Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, March 22, 1916, Page 5, Image 5

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    TITE MOHXTNCr OKEGONIAT7. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 22, 1916.
LIND LEFT If GOLD
HOUSE INCREASES
RESERVE FOR ARMY
CICCOLINI MAKES BIG
HIT ON ORPHEUM STAGE
Italian Tenor Is Delighted With West on First Tour He Likes American
Girls Personality Is Engaging; and His Singing Is Superb.
Young JSLen
Second Floor
T
IIILliUli
BYQVVNAMENDMEN
Efforts by Others to Make
Provision "Stronger" Re
v moves Vital Feature.
INTEREST NOT EXPLAINED
Lands Claimed by Mr. Wilson's Ad
viser AVI II Xot Be Affected by
Validating Clause, Since
They Are Xot Patented.
tJtEGOXIAr NEWS BUREAU. Wash
ington. March 21. The Attorney-General's
proposed amendment to the
Chamberlain land grant bill, seeking
to confirm outstanding executory con
tracts for the purchase of Oregon and
California lands, was based on an
Amendment drafted by John Liind. ex
Governor of Minnesota and personal
representative of President "Wilson in
Mexico. But because C. J. Smyth and
S. W. Williams, attorneys of the De
partment of Justice, without thorough
ly understanding the situation, sought
to strengthen the amendment submitted
by Mr. Lind, the amendment inadver
tently was changed so that it will not
affect the Lind lands, some 7000 acres.
On the contrary, if tha bill is passed
carrying the amendment in its present
form. Mr. Lind will be out in the cold,
and the land to which he makes claim
will revert to the Government.
Testimony DisclOMeg Situation. .
This was disclosed today by testi
mony before the House public lands
committee by Mr. Lind and C. J. Smyth.
Mr. Lind testified that when he saw
the Chamberlain bill he found it made
no provision for outstanding contracts.
He came to Washington, drew up an
amendment which would ratify these
; contracts, and submitted it to Senator
Chamberlain.
"It appealed to the Senator," testi
fied Mr. Lind. 'and he said it was mani
festly just and fair."
At Senator Chamberlain's suggestion,
Mr. Lind took the written amendment
to the Department of Justice and gav
it to Assistant Attorney-General Knae
bel. He did not get a chance to ex
plain it, as Senator Chamberlain en
tered the office and he withdrew.
"I did not tell Senator Chamberlain
or the Department of Justice of my in
terest in the land," said Mr. Lind.
I.ind Explains Amendment.
Mr. Lind explained that his amend
ment was similar to the Attorney-General's
amendment, save that it did not
require contracting parties to pay the
Government the unpaid balance due the
railroad, nor did it require the payment
of $2.50 an acre to the Government on
purchases exceeding 1000 acres. These
requirements, he thought, were fair.
C. J. Smyth said the Department elab
orated the amendment proposed by Mr.
Iind. incorporated these two require
ments, and also adding a proviso in
tended to make it inoperative as to any
contracts made in bad faith since Judge
Wolverton's decree, but in phrasing the
proviso, the emendnient was made to
apply only to patented lands, and as
Lind's lands are not patented, they
will not be affected. "We did not know
when we drew the amendment," said
Smyth, "that there were any unpat
ented lands covered by outstanding
contracts."
TEACHERS GATHER TODAY
Clarke Connty Institute Will Con
tinuc Three Days.
VANCOUVER. Wash., March 21
(Special.) The annual Clarke County
Teachers Institute will be held in the
high school auditorium beginning
Wednesday morning, March 22, and
continuing for three daxs.
Professor Norman F. Coleman, of
Heed College, Portland, will lecture on
"School as a Social Force" tomorrow.
"The ProgressiveKoad to Reading
Methods" will be Miss R. Dorothy Berg
on's topic on primary work. A. C.
Murphy will speak on "Writing" and
Professor E. C. Leathers will dwell on
"Art Work and Drawing."
Miss Jenny Cameron will treat on
"Basket-making." The Pacific Glee
Club will sing. Pxofessor Coleman will
lecture on "A. New Note in Poetry."
Marshfield Passes Vehicle Tax Xaw.
MAESHFIELD, Or., March 21. (Spe
cial.) The City Council last night
passed the vehicle ordinance taxing all
sorts of motor-driven machines and ve
hicles drawn by horses. The license
fees, due April 1, run from $1.50 to
J20 a year. The Council had consid
ered the ordinance for four weeks.
Civil AVar Veteran Passes Away.
ROSE BURG, Or., March 21. (Spe
cial.) William H. Baker, aged 74
years, and for some time a member of
the Oregon Soldiers' Home, died here
today. Mr. Baker was a native of
Ohio, and served his country during: the
Civil War. He is survived by two
children. A, L. Baker, of Glendale,
and Mrs. Williams, of Roseburg.
& noiv ao iet ttia. or a
Bad Cough'
A, Home-Mide Remedy that Will
Do It Quickly. Cheap and.
Easily Made
i
If you have a bad cough or chest cold
Iwhicli refuses to yield to ordinary reme
dies, get from any druggist 22 ounces
f Pinex (50 cents worth), pour into a
pint bottle and iiil the bottle with plain
Kranulated sugar syrup. Jstart taking
c teaspoonful every hour or two. In 24
tours your cough will be conquered or
very nearly so. Kven whooping cough ia
Creatly relieved in this way.
Ike above mixture makes a full pint
a family supply of the finest cough
svrup that money could buy at a cost
cf only 54 cents. Ka6ily prepared in a
ininutes. Full direction's with Pinex.
This Pinex and iaugar Syrup prepa
ration takes right hold of a cough and
gives almost immediate relief, ft loos
ens the dry, hoarse or tight cough in a
way that 13 really remarkable. Also
quickly heals the inllamed membranes
which accompany a painful cough, and
ftops the formation of phlegm in the
throat 2nd bronchial tubes, thus ending
the persistent loose cough. Excellent for
bronchitis, spasmodic croup and winter
coughs. Keeps perfectly and tastes good
children like it.
PinPY il a tnonii 1 on-? TicrVilTT iiniimn.
trated compound of genuine Sorway pine
extract, rich in guaiacol, which is so
healing to the membranes.
To avoid disappointment, ask your
druggist for "2 ounces of Pinex," do
not accept anything else. A guarantee
of absolute satisfaction, or money prompt
Iv refunded goes with this preparation.
i he X'mcx. Co., x l. Av ajne, ino
BT LEONE CASS BAER.
THE latest thing that has happened
to us is Ciccolinl. Tou pronounce
It "chick-o-leeny," treading hard
on the last syllable. Be is a manly look
ing chap one can rave over like &
pretty woman.
Vaudeville permits devotees of music
to get a little nearer their deities, to
gather in as a precious possession their
share of a smile. As long as an artist
is performing in the opera there is a
veil of mystery about him, he seems
a being from another world. Vaude
ville brings him close to us, where we
can exhibit an intimate Interest.
A beautiful voice is the most glorious
of all the gifts that distinguish the
holy spirit of man from the mute and
meek animals; it is the proof positive
of the divine in us. That is why even
cynics and skeptics regard a beautiful
voice as something sacred.
These thoughts came trooping while
I listened in the wings yesterday at
the Orpheum to CIccolini trilling his
last golden note.
He Is Only 27.
He is only 27 and for seven years
he has been in grand opera. The fire
of his race and youth flash from his
dark eyes and smiling face. The pic
ture of the handsome devil-may-care
Ciccolinl dashing out on the Orpheum
stage, clad in his romantic Chauncey
Olcottish coat and ruffles and boots,
to sing clear to the rafters in his su
perb tenor, is going to worry the life
out of some of our best little tired
business men with fat bay windows and
thinniag hair.
For how can a T. B. man rush around
and compete with this sort of thing?
The advent of Ciccolinl in our midst
even fcr one week can complicate the
politics of many a flat. So very few
of our well-known husbands would ap
pear at their best in lace ruffles at
throat and wrists, a splendid gray
long coat and smart boots. I predict
that Ciccolinl is liable to makj mati
nee girls out of all sorts of women.
War Brings Singer.
He has been in America just two
years and he came over because the
war chopped up a grand tour he had
arranged with Melba and Kubellk. He
went into vaudeville after his grand
REDS SHOW LOT OF PEP
RAW Mil AT" IS BATTLE CRY OS"
CIXCISXAT1 JiATIOSALS.
BUI Rodcera, Foremost in Instilling
Life In Team. Sure of Place at
Least as Utility Infieldcr.
SHREVEPORT. La.. March 21. (Spe
cial.) With the new battle cry of
"raw meat" resounding over the spa
cious lot at the fair grounds, the Cin
cinnati Reds are attacking their dally
workouts with pecks of pepper and
gallons of good old ginger. Lam,e. and
sore as many of the boys are through
their efforts, there is no lagging, and
every man goes through two sessions
without faltering. The raw meat slo
gan has been adopted unanimously by
the team as an indication of what it
feeds on, so the Cubs, Braves and other
innocent young teams may know what
is coming to them.
It originated with Bill Rodgers, for
mer captain of the Portland Pacific
Coast League team, whose favorite
diet is a few pounds of steak which
has never been near the tireless cooker.
Bill interested Mollwitz in his new
menu, and now Moll is a confirmed de
vourer of red meat Others are falling
into line, and the fires are dying out
in the kitchens of the Hotel Youree,
where the boys are stopping.
Whether it is the new bill of fare
or just the natural infusion of pepper,
the fact remains that the Red prac
tice this Spring is something worth
going a long way to observe. There is
more of the good old pep than has
ever been seen at a Red camp. The
boys are on the field half an hour be
fore time for reporting both morning
and afternoon, and they have to be
driven off by Manager Herzog, who is
himself the life of the party. If am
bition and spirit are any good in base
ball, the Reds are likely to be heard
from long before the season is over.
Morning and afternoon sessions al
ways conclude with 15 minutes of the
fastest kind of work put up by the in
fielders. Bill Rodgers is being tried
both at short and second base, which
means that he will surely be retained
on the club, whether he makes the reg
ular second base position or not. When
Rodgers plays short Billy Loudeh,' who
handles himself well, goes to second.
MRS. LOCKHART DIES, 89
FIRST WHITE WOMAN . IX COOS
LIVED AMONG INDIANS.
Home Several Times Tbrtstesadssd
Abandoned to Reds in Early Days.
Oregon Reached in 1853.
MAHSHFIELD, Or., March 21. (Spe
cial.) Mrs. Esther M. Lockhart.- the
first white woman in Coos County,
died today, aged 89. In 1853 she and
her husband settled at Empire; amid
surrounding Indian tribes. The family
fled from the homestead several times
to escape the Indians.
Mrs. Lockhart drove a team of oxen
part way across the continent when
she and Mr. Lockhart emigrated from
the' East. At first they -lived near
Oregon City, on reaching Oregon,' later
moving to Roseburg and in the early
aOs to Coos Bay. -
The living children are . Herbert
Lockhart, of Marshfield: Mrs. Henry
Sengstachen, of Marshfield: Mrs. Ella
C. Merrill, of Oakland, and Mrs. Er
nest Pollexfsen. of San Francisco. Mrs.
Lockhart was identified with the early
history of the county and had a very
retentive memory, being able to relate
all the interesting events of Indian
war times.
EUGENE ASKS JACK RENFRO
Man Held in Portland Said to Have
liaised Check From $15 to $50.
EUGENE, Or., March 21. (Special.)
Jack Renfro, arrested in Portland, is
wanted in this city for raising a check.
He is charged with having changed a
check for $15.90 to read $50.90 and with
having cashed it at a Eugene bank.
The check was drawn on the First
Xational Bank, where it was refused
when it came through the clearing
house, because it had evidently been
changed. Renfro formerly lived in
Corvallis. Renfro Is being" held in Port
land for the present as a witness in
another cas
Abatement Law Enforced.
TACOMA, March 21. The first abate
ment proceedings in Pierce County un
der the new prohibition law were be
gun yesterday, when Judge M. L. Clif
ford ordered the Maple Leaf Hotel,
!T7
1
Ciccolinl, Great Italian Tenor,
Singing at Orpheoni This Week.
opera engagements ended for, frankly,
the big money that an artist receives.
And few grand opera singers are able
to stand the two-a-day and the con
stant travel and climatic changes. But
Ciccolinl is, and he is absolutely happy
on this tour.
It is all new to him. this Western
country,-and he asks questions about
it like an eager school boy. He has
mastered the intricacies of our lan
guage and loves to speak it. He isn't
married and he thinks American girls
are smart and they interest him.
He loathes ragtime and has refused
big money to incorporate even one
tune in his repertoire. "Ah," he sighs,
"who would sing 'Baby looka here,
looka here" when za lofely Celeste
"Aida" could be sung?"
"Yen." sez I, "but we all can't
warble Celeste 'Aida.' "
1546 Broadway, closed and boarded up.
P. B. Millisack. the proprietor, had
been arrested twice for selling liquor.
-4
WINING ACTIVITY NOTED
Surveys Being Made for Dredges in
Josephine County.
GRANTS PASS. Or.. March 21. (Spe
cial.) That the Illinois Valley. 40
miles from Grants Pass, on the line
of the California & Oregon Coast Rail
road, is to be the scene of the greatest
activity of placer gold mining by
means of gigantic dredgers in the
Northwest is evident from the great
amount of land being prospected at
the present time with the view to the
installation of dredgers.
The Harris property near Takilma,
embracing 280 acres of the richest
placer lands in Josephine County at
the mouth of Allen Gulch, a tributary
of the east fork of the Illinois River,
and a noted producer of placer gold in
the early mining history of this
county, has been optioned to a com
pany of San Francisco capitalists who
will at once undertake an extensive
survey and prospect of the ground pre
liminary to the installation of a mod
ern dredger.
MORE WOMEN REGISTERING
Aggregate in Linn Connty 4 92 8 With
Republicans Far in Lead.
ALBANY, Or., March 21. (Special.)
Linn County women are registering
more rapidly. Last week 681 voters
registered in this county, making the
largest week's registration since the
books opened, and 323 of them were
women. It is the first week since reg
istration began when the number of
women was anywhere near the number
of men registering.
The total registration of Linn County
thus far is 4928, and of this number
3175 are men and 1753 women. Repub
licans continue to lead the Democrats
almost two to one, with a registration
of 2920 to 1549. Other parties are rep
resented as follows: Prohibition, 157;
Socialist, 103; Progressive, 15; Inde
pendent, 153; refused to five affilia
tions, 26; miscellaneous, 5.
FATHER MAKESS0N MASON
Sbedd Lodge Initiates Third Genera-
tion of One Family.
ALBANY. Or., March 21. (Special.)
With Masons from Albany, Browns
ville and. Tangent attending, Shedd
Lodge No. 79, of Shedd, last Saturday
night . conducted a ceremony, probably
without a parallel in this state. It
initiated a representative of the third
generation of a family all of whom
were initiated in that lodge.
John A. Cornett. 21. was the candi
date. His grandfather. J. B. Cornett,
was the first man initiated in this lodge
after it was organizi in 1884, and his
father, John B. Cornett, was initiated
six- years later.
A feature of the ceremony was that
the' young man's' father conferred the
degree, and old friends of the family
took most, of the parts in the work.
POSTMASTER FOR 13 YEARS
Independence Official Ttetires After
Making Office Second Class.
INDEPENDENCE. Or., March 21.
(Special.) M. E. Merwin, who has been
retired from th office of postmaster
in this city, has been instrumental in
raising this office to an office of the
second class.
He received his appointment from
Roosevelt in November, 1902, being con
tinuously in office since that time, 13
years.
Mr. Merwin formerly was a farmer,
but had had some experience in the
postoffice under his father and others.
He used to stamp letters in this same
office under his father in 1866. when
his father's salary was only $35 per
month.
Poison Comes From Paring Corn.
RIDGEFIELD. Wash., March 21.
(Special.) As a result of an infection
from a knife used in removing a corn,
G. Keller, a rancher residing in the
German settlement a few miles south
east of here; is suffering from blood
poison in one of the toes on his right
foot.
North Yakima Capital Takes Bonds.
NORTH YAKIMA. Wash., March 21.
(Special.) An issue of $35,000 bonds
of the Yakima County Horticultural
Union, for erection of a cold-storage
warehouse, has been absorbed by local
capital. The building is to be com
pleted in time to handle the 1916 crop.
Pro
in POWER GIVEN PRESIDENT
Army Can Be Increased to 225,000
Without Appeal to Congress in
Emergency Senate to Be
gin Work at Once.
WASHINGTON, March 21. Although
rapid progress was made in the House
today with the Hay Army increase bill,
it was quite impossible to reach a
vote before adjournment. It may be
passed tomorrow, "Qalendar Wednes
day" having been set aside to permit
its uninterrupted consideration.
In the Senate, Chairman Chamberlain
of the military committee, now plans
to call up his Army bill tomorrow. He
had expected the House bill to be com
pleted today and was waiting for it.
but concluded tonight that time would
bo saved by attempting to take up the
Senate measure at once.
Reserve Provisions Adopted.
Several important amendments were
made to the Hay bill in the course of
the day. With one exception they were
approved by Chairman Hay, of the
military committee. After defeating a
proposal by Representative Kahn.
ranking minority member of the com
mittee, to permit efficient regular
soldiers to be discharged into the
reserve in one year on recommenda
tion of their commanders, or in two
years on their own motion, the House
reversed its action and put through
a similar amendment by Representa
tive Gardner, Republican, of Massa
chusetts, over Representative Hay's op
position. The Senate bill contains such
a provision.
The most important amendment was
the insertion of the reserve officers'
training scheme proposed by Represen
tative Gard, of Ohio, Democrat, which
already has been included in the Senate
bill. It provides that military instruc
tors be supplied by the War Depart
ment to any civil educational institu
tion with an available student body of
100 or more and where a military
course, satisfactory to the War De1
partment, is established. A sufficient
number of graduates would be desig
nated for six months' additional train
ing for the regular Army to maintain
a corps of 50,000 reserve officers.
President's Authority Extended.
Another amendment accepted, offered
by Representative Kahn, would permit
the President to order out the regular
Army reserve without going to Con
gress for authority. The contemplated
strength of the reserve is 60,000 and,
as the bill now stands, the President
could increase the regular Army from
its peace strength of 140,000 to a
strength of 230,000 by executive order
if war seemed imminent.
The last amendment adopted was
offered by Representative Tilson, Re
publican, of Connecticut, a member of
the committee. It would authorize the
War Department to have constructed
all the tools and fixtures necessary to
convert private munitions plants for
the manufacture of Army rifles, can
non and ammunition. The fixtures
would be stored by the Government in
peace times, but could be added to the
machines of commercial plants in a
few days, mobilizing the whole war
machinery industry of the country be
hind, the fighting lines. Details of
the plan will be worked out in the
Army appropriation bill to be con
sidered later. It has been estimated,
however, that the fixtures alone would
cost $15,000,000 or more.
IDAHO CHANGES PENDING
HEAD OF" TIUIMG SCHOOL AT ST.
A.VTIIOW TO STEP OUT.
Dr. J. W. Given, of Orofino Asylum,
Said to Be Ready to Leave, and
H. J. Rossi's Term Ends Soon.
BOISE. Idaho, March 21. (Special.)
There-will be two important changes
in state institutions in Idaho within a
short time, it has been learned on ex
cellent authority. J. T. Humphries, of
the Industrial Training School at St.
Anthony, already has or shortly will
resign, and Dr. J. W. Givens. medical
superintendent of the North . Idaho
Asylum at Orofino, it is understood,
will step aside as head of that institu
tion. Dr. E. O. Sisson, Commissioner
of Education, is out of the city and
could not be -reached. It is understood
that Superintendent Humphries has
placed his resignation in Dr. Sisson's
hands and that on hie recent trip east
Idaho s Commissioner of Education has
been looking about for a possible suc
cessor qualified, to take the important
post.
Action is expected in the St, An
thony school matter during the April
meeting of the State Board of Educa
tion. The Orofino Asylum matter will
come to a head the latter part of the
present week, it is said.
Herman J. Rossi, president of the
State Board of Education, will be suc
ceeded shortly by an appointee of
Governor Alexander. His commission
expires April 10. He has served on the
boara since its creation.
CENTRALIA OWNS RELIC
Fort Borst Removed to City Prop
erty and Committee Discharged.
CENTRALIA, Wash.. March 21.
(Special.) Old Fort Borst. erected on
the banks of the Chehalis River in
1856, now rests on city property just
west of the city limits. At the noon
luncheon of the Commercial Club yes
terday the club's blockhouse commit
tee, composed of William Christensen,
Fred Thomas and V. B. Keir, rendered
its report and was discharged with a
vote of thanks. This committee en
gineered the removal of the old fort,
which it is expected will prove a valu
able asset to the city in future years
as a historic relic. Henry Ward, one
of the builders of the fort, was pres
ent at the luncheon yesterday.
Judge A. E. Rice, of the Lewis
County Superior Court, and A. J. Milem
were speakers at the luncneon.
CASTOR I A
) For Infants and Children.
TTiJ Kind Yea Have Always Bought
Boars tbo
Eignaturoof
Officers' Training Plan
vides for Instruction
Qualified Schools.
SpriiigSuiflO,'30
J Hafc$2aiid$3
HOTEL BURNS; OFJE DIES
HOUSE AT HANDLE VALUED AT
3000 IS TOTAL LOSS.
Victim Js Nearby Farmer Named
Metcalf, Bachelor, Who Waa Stop
ping There for the rVlsrht
CHEHALIS. Wash.. March 2L (Spe
cial.) The Randle Hotel at Randle in
Eastern Lewis County was totally de
stroyed by fire about midnight last
night.
S. R. Metcalf, a farmer living near
Randle who was stopping at the hotel
overnight, was burned to death. Mr.
Metcalf was unmarried.
A short time ago the hotel was sold
to Crockett Christian, Matt Randle
being the former owner.
The origin of the fire is not known.
The contents of the building were all
destroyed, not even clothing being
saved.
The loss is about J3000, covered by
insurance.
ORE WILL BE TESTED
Aberdeen
Men
Think They Have
Manganese Deposit.
ABERDEEN, Wash., March 21. (Spe
cial.) With manganese ore prices
shooting skyward because of the heavy
demand for steel County Commissioner
Phil S. Locke and J. S. Waugh, will test
out a ton or two of what they believe
is manganese ore which was taken
from claims they hold near Lake
Quiniault.
When the claims were staked a year
ago manganese was selling at from $14
to $15 a ton, but has advanced to sev
eral times this price.
Rldgefield to Have Seven Graduates.
RJDGEFIELD, Wash., March 20.
(Special.) The Ridgefield High School
will graduate seven at the end of the
present term, six boys and one girl, as
follows: Miss Myrtle Funkhouser,
Wallace Keim, Frank Keith, Claude
Potter, Eugene Berger, George Zahn
The Very Latest
Silk Novelty Skirts
We believe we are showing the
prettiest line of dress skirts in
the city. They are wide awning
stripes in black and gray taffeta,
blue and green striped effects,
black and white checks, and all
black, extremely wide, draped
styles. You will simply have to
have one of these as soon as you
see them. Drop in today; if convenient.
Splendid Line
Waists
A Charge Account Your Privilege
Washington
IIIIIIIISIIM
rr
5
MomsonatroujTO
and Warren Snook. There are over 35
pupils in the high school this year, and
about 253 in all branches.
VIOLATORS KILL TEN DEER
Investigation In Baker District Will
Be Made at Once.
BAKER. Or.. March 21. (Special.)
That ten deer are reported to have been
killed within the past week in the
Burnt River section is the statement of
Assistant Game Warden Chapman, who
is in Baker for a few days on official
business. There is no motive apparent
for the killing, as the animals, having
just passed through a hard Winter, are
useless for food. An investigation will
be made at once.
Mr. Chapman made a trip of inspec
tion on the sloughs of the Powder River
yesterday and reports that an unusually
large amount of catfishing is being
done. He believes that the major por
tion of the anglers are without licenses,
and this phase of the matter is to be
investigated at once.
ROAD IMEARS COMPLETION
Route Into Little Kalama Country
Will Soon Be Open.
WOODLAND. Wash., March 21.
(Special.) Harvey Riker, of the Little
Kalama country, seven miles north of
Woodland, foreman on the new road
from that section into Woodland, re
ports that in a short time the road will
be in shape for traffic. A large part
of the grading will be completed in a
few days.
Completion of this project means
much to the settlers of that section,
many of whom are homesteaders, as
it will reduce the grade over the sum
mit by 400 feet, and therefore avoid
much of the snow that interfered with
Winter travel.
lloquiam Man Slated for Bench."
HOQUIAM, Wash.. March 21. (Spe
cial.) According to information re
ceived here from Olympia. Governor
Lister will appoint George D. Abel, of
this city, as judge of the Grays Harbor
County Superior Court to succeed the
late Mason Irwin. It is understood the
in
New Georgette
Just In
Street at Tenth
Service
e practise
it -more than
we preach it.
appointment is to be made Saturday.
Mr. Abel is a brother of W. H. Abel,
of Montesano, and A. M. Abel,-of Aber
deen. DRESS WARM AND
KEEP FEET DRY
Tells Rheumatism Sufferers to
Take Salts and Get Rid
of Uric Acid.
Rheumatism is no respecter of age,
sex, color or rank. If not the most
dangerous of human afflictions it ia
one of the most painful. Those subject
to rheumatism should eat less meat,
dress as warmly as possible, avoid any
undue exposure and, above all, drink
lots of pure water.
Rheumatism is caused by uric acid
which is generated in the bowels and
absorbed into the blood. It is the func
tion of the kidneys to filter this acid
from the blood and cast it out in the
urine; the pores of the skin are also
a means of freeing the blood of this
impurity. In damp and chilly, cold
weather the skin pores are closed thus
forcing the kidneys to do double work,
they become weak and sluggish and
fail to eliminate this urio acid which
keeps accumulating and circulating
through the system, eventually set
tling in the joints and muscles caus
ing stiffness, soreness and pain called
rheumatism.
At the first twinge of rheumatism
get from any pharmacy about four
ounces of Jad Salts; put a tablespoon
ful in a glass of water and drink be
fore breakfast each morning for a
week. This is said to eliminate urio .
acid by stimulating the kidneys to nor
mal action, thus ridding' the blood of
these impurities.
Jad Salts is inexpensive, harmless)
and is made from the acid of grapes
and lemon Juice, combined with lithla
and is used with excellent results by
thousands of folks who are subject to
rheumatism. Here you have a pleas
ant, effervescent lithia-water drink
which overcomes uric acid and Is bene
ficial to your kidneys as well. Adv. .
DARKENS YOUR
GRAY HAIR
Q-Ban Hair Restorer, No Dye,
Surest and Only Harmless
Hair Color Restorer
Known.
Actually does so you can see It with
your own eyes turn every gray,
streaked with gray, prematurely gray,
or faded hair In your head beautifully
dark after a few applications of Q
Ban Hair Color Restorer to hair and
scalp. Every strand of your hair,
whether gray or not, becomes evenly
dark, soft, flossy, fluffy, full of life and
health, full and heavy and fascinat
ing, just as you like to have your hair
appear, and the entire head of hair is
so beautifully and evenly darkened no
one could suspect you had applied Q
Ban. It Is absolutely harmless, and no
dye, yet not even a trace of gray shows
after applying Q-Ban. Give it a trial.
Sold on a money-back; guarantee, 60c
for a big seven-ounce bottle, at Hunt
ley's Drug Store, Portland. Out-of-town
people supplied by mail.
Pimples Disappear
There is one remedy that seldom
fails to clear away all pimples, black
heads and skin eruptions and that
makes the skin soft, clear and healthy.
Any druggist can supply you with
Zemo, which generally overcomes all
skin diseases. Acne, eczema, itch, pim
ples, rashes, blackheads in most cases
give way to zemo. Frequently, minor
blemishes disappear ' overnight. Itch
ing usually -tops instantly. Zemo is
safe, clean, easy to use and dependable.
It costs only 25c; an extra large bottle.
$1.00. It will not stain, is not greasy
or sticky and is positively safe for ten
der, sensitive skins.
Zemo, Cleveland.
W