THREE DIPLOMATS CHOSEf BY TAFT Leishman Will Go to Rome, Ide to Madrid . and Sherrill ' to Buenos Ayres. OTHER CHANGES IN AUTUMN O Brien Will Remain at Toklo, Says , Kiiox Leishman Is Fellow- 'Townsman of Knox,. Ide Is Philippine Governor.' WASHINGTON, March 20. The fol lowing contemplated changes and ap pointments In the diplomatic service . were announced today, after a confer ence between the President' and Secre tary Knox:. Ambassador Leishman, now at Con tuntiiioile. to go to Home; Charles P. fcherrill. New York, to be Minister to Argentina, and Henry C. Ide. to be Min ister to Spain. There are to be no fur ther changes in the embassies for sev eral months, probably not ' until Au tumn. The announcement was made' om rially that Thomas J. O'Brien, now American Ambassador to Japan, would remain at that post. Mr. StlerrilL, who got i to the Argen tine Republic, is a lawyer of New York fMtji, about . 45 years old. and., speaks Spanish and French fluently. Mr. Ide, who will be Minister to Spain, has been Uovernor-General of the Philippines. Neither Mr. Leishman at Constantino ple jior Mr. Griscom at Rome, whom he succeeds, will relinquish his office for some weeks. - John O. A. Leishman, whom Mr. Knox tias. caused to be promoted to the em bassy to Rome, is a fellow-townsman pf the Kecretary, having ' een born in Pittsburg arch 28, "1857. ' He became . metal broker in that 'city In 1881, Vice-president of Carnegie Bros. & Co. In 1J186.' and later president of the Car negie Steel Company. He entered the fliplomatie service in 1897 as Minister to Switzerland and was promoted to the. Ministry to Turkey In 1901. The mission to Turkey was raised to an em bassy in 1906. and Mr. Leishman was appointed to the hlgher-offloe-.. Mr. Ide Is a Vermanter.-born Septem ber ,18. 1844, and is a graduate of Dart mouth lnd Tufts ollgea. -After serv ing In the State Senate, as chairman of the : Republican state convention In 1884 and delegate to the National con vention In 1888, he was appointed Unit M States Commissioner to Samoa in 891-, and was Chief Justice of those Islands from 1S9S to 1897 . under the Joint aonotntrasntJit the United States Greatritain end Germany. In 1900 he went to the Philippine Islands as a member of -the Taft commission on the establishment of civil . .vernment; was appointed Secretary of FIni.nce and Jus tice, the ls'ands In 1901. Vice-Governor In 1904 and Governor-General in 1906, resigning that office In 1908. - He Is a director ri several banks and man ufacturing corporations. ... 1'ROBB CAMPAIGN EXPENSES I'unds Collected In 1896 and 1904 to Be Investigated. WASHINGTON, March 20Campalgn contributions and expenditures during the , campaigns of 1S96 and 1904 will be inves tigated by a, Congressional committee, to be known as the special committee of the slxty-first'Congress, for the investigation of campaign funds and expenditures in National elections, and .to consist of five Representatives and 10 Senators, should the joint resolution introduced by Repre sentative Weisse .(Wis.) be adopted. It will be the duty of the proposed com mittee to investigate the amount of funds collected ind expended, from whom re ceived and to whom paid. and. for what purpose- paid and expended. The committee is also to determine the influences which prompted the contribu tions ar.d the use of them. LITE FOK EXiPRESIDEXTS Two Bills in .ilouse io Make Retired Executives Senators. WASHINGTON. March 20. Once a President.' always a. Government em ploye, if either of two bills introduced in th,e House becomes a law. One of fered by-. epresntative Coudrey, of Misaou.l.'makei ex-Presidents honorary members of the United States Senate for life ami as such gives them a sal ary of 35,006 - rr annum. The other Introduced . by Representative Bennett. 'f New York, provides that ex-Presidents of the United States shall have a seat in the House of Representatives with the right of debating but not vot ing. Under this bill they would receive the same compensation as members. 3AK FOK TERKITOIUAL MEX llallingcr to Issue Order Restrain ing Their Travels. -WASHINGTON, March " 30. Territorial officials in Alaska, Arizona, New Mexico, Hawaii and Porto Rico will receive a shock in a few days when they receive an official order from Secretary of the Interior Balllnger informing them that in ' the future they must remain in-their ter ritories except In cases of emergency. Secretary Balllnger. called at the White House today and his contemplated order received the approval of President Taft. The order Is intended to put an end to Uovernors and other territorial officials coming to Washington during sessions of Oongress and spending many months here lobbying for their measures or for state hood. . CANA !...'" ' :scius Taft Thinks Half Year Sooner, but Engineer Disagrees. WASHINGTON. March--SO. It-devel-: oped.-tiulay lha.t. during a recent con versation hetrw-r-fn President Taft and Chairman Ormthais. Bf-the Isthmian Ca nal Commlartiui.. th President ex pressed his desire that the canal be completed by the Fourth of July. 1913. Colonvl Goethuls. however. Is not -at all sanguine of accomplishing any such re sult.., holding to his heretofore ex pressed opinion. .that. January 1. 1915. will see the cana)-open to navigation. liiUs Against Stock Gambling. WAflHINOTO-NV March . The cam paign t procure legislation against speculation-ln cotton. uraii and other agri cultural products will be carried on in J-lie present Congreaa with even more vigor ttian in the sixtieth Congress, ac cording o th- et.romtn4 of Southern inem-.rs. ' Rejwi-enUiive. Macon.' of Arkansas, nad Introduced his bill to prohibit this specu lation by forbidding telegraph and tele phone companies from transmitting in formation concerning the buying, selling or dealing In these futures. Under the amendments to the rules, it is believed the House will be called upon to vote on the proposition at the first regu lar session. NEGRO INQUIRY IS HAMPERED Taft Will Ask- Congress for Special J - Fund 'or Brownsville Court. WASHINGTON. March 20. The Presi ?ent Hnds himself somewhat hampered In the execution of the Foraker act providing for the appointment of an army court of "Inquiry to determine the eligibility for re-enlistment of the sol diers of the Twenty-fifth Infantry, col ored, discharged on account of the Brownsville affray. The act makes no BPeCial Drovisinn tn mca : penses connected with the investigation. ""'"S to tne peculiar conditions of the case, it is deemed advisable to se lect retired officers, not below the grade of colonel, for service on the court. After a conference with Secretary Dickinson on the subject, the President has decided to ask Congress to au thorize the payment of full active pay to all officers on the retired list who serve on the Brownsville court. Among the officers said to have been consid ered for the court are Lieutenants Gen eral Bates, Chaffee, Young, Miles and MacArthur; Major-General G. W. Da vis. Brigadier-General Schwartz and Judge Advocate-General Liber. NO REFLECTION IX CHANGE Taft Assures Ool. Broomwell That His Work Alone Was Necessary. WASHINGTON, March 20. In a per sonal letter just made public, to Colo nel Charles & Broomweli; U. S. A., for the last five years superintendent of public buildings and grounds, President laft commends his services and says that his having been displaced by Ma jor Crosby was "in due course, and is not to be taken in any respect as a Suggestion of dissatisfaction with the performance of your duties." The President declares that the change Is simply a routine one, and the position of custodian of public build ings was one that no man holds for more than a term. WATSON DECLINES ALL BALM Refuses Federal Governorships. Gen. Miles Calls on Tart. WASHINGTON, March 20.-Ex-Repre-sentative James E. Watson, of Indiana, who lost his fight for the Governorship has been offered and has declined the Governorship of .Porto Rico and the Ministry to Cuba. Lieutenant-General Nelson A. Miles (re tired! called at the White House today for the first time in eight years. Taft Returns to . Capital. - WASHINGTON. March 20.-Fresident Taft arrived in Washington from New Jork at 7:12 o'clock this morning. Mrs. Taft and Miss Mabel Boardman, who ac companied the party from this city, have gone to Boston, it is said, to look at some Summer homes in that neighborhood. The President was immediately driven to the White House in his automobile. SAYS TAFT WILL REIGN Chicago Teacher Identifies Mod ern With Biblical Characters. ' CHICAGO. March 20. Miss Nina" Pattee a school teacher 30 years old, is under arrest by the Federal authorities, charged with sending objectionable letters through the mails. She was sent to the detention hospital tonight for examination .It is charged that she wrote to the Governor of each state saying that Presi dent Taftwas going to reign and that he with ex-President Roosevelt, was coming to Chicago. In letters addressed to prominent clergymen she wrote: "Pontius Pilate became Theodore Roose velt. 'Abel was Ethan Allen, and is now George Cortelyou. David lived 14,000 times. David is now John D. Rockefeller. 'William J. Bryan once was Ezra'and later became Andrew .Jackson." RIDS WORLD OF ENEMIES Antonio Dijulio Also Gets Himself Killed During Progress of Plan. RATON. N M.. March 20.-Antonio Dijulio, a cokeworner, started out last night to rid himself of his enemies, and a, result thre Persons are dead. Dijulio attacked his cousin, named Bartole, and shot him in the abdomen Bartole ran to the home of his brother Francisco Bartole, pursued by Dijulio' The latter threw open the door of the house and fired inside, the bullet lodg ing in Mrs. Francisco Bartole's head kill ing her instantly. . Enraged at the sight of his wife lying dead, Francisco Bar tole plunged a dagger into Dljullo's body killing him.. Bartole died later in a hospital. DIVORCE ENDS ELOPEMENT Girl Who Ran Away From School With Football Hero Asks Freedom. SAN FRANCISCO, March 20. Alleging non-support, Mrs. Thomas H. Graydon, who as Helen Beryl Whitney eloped from the Misses Ely's school, in New York, six years ago with the Harvard football player, is seeking a divorce. Mrs. Gray don is the daughter of J. Parker Whit ney, a California millionaire, and she met her husband while he was in Harvard and while she was in the Eastern board ing school. Falling to overcome parental opposition to their proposed marriage, the couple eloped. Mrs. Graydon arrived here from her home in Cincinnati last week, and she is now staying with her parents. HARVEY HELD UNDER BAIL Editor Accused of Objectionable lietter-Writing Denied Jury Trial. STAMFORD, Conn.. March 20. John C. Harvey, the western editor charged with sending an objectionable letter to Mr Carpenter,, secretary to President Taft filed a demurrer today to the complaint' asking for a trial by jury. The demurrer was overruled and Harvey was held In tS ball for the Superior Court. Harvey says he is the victim of a conspiracy, but admits that he has been writing numerous letters to prominent men. Harvey came here from Presto Ida- .. Receiver for Dead Newspaper. ' - CHICAGO. March-' ,20: The Chicago Chronicle Company, which suspended business May 31. 1907. was placed in the hands of W. I. Dickinson, assistant treasurer, as receiver today, by Judge Honors on petition of John R. Walsh, holder of a majority of the capital stock. The liabilities are Jl.000,000 and the assets' J260";OtV - ' THE SUNDAY OREGOMAX, l'ORTLA"T), 3IARCII 21, 1909. cuba nifty cause; GREAT TARIFF WAR All Nations May Claim, Same Rates' Under Most Fa vored Nation Rule. OBSTACLES TO RECIPROCITY European' Nations May Refuse United States Same Terms as Under Special Treaties-West Objects - to - Drawbacks. WASHINGTON, March 20.-That the Payne tariff bill would bring about a great international tariff war if enacted, because of the section which continues in operation the Cuban reciprocity treaty, is one of the arguments that are. being made against the measure. It is urged that, foreign countries which would other .f I? five the United States the . the'r raoat favored nation clause in return for the minimum scale of duties provided for in the Payne bill will contend that the Cuban reciprocity provision is the most favored nation clause of the American tariff and will therefore refuse to enter into a low-tariff agreement with this country. Cuba Not tike Foreign Nation. This difficulty regarding the Cuban reciprocity treaty and its relation to the maximum and minimum tariff provisions of the Payne bill was not overlooked by the framers of that measure. The sub committee which drafted the bill consid ered the possibility of the claim being made that the clause continuing th5 treaty with Cuba, discriminates against other nations. It was agreed to allow the provisions to remain in the bill, upon the assumption that other countries would recognize the unusual relations ex isting between the United States and Cuba and would not object to the lower duties which the Island Republic- would get. Furthermore, in support of this ar gument, it is contended that Cuba shins to this country articles which do not compete with the imports of countries of iiiU-rope. Difficulties of Reciprocity. There are other difficulties in the way of operating successfully a maximum and minimum tariff. Most European nations have special trade relations on certain products with their neighboring countries and it would be inconsistent for the United States to expect these nations to abrogate these agreements In order to get the benefit of our minimum duties. On the other hand, the framers of the Payne bill have designed the maximum tariff provisions in such ..,,. .i . .. " a. j v 1 1 ijl l virtually every country In Europe would be com Ume Beek our minimum duties in France Greatly Affected. France is one of the countries that will be most affected by the maximum sched-. ilV?i e.uayne ,lr"t- The duties im posed by the present law on wines liquors and spirits are increased 40 per cent in the maximum provision of the new bill nnd thic. . . . .. .. 7 """'-" wouia seriously affect the importations from France of wines, principally on the low grades. Italy and Spain also would feel the effects or these duties. Germany now gives the United States nearly all the minimum duties of her tariff under the provisions of the German IS?.,6 tagreement- bt unless she should offer to abrogate the agreement and give this country all of her favorable dufies the maximum rates of the Payne tariff would apply. The German agreement provides that six months' notice of Its discontinuance must be given by either country, but it can be abrogated by mu tual consent. Basis for Negotiations. duTveofP9nne biU Places a maximum duty of 20 per cent additional on the follow ng articles: Chemicals, tobacco agricultural products, silk and paper schedules with the exception of coal-tar dyes and extracts for dyeing in th chemical schedule, for which there is no maximum rate of duty. The rates of the Ding-ley law are retained as maxl mtU" k?,V6S n Piff lron' structural steel, steel billets, iron and steel plates, steel wire and numerous other iron and steel products. The maximum duties for -the thlneThSCheidfle are 2' per nt more than the minimum, and for the sun dries schedule the increase is an addi tion of 25 per cent ad valorem. The flax and wool schedules have no maxi mum duties prescribed. """-i The principal articles on the free list for which a 20 per cent ad valorem duty is provided in the maximum schedule are coffee, crude natural camphor drugs for dyeing and tanning hides ron ore, oils, including petroleum tal low and tobacco stems. West Loses by Drawback. Representatives of Western States maintain that the new drawback pro vision in the Payne tariff bill is dis criminatory against the West in favor of the East. The revised drawback section permits manufacturers to se cure the regular drawback of 99 ter cent of the duty paid on Imported raw material without the necessity of usinr the imported material in the manufac tured product that is exported A raw material of domestic production in equal quantity and of a similar charac ter may be used instead of the import ed material Western members of Congress con tend that this tends to give the manu facturers at the seaboard a decided ad vantage over the manufacturers in the interior on account of freight rates. The ways and means committee main tain, however, that the new drawback Is for the benefit of the honest export er who has been laboring under a dis advantage because unscrupulous manu" facturers have taken advantage of the difficulty of enforcing the present drawback provision. It is contended also that the new drawback section extends this privilege to many indus tries which have been unable to make use of it. and that for this reason It will encourage manufacture in thl country. One amendment to the Payne bill w-hich has the support of the members' of the ways and means committee and which probably will be submitted as a committee amendment, is that the sec tion regarding minimum duties should also apply in the case of the mother country granting a lower tariff to a dependency or colony. Calm Ricegrowers' Fears. The rice-growing and distributing In terests of the United States are appre hensive of the effects on their indus try of proposed free entry of that sta ple from the Philippines. Today repre sentatives of that industry held a con ference with Secretary of War Dickin son and secured his approval of an amendment to the bill providing that when rice is Imported from the islands for commercial purposes free of duty READY-TO- A fine and dandy Suit of Clothes, made of wool, grown in Oregon; the cloth made by the Salem Woolen Mills and manufactured into suits by ourselves. Such a suit for - v iyi . i Tailoring Note We have just received sev eral bolts of pure wool cloth from the mill, that we will make up into Oregon Wool Suits, as long- as the stock lasts, for $28 to $33.50 each. This is a brand new idea. Try it. the President is to impose on rice com "a me t-niiippines- from any for eign country a duty equal in amount to that imposed on such imports enter ing the United States from foreign countries. Officials of the Insular Bu reau say it will be a long time before the Philippines export any rice.. Women Object to Stocking Tax. - CHICAGO, March 20. "Kill the stocking tax!" A country-wide movement against certain features of the Payne tariff bill, which will be participated in' by more than 2,000.000 women, is seen in plans-just launched here. Chicago club women "have determined to enlist the National Federation of Women's Clubs In an attack on the schedule in its ap plication to stockings and stocking ma terial. Features of the Payne bill which retain the present high tariff on wool, silk and cotton stuffs, and even increase the tariff on cotton Btockings. are also being discussoi Mrs. Frances Everett, president of the Illinois Federation of Women's Clubs, announces that the stocking tax situa tion will be brought at (ince to the attention .of the National c rgauization. DOCTORS TO RULE WORLD Wood a Hutchinson Sees Remedy of Many Evils in Idea. NEW YORK. March 20. Medical men should be placed in sole con trol of the dependent classes and crim inals, according to Dr. Woods Hutch inson, the eminent medical authority. In an address last night before the University of Michigan Alumni in New York, Dr. Hutchinson said in part: "Physicians should have a way to prevent the perpetuation of unfit citi zens. It Is time for the medical men to have close association with others besides the druggist and the under taker. The time of medical leadership is coming. Much of the mystery which has surrounded medicine has already disappeared, and the rest is fast dis appearing. The community should realize that In its medical men it has a corps of highly-trained experts in whose hands is to be found the solu tion not only of questions of health but of questions of -the general welfare and prosperity of the community." Dr. Hutchinson said that the more enlightened physicians were anxious to get into politics in order that they might carry into effect new ideas for the protection of health. Physicians, he said, were becoming eager to get into State Legislatures, into Congress and into the Cabinet. $10,000 FOR A SONG. "I Wish I Had a'Girl" Looks Like a Big Winner to Kemick. CHICAGO, March 20. The Thompson Music Company have sold their great ballad, "I Wish I Had a Girl," to Jerome H. Remick & Co., for $10,000. The buyers, who are the largest publishers of popular music in the world, paid a like price just a few years ago for "Hiawatha." Xew Star Field for Flag? WASHINGTON. March 20. A new "Old Glory" is proposed in a bill recently intro duced by Representative Ansberry, of Ohio, to amend the section of the revised statutes which relates to the design of the American flag. A new formation of the stars Is suggested. They would be ar ranged "In five arcs in combination, the centers of the arcs to be the apices 'of a regular pentagon, the radius of the arcs to be equal to one side of the pentagon " As to the size of the stars, the bill pre scribes that their radius shall be equal to "one-fourth the distance of the stars from center to center." Provision for adding new stars for new states might be made by extending the area. The best wool in the world is Oregon wool, making the best cloth and consequently the very best clothing. Wears longer, looks better and costs a great deal less Clothier Furnishers, Tailored Grant PKleytm 7cStarIo SDN FINDS FATHER Brockton Man Believes "Man Who Forgot" Is Relative. LOS ANGELES CASE SOLVED Daniel Driscoll, Found in Califor nia City With Xo Memory of Past Life, Is Massachusetts Man. Who Has Wandered. BROCKTON. Mass., March 20.-Daniel Drlscoll, who was reported last night to be in care of the Los Angeles au thorities, after a long mental lapse, was employed by the New England Tele phone and Telegraph Co. in this city about Ave years ago, but the date of his leaving here has not been ascer tained by the police. Joseph A. Driscoll, a young man em ployed by a local caterer, reported to the police the belief that the sick man at Los Angeles was his father, from whom, he said, he had not heard in three years. The father, Driscoll said had been a wanderer from his early days. " A fall and a subsequent sunstroke had aggravated this tendency, the son said, so that the father's whereabouts were seldom known to those at home Mr. Driscoll today advised the police that with his financial burdens he was not In a position to bring his father back to Brockton. COURT TO PROBE SPIRITS Grand Jury Mast Tell Why "Bright Eyes" Was Fake. NEW YORK, March ' 20. Mrs. May" Pepper Vanderbilt. the spiritualist "bishop" of Brooklyn, asks in effect that the Kings County Court determine whether there is such a thing as com munication with the spirit world. In a motion filed yesterday counsel for Mrs. Vanderbilt asks for the dis missal of the indictment against the medium, charging grand larceny. It is alleged by Miss Minerva Vander bilt, a daughter of the aged husband of the medium, that she caused Van derbilt, by fraud and deceit, to deed to her a house in Brooklyn. Mrs. Vanderbilt's attorney now asks the court to ascertain by what definite means the grand Jury decided that spiritualism was a sham and a fake The lawyer thus puts up to the court the rather puzzling question of decid ing how to prove whether the medium did or did not receive messages -from the dead. Because of divided author ity, . he argues, no one Is competent to testify against her. In support of this contention, the at torney attempts to show that spiritual ism is a recognized religion, and to prove this he quotes Alfred Russell Wallace. Sir William Crooks and other authorities, and mentions Jules Verne Marconi, William Lloyd Garrison Sal ' mon P. Chase, Bayard Tavor. R'obert Owen, Parker Plllsbury and others. " Wild Train Leaps 40 Feet. COMO, Colo.. March 20. An ore train on the Colorado & Southern Railroad composed of 16 loaded cars, got beyond WEA 7T 1 : . : . control last night on the steep grade from Boreas Pass, on the crest of the Conti nental Divide, and Jumped the track at a sharp curve while going at the rate of 90 miles an hour. Engineer Bud Schwartz, who stuck to his engine in an heroic ef fort to Eton the trnin . wae fnotnnllif killed." The other members of the train crew Jumped from the train when they realized it was beyond control, and es caped with minor bruises. So great was the momentum of the train when It left the track that the cars and engine were piled in a heap of scrap 40 feet from the right of way. When Engineer Schwartz realized that his train was beyond control, he grasped the whis tle cord, and all the way down the seven miles of steep grade his engine kept giv ing out its shrill note of warning. Schwartz went to his death with the cord In his hand. OFFICER MAKES MISTAKE Policeman's Error Makes Young Mother Widow. CHICAGO, March 20. A fragile wo man with an 8 months' child is today mourning the loss of her husband', Jo seph Finn, 26 years old, who lies dead because Alexander Scott, a policeman, mistook him for "Pickles" Kllroy, a suspected robber, and shot him. Im mediately after the shooting Scott real ized his mistake, notified his station, surrendered and was held in custody pending the Coroner's- Investigation. When he was informed that the widow of his victim, with her child in her arms, was wondering whv her husband Watching A Stomach Digest Food Was the Means Whereby Science Made ; Possible the Cure of Dyspepsia. The Abbe Spallanzanl was the first scientist to study systematically the chemical powers of the gastric Juice, but it was by the careful and convinc ing experiments of Beaumont that the foundation of our exact knowledge of its composition and action was laid; Beaumont was an army surgeon, lo cated at an obscure military post In Michigan, while it was yet a territory, and was called upon to treat a gun shot wound of the stomach in a Cana dian voyageur Alexis St. Martin. When the wound healed a permanent opening was ieft by means of which food could be placed in the stomach and gastric Juice taken from it. Beaumont made scientific experi ments with his crude means and wrote a book, which today is recognized among the classics of physiology. Beaumont blazed the way for other scientists so that today medicine knows what the stomach does with food and what food does to the stomach. Science also knows what the gastric Juices are and how to make them best for the system. Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets, thanks to the poor army surgeon and Alexis St. Martin, give man a means of digesting food, replenishing the exhausted Juices, soothing the nerves and correcting dys peptic conditions of the stomach. Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets are natural fruit and vegetable essences reduced in concentrated form and by tre mendous power compressed into a tab let. These wonderful little digestors are known all over America and Canada- Full meals have been digested by them in glass tubes and they are sold by every druggist. Physicians to the number of 40.000 use them. They re meritorious and powerful. Go to your druggist and buy a package today, price 50c, or send us your name and address and we will send you a trial package my mail free. Address F. A. Stuart Co., 150 Stuart Bldg.. Marshall. Mich. Furnishing Note Haven't you overlooked the newest, most strictly up-to-date sotck of furnishings in Portland. Step around and see what we have. Most of these novelties are displayed in this city for the first time. did .not come -home' to! supper.- h was overcome and it ws some, time before eiC2,i exPlalni he shooting in de tail. He said he fired after Finn re fused to stop upon , being ordered to surrender and had made a-motion as if to draw a weapon. Kilroy is much " man wnose life was ended. Cracksman Accuses Policeman. SAN FRANCISCO. March 20. While graphically relating the history of the Archie Band gang of safecrackers on the witness stand of Judge Shortalls Police Court in this citv. William J Downing, ex-convict and self-confessed safecracker, made the startling asser tion that a "copper had agreed to stand In with the gang to rob a bank on Cal ifornia street." He stubbornly refused to give the name of the officer or the exact address of the bank. Rosenthal's pumps fit at the heel. What Mr. Kelly Said W. J. Kelly, of the firm of NlckunV & Kelly, this city, saw many . people suffering from the ravages of rheuma tism and nervous disorder arriving at Professor Ricard's offices on canes and crutches, and leave after a course of treatments with the Elect ror. Radiator, perfectly cured. Mr. Kelly was being treated for paralysis,' and following is what he .has to say about the Radiator: . Portland. Ore. Prof. Wm. Ricards, 555 5th St., corner Lincoln st. Dear Sir: I wish to add my testi mony to the marvelous cure . of paralysis by use of the Electro Radiator. I was paralyzed in the entire ' right side. I had no. use of my arm or leg. and my face was badly affected. By uslng your Electro-Radiator I have been restored to complete health and -I wish to speak in the highest terms of the efficacy of the Radiator in cur ing disease. W. J. KELLY. Poot E. Alder St.. Nickum & Kelly. Prof. Wm. Ricards 5th St., Cor. Ilnoolu. R Ask your Grocer for HonoluIu.FIantatlon Go's a extra fane dry granulated J2 H you want an absolutely pure Cane Sugar alllll'mi.i.t.n .!. I .M ?.ttttV