Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, July 21, 1919, Page 6, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE MORNING OREGOXIAX, MONDAY, JULY 21. iOJO.
PLANE WITH NOTES
REACHES PORTLAND
FLYIXG WAR SALES DIRECTOR AS HE CLIMBED FROM AIRPLANE
AT EASTMORELAN'D.
TO ATGNE FOR SINS!
Comoiuioity
Plans for Restoration of
ined Regions Pushed.
Ru-
De Haviland Averages 100
Miles an Hour on Voyage.'
GREAT OPPORTUNITY SEEN
R. E. SMITH rRAVE FLIER
Socialist and Labor Leaders Hope
to Convince World of the v
Germany's Good Faith.
i Director Keeps Hand on Government
Securities Throughout Flight;
$5 0,000 Sent in Air,
6
GERMANS PREPARING
Prosp
?."i0,000 wortTi of government
certificates for delivery in
Robert K. Smith, director of
Alaska
war sales in the 12th federal reserve
district, dashed through x-ortland at
noon yesterday in his race'to get the
notes to Seattle in time to connect with
a mail steamer leaving for the north.
In his efforts to pot the notes to Seattle
and into the hands of Chairman Gra
ham of the war savings committee of
the Ftate of Washington before S
o'clock last niarht Mr. Smith made use
of the fastest transportation means on
land, water and in the air. The first
lap of the journey was completed when
he stepped from an airplane at East
moreland field at noon yesterday, hav
ing flown from Mather field, Cal. Mr.
.Smith made the trip in an army plane
with iLeutenant K. K. Neubigr at the
wheel.
Stop Made ImpoBwihJe.
Mr. Smith had originally intended
to rarrv $1,000,000 worth of the notes
r.n the trip, to distribute $950,000 worth
a.t various points alons the route and
to pet Alaska's quota of $rrt.noo worth
o .Seattle in time for the mail boat.
tVhen he started from San Francisco
by airplane the federal hank director
had the full $1,000,000 worth of notes
in his handbag, but Mr. Smith received
news at Redding, where he and the
pilot made a stop for the night, which
made it necessary to send $9.rj0,000
worth of the securities to Portland by
express. Mr. Craham. who had charge
of getting Alaska's share of the paper
from Seattle to Alaska, telegraphed
that the certificates would have to be
in Seattle by S o'clock last night, and
this made the proposed stops along the
route impossible.
Hand hac Contains 3iotes.
Fared by the necessity of speeding
up his schedule, already a fast one,
Mr. Smith gave up plans to stop at
Roseburg and other Oregon towns and
came right through from Redding to
Portland, alighting only a few min
utes at Eugeno for gas and oil. The
$ ;t 50, ooo worth of certificates he sent
to Portland from Redding by express
are to be distributed throughout the
northwest by express during the com
ln t week.
The federal director alighted in Port
land from the clouds with his yellow
handbag in his hand. In it was con
tained the $50,000 worth of new gov
prnnient notes in denominations of $100
and $1000. Mr. Smith, without so much
as removing his guggles, dashed to a
waiting automobile and was whisked
to Linnton for a -.notorboat trip to
Kalama.
t'orrretlons Q,uiekly Made.
John R. Ktheridge, director of sales
for liberty loans in this state, drove
the automobile which carried Mr, Smith
and his valuable cargo from the Kast
moreland field, where the airplane had
alighted, to Linnton, and made the trip
through the city as rapidly as the law
allowed. The "Vogler Boy," one of the
fastest motorboata on the river, was
waiting at Linnton with F. W. Vogler
at the wheel. The trip down the Wil
lamette to the Columbia and thence to
Kalama was made in short time. At the
wharf at Kalama was waiting the au
tomobile in which the notes were to be
carried on the last lap of their journey
to Seattle. K. E. Edmund, accounting
officer for the liberty loan committee
in Oregon, had charge of arrangements
for this position of the trip.
raperfi to It Ruhed.
What vessel would be waiting to
take the certificates to Alaska at 8
o'clock last night. Mr. Smith did not
know. His part of the work would be
successfully completed, he paid yester
day, if the certificates reached the
hands of Mr. Graham at Seattle before
S o'clock last night. Mr. Graham is in
charge of the transportation of the gov
ernment notes to Alaska.
Lieutenant Xeubig, who was with the
army fliers in Portland at the time of
The Rose Festival and later flew to Cal
ifornia with Milton R. Klepper, presi
dent of the Portland Aero club, as a
passenger, guided the giant De Havi
land plane wntch came down grace
fully at noon yesterday.
Plane Goes 100 Mile an Hoar.
In the race to carry the federal bank
director to Seattle In the alloted time.
Lieutenant Neubig drove his plane at
a rate yesterday which broke all pre
vious records for the trip. When Mr
Smith stepped from the airplane and
into a waiting automobile it was just
12 o'clock, and the trip from Mather
field. 535 miles, had been accomplished
in just ?'2o minutes of actual flying
time, an average of approximately 100
miles an hour.
"The first I knew of the trip was
when I received word from aerial head
quarters yesterday morning that I was
to fly to Portland that afternoon,, eaid
Lieutenant Neubig yesterday. "I tuned
up a machine and flew the 75 miles
from Mather field to San Francisco,
where I picked up Mr. Smith and the
yellow bag which contained $50,000
worth of government notes. My engine
was r.ot running well, so we flew back
to Mather field and changed planes.
Jt was just 0 1. M. when we left -Mather
i ield on our way north."
With
savings
Redding Reached In. 90 Minutes. Paul Findlay, retail merchandiser of
The trip to Redding, where a stop the California Fruit Growers Ex
was made for the night, was made in change, will address Portland grocers
minutes, the distance being 163 J and merchants at the meeting of the
miles. A start was made from Red- association tonight at S o'clock, at
fline- 7 nVln.W vpstPnl.iv mnrniniy Aliskv hall, on "HOW tO Retail Fruit
and the machine was brought straight
through to Eugene, where a short stop
was made at 10 o clock. The trip to
Portland consumed 65 minutes. The
trip was made under almost ideal cir
cumstances, according to Lieutenant
Neubig, the air being warm and at
mospheric conditions helpful. A high
altitude was maintained t li rough out,
the Siskiyou mountains being crossed
at 1.000 fet-t and Mount Shasta being
skirted at 14.000 feet.
A graphic account of the forest fires
raging in the vicinity of Grants Pass
was given by the army flier, who told
of feeling the heat from the flames at
O'U'O feet above the tree tops.
Forest Klre Heat Felt.
"Between Roseburg and Grants Pass
the entire mountain forest teemed in
flames.' said Lieutenant Neubig. "We
could scnrcely see the ground for the
smoke th:i t was billowed below us.
Occasionally we could see flames burst
ing clear above the tree tops. We
could feel the heat and smell the smoke
pluinly even at our higli altitude. I
would estimate that at least 2500 acres
of timber land were in flames between
Roseburg and Grants Pass.
A tribute to Mr. Smith's gameness
as a flyer was given by Lieutenant
Neubig. who declared the federal direc
tor stood the long trip wonderfully
I - . " - t
i
I . "v-V ": VP' - i
f , s , . .
t ' ' ' '
V,'' . '' - " .-
- if '1
' " " ? . 1
v ' 1 - - ;
f - t - ' ' . . . ?
f , - 1
s i
& y ( ' &
r .... issiy;f' ', 'S3
ROBERT
well. considering it was the first time
that he had ever been in the air. -
"Ho forgot to grease his face before
he embarked yesterday, however," said
the pilot, "and when he climbed out of
the machine this noon his face was as
red as the inside of a watermelon."
Hand Kept on Valuables,
The yellow traveling bag containing
the $50,000 of government savings
certificates never left Mr. Smith's hand
during the entire trip, declared Lieu
tenant Neubig.
'I never saw Mr. Smith's hand off
the bag during the entire trip," he said.
"If we had taken a tumble and plunged
into the tree tops I'll guarantee that
when the debris was cleared away you
would have found Mr. Smith with the
handle of the bag still f i rmly grasped
in his hand. He never let go of it even
when we were 14,000 feet above
ground."
The plane is much larger than those
used here during the festival, and is
equi pped with a motor of three times
the horse power. The De Haviland has
a 45-horse power Libert y motor and
a wing span of 45 feet. The machines
here for the festival had but 150-horse
power motors.
The plane will remain at Eastmore
land field until about 4 o'clock this
afternoon, when Lieutenant Neubig
expects to start back to Mather field.
Sergeant Walter Reed arrived last
night from Mather field by train and
will make the t:ii back with the pilot.
It is planned to go from here to Eu
gene this evening, stop there for the
night and to complete the journey to
morrow. No exhibition flights will be
made today, Lieutenant Neubig said, as
it will take nearly the whole day until
time of departure to tune the motor up
for the trip back.
BODY IS FOUND HANGING
CREWSOME DISCOVERY MADE
NEAR CAXYOX ROAD.
Booklet From Pocket of Dead Man
Suspended From Tree Bears
Name of John Stone.
A body, supposed to be that of John
Stone, was found hanging from a large
tree 300 feet from the Canyon road
and a few hundred feet below the old
city reservoir yesterday afternoon. It
had evidently been hanging there, a
secluded, little visited spot, from one
to two months.
The man is described as being about
5 feet 7 inches tall, weighing: about 150
pounds, having dark hair and small
moustache, and wearing blue overalls
and tan shoes. A black coat and dark
felt "hat were on the ground close by.
The body was found by Tony Fecho
of the Repose hotel. Twenty-third and
Savior streets, who was walking
through the woods. He telephoned the
police and motorcycle patrolman Linton
was sent out. Coroner Smith took
charge of the body, which was taken
to the morgue.
A small booklet, bearing the firm
name of the Occident Flouring mills of
Minnesota, and having the name John
Stone written in it, was found in the
pockets of his coat.
RETAILERS TO HEAR TALK
Paul Findlay Will Address Grocers
and Merchants Association.
Properly." The discussion will include
blackboard demonstration of the cor-
rect theory and practice ol margin
computation and is therefore of vital
interest to any merchant in any line
of business. Fruit is merely the sub
ject which t!es the argument together.
All merchants, whether members ofMhe
association or not, are invited to
tend.
Mr. Findlay is a regular contributor
to the Oregon Merchants magazine and
has writteu authoritative articles for
the trade press of the United State
and Canada for upward of 15 years.
STRIKE SHORT-LIVED ONE
Chicago Firemen Quit in Morning
and Return in Evening.
CHICAGO, July 20. The first strike
of members of the fire department in
the history of the city has ended, .and
the men have returned to work after
agreeing to submit their grievances to
an arbitration committee.
The strike of the firemen started
when 250 engineers and assistants quit
work this morning after refusal of the
city to grant an increase in wages.
Read The Oregonlan classified ads.
K. SMITH.
LAD, HEED 6, IS DH1E0
MAX M. FROST WADES INTO
DEtP WATER IX-COLUMBIA.
Boy AVanders From. Ticnlc Party
With Companions, Who Bring
Assistance Too Late.
Max M. Frost, six years old, was
drowned at Columbia beach at 5:30
P. M. yesterday as a result of wading
into deep water. The little boy Is the
son of Mrs. George Kincaid of Astoria,
and lived with Mrs. Graco Leabo on
rural route No. 6, out of .Portland.
With Mrs. Leabo and members of a
picnic party, the lad had gone to the
beach. With two other little boys lie
had gone to the lower end of the beach
near the trestle of the Portland, Rail
way, Light &. Power company. Pre
ceding the other boys, according to
their recital, ho went into deeper water
as they were following the shore line,
and his clothes becoming watersoaked
he was unable to get to shore. It was
probably 40 minutes after he went
down that the body was recovered,
only about 10 feet from shore. The
pulmotor of the Portland Railway,
Light & Power company was used in an
effort to resuscitate life, but tho at
tempt was unsuccessful.
The place where the tragedy oc
curred is fully half a mile from the
main part of the resort and is seldom
frequented "by bathers. It is at the
extreme western end toward the in
terstate bridge. There are six life
guards at tha beach, but the men of
the picnic party were so alarmed, that,
instead of seeking the expert swim
mers, they hunted Joseph M. Rieg, the
manager. On this account much d
lay was occasioned. More than 150
bathers formed a chain out into the
water, once the rescue party had ar
rived on the scene, but searching: was
found unnecessary, as the body was
floating on the surface almost at the
shore, despite the fact that the two
little boys had reported that ft had
sunk .
Until the pulmotor was brought the
life guards worked over the body, to
no avail. At 7:15 all hopes of saving
the child were given up and the coro
ner was sent for.
This Is the second drowning that h
occurred at the beach this season, the
other resulting from heart failure.
The boy's mother evidently was un
able to care for her son and have him
with her, so he had been living at Mrs.
Leabo's borne. Mrs. Kincaid has been
notified of the accident.
COLLEGE OFFICERS TO GO
Temporary . Commanders Are to Be
Replaced by Regulars.
OREGON AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE,
Corvallis, July 20. (Special.) All offi
cers of the college military department
with the exception of Colonel Joseph
K. Partello, commandant, and Captain
Dents Hayes, acting adjutant, will be
discharged prior to September 30, to
gether with thousands of other officers
who are on the temporary list.
This is indicated by a communication
received from'the committee on educa
tion and special training of the war
department. Colonel w. F. Sharp has
already been detailed to succeed Major
C. E. Hanford, In charge of field ar
tillery work.
The college is going ahead with its
preparations to handle military ff'ork
on a large scale next school year. A
part of the approximately $250,000
worth of equipment has already been
received.
CLOUDBURST WORKS HAVOC
Four Persons Killed and Much Prop
erty Destroyed in Ohio.
WHEELING, Va.. July 20. Four
known dead, 10 others missing and
believed to be dead, and property loss
of thousands of dollars was the tol
of a cloudburst which swept south
eastern Belmont county, Ohio, and i
small portion of Ohio and Marshall
counties. West Virginia, last night.
Two houses were carried away by
the flood waters at Wegee creek, on
the Ohio side south of here. Fifteen
persons were in the houses at the time
and only one is known to have escaped.
He was seriously injured.
Two bridges across Vege creek
were washed out. Hundreds of head
of -livestock were drowned in Belmon
county and near Wheeling.
Packing Plant to Be Rebuilt.
ALBANY. Or, July 10. (Special.)
Rapid progress is being made In the
rebuilding of the big packing plant o
the D. E. Nebergall Meat company
which was burned recently. Some o
the former walls are being utilized in
the reconstruction. The new plant will
be a larger and a better one than
the old.
BY CYRIL BROWN.
(Copyright by th Xw nrk World. PuS
Iteh'd by arrangement.)
BERLIN. July 20. (Special Cable.
A large staff of experts is pushing
work on Germany's preliminary plans
for the restoration of devastated north
ern France and Belgium. Theea plans
will be submitted to the allies. At the
same time the work of organization is
being pushed so that if the allies ac
cept Germany's ten tat I ve proposals,
wholly or in part, the restoration of
the devastated d istrlcts can be bgun
immediately.
Under this ambitious scheme the ex
perts who have it in hand declare that
Germany will have no trouble in rais
ing quickly an army of 600.000 high
grade laborers for atonement service
in France and Belgium and could re
cruit 1,000.000 volunteer German work
men if necesFary.
Plan II aa I n ion Support.
The basic idea, which has the whole
souled support of the German labor
unions, is to. make the restoration job
purely a state enterprise, elimlnat ing
all private profiteering in furnishing
labor and material. The tentative
scheme bars anything like slave labor,
peonage or the drafting of workmen.
Germany's restoration experts argue
that the best results will.be attainable
only by free, union labor receiving
union wages and working union hours
under a high standard of living condi
tions. Accordingly Germany will be
covered with a network of state em
ployment bureaus wh ich will sek to,
attract only tho highest grades of labor
of all classes for service in France and
Belgium. This will be done by offer-
ng the highest wages and special in
ducements such as free clothing and
equipment, the promise of the same
good rations or even better as are
received by Germany's volunteer army,
and free housing in attractive eanitarj
barracks. .
Railroad TriDiporti Organised.
Plans have already been prepared for
concentrating the recruited laborers at
central depots, where they will be
fitted out. From these de-pots railroad
ransports which are already organized
will hurry them to devastated France
nd Belgium.
The scheme further calls for the ex
penditure of o.000,00 marks for
building 500 model barrack villages In
northern France and Belgium. Each
village will house 1000 laborers and
will have a recreation hous. a fire-en
gine house, a library, a children's play
ground, garden plots and all other mod
ern improvements.
The sperif ications call for ten rooms
to a house, with only two laborers to
room. Each house will contain a
clubroom. a bathroom and will be
heated by steam, as the experts figure
that the maximum amount of work
can only be got out of happy, consented
workmen.
Each village will also contain cer
tain apartment barracks for workmen
who choose to bring their families
with them. The plans further call for
narrow-gauge railways to link up the
laborers' villages.
Social lata See Opportunity.
German socialists and labor leaders
see in the obligatory restoration of
Belgium and France a great opportu
nity of convincing the world of the
new Germany's good faith and Inci
dentally of helping to get It back into
the world's good graces by tackling
the'huge task of reconstruction in the
right spirit and making a good job of
It. One labor leader said to me: "We
are anxious to show the world what
we can do to atone for the sins of the
old regime by doing a monumental
piece of kultur work of which we may
be Justly proud."
DANGER IN ORIENT SEEN
Educator Fears Work of Peace Mak
ers Will Be in Vain.
SAN FRANCISCO. July 20. '1 fear
that within two decades the whole
work of the peace conference will have
to be done over again, unless It is at
tended to now," declared Dr. Charles K.
Edmunds, one of the most noted Amer
ican explorers and educators in China,
in protesting the award of Shantung
to Japan in an address here today be
fore the commercial club.
"The Chinese-Japanese situation Is a
duplicate of the recent situation in Eu
rope, with a militaristic Prussian party
in control and the populace in favor of
democratic larty. It must be our
concern to fasten to and aid the right
party in the future.
"The situation is the remnant of the
whole international attitude toward
China, not of Japan only. Japan only
takes her cue from other powers which
showed her In the . past how they
treated China. China looks to the
United States for help. We should in
the orient apply the same principles of
righteousness a we appliel in Europe."
DENTIST IS HELD SLAVER
Massachusetts Man Arrested In I-os
Angeles; Girl Freed.
LOS ANGELES. July 20. Dr. Frank
Luther Goodspeed. a Massachusetts
dentist, is awaiting a hearing here on
a. charge of having violated the Mann
att He Is temporarily free under bonds
of J500. Miss Pearl Rose, the girl in
the case, has been released rom cus
tody on her own recognizance.
Goodspeed, who is :6 years old, and
Miss Hose, 20, were arrested on a
telegraphic warrant from Boston. He
Is alleged to have purchased transpor
tation for Miss Rose to Los Angeles.
by way of Tacoma. Wash., from White
man. Mass., where she was said to
have served as his office assistant.
He was preparing to take the Call
fornla dental examination.
Miss P.ose is quoted by officers a
saying that an attorney in Boston told
her she and Goodspeed would not be
arrested.
He is said to have a wife and two
children in Whlteman.
Penitentiary Paint Bids Received.
SALEM. Or.. July 20. (Special.)
Bids have been received by the secre
tary of the board of control for sup
plying 860 gallons of damp-proof sur
face coating and 200 gallons of paint,
to be used in connection with improve
ments under way at the penitentiary.
Six bids were received for furnishing
ihe coating, ransing from $1.S5 to $2. 6s.
The bids for t'ne paint range from
$1.97 to J3.4. W. P. Fuller & Co. of
Portland submitted the lowest bids
and the contracts probably will be
awarded sometime next week.
LADD &
RADICALS HELP OH. EQUI
m'DS CIVEX.TO KEEP WOMAX
OUT OF JAIL.
Speaker at Labor Meeting Predicts
I. S. Soviet Republic of
World Will Materialize.
Labor radicals last night turned their
attention from attempts to get Thomas
J. Mooney out of prison and took up
the task of preventing the Incarcera
tion of Ir. Marie Kqul. who Is under
foderal court sentence to serve a trm
of throe years In prison and to pay a
fine for violation of the espionage act.
Following addresses delivered in the
plaxa. a ubcriptton wa tak.n to as
xitn Ir. Equi in appealing her case to
a hleher tribunal. As she Is In Se
attle, soliciting funds to obtain her
freedom she was not rresent at the
meeting, which was attended by 500
or 600 men.
Ike Ranxler. who said he was an
honorary member of tho Boise press
men's union, told of hi acquaintance
A Checking
Con s erTauerj-
rouATH ST. WASH1NOTOH St. '
i1 ;
is a household and business necessity. A
complete monthly statement, showing all
deposits and withdrawals, is furnished,
and every cancelled check is a receipt.
As a depository for your funds select
"A Conservative Custodian "
HIBEBNIA. SAVINGS BANK
SAVINGS - COMMERCIAL. - TRUST
FOURTH AND "WASHINGTON STREETS
"tfMs
g- OPEN SATURDAY
act:
Of
XC-3
took
them
long,
is measured by the sum total of the pros
perity of its individual citizens.
Therefore, the only way to insure permanent
prosperity for Portland is to make its resi
dents prosperous.
The best method of doing this is to have
everybody in the city set aside systematically
and regularly some portion of his income.
Here the bank comes in as an important fac
tor in community development and upbuild
ing. By offering- interest as an inducement
to saving, many persons have learned to save
who would not otherwise.
Ladd & Tilton Bank rejoices in the hundreds
of Portland citizens who have learned the les
son of Thrift through it, and solicits the
accounts of others desirous of learning it.
TILTON
BANK
Washington and Third
with rr. Equl. dating from 1913. when
the Oregon Packing company's strike
aliirned her on the side of labor. He
addressed the gathering as the Sol
diers. Sailors' and Workmen's council,
and predicted that the United States
soviet republic of the world was cer
tain to materialize soon, just as he
said the movement had spread and
proved a success in Europe.
The speaker told of tha Intense feel
ing existing between Boise and Nam pa.
since headquarters of the Non-Partisan
league had been moved to Nampa, and
advised any who might be going east
to ptop in Holse and get In on the
state capiiol work, which he said Is
being done In an effort to prevent
Nampa from becoming a greater city
than the capital. He said workmen
might be able to Increase the'r wages
every two or three weeks while so en
gaged, as politicians are worried afid
will permit no tie-ups or delays on the
capltol contract.
Memorial for Americans Planned.
NANCT. July 10. (By the Associated
Press.) Models of a monument to be
erected In the region of Fllrey to com
memorate the liberation of many vil
Inees of Lorraine by the American of
fensive September 12. ISIS. aKainst the
St. Mthlei salient have been sent to
President Wilson and Genersl Pershing
Account
EVENINGS b TO 8
and with our
NC Ocean Fliers
the!5 men on theXC-1 ,
and NC-i, twelve
Fatimas to keep
company on that
lonely daring flight.
"justnouth Turkish"
Carats al atscavajr
aasvsTm a1i
by the committee having charge of th.
erection of tho memorial.
Ohio Phone Strike United.
TOUNGSTOWN. O.. July 20. Th.-
strike of more than 100 operators ot
the Central Union and Ohio State tele
phone companies. In proprcps for eihi
days, was settled last night when the
operators accepted the companies' pro
posal of J3 a week increase in ra.
with r.o discrimination against the?
union.
Tten The Orirrn I t r l:is.ifj.
"THE IMPENDING CATASTROPHE'
A I alrraal Mourrkr Imnttaeat
(A Bible Prophecy.)
EYANGELIST DICKSON
la This Striking: Lecture I" pox Bihle
Prophecies Relating to tke
Near Fimrr.
LARGE TEXT P.)TL10', fORXKR
THIRTEENTH AM) MORRISOX.
TONIGHT
"peelal Gospel Sing IMreeted br Pro
fessor Colcord.
Public Invited. Tke Teat la Cool
"I ADVISE EVERY
SICK WOHAH
To Try Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound."
" I advise every Buffering woman t9
take Lydia E. Pinkh&m's Vegetable
Compound for it has
done me bo much
good. I had female
weakness, inflamma
tion, pains in niy
aides and painful
periods. I Buffered
for six years and
tried many remedies
without benefit.
The doctor said I
must have an opera
tion. I read about
Lvdia C. Pinkh&m's
v ezetable lom pound in trie newspaper,
and since taking it I em cored and have
a nice baby four months old. I feel Like
a new woman, and have recommended
your medicine to my friends. I would
be lad to have everybody know what
your medicine did for me, end it any
write to me I will enswer ell letters."
Mrs. Mary Caligcre, S17 South Mala
St., Herkimer, N.Y.
Every woman at some period or other
in her life may suffer from just such dis
turbances as Mrs. Caligure, end if there
is no interested friend to advise, let this
be a reminder that this famous root and
herb remedy has been overcoming these
ailmectsof women for moreth&n-lOyettrs.
If any complications exist, write
Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn.
Mass., for advice. The result of many
rears' experience is at tout service.
NURAYA. TEA tickles the
palate
Closset Se Devers - Portland
V ? - .
f .
-' .- '
... s -
V.'"' Vv 'M'l:J 1,.'.'. -' ' .
li!i!lli!!'i!'!i'l!Mlli;iiil:
lift '