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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 5, 1920)
THIS MORNING OKEGOMAN, MONDAY, JANUARY 3, 1020. mm LABOR AS STEPPIi-STOI Steps Taken to Foment Revo lution Are Reveajed. ARRESTS REACH 4500 Well-Known Citizens in Respective Communities to Be Turned Over to States. "WASHINGTON", Jan. 4. Plans f the communist and communistic labor parties, against whom the great raids by government agents inaugurated Kriday night are directed, are to gain control of all labor organizations as the means of fomenting revolution. This was revealed tonight in docu ments made public by the depart ment of justice. Assistant Attorney-General Garvan made public the documents which were seized in several cities with the desire, he said, that the American people learn "the real purpose of these menacing groups and the nature of the poison they were spreading." Campaign Is Continued. Department agents in many cities continued today the work of running down and interrogating members of the two organizations. Officials said it was distinctly surprising: that each party numbered so many American citizens in its membership. The party rolls were said to carry the names of many persons well known in their respective communi ties as American citizens. Although there is no federal law under which the American communists can be dealt with, department agents were not overlooking these. Their cases will be turned over to state govern ments. Arrests Near 450t Mark. Two hundred and eighty persons arrested today in Detroit were added to the list of those taken into cus tody, which is fast approaching 4500. Ninety-four additional arrests of aliens were reported to Mr. Garvan's office today, sending the total against whom the department be lieves it has "perfect cases" to 2279. included in the arrests reported today were: Jacksonville, 9; Grand llapids, 16; Omaha, 11; Courtland. N. Y., 16; Woodlawn, Pa.. 2; Des -Moines, 15; Spokane, 10; Portland, Or., 9, and Toledo and Pittsburg, 2 each, and Denver, 1. Among those arrested In Portland was Victor Saulit, who attracted at tention by his activities as a delegate to the August convention of the com munist labor party in Chicago. In Spokane, federal agents took into custody Peter Kedorchuk, who, of ficials said, had been one of the most dangerous agitators with whom they had to deal in the northwest. Revolution Is Final Goal. In their plan to "bore from with in" the labor unions, as disclosed in the "manifesto and programme," the leaders of the communist and com munist labor parties outlined the pro gramme for inciting simultaneous small strikes and development of these into mass action. The plan of action was given in de tail from "small strikes" to "minor mass strikes; from minor mass strikes to general strikes and from general strikes to the dictatorship of the proletariat through revolution." The "manifesto" said: "The unions are not organs of the militant clas-s in the struggle now. Today the dominant establishment is actually the bulwark of capitalism, merging in imperialism and accepting state capitalism." The "manifesto" admonished the parties followers that they must actively engage in the struggle to revolutionize the trade unions, and added: Federation Held Reactionary. "We recognize that the American Federation of Labor is reactionary and the bulwark of capitalism." The communist party members pledged themselves, the manifesto showed, to participate in all mass slrikes to further its programme of revolution. Complete capitulation by capital in all strikes Is given as one aim while collective bargaining or dickering of any kind between em ployer and employe has no place in the radicals' scheme. The "manifesto of the communist International" which was made public as one of the documents subscribed to by both the communist and com munist labor groups, characterises the leasue of the nations as the "cov er under which the world capitalists iuf pare lur ineir iinai URllie. The league covenant itself is de scribed as "only a deluge of pacifist praise-mongering." Action of the sovernment in obtaining an injunc tion against the leaders of the bitu minous coal strike was employed by the communist party heads as am munition in their campaign. This evidence is contained in a pamphlet printed a few days after Attorney General Palmer had reached an agreement with officials of the Unit ed Mine Workers. "RED" ROTXD-l'P ONI1" BEGUN Drive Not Anywhere Near Tliroug-h, Says William J. Flynn. NEW TORK, Jan. 4. Announce ment that the great nation-wide roundup of "reds" is not "anywhere near through" was made tonight by William J. Klynn, chief of the depart ment of justice secret service. ."We are going to continue gather ins in reds," said Flynn. "We are just resting so that we can renew our work with increased vigor." Five hundred and fifty aliens ar rested during the raids in this and in neighboring cities were held on Kills island tonight for deportation proceedings. The number of prisoners on the island probably will be increased Mon day and Tuesday when 300 warrants held by department agents in New York and smaller numbers in sur rounding places are served.' Deportation hearings before special boards of inquiry will not begin until Tuesday. More than 1700 alleged radicals rounded up in the recent nation-wide raids will be brought to Kills island shortly to await deportation pro ceedings, it was announced tonight at the federal bureau of investigation here. Detroit will send 500. Chicago 221. Philadelphia 200. Buffalo 136, and Nashua, N. IT., 161. These, to gether with 550 arrested in this dis trict, .would make a total of 1768 prisoners. The number of guards at the island has been increased by 90 "strong arm men." The raids on four communist pub lications made last night by the Lu.sk legislative committee, "struck at the source of radical propaganda," ac cording to a statement issued tonight. They revealed the place of printing of "Bread and Freedom," a anarchist publication which had been distrib- uted by Peter Blanki and Naum Stepanuk, who were deported on the "soviet ark" Buford. 2 80 ARRESTED IX DETROIT "House of Masses"' Is Raided lor Second Time. DETROIT. Mich.. Jan. 4. Two hun dred and eighty alleged radicals were taken Into custody this afternoon by department of Justice officers, aided by local police, in a second raid on the "House of Masses." known as headquarters of radicals here. Two meetings were in progress when the federal operatives arrived. They met with no opposition and the reds were taken to the federal building-, where they joined about 300 taken in Friday night's, raid. Arthur L. Barkey, chief of the in vestigation bureau here of the de partment of justice, said he believed 250 to 300 of those taken would "be deported. 'SOLICITORS' ARE SOUGHT TRIO PASSING AS CANVASSERS WANTED BYT POLICE. Men Going About City in Automo bile Believed Responsible lor Recent Burglary. Police are searching for three men who are believed to be operating In the city in the cruise of magazine so licitors and who are charged with burglary of the home of Miss Frida Nygaard. 723 Kast Stark street. A quantity of jewelry was taken, the loot including a gold bracelet, a cameo necklace, a purse, a string of black jet beads, two gold rings, a silver soap box, a glove box and Jl in cash. The three men suspected are said to have driven to the place in an au tomobile. The Red Front Clothing company reported the theft of four pairs of shoes by thieves who broke a plate glass window and took the footwear from the display. Miss Adane Feurer, 544 Lake street, said her place had been entered and a diamond ring and a garnet ring stolen. Efforts were made by thieves to break into a residence at 386 East Eleventh street early yesterday morn ing, according to a report made to the police. A neig-hbor who saw the two men trying to take the glass from a window frightened them away. Mrs. John Bergstrand, 315 Belmont street, reported the loss of a black leather handbag containing valuable papers and articles of clothing. She said the handbag was lost from the running-board of an automobile some where on Front street between the Jefferson-street depot and the Morri son street bridge. Mrs. Ella Erickson, 885 East Four teenth street North, reported that while shopping in the White House millinery store, Sixth and Alder streets. Saturday, she left a suitbox containing a suit of clothes and a georgette crepe waist on the counter for a few minutes. Another shopper, she said, took her suitbox and "left another in its place. LEWIST0N WOMAN DIES Mrs. Ira Small Stricken During Visit in Los Angeles. LEWISTON, Idaho. Jan. 4. (Spe cial.) News of the death of Mrs. Ira Small, well known resident of this locality who had been spending the winter in-Los Angeles, was received yesterday. Mrs. Small was a native of Port land, Or., and was 62 years old. She was married to Mr. Small about 35 years ago when the couple estab lished their home on the ranch a few miles east of Lewiston. Two years ago Mr. Small disposed of his hold ings and since then has been enjoy ing visits with relatives at various points in the west. Besides her husband -Mrs. Small is survived by two daughters and two sons, Ray and Roy Small of Lewis ton, Mrs Roy A. Gage of Lewiston, and Mrs. Robert Hungerford of Port land. It is probable that burial will be at Walla Walla, the first home of Mr. and Mrs. Small. BIG BUILDING WILL "FIT" Terminal In London to Harmonize With Surroundings. (Copyright by the New York "World. Pub lished by Arrangement) LONDON, Jan. 4. (Special Cable.) Plans for the $10,000,000 building to be erected on the Aldwych island site in the Strand by the Bush Termi rial company of New York are now ready for submission to the London county council. Harvey W. Corbett, the architect, who is responsible for the design, has arrived in London. He says he has been a keen ad mirer of British architecture and con fesses that Somerset house, which will face his building, has had con siderable influence on his design. The building which has, architecturally, Influenced Mr. Corbett most is the little known Fishmongers' hall at London bridge. He says: This is to me most satisfying of all London architecture, but the curved side of St. Paul's cathedral is to my mind one of the most beautiful pieces of architecture in the world. GRANGE ELECTS WOMAN Miss Bertha J. Beck Is Master of Callamette Unit. ALBANY. Or., Jan. 4. (Special.) The unusual situation of a woman presiding over a grange will prevail in Linn county this year. Miss Bertha J. Beck has been elected master of Callamette grange, which meets in the Riverside schoolhouse southwest of this city. Other officers were elected as fol lows: Frank Bryant, overseer; James Bryant, lecturer; Wallace Truax, steward; Glenn Eastman, assistan steward; Mrs. L. Bond, chaplain; Les ter Bond, gatekeeper; Mrs. Maud Truax, secretary; W. -C. Stellmacher, treasurer; Olivene EtiStman, Ceres Mrs. Olive Bryant, Pomona; Vera Bond, Flora; Mrs. Myrtle Ponsford lady assistant steward; Mrs. Lulu E. Miller, organist. CHAMBER ELECTION DUE St. Helens Organization to Name Officers Next Wednesday. ST. HELENS, Or., Jan. 4. (Special. The St. Helens Chamber of Com merce will hold its annual election next Wednesday night. - Directors and officers will be chosen. The pas year has been the most successfu one in the history of the chambe and much has been accomplished in city and country development. The chamber has arranged for Frank Branch Riley to present his wonderful pictures and lecture on th "Lure of the Great Northwest" at the school auditorium on Saturday liLESS CIVIL WAR ISCOinSTS'Ai our Radical Organizations in U. S. Linked With Move. . W. W. INCLUDED ON LIST Workers' Industrial Union and Socialists Also Mentioned In Call for Internationale. WASHINGTON, Jan. 4. The com munism of Lenine and Trotzky rec ognizes no national lines or state boundaries, but aims at engulfing the entire world through establish ment of a "dictatorship of proleta- iat," according to the "essence of sovietism" prepared by the bolshevik! hemselves and included In a collec ion of press utterances translated from Russian newspapers for the state department. The memorandum, which presents an Indictment of bolshevik terrorism and points out the soviet programme ror world revolution, was made pub lic today and has been transmitted o the senate and house committees dealing with foreign affairs. rour American radical organ iza- ions were included in the original list, , eligible for representation and full membership In the third Inter nationale, according to the full text of the call Issued by wireless in Jan uary, 1919, which was reproduced in the memorandum. Call' Isaaed by Socialist. These organizations were the so- ialist labor party of America, the left elements of the -socialist party of America, especially that group which is represented by Debs and the socialist propaganda association. he I. W. w. of America, and the workers' industrial union of Amer ica. This call was signed by Boris Rein- stein, representative of the socialist labor party of America, who suc ceeded in reaching Russia without a passport. His wife was arrested re cently in Buffalo. The extraordinary commissions and organized terror under the bolshevik regime are discussed in the memor andum and supplemented by official proclamations from the president of the all-Russian extraordinary com mission. This message, signed by Petrovsky, September 2, 1915. contains the following: Mass Shooting; Advocated. 'End should be put to weakness and softness. All right socialist rev olutionaries known to local Soviets should be arrested immediately. Nu merous hostages should be taken from the bourgeoisie and officer classes. At the slightest attempt to resist or the slightest movement among U'.e white guards, mass shooting should be applied at once. Initiative in this matter rests especially with the local executive committees." A second section of the memoran dum deals with the economic results of the two years of bolshevik con trol. The budget for the first six months of 1919, as published in bol shevik newspapers, showed the bol shevik themselves, it appeared, that the amount of paper money in cir culation in January, : 1919, was more than 50.000,000,000 rubles. Disorganisation Is Revealed. Other press excerpts show the dis organization of administrative ma chinery, the decrease in the produc tivity of labor, industrial collapse. and the breakdown of transportation The world programme of the bolshe. vikl is amplified in the May day proclamation last year of the com unist Internationale, in which ap peared the phrase: "Long live civil war, the only just war, in which the oppressed class fights its oppressors The concluding sentences of the proclamation were: "In 1919 was born the great com munist international. In 1920 will be born the great international soviet republic." CREAMERY OWNERS ELECT St. Helens Co-operative Stockhold ers Have Session. ST. HELENS, Or., Jan. 4. (Special.) The annual meeting of the stock holders of the .St. Helens Co-Opera- tive Creamery association was held here yesterday and the following of ficers elected: P. H. Lund, president J. F. Lloyd, vice-president; Mrs. Jen nie Sobieski, secretary-treasurer. In addition to these officers who are directors, R. Anliker and William Skuzie were elected to the board. During the year past, the creamery association leased from the city a lot on the water front and erected a con crete building at a cost of $5000. The association is composed of farmers and dairymen. Trout Lake Masons Install. GULER, Wash.. Jan. 4. (Special.) The Trout Lake lodge of Masons were hosts at a joint installation of the Masonic and Eastern Star lodges H. Liebes .& Co.'s 56th Annual SALE OF FURS Fur C oats, Coatees, Capes, Scarfs, Chokers and Throws at Splendid Reductions Select .your this winter's furs now. Select your next winter's furs now. The furs you buy-now will last for several winters, so profit by this splendid opportunity, which offers such appreciable savings. Furs are advancing rapidly. The present outloojt for next winter is higher prices, therefore we advise you to protect yourself by making your ' selection now. 1 - See Yesterday's Paper for Reduced Sale Prices here New Year's day. The following officers were Installed by the Ma sons: -Worshipful master, J. E. Rey nolds; senior warden, Carl Pearson; junior warden, Orin Pearson; secre tary, E. C. Duncan; treasurer. Will iam Coate; chaplain, F. M. Coate; senior deacon, E. C Yaden; junior deacon. C, H. Pearson; senior stew ard. Christian Guler; junior steward. Josias Guler; tyler, Monte Mapes. The Eastern Star Installed the fol lowing: Wrorthy matron, Mrs. Annie B. Coate; worthy patron, Henry Pear son; associate matron. Miss Bessie Coate; conductress, Amelia Pearson; associate conductress, Mrs. Martha Mapes: marshall. Mrs. Augusta F. Cutting; secretary, Carl Pearson; treasurer. F. M. Coate; chaplain. William Coate; organist. Miss Martha Coate; warden. Mrs. Phllomena Gul er; sentinel. Josias Guler; Ada, Mrs. Amanda Pearson; Ruth. Mrs. Eliza beth Duncan; Esther, Mrs. Daisy E. Reynolds; Martha, Elva Pearson; Electa, Mrs. Winnogene Belsheim. SKIOIBTS LINED UP BA-BAH-DUSE IS AMONG HEIRS SUMMONED TO COURT. Rights to Ancient Indian Inher itance, Undefined by Wills, Are to Be Settled. TACOMA, Wash., Jan. 4. (Special.) The Sklnshirts are being lined up for rollcall. Sam Guis and his wife Elizabeth have compiled the list so that each and all of them may an swer to a suit to quiet title to prop erty that harks back to federal land grants to Omaha Indians when the peace pipe was smoketf.and a peace treaty signed In January, 1886. Ba-bah-duse Skinshirts. known as Joe Tishu Skinshirt, called Allen. Maggie and Susie and Eva and Dan iel and Manuel and Baby Skinshirt, and all other known -heirs of the Skinshirt family have been sum moned to say as to how the owner ship of the property, its boundaries and its limitations have changed since the original inheritance. The grant 8, according to the plain tiffs, included four lots In the Puyal lup Indian reservation. The Skin shirts say they have multiplied, lived and died, and no wills have been made and probated during the proc ess. In 1908 Tishu Skinshirt turned over the land to Mr. and Mrs. Guis and now some of the heirs have risen to claim an interest in' the property. Thus the Guis family has come into court to thresh it out once and for all. The land Is valuable. BIG BLAST IS SET OFF Dynamite Loosens Dolomite in Quarries at Colvilie. COLVILLE. Wash., Jan. 4. (Spe cial.) Dolomite quarries of the Tu lare Mining company, three miles east of Colvilie, were the scene January 1 of an unheaval by which between 30.000 and 40.000 tons of dolomitic rock was shattered and torn from the foundation to facilitate mining it for furnaces where it is calcined for shipment and use in the manufac ture of paper In the various plants of the Crown-Willamette Paper company in Oregon. More than 7200 pounds of 10 per cent giant powder, placed at intervals of 26 feet in a 40-foot tun nel at a lateral depth of 41 feet from the surface, was set off. A. H. Crane, representing the Hercules Powder company of San Francisco, was here to oversee the work. Several hundred people gathered to witness what they expected would be a most spectacular scene, but were disappointed at the lack of a deaf ening explosion. When the big bluff heaved, there was a grinding sound and the great mass settled back al most noiselessly. The amount of rock displaced by the explosion, it is said, will be sufficient to last a year. LUSK COMMITTEE FLAYED Sabotage far More Serious Than That of I. W. W. Charged. ROCHESTER, N. Y., Jan. 4. Char acterizing accusations against the Amalgamated Clothing workers in Rochester as groundless and absurd. Dr. W. M. Leiserson. chairman of the labor adjustment board of the Roches ter clothing industry, Saturday made public a letter he had written to State Senator Clavton Lusk, chairman of the legislative committee. In which the principal accusations made at the hearing here yesterday are refuted. "The amalgamated is the only or ganization which had made strikes il legal in this city," Dr. Leiserson said. Another part of the letter says that the Lusk committee, by attacking the agreements to arbitrate made by the amalgamated and clothing factories here, "have committed an act of sab otage compared to which the sabot age of the I. W. W. is insignificant." Centralia Choses Teacher. CENTRALIA, Wash., Jan. 4. (Spe cial.) Miss Lillian Garnet of Moscow, Idaho, has been elected assistant teacher in the commercial department of the Centralia high school. She suc ceeds Miss Dora Fischer, resigned. Miss Garnet will assume her duties tomorrow, when the local schools re open following the Christmas vacation. ! For Prompt ana Expert Plumbing service, phone Main 7255.--Adv. STABirsufO FURS J9 fSt .&ftOA-DVUA. SS YAA3 BRITISH WETS MAKE WOOD ALCOHOL BOGY New Weapon Found for War on Prohibitionists. WOMEN TO DECIDE ISSUE Liquor Interests See Danger and Make Use of Every Means for Opposing Propaganda. BY JOSEPH W- GRIGG. (Copyright by the New York World. Pub lished by Arrangement.) LONDON, Jan. 4. (Special Cable.) The ravages of wood alcohol in America have given the anti-prohibition forces here a telling argument in their fight with dry propagandists, and they are losing no time in bring ing It home to the British pubic, aided, of course, by the liquor inter ests men. With the government still afraid to adopt a definite liquor traffic pol icy, the Britisn drys are undoubt edly being given an opportunity to extend their campaign and the suc cess of this campaign largely depends upon the women voters. As one well known English bishop expressed it the women voters here will eventually hold the balance of power in deciding me liquor issue. The liquor interests recotrnize in "Pussyfoot" Johnson's campaign a serious menace and are preparing to fight to a finish. Improvement in sa loons Is being advocated by the iiauor trade to meet the criticism of the evils of many saloons as run at the present time. Pressure grows steadily for a scientific regulation of the liquor traffic, not on lines as strict as existed during the war. but more akin to the modified System of regu- it&Ljuuss now in operation. Wet Element Still Strong". It is practically certain that pre war conditions will not be reinstated, but it is equally certain that at the present, if the question were put to a referendum, there would be an over whelming vote against emulation of Americas policy. The hopes of the drys are centered in continuing their propaganda among women voters. One strange effect of American prohibition is to generate the suspicion here of American dry propaganda in almost everything. Un wittingly or otherwise, some Ameri can film companies,have recently sent to this country a large number of film dramas in which John Barleycorn gets rough handling. .In one well known moving picture house recently, three dramas shown in one evening all had reformed drunkards as their heroes. This aroused the suspicion of the audience that these films were in sidious dry propaganda and there were loud protests. Britons have been cautioned against "Pussyfoot's" prop aganda to such an Extent that some wets even suspect that dry heroes in American novels are only part of it. Editorial Brings Challenge. Lord Rowallan, in a letter to the Pall Mall Gazette, states his willing ness to pay $5000 to the Licensed Victuallers' asylum if it is proved that crime has not diminished in America as a result of prohibition. His chal lenge is the result of an editorial in the Pall Mall Gazette on the enormous increase in crime in America because of prohibition. Of this, Lord Rowallan says: "People who don't know the facts are liable to be ' confused by such statements and I wish to put them to a definite test. I allege that crime has diminished since prohibition came Into force in the United States and if any representative body of the liquor trade, such as the Licensed Victuallers' association, challenges this view, let ' us prepare written statements and submit them to a com mittee of a statistical society and if the verdict goes against me I am pre pared to send my check for 1000 ($5000) to the Licensed Victuallers' asylum." Lord Rowallan is a well-known temperance advocate. LATE CULTURE IS DANGER Lane County Orchardist Tells of Cold Weather Experiences. EUGENE, Or.," Jan. 4. (Special.) Fruit trees that were cultivated late suffered most from, the freeiing weather of the past month, according to E. L. Klemer. who owns 1000 acres of orchard land in the Kern Ridge country northwest of Eugene, who was here yesterday on his way to Portland. Mr. Klemer said trees that were cultivated late in the fall were sappy and as a result, when the zero weather came, the tender limbs were killed while trees that had not been culti vated late suffered , no damage be cause They, were dormant. - Mr. Klemer reported prune and ap pie nursery stock hard to get. with prices exceedingly high. He said a large acreage of both these fruits would be set out in his locality if it were possible to obtain young trees. 1 "11 JWlJlia. GOING to reftt goodwill shave; built up. Your account, too, is cordially in ' vited, ahH whether large or small will receive our best attention. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK K, ILL, KILLS SELF MRS. MARY FRANCES KERTSON, CONSUMES LYE. Coroner Attributes Suicide to De spondency; Widower and Daughter Survive. Mrs. Mary Frances Kertson, 51 years of age, committed suicide at her home, 72 East Twenty-sixth street. vesterdav afternoon at 2 o clock by consuming lye. She is said te have been despondent from Illness. J. E. Kertson, her husband, called Dr. J. P. Tamiesie and everything pos- ble was done in the effort to save her life." Death followed shortly after Mrs. .Kertson Is said to have taken the fatal draught. Leo Goetsch. deputy coroner, was called and, after he had made an in vestigation, the body was turned over to A. R. Zeller & Co.. undertakers. Mr. Goetsch reported the case to be clearly one of suicide. He said that Mrs. Kertson had been sick for some time and was apparently despondent as a result. Mrs. Kertson is survived by her widower and an 18-year-old daughter. She was a native Oregonian. Sciiool Addition Planned. EUGENE. Or.. Jan. 4. (Special.) Plans are being drawn in the office of a local architect for an addition to the high school at Toncalla. The ad dition will be 77 by 80 feet in dimen sions and will contain a gymnasium, a room for the domestic science de- f IB I XTVTT ' Klip If Red Seal Records From January List You'll enjoy our Victrola GERALDINE FARRAR Sings "Sans To?' $1.00 GALLI-CURCI" Sings "Glances So Soft" from the opera "Don Paquale" $1.50 JOHN McCORMACK Sings "Only You" $1.00 PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRA Plays "Invitation to the Waltz" $1.50 VICTROLAS $25 Upward Convenient Payment Terms Hi Sherman II Sixth and Morrison Streets, Portland (Opposite Postoffice) ML SEATTLE TACOMA SPOKANE ygjj "IL'" 1 1 . iisnwi iw wiwslni n isiHii 1 iWMVawwaibnsaHaaw)wanasa and from the main that many years of OF PORTLAND OREGON THE FIRST"- NATIONAL' BANK WEST OF THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS partment and rooms for vocational training. Read The Oregonian classified ads. "ONLY ONE THING BREAKS MY COLD! "That's Dr. King's New Dis covery for Fifty Years a Cold-breaker." NOTHING but sustained quality and unfailing effectiveness can arouse such enthusiasm. Nothing but sure re lief from stubborn old colds and on rushing new ones, grippe, throat-tearing coughs and croup could have made Dr. King's New Discovery the na tionally popular and standard remedy it is today. Fifty years old and always reliable. Good for the whole family. A bottle in the medicine cabinet means a "short lived cold or cough. 60c and 11.20. All druK-gists. Adv. Regular Bowels Is Health. Bowels that move spasmodically free one day and stubborn the next should be healthfully regulated by Dr. King's New Life Pills. In this way you keep the Impurities of waste matter from circulating through the system by cleansing the bowels thoroughly and promoting the proper flow of bile. Mild, comfortable, yet always relia ble. Dr. King's New Life Pills work with precision without the constipa tion results of violent purgatives. 25c as usual at all druggists. Adv. hearing these in Dept., First Floor Jiftay & Cc i banking room Iro the fair banking THIS NURSE ADVISES Women Who Are 111 To Take Lydia E. Pinkham' Vegetable Compound. East Rochester, N. Y. "1 have used Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable uiuiK ii one. x am a practical nurse and when I get ran down and nervous I take theVegeta able Compound. I also have trouble with my bladder when I am on my feet and Lydia E. Pink ham's Sanative Wash re- that. have recommended your medicine to several young ladiea who have all benefited by it.' Mra. Agnes L. Bellows, 306 Lincoln lid., East Rochester, N. Y. ' Young women who are troubled with painful or irregular periods, backache, headache, dragging-down sensations, fainting spells or in digestion should take Lydia EL Pink barn's Vegetable Compound. Thous ands have been restored to health by this root and herb remedy. Write for free and helpful advice to Lydia E. Pinkham MedicineCo. (con fidential), Lynn, Mass. Women only open, read and answer such letters. The Luncheon That Wasn't Spoiled Harry Brewster kissed a disconsolate little wife when he returned from th office one drizzly evening in January. "Wh&fi the matter. girlie V be asked. "Oh, Harry, you know I am enter taining at luncheon tomorrow and now I am in for another miserable cold." Her pretty face was flushed and showed signs of fever already. "Have you done anything for It. yet?" Harry asked. "No. I haven't." she replied quickly. There's nothing to do but go to bed and stay until a cold runs Its course. And I want to be up tomorrow." "It is too bad," Harry responded sympathetically. "By George, Bob Knowles told me Weeks Break-Up-A-Cold Tablets cured him over night." "But cold tablets contain eaiomel. which is a mercury compound, and must be taken very carefully," she re marked, uninterested. "Bob says Weeks' contain a vsce table laxative Instead of calomel. I'll get a bor after supper." The box was bought and Mrs. Brewster took them as directed. . but . went to bed feeling very sura the luncheon would have to be postponed. In the rnorninft Harry did not waken his wife. She slept so quietly he knew the fever must have left her. That niRht he met a wife happy over a successful afternoon. "Oh. Harry," she said, "ererythinj went perfectly lovely and I feel simply fine. Not a trace of a cold an day. Just think what I would have been saved If we had knowa before of that little twenty-five cent box of Weeks TtT-k-nn- A-Onld Tablets." COZY DAIRY LUNCH & CAFETERIA 323 Washington St- (Near 6th) Choice Roasts, Steaks, Chops, Chicken, Fish, Eggs, etc 15f, 20. 25 KICH HOTCAKES CRISP WAFFLES and all short orders, any time of day or night Excellent Chicken Dinner Sunday Phone Your Want Ads to THE OREGONIAN Main 7070 A 6095 r: ;f ' . .. i i .it