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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 9, 1920)
6 THE MORNING OREGONIAN, SATTfUDAT, OCTOBER 9, 1020 COX HOTE PROBE IT are combing the city in an effort to locate Donald Newcomb, -aged 9. who left a child's boarding house at Forest Grove late Thursday afternoon for Portland in search of his mother. No trace of the lad had been found last night. The boy became homesick for his mother after being away from her five days and determined to-set out and walk to Portland rather than stay at the Forest Grove boarding house. Deposed San Francisco Dis trict Agent Charges Plot. Testimony Produced Showing $5000 Paid. The child's mother, .who lives at 235 Fifth street, took the boy to the home of Mrs. C. M. Wyant at Forest Grove last Sunday. She paid the boy's room and board for two weeks in ad vance. . He started to school at Forest Grove. Thursday afternoon he told some of his schoolmates that he was POLITICS ARE BLAMED SENATOR P0MERENE IRATE homesick for his mother and intended walking to Portland to join her. He has not been 6een since. Will PROHIBITION DIRECTOR REMOVED Beth, 200 North Sixteenth street, he reported to the police yesterday; En trance to the' house was gained by means of a passkey during the ab sence of the family. A. M.. Conover reported that thieves stole an auto clock and xther automo bile accessories from in. front of his home, 430 East Fortieth street, some time during the night. Apples, carrots and celery comprised thi loot taken from the grocery store of T. Kawahara, 181 North - Twenty first street, by thieves who cut through the canvas covering of the display window. Police believe it to have been the work of boys. Three boxes of cigars were stolen from a cigar store at 82 Third street, the proprietor reported to the detec tive bureau yesterday. The prowlers gained entrance by breaking a win dow glass. RD1GALS LONG FDH'U. S. DAYTOH CONCLUDED Sirs, (ilad K. .Warburton Declares livery Obstacle Has Been Thrown in Her Path. SAN FRANCISCO. Oct. 8. (Special.) In the midst of charges and counter charges and in the face of whisperings and insinuations concerning; the easy manner in which bootleggers have been operating in Sah Francisco for the last month. Mrs. Glad K. War burton was removed as prohibition df rector today by orders from Washing ton. Prohibition Supervisor John L. Considine was temporarily named pro hibition director. The telegram to Mrs. Warburton, who was appointed' to the place va cated by the death of Loren Hand loy a few weeks ago. was brief. It stated: "John 1. Considine. federal prohibition supervisor for California, will temporarily assume the duties of prohibition director." Mrs. Warburton, in admitting re ceipt of this telegram, declared it did not surprise her. She said: . Political Plot Charged. "I am shock-proof. Nothing less than murder can feaze me. I'm glad it's over. I have been trying to do my duty in the face of all kinds of whisperings and insinuations. I am the victim of a political plot. But Mr. Considine's appointment is not the result of politics. He was ap pointed because he is the only one in a position of authority in the prohibi tion department in San Francisco who has not been, actively against me since I assumed office. His appointment is a matter of expediency and not poli tics. I have received no co-operation, but. on the other hand, every obsta cle has been placed in my way to make my work impossible. "My own appointment to .the place was temporary. When Mr. Handley was killed I telegraphed Washington for instructions and was told to take charge until further notice. I expect to remain in the department subject to Mr. Considine's orders." Appointment Held Surprise. Considine said that his appointment to the office temporarily was a big surprise to him. One of Considine's first acts after taking the reins from Mrs. Warburton was to confer with Collector of In ternal Revenue Wardell relative to the release of a large number of le gitimate permits which have been held up by Wardell. "These permits." said Considine, "have been held up because of the suspicion that liquor was being with drawn for illegal use. Many legiti mate permits calling for the with drawal of liquor for non-beverage purposes have been so . held up and hould be released." While Considine's appointment, is temporary. Mrs. Warburton's removal so far as known today was permanent. Edward Kenny, chief deputy prohibi tion director, was mentioned as a pos sible successor to Mrs. Warburton. It was also reported that Colonel John L. Flynn, chief deputy under Collector Wardell, was being groomed for the place. Records Declared In Bad Shape. Prior to leaving her office, Mrs. Warburton declared that the records of her offjee were in bad shape be cause of insufficient appropriations and clerical help. "There are many permits for the removal of liquor." she said, "that do not appear on our records at all. There lias been continual friction with Collector Wardell. Liquor, I am in formed, has been withdrawn from the warehouses without permits being is sued." Whether the appointment of Consi dine and the removal of Mrs. Warbur ton will have any effect on the whisky market here cannot "be fore shadowed. Whisky bonded stuff has been obtainable in any quantity at $32.EO to $40 a gallon, delivered. Bootleggers are so numerous in San Francisco and vicinity that they are compelled to wear badges, a wag said today. The badgeB are to pro tect the whisky runners from ap proaching one another to sell liquor. SIAXNIX ARJtKST ORDERED California Attorney' and Others Held Dry Law "Violators. SAN FRANxriSCO, Oct. 8. Warrants for the arrest of Francis J. Mannix. prominent attorney and former census supervisor for San Francisco, and five others on a charge of conspiring to violate the federal prohibition en forcement law were issued by United States Commissioner Francis Krull today after having been sworn to by the United States district attorney. Bail was placed at $10,000 In each warrant. TOWN COURT IS MISSING 1'irs.t Prisoner in "Three Years Re leased, -Magistrate Lacking. LAJAKA, Colo., Oct. 8. The first arrest in this town in three years was made today. A man, after being here but a short time, was accused of stealing an overcoat from a garage. The town marshal, whose sole duties have been to care for the town streets and parks, placed the man in jail. When the marshal was ready to bring the prisoner up for trial it was found there was no police magistrate in the town and that there had been no such official for three years. The prisoner was released. PRIZE BULL IS BOUGHT Portland Attorney Puts Champion on Clackamas Farm." OREGON CITY. Or.. Oct. 8. F. J. Meindl, attorney of Portland, has pur chased the grand champion Junior bull at the Oregon state fair of 1920, and has placed the animal on the Lazelle farm at Twilight, the former home of Mrs. Meindl. The animal was from Tillamook county.- "Foxy You'll Do Oxford." the grand champion bull at the fair. Is also on a Clackamas county farm, this ani mal having been purchased by Gus Engelman, of Marquam. and former ly owned by Hugh Ridings, of Molalla. LEGAL PAPERS STOLEN Documents and Jewelry Taken From Home of H. R. Manseth. Some valuable legal documents and a small quantity of Jewelry were atolen from the home of H. D. Man- E5I.MA GOLDMAN AND BERK MAX XOT COXTEXTED. Socialist Investigator Saj;a All of Passengers on Soviet Ark. Do . "ot Like- Russia. LONDON, Oct. 8. fBy' the Aeaoct ated Press.) Emma Goldman and Al exander Berkman both want to return to the United States, according to Boris Sokoloff, former professor of bi ology in Petrograd university and well-nown as a socialist writer, who has just arrived in England. " There are 240 of the passengers of the soviet ark Buford who were eent away from the United States last De cember in Petrograd and- 239 of them want to return,' was part of Berk man's comment on present life -conditions in soviet Russia when I talked with him in Petrograd a few weeks ago," M. Sokoloff told the Associated Press this afternoon. "Within a month I am going to New York, where I have been invited to re port to the American workers my ob servations." said Sokoloff. "I did not want to leave Russia because great events are ripening there and discon tent with the eoviet government is growing more and more. . "The workmen and peasant masses have completely withdrawn from the bolsheviki and serious trouble is ex pected in Moscow and Petrograd. One need not mention that there is no communism or socialism in Russia. My opinion is that the process of the crystallization of the middle class 's nearly finished and that Russia will soon follow the example of France by overthrowing its tyrants. "The economic and commercial posi tion of the workers is very bad. The average wage of the Petrograd work man, rations premium included, equals one-fifteenth part of his earnings in 1917. He received about one-eighth the normal quantity of food. In other words, he is in a chronic state of semi-starvation. Because there are no goods available for export and ow ing to the disruption of transport a renewal of commerce with the outside world will be impossible for two years." Emma Goldman and Berkman and the other persons deported from the United States are living comfortably without working, according to M. Sok oloff. Sokoloff returned to Russia nine months ago as a socialist investigator. Since then he has spent three months in a Moscow prison. On his release he went to Petrograd, where he was elected a workers' member of the Pet rograd soviet. Under the Kerensky regime Sokoloff was minister of do mestic affairs; He was a member, of the national assembly in 1917. ,. ; LIQUOR AUTO IS SEIZED m PROSPERITY OF BOOTLEGGER REGARDED AS TYPICAL. Prohibition Enforcement Officer Points to Costly Car as Add ed Incentive for Arrests. E. R. Wolfe of the federal prohibit tion squad left for Pendleton last night to seize and bring to this Sity an expensive automobile, said to have been used by a bootlegger in his illicit trade. A warrant is out for his arrest, but the quarry left eastern Oregon one Jump ahead of his pursuers and is thought to be in hiding somewhere near Seattle. Pending his appear ance, the federal authorities will take possession of the automobile, listed at $4500 and bright from the factory. Members of the prohibition squad point to this car, with its costly fit tings and powerful engine, as proof that evasion of the law is, from the standpoint of law-abiding citizens and earnest sleuths, distastefully profitable. They declare that an added' Incentive to their work is the fact that professional bootleggers almost Invariably drive such cars as no mere minion of Uncle Sam can. af ford to own. "I tell you it sort of gets a man's goat to have to jump out of the way when one of these fellows comes mo toring along, tooting his hoVn and aping the airs of 'gentility," said Johnston Smith, federal director of prohibition for Oregon. "Once in a while the laugh is on our side, how ever, and we get both car and man. There's some satisfaction to that, I'll say there is." NEW ZEALAND-ER VISITS Editor of Labanaki Herald Reaches Portland. ' W. J. Penn, editor of the Taranakl Herald, New Plymouth, New Zealand, and one of the seven delegates from New Zealand to attend the Imperial Press conference held last month at Ottawa, Canada, arrived in Portland last night from San Francisco, for a two-day stopover en route to Van couver, B. C. Mr. Penn will be the speaker at a luncheon given by a group of ship pers and exporters at tne cnamDer of commerce today on the general Bubject of trade relations between this country and New Zealand, with spe cial emphasis on the possibilities of large lumber shipments to that coun try. "New Zealand is having difficulty In obtaining lumber sufficient for her needs." said Mr. Penn last night. 'The situation has become . more or less acute since the war and is a regret table fact, since at one time New Zea land possessed some of, the finest lumber in the world." Mr. Penn is also president of the New Zealand Iron Ore Smelting com pany, which is engaged in smelting ore fro'm high-grade iron-bearing sand that is washed up on the shore in the province of Taranaki. He says that American capital may be permitted to assist in exploiting this promising in dustry. Mr. Penn is accompanied by his wife on his trans-Pacific tour. He will leave for Seattle Monday morning- Statement Issued Declaring Inquiry ' ' Had Failed to Throw Light on Campaign Contributions. DAYTON, O., Oct. 8. The senate sub-committee, composed of Senators Pomerene." democrat, Ohio, and Edge, republican. New Jersey, today con cluded its investigation of the circum stances sucrounding the giving of a $5000 note by Governor Cox to a local bank in August, 1917, and payment of the note by the Dayton Metal Products company fn June, 1918. The committee will meet in St- Louis October 18 to continue investigation. ' Testimony of Clarence Keifer, who was vice-president of the City Na tional bank of Dayton, which ' dis counted the note, was that he "thought" he had paid "the proceeds of the note to Clarence N. Greer, chairman of the Montgomery county democratic committee. Greer testi fied that he, had received a $5000 cer tificate of deposit from the City Trust & Savings bank, a bank interlocking with the City National bank, the day following and that he used it to pay expenses incurred by the' democratic committee in conducting its primary campaign for the nomination of can didates for city commissioners. Obligation Held Personal. H. K. Talbot, president of tfie Day ton Metal Products company, testi iied that the company had paid the note, but that it was considered a personal obligation on himself . Colonel E. A. Deeds and C. F. Kettering, com pany officials. He said Governor Cox has asked him and others forming a committee interested in securing the nomination of desirable candidates for city commissioners to assume the obligation inasmuch as their efforts to bring about a coalition 'between re publicans and democrats to defeat so cialist candidates had delayed cam paign plans so long that' the demo cratic organization had not had time to collect sufficient campaign funds. Talbot said he agreed with Governor Cox and- consequently assumed the cbligation. Concerning delivery of, the proceeds of the note, however, Marvyn Scudder, New York accountant, testified that during the Hughes aircraft investi gation he had talked with Keifer con cerning the payment of the note and that Keifer had told him "I paid the money to Governor Cox and he put it in a bag and took it away with him." Mr. Pomerene Protest. This testimony was strenously ob jected to by Senator Peomerene. Senator Pomerene later issued a statement in which he declared cer tain witnesses who had been connected with the Hughes and Frear aircraft investigations and others had "dem onstrated .that they were more in terested in besmirching Governor Cox than in assisting the truth." He also declared that the entire investi gation here had shed no light on presidential campaign contributions. Senator Edge issued a statement in which he said: "1 do not care to discuss the things that have been made clear before the committee. The matter Is now up to-the prosecuting attorney. We have clearly established that there has been no violation of the corrupt practices act of Ohio and irregular proceedings in the Cox campaigns of the past, but these are not within our jurisdiction. We cannot con duct the prosecution, but steps should be taken immediately to act upon the evidence disclosed before tjie com mittee." E IN COUNTY JAIL COXVICTED SLAYER , W1XS FREEDOM FROM PRISON. Abode to Be in Multnomah Bastile Pending Appeal of Case to Supreme Court. ' - ' Russell Brake, recently convicted for his part in the murder of Harry Dubinsky, is back in the Multnomah county jail, arriving just one day be fore argument in Salem on a manda mus proceeding,brought by his attor ney, Tom Garland, to compel the warden of the state penitentiary to deliver him. Though the mandamus action is to be heard at 10:30 o'clock this morning. 11 is cjipetieu Liiai 11 will u quasneu by reason of the boy already being returned, but the fact of the return is a legal victory for Garland. Brake does not like the peniten tiary and asked if he- could not be returned to the Multnomah county jail, pending the appeal of his case. Garland filed a certified copy of a certificate of probable cause with L. H. Compton- penitentiary warden. four days ago, and asked that Brake be turned over to Clackamas county officers. He was tried and convicted in Oregon City. On the advice of Attorney-General Brown the warden refuses to deliver the boy. The man damus action followed. Garland con tending that the law was plain that In similar circumstances a prisoner must be delivered to the officer in whose custody he was at the time of his trial. AID TO BANDITS DENIED Japanese Disclaim Reported Attack on Chinese Railroad. WASHINGTON, Oct. 8. Publication in this country of the report of a special commission lof Inquiry to the Chinese government that there was evidence that Japanese military au thorities with view to obtaining con trol of the Chinese Eastern railway had aided bandit raids on that line, brought a denial today from the Jap anese embassy. The embassy added: "As a matter of fact Japanese military authorities have always -cooperated with the Chinese authorities in suppressing the bandits, and the Chinese commander, Yan, expressed cordial appreciation of the great help and facilities received from them.- HOMESICK BOY IS LOST Uonald Xewcomb, 9, Is Sought by Searching Parties. Searching parties are out in Wash ingtpn county. and the Portland police OF S! TWO MT2X LOOT VAULT AT 1'LOIMKR, IDAHO. Woman Cashier and Depositor Ae Locked tn Safe Escape Is Made in Auto. SPOKANE, Wash., Oct. 8. (Spe cial.) Two armed men robbed the State bank at Plummer, Idaho, just before 3 P. M.. today, according to re ports received here, and locked Miss Myrtle Wynn, cashier, and Miss Eva Usury, a hardware store employe, who had entered the bank to make deposit, in the vault. Then, they looted the bank of $3900 in currency, all the avail able funds. The robbers were believed to have escaped in the direction of Spokane in an automobile. The robbery was discovered by a woman who entered the bank shortly afterwards and heards the girls in the vault crying for assistance. She quickly informed the officers, who lo cated John Muran, a former bank em ploye, who knew the safe combina tion, and the girls were released. There were few people in town at the time. Most were in .attendance at the county fair. The robbers were young men. . RED SUBMARINES MOVE American Xuvy Told to Make Xo Hostile Move. WASHINGTON, Oct. 8 The bol shevik submarines, supposed to be bent on intercepting munition ship ments to. Poland, have been reported off the Esthonian coast, presumably bound for Danzig, according to an an nouncement tonight by the state de partment. The information came to the navy department and also to the state department from agents along the Baltic. "Instructions have been sent by the navy department," the announcement said, "to Vice-Admiral Huse, com manding the American naval forces now in the Baltic, that the United States is not at war with Russia and that the submarines in question are not to be treated as hostile vessels." Since the signing of the armistice between the soviet forces and Poland hostilities have supposedly ceased, but it was apparent that the reports received here left no doubt that the mission of the undersea craft was a hostile one. WAR DEAD HONOR ASKED President Directs Flags to Be at Half Mast Sovember 14. WASHINGTON, Oct. 8. President Wilson today directed that Sunday novemoer it, tne American nag De displayed at half-mast on all public buildings and naval and military posts. 1 The observance was declared "a token of the nation's participation in the memorial services held for the heroic American soldiers, sailors, ma rines and others who gave their Jives to their country in the world war." HARDING TOUR BILLED Senator Will Be Gone Five Days and Kept Busied. CHICAGO. Oct. 8., (Special.) Dates of- Senator Harding's next tour were issued here tonight by national re publican headquarters. The tour will last five days, the senator reaching home just, in time to speak at the America first ' celebration in Marion, Ohio, on October 18, at which time between 60,000 and 70,000 are expect ed to attend. The senator will leave Marion Tuesday,, October 12, making stops at Columbus and Cincinnati. On Wed nesday he is booked at Chattanooga. Mr. Merchant We S42S00 Model E l-i2-Ton 'Chassis Solid Tires Old Price $2105. New Price $1680 Model ErUV2-Ton-35x5 Cord Tires Old Price $2240. New Price ' $1815 Model EP d 12-2-Ton 36x6 Cord Tires Old Price $2505. New Price $2080 F.O.B. Portland. M cCRAKEN MOT Fourteenth at Morrison For a long time, remarks the New York Times, "high prices seemed like the weather, about which, as Mark Twain said, everybody talked but nothing was done." Then the buying public, reacting at last from the wave of extravagance that swept the country in war time, began a few months ago to rebel "against the ever diminishing purchasing power of the dollar. The result of this action is seen in the dramatic price cuttings in the wholesale market last month, which affected wheat, corn, oats, wool, cotton, automobiles, textiles, clothing, food-stuffs, metal, leather and many other commodities. The wholesale prices of these commodities have declined on the average about 20 below the high prices of February, according to R. E. Edmundson of the New York News Record, a commercial daily, who pre dicts that these cuts are " certain to be reflected in a reduced cost of living removing the usual excuses for striking to get higher wages." Dispatches from various cities report that the procession of falling prices in the retail trade has already begun. The leading article in THE LITERARY DIGEST this week, October 9th, will be read with great satis faction by the public. It gives a comprehensive review, drawn from all sources of information, of the conditions of trade in the United States, including the prospects for the country's getting back on a lower price level without affecting the hours or wages of labor. , Among many other interesting articles in THE DIGEST this week, are : ; The Flaw in the Baseball Diamond , An Account of the Recent Exposures of Crookedness in Professional Baseball Treated From Every Angle The Japanese Question in the Campaign Wilson's Refusal to Obey Congress Cool Greetings to Our Immigrants The "Undeclared" War in Haiti Big Possibilities of the "Little Entente" (With Map) French Disapproval of Black Troops in Germany Home, Sweet Home in Bolshevia Why America Is Not Rebuilding France American Windmills in the Sahara California " Earthquake - Proof " Freak Foods Did We Come From the Sea? Plantin, " King of Printers " Testing "American Literature" Many Interesting Illustrations, Including October 9th Number on Sale Today The day after he will be at Oakdale. Tenn., and Somerset, Danville, Har rodsburg. La w re nee burg, Shelbyx-ille and Louisville, Ky. On October 15 he will speak at Jeffersonville. New Al bany, Scottsburg, Seymour, Columbus, Franklin and Indianapolis. Ind., and on October 16 he will stop at lireen castle. Brazil and Terre Haute, Ind., and St. Louis, Mo. He will winiJ up at Columbus, Ohio, and Marion on October 17. Relatives of Jolin Custer Sought. The police were asked last night tn Mr. are reducing the price of Tis a y? i lie FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publishers find the relatives of John Custer, who was killed in Prlneville, Or.. Thursday. He was said to have a son and daughter living here. He was a member of the longshoremen's union. Offending Brewers Warned. WASHINGTON, Oct. v 8. Breweries wtlh Tail tA onnfinA t Vi A nlonhnlic content to their products within the- hair per cent limit oi tne voisieau prohibition law hereafter will be pun ished by revocation of their license to do business. Commissioneer of In ternal Revenue Williams ruled to night. Tt has been found, the com- Farmer CO. Broadway 93 OR What Harding and Cox Think of Each Other R. L. Stevenson Again on the Stage Optimistic American Singers The Passover Unchanged inThirtyCenturies Prohibition's Blight on Jail and Rescue Missions Vast Power of the American President The Paper Industry An American Agent Among the Letts, Poles and"Bolos" Woman's Brains Are to Man as Fifty Is to Fifty Planning Ahead for Next Winter's Snow Problem Best of the Current Poetry Topics of the Day the Usual Collection of Humorous Cartoons. Newsdealers 10 Cents $4.00 a Year of the Famcan NEW Standard Etfctionary). NEW YORK miasioner's statement said, that the imposition of double taxes and pen alties in the nature of fines which the law also allows, is not sufficient Chan ers At a moKt remarkable saving to you we are In a position to offer two practically new popular Dispatch 4-passenger moti-lrt. One has been driven but -100 miles, the other about 5000. both equipped with cord tires, one extra, wire wheels, motometers, bumpers, etc. At a price of $1800 and $2000, you surety can select from these cars one of the best values possible to obtain in the city of Portland. Covey Motor Car Company lt and Washington ets. Main 6244. A Ulrrarrnt Kinds of Liudrf 4 Different Prices EAST 494 WILSON WAITS ALL THE WORLD TO KNOW Says He Would Like to Tell Everybody What a Won derful Thing Tanlac Is. Gains Fifteen Pounds. Troubles Over. "When I began taking Tanlac I only weighed a hundred and forty pounds, and I now balance the scales at a hundred and fifty-five." declared Charles Wilson, of 233 Crown ave nue. Spokane, a well-known saw mill man. a few days ago. "For seven or eight years before I got Tanlac I was in mig-hty bad health. My appetite was go poor that I never felt hungry at all, and had to force myself to eat enough to keep going. My stomach gave me no end of trouble, for after meals I always had a heavy feeling like lead in the pit of my stomach and gas formed which kept me feeling miserable for hours. 'I had such a hurting between my shoulder blades I could hardly get on my clothes, and at night I was so annoyed by these pains and so choked up with gas that sleep to prevent the production of cere;il beverages carrying an il leca 'k f ck ." FOB I'SEXPHCTKI) COMPANY, RKMKMll i: Ol'R COMPLK IH ASSORTMENT OI Home Prepared, Home Cooked Foods Salads Cold Meats and Pastries "Everything for a Luncheon" STOP AM) SHOP TIP' TOP DELICATESSEN ANO fiROCERY, Thirteenth nnri Morrison St.. OPK.V UYK.MNUS A NO SL'NDAY. "Autoists Always Remember" OREGON HUMANE SOCIETY Investigates all cases of alleged cruelty to animals. Offices, room 150 courthouse. Phone Main 378 from 8 A. M. to 5 P. M. The society has full charge of the city pound at its home. 535 Columbia bou levard. Phone any time. Woodlawn 764. Dogs for sale. Horse ambulance for sick or disabled horses. Small animals painlessly electrocuted where necessary, and stray animals cared for. All dead animals, cows, horses, itc. picked up free of charge. almost seemed out of the question. In spite of everything I could do. I kept getting worse, and finally .got to where my troubles had pretty near put me out of commission. "I had taken so many different medicines without getting any bene fit that when my neighbors got to praising Tanlac to me I thought it would mean just another disappoint ment if I tried it. Hut I pretty soon found I was badly mistaken, for actu ally the first bottle did me more good than all the other medicine I had ever taken. "Well sir, I never saw anything like Tanlac to make a man eat, and the best of it is. I can eat just anything I please and everything agrees with me perfectly. And sleep, why, I am sleeping better now than I have since I was a boy, and I jet up every morn ing feeling lively and active as a two-year-old. "All the pains have gone from my back, and in fact, I am a wsll man in every way. I just can't begin to express my gratitude for the good Tanlac has done for me. and I would like to tell everybody in the worhsj wndi a great, ineuiuine it is. Tanlac is sold in Portland b- the Owl Drug Co. Adv.