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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (June 17, 1919)
14 TIIE 3IOKXIXG OREGOXIAX, TUESDAY, JT7XE IT, 1919. llHSippiffllll ,J lliiii!!ljiiiii!!lllijlliHlHi!! NllllJliM - - i .11 i in IJLIMTIMW MWWIlMlfll"1rT I' 1 111 VL STARTS OUT WELL - 0 0 -150 Members of Rotary Club - Jake Field for Campaign. REPORTS HEARD THIS NOON Women's Committee and Portland Chapter or Red Cross Will Ren der All Possible Assistance. With 150 member of the Portland Tiotary club in the field, the member hip drive for the Boy Scouts opened here yesterday. The drive is being con ducted all over the United States. through the co-operation of the Rotary ' dubs, and the local organization hopes to make a record that will stand with the very best. First reports of the success of the - drive yesterday will be made this noon at a luncheon of the club. While no check of the work was made last even ing. H. C- Ewing. head of the city mem bership drive, was confident that ex cellent results had been' accomplished - for the first day. The women's committee, tinder Mrs. ' Sarah K- Evans, also started its work yesterday and will have reports to - snake today. The effort Is being; made at this time to secure associate members of the - boy scouts, grown-ups who believe in the organization and are willing to . back it up. The goal for the entire ' I'nlted States is 1.000.000 associate members, and Portland's quota is 3000. ' while that of the entire state is 5800. membership of $1 a year is charged. Red Creea .Members Helping. . While the American Ked Cross as an organization Is not entering into the " Boy Scout campaign, every possible as sistance is being provided the Boy Scouts in the progres of their eam- -paign by the Portland chapter and its executives. "We have to offer a most enthu siastic indorsement of the Boy Scout l.lea and our enthusiastic desire to have their work extended and made of even greater benefit to the country than it has heretofore been.' said R. V. Holder, volunteer general manager of the American Red Cross. "Our Red Cross records can never be gin to show the marked assistance of the Boy Scouts. We have called on them often and never called in vain. -' 1ike the little Trojans they are. the scouts nave done tneir parr. ana aone It nobly behind the lines. Other Saecessea Ttoted. "In two big war drives of the Amerl- can Red Cross and in the two member ship drives, the Boy Scouts were an ever-present factor. Maybe their work was not the most pleasant, but it was -done, and done well. Hundreds, if not -thousands, of dollars was saved the Hed Cross by the manner the scouts ' stuck stickers on automobiles, carried ' posters and cards. And far better than .-the money-saving is the fact that the work was done thoroughly. "To the Boy Scouts must be given a great deal of credit for the last Red Cross clothing drive. The Scouts ac tually del'vered Into Portland homes -4i.000 handbills advertising the drive. . They helped to make a success by ad- - verlislng Oaks Ked Cross day. They helped with the theater benefits, and all the time they maintained their scout Ideals. They were always cheerful and always willing. "The American Red Cross earnestly hones the Boy Scout campaign will be a -auccess. : , U( mm ! fc- ; ' 's&ll : lit wt - , . aMBtftlKiTu m aianiirirfrtrnntTIi' 'ifn'riiiiliiilfrhrr"''' lYinv.iti'ffiiiTrn'iTniWttfrftrrtnrrtfriWnrri Scene from "Oh, Yen 'Women, clever a fter-the-war comedy starring Louise Huff and Ernest Trnex, this week' attraction at the Peoples theater. was exceedingly anxious to do it. Helen Ferguson is his leading lady and It is under direction of Paul Scardon, assist ed by Tenny Wright. TODAY'S FILM FEATURES. Liberty Nazimova, "The Red Lantern." Majestic Mable Normand, "The Pest"; Victory Rose Festival pictures. Columbia Fatty Arbuckle, "A Desert Hero": Elmo Lincoln, "Elmo, the Great." Peoples Louise Huff and Ernest Truer, "Oh. You Women." Shir Alice Joyce, "The Third Degree." Sunset Florence Reed, "Wives of Men." Globe Elsie Ferguson, "His Pa risian Wife." Circle Private Peat, "Himself." EDUCATOR TO LEAVE IDAHO Mrs. Anna Tannchlll Accepts Posi tion in Wisconsin. LEWISTON. Idaho. June 1. (Spe cial.) Mrs. Anna W. Tannehtll, who was dean of women in Lewlston nor mal school several years ago. has ac cepted the position of non-resident dean of women In Beloit college, Wis consin, and will leave In August with her mother to assume her new duties. Melvin W. Brannon. former president of the University of Idaho, left this state two years ago to become presi dent of Feloit college. C. L. Clarke, formerly head of the department of education In lewlston normal school, will take the headship rf the education department in Beloit next fall. HEARTBURN or heaviness after meals are most an noying manifestations of acid-dyspepsia. ICIF10IDS pleasant to take, neutralize acidity and help restore normal digestion. ADS BT SCOTT B0WKH MAKERS OF SCOTTS EMULS10R -IE current Issue of Kinoprams, al though It contains new features, includes one that should arouse great Interest among those who book this news weekly. It Is designated on this issue as "The sweetest place In Ohio." It picturises a bee farm at Me dina, Ohio, known as the biggest honey plant in the world. This statement in itself does scant justice to the picture. What gives it unusual Interest is the photopraphing of bees from this, farm, the method of cultivation and the fact that these wonderful little insects com mand in the market as high as $100 each. It would seem that our credulity is strained almost to the breaking point of being Informed that a busy little bee sells for such a price. Another feature has to do with Lieu tenant Lock lea r, the acrobatic aviator, who jumps while thousands of feet in the air from one plane to another and does other stunts of a combination of reckless bravery and athletic ability. The photography is so clear and per fect that it would seem in looking at the picture you were in another aero plane close by. A certain Londoner well known in social and political economy circles throughout Kngland recently toured the United States. A brief stay in California afforded the intellectual one the pleasure of visiting with Charlie Chaplin m hts Hollywood studio. Dur ing the course of an earnest conversa tion the comedian remarked upon the cleverness of the American people. "Clever, you say." remarked the pro fessor. "Well, being a man of studious Inclination and observing eye. I quite agree with you, Mr. Chaplin. Why, the American is so deucedly clev-r he can safely keep his trousers up vwthout a single sign of the bally braces." After some delay In completing the scenario for "Love or Fame." Elaine Hammerstein finally has started work on her first production for Selznlck. Harry Morey has started production of a special feature. Charles Klein's "The Gamblers." the famous stage play. Vitagraph has controlled the rights of this story for some time and Mr. Morey derson. Two years ago a young girl In com pany with 15 or 20 other young ladies set out to the World studio at Fort Lee to secure a position in the "pic tores." The earnestness in which she made her appeal to the casting director won for Dorothy Green a position as an extra girl. It was apparent to everyone who was in this picture that Dorothy was determined to get on. She never lost an opportunity to edge up in the very front row, and every now and then had to be cautioned by the di rector not to get between the star and the camera. Finally, losing his pa tience, she was discharged on account of her insistence on starring herself. As she left the studio lot, she turned to the man who told her she was through: "I am coming back some day, and when Z do it will be as a star." It was with a great deal of satisfac tion that Miss Green signed a contract to be starred by World pictures last week. and. when she appeared at the studio on Monday morning ready to go to work, she turned to the casting director and said: "You don't remem ber me, do you?" and in replying in the negative. Miss Green continued. "You fired me once, and I told you I would come back as a star." And she did. Her first picture will be "The American Way." John M. Stahl, director of Florence Reed's latest successes, last of which was "A Woman Under Oath," has signed with the American Cinema cor poration to direct a series of pictures featuring Mo Hie- King, first of which is Greater Than Love." Vic Potel of "Slippery Slim" comedy fame will have a humorous role in The Petal on the Current," Mary Mac- Larens newest starring venicie, wnicn being made from Fannie Hurst's well-known Cosmopolitan magazine story, under the direction of Tod Browning. Oi $Qr tk8 ei n 0RNPR0DUCXSREFININ6 CO. '-I::-.'''V.-r CfN OFFICES .JEW YORK, U-AA. :...-. ..'.i'-.'V-Tr"mAw Why Mazola Saves Money ia . Cooking and Makes Food Better ANE of the most important things Mazda does v for cooking is to take the place of butter. In frying or shortening it gives the finest results. . And, pound for pound, it costs considerably less. Foods cooked with Mazola, or in which Mazola is used, are wholesome, healthful, very easy to digest Use to less Mazola for shortening than butter or lard. In frying, use Mazola over and over again to the last drop it never absorbs odors or flavors.. No smoking no soggy cooking. FREE Won Jerfnl Cook BooL Write today for it. CORN PRODUCTS REFINING COMPANY P.O. Box 161 New York LABOR LEVELS GUNS ON PORTLAND LAWYER Lee Roy Keley Censured in Council Resolution.. Al Santell Is directing the new Neal Burns and Josephine Hill comedy enti tled "Babies Is Babies." A sextet of infants are used in the production three Caucasians, two pickaninnies and one slant-eyed Japanese babe. ... Those who enjoyed Bert Lytell In "The Spender" will be eager to see this star In another offering by the same author. Frederick Orin Bartlett. The name of this story Is "The L.ion'8 Den." and it revolves around the activities of a young clergyman to uplift the youth of a small town, hindered by the obstacles of a close-fisted congrega tion. In this gripping story of the young minister's silent fight against unseeing odds. Mr. Lytell has the best support in Alice Lake. Josephine Kil gour, Edward J. Connelly, Augustus Phillips. Howard Crampton, Seymour Itose, Alice Xowland and Mother An- VILLA UNLIKE ANGELES PHYSICAL LAW THAT OPPO SITES ATTRACT APPLIES. Wash That Itch Away W kaew of do offerer tnm Ecaemft wh ercr otwd tb timpto wmso D. D. D. mmv am sot iwi iniBmiiBii ij uui wag 4erfoJIy etlia, cool KWtttM that matt wbea tb Itch la takes away. Thta aoeth fac wmati ptoctntM tbo poros, ffivlaff Instant rolief from tbo most distrvaain km dm in Ask a boat It today. ae.tttcaadfl.oa. E2XIDXID). EL lotion ibr Skin Disease told by Th Owl Drug; co. and Skldmor. Drur Co. Got Good Results. This honest, straichtforward letter from a woman who hits suffered should l hee1d by all afriti-ted with back ;he. rheumatic pains, sore muscles, awful lirrd feeling and other symptoms cl kidney and bladder trouble: "I have cot surh good results from Foley Kld T.y 1111. that 1 can sleep much better and the patn In my back and sides is a Food lot better. I am going to keep on taking them." Sirs. Charles Oray. 170 S xih street. Detroit, Mich. Sold cvery wiiere. Adv. Mexican Leaders, Despite Great Differences In Charncter, Seem Seem DcvoU-d to Each Other. JUAREZ. M. The physical law that opposites attract each other seems to apply to Francisco Villa and Felipe Angeles, the two leading Mexican rebel commanders. Villa rough, impulsive and given to flashes of red temper is as devoted to Angeles, the suave, well bred and highly educated, as if they were blood brothers. W-hen Angeles left New York last November "to Join Villa many of his friends on the border wondered at his folly in leaving a com fortable hotel to take the field with the most rough-and-ready character in Mexico. The two leaders are as unlike as the poles and yet each Is Uie com plement of the other and the result of their union under a rebel flag was al most instantly apparent when Villa ceased killing prisoners and civilians, treated Americans captured by his forces with more consideration and re frained from destroying property wan tonly. General Angeles was graduated from the Chapultepec military academy of Mexico as an artillery officer and stud ied at St. Cyr In France under master artillerists. Ha was an observer at many Kuropean maneuvers and wrote many pamphlets on artillery fire. He Joined the Madero revolution and. la ter tne Constitutionalist movement un der Carrama. When Villa brokewith Carranxa the prospect of action with Villa lured Angeles to his side and to gether they conducted an aggressive campaign In the north which has such a disastrous ending at -the battle of Celaya. After this Angeles deserted Villa, bought a dairy in the El Taso valley and announced his intention of retiring from Mexican military and po litical affairs. When the European war broke out he went to New York as In spector of shells for the French govern ment and quit this to rejoin Villa In Mexico. Even In the field Angeles shaves daily, wears clean linen and carries a toilet kit on an extra pack mule. Villa prefers a flannel shirt and a soft col lar to starched linen, shaves at rare in tervals when In the field and wears "hand-me-down" suits and square-toed shoes. To an American held prisoner In Vil la's camp General Angeles cofided that Villa had almost ruined his chances of ever regaining the good will of Amer icans by his treatment of native and foreign prisoners and that he. Angeles I "How do yon like your new minis has persuaded Villa that to observe' the I ter?" "Very well. But then I hardly rules of civilised warfare was to make I know him well enough as yet to find friends for him and for this cause in 1 fault with him." Detroit Free Tress. the United States. The only time Villa has lapsed from this program was at Parral where he executed six Chinese betause he found them armed, and the three Herreras. against whom he had a grudge of long standing. To another American prisoner Villa extended a blanket Invitation to anv Americans who wished to visit him in his rebel camps in the field. To date no one has accepted this invitation. BORDER SERVICE ATTRACTS Young Americans Like to Ride, Shoot and Live In the Open. MARFA. Tex. Mexcan border service is attractive to young Americans who like to ride, shoot and live In the open. To prove that the lure of being "riders of the purple aage" is strong for his men. Colonel George T. Langhorne, com manding the Big Bend district of Texas. quotes figures to show that 467 of his men had re-enlisted since the recruiting order was Issued in an effort to retain border veterans in the cavalry serv. ice. During the first month the re cruiting order was in effect 350 men re-enlisted and the total enlistments for a second or third tour of duty in the Big Bend are more than 18 Dor cent of the total strength of the border troops In this district. On the outpost at Ruidosa. miles from the nearest habitation, 90 per cent of troop M. 8th cavalry, re-enlisted. The machine-gun troop showed the highest percentage with 29 re-enlistments. Troop I was a close second with 28 re- enlistments. Colonel Langhorne con siders the showing of his recruiting campaign all the more remarkable from the fact that the district command has been stationed In the Big Bend district, away from a large city, almost two years. This, he says, .explains the eagnerness for re-enlistment on the part of the men. The morale is higher and the spirit of regimental loyalty more intense because the men are thrown together more in the wilds, are not distracted from their military du ties by the attractions of a large city nearby and come In closer and more personal contact with the officers com manding them. This explains why the men voted almost as a unit to remain in the Big Bend rather than transfer to Fort Bliss, Colonel Langhorne added. UNFAIR METHODS CHARGED Action in Handling Case for Mrs. A. G. Dibbern Spurs. Steam fitters to Protest. Russell makes the act a success all round. Valmont and Jacques in a Belgian American or American-Belgian song act introduce some high-class music and singing in a novel and pleasing way. Hall and Guilda, dancers par excel lence, open the bill. The girl is an ex pert toe dancer and the man is light of foot. Music and pictures complete the bill. Scathing censure for his alleged at tempt to collect J1600 from the widow of A. G. Dibbern, a steamfitter, who died In an accident at the Grant Smith Porter yards, is leveled at Lee Roy E. Keeley. Portland attorney, by organ ized labor of the city. Keeley is reputed to have offered his services, in the guise of a friend, at the time of the death, assuring Mrs. Dib bern that he would obtain a full settle ment from the industrial accident com mission, and it is said that he secured a contract at that time calling for a fee of 40 per cent when the insurance money should be paid. At the last meeting of tne central labor council resolutions were passed which score Keeeley mercilessly. At the same session, when tne attorney ap peared and asked the privilege or the floor, he was ordered to retire from the hall, with but two or three dissenting votes. Delegates, discussing the motion, upbraided Keeley In unmistakable terms. , We believe." read the resolutions, "that any member of the legal frater nity who takes advantage of such a time and tries to collect on an insur ance which the said brother was and had been paying for to said commis sion, is unworthy of being classed as a friend." The steamfltters' local union, of which Dibbern was a member, also In troduced resolutions, which were in dorsed by the central labor council. The resolutions read in part: "That this organisation wishes to go on record as being opposed to any sucn tactics on the rjart of any attorney, and particularly the methods of the. said Lee Roy E. Kelley In the matter of his controversy with Mrs. uiDoern and. be it further "Resolved. That the said Lee Roy E. Kelley has shown himself to be any thing but a friend of tne laDoring class." Members of organized labor, with the steamfltters and plumbers particularly pledged to the cause, assert tnat tney will leave nothing undone to see that Mrs. Dibbern receives the full insur ance award granted by the industrial accident commission. At the Theaters. Hoquiam Well Material Arrives. HOQUIAM. Wash, June Is. (Spe cial. The road from the Northern Pacific tracks at Moclips to the site of the Standard Oil company's well was completed Saturday, and the hauling of timbers and lumber for the derrick was commenced. A car of casing for the well passed through Hoquiam Satur day, and another car with the remain der of the machinery is not far be hind it. Pantages. . JOYOUS affair, from start to fin L ish, 18 the bill at Pantages this week. Music, bright, jazzy, melodious, classical and catchy, all varieties and all good,' prevails. The headline act Is Louis Charminsky's Keen Jazzers, known as the Camp Dick Jazz Band. There are eight lively, talented feltpws brimming with life and full of ginger, who play violin, piano, cornet, clarinet, saxophone and other instruments and add song to their programme of in strumental music. The boys all wear uniforms and service stripes, and alone are worth the price of admission. Their "Wednesday, S-o-u-p" was a h it Tom Kelly, in "A Breath of Old Ire land," was a storm of applause for his songs. Jokes and stories about O'Brien and the land of Erin. His singing of "Beautiful Ohio" was also a winner. As an ebony-hued jokester and a heathen Chinee. Rucker and Winifred got a storm of encores. They are en tertainers that are genuinely funny and they have new lines and some orig inal methods of inspiring mirth. Their little argument about chop suey is a rare treat. Martha Russell, famed as a star of filmdom. Is seen in a farce-comedy en titled "Rocking the Boat." There is a great mix-up as to identity among fhe passengers of a steamship. It's fast and furious fun for a while, and one poor husband, whose life is heavily in sured, has a few bad moments when he believes his wife wishes to kill him. But all ends well, and the artistry of Miss PRETTY WIDOW ABDUCTED Attractive Woman Tells Court She Was Carried Off at Jflght in Taxi. NEW YORK, Testimony as to her acquaintance with John E. Carey, wealthy surgical instrument manufac turer, 17 Livingston Place, Manhattan, was given before Magistrate Steers in the Flatbush court, Brooklyn, by Mrs. Helen C. Waterman, an attractive young widow, 243 Sterling street, that borough. Mrs. Waterman charges Carey with burglary and abduction. The complaint charges- that Carey went to Mrs. Waterman's home early one morning and carried her forcibly to fiis apartments in Manhattan. Mrs. Waterman said that she met Carey while bathing at a popular and fashionable beach last August. It was a flirtation, she admitted. She invited Carey to her home for dinner, on the Sunday after the meeting, and he ac cepted, she testified. The witness said that she had gone to Long Beach with Carey, and ad mitted that they were in Atlantic City together, but emphatically denied that they stayed at the same hotel. She said that Carey on all his visits to her home "acted like a perfect gentle man," and that she was always a little lady." She denied with much empha eis that she had ever gone to Carey's apartment, and said that the night sye was forcibly taken there was the first time she had ever been to his home. Mrs. Waterman testified that she was 26 years old and that she was born In Boston. Her husband died on Dec. 10. 1916, at Putnam, Conn. She said she had been living in Brooklyn since last August. Mrs. Waterman admitted Carey had a key to her home but declared that he had had it made himself, and that when she found It out she had a chain put on the door to prevent any one fro mentering unless the chain were removed from the inside. She is employed as a saleswoman, she said, for a Miss Huges, on West Forty-sixth street, Manhattan. She did not state the nature of the business. I returned home from work at 6:30 o'clock, and did not leave the house after that," she testified, in telling of the events on the night of the alleged offense. "I retired about 10:30 o'clock. The first time I saw Carey that night was when he burst open my door, pushing me behind it." It is alleged Carey entered the house by breaking a window and climbing through. "I was petrified with fear and stood there," she stated. "He tore out of the room into the hall and I rushed into the hall and took the burglar chain off the door and ran into the street. I ran along the street toward Nostrand avenue and met no one. I was confused, but as I rememoer It, he ran after me and dragged me back in front of the house. "I was screaming and begging him to let me alone. 1 did not see the taxicab until he dragged me to it and forced me into it. I thought he had a revolver. He told me so." She was asked by Carey's attorney how far Carey dragged her. "He dragged me eight or nine doors," she replied. 'The door of the taxi cab was open and he thrust me in de spite my pleas to him and the chauf feur." In answer to another question, sho declared: "I want the court to thoroughly un derstand I fought him and shrieked at the top of my lungs. I was beg ging and pleading with Carey, but he told me it would be of no use. 1 thought it was a revolver he had pressed to my side or I would have called out or screamed when we passed lighted squares and policemen. He said that he would kill me and kill him self if I made any further outcry. "I begged the elevator man. at his apartment to telephone for help for me. but Carey passed him money. 1 was forced into his room at the point of the revolver. She was asked If she made no out cry after she found herself in the apartment. "No." she replied, "I was terrified and frightened. I felt fingers at my throat in the room, which was in dark ness, and I thought I was going to be killed." Carey's attorney asked her whether It were true that Carey had paid her expenses and given her money. "Carey never gave me a cent, as God may 6trike me.- dead," she declared. machinery. Clerks whose duty it is to analyze and record the daily operating charts and compile them into coBt rec ords are being used more and more in electrical plants. The first oil company in Kentucky of which the stockholders are all wom en, has been organized at Owensnoro. Multnomah Hotel Portland, Oregon. The Palace Beautiful One of Portland's Exceptional Hotels. TABLE D'HOTE DINNER 6 TO 8 P. M. Dinner Dancing Supper Dancing ARCADIAN GARDENS Music by Arcadian Orchestra. ELECTIRCIANS IN DEMAND Atractive Jobs Suitable for Men With Various Disabilities. T WASHINGTON. A returned soldier. whatever his disability, and whether or not he has had previous experience. will, if he is at all interested in the subject of electricity, find some Job that will be suitable for him, so great is the present demand for electrical men, says the federal Doara ior voca tional training. It is not surprising that courses in electricity either construction, maintenance or repair, are popular with disabled soldiers who come to the federal board for training. There are at present 178 men taking courses in the general subject of elec tricity, 13 are studying bench worK and 61 are preparing to be electrical en gineers. t Disabled men can fill many positions in power plants, such as switchboard operators. Bub-station operators, com bustion expertB, attendants of auxiliary COULD NOT REST Don't Experiment Witlr Catarrh; It Often Leads to Dread Consumption You Will Never Be Cured by Local Treatment With Sprays. Catarrh is a condition of the blood and cannot be cured by local applica tions of sprays and douches; this has been proven by the thousands who have vainly resorted to this method of treat ment. Catarrh should not be neglected or experimented with. The wrong treat ment Is valuable time lost, during which the disease is getting a firmer hold upon its victim, and making it more difficult for even the proper treat ment to accomplish results. Though Catarrh makes its first ap pearance In the nostrils, throat and air passages, the disease becomes more and more aggravated and finally reaches down into the lungs, and everyone rec ognizes the alarming condition that re sults when the lungs are affected. Thus Catarrh may be the forerunner of that most dreaded and hopeless of all dis eases, consumption. No local treatment affords permanent relief. Experience has taught that S. S. S. Is the one remedy which attacks the disease at its source, the blood, and produces satisfactory results in even the worst cases. Catarrh sufferers are urged to give S. S. S. a thorough trial. It is sold by all druggists. You are invited to write to the Medical De partment for expert advice as to how to treat your own case. Address Swift Specific Co., 254 Swift Laboratory, At lanta, Ga. Adv. FKEVERP! Scalp and Face Covered With Pirn pies. Disfigured. Cuticura Heals. "My scalp and face were covered with little white pimples that grew into large sore eruptions making my face and head look like one large erup tion. It itched and burned and I could not rest from the severe pain. My ace was disfigured. "I happened to see an advertisement for Cuti cura so I sent for a sample. Then I purchased more, and after using three cakes of Soap and two boxes of Oint ment I was healed." (Signed) Miss E. Rosendorn, 29 Brice Terrace, Sao Francisco, Cal., June 21, 1918. Use Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Talcum for all toilet purposes. Sunvl bet r br Utli. Adrlm port-card: "Cvtiearft, Dapt. H. Bolton." Sold everrwfam. Soap 2c Ointment 2& and 60e. Talcum 26c For Skin Tortures Don't worry about eczema or other skin troubles. You can haye a clear, healthy skin by using- Zemo, obtained at any drug store for 35c, or extra large bottle at $1.00. Zemo generally removes pimples, blackheads, blotches, eczema and ring worm and makes the skin dear and healthy. Zemo is a clean, penetrating, antiseptic liquid, neither sticky nor greasy and stains nothing. It is easily applied and costs a mere trifle for each application. It is always dependable. Tne E. W. Rose Co., Cleveland, O. Dyspeptics will do well to re member that a great many have been restored to health by Cham berlain's Tablets, and can now eat any sort of food that they crave. WOMEN AT WORK." During- the war, millions of women have been at work, in vocations into which they have never before been called in Munition Factories, Chemical Works, Metal Works, Street Railways and as Ambulance Drivers, Barbers and Elevator Girls. Undoubtedly thou sands of others have longed to servo in this way, but because of female ail ments, which had fastened upon them, were not able to do so. Women in this condition should give Lydia K. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound a trial and find health and strength, as thousands of others have so done. Adv. ORENESS in joints or mus cles, give a brisk massage with VICKS VAPOIt YOUR B0DYGUARD"-3060. aim I,20