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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1919)
TIIE MORNIXG OREGONIAX, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1919. COLONEL ROOSEVELT result of a camping accident at the Breitenbush Hot Springs August 12, when he fell from a log. Mr. Fryrear was' married in 1858 to Miss Elizabeth Berry, and they be came the parents of ix children. The widow and the following children survive: Mrs. Susan P. King of Sis ters, T. Joseph Fryrear of Pendleton, William Fryrear of Sisters, John Fry rear of Bend and David Fryrear of Stephenson, Wash. James Berry of Mill City, Mr. Fry rear'o brother-in-law, an Oregon pio neer of 1852. 81 years of age. was NEAR EAST CLINGS IE TO FREEDOM S HOPE Aire Yo.e Oregon to Subscribe $38,090 for Monument. People Ready Even to Flout Paris Conference. with Mr. and Mrs. Fryrear on their outing at Breitenbush Hot Springs. MEMORIAL PUPILS ARE INTERESTED tteports Received at State Head quarters Indicate Thorough Or ganization in All Counties. Roosevelt Memorial week was opened formally yesterday. A devoted band of workers started out in every county in the state to raise their por tion of the state quota of $38,090 to ward the J5.O00.000 fund, which is being- subscribed throughout the na tion for erecting a permanent monu ment to the late ex-president at Washington, D. C, to acquire and maintain a public park at Oyster Bay, which ultimately will include the Roosevelt home on Sagamore Hill, and to endow a national memorial association to perpetuate Theodore Koosevelt's ideals of American ciii zenship. The Multnomah county campaign was opened yesterday by Jacob Kanzler, county chairman. Under the direction of Arthur I. Moulton, chair man of the speakers' "bureau, various speakers called at high schools and public schools and delivered addresses upon the life and career of the late ex-president. This work will be con tinued throughout the week and speakers also will visit various civic gatherings. Figures Not Available. Volunteer workers also started to make a canvass of the city and county and Roosevelt subscription .books were delivered to workers in various Industrial plants. Although no totals so far are available as the result of the Multnomah county cam paign, the canvass has been started and Judge Kanzler is hopeful that many thousands of members will be obtained for the Roosevelt Memorial association. At state headquarters reports from county chairmen indicate that the various county chairmen and their sub-committees are taking hold of the campaign in a fine spirit. Lester Martin, county chairman for Lincoln county, writes to state head quarters that he has every assurance of a strong and willing support of the campaign from many parts of the county. C. S. Davis has been ap pointed chairman of the Newport dis trict and C. D. Hawkins treasurer. Professor Teats is in charge of the scirool work and the Boy Scouts: Rev. Mr. Bush of the church work. Other active members of the Newport com mittee are: Dr. Walter M. Berry, L. C. Smith, Dr. Mlnthorn, J. H. W. Ander son and William Mathews. Mr. Davis, the Newport chairman, is secretary, of the Newport commercial club. Mr. Martin also has appointed Judge R. R. Miller chairman for the east end of the county and the latter has organized a committee to assist him. composed of the following: J. E. Cooter, secretary: J. E. Booth, treas urer; W. . F. Wakefield, Edville; Charles Dickson, Elk City: George Smith, Chitwood: George Wilson, Nor. tons; Darwin Nash, Nashville; Ed Chalcraft, Siletz; Dr. F. M. Carter, Siletz schools; Professor W. A. Cox, Toledo schools; Rev. C. R. Elsworth, church, work, Toledo. Cash Prises Offered. Francis A. McMenamin, county chairman for Morrow county, and a committee of Heppner business men have given J30 in cash prizes to be divided between the high school divi sion and the grade school division for the best essay on Theodore Roosevelt. Mr. McMenamin appeared before the teachers' institute last week and pre sented the educational features of the campaign, securing the enthusiastic co-operation of the teachers of the county. C. W. Robinson, county chairman for Clatsop county, has appointed an executive committee to assist him in raising Clatsop's quota of $1080. com posed of James Bremmer, Frank San born, W. P. O'Brien, John H. Smith, Otto Owen, C. 1. Barr, Brenham Van jusen, Theodore Higgins, R. W. Ekallerud, E. T. Gooch, A. Dalgity and Howard Zimmerman. Lane county is well organized un der the leadership of Mrs. W. W. Cal kins. Small banks .have been placed in banks and theaters throughout the county to receive donations toward the county quota of ?950. B. L. Eddy, county chairman for Douglas county, has appointed an executive committee to make a cam paign this week. Roy W. Rltner has an active com mittee at work in Umatilla county. School Children Busy. At all of the schools and colleges of the state special committees' are holding Roosevelt memorial meetings and organizing campaigns for mem bers. Throughout the state arrangements are being made for memorial meet ings on Roosevelt's birthday, October 27, and it now seems certain that such meetings will be held in almost every city, town and hamlet in the state. In many cities the mayors are ap pointing special committees to ar range these public exercises. In Portland the meeting will be held in the auditorium, prominent speakers will appear, and the victory chorus already has volunteered to appear. SHOW BIDS GOVERNORS Executives for Four States May At tend liewiston Displays. LEWISTON, Idaho, Oct. 20. (Spe cial.) The governors of Idaho. Washington. Oregon and Montana have been invited here to the north west livestock show, November 9-14, and all are expecting to attend. November 11, "Armistice day," will be celebrated in connection with the show, and the directors hope that the governors mav be present on that day to assist in the observance. The Lewiston Commercial club will be represented by a committee com prising C. F. Bennett, A. A. Seaborg ar:d J. E. Kincaid, who will direct the advertising for the show. J. H. Cole will arange for the appearance of the Lewiston band during the week. OREGON PIONEER IS GONE John B. Fryrear Resident of De schutes for Past 3 7 Years. ALBANY. Or.. Oct. 20. (Special.) John B. Fryrear, who died at Mill City September 27. was an Oregon pioneer of 1S53 and had lived in this state for 66 years. He was an early settler in Linn -county, and for the past 37 years had resided near Sis ters, in Deschutes county. He was altinst S6 years of ago. Air. Fryrear's death came as the PASTORS DISCUSS PLANS Ministers' Association Holds First Meetlnjr of Season. The first meeting this season of the Presbyterian Ministers' associa tion was held yesterday morning in the First Presbyterian church. Eigh teen ministers of that denomination representing Portland, Vancouver and Oregon City were present. Rev. D. A. Thompson, pastor of Mizpah Presbyterian church, who has just returned from overseas, where he served under the Y. M. C. A., told of his war experiences. New officers taking their positions were Dr. R. H. Milligan of the Rose ROOSEVELT MEMORIAL CAMPAIGN. Roosevelt Memorial Committee. - Name Address ....... Town or City. fnDrl"dIaT??iw"0Cltl0n 1) To t (2) to acqui lncluae aa. ton estate (3) to en petuate Theodora Roosevelt's Ideals of rct a monument to Theodore Roosevelt in Washington. D C re and maintain a public park at Oyster Bar. N. v.. .Tiiim.t.i. ,Z Earners Hill, the Roosevelt boms, to be preserved like the Washlni at Mount Vernon and the horn, of Mr. Lincoln at SprinrflelS low the Roosevelt Memorial association . r,.,ii r ,rvT onor to tne runa will receive a certificate of menbenblD bearing mall portrait of Theodore Roosevelt and will become a membsrof the R?os?veit Memorial association. The names of all contributors will be deposited In the national memorial at Washlncton, D. C. when erected. ID ln" City Presbyterian church, president, and Rev. T. P. Smith of Trinity Pres byterian church, newly elected secretary-treasurer. The association will meet each Mon day morning at 10 o'clock in the First Presbyterian church. Y.W. C.A. OPENS CAMPAIGN Fund of $3 0 00 Is Sought for Work in Vancouver. VANCOUVER, Wash., Oct. 20. (Special.) The Young Women's Christian association here has in augurated a campaign to raise $3000 to be used locally by the association. The girls have nice quarters in a building at Seventh and Main streets. Lunch is served daily for girls who work down town. At an informal luncheon there to day, business and professional men pledged their aid in "putting over" the drive. Miss Diehl, city and county secretary, and Mrs. C. W. Hall, president of the local association, spoke. Tho folowing men are trustees: W. B. D'jBois. Rev. L. K. Grimes, W. S. Short, Dale McMullen and M. R. Sparks, with the following advisory beard; -Professor Thomas P. Clarke, E. Curran. Dr. N. J. Taylor, W. H. Hornibrook, J. W. Shaw. Frank M. Kettenring, C. W. Ryan, H. R. Porter ar d J. B. Atkinson. EPIDEMIC FEARS QUIETED City Health Official Says Diphthe ria Situation Not Serious. Although 50 cases of diphtheria are registered at the city health bureau, the situation is not alarming, accord ing to City Health Officer. Parrish. In fact, the city health officer is confident that no great increase in the disease will be shown in reports during the next few days. No decrease in the number of cases registered is expected until next week, when the quarantine of the first cases reported will expire. The diphtheria cases first were dis covered in two schools, 16 cases in the Woodlawn school and 14 cases in the Fernwood school. Since the discovery of these the health bureau has been informed of 20 additional cases. With few exceptions, all are mild and few of the afflicted are in dangerous condition. BOYS' CONVENTION ENDS V. M. C. A. Meeting at The Dalles Addressed by Sir. Rhodes. THE DALLES, Or., Oct. 20. (Spe cial.) The older boys' convention . of ficially ended last night after one of the most encouraging meetings ever held in this state. The conference was held under the - auspices of the T. M. C. A. with Paul N. Newmeyer as director. Pulpits of local churches were filled yesterday by young men attending the meeting. In the after noon Ivan B. Rhodes, state secretary of the "Y," addressed the youths on the subject, "A Question of Alle eiance." At 7:30 o'clock last night in the local high school assembly room, Mr. Rhodes again addressed the confer ence, discussing "Oregon's Challenge to Her Boys." Reports were made Dy committees. ARCTIC EXPLORERS LAND Two Members of Stefansson's Expe dition Reach Seattle. SEATTLE. Wash., Oct. 20. A. G. Gumaer and Martin Kilian, the last members of Vilhjalmur Stefansson's Canadian Arctic expedition to return from the Arctic, arrived here today from Nome, Alaska, on their way to Victoria, B. C the port irom wnicn Stefansson sailed north six years ago. Gumaer and Kilian joined the Ste fansson expedition in the north and were with Storker Storkerson. Ste fansson's lieutenant, when he drifted eight months on an. ice floe in an un successful attempt to find a current leading across the Arctic from Alaska to Siberia. Change in Time Hits Boise. BOISE. Idaho, Oct. 20. (Special.) By placing Idaho on Pacific coast time, the southern part of this state virtually loses two hours of twilight on October 26. To overcome the handi can merchants in Boise are serious ly considering closing their places of business on and after that date an hour earlier. On October 26 the day light saving law ceases to exist, and all sections go back to their old time, but through a rearrangement of zones last summer southern Idaho was placed on Pacific instead of in termountain time which makes it one 1 hour snorter than formerly. BLUFF ALLOWANCE MADE Reaction From "War and Renewal of Constantinople's Authority Reviewed as Major Canses. BY WILLIAM T. ELLIS. (Copyright by the New Vork Herald Com pany. Ail rights reserved.) PALESTINE. General ferment is more important news than local fact. No particular phase or incident of the Judge Jacob Kanzler, Multnomah county chairman. Press Club, Elks' Building. Portland. Dollars I desire to give Cents which I enclose herewith to the fund to erect a memorial to the memory of the late Theodore Roosevelt and to become a member of the Roosevelt Memorial association. bM 0r"n,Md t. rau. a $5,000,000 American cltlnmshlo present situation in the near east is of as great significance as the condi tion of things as a whole. Like the breaking up of a northern winter with swoolen streams that carry logs to the mills, but also smash bridges and houses on the way, so the swirl and rush and upheaval of life in the near east is bearing desirable com modities to market, but it is also wrecking ancient and honored struc tures. There is an almost uncanny mean ing to events in this central part of the world. There always has been. What happens here eventually affects the remotest confines of civilization. This is the land of origins. What begins here continues else where. The Hebrew prophets who spoke to a little and apparently neg ligible people are still speaking all over the earth. A Nazareth Carpen ter was manifested here as the whole world's Saviour. A Mecca camel driver, wandering over this region, heard voices and saw visions that made him God's prophet to about one seventh of the human race. This spot has been central to the most momen tous political movements of history. History's Spotlight on gtase. Again this theater of classic and religious history is crowding forward to claim portals of the Orient Con stantinople, the Suez canal and the Persian gulf. Soldiers of all the Eu ropean nations swagger through the cities and byways of the near east. Most ominously out of the desert have come swart figures, clad in pic turesque costume, trebly armed and swaggering in the consciousness or conviction that the east is coming to its own again. They regard the presence of western troops as a pass ing phase. Among them one hears strange and audacious talk of Pan-Arabic leagues and independencies: of Pan-Islam's power; of war to the death for inde pendence; of present and possible conflicts with European forces. Were the observer unaware of the penchant of the Oriental for dreaming and talking 'rather than for doing, these would be alarming symptoms indeed. Orient May Float Paris. Shaken out of immemorial patience by the world war, the native peoples of the near east and what a mixed multitude they are! are now in a state of flux and change and uncer tainty. They have developed a keen interest in themselves and in the pro gramme of the powers. All of them, f rom . the Armenians to the Yezidis to mention the alpha betical extremes are talking about their wrongs and their rights. None of them will relapse into the old or der. Things will never again be as they were before the war. As well expect a revival of the' Hittite em pire as to look for a return of the ante-bellum status of Syrians, Arme nians. Turks, Egyptians, Kurds, Arabs, Greeks, Yezidis, etc. "Self-de termination" is getting in its vitaliz ing and intoxicating work in the most remote and unexpected places. Al ways, too, it is to be remembered that out here people argue with guns and knives. Making all allowance for bluster and bluff, it is still clear that these people are ready' to flout the Paris conference, if it does not give them what they consider a square deal They refuse to be made lifeless pawns in a game between European powers. Syria, for example, says sh will fight unless permitted to become a united nation, from the Egyptian border to the Taurus mountains, and from the Mediterranean to the desert, with a clear prospect of eventual in dependence. Armenians, Georgians and Tartars are already fighting. So are the Greeks, Arabs and Egyptians. The Turks have lined up for guerrilla warfare against partition by Paris. Killings are so common that they are not reported. Nobody out here would be surprised at anything. Orient's Bubbllnc Pot Viewed. Apparent at a glance are several major forces which contribute to the present turmoil in the near east. Re action from war's strain and the re newal of Constantinople's authority are manifest factors. Ambition for "self-determination" is another. The resentment at foreign aggression is a continous irritant. Ambition for a modern education for their sons is an influence increasingly at work upon parents. Economic hardships exert a steady pressure upon popular thought. Always in the background is the religious motive, like tinder awaiting a match. The old crust of caste and conser vation has been cracked and is crum bling. For better or for worse, the east has entered upon a new era. Some men who are close to conditions are utterly pessimistic, even indulg ing in wild imaginings of new orien tal hordes to overrun Europe. Doubt less there is warrant for the state ment that the present problem is what the Orient may do to the west, as well as what the west will do to the Orient. The world's responsibilities to the eastward were never so grave as today. - v&iwtjr io per- - it 'in . -jfjwng-.ri f nrn r nQ Did you think of the Hazelton Bros., of the Behning", of the Haines Bros., of the Baldwin pianos? Did you think of the MONEY SAVED? Did you think of a gilt-edged guarantee? If you did you thought of LIPMAN, WOLFE & CO. If you did not, begin right now to think of Lipman, Wolfe & Co. and of what this name means to buyers of clean merchandise. Think of our magnificent line of pianos, all under one roof, on one floor "Our Musical Floor," the 7th. No such array of standard, high-grade instruments to be found in the city of Portland. There's a reason why we must carry the best line of high-grade pianos. There's a reason why we must give better values than do other dealers. There's a reason why we charge only 6 interest on your deferred payments. Re Eld WTiy no cnare interest on phonographs.) Our tremendous buying power, combined with our unfailing policy of "Merchandise of Merit Only," and our insistence on giving the best service to piano and phonograph customers make this store "One Safe Place" to buy your piano or phonograph. Show us one dissatisfied piano .or phonograph customer. It J Victor Pathe Stradivara Jalking Machines HOME OWNERS HELP ED REALTOR SAYS "CHEAPER TO RENT THAX BUY" FALLACY. Southwest Washington and Oregon Realty Men Hold Convention at Iloquiam. HOQL'IAM, Wash., Oct. 20. (Spe cial.) "The smaller the number ol home owners, the more irresponsible Is the voting: population of a city. E. B. Arthaud. president, declared in an address at the southwestern Wash ington district convention of the In terstate Realty association here last night. About 125 realtors from all parts of southwestern Washington, Puget Sound cities and Portland were in attendance. 'The old assertion that 'It Is cheaper to rent than to buy' is a greater fal lacy than anything offered by the bolshevists, and as dangerous as anarchy," was Mr. Arthaud's conclu sion. State Senator F. W. Loomls held the tourist a financial asset to every city on the coast, pointing out that state highway officials estimate 30,- 000 tourists spent $9,000,000 in Wash ington during the last year, and that an average of more than 250 tourist automobiles passed through Spokane daily. Other speakers were: E. S. Good win of Seattle, Paul Cowgill of Port land. H. E. Lambuth of Seattle, L. H. Wheeler of Olympia, Senator Judd of Chehalis, W. E. Campbell, Iloquiam city attorney; H. S. Shorey. countj engineer; Edward H. Miller of Taco- ma. President Elliott of the Tacoma board, A. E. Cross of Aberdeen and J. H. Roberts of Centralia. Wheeler, Judd and Roberts won prizes In a five-minute speech contest in which the respective merits of each realtors' home city were the topic JAPS FAST GETTING LAND Holdings ia California Shown to Be Steadily Increasing. HOOD RIVER. Or., Oct. 20. (Spe cial.) Former Hood River county residents now living in California, al most without exception, send word of encouragement to a movement start ed by orchardists here to prevent the purchase or leasing of fruit lands. D. I. Stone, who formerly resided on the upper West Fork and who now lives at Santa Ana. Cal., eays: "In 1912 Kern. Santa Barbara. Ventura, Los Angeles, San Bernardino, Orange, Riverside, San Diego and Imperia counties, California, had,, according to official figures. 4670 acres of land owned by Japanese. In 1919, by au thentic estimates, Japanese own 199.- 000 acres, an increase of about 2500 per cent in seven yeara. FIRE CAUSE OF SUICIDE Man, 80, Worries Over . Loss of House on Son's Farm. CORVALLIS, Or. Oct. 20. (Special ) "Jack" Tharp, past 80 years of age. ehot himself in the right breast Sun day while the family were away from their Alsea home for a short time, and he was found dead when the family returned. The old man had used a 22 rifle. It was thought he was a victim of worry that followed the burning of his son's home a few weeks ago, a conflagration' from which he himself escaped. only by aid of a rocking chair. Neighbors assisted recently in tear ing down an old house on the place and building a temporary residence for the unfortunate people, and It Is here they hae been living since the Hi GET OUR SELLING FLAN Notice: We will ship prepaid any of our pianos on one week's approval to any responsible party in Oregon or Washington. Write us today. fire. On Sunday George and his wife were out in the field working. When they returned home they found the old man had killed himself. CHEHALIS SALES BRISK Demand for City and' Suburban Property Reported Strong. CHEHALIS, Wash.. Oct. 20. (Spe cial.) Demand for Chehalis property continues brisk, according to reports of local dealers. A. A. Broderick pur chased the Mattie Robinson house on Quincy avenue. Albert Irish sold his three acres on Coal creek to Alice M. Pierce of Tumwater, Wash. J. M. Wallace bought Riley's State-street dwelling for 1500. C. P. Fulton, local agent at the union station, bought the W. M. Parge residence on Adams avenue for $2650. John H. Urich has purchased the William Lynch dwell ing on James street for $650. C. M. I.indell sold two Prlndle-street dwell ings to Fred Aust for $1600. Fred Dahlman bought Wasile Branzak'a Fourth-street residence for $700. B Riley bought the Fourth-street resi dence of R. A. Ellis for $1400. A number of transfers of country property near Chehalis are reported. the 160-acre farm of Henry Layton on Lincoln creek being purchased by Mrs. Mary Pittman Senn of Chehalis for $18,000. G. W. Simmons also has pur chased the 80-acre farm of Ed Myers of Boistfort for $10,000. GOLD OUTPUT INCREASING More Than $2,000,000 Taken From Seward District This Year. SEATTLE, Wash.. Oct. 20. More than $2,000,000 In gold was mined on the Seward peninsula, Alaska, this year, Jafet Lindeberg, president of a Nome, Alaska, mining company and one of the discoverers of Nome's gold- bearing sands, said here today on his return from the north. This year's output was $750,000 greater than last year's total. Lindeberg came down, from Nome on the liner Victoria, which brought $700,000 in gold bullion, consigned to banks in Seattle and Tacoma. The Victoria leaves this week on her last trip of the year to Nome. "There should be no delay in the Victoria's departure." Lindeberg said "Nome is in need of the supplies she will carry and if she is delayed and prevented by ice from unloading the little camp will suffer this winter." CAR BEARS PROPAGANDA Verse Appealing for Short Honrs, More Pay Found on Box Car. ALBANY. Or., Oct. 20. (Special.) Klght hours' sleep, Kiht hours' play. Eight hours' work, Klght dollars a day. This verse, evidently expressing the ideals of some workman, was written with chalk on the side of a freigh! car containing lumber which arrived in Albany this week for a local man ufacturing plant. It attracted con siderable attention. COLLEGE "Y" IN SESSION Willamette Cnlverslty Represented at McMlnnville Meeting. "WILLAMETTE UNIVERSITY, Sa lem, Or., Oct. 20. (Special.) Twenty six delegates represented the Wil lamette organization at the state col lege Y. M. C. A. conference at Mc Mlnnville Saturday and Sunday. The total number of delegates was in ex cess of 60, the following institutions of Oregon being represented: Univer sity of Oregon, Oregon Agricultural college. Pacific college. Portland Y. M, C A. scliuol. Clieaiawa Indian p ? nam Did this thought occur to you: "Where can I do best in the pur . chase of a piano?" Did you think of House Reliability? Did you think . of PIANO QUALITY? Did you think of KNABE. the world's Rest? "Merchandise of cJ Merit school, McMlnnville college and Wil lamette university. The conference was held to rally the Christian associations of the various colleges to the year's work and to emphasize the two big na tional conventions of the year the Y. M. C. A. convention to be held in Detroit during November, and the Student Volunteer Movement gather ing in Des Moines, Iowa, December 31 to January 4. World fellowship was discussed at the McMlnnville confer ence. ALBANY SHORT OF LABOR Rush of Building Is On and Even Unskilled Help Lacking. ALBANY, Or.. Oct. 20. (Special.) The great demand for workmen now existing in this city, where a great deel of building Is in progress and Children Cry mm u mm The Kind You Have Always Bought has borne the siprna ture of Chas. II. Fletcher, and has been made under his personal supervision for over SO years. Allow no one to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and. "Just-as-Rood" are but experiments, and endanger the health of Children Hxperience against Jxperiment What is CASTOR I A Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, larc-i poric, Irops and Soothinjr Syrups. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Dowels, aids the as similation of Food ; giving healthy and natural slccp. The Children's X'anacea Xhe Mother's friend' The Hind You Have Always Bought SI Bears In Use For Over 30 Years thc cm tmtu eonrasny, tnm om pit. DON'T BE A "MISERY-FACTORY" Stop Headaches. Bilious Spells, Colds and' Constipa tion with "Cascarets" Ideal Physic! You men and women who can't get feeling right who have headache, coated tongue, bad taste and foul breath, dizziness, can't sleep, are bu llous, nervous and upset, bothered with a sick, gassy, disordered stom ach and colds. Are you keeping your liver and bowels clean with Cascarets, or mere ly, shocking your insides every few davs with Calomel, Salts, Oil or vio lent liils? Only where business Is good in all lines, is shown by the experience of the man ager of a local maufacturing plant Saturday. He had a rush order and as part of the work could be handled by un skilled labor, he started out on the streets to see if he could find a man or two for a few hours' work. After scouring the streets In vain for al most an hour he found one idle man. "Here is my chance," he thought, so he called the man by name and asked him what he was doing. "I am hunting three or four men to help, me on a carpenter job," was the reply, "but I can't find anyone." Allenby Goes to Egypt. MARSEILLES. Oct. 20. (Havas.) Field Marshal Allenby, British high commissioner for Egypt and the Sudan, embarked on' a British ehlp today for Port Said. a for Fletcher's the Signature of Cascarets work while you sleep; they cleanse the stomach, remove the sour, undigested, fermenting food and foul gases; take the excess bile from the liver and carry out of the system all the constipated waste matter and poison in the bowels which is now keeping you in constant misery. Cas carets never gripe, sicken or cause in convenience and Cascarets cost so little, loo, Auv. Sheet Music Player Rolls Records THE GIRL ALASKA The Alaskan Picture Now Playing Filmed and Acted in Alaska STAR Coming Soon Her Purchase Price i This Smile Says: I Hear Clearly" If you are hard of hearlnp you. have tmbarrainp momenta o io your friends. x it not worth while to e If all this embarrassment can be avoided ? 35O.0OO persona ara now hearing clearly by aid of the Acoupttcon. A New York physician says: "It la of rrreat value to me. I should have been obliged to itlve up the practice of medtrino Ionic apco If I had not ob tained this best of all devices for the aid of hearing. WE OFFER TOU THE! Famous Acousticon 1 For 10 Days Free Trial No Deposit No Expense Just write, saying; "I am hard of hearing and will try the Acousticon." Give it a fair trial amid familiar sur roundings thus you can bct tell what It will do for you. Remember, however, that the Acousticon has patented features which cannot be duplicated. So no matter what your past experiences have been, send for your fre trial ; today. 1'irtoirrapn iToaiirtt corporation Successor to The t;n'l Acoustic Co, !U7 Orejcon lds. l'ortutad, Oregon. lOaster Now Than letter. It Is easier to break up a cold or check a cough now than it will be later. Persistent bronchial coughs that "hang on" all winter pave the way for serious throat and lung dis eases. L. W. Day, 65 Campbell Av. K., Detroit. Mich., writers: "Foley's Honev and Tar relieves one of bron- chitis very quickly. I hope never to have it again. This reliable family medicine for the relief of coughs, colds, croup, hoarseness, etc.. con tains no opiates. Children like it. Bold everywhere. Adv. " - - - - - -ft" - -Sh i.lli 1