THE. MOKXIXG OREGOXIAN, TTJESDAT, AUGUST 10, .1920 NATION TURNS EYES TO Outcome May Affect Hard ing's and Cox' Chances. BOURBONS ARE ORGANIZED democratic Maclilnc Runs Smooth ly, While Republicans Have Factions and Contests. BY MARK SULLIVAN. . Copyright by the New York Evening Po6t, Inc.. Published by Arrangrement. COLUMBUS. O.. Aug. 9- (Special.) 4 Of all the August and September state primaries for the selection of candi dates for the United States senate and other offices, the primaries to be fceld in Ohio tomorrow to name party candidates to succeed Warren O. Harding in the senate and James H. Cox as governor of Ohio is the most important. Ohio always Is a pivotal state. This year, for obvious reasons, it is more pivotal than usual, inasmuch as the vote for president In the state will be affected by the popularity and other qualities of candidates running on the same ticket for United States senator and governor. It is clear that the result of the Ohio primaries to morrow may have a vital effect on the chances that Harding and Cox have of carrying the state in No vember. Democrats Well Organised. So far as one man can make de ductions from conditions to date, one would be inclined to say that the democratic organization appears to have much more solidarity and much wore effective party discipline than the republican organization. The republicans, in fact, are shot through with bitter factional contests end vindictive personal disagreements. Last spring, when Wood and Harding were contending in the presidential primaries of this state, the fight be tween the two became so keen that the leaders of each assured your cor respondent that the wounds left by the contest would be so bicter that neither man could carry Ohio in the Novem ber elections. Rivals Say Hard Things. The Wood people said that if Harding were nominated he would lose the votes of tens ot thousands of republicans whose animosity had been excited in the presidential primary campaign. The Harding leaders said the same thing of Wood. .With the democrats however, this sort of thing was avoided and smoothed out by the strength and discipline of the party organization. In the presidential primary last April not only Cox but Senator Pomerene also started out to fight for the Ohio delegation. The party discipline of the democrats, however, was effective enough to rule Fomerene out, and he withdrew. All Contests Republican. Precisely the same thing has again happened in the primary campaign for senator and governor, which cul- i minatcs tomorrow. Vor governor the democrats have, but one candidate. There is no contest in their party for that office. For senator also the democrats have substantially only one candidate, the minor one being generally considered un.mportant. With the republicans, on the other hand, there are bitter contests -for both the senatorial nomination and the nomination for governor. For senator there are three leading re publican candidates. One is Frank Willis, a former governor "and former congressman who came forward into the national eye recently by making the speech which nominated Harding at the Chicago convention. That speech, considered from a vocal point ot view, was a. national event. If you like music you would walk a mile to hear Mr. Willis roll the "o's and trill the "r's in "four years ago." , Toledo Man Candidate. Another of the candidates for the republican senatorial nomination Walter Brown of Toledo. Mr. Brown has never held public office, but has J h-ia positions of the highest import ance as a party official, and in the in formal council of the party ,th third is K. M. Wanamaker, who for many years has been a judge of the state courts. Among the three it is possible only partially to trace the connection of each with the party organization and with the factions of it. Mr. Willis might normally be the beneficiary of the party machine, but that appears not to be the case. rcubtlcss one reason why is the fact tnat the state machine, realizing that Hording is identified so clQgely with the regular party organization in this state, is eager so far as the senator eiiip is concerned to placate that ele ment In the department which was Identified with the old progressive j-arty, and so the party organization ib o ems, in a not too emphatic way, to be supporting Walter Brown. Brown Is decidedly entitled to the loyalty o the members of the old progressive parly. Brown Roosevelt Man. It would be fair to say that Brown Hot merely In Ohio, but in the country as a whole, was one of the 20 or 30 men who' were the principal leaders of the old progressive party and the rilncipai confidants of Mr. Roosevelt w hen he was engaged in that enter prise. It would probably also be fair to say that among these. 20 or 30 men Mr. Brown was one of the most sub atKiitial. He Is a lawyer, able, and has a better understanding than many of the others of just how much of that programme is practicable. Judge Wanamaker was a pro gresslve also, but belonged to the more radical group of that party. As a judge of the Ohio courts, he has come into the public eye frequently through handing down minority opin ions in opposition to his fellow Judges and in his friendliness to labor. Wanamaker was counted originally an independent and for many years ha; had a large and Impressive inde pendent following in the state. In the present campaign, however, he is handicapped by having done in Ohio what Hoover did in the country. He has sacrificed to a degree his former independent and non-partisan follow ins by formally identifying himself wuh the republican party. Candidates About Even, The governorship of Ohio is, of course, of less interest to the public outside the state than the senatorship. Moreover, the three candidates for the republican nomination for governor are of relative evenness and none them would be of any special tnteres to the public outside the state. The candidate for the democratic nomination for senator is practically certain to win because he has only an unimportant opposition in Mr. Ju lian of Cincinnati. Mr. Julian is wealthy business man who began as a manufacturer of shoes more th SO jearg ago, and Is now important In many other business and financial lines in Cincinnati. He is syrapaj thetic to progressive measures and has given much time and energy to the promotion of social institutions like health Insurance and the like. The man who is certain to get the democratic nomination for governor, Mr. Donaghey, is the present auditor of the state and has made the sort of reputation which men frequently make in the position of watchdog of the treasury. Barton National Figure. Among the contests for congress and other less Important offices then is one which will be of decided inter est to the public everywhere. For practically a generation Thedodore Burton represented a Cleveland dis trict in congress. Then the state pro moted him to the senate and re served one term there. For the past five years, however, he has been out of office.. Now he is running for the republican nomination for congress in Cleveland again. He is a man of such outstanding character and abil ity that the outcome of this contest is of national importance. Jf he should win he would undoubtedly be among the first five of the 435 mem bers of the national lower house. DECISIVE BATTLE HELDIIfEHG Warsaw's Fate Is Declared Still in Balance. HEAVY FIGHTING GOES ON BULGARIAN TREATY SIGNED War With Allies Brought to End With Signature Affixing. PARIS, Aug. 9. The peace treat with Bulgaria was made formally ef fective today by the exchange of rat ifications among the powers party to the pact. The treaty was signed at Neuilly November 27, 1919, and was ratified Military Observers Assert Prin cipal Danger Is Advance on Prussian Frontier, PARIS, Aug. 9. (By the Associatld Press.) The battle to decide War saw's fate has not really begun, ae cording to the latest news, but both sides are preparing for the struggle. General Haller's new army occupies a strong intrenched position in the fork- between the Narew- and Bug rivers, where an army is able to block the approach upon Warsaw of a numerically superior enemy, as was demonstrated in the Napoleonic cam paign of 1807. Military observers believe the prin cipal dangers of the Poles is the ad vance on the Prussian frontier, be cause it would force them to extend kow the fighting continues with al ternate success, the statement says. On the southern front bolshevik forces debouched along the river Bug August 6. striking the Polish lines from Ulodaya to Karytniki village, advancing to the town of Vladimir Volhymsk and developing their ad vance south oi that town. In the 'lar nopoi region in Gallcla the bolsheviki have ririven back the Poles to the upper reaches of the Stripa river. Along the Crimean front fighting ts proceeding favorably to the soviet aimy, the statement said. The Polish government is leaving Warsaw, in capital, it is asserted in a wireless dispatch from Moscow re ceived r.ere this afternoon. The government is being removed to Kalisz. the message said. Kalisz is the capital of the prov ince of Kalisz and is about 150 miles west-southwest of Warsaw, close to the old German border. It is on the direct railway line from Warsaw to Posen. for which latter place all the foreign legations in Warsaw have left. U. S. AWAITS ALLIED MOVE IN POLE CRISIS Capital in Communication With French, British. UlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllUIIIlllIllIIlllllllIlIllIIIIlllllIlllIIlllUlllltlllllllllllllllllllltUIlllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllllf 1 RED BLOCKADE FAILURE; ALL REPUBLICAN VOTERS MAT AFFILIATE WITH . CAM PAIGN CLUB WITHOUT COST. Application for Membership Hardlngr-Coolidse Republican Club. " I herewith apply for membership in the Harding-Coolidge Repub lican club of Multnomah county, and agree to use my best efforts to secure the election of Harding and Coolidgo'on November 2, 1920. Name Precinct No. Res. Address Phone by the Bulgarian Sobranje January their front westward when they need 12. France'! ratification was com pleted July 31. The ceremony today, presided over by Jules Cambon, took place at the ministry of foreign affairs. M. Cambon pointed out that the document would .end the state of war between Bulgaria and the allies. He expressed the hope that prosperity might favor Bulgaria. The representative of France, Bel gium, Great Britain, Italy and Siam then affixed their signatures. POLES. HELD MERCILESS SOCIALISTS AND JEWS PERSE CUTED, SAYS REPORT. News of "White Terror" Sweeping Over Country Reaches Paris. Prisons Declared Packed. Pub- (Copyright by the New York "Worid. ugnea Dy Arrangement. I PARIS, Aug. 9. tSpecial cable.) Grave news telling of the "white ter ror" which is sweeping through Po land is jDub'.ished here. It is brought to Paris by a Polish socialist who comes straight from the battle line ar.d Warsaw. "The Polish minister of the interior and the police Officials are arresting without mercy all socialists who are even suspected of sympathizing with the Russian reds." this Pole declares. "Tens of thousands of our members have been arrested. There is a veri table orgy of persecutions, arrests and massacres. The prisons are so full that special concentration camps have been formed, in most of which typhus has broken out. "Furthermore, the persecution of the Jews has begun again. Polish re action is qtilte like any other reaction and so it attempts to confound the Jews with the bolsheviki. Utterly re gardless of ,iny justification, it ar rests Jews and persecutes them gen- rally. For example. 80 members of the Jewish social democratic party, known as the bund, have been ar rested in three days, despite the fact that 130 members ot the party are municipal councillors throughout the countiy. Permission has Been aeniea me Jews to form a league of working boys and girls between the ages of IS and 17. It is dangerous for a Jew to travel on a railway train, for if lie is discovered he is thrown through a window. Every day Jews are halted In the streets of Warsaw and their beards are torn off. "Even the Franco-British mission has fallen in with the views of the Polish government. The members of the mission hold conferences twice day with the army commanders. It is well known that in the absence of Marshall Foch, General Weygand will be nominated soon as chief of the Polish army." Parallel with this news coming from socialist sources is the informa lion that the French socialist deputy. Ernest Lafont. his wife and family. have been expelled from soviet Rus sia. No reai.m for this is known here Iafont vai an ardent admirer of the bolsheviki and a fervent defender of their cause in the French parliament He had gone on a visit to Russia to study the st-viet repime. to keep their armies concentrated east of Warsaw. The Poles have been able to ignore this advance, merely a dem onstration, but it is considered likely that the red Starr will avoid battle in that fork until stronger forces can be pushed toward Mlawa. Heavy Fighting Continues. Heavy lighting continues on the 80 mile front along- the middle Bug. North of Brest-Litovsk the Russians have obtained a footing on the left bank of the river. To the south the Poles command both banks of the river. The Polish general staff has re jected the offer of General Weygand of the French army to take command of the Polish army if granted full au thority, the Anglo-French mission in Warsaw reported today. Both General Weygand and.General Delmas Radcliffe of the British mili tarism ission have been insisting that the situation was not hopeless. The suggestons of Generals Wey gand and Radcliffe included re grouping of the Polish forces and strategic movements. Poles Reject Advice. They advised strongly against keeping a large part of the Polish forces on the Galician front, but the Poles were determined on these tac tics because they feared that if east ern Galicia passes out of their hands It will be lost permanently. It is known also that 800 picked French officers composing the War saw mission have found it difficult to exercise whatever authority appar ently has been allowed them. The Polish generale ugsnstaff is composed of officers with Austrian. Russian and German training, and is. mererore, not only not united in mill tary theories, but .s also at variance with Generals Weygand and Rad- ciitre. Allied leaders also failed to win President Pilsudski's support for their programme. Chor Taken by Russian. Russian cavalry driving westward from Przasnysz has occupied Chor. within a day's riding distance of the Warsaw-Danzig railway, which is ex pected to be reached either at Mlawa or CEechamw late today or early Tuesday, according to advices reach ing the French foreign office. rne soviet cavalry units are re ported greatly depleted owing to the exhaustion of both men and horses. BRTTAIX EXPECTED TO ACT Advices Say Siege May Be Declared Over Danzig. v BERLIN, Aug. g. (By the Associ ated Press.) Private advices from Danzig predict that Great Britain will in all probability be forced to pro claim a state of siege over the terri tory of the free city, should the soviet army threaten to enter the Polish corridor. The fact that large stores belonging to Poland are held in the harbor basin is believed to furnish the bolsheviki with the pretext for the advance. An American business man passing through Berlin declared American mail and telegrams were being mis carried and delayed because they were addressed "Danzig, Poland." Whether that port still is available for J American and other liners in view of the present political situation is a matter of conjecture. Danzig is overcrowded with Polish and Russian emigrants seeking an opportunity to embark for the United States. A special dispatch from Marien werder to the Morgenpost said the ar rival of soviet cavalry patrols at Choawle presages a possible Russian invasion of former German territory ceded by the peace treaty. The east ern outlet of the Polish corridor to day's march distant. Poles are re ported to be digging trenches at thw point indicated, which is only about nine miles from Soldau and the War saw-Danzig railroad. The correspondent urges that the occupation by the bolsheviki of Prza snysz. which might easily have been defended," indicates that the Polish troops are fast succumbing to bol sheviki propaganda and that disci pline is no longer prevailing. TROOP MOVE IS CONSIDERED Transportation Through Border States Under Discussion. WARSAW, Aug. 9. (By the Asso ciated Press.) Transporting through the border states two divisions of cavalry offered to Poland by the Hun garian parliamentary delegation is under consideration. All foreign legations in Warsaw left for Posen tonight. John Camp bell White, secretary and J. Pierre pont Moffat, third secretary of the American legation, and the military attaches will remain in Warsaw for the present, but the rest of the per sonnel left. A few American Red Cross nurses and some T. M. C. A. workers also remained. English Keep Goods They Desire From Russia Without Break ins Power of Bolsheviki. WASHINGTON, Aug. 9. Commit ment of the United States to a plan of action in the Polish crisis contin ued to be held in abeyance today while word was being received of the decision of France and Great Britain to impose a - blockade on soviet Russia. ' : The note dispatched by Poland to the United States has not Deen re ceived. It was stated, however, that the government was in constant com munication with France and Great Britain and that the situation was oc cupying the almost exclusive atten tion of foreign affairs officials. Blockade Kot Effective. Effectiveness" of the proposed blockade was seriously questioned by officials, who declared a blockade had been maintained by the British in the Baltic sea since the armistice. The blockade, although never formally acknowledged, has prevented Impor tation into Russia of any goods the allies desired to keep out. they claimed, without having broken the soviet power. There was no reason to expect, it was said, that the formal announce ment of a blockade already existing would promise any of the hoped-for remedial results.' Use or force Dy France and Great Britain was equally void of hopeful results, in the opinion of officials. I Poles Plead for Home. A proclamation addressed by the Polish council of ministers to the Polish nation was made public today by the PolisTi legation. Appeal was made for all citizens to defend their homes "in the holy war before the gates of Warsaw. "The government will defend the country to the last drop of blood, "the proclamation added. The Polish legation made public the note addressed by the Polish gov ernment to the league of nations, as follows: League Gets Note. "Poland informs th league that notwithstanding the declarations made to the league council July 6. and notwithstanding the reiterated efforts to obtain the armistice and Just and durable peace with the so viet, the attitude of the latter has rendered cessation of hostilities im possible. "Under various pretenses, the soviet government refused until now to state the conditions of an armistice. notwithstanding hte Polish govern ment did not and will not cease to do everything within its power to reach an honorable peace, but .declines all responsibility for the continuation of the war." Warsaw Police Goes to Front. WARSAW, Aug. 9. fBy the Associ ated Press.) The entire police force of Warsaw. 1000 strong, armed with new English rifles, has left for the front. Their places are being taken by men too old to fight. Among-the volunteers who have gone to the front is Stanislaus Patek, former minister of foreign affairs. He en listed as a private. WALLA WALLA HAS RAIN Wheat Not Hurt and Other Crops Are Greatly Benefited. WALLA WALLA. Wash., Aug. 9. (Special.) An Oregon mist wandered into Washington and settled down on the Walla Walla valley early this morning. It rained generally all the morning. .48 of an inch of rain falling. Unless the rainy weather continues wheat has. not been injured much be yond delay in harvesting, and surar beets, late vegetables, alfalfa and pasT ture were greatly benefited. GASOLINE SHORTAGE By E. TV. CLARK,, Vice-President and General Manager, Union Oil Company, Cal. On Tuesday night, August 3, the following telegram was sent to the Governors of California, Oregon and Washington; to the Mayors of all the principal cities of these states; to the various Chambers of Commerce, and to the publishers of the great news , papers of the Pacific Coast. This message speaks for itself. LOS ANGELES. Aug. 3. 1920. It is an estab lished fact that the United States now con sumes 436.000.000 barrels of crude oil a year, while only 402.000.000 barrels are produced. This leaves a national shortage of nearly 34.000,000 barrels. There are more than 7.600.000 automobiles and motor trucks In the United States, as compared with 700.000 in 1911. For your information the consumption of California oil is estimated at 110.000.000 bar rels for tills year, while only approximately 100.000.000 barrels will be produced. This leaves an actual shortage of at least 10.000. 000 barrels. In the year 1919 the total production rf gasoline in the State of California was ap proximately 300.000.000 gallons. The produc tion for the year 1920 Is estimated at 400.000. 000 gallons. The estimated consumption of the Pacific Coast states for the year 1920 is estimated at approximately 550.000.000 gal lons, leaving' a shortage of approximately 150.000.000 gallons. In view of these facts the Union Oil Com pany of California closed Its export, off ices early in the year and has been making every Sossible effort to meet the oil, gasoline and istillate shortages. At the same time we have attempted to retain on the Pacific Coast the present low gasoline prices, which are lower than at any other point in the entire world. But it has been absolutely impossible to supply the gasoline required at the present low prices. Automobiles have been strictly rationed even through the producing sections of California. Recently representatives of the Tarious marketing companies, civic bodies and essen tial industries were called before the Board of Public Utilities of Los Angeles for the purpose of considering the present gasoline situation and determining how best to handle it. At this conference we stated that we could help to relieve the situation by import ing gasoline, or coirld continue to sell only what was possible for us to produce in this state At the unanimous request of those inter ested, including the city of Los Angeles, we adopted the policy of importation. In pursu ance of this policy we have purchased and are now shipping gasoline from the mid-continent field and there have already been shipped to us seven solid train loads, con taining 175 tank cars of gasoline. Arrange ments have been completed . for additional shipments. - The Union Oil Company of California hopes that it will be able by this importation to - take care of its portion of the tremendous peak load requirements of the Pacific Coast for the months of August and September. Gasoline purchased In the mid - continent field costs us 24 Vic per gallon f. o. b. shipping point, to which must be added 6.43 cents per gallon for freight. The total delivered price is 30.68 cents per gallon.' In addition thereto we must stand the shrinkage In transit and the extra cost of storage and distribution. For this reason we find it necessary to-ln-crease the price of gasoline under our exist ing schedules throughout the Pacific Coast. Tou will note that we are not charging tha entire cost of the importation against tha gasoline imported, but are spreading the load on as equitable a basis as is humanly possible. Therefore, effective Wednesday morning, August 4th. the price of our gasoline to the consumer at basic distributing points will bo as follows: Seattle 8o Portland 29c (Including stats San Francisco.. .27c road tax) Sacramento 2"H Fresno 27 Vic Pan Diego 27Hc Stockton 27 Ho Oakland 27c San Jose 27Ho Los Angeles. . ..27c ' It would be "absolutely Impossible for the Union Oil Company of California to carry the load of the purchase and transportation of this imported gasoline without this increase in price. It is only fair that the public should know that the Union Oil Company of California is manufacturing and will continue to manufac ture all the gasoline possible from its avail able supplies of refining crude oils, and that it is not exporting any gasoline from the Pacific Coast. The Board of Public L'tilitles of the city of Los Angeles, the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce and the Chamber of Mines and Oils of California have made a thorough and impartial investigation of the present short age of petroleum products and the vnderly ing causes thereof, and their findings are available to all who seek further information. I believe It necessary - that you nave the Information immediately and at first hand so that the situation may be thoroughly under stood. It is for this reasea Uiat I am wiring you direct. E. W. CLARK, Vice-President and General Manager Union Oil Company of California. UNION OIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA REPORTER HELD AS FRAUD FALSE STORIES ARE SENT THROUGH MAILS, CHARGED. SINN FEIN FUND $500,000 , Irish Charged With Meddling in Presidential Campaign in TJ. S. LONDON, Aug. 9. The Evening Standard claims it has documentary evidence that a Sinn Fein congress in June authorised Eamonn de Va lera, "president of the Irish repub lic." to expend $500,000. "in connection with the campaign for the presidency of the United States." One million dollars in expenditure by De Valera was authorised to ob tain recognition of the Irish republic, the newspaper declares. According to the Standard, the Dail Eireann (Irish republican par liament) authorised De Valera to send a diplomatic mission to the Russian soviet and to various governments of Europe and America and appointed De Valera. James O'Hara and Bishop Fogarty of Killalaoe trustees of the Dail Eireann funds. GA6ICIA SOVIETS ARE SET UP Bolsheviki Reported to Have Acted in Occupied Sections. LONDON. Aug. 9. The bolshevik military authorities have established Soviets in the parts of eastern Galicia under their occupation, it is stated in an authoritative dispatch received here. I oland- is still far from being beaten, in the opinion of Marshal Foch, as expressed in an interview with the 'Exchange Telegraph com pany's correspondent at Hythe. Providing Poland's forces and her military material are quickly organ ized, the marshal is quoted as saying she may yet be able successfully to defend her frontiers. . Russian bolshevik troops have broken into the town of Sokolow, about 40 miles northeast of Warsaw, and have captured several points south of Brest-Litovsk, according to an official statement issued in Mos cow yesterday and received here by wireless. At a railroad Junction on' the Bug river, about four miles southeast of Ostrov, the bolsheviki have beaten off fierce counter attacks by the Poles, the statement says. It adds that so viet trcops on the northern front are successfully advancing toward the Narew river. Tn the direction of Siedlce and Lu- Phone your want acts to The Orego nian. Main 7070. Automatic 560-95. Eastern Colleges Complain of Re ports Circulated About Them In Newspapers of Country. BOSTON. Mass., Aug. 9. Charles .L. Appleton, also known as Lawrence A. Almon. who is alleged by federal was anything known ' regarding the German pennant. 1 Another Btory. alleged to have been widely circulated by Almon. told of students at Smith college selling soap on the streets in the endowment fund campaign. ments, according to the agreement reached by the Lithuanian and Rus sian delegates in Joint conference at Riga. How About It? PRISON FACTORY BURNS Damage Estimated at $50,000; Blaze Believed Incendiary. JOLIET, III., Aug. 9. Fire which destroyed one building of the peni tentiary chair factory and damaged a second building was under control at S o'clock this afternoon. Loss was estimated at -S20.000. Penitentiary officials admit the tire authorities to have sent false stories j was incendiary, but were unaDie to about students at Wellesley, Smith, ' arrive at the srccific cause. Mount Holyoke and eastern women's I . . - colleges to various newspapers. wa Bicyclist Collides With Street Car. Jeff Marsh. 643 Upshur street, was injured seriously last night when his bicycle collided with a street car at Twentieth and Upshur streets. He was taken to St. Vincent's hospital by the Arrow ambulance. Russia to Evacuate Lithuania. WASHINGTON. Aug. 9. Evacua tion of Lithuanian territory by soviet forces will take place in inree move arrested today, charged with using the mails to defraud. The first complaint, officials said, came from Wellesley, after publica tion in another city of an account of a weird ceremony said to have taken place in connection with the presentation to the college of Gen eral Pershing's helmet and flag and the battle pennant of the former kaise. The ceremony did not take place, according to the complaint, nor Des Moines May See Strike. DES MOINES. Aug. 9. Street-car men were voting today on the ques tion of authorising their executive committee to call a strike before or during the Iowa atate fair., Cuticura Soap IS IDEAL- For the Hands ftddroa-i: CmMrO-T L.bwrUar-i JVeryt X . lfaiaWm, Mat 1 '" . ? " """ "" '""'"""'".-W'v--' , , ' ' I " ,' . H PS "If K'J Wa Fire Might ireak Out or Burglars Break In "One of the Northwest's Great Banks" YOU'VE often' heard of "peo ple returning from a trip only to find their valuable papers, jewelry and keepsakes missing or destroyed. Before starting on that vaca tion trip place such things in a Safe Deposit Box at the United States National .Bank and elim - inate the worries. United States National Banlo SltH and Stark- IIP lip such midsummer ap petizers as these at pof 'ar prices! Corn on the Cob. Chickens From the Farm. Iced Melons (selected) Fruit Salads. Fresh Berry Pie. Or anything, in fact, that your palate craves; and a wonderful table d'hote dinner for Jl. Service Continuous From 6A.M.to9P.M. Htmpertal Hotel Manager Hi 1 FOLLOWED FOR THIRTY YEARS "That Is a Long Time to Suffer," States Clemens, "but My Troubles' Are Over Now" Praises Tanlac. "Thirty years is a mighty long time for a man to suffer. That's what I had to do but I wn to say I'm in fine health now and feel like I'm starting life all over again." The above statement was made recently by Charles N. Clemens. 416 Jertey street. St. Johns. Portland, Oregon, while speaking of his remarkable re covery by taking TaniiO. Mr. Clemens is a cabinet maker in the employ of the Fenner Mfg. Co. "I am sixty-four years old. It was back in 1890 that my stomach first began to bother me and ofher troubles kept coming on until it looked like I I had everything in the world the matter with me. My appetite was so poor that sometimes I went all day without eating hardly a mouthful, and iha man in the restaurant often asked me what I was coming in for, as I ate so little. I had pains that would start -in the pit of my stomach and go all around my waist and on up under my shoulder blades. Why, at times T just had to grit my teeth to be able to stand them. Gas would form on my stomach and bloat me up so tight I felt like my breath was cut off entirely. My nerves were shattered and often while walking along the street some little noise would upset me so bad I would Jump three or four feet. I was subject to awful dizzy spells and on several oc casions while at work I got so fainty and weak I fell right over on the floor. I had sharp catching pains all through my back and when I sat down I would have to pull up with both hands. I could never get much sleep and it Just seemed I had played out altogether. "But Tanlac came my way and when I started taking it, that was the best thing I ever did in my life. The second bottle turned things for the better,- and I could Just feel my troubles leaving me. 1 have taken six bottles now and am feeling so fine it seems I have been made over into a new man altogether. My big gest trouble now is my aopetite, why, I can hardly get enough to eat and the beauty of it all is that every thing I cat -' grees with me. I never have an ache or pain of any kind, in fact, I don't know what it is to ever be bothered in any way whatever now. I have picked upten pounds in weight and am simply feeling fine. I con sider Tanlac a medicine in a class by itself and don't hesitite one minute to recommend it." Tanlac is sold in Portland by the Ual Drug Co. Adv.