THE MORNING OREGONIAN, MONDAY, MAY 24, 1920 HO CONTINUE E Senator From Spokane Puts All Doubt to Rest. CAMPAIGN GOES AHEAD Governor Hart Addresses Walla Walla Sleeting but Refuses Carl yon Bill Comment. NEW BILLS AT THE THEATERS IF A wh SEATTLE, Wash., May 23. (Spe cial.) This job of running for gov ernor is a strenuous occupation and only the strong-hearted should at tempt it. State Senator Ed Coman of Spokane, who seeks the republican nomination, has said. The declaration by Senator Coman that he proposes staying in the guber natorial contest to the en tt at rest a story that was circulated after the Bellingham convention that some of his friends had advised him or had agreed to advise him later that in the interest of party harmony he should consent to an elimination plan. Coman wasn't expected by the inter ested politicians to be a proposed beneficiary of the elimination process. Spokane Headquarters Busy. Spokane headquarters of the Coman fight are busy compiling a card index system to keep in touch with voters in eastern Washington, while a simi lar work for the-west side-is under way at his headquarters in the Krye hotel. Senator Coman is expected to return to western Washington this week. Governor Hart has been traveling on state business' in eastern Wash ington during the last week. He made a speech in. Walla Walla, but declined an invitation- to -address m Spokane meeting where the Carlyon highway bill was under discussion. Governor Hart was quoted in Spokane as saying that though he had strong views on the Carlyon bill, he believed that as the measure has been submit ted to the people for their ratifica tion, he should not, as the state's executive, attempt to influence that decision. In any event Governor Hart was compelled to go to Medical Lake, to inspect state institutions at that point at the time the Spokane invitation was extended to him. Thouprh Governor Hart has not formally opened his campaign for the republican nomination, his friends have been extremely active in his behalf. Since the adjournment of the special legislative session on March. 23, the Hart workers have shown more activity than have the support ers or other candidates in the race. Hart has the advantage of the sup port of the state administration, for most of the appointive officials have enthusiastically taken up his contest. He presided over the senate during three sessions and was acting gov ernor during one regular and a spe cial Bession, So his acquaintance among members of the legislature is more extensive than that of any other candidate. The Hart forces are endeavoring to obtain the support of the law makers who have served with him in the past. Cellatly Making Ciht9. The only gubernatorial candidate other than Senator Coman, who has established headquarters in Seattle, is Representative J. A. Gellatly of V e natchee, who is. making a quiet per sonal canvass of the state. Colonel Roland H. Hartley .of Ever ett has been in-consultation with Se attle friends during the last week and is expected to return here tomorrow, Whether or not Hartley headquarters will be opened in Seattle next month probably will be determined during the coming week. Hartley has been in the guberna torial race longer than any of his rivals, but he has directed a quiet campaign from his home in Everett thus far. Immediately after the close, of the campaign four years ago, Hart' ley announced he would run for gov ernor and he was the first candidate to make a formal avowal this year. Colonel Hartley, it is declared by his friends, will direct his campaign on the theory that his attitude of oppo sition to all radical elements was thor oughly established four years ago. In proof of this he has sent out copies of his platform of 1918 and in timated that he proposes when he stares his real fight to take up the campaign where he left it four years ago and also bring into his contest newer issues. Colonel George B. Lamping and Colonel John Stringer of Seattle have not launched an aggressive fight as yet, although' Colonel Lamping in a speech delivered before the Pierce county republican club outlined many of his views on state issues. Orphenm. BY LEONE CASS BAER. ALL operatlo stars and star-lets ho take brief journeys into vaudeville would follow Henri Scott's friendly little way of prefacing each song with a brief word about the song, Its origin, meaning and why be sings it, possibly there would be more of a get-together feeling between vaudeville audiences and operatic singers. So often we have things' forced on us, crammed down our very throats in the name of high art, and when we frankly say we do not like it, or do not understand it, we are pitied patronizingly by others who do not know any more about it than we do, but are afraid to- say so. Henri Scott, the famous American bass-baritone, may not be of the pro letariat, but he understands the pro letariat. For that reason an addi tional glory surrounds his singing. We knew what he was singing, for he told us in words, enhanced by whim sical humor and an intimate- touch. He told us of Valentine's farewell in Kaust and then sang the big song, and then he gave a word picture of an Indian song before 4ie launched into rts singing. "By the Waters of Mlnnetonka," he called it, and a rippling piano accom paniment suggested the pleasant waters, while the big dramatic voice sang the love legend of the Indian brave. The Toreador song from Car men gained a personal equation in Mr. Scott'3 humorous preface that he preferred the role because the com poser had put one over on the tenor and allowed the baritone the big song and to capture the girl as well. As an encore he sang 'On the Road to Mandalay," saying that it is his fa vorite of the Rudyard Kipling poems that have been set to music. Mr. Scott's voice is powerful and pleasing, of marked beauty. His dic tion is worth a volume.- A. Wynter Smith is the able pianist. Homer Mason . returns with his clever 'study in the prevalent epi demic of amnesia. Marguerite Keeler, a very charming comedienne of pink and platinum coloring and cunning feminine witcheries, helps Homer make a big success of the sketch. Marguerite has been an amnesia vic tim from the shock of a fall down stairs,, and when the play opens : she has amncsiacd herself into an occu- I pied room at a hotel where a burglar " " ' ' ' " , nao mi. Ull lilts iicua aiiu restored her reason. The rooyi's oc cupant has been away at a private sanitarium for alcoholics and escapes and recovers his reason also, simul taneously with the girl. They believe they must have been married at some unaccountable moment during their attacks of amnesia, and the sketch has been appropriately named "Mar ried." Their wooing interspersed by domestic details is a highly humorous affair, and set out as it is in the excellent and natural methods of Mr. Mason and Miss Keeler the values of the lines and situations become ex ceedingly amusing. Beth Beri is a California girl who bows and bends and sways in dance like the lovely poppies of her own native heath. She has acrobatic ideas incorporated in some of her graceful dances and is quite delightful. Two slim young men assist. They are Jay Velie and. Paul O'Neill. The act is handsomely caparisoned. The Rosellas have a capital act. One Rosella is a quaint maid in gypsy apparel, who plays a big golden harp. The other Rosella is done up as an inebriated passer-by, who stops to play on his pipe, his cane and a lamp post, out of all of which he gets splendid music. The comedy and the surprise element add to the act, but the music is excellent. Opening the bill is Rudinoff, who makes smoke pictures, whistles like the birds and makes shadow pictures. A pair of aerial braves, Stewart and Mercer, have a diverting trapeze act. Also on the bill is Ned Norworth with Evelyn Wells and Frank Herbin. w Baker. ITH as many varieties of south ern accent as there are actors who portray southerners in the play "Lena River" of BO years ago is be ing put on at the Baker for the fare well week. The scenes are laid in Kentucky and save for William Lee as a darky servant the entire cast uses a Lincoln, Neb., southern dialect. The 60-year-old comedy has been re tained and 50 years is too long to preserve comedy. The presentation is a series of inconsistencies. The women wear 1920 gowns, the furni ture is some 1920, some of the Abe Lincoln period, and the characters speak of incidents that were happen ing SO years ago. In the prologue Helen Baker, who is an excellent young character-actress and willing to go to any lengths to make a role genuine, affords great hilarity as an old spinster on a farm and wears ilk hose and French heels to go with her slattern dress and unkempt hair. John Fee is the hero and a young girl plays his mother. When ever John Fee says "mother" to the smooth-faced debutante the audience Dili HEALINGS E HELD IN PORTLAND Followers Profess Faith Rev. John G. Lake. in "MIRACLES" NOT SEEN Great Number of Persons Asking for Aid Appear to Be Mostly Hypochondriacs. While there were no "miracle" cures at the opening sessipn of lie v. John G. Lake's series of "divine healing meetings" at municipal auditorium giggles. The height of comedy in the yesterday afternoon, there were pres- piuy 13 reacnea wnen lieorge xayior, . enc on tne platform half a dozen per LIQUOR STORE IS LOOTED JVLCOHOIi YALXliD AT $20,000 SEIZED BY ItOBBERS. Seattle Sanitarium Employes Held T'p by Masked Man 'While Con- federates Carry Off Barrels. SEATTLE, Wash., May 23. (Spe cial.) While a masked man held up two employes of the institution with a revolver, four other men broke into the basement storeroom at Firlands, the municipal tubercular sanitarium, early Sunday morning and stole near ly 350 gallons of whisky, valued. current "bootleg prices, at more than $20,000, making away with their loot in a touring car and an automo bile truck. R. W. Johnson, fireman, and John Murray, night watchman, were alone in the engine room of the hospital when the robber entered. He men aced them with a heavy revolver, then forced them to stand against the wall while his confederates forced en trance to the strong room in whieTi was the institution's supply of liquor for medicinal purposes. The into held the two men at bay for several minutes while three bar rels and a number of kegs, none of which was entirely full, were carried out to the waiting cars and loaded. When the room had been entirely cleaned out, -the holdup man -backed cut and Johnson and Murray heard the automobiles drve off toward Seattle.- The man who held up the two hos pital attaches was described as being about 30 years old and 5 feet 10 inches in height. No description was ob. tained of his confederates. Lyric. SOLO dances in great variety re place the usual opening chorus of the musical comedy at the Lyric this week and form a popular new attrac tion. Cabaret songs are another fea ture of "Fads arid Follies," the new revue, the Betting of which is in Paris. Pursuit of a count for a husband and a collection of antique statuary by an American woman who goes abroad leads to the complications in the plot. A grasping French land lord, bent on extracting all the money possible from tourists, places her un der financial obligations to him. She purchases two fine statues from him promising to pay for them as soon as she has found her count. The fun begins when Mike and Ike Ben Dillon and Al Franks, who are employed to move the antiques, break them and decide to pose as statues until the deal can be completed. An other American, also hunting a count for matrimonial purposes, drops in about this time and complicates mat ters. Will Rader has one of the best song numbers, which eulogizes Theodore Roosevelt. The solo dancers, members of the chorus, who furnish the extra numbers this week are Marie Celes- tine, Claire Wahrmund, Jessie and Anjie Reed. They appear in what represents a cabaret de luxe opening night, all of the Rosebuds taking part. Miss Liilie Lytell also has a number, 'There was I Waiting at the Church. In the play itself Dorothy Raymond plays the part of Mrs. Waxtaper, one of the ambitious Americans, and Charlton Chase is the landlord. Will Rader makes a splendid count. Billie Bingham and Madeline Mathews take the part of the two other American women. Brljradler-Gcneral Bailey Dies. CHICAGO, May 13. Brigadier-Gen eral.C. M. Bailey. U. S. A., retired, died here Saturday. General Bailey was born in New York la 1841. lie was retired In 1SS9. as a rural wag, has the seat of his trousers torn out and dons a dress to hide the predicament and lays down flat on his face when guests arrive. It's about as funny as a cry for help. There are long asides, whispered or moaned or cried or muttered. If the heroine makes the asides they are cried or moaned for she is that kind poor Lena. If it's the villainess, and Mary Edgett Baker is the picturesque villainess, the asides are muttered with venom. The plot is as compli cated as a page out of the telephone book and just about as interesting. Where one quick reply would explain a mystery they all avoid that reply as if it were a plague, and we are treated to four acts of one constantly reiterated theme, embroidered and em blazoned and the final curtain brings what we" knew ail along. "Lena Rivers" possibly was an exciting story when Mary J. Holmes first gave it to her palpitating readers. But SO years is a long time and Lena has lost her pep. The play will run all week with matinees on Wednesday and Saturday. The cast: Lena Itivers I.llllan Foster Granny Nichols Claire Sinclair Caroline Livingstone. . .Mary Edsett Baker Raatus Johnson William J-e Durwftrd Belmont John ti. Fee Anna Livingstone Mayo Methot Mrs. Graham .. Muriel Kinney Nancy Scovcndyke Helen Baker Joel Slocum George R. Taylor Harry Graham George P. Webater John Livingstone Brodcrick O'Farrell Hippodrome. USED to "be an -old-fashioned bev erage named "pop," that they sold at circuses. It was tingle from the first gulp to the last and it came in fancy colors. There's just such an Let on the Hippodrome bill, opening yesterday, when Phil E. Adams and his lively troupe romp out for a quar ter of an hour of happy songs, eccen tric comedy and general gala time. There are six girls In the act who wear their breezy costumes with non chalant grace, and who are pretty foils for that artist of lunacy, the long-nosed Phil, mimic and master merrymaker-. Tho act is termed miniature musical satire and is all of that. Billy Fields and Bob Robertson one with a long face and the other slant-eyed and comic as a billikln known to programme readers as "the gloom chasers," have a line of patter that stretches away to the joke fac lories and enables them to spring,! new uuo every spur, secona. inere isn't any way for the uninitiate to tell which one is Bob and which Is Bill but the partners are riots of equal caliper ana earn their plaudits. Strength such as the late Mister Samson had when he took a circus lion by the jaws and ripped him wide open is smilingly displayed by the raDer Drotners, two tumbling ath letes whose strength makes their stunts appear e a s y unless one watches the muscles swell and ripple along knotted arms and bulging torso. And there are Welton and Marshall. "the hare hunters," and Vidian Du. in musical melange, and Murry Leslie, wno narrates by tuneful song to round out an excellent bill. "The A B C of Love," starring Mae Murray, is the film number. sons who bore testimony to the fact that cures had been wrought through the agency of Mr. Lake in the past and in the actual work of "healing" which followed the service, these persons assisted.' Approximately 300 persons were present and close to 100 gathered in a corner of the auditorium for treat ment. There were a number of crip ples and paralytics, who did not ap pear to have received any especial benefit : and the greater number of those asking for treatment seemed to be hypochondriacs. Several persons came up to the healer and thanked him for benefits which they had received in the past. One of these said his child had been practically at the door of death when cured. ... Influenza Cares Claimed. Mr. Lake claimed that of the 727 In fluenza cases treated" by him or by his associates in the Spokane divine healing institute during the epidemic in that city there was not a single death. He said that during the war Louis Botha cabled him from Cape town to Spokane asking him. to or ganize a healing mission for the troops invading German South Afriea, as a result of his former association with a healing mission in Johannes burg, which he founded. He said he arranged for a corps of CO men, who ministered to the 20 per cent of the South African army which placed its sole reliance on divine healing. "Since 1908," said Mr. Lake. "I have witnessed a deluge of healing, such as I believe no other living soul has seen. He asserted that in the past five years the mission in Spokane has healed 100,000 persons. No Appeal tor Fonda Made, No collection was tr ken and no ap peal for funds made. There were baskets at the door, but very few con tributed. Miss Mary Whitemore, who. It was declared was a county employe at Spokane, stood and acknowledged the truth of the statement that sh was discharged from the deaconess hos pital at Spokane as incurably tubercu lar and was healed in several weeks. Mrs. Mary Mathenay of Gresham similarly acknowledged that she had been pronounced incurable from can cer; that she had been sent to Mr. Lake by her physician who said he could no nothing more and that she was healed -in seven weeks. Thes and others themselves "laid on hands' and -prayed for the individual receiv ing treatment, which constituted the agency of the healing xvork. At the close of the meeting several said they had received benefit, one young woman declaring she had been cured of neuralgia and another serting her spinal pains, from which she had long been troubled, had com pletely disappeared. Mr. Lake said that it was not un til later meetings that all would know the full benefit of their treatment. With his associates, Mr. Lake will be at the auditorium to receive those who wish to see him from 2 P. M Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, while meetings will be held each night at 8 P. M. There is no charge of any kind UNITED FAIRS PLANNED Co-operation in Washington to Standardize Exhibits Sought. SPOKANE, Wash., May 13. Co operation between fairs held in Wash ington with especial regard t6 edu cational features and standardization of exhibits and awards were discussed at a conference here Saturday be tween Governor Hart and representa tives, of Washington fairs. Present were W. H. Paulhamus of Puyallup, representing the Southwest ern Washington Fair; Manager Wine ley of the Washington State Fair; F. S. Gloyd, state commissioner of agriculture; Dean Johnson of Wash ington State college; Thomas S. Grif fiths, president of the Spokane Inter state Fair, and E. E. Flood of this city. Greater emphasis on agricultural and stock show features of fairs was recommended by those present. THEATER IS DECORATED Managers Prepare for Special 12 Act Vaudeville Show. Official decorators for the Im perial Shrine convention in Portland began work yesterday decorating the Heilig theater, where the theatri cal managers of Portland will stage a lZ-act show Wednesday night. . Proceeds of the show will be turned over to the entertainment committee of the Shrine as the the atrical manager's additional contri bution. Frank Coffinberry, formerly man ager of the Portland Orpheum, has been placed in charge of the show and will call a meeting of the man agers this afternoon for the purpose of selecting the headline acts, to be presented. The cream of the acts from the Orpheum, Hippodrome and Pantages theatres together with a special comedy presentation by the Rosebuds of the Lyric will comprise the bill at the benefit. Tickets will be on sale this morn ing at the Heilig theater. Sugar Export Is Off. BUENOS AIRES, May 23. The ban on the exportation of sugar has been lifted for 90 days, and with a limit ef 100.000 tons, by a decree issued by President Irigoyen. s To prevent an undue advance in the domestic price through lifting of the ban the decree fixes the maximum price at the equivalent of 11 cents gold per pound. If 'this price is reached exportation must immediate ly cease, Veteran Reporter Is Dead. NBW YORK. May 23. Gus C. Boed er, veteran newspaper reporter, died yesterday in Brooklyn. For 33 years he w-as on the news staff of the World. CASTOR I A For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Ajways bears the Vgnatuxe of ROM-IDA Hair Grower POSITIVELY GUARANTEES TO GROW HAIR Parlors Now Open at Rooms 428-429 Medical BIdg. for the treatment of bald heads and falling hair. Frances S. Ryan, Mgr. SHAMPOOING MANICURING Treatments by Appointment McADOO IS MADE VICTIM (Continued From First Page.) ventions may be, and often are, far from true indications of the state o feeling of the party leaders. Looking more deeply, it is possible to say with confidence that Mr. Wilson's action has met with widespread resentment The explosive uproar anent the democratic senators is sufficient evi dence of that, - But the most spectacular result of President Wilson's message is the effect on the political fortunes of his son-in-law. Those democrats who re sent the attitude of the president are wreaking a vicarious revenge upon Mr. McAdoo. About the time the message was issued.' Mr. McAdoo' fortunes were at their highest. The forces which were to nominate him were Just being brought Into organ- ) tzea piay. At tnat time anyone who made inquiry among democratic lead ers would have been told by most of them with an air of finality that tne ticket would be McAdoo for nren- ident and Cox for vice-president. I Today the same inquiry In the same quarters receives, with an equal de gree of positlveness, the answer that the ticket will be Cox for president and McAdoo for nothing at all.' As things stand today Mr. McAdoo will not get the delegation from his' own state. Within the past ten days he has been told so. In strict accuracy, the president's message on the league is not the whole cause of the change of front so far as it applies to Mew York state. An additional and even more acute cause was the appoint ment of a federal Judge in New York i against the wishes of the state ma-1 chine. The circumstances of that appoint ment would probably appear to the president's credit from the point of view of the independent citizen not concerned in partisan patronage. But it broke the back of the New York machine's patience. In the words of one of the New York leaders, when the news of the appointment came out, "This is the end.' McAdoo Seriously Handicapped. Not having his own state back of him is & serious handicap to Mr. Mc Adoo, but it is not final. Grover Cleveland received his first nomina tion against the will of the democratic organization in his home state. In fact, to have tne opposition ox lam- many is often an asset in otner parts of the country. But in Mr. McAdoo s case it is not merely. New York that has turned against him. Illinois also has turned away from him. Anyone who at tended the democratic state conven tion in Illinois last week and who gathered the consensus of the feel ing of the body of district and pre cinct leaders that made up the con vention, received a thoroughly crys tallized impression that Illinois will oppose Mr. mcaooo. Anotner large state, Massachusetts, is pretty com pletely under the leadership of Sen ator Walsh of that state- It is well understood Senator Walsh regards opposition to Mr. Wil son's version of the league as para mount patriotism, and the Massa chusetts delegation, will, in conse quence, resist the effort to nominate McAdoo. Others Rave F"verlte Sena. Some other large states are not for McAdoo, not merely as a result of recent developments, but because they have candidates of their own Indiana with Marshall and Ohio with Cox. Tennessee is against McAdoo and Georgia also. In connection with Tennessee, Georgia and New York there is a. current phraso of exultation among Mr. McAdoo s en emies to"the effi-ct thai? "he will not have the state he was born in, nor the state he lives in, nor the state he votes in." Mr. McAdoo, indeed, is showing how conspicuous that handicap, which lias always seemed to be so Bevere as to make him the least likely ot tne democratic candidates. That is, the relation to the president. Mr. McAdoo must carry all of the president's liabilities and can get none of his assets. He is the one man whom Mr. Wilson and tho ad ministration cannot lend a hand to help. As to any other candidate, the administration, even under its present lack of prestige, could be a help but the president cannot lift a hand to help his own son-in-law. If he should the very effort to exercise that asset would defeat itself. Wilson's Propriety Evident. On this point the president has un doubtedly acted with circumspect pro priety. There is nowhere a person who can say that President Wilson has lifted, or - is lifting, a finger to help Mr. McAdoo. Even so, there is hardly any possible course of action or inaction on the part of the presi dent and the administration which is not fraught with danger to Mr. Mc- Adoo's hopes. If this administration refrains scrupulously from taking a hand in the nomination, it will be said that that very silence and inaction in itself Is an expression of intention to help Mr. McAdoo. The net of it all is that at this mo ment the point upon which the bulk of the most powerful democratic local leaders throughout the country are crystallized is opposition to Mr. Mc Adoo. Another crystallization, sec ondary to this, is In favor of Cox. Cox is the present rallying point. Whether Cox will continue to be the rallying point up to the final moment of success in the convention cannot be predicted with certainty. The obvious probability is that all crystallizations are subject to revi sion the day after the republicans have finished their convention. The Cox crystallization, like the McAdoo crystallization which preceded it, and like the Palmer crystallization which came first of all,. is merely tentative Election Enlarges Gresham. GRESHAM, Or., May 23. (Special.) The city of Gresham was enlarged to the extent of 33 additional acres as a result of the election yesterday. The Minnie Clanahan tract of 23 acres west of town on the 'Section Line road, part of the original claim of Mrs. Clanahan's father. J. P. Pow ell, who came to Gresham in 1S53, was annexed, as was the Pat Collins farm -of 10 acres south of Ofesham. I K'ST TV E The economy v of suc- jfZ rj cessful baking proves tNJ W Uniformity of j)U fj Olympic F.lour 1 1 '"-mm- 1M -t iMinj fV and 49 lb. sicks at Ji nSnannnnnljnan YOUZ nerest gTocer- y SEATTLE BAKERS RESUME!- , Cal.; Hartford, Conn., and Ot-Can." ASSOCIATION SAVS STRIKE IS AT END. Statement Says Public May Ob tain Bread as Usual, Be ginning Today. SEATTLE, Wash., May 23. (Spe cial.) As far as master bakers are concerned, the bakers' strike is over. All plants of the various members of the association will resume normal operation Monday. "The public can now ask for and obtain the individual brand of bread it prefers, as before the strike," says an announcement of the Master Bak ers association. "Bach individual master baker will again solicit in every territory with a full line of bread and bakery goods as before. "In order that, the public may know that the bread strike in Seattle was not local, but was a general move ment staged in the unions, we quote a list of cities where bread strikes are now taking place, as published in the Bakers' Journal, the official organ of the Bakery and Confectionery Workers' International Union of America: "Fargo, N. D.; Charleston, S. C; Philadelphia, Nw Haven, Champaign, N. Y.; Los Angeles. Cal.; . Nashville, Tenn.; Sioux Falls, S. D.; Victoria. B. C; Seattle. Wash.; Jacksonville, Fla.; Lynn, Mass.; San Antonio, Tex.; Chi cago, Knoxville, Tenn.; Brockton, Mass.; Galesburg, O.; Rochester, N. Y.; St. Catherine's, Ont., Can.; Erie, Pa.; Portland, Or.; San Diego, Cal.; Ta coma. Wash.; N'ew Orleans, La.; Sacra- War Waged on itodcnts. -V ALL A WALLA, Wash., May 23. (S'pecial.) Farmers of the valley are uniting to fight the gophers. One hundred farmers of Touchet have agreed to use poison to combat the pests. At the Baker Langdon orchard 3600 of the rodents have been trapped since March 25. The orchard com pany first paid "by the gopher," but the trapper caught so many that they put him on a salarjr. TELLS ABOUT A CHRONIC TROUBLE Mr. John O'Brien, 639 N. 15th St., Philadelphia, writes: "I had been troubled for years with chronic constipation, un til my whole system eeemed poisoned, and I suffered with headache, languor, depression and general impaired health. I began taking Sulpherb Tablets and got immediate relief. I am. after many ' months, etill regu lar in habits, and thank you. and hope they will become known to thousands, etc" If your blood is bad, tongue coat-' ed and you are constipated, with stomach and bowel ir regularity, get a tube of Sul pherb Tablets of your druggist right away. They are made of sulphur, cream of tartar and herbs so don't accept ordinary "sulphur" tablets. Adv. . IHBtlitztna TRY thia approved rein( edy. Just the tonic for nervousness, sleeplessness, depressed feeling-, loss of appetite, digestive troubles, brain fag, or Blow recovery from influenza and kindred ailments. Atonic, alterative and diuretic for blood and nerve disorders. SHE IS SO WILD She Won't Even Wear Clothes Because They "Smell Missionary" imiri ii irniTniilni-iit'if ftn Tirfir'-m Tiir t mtnmmittilimii e STEEL and OIL STOVES TO BK SOLD BY NAVY There will be sold by sealed proposals, to be opened at 10 A. M., Mav S 19"0 by the Senior Member, Board of Survey. Appraisal and Sale. Navy-Yard. Puget Sound, Washington the following classes of material: Steel, Class Ac heat treated, bar, round. Steel. Class As. heat treated, bar, square. Steel, Class Ac, semi-finished, billet, square. Steel, Class Ac, semi-finished, slab, square. - Steel, Class An, heat treated, bar, round. Steel, Class An, heat treated, bar, square. Steel, Class An semi-finished, bar. round. S'eeL Class An, semi-finished, billet, square. Steel, Class An, semi-finished, slab, square. Steel, Class B, semi-finished, bar, round. Steel, Class B, semi-f ininhed, slab, square. Steel, Class B, special, bar, hexagqn. Steel, Class B. special, bar, round. Steel. Class HG. heat treated, bar, round. SteeL Class HG, semi-finished, bar, round. Steel, Class HG, semi-finished, bar. square. Steel, Class HG, S. F. billet, square. , Steel, Class HG, S. F. slab, square. SteeL Machinery, cold rolled, bar, hexagon. SteeL Machinery, cold rolled, bar. round. Steel, Machinery, cold rolled, bar, square. ' ' Steel, Nickel bar, round. !x Steel, Medium, black bar, flat. Steel. Medium, black bar, hexagon. Steel, Medium, black bar, round. - . . Steel, Medium, black bar. square. " Steel, Rivet, high tensile, bar, round. Steel, Rivet, medium, bar, round. Steel, Rivet, Class B. bar. round. Steel, Hull, medium, plate, biack. . . Steel, Hull, medium, plate, galv. Steel, Hull, medium, tank plafe, black. . V Steel, Floor-plate, ribbed. t Steel. Hull, high tensile, plate, black. . Steel, Hull, high tensile, plate, galv. Angles, Plain, steel, medium, black. Angles, Bulb, steel, medium, black. Angles, Plain, steel, high tensile, black. Angles, Plain, steel, high tensile, galv. Beams, deck, steel, medium, black. I-Beams, structural, steel, high tensile, black. I-Beams, structural, steel, medium, black. Tees, structural, steel, medium, galv. , Stoves, oil, "Perfection," wicks, circular, 2i inches dia., 9 inches long, 1-gal. oil capacity, height 2 feet. Sale will be for cash to the highest bidder. Deposits ef I per cent of the amount are required. Inspection can be made upon application to the Senior Member, Board of Survey, Appraisal and Sale, Navy-Yard, Puget Sound, Washington. Catalogue of sale and further information may be obtained from Board of Survev, Appraisal and Sale, Navy-Yard, Puget Sound, Washington. Branch Office, 305 Louraan Bldg., Seattle, Wash. Phone Elliott 379s. I 1 iNi a Byif'il !.:v i' jj :. ; i iv lift imimmiiiiimmiuunuiiimiiNiiiiMiiitmitimitmim iimnm-iiiHiruiHutiiiiiHiiHitmnmiminiintimiintHimimra.iiHuimiMiimi The Portland Chamber of Commerce Helps you through the greater civic develop ment that it fosters. Join the Chamber of Com merce. It is working for the community as a whole and deserves the com munity's support. Lend your aid by becoming a member. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK Vr l'UI l LAIN U ch as THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK "WEST OF THE. ROCKY MOUNTAINS