Later, after the committeemen had adopted a resolu tion indorsing the policies of President Wilson Miss Nora Rasmussen offered a resolution which covered the Wilson policy on suffrage. The resolution, which follows, was adopted unani mously: "Resolved. That we favor woman suffrage and recommend that every state In the Union enact legislation which will extend the right of suffrage to all women who are otherwise enti tled to vote." LIVES GlVENTOPRAYER THREE YOUNG WOMBS TO INTER CEDE FOR SINFUL WORLD. JUSTICE ABOVE WAR All Else Will Be Sacrificed for Peace, Says Wilson. of YTnnKnal Ceremony of "Receiving Habit" to Be Witnessed at Monastery of Carmelites. SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 26.-The Car melite monastery at Santa Clara will witness next Thursday one of the rarest religious ceremonies ever held in the United States, when Archbishop Hanna, of the Roman Catholic diocese of San Francisco, will preside over the rite known as the "receiving of the habit," during which three young women will pass behind the monastery walls to de vote their lives to prayers for the sins of the world. Dressed as brides, Miss Gertrude Center, of Oakland; Miss Mary McDon ald, of Seattle, Wash., and'Mlss Alice Moynihan, of Denver, will become "brides of the church." and will don the robes of the Carmelite order. Thenceforth they will not act as nurses or teachers or perform other tasks, as do the nuns of other orders, but will devote themselves to unremitting Inter cession, nraver and penance for the sins of the world, seeing no one but their nearest relatives. They will take, re spectively, the names "Cecelia of the Angels," "Sister Elizabeth of the Trinity" and "Sister Emanuel of the Passion." After a novitiate they must pass a second ceremony before they will be admitted as fully professed nuns. HUMOR IS MOST GRAVE EIGHT SHOTS HIT 1800-YARD NIGHT TARGET IN 73 SECQNDS. Crew of Cruiser San Dleso Shoot by Searchlight and Are Confident of Winning; Trophy. SAN DIEGO, CaL, Feb. 27. What ii declared to be a world's record for ac curate and rapid-fire gunnery was made by gunners of the armored cruiser San Diego at target practice Friday, it was announced today. The crew 'of No.11 sixincli gun scored eight perfect hits out of eight shots in 72 seconds, firing at a range of 1800 yards. The crew of No. 14 three-inch gun scored the same number of bulls eyes in as many attempts in 48 sec onds, the range being 1600 yards. Both records were made at night, the point ers picking up the target after it had been illuminated with searchlights. Officers of the Pacific fleet flagship are confident they will be able to re tain the Spokane trophy for 1915-1916, which was awarded to this vessel for excellency in gunnery for 1914-1915. In big-gun shooting the San Diego did not equal her record of last year. The forward turret crew scored nine hits out of 12 shots wtih the eight inch guns and the after turret eight hits out of the same number of shots. This shooting. was done la daylight, Selfish Ambition Is Scored in Con: fidential Talk to Gridiron Clnb, Requests for Publication of . Milch Are Granted. WASHINGTON, Feb. 27. President Wilson told members and guests at the Gridiron Club dinner last night that America ought to keep out of the European war "at the sacrifice of everything except this .single thing upon which her character and her his tory are founded, her sense of human ity and justice." The address was confidential, since the speeches at the dinners of the Grid iron Club, composed of newspaper cor respondents, are not reported. It was made public tonight, however, because many of those who heard it urged that it should go to the country. President in Grave Humur. The President spoke of the Nation's affairs with unusual gravity. His hearers, including several hundred members of Congress, Government of ficials, business men and correspond ents were brought to their feet ch,eer- ing when he concluded with the words: "I would be Just as much ashamed to be rash as I would to be a coward. Valor is self-respecting. Valor Is cir cumspect. Valor strikes only when It is right to strike. Valor withholds it self from small implications and waits for the great opportunity when the sword will flash as if it carried the light of heaven on its blade." Selfish Ambition Rebuked. The address, in part, follows: "Your talk, Mr. Toastmaster, has been a great deal abont candidacy for the Presidency. It is not a new feeling on my part, but one which I entertain with a greater intensity than formerly, that a man who seeks the Presidency of the United States for anything that Six bars of Ivory Soap 25? i I Six bars of Fairy Soap W Six bars of Life Buoy Soap 2o Six bars of Wool Soap Six bars of Grandpa's Soap. t 25c Colgate's Shaving Cream 20 50c Pebeco 39 50c Hinds' Honey Almond Cream 35 25c Frostilla $1 Wood-Lark Freckle Cream 85 50c Dr. Charles' Flesh Food 33$ 50c Java Riz Powder 390 75c Pyralin Ivory Powder Box 490 75c Pyralin Ivory Hair Receiver 490 $4 Hindes' Very Hair Brush, special, $2.59 $2 Pyralin Ivory Clocks 980 FREE 15c Tooth Brush Holder, with 35c Tooth Brush. FLATTONE PAINT Gives a beautiful dull finish to plaster, wood, paper and furniture. Washable and durable. Quart 700 Gallon ?2,23 Good Brushes 500 to $3.00 Is 9 FURTHER All finishing: orders left with us in the forenoon ready for you by 5 o'clock same day. Ex pert men, modern meth ods, fine, fresh solutions, make this possible. CANDY 50c lb. Wood-Lark Special Mixed Choc olates, the pound 25c lb. Horehound Stick Candy 170 25c Can Salted Peanuts 150 SEASONABLE Grafting Wax, the can 350 Bordeaux Mixture, the quart 100 (One quart makes three gallons.) Lime and Sulphur, the gallon 5O0 Arsenate Lead, all sizes, pound cans to 100-pound kegs. "Roselawn" Fertilizer, can 5O0 , . nn . . T1ITI nci nrMir T h WW We have them Tested Flower and Vegetable Seeds. MAE SHALL 4-700 -HOME A ft' 7' JUXlZX STREET AT WEST FKBX S it will bring to him is an auaacious fool. The responsibilities of the oince ought to sober a man even before ne approaches it. One of the difficulties of the office seldom appreciated, I dare say, is that it is difficult to tninK while so many people are talking, and particularly while so many people are talking in a way that obscures coun sel and is entirely off the point. "The point in National anairs, gen tlemen, never lies afong tne lines ui expediency. It always rests in me field of principle. The United States was not founded upon any principle of expediency: it was founded upon a pro found principle of human liberty and of justice, and whenever it bases its policy upon any other foundations than those, it builds on the sand and not upon the solid rock. Congress and Press Scorned. I would a great deal rather know what thev are talKing aooui quiet firesides all over this country than what they are talking about in the cloakrooms of Congress. I would a great deal rather know what the men on the trains and by the wayside and in the shops and on the farms ar thinking about and yearning for than hear any of the vociferous proclama tions of policy wnicn it is so hear and so easy to read by packing up any scrap 01 pnmm h.. is only one way to near uicoo nd that Is constantly 10 no ua.-n. the fountains of American jiuliui.. These fountains are not to be found in any recently discovered sources. "I heard somebody say that tne pres ent population of the United States Is 103,000,000. It tnere are j.uvu.uvu ing the same things that our 3,000,000 forefathers thought, tie 100.000,000 will be saved for an illustrious future. They were ready to stake everything for an idea, and that idea was not expediency, but justice. And the infinite difficulty of public affairs, gentlemen, is not to discover the signs of the heaven and the direction of the wind. But to square the things you do by the not simple but complex standards of justice.. Jus tice has nothing to do with expediency. One Sacrifice Impossible. "America ought to keep out of this war. She ought to keep out of this war at the sacrifice of everytning ex cept the single thing upon which her character and history are founded, her sen of humanity and justice, ii sue sacrifices that, she has ceasea to pe America; she has ceased to entertain and to love the traditions which have made us proud to be Americans, and when we go about seeking safety at the expense of humanity then I, for one, will believe that I have always h..n mistaken in what I have con ceived to be the spirit of American his- "You never can tell your direction except by long measurements. You cannot establish a line by two posts; you have got to have three at least to kT,, whether thev are Btraight with anything, and the longer your line, the more certain your measurement. xuci is only one way in which to determine how the future of the United States is going to be projected and that is by looking back and seeing which way the lines ran which led up to the pres ent moment of power and of opportun ity. There is no acuoi uuuui. ium. , Honor Roll Well Defined. "There is no question what the roll of honor in America la. The roll or nonor .nncista nf the names of men who have squared their conduct by ideals of duty. There is no one cioo uhw, . . ther Is no one else whose name we oor tn remember when we measure things upon a National scale. "And I wish that whenever an im i, f Imnatience comes upon us. whenever an impulse to settle a thing nme. short way tempts us, we might .inu the. door and take down some old stories of what American idealists and statesmen did in the past and not let any counsel in that does not sound in the authentic voice of American tradition. Then we shall be certain what the lines of the future are, be cause we know we shall be steering by the lines of the past. We shall know that no temporary convenience, no temporary expediency, will lead us either to be rash or to be cowardly. I would be just as much ashamed to be rash as I would to be a coward. Valor is self-respecting. Valor is circum spect. Valor strikes only when it Is right to strike. Valor withholds Itself from all small implications and en tanglements and waits for the great opportunity, when the sword will flash as if it carried the light of Heaven upon Its .blade." V7 a f; chills blood Russian Returns to Portland ' After Seeing Horrors. MAIMED FILL SIBERIAN CITY Pctroff Burochenko Sees Knoush at Vladivostok to Change Ills ! sire to Tight for Czar; Two Brothers Among Killed. I'etrofT Burachenko. a beardless Kus sian of 20 years, returned home to join the army, learned that- two brothers had been killed, saw some of the hard ships and terrors of the war, and then turned back to Portland, reaching here last week. He has been away from his country. Kiev province, Russia, for three years, part of which time was spent in Can ada and part In Portland and Oregon and Washington, working in contract ing camps. He kept up with the war news only in a meager way. The desire to return and fight for the Czar burned in him so fiercely, according to his storv as interpreted last night, that he quit his job and sailed on an aminu nition boat from Vancouver, B. C, in December. Mind In Changed Karly. Reaching Vladivostok he spent two weeks there waiting to go to the front. However, he says he saw enough of the horrors of the war to change his mind and to send him sailing back to this country and to Portland. Young Burachenko speaks English with difficulty. Having run away from the fatherland to avoid the conflict, he is naturally suspicious of those who seek to talk with him. lest they bo de tectives or secret agents to take him back. John Petroff, an ex-navynian of the Russian navy, was with Burachenko last night and acted as interpreter for his compatriot. It was an interesting story which the young fugitive had to tell, after relieved of his uneasiness. He said there were hundreds of Rus sian soldiers and laborers at Vladi vostok blowing out and moving the ice in the harbor there. A channel 50 feet wide was kept opened for miles to permit war supply boats to reach the port and unload munitions. Some days there were as many as a dozen such vessels to reach the port. They came from America fior the most part and many of them from Japan, he said. It was while there that be learned of the death of two brothers In the lighting around Warsaw. There is an other brother now under Grand DuUn Nicholas down in the. Transcaucasutt. Many Return Mnlmed. While in Vladivostok he saw thou sands of Russian reservists coming in and proceeding to the front, on ammu nition trains via the Trans-Siberian Railroad. Also he saw many hundred'! coming back to their homes in anil about Vladivostok, crlppli'd, mstmcd and shot to pieces. Some of the latter were so badly transfigured that their wives did not at first recognize, them. He says he saw sonic of the young' nicti and also fathers leaving home for iho front. They were accompanied to the train by their mothers and wives and children even. He shuddered when h recalled the heart-rending scenes. He said he was going to remain In this country. He liked it better. Ijiter on he intends to buy a farm, settle down, bring his parents over and make their last days as happy us possllile. lie believed that Russia and her allli s would win the war eventually, and that It was going to be easier for tho subjects of the Czar after tho conflict. REPUBLICANS ARE IN LEAD HegiMry rigures Total 6 I, I HO for 35 fount Irs SAI.KM. Or., Feb. 2tl. (Special. Registration in the 35 counties of Ore gon up to February 1!. according to records in the office of Secretary of State Olcott. totaled 61.180, of which 40. EDO are Republicans, 15.4.17 Demo crats. 1337 Prohibitionists, 1.":'9 tioctal ists. 403 Progressives and IStil of mis cellaneous affiliation. Multnomah County's registration, the returns here show, totals 18.173. of which 13.74 are Republicans and 37-J7 Democrats. Lane County has tho largest regis tration in proportion to population, with a total of er.f.ft, while Marlon stands third with 4223. PARENTS SEEK DAMAGES Southern Pacific Defendant In Four Suits in Kugcne. KUOENE. Or., Feb. 27. (Special.) The four damage cases arising out of the accident lust .spring at Creswell. in which .1. U Spry and four children were killed when a Southern Pacific train struck the motorcar in which they were riding, will come up for trial at the Spring term of the Lane County Circuit Court, which convenes tomor row. In the suits, which were recently re manded from the Federal Court to th state court, the parents of each child ask $7500 damages, alle-ring that tho railroad company did not take proper prccailticn to avoir! the accident. Painless Parker Outlaw His Confessions CHAPTER XIX. riTHE facilities, service and accommodation which at tracts the patronage of business houses to ,this National bank, will also appeal to you as an individual Every department of banking under one roof. We shall be pleased to welcome your account here. 01MWOT1M NotihwesterriliiiiiilSSaiBanK Building The first thing the Dental Trout tan vk to damn me is that I am "un- I ethical" enough to want to clear some of the mys teries from the practice of dentl try. I actually want to educate the pub lie. Aa I have point- ed out already, It is only through keeping people in Ignorance that the p o 1 1 te professions ran maintain their attitude of superi ority and keep their KralL 'me gullible reaman ookeu Kltn awe on his Medicine Man because ne hihp unknown lingo and made signa and muttered prayers and wroic vrticrm tlona and mixed herbs and went through Incantations that -were Incom prehensible to hi in. And et the "ethical" oeniisi wants all other dentists to play that bunko Si , . ... . game In thla Twentieth Century, organ ized societies to make him play U, pasiies laws to ronipel hlra to Join the organized confidence men, and yrllr like a Comanche Indian when anybody letn the cat out of the bag. I'd like every man, woman and rhlld In the Inited Mitten to know at lrat the flrat principle about tooth trou ble and their correction. I'd like to tell them nil Jut what Home of three nullifying things are that the "ethical" den tint enjoya rolling on bin tongue, generally In l.alln pyorrhea alTcolurU. and other term Ineomitreheniiilile to the average "laymnn." I'd like to tell how Kimple uomr of the dental dlnraara are and how almply thry can be cured. I'd like to tell them how almule aome of the dental operations arc, how little time they really take, how little la their actual coat. I'd like to tell the cold truth about thla profcaalon I am In bc cauae I'm not a lilt afraid of the truth. Hut your "ethical" drntlat ahurfdrra all over when you tell him he ouaht to educate the public. He doran't want the curtain removed from a proapcroua graft. Poor, deluded moaaliackl he doran't know thai the more people; know about their teeth, the more pa tients he will havt fop we all need denliatry aome of us ery badly. To Be Continued.) Adv. FOR BRONCHITIS, WHOOPING COUGH, CROUP, COUGHS AND COLDS Make the Best Remedy at Home 128 Teaspoonsful for 50 Cents If everything was sold in as liberal and fair a manner as Huntley Drug Co. are selling Schiffmann's New Con centrated Expectorant, absolutely no cause for complaint or dissatisfaction could possibly arise from anyone. These druggists say "Buy a bottle of this remedy and try it for Bronchitis. Whooping Cough. Severe Cough. Croup or any Bronchial Affection, and wc will return vour money, just as we do with Schiffmann's famous Asthmador, if It does not give satisfaction, or if not found the best remedy ever used for nv of these complaints." Why not take advantage of this guarantee and try this medicine, and get your money hack, rather than buying another pure ly on the exaggerated claims of its manufacturer or on the strength of tes timonials from others and run the chance of getting something worthless and aiso wasUofi your. nonsxJ In buying this remedy, besides secur ing an absolute, guarunteo of Its elii ciency from these druggists, you also get about eight times as much medicine as you would in buying most any of the old-fashioned, ready-made, kinds, which average from 20 to 32 teaspoonsf ul, b. -cause 60c worth makes a whole pint (128 teaspoonsful) when mixed at honv with simply one pint of sugar and one half pint of water. This remedy posi tively docs not contain chloroform, opium, morphine or any other narcotic. It Is pleasant to take and children are fond of it. You will be the sole Judge, and under this positive guarantee abso lutely no risk is run in buying this remedy. Druggists everywhere are au thorized to sell it under the sani.i guarantee as Schiffmann's famous Asthmador of "Money Back" if not per fectly satisfactory. R. J. gchiffmaun, Proprietor, St, Paul, MIbl, are tee to everyone jmereoLcu.