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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (June 12, 1920)
G THE MORNING OREGONIAN. ' SATURDAY. -JUNE 12, 1920 CAR TICKET SALES ORDERED STOPPED Public Service Commission " Takes Action. SCALPERS BELIEVED BUSY It ash Since Increase Announced Is Alleged to Have Cost Company About $12,000 SALEM, Or., June 11. (Special.) The Oregon public service commis sion" tonight ordered that tha Port land Railway, Light & Power com pany should desist aft3r this date from selling- street-car tickets, either In strips or books, at the r.ite now effective. This action was taken on advices from Portland that thousands of patrons were purchasing ticket books and strip tickets because of 'he advance In fares from 6 to S cents going into effect next Tuesday. "Under date of June 10 this com mission made and entered an order establishing; certain rates an1 fares for transportation on the strem ral. way line-s of the Portland Railway. Lighc & Power company with'n the city of Portland, the said order to become effective June 1"," said to day's ruling of the commission. I. a rice Supplies BelnK llougbt. "It appears that by reason of the several days .intervening between the issuance and effective da.: -jf said order, many persons are purchasing large supplies of ticket books and atrip tickets with the inten- of ob taining thereby preferential tares. "It further appears that lioonns people, suburban residents and others who have neither the time nor surplus funds to purchase quantities of such ticket books and strip tickets will be discriminated against in the event the sale of such books and tickets is continued; also, it is prob able that certain persons are buying these books and tickets with the i.i tent of reselling them and thus de riving personal profit therefrom, at the expense of others less fortunate. "To prevent this obvious discrimi nation and to protect those who have in the past purchased, in pool faith, reasonable Quantities oi' these hook:, and to avoid the necessity of refusing to honor the name, and requiring that all outstanding books hr redeemed at purchase price, the commission now deems It necessary and advisable that the sale of tickets in strips and books at the present sale price be immediately discontinued." Suggestion Made CommliNlon. One man called a member of the commission by long-distance tele phone from Portland this afternoon and said he had been standing in line in front of the company's ticket office for hours and he feared the books and strip tickets would be ex hausted before he obtained his share of the supply. He urged that the com mission take some action to have more tickets printed and made available for patrons of the lines under the present effective prices. Word also reached Salem late today that today's sales of strip tickets and books based on the loss of approxi mately 2 'i cents on each fare had cost the railway corporation $12,000. While the members of the commis sion declared they would not be ad verse to any moderate demands for tickets at the present prices, they felt certain that scalpers were at work with a view of reselling the trans portation at a profit. Under today's order of the commis sion the railway corporation may re fuse to sell any more strip tickets or ticket books at present effective prires. ' The order was sierned by H. H. Corey and Krcd H. Buchtel. in the absence of Fred Williams, third mem ber of the commission, who is now in Washington. TUSH MADE FOK TICKETS fcalc of 12.060 Books Ourin; Day Is Announced by Company. Never before in the history of Port land were streetcar tickets so popu lar here as yesterday. Hitherto signs appearing in streetcare and else where advising the populace that books of tickets might be obtained at a slight saving from the regular price of car rides had met with but feeble response and the general pub lic had in the main gone on with the process of digging up a nickel and a penny for each ride. It was a different story yesterday, however. With the prospect of eav ing 90 cents on each block of 50 tickets by getting the pasteboards before the new 8-cent rate goes Into effect June 15, thousands crowded the office of the Portland Railway, Light & Power company throughout the day, bent upon the purchase of books of tickets. "I day long there was a line of prospective purchasers in front of the ticket window at the Aider-street entrance of the Klectric building, the line reaching clear to the sidewalk at all times and nearly up to Broadway during the rush hours. In anticipation of a heavy demand for tickets. President Griffith yester day morning issued an order that not more than one tiook was to be sold to any one purchaser. In spite of the fact that this regulation pre vailed throughout the day. up to the office closing hour .late yesterday afternoon 12,000 booklets, or 600,000 Individual car ride tickets had 'been sold. At noon yesterday j 5.000 book lets remained in possession of the company, and another day of sales equal to yesterday would clean out the suDPlv entirely, as it was esti mated last night that not more than 000 booke remained unsold. The ruling "hat not more than one book was to be sold to any one per son was made ly Mr Griffith in order to nrevent. f possible, speculation in tickets. One order was sent in for 2000 books, it was learned, and several for 500. These, were refused under Mr. Griffith's decision. While the company was legally bound to sell tickets at the rate ot 2.1a a book, it was vhe hope of the officials to distribute them as widely as possible. On the ground that it would be fllscrimination to l ermit car riders to use the tickets after the new rate noes into effect, while others arc forced to pay a higher fare. It is possible that action may be taken which would lead to redemption by the company of the tickets for cash rather than to honor them on the cars after June 15. It would lie with the public, service commission to pre scribe such action, it is understood. The loss to the company through the sale of the books is considered to be between 90 cents and II a booK. While the actual loss is 90 cents, many bought tickets yesterday who under ordinary corditions do not use them. The total loss for the one day ale was '.bus estimated at over $10,000. Such a loss .the company could 111 afford to sustain. Mr. Griffith said, in view of the fact that the new rate granted by .the com mission is designed to place the line upon a paying basis for the future but not to make up for losses during the last several months. Any plans for improvements, alter ations and changes In service which might be expected with the return of the company tc a paying basis will be heFd up until after it has been deter.-n'ned what the income of the company under the new fares will be. Mr. Griffith said. Request that the order increasing the streetcar fare on lines of the Portland Railway. Light & Power company from 6 to 8 cents be made effective beginning July i. instead of June 15, as prescribed in the order issued by the public service commis sion Thursday, was made in resolu tions adopted by the city council yes terday. The resolutions were ad dressed and forwarded to the public service commission late yesterday. According to the views of council members the advance on streetcar fare should not be put into effect on the eve of three national conventions which are expected to bring thou sands of visitors to the city. To do so, suggests profiteering, ac cording to City Commissioner Pier, who spoke In favor of the resolution. City officials fear that to put a streetcar fare increase in effect at this time would create an unfavor able impression in the minds of east- AL KflDER WILL INITIATE HIXDREDS OF CANDIDATES TO RECEIVE ADMISSION. Dinnea to Be Served After Cere mony; Vaudeville nigh Jinks at Auditorium in Evening. Dromedaries jogging through the waste of deserts, with the green oasis drawing nearer, will bear between 400 and 500 candidates who seek ad mission into Al Kader" Temple, Im perial Shrine, toward the sacred city of Mecca this afternoon. If they ar rive on schedule, as seems altogether likely, the impressive ceremony at tendant upon their arrival will be conciuded early this evening. Mecca, on this occasion, will be located within the four walls of the public auditorium, where for two days busy men under the direction of Chief Rabban Frank S. Grant have been busily preparing for the recep tion of the candidates following their ted'ous Journey over blistering sands. Particular significance is attached to the ceremonial held today, for it is the final one prior to the annual session, when Portland will welcome operations and both he and Joseph, another brother, were In such poor health that limited service was given them by the draft boards. In 1917, 16-year-old Bruce, the baby of the family,' was murdered. It was oddly incongruous to hear the aged woman talk glibly about prize-fights and fighters. After the Meehan fight, she said, Dempsey sent her money and after the Willard fight bought a J20.000 house in Salt Lake city and installed his relatives there, not Maxine, his wife, ' though. Maxine by that time had grown tired of the slow life of respectability and was in Wells, Nev, with Tommy Wilson and- Peggy Murray and others of her kind. "Do you remember when Maxine left to go to Wells?" asked Preston. "Very well, indeed," answered Mrs. Dempsey. "She had been restless and dissatisfied for a long time. -She used to say that life in Salt Lake was too slow. Sometimes she" would look at her hands and complain be cause they were a little rough from helping. me. 'I'd rather go back; to my old life and smoke hop than stay in any slow place like this,' she said once." "Did you -try to persuade her to stay?" "Often and often. I used to tell her that just as soon as Jack had had the championship fight and was well off he would buy her a nice house of her own. He wanted her to THOUSANDS CROWD RAILWAY COMPANY OFFICE TO PURCHASE STREET CAR TICKETS BEFORE NEW RATES GO INTO EFFECT. - i ininlBHK-- . X' l H rrmmm, sf" S v-i,r sA tt s - - I I - iff U d&t&ik tJi 5 1 aE). I Scene at the Electric building yesterdny, where 12,000 book of tickets, at the rate of one jooklet to each parchaser. were sold during; the day. ern people who will be in Portland next week and the week following. Authority to postpone the date rests with the public service com PATROL CONTRACT SIGNED GOVERNMENT WILL FURNISH PLANES FOR FORESTS. ' Principal Base to Be Located at Eugene eWith Sub-Bases at Mcdford and Portland. SALEM, Or.. June 11. (Special.) F. A. Elliott, state forester, today signed the formal contract whereby the government, through Colonel W. H. Arnold, commander of the western department of air service, will assign to Oregon a squad of airplanes for forest fire patrol work during the 1920 season. Under the provisions of the contract a patrol base will be located at Eu gene, from which point two planes will make trips daily. One plane will go as far north as Portland, while I the other plane will fly south to 1 Mcdford. I At Mcdford will be located a sub- base, where the planes operating south out of Eugene will stop for gasoline. There will also be operated out of Medford a plane which will travel in a northeasterly direction as far as Summer lake, thence south to Alturas and return to the sub-base. There also w-ill be a sub-base at Portland where planes making the flight north of Lugene will stop to take fuel. Radio stations will be lo cated at Medford, Eugene and Portland. Under the contract the state will furnish the observers, employ guards for the machines when not in use, pro vide automobile trucks at the sev eral patrol bases and defray the costs of the telephone and telegraph com munication. Service is to start June 20. ' thousands upon thousands of fez wearers. Immediately following the ceremony this afternoon dinner will be served for the officers and members of Al Kader temple as well as the candi dates. Nobles with alphabetical initials will dine in the following order: A to N at the Multnomah hotel, A. L. Tetu in charge: O to Z, Benson Hotel. Ivan Humason in charge; Patrol, band, chanters, dancing girls and deputy potentates, Imperial hotel. A- E. Davidson in charge; candidates. Hotel Portland, Harvey Wells in charge. Nobles and their ladies will be ad mitted by the 1920 card to the vaude ville high jinks at the auditorium opening at 8 o'clock. This will be the first opportunity given to women of Al Kader temple to view the set tings. A. H. Lea, potentate, will be in charge of the ceremonial held today. . CATT RE-ELECTED INTERNATIONAL SUFFRAGE OF FICE IS ACCEPTED. CDVEBHMEHT BUYS SUGAR ARGENTINA SUPPLY IS MADE AVAILABLE FOR U. S. 31.000,000 Pounds Sweets Prom ised Commercial Cnnners and Preservers by Refiners. BUENOS AIRES, June 11. The United States government has bought 14,000 tons of Argentina sugar.. NEW YORK, June 11. Thirty-four million pounds of sugar will be avail able for commercial canners and pre servers during the five months from June 1 to October 31, A. W. Riley, special assistant to Attorney-General Palmer, announced here today. As surances that the sugar will be pro vided were giver.. Mr. Riley said, by representatives of the leading re finers. Representatives of the canning and preserving industries told him. .Mr Riley said, that both industries were in a cerious condition -due to the threatened shortage of sugar. The refiners promised, he added. that the supply would be available at a reasonable price. They ex pressed willingness to fill the orders of all essential industries but de clared the principal obstacle was lack Of transportation facilities. The 34.000,000 pounds will be divided equally between the canners and preservers. Labor Against Bolsheviks. LONDON", June 11. The first re port of the British labor delegates who have Just returned from an In vestigation of conditions in soviet Russia made public this evening. 1, broadly speaking, unfavorable- to the bolshevik refiinie. Mrs. Joscphos Daniels and Mrs McCormick Declare Pleas ure at Choice. GENEVA, June 11. (By the Asso ciated Press.) Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt was unanimously re-elected president of the International Woman Suffrage Alliance at this morning's session of its congress here. She has agreed to accept the office, it was announced, despite her declaration in a speech yesterday that she felt com pelled to retire. Mrs. Josephus Daniels and Mrs. Stanley McCormlcK of the American delegation, and Lady Astor and Maud Royden of the English delegation. declared they were especially pleased at Mrs. Catt's decision to remain in office and warmly congratulated her for her devotion to duty, notwith standing her age. There was enthusiasm over" Mrs. Catt's acceptance of her re-election and during the afternoon session there were smiling faces everywhere in the hall. The woman's charter was taken uy again and two more clauses were ac cepted with slight change, bringing the total to 11. The two remaining clauses will be discussed immediate ly. One of them has to do with the qifestion of state. support and also the status of illegitimate children. learn to cook and to keep house, but she wasn't interested. ' Finally she went away." The case will be resumed Monday morning. SQUALL CAPSIZES CRAFT Seven Men Missing Following Acci dent to Eagle Boat. PHILADELPHIA. June 11. Seven of the crew of Eagle Boat No. 25, which was struck by, a squall and capsized in the Delaware river today, were unaccounted for tonight and naval officials said their fate prob ably would not be known until to morrow. It was at first reported that five men had been caught in the engine room and drowned, but officials at the navy yard said this had not been confirmed and that it was possible some of the missing sailors had been picked up by small craft which aided in the rescue work. The little war craft carried a crew of seven officers and 51 men. Forty six of them were picked up by an excursion steamer, four by another boat and one man chiseled a hole in the side of the Eagle boat while it was floating bottom up and swam ashore. MOTHER LAUDS DEMPSEY AGED WOMAN TAKES STAND FOR PRIZEFIGHTER. SINN FEIN WINS VICTORY 590 County Council Scats Gained Out of Total of 609. DUBLIN, June 11. The completed returns in the county council elec tions show a Sinn Fein victory greater than was expected). This was owing to compact between the Sinn Fein and labor not to oppose each other in Lefnster, Munster and Con- naught, while in Ulster there was a similar compact between the nation alists and Sinn Feiners to make com mon cause against the Carsonites. Out of 699 seats the Sinn Fein, as a distinct party, won 525. while the combined forces of the Sinn Fein labor and nationalists captured 590 seats. SECOND WEEK L WHIST EXPERT KILLED Mystery Surrounds Death of Joseph Elwell; Money Safe. NEW YORK, June 11. Mystery surreunds the death here today of Joseph Elwell, a widely known whist expert and author of several books on auction and bridge. Elwell was found by his house keeper seated in a chair in his bed room, with a bullet wound In his forehead. Detectives pronounced the case one of murder. Elwell's money, jewelry and many valuable trophies were untouched. Father Said to Be Crippled, Sister 111, One Son Operated On and Another Son Murdered. SAN FRANCISCO. June 11. (Spe cial.) The Jury in Judge Dooling's court heard the other side of Jack Dempsey'8 story this afternoon after the government had closed its case with Maxine Dempsey as the last witness. Dempsey's side of the story was told by his mother, who took the witness stand late this afternoon. "How could you have managed In the years 1917 and 1918 if Jack had not sent you money?" asked Attorney Treston. "I couldn't," answered Mrs. Demp sey. "We wouldn't have had any thing." Hard luck pursued the Dempsey family, she testified. She said Hiram Dempsey. .the father. Is crippled with rheumatism and Inclined at times to absent-mindedness and melancholy. She said she has been 111 for many months. Mrs. Effie Clarkson, the sister, has also . been III and has undergone operations. . Johnny, the younger brother, underwent three STUDENTS IN CONFERENCE Delegates From Colleges Gather at Lake Genera. LAKE GENEVA, Wis.. June 11. Five hundred representatives of mid die western colleges today attended the opening sessions of the Lake ( Geneva students' conference. The dis trict represented comprises Ohio, In I dfana, Michigan, Illinois, Iowa, ,Wis cousin, Minnesota and North and South Dakota.. Delegates also registered from Peru', Chile, Brazil, China, Mexico, Armcnl Syria, Greece and Panama. CHICAGO HEAT KILLS 4 Three Prostrations at Coliseum and Two in Other Parts. CHICAGO. June 11. Four deaths and five prostrations from the heat were reported to the police today The maximum temperature for the day. the third of the heat wave, .was 93, a high mark for the year. Three of the prostrations occurred at the Coliseum when the republican con ventivu was In session. LIMIT BN WORK LIFTED WOMEN TO BE PERMITTED TO WORK 10 HOURS. for women is nine hours a day and 48 hours a week. Members of the industrial welfare commission who passed on the propo sition were W. L. Brewster, chair man, and Amedee M. Smith. Miss Eunice L. Smith, the third member of the commission, was out of the city. Commission Raises Ban From June 14 to 3 0 Because of Large Crowds Expected. In an effort to rescue Portland's visitors from the menace of dirty clothing and short rations, the in dustrial' welfare commission yester day waived its .regulations limiting the hours of work for laundry and restaurant employes, permitting women to work ten hours a day and SO hours a week if their employers obtain necessary permits. fc'or overtime work, wages of time and one-half must be given, says the commission. The industrial welfare commission indicated that it would go as far as possible to help what may become a very serious situation, but the com missioners said that it would be necessary to comply with the legal requirements that the overtime not be greater than SO hours a week. HotiTl employes as well as laundry workers and waitresses will come under the ruling, as will women em ployes in any Industry endangered by the presence of a temporary popula tion far in excess of Portland's usual quota needing attention. The matter first was brought to the attention rf the commission by a laundry which handles the linen of the Pullman company. When the Shriners are in .the city many trains will be parked here and the Pullman cars used for sleeping quarters. This will increase the ordinary laundry business from the Pullman company a hundred fold and the laundry as serted that It would be impossible to handle the work unless it was per mitted to employ its workers over the statutory limit. From the hotel business, the other laundries found the same condition imminent, and the increased use of napery and bed linen in the hostelrles threatened the laundries with, work which could not be assimilated. A chambermaid shortage also is threat ened. The Issuance of overtime permits by the Industrial welfare commission will follow applications made by em ployers to the office of the commis sion at 646 and 648 courthouse build ing. The period for which the per mits will be good is from June 14 to June 30. Extensions will be con sidered if the emergency continues. The present limit of hours of work DRAINAGE MEN CONVENE WORK NEAR CITY INSPECTED AND CONFERENCE HELD. BLUFF CAUSES DOWNFALL In Effort to Make Good His Story, Youth Passes Bad Checks. The "bold front" Charles Shumway made on the train en route to Port land while talking to a stranger had to be made good after arriving here, for he was invited Into the man's home as a guest, explained Shumway yesterday before Presiding Judge Mc Cotirt to excuse tho passage of bad cltecks. He - had "romanced'' to the stranger about an auto agency he said he was about to establish in Portland, representing himself as a man or means. To display the necessary cash after his fictitious story for Shumway had no opening in prospect and was pen niless when he arrived the young man persuaded the persons he had fooled to cash his checks. The persons who had suffered most through his act vouched for his fu ture conduct 'and he was paroled by Judge McCourt after an eight months' sentence In the county jail. Shum way had served 31 months in the med ical corps of the army. 3' MINORS IN WEDDINGS Two Boys and One Girl Are Prin cipals at Vancouver. VANCOUVER, Wash., June 11. (Special.) Two boys and one girl, all residents of Portland, were married here today. Licenses were issued to six couples. Bert A. Gray. 20, and Miss Lorna Davis, IS, both if Portland, were married. Mrs. N-llie Gray, mother of the lad, gave her written consent. Miss Zelma Maulding. 17, and Ed ward F. Hays, 24, of Portland, were married. F. II. Maulding of 670 Har ney avenue, Portland, father of the bride, acted as witness and gave his consent. Harold A. Welch, 18 years old. mar ried Marie Knecht, 18, a telephone operator. Mrs. Anna Welch of route A, Portland, mother of the boy, was witness ana consented to the mar riage. See page 9 First-class Utah coal $10.75 for steam, $10.50 to $13.50 for the home: dumped at curb. Adv. You Are Easily Tired Out, Your Blood Needs Purifying Projects Relating to Deer Island. Scappoose and Sautles Island Receive Indorsement. The second annual field meeting of the State Drainage association, held yesterday, was attended by experts from all parts of Oregon. The con vention spent the day examining the various drainage projects in the vi cinity of Portland. S. B. Hall, county agriculturist, piloted the members in the morning to inspect the dike lands of the Peninsula Industrial company and Multnomah drainage district No. ., The work under way was explained by W. J. Brown, engineer in charge. The project includes 8200 acres of rich alluvial land. A brief conferenec"was held at the home of County Agriculturalist Hall, near Troutdale, Samuel H. Brown, ex-president of the association, pre siding. Brief addresses were deliv ered by W. L. Powers, chief in soils of the Oregon Agricultural college; State Engineer Percy Cupper, Louis H. Jessup. district engineer of the United States department of agricul ture: W. J. Brown, enginer of the Peninsula Industrial company, and Samuel H. Brown. The association indorsed the drain age projects of Sauvies island, Scap-; poose and Deer island. Fifty delegates from all parts of Oregon were present at the conven tion, among them being: J. W. Parrish, Toledo: Percy A. Cupper, Salem; C. R. Wright, Toledo: C. C. Karr. Coqullle; T. A. Teeter, Corvallia: William Eltelsteln. Clatskanle; W. I.. Powers. Cor vallia; Ward Cretcher. Corvallls; J. H. Lewis. J. D. Brown, P. Hetherton, John Cunningham and H. C Campbell, Porr land: T. J. Flppln. St. Helens; J. U. Brown, Sauvies Island; M. Tannler, Albert Johnpon and Ed Wlsst, Scappoose: A. l. Anderson and Harry liaru. Madras; P. H. Leslie. Portland: Samuel H. Brown, Gcr v&is; H. C. Ivechner. Astoria; T. A. ciar row. Portland: W. I.. Kaddrrly, Corvallls: I.. A. McNary. Portland: W. ii. Brown. J. O. Elrod and J. E. Stansbery. Port land: J. t.usoher. Kalrview; V. C. Spence, Troutdale: A. K. Kngbrrtson, Astoria: H. C. Kendall and K. W. Cary. Portland, and I.. T. Jessup. Yiiklma. ATHLETIC STAR MARRIES Clayton Patterson Wedded to Miss Caroline Gentry at Astoria. ASTORIA, Or., June 11. (Special.) Clayton Patterson, former baseball and football star' at Lincoln high school, Portland, and a member of tho Multnomah football team for four seasons, was married here tonight to Miss Caroline Gentry of Warrenton, Or. The ceremony was performed by Rev. W. S. Gilbert, formerly chaplain of the 162d regiment. The bride Is the daughter of Mrs. John Litzler of Woodburn. The bride groom Is a son of John Patterson, one of the owners of the Warrenton Lum ber company. The couple will mane their home in Warrenton. P Closced-as) Imparities Will Vnd er mine Your Health. As summer approaches the impuri ties that have , been accumulating in the system throughout the winter be fctn to clog up the circulation, causing a general weakness and debilitated condition that is generally known as "Summer Sickness." The first symptoms are usually a loss of appetite, followed by a gradu ally lessening of energy, the system becomes weaker day by day. until you feel yourself on the verge of a break down. Children just at this season are peevish and irritable, and become puny and lifeless-. This whole condition Is but the re sult of impurities in the blood that have been accumulating and make themselves felt more distinctly with the change of season. They show that nature needs assistance in giving the system a general housecleaning. Nearly everybody just now needs I a few bottles of S. S. S-. the great vegetable blood remedy to cleanse out all impurities It is good for the children, for It . gives them new strength and puts their system in con dition so they , can more easily resist the many ailments so prevalent In summer. S. S. S. is without an equal as a general tonic and system builder. It Improves the appetite and gives new strength and vitality to both old and young. Full Information and valuable liter ature can be had by writing to Swirt Specific Co., 609 Swift Laboratory, At lanta, Ga. Adv. . Just What I Need Says Mr. R. Sturdivant, 490 Clay Street, Portland, Oregon, Who writes; T am now petting close to forty years of age. and up to my inirty-iirin year, x. nan never known a nick day. Just about this time I heiran to be troubled with constipation and biliousness, and It was not long before the trouble became so aggravated mat i ieu almost unable to stand up under the heavy work that I was compelled to do in ane of our local steel plants. I hardly knew what a full pay check looked like. I tried everything that was recommended to me, and none of them afforded me any more temporary relief, and they always left me worse off than I was before. "Several months ago, a friend of mine told me to get a bottle of Bark Root Tonic ami give it a trial. I did sc. and I will never again be without it. It Is just what I needed, and I believe .that it has permanently cured me "I would not hesitate to recommend It to anvone who is suffering as I was. and it voii desire to publish this letter you have my permission to do so, as I feel that I owe a debt of gratitude to your wonderfu" tonic." Bark Root Tonic A Alild Laxative and Appetizer. Whv suffer with stomach troubles, indi gestion, etc., which result in nervousness and sleepless nights? No griping or purging. What It has done for others, it will also do for vou. Be convinced and give It a trial. Sold at all druggists, or write '.I i:V t.r lattvc T ' jjjr J y aw ; Rrmfmhrr .he Isbel. fee that It bara the young Squaw. CELRO KOLA COMPANY PORTLAND, OREGON