THE MORNING OREGONIA WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 191D. 13 IE Off SESSION CALL Politicians Discount Reason as Given by Governor. ACTION PLEASES WOMEN Safety Commission, Suffrage, Fish Bills and Death Penalty Listed as Possible Business. Chief discussion among politicians yesterday was the special session of the legislature, which the governor is to call January 12. The members of the Multnomah delegation were espe cially interested and there wae con siderable speculation as to the reason for the call. It appeared to be the opinion of many that the need for giving assistance to the workmen's compensation commission was not the real motive for the call. It was predicted in political circles a week ago that a special session was to be called. One member of the Multnomah delegation was told that ho could "bet everything" that such a call would be made by the governor, but tiinee that tip was received until tho governor made his statement in The Oregonian yesterday, there was no Inkling of the reason. .In some quarters the supposition was ad vanced that the governor changed his mind about the special session for ratification of the equal suffrage a amendment, and used the compensa- tion commission as a camouflage. At any rate, the women who have been urging and demanding that a special session be called were perfectly de lighted at the news. They consider i. a victory. There is no means of knowing how long the extraordinary session will hold. Once the members get the ma chinery in motion they are always loath to stop and go home. The sug gested legislation outlined in the governor's, statement would consume at legist three days, and it is possible that an assortment of new measures may be introduced and fought for so that the session may be prolonged a week or more. Ilouxea MuHt Ornniie. One matter which is causing mem bers to do a bit of debating is the senate and house organizations. When the regular session adjourned it adjourned sine die. That ended the session and ended the functions of the officers, it is contended. In other words, if the members want to be technical, they will have to pass resolutions permitting the officers of the regular session to function at the special session, or else elect a new president of the senate and new speaker of the house, and new staffs for each branch of the legislature. However, for the few days the ses sion will be operating no' one will tare to start a fight for speaker or president. . State Labor Commissioner Gram is said to be preparing to have a bill introduced at the special session creating a safety commission. Sena tor Charles Thomas of Jackson coun ty, who was in the city yesterday, said something should be done' at the special session about creating the of fice of lieutenant-governor, albeit the people snowed under the bill to create such an office at the special election last spring. While it is too earlv to forecast the character of legislation coming ud: it is a foregone conclusion that there will be a few dozen bills oresented. In his original attitude toward a spe cial session, the governor wanted members to promise to limit their activities to ratification of the eaual suffrawe amendment and to serve without pay and defray their own traveling expenses. With an official call, the state must pav the members their daily wage and mileage and the bars are down for all manner of measures and tentative laws. I'lh Rill liar Bob t o. Only one law passed by the leels Inture was vetoed by Governor Withv combe before he died. This was the liocue river fish bill. Friends of the measure may attempt to muster enough votes to pass the measure over tlie veto. With a brief session the legislature Is likely to be free from the attend nnce of the lobbyists, for, as the rat ification of the suffrage amendment will go through as fast as the roll can bo called and the formalities com piled with, there will not even be oc casion for any women politicians to go to Salem to lobby. If the session is more than a few days, there may be some irrigation legislation pro posed, and it is quite possible that the legislature will rescind the Home bill, which organized labor was so interested in passing last February. There is some talk of the legisla ture restoring the death penalty, but this is beyond the province of the lecislature. Capital punishment was killed by the people through a con stitutional amendment, and it will require a constitutional amendment to restore the penalty. The most the legislature can do at a special ses sion would be to refer the matter to the people, and this would put tho subject on the ballot without the trouble and expense of circulating an initiative petition. "WANT DEATH PEXALTY VOTE Mayor Baker to Ask Submission of Quos-tion in May. Mayor Faker win ask the state leg islature to refer the constitutional amendment restoring capital punish ment in Oregon to the voters of the state at a special election to be held You Cannot Hide Your Fat uvrnainfM 10 toe one mtsrortune you cn not hida from yourself or from those around you. If too thin, your dressmaker or tailor can supply the deficiencies, but the over fat carry a burden they can not conceal. There is one sure way to 1 duce your weight safely and quickly. The harmless Murmola Prescription, which changes the fatty tissues and fat-produc ing- foods to solid flesh and energy, helps tha general health and digestion. Derm its you to eat and live as you like, and leaves the skin clear and smooth. This famous rrescrlpuon is now condensed into tablet form. Kach tablet contains an exact dose or the same harmless ingredients that made the original prescription capable f reducing the overfat body at the rate of two, three, or four pounds a week without the slightest ill effects. Take but one tablet after each meal and at bed time until the normal weight is reached and the bodily health completely re stored. Ask your druggist for Marmola Prescription Tablets, or send to the Mar- mola Co., 864 Woodward avenue. Detroit, Mch.. and you will receive for l a full case enough to start you well on your way to lUmneas and happiness. Adv. at the time of the primary election next May. If the request is granted by the leg islature during the special session it will not be necessary for Mayor Baker and other friends of the measure to circulate petitions throughout the state to place the measure on the ballot. Mayor'Baker yesterday received an opinion from City Attorney LaRocbe in which he held that under the pro visions of the constitution the legis lative assembly Is empowered to refer initiative measures to the people at a special election ordered by the as sembly. Mayor Baker is anxious to have the constitutional amendment restoring capital punishment referred to the people at the earliest possible mo ment. In view of the fact that the primary election will be held in May, and that it will be no added expense to the state to call, a special election at that time, Mayor Baker is confident tnat the legislators will refer the measure to the voters in May. JAZZ IS HEBE TP STAY WILL MARIOS COOK DEFENDS SYNCOPATED MUSIC. Leader of American Negro Orches tra Praises Folk Songs of Soulb as Truly Material. BY JOSEPH MACQTJEEN. Jazz has come to stay. It is a wel come diversion. Common folks un derstand it, when they fight shy of high-brow music, although the latter Will Marion Cook, conductor of American Syncopated orches tra, to be heard In concerts, today, public auditorium. of course must be recognized, as it also has its devotees. The American negro has a music all his own, the old folks songs of our own southern states. The American negro musician has a natural gift for musical har monization. So says Will Marion Cook, con ductor of the American Syncopated orchestra and singers that open two concert engagements, matinee and night, Wednesday, at 3 and 8:30 o'clock, in the public auditorium, un der auspices of the city of Portland. "Be sure and tell the Portland peo ple that we play Dvorak. Brahms, even if we do play jazz. Every man in our syncopated orchestra has been hand-picked, so to speak. They all have been educated at American col leges. "Our orchestra exists for no other purpose than to keep alive the spirit and performance in concerts of our own loved negro music of the Ameri can southland, a department of music in which we are specialists. It takes an American negro to sing and play his own music. As for a white man doing' it, never. He's only playing at it. We have the gift of absolute, natural rhythm, and the gift of mu sical pitch," said Mr. Cook. When the war broke out, Mr. Cook began work as a musical entertainer among troops at Camp Upton, Long Island, and Camp Meade, Md. Then he and his musicians went overseas. If? - - K-r ROOSEVELT MEMORIAL CAMPAIGN. Roosevelt Memorial Committee, Name Address Town or City. - The Roosevelt Memorial association has been organized to raise a $3,000,000 fund to be utilized a. follows: in To erect a monument to Theodore Roosevelt In Washington. r. C.; to acquire and maintain a public park at Oyster Bay. N Y., ultimately to Include Sagamore Hill the Roosevelt home, .to be preserved liUe the WaalilnR- "n e'ta a? Mount Vernon and the home of Mr. Lincoln at Springfield; It) to endow the Roosevelt Memorial as.-o.iation as a national society to per petuate Theodore Roosevelt's ideal ot American citizenship. ! Hrtnnr to the fund Will receive ! small portrait of Theodora Roosevelt and will become a memb veil Memorial association. The. names of all contributors will the national meraonal at Washinston. D. C. when erected. to give American negro conceit . A allied soldiers in ionaon. t ney formed also in the Philharmonic hall and the Prince of Wales' theater. One notable Cook orchestra engagement was a concert at Buckingham palace. to the king and queen 01 urmi Diz ain and invited guests. HOTEL TO BE APARTMENT Owners Visit KoseDurg to neopen Old McCIellan House. ROSEBURG. Or., Dec. 9. (Special.) The three-story brick structure that for many years was the leading hotel in this city, known to travelers as the McCIellan house, which has been idle for the past two years, will be reopened as an apartment house, according to information giv en out today by the owners of the property. Messrs. C. A. Keaphle, Lin coln Crabtree and J. R. Webb, of Portland, who arrived here last night and today began work of placing the building in readiness for occupancy. Steamheated throughout, with hot and cold water in most of the 87 rooms, the owners believe that with the present urgent demand for apart ments that they can make this once famous hostelry serve a splendid pur pose. Demand in Roseburg for residence property and apartments continues to increase. The Swiss government is again con sidering the possibility of linking Lake Geneva and the Rhone river with the canal which would give Geneva an outlet to the sea at Marseilles., WITNESS FOR LUCAS IS INDEBTED TO HIM; Character Testimony Given by Man Owing $75. DEGREES HOTLY ATTACKED Self-Styled "Healer" Says "D. D. Was Assumed by Divine Right. Telegram Man Testifies. Savage attacks against the degrees of Ph. D. and D. D. claimed by Alzamon Ira Lucas and the extent of erudi tion required to get several imposing diplomas offered in evidence by tne self-styled "healer" and "trouble spe- I cialist" featured the progress of his $50,000 libel suit against the Portland Evening Telegram before Circuit Judge Tucker yesterday. Cumulative evidence to support the contention of the defense that Lucas is of negro blood was produced, even from records In the possession of the plaintiffs attorney. In an assault on the sole character witness called by Lucas, the defense discovered that he owed Lucas $75 and was a graduate of a defunct naturopathic school of which Lucas had been a faculty mem ber. The plaintiff's case was concluded shortly after the noon recess and the defense began to put on its evidence, by which it first sought to show that the newspaper expose of Lucas' prac tices was a public duty, of news in terest and therefore privileged. All element of malice was denied. The degree of "D. B." was not con ferred on Lucas by a theological seminary but was assumed "by divine right." he told the Jury. "As I understand it, the degree of "Doctor of Divinity must be conferred by some college, and being ordained a minister in a colored Baptist church would not entitle you to the degree, Mr. Lucas," commented" Attorney C. R. Peck, who, with Harrison Allen, rep resent the newspaper. "Just what is your authority for the title?" "It is only on my own authority, an authority by divine right," was the response. "I am not only a minister but a. healer a doctor of divinity." Other Degrees "Explained." On the business card of Lucas is also the assertion that he is ioctor f of .Philosophy. Asked how he re ceived this degree, Lucas replied that it was conferred on him in California by a Hindu priest. "Did you receive a diploma or any certificate to show your qualifications in this line?" was an interrogation. "A Hindu priest never gives diplo mas." The reply was in dignified tones. "He gave me his blessing and conferred the degree on me for my wide knowledge of oriental and occi dental philosophy." "What was his authority to confer this degree?" "I understood he had authority from a university in Bombay, India." Lucas presented a diploma from the Oregon State Naturopathic col lege of Portland, now defunct; a cer tificate showing the degree of "M. S. H.", said to mean "Mental Science Healer-', from the Mental Science col lege of Bryn Mawr, Wash., and a cer tificate of membership in- the Amer ican Naturopathic association. Lucas Connected With College. The witness was a member of the faculty of the Oregon State Naturo pathic college during its life in 1918. He testinea mar ne receiveu inu diDloma on January 11. 1918, before' the school was opened. The "col lege" opened on January 28, 1918, and after one course was discontinued, "on account of the war," said Lucas. He admitted being interested in the organization of the school. Lucas was ordained a Baptist min ister in a colored church in Los An geles. He 6aid that he accepted the honor with reservations, saying that he reserved the right to refuse to teneh eternal damnation, in which he did not believe. Tire ceremony ordination was in the presence of of 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 Roose velt Memorial Association. a ci-nim-aic ui iiiMMLi:riiiip Pouring member of the Roose- be deposited in "the biggest white minister In Los Angeles," he declared. Asked if it were not true that the man to whom he referred as the "biggest white minister'" was a Los Angeles under taker. Lucas replied that he did not know what his profession was now. un cross-examination 'Lucas was asked concerning family birth and death certificates, which might be on record at Santa Barbara, Cal. At first he said he had none, that he had written for the birth record of a brother, but had been informed by the registrar that there was none. Under close questioning he admitted that a record had been received of the birth of a sister. Certificate Is Introduced. "Produce it." demanded the defense. Reluctantly, the document was un earthed from the files of Lucas' at torney, i-eiaon rt. uacoDson. it was a certmed copy or an instrument telling of the birth of a daugh'.er to Ira and Margaret Lucas In Santa Barbara, No vember 11, 1878. "Parentage, negro; color, black." read the certificate. The inquiries had gone rather-deep ly into trouble in which Lucas had been involved with officials In various cities, during the course of the cross examination. He suddenly burst out "Like all teachers, I have been per secuted. After death comes fame." Charles E. Dodge, who based his claim to being a naturopath on the fact tnat he had graduated, from the late Oregon state naturopathic col lege of which Lucas was a faculty member, was the concluding witness for the plaintiff, testifying that he was acquainted with the reputation of iucas for sKHl and learning and that it was good. Ruth Alice Lucas, white wife of the plaintiff, was on the witness stand for a few moments. She said that "to a woman of southern blood" the newspaper comment. "We may kick you on the shins, Alzy, but as sassinate you, never," meant to infer thatLucas was a negro. k. Wheeler, president of the Tele gram Publishing company and the man who ordered the expose of Lucas, was the first witness called by the defense. He testified that he knew nothing of Lucas until his attention was called by a friend, M. F. Brady, to the loss of an employe through al leged machinations of the "healer." "He told me a man named Grau had been humbugged out of several hun dred dollars by Lucas. I knew noth ing of Lucas but thought that the in formation was news, and that, if the man had been humbugged, it was a proper matter for a newspaper to take up. I called the .city editor and re quested that he look up the affair carefully and if the facts justified it to use a story on it. I considered it a matter of news and that it is the duty of a newspaper to expose fraud where it exists." The witness said he had never seen Lucas until he came into his office following the launching of the Tele gram 'campaign against him. City Editor Testifies. Arthur L. Crookman, city editor of the Telegram, was called to the stand. Mr. W heeler called me up and asked, "What do you know about this fellow Lucas?" " explained this wit ness. " 'I know he's a bad actor," I replied, and Mr. Wheeler asked me to send a reporter out to investigate the Grau case and Lucas, for the purpose of exposing his practices if investiga tion showed it would be warranted. I detailed Earl W. Murphy, who wrote the first and second story, and later Arthur Caylor, who wrote subsequent stories." The witness went on to explain that considerable caution was used in getting facts before the attacks were printed, that . affidavits were taken, court records investigated, and many people interviewed. PURS YIELD BIG FIGURE OREGON" TRAPPERS RECEIVE SUM OF $41,738.60. Total for 1918-1919 Season Ex pected to Be Exceeded by 1919-1920 Returns. No small amount of wealth was de rived by Oregon trappers in the past year from fur-bearing animals caught in this state. Figures just compiled for State Game Warden Shoemaker show that in the season from Novem ber 1, 1918, to B'ebruary 28, 1919, sales brought in S41.738.60. This is said to represent only 45 per cent of the catch, as not all of it was reported. That this season's results will be much greater, due to the higher prices ana the greater number of trappers licenses issued, is the prediction made by Mr. Shoemaker. . Whereas 1141 licenses wire taken out last year, 1389 already have been issued for the pres ent winter and the season is yet young. The largest number of any one kind of skins listed is 12.562 muskrats, valued at J12.711.54. Mink ran a close second in the money column, 270i skins bringing in SU, 366. 50. Skunk 2092 of them, produced $4876.61. The one seal listed was worth $325; three wolves, $1200, and seven fisher, $160. Other figures are as follows: 334 wildcats, $1167; 49 badgers, $65.85; 297 weasels, $225. 7o: 412 coyotes, $3301.78; 887 civet cats, $286.77; 96 otter, $1042; 704 coons, $1822.43; 121 beaver, $1550; 81 ringtail cats, $43.60; 54 moles. $9.50; 47 fox, $197.25; 37 bear. $17.14; nine cougar, $30; 3 house cats, $19.50; 23 rabbits, $1. TAC0MAN ABROAD SHIFTED consul General Summons Goes From Shanghai to 3IeIbourne. TACOMA. Wash., Dec. $ (Special.) Consular-General Thomas Sammons, until recently located at Shanghai, has been transferred to Melbourne, Australia, according to advices re ceived by his friends here. Mr. Sammons was a newspaperman in Tacoma before entering political life. In his position as consul-general in Shanghai he has done much for Pacific coast trade. Before leaving China he and Mrs. Sammons were presented with a silver loving cup, the gift of 500 Chinese educators and merchants. Mr. Sammons retains his member ship in the Tacoma lodge of Elks. He was last here in 1918, while en route to Washington, D. C, on business. CITY OF ASTORIA SUED Error in Computation of Excava tion Alleged in Complaint. ASTORIA, Or., Dec. 9. (Special.) Seeking- to recover $14,258 for alleged extra work on the improvement of Olney avenue, between Fifth and Tenth streets, C. G. Palmberg has filed a suit in the circuit court against the city of Astoria. The complaint avers that the city engineer in computing his estimate of the grading made an error of 11, 480 yard3, and that the moving of this earth is worth $14,258, which the plaintiff seeks to recover. Colonel Dowd Visits Hood. HOOD RIVER. Or., Dec. 9. (Spe cial.) Lieutenant-Colonel Dowd. now stationed at Fort Canby, Wash., in command of the coast artillery forti fications, has arrived here with his family to spend a vacation on the B. Coit 40-acre ranch place, in the Upper valley, which Colonel Dowd re cently purchased. Colonel Dowd states that his family will arrive here in March to make th Upper valley place tneir permanent home. CHECK THAT COLD RIGHT AWAY Dr. King's New Discovery Has Relieved Colds and Coughs for Fifty Years. IT was an unusually high quality cold, cough, grippe and croup remedy when introduced half a century ago. Not once in all the years since then has the quality been al lowed to deteriorate. Its effective ness in combating colds and coughs has been proved thousands of times in thousands of families. Taken by grownups and given to the little ones for the safe, sure treatment of colds and grippe, cou-ghs and croup, it leaves absolutely no disagreeable after effects. Get a bottle at your druggist's today. 60c and Jl.u. Bowels Act Human function gently but firmly without the violence of purgatives when you treat them with Dr. King's New Life pills. A smooth-actincr laxative that gets right down to business and grati fying results. All druggists iiic a bottle. Adv. IT" - 1 with all its old-time charm of flavor and miss that because the wine is so eood, I . 1 i :' Catt for .p MM Wlp Wine HP XtlJI'" till WSk -V- 'svlV yi-jW A yoar dealer or write a. feSO'WeK NV:,:f :- direct for " The Art of Hotpi- 1U c w,, V5a JI -" ,1p-.tV! - " i rooo noaucTi i XSok 'SPsffr biohlem of social enltrlainmenL jf?"r ' '"Z'l ZjfrH yl CAKRETT COMPANY, ba Iv.1',-' 1' l?!?' I ."i&irtfti3 - V-riS Bush Terminal Bide. Ne. It SAiMt.f-Sjf Brooklyn. H. T. ' i"if mmrnt W rggSjSg . MASOX-KHRMAX to.. Distributors, Portland, 0 ' - REDS PLAN TO APPEAL DEPORTATION FIGHT MAY GO TO SUPREME COURT. Bee kin an and Goldman to Ask Jits-. tice Brandcis for Writ of Error, Says Counsel. NEW YORK, Dec. 9. Application will be made to Supreme Court Jus tice Brandeis in Washingrton tomor row for a writ of error to brlngf the cases, of Alexander Berkman and Emma Goldman, anarchists fighting deportation, before the highest judi cial tribunal. This announcement was made to night by Harry Weinberger, their counsel. The petition will be an ap peal from the action of Federal Judge Mayer in dismissing writs of habeas corpus. If the writ is granted, w einberger said, he will apply to the full bench of the supreme court to release Berk man and Miss Goldman on bail pend ing argument and final decision. Judge Mayer declined to grant them bail and they are held at Ellis Island awaiting deportation. "The practice of applying for writs of habeas corpus upon loose general allegations which fail to show on the face of the petition that a petitioner is wrongfully detained should be dis continued." said Judi,e Mayer. Miss Goldman was married to Jacob A. Kernsner by a sohochet a slayer The Choice Prizes of Life Are Won By the Healthy and Strong The weak, soft; flabby-muscled those who ere deficient in vior and vital force have ever had to suffer the humiliation of beina ruthlessly ahoved aside by their scronirer rivals A clear, ruddy complexion; bright eyes hardened muscles; and a well knit-toa-ether body' of elastic step and sway, constitute a trump card in any game whether of love or business' If you feel that yon are out classed, lacking the stamina to stand up and claim your own, don't delay another day in com mencing to take .YliO is Mid in original only, like picture bov Drink, and the World Drinks With Thirst, and You Thirst Alone TT7HY thirst ? Why go around Eke a lost soul seeking an oasis in the gray, dry desert ? Right here for you is the famous old VIRGINIA DARE WINE with all its old-time charm of flavor and of animals for kosher meat and di vorced by the same person two years later, according to the answer of the government to her claim that she is a citizen by marriage and therefore not deportable. The answer waa filed in court today. In February, 1S87, she went through a form of marriage with Kersner, according to the record. Schochet Kalmon Bardin performed the ceremony. "'If the marriage by the schochet was legal," says the answer, "then according to the Jewish law It was nullified by the same means." Kersner was denaturalized in 1909. He died early this year. SPOKANE MAN IS MISSING Friends of E. J. Irvine Unable to Explain Absence. PrtOSSER, Wash., Dec. 9. (Special.) Prosser friends have become great ly alarmed by the disappearance of K. J. Irvine of Spokane, a prominent young business man who left here two weeks ago en route for Pocatello and Salt Lake, expecting to return in three days'. Mr. Irvine who was formerly in the lumber business in Spokane and in ban kin (i business at Llbby. Mont., also had land holdings in Alberta. lie associated himself with the central Yakima Ranches company two months ago, engaged in operating and sell ing farms on a large scale. Spokane relatives have no knowledge of his whereabouts. Telegrams have been sent to various localities by Fred H. rjaston. secretary of the Central Yakima Ranches company, in a futile effort to locate the missine man. The Great General Tonic It will restore that confidence you need to combat the ever oppoeinflr forces of social and business life; it will give you the heart and spirit to do and the courage to challenge the world to your right to a place in the Sun, because it will re build your physical strentrth and mental power to a state of perfect health, strengthening your run-down system with better nourishment because of its great aid to digestion. "LYKO" is a refreshing appetizer and an exceptional general tonic in those subnormal conditions of the physical and nerv ous systems, such as muscular and mental fatigue, nervousj exhaustion, general weakness, or debility following a pro tracted illness or the result of a wasting- disease. It's truly Nature's first assistant as a restorative agent a really re markable reconstructive. All druggists have LYKO. Gets bottle today and begin at once to feel and look better. Sole Manufacturers! LYKO MEDICINE COMPANY N.w Ymrk Kns Ci ty. aroma, its satisfying appeal and whole some qualities. Drink VIRGINIA DARE WLNE when and how you please. Nothing is missing but the alcohol and you won't miss that because the wine is so eood. mm MUST PAY PRICE COREAX COURT OP APPEALS UPHOLDS DECISION". Presbyterian Missionary Convicted of Sheltering Agitators Dur ing Corean Revolt. SEOUL, Dec. 5. (tiy the Associated Press.) The supreme court today confirmed the decision of the court of appeals, convicting Rev. Stiller Mowry, a Presbyterian missionary of Mansfield, Ohio, of sheltering Corean agitators during the Corean revolt. Mr. Mowry was sentenced to pay a fine of 100 yen or go to prison for 20 days. The court gave him 30 days in which to decide whether he would pay the fine or serve the Jail term. Rev. Mowry was found guilty last April of sheltering Corean agitators and was sentenced to six months' im prisonment at hard labor. He ap pealed to the court of appealB, which sentenced him to four months' im prisonment, but suspended the sen tence for two years. Later the orig inal judgment was quashed and the missionary was renmnderl for a nw STOMACH UPSET? Get at the Real Cause Take Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets That's what thousands of stomach sufferers are doing now. Instead of taking tonics, or trying to patch up a poor digestion, they are attacking the real cause of the ailment clogged liver and disordered bowels. Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets arouse the liver in a soothing, healing way. When the liver and bowels are per forming their natural functions, away goes indigestion and stomach troubles. Have you a bad taste, coated tongue, poor appetite, a lazy, don't care feeling, no ambition or energy, trouble with undigested foods? Take Olive Tablets, the substitute for calomel. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets are a purely vegetable compound mixed with olive oil. You will know them by their olive color. They do the work without griping, cramps or pain. Take one or two at bedtime for quick relief. Eat what you like. 10c and. Rheumatic Pains Quickly Cased By Penetrating Hamlin's Wizard Oil A safe, and harmless preparation to relieve' the pains of Rheumatism Sciatica, Lame Back and Lumbago t: Hamlin's Wizard OiL It penetrates quickly, drives out soreness, and lim bers up stiff aching joints and muscles You will find almost daily uses foi it in cases of sudden, mishaps or ac cidents such as sprains, bruises, cuts burns, bites and stings. Just as re liable, too, for earache, toothache croup and colic Get it from drufrgists for 30 cents If not satisfied return the bottle an get your money back. Ever constipated" or have sick head! iche? Just try -Wizard Liver .Whips o!easant fittle pink pills, . 50 tents; liuaxaatecd. Ton: trial before the court of appeals, which resulted in his conviction on November 1. Seattle Census to Start. StATTLE, Dec. 9. Three hundred and sixty census enumerators are to start work here January 2, 1920, Roy KrnVd. district census director, an nouneed today. HOW WEAK WOMEN ARF MADE STRONG Mrs. Westmoreland Tells in the Following Letter. Harrison, -N. Y. "When my tirt child was born I did not know about Lydia E. Finkham a Veeetabl tom- pound and had a very hard time. I read in the newspaperabout the vegetable com pound and when my second child camel took it and was well during the whole time, and childbirth was a hundred timea easier. Ever since then I have used it for any weakness and would not be without it for the world. 1 do all my work and am strong and healthy. I am nursing my baby, and I still take the VegetableCompoundaaitkeeps a woman in good health. You may publish my tpptimonlalforthegoodof other women, if you choose to do so." Mrs. C West moreland, Harrison, N.Y. Women who suffer from displace ments, irregularities, inflammation, ulceration, backache, headaches and nervousness should lose no time in giving this famous root end herb remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Com pound, a trial, and for special advice write to Lvdia E. Pinkham Medicine Co.. Lynn, Mass For Middle-Awed- Men and Women It Un't always on-coming old age that causes men end women in the middle years of life to slow op and feel a loss of ambition and energy. Weak or disordered kidneys do not filter waste matter and impurities out of the blood as they should, and back ache, tired feeling, lameness, stiff joints, sore muscles, rheumatic pains, biliousness, irritation of the bladder, puffiness nnder the eyes or other symptom or ailment appears. SHE WAS GREATLY BENEFITED ! feel so much better than I did before I got Foley Kidney Pills. They are fine and ?ou may use my oamein your advertiaetstnt, am glad to help you. aayourmedicine helped me sreatly. 1 truly hope aome one ela who needs it wiUaet eomeof your medicine. Your Kidney Pills are wonderful, I cannot thank you enough for them." Laura Peiry. 1540 Twists St.. Ausuata. Ga. Foley Kidney Pills v .... 'i strengthen the kidneys, stimulate the bladder and tone uplhe liver. They help the kidneys remove the accumu lated poisons and soothe and heal the passages. When the kidneys and urinary tract are doing their work perfectly ,the whole system is benefited and restored to health and strength. Why suffer when a reliable remedy can be so easily had? SOL.U E V K II Y Wil K H K.