11 BLISS DREAM O'ER THE SUNDAY OREGOTflAN, PORTIANT,. DECEMBER" IS, 1909. The Bane Of Beauty la Pimples, Boils, Blackheads, Erup tions; Its Blessing Is "Stuart's Calcium "Wafers." ' ' EXTRA! EXTRA! EXTRA! Molly Fails to Buy Soldier's r Freedom. GOOD PLAN MEETS REBUFF City Sends Her Home and Army Of. fleers Scold Designing Young Man for Having Entered Into i Scheme With Girl. Ir earns of a love romance shared by an unsophisticated country girl and a soldier from Vancouver Barracks have been shattered by the municipal authori ties of Portland, aided by the military authorities. The girl was sent to her home at Pioneer Friday, and the epldler was reprimanded by his officers. Molly Rodgers left her home at Pioneer several months ago to make a living for hrself in Portland. She was industrious, sod by doing domestic work and for a time serving In a laundry, she managed td save more than $100. The money she put into the hands of the Municipal De partment for the Public Protection of Young Women. Recently the girl was robbed of $13 by a. man whose identity could not be learned. Another man, believed to be an accomplice of the one who robbed her, then appeared on the scene and Induced " her to go to "Vancouver, where he told her she would And work. 5&.t Vancouver she met Glralamo Bor gognl. a soldier In the First United States Imantry, who declared that he loved her at first sight. He made the girl believe that without her life was nothing to him, end he painted pictures of a happy home for both. But, he explained to her, he wits a soldier, and it would require $120 for him to buy his freedom. JtVith her soldier sweetheart at her heels, Molly went to the municipal au tMbritles who had her money in custody, .aid asked for It. Instead of getting her money. Molly was put on a train and sent at once to her parents at Pioneer, and a report of the case was eent to the mili tary authorities at Vancouver, who have sent back word that the soldier has been reprimanded for his acts. FAMILY TROUBLE IN COURT Homer Eller Accused of Acting Wrongly. Homer Eller, a collector for the Pala tine Hill Dairy, was arrested yesterday afternoon at his home, 734 Second street, upon complaint of his wife, Grace Eller, who alleges that -on the day of the fu neral of her mother, December 10, her -irtisband acted in an outrageous manner and threatened to kill her and her sister, Delia Kllgore. From accounts told by Eller and by his wife and her relatives, it appears that Eller had recently moved from Palatine Hill to this city, when his wife's parents end her brother and sister came to live with them. Eller says all the Kllgore family combined to treat him with, lack of consideration and contempt, and that they Anally prejudiced his wife against him. Eller says he desired to move away from the Kllgorea. but that he did not care to do so while Mrs. Kllgore was ill. Mrs. Kllgore died and was burled on De cember 10. Eller was not Invited to ac company the rest of the family In the carriages to the burial ground, and was in other ways slighted, he saya Upon the return from the funeral, he announced his intention of taking away his furniture and leaving the Kllgores to live by themselves. This action was re sented by his wife and the others, he ays. and a wordy battle ensued. Mrs. Eller says In moving the furniture into one room where he locked it up he smashed things about the house and swore he would kill her. Eller's case will come up before the Justice Court. MAN'S REVOLVER SHOWED Rex Shields Arrested on Charge of Carrying Concealed Weapons. - Rex Shields, the son of J. H. Shields, a real estate dealer, with offices In the Gerlinger building, was arrested yester day afternoon by Constable Wagner, charged with carrying concealed weapons He was taken to the Justice Court, where he later secured his release upon $50 cash bail. Shields was taken into custody through the complaint of Chief of -Police Black, of St. John. Last Thursday young Shields went to St. John. He had placed a revolver in his hip pocket, unmindful of the fact that be was without his overcoat and that when he placed his hands in his trousers pockets the tail of his short double breasted coat was raised so high the butt of his revolver was plainly visible. As lie walked down the street the weapon was noticed and Shields was placed under arrest. There being no city ordinance in t- John prohibiting carrying concealed weapons, the authorities were obliged to bring a state charge against him and therefore sent him in custody to the .of fice of District Attorney Cameron. At the ofTice of the District Attorney Shields, who had been left in -the oorridor, got up and Walked out. When the District At torney came-to look for his man he did not find him. and a warrant was issued, which was served in his father's office. HOLDUP MEN SENTENCED Fred Cobb and Bert La Barge Denied v. Kew Trials. Petitions of Fred Cobb and Bert La Barge for new trials were denied in the Circuit Court yesterday, and orders committing them to the State Peniten tiary, where Cobb has been sentenced to serve 16 years, and La Barge 14 years, -were signed. The two men were indicted for using a dangerous weapon in holding up A. B. HutchlnsSeptember 26, but the jury found them guilty of holding him up without the use of a dangerous weapon. The jury modified the verdict in order to make the sentence less severe, as they were led to understand that it was the defendants' first offense. Before sentence was pronounced, how ever, it was found that they had previ ously served sentences in the peniten tiary, and the judge gave them as long terms as the- law provided for such of fenses, under the terms of the verdict. Woodstock Push Club Meets. An enthusiastic meeting of the Wood stock Push Club was held Friday evening at Woodstock Hall. Report was made by Ben Riesland that a resolution had been passed by the City Council, requesting the City Engineer to establish the grades on- all streets of Woodstock, as well as ;on East Thirty-ninth street from Glad ; stone avenue south to the city boundary. 'Mr. Van Horn reported that a number of electrlo lights had been placed In leply to the solicitation of the committee, i . Trial Package Free. Is your blood out of order? Have you pimples on your face and body? .Do you have bolls, tetter, eczema, blackheads, rash and rough, scabby ekin? If you have all or some of these, it is a sure indica tion that there Ib something the matter with your blood. Of course you know this as well as any one, and have sus pected it from the first appearance of a pimple or boil. You have been negligent in attending to yourself and your case; this is all. It is so easy to be negligent and put oft for another time that which should have been done right away. And all these vexations and annoyances pimples, boils, - etc, are your good friends, so don't harbor ill feelings to wards them and attack them with ugly remedies in order to rid yourself of them. Besides being the escape of bad and poisonous humors, they act as messengers which the blood sends out to tell you that it is In peril and needs help, and seeks it from you. The blood is starving and must have supplies; famishing for some certain kind of food of which it has been denied and unable to get. More messengers and yet more are sent out as the delay becomes longer, and they plead for and almost demand help. Eczema, rash, tetters, blackheads come, all persistently telling the same story of the great and imminent need of aid. Science has made the important discov ery that when these various eruptions appear on the surface of the body that the blood and system need a calsium a limelight in order that it may be chem ically correct and able to do all the im portant work assigned to it. The scientific and medical laboratories have been bssy endeavoring to produce a product, manufacture a medicine. Invent a remedy adequate to this need and en tirely adapted to the purpose required. The demand was for something more carefully elaborated than the rude and rather elementary remedies heretofore used. The happy outcome of this com bined effort is the STUART CALCIUM WAFER, which contain in agreeable and convenient form the lacking food which the blood has been craving and demand ing, and with the use of these as a rem edial agent, the blbod becomes pure and normal and the outward Indications dis appear. ' No more pimples, bolls and blackheads; no more eczema, rash, erup tions and scabby skin, for the reason that there is no cause for them, and the skin very soon becomes clean and smooth and the entire system enters upon a new lease of health and activity. The Calcium Wafers' action is prompt and the system responds quickly; no tire some months and years waiting for re sults. While there Is nothing magical or mysterious about these wafers, their quick and alert action may well suggest It. They are the willing helpers of the various organs of the body; they give the lungs a lift by furnishing them with better material to work on; they invig orate the bowels and encourage them to normal action; in fact, lend a helping hand wherever needed. Get rid of the pimples and blotches on your face, the boils on your body, and be well and healthy once more; realize that this is your condition again and your friends as well. Try the STUART CAL CIUM WAFER TREATMENT; It Is not expensive even in extreme cases. . Ask your doctor what he thinks of Calcium Sulphide as a blood purifier; If he knows his business he will have but one answer. There Is no better way of presenting this remedy than in the Stuart Calcium Tablet form, . and a - trial package will be sent to" any one who will write for it. This trial package will serve as - an --introduction, after which, -if you- need more, you can supply yourself at the drugstore. Tou will be charged 60 cents a box for It here, as this is the price everywhere. For the free trial package, address F. A. Stuart Co., 175 Stuart Building. Marshall, Michigan. and that more were in prospect. By unanimous voice the action of the Seventh Ward League In calling a mass meeting to condemn the present streetcar methods was indorsed, all present pledging them selves to assist the movement, and to be present with their friends at the mass meet Inc. which is to be called In the near future. It was decided to call a spe cial meeting for Friday evening, Decem ber 17. tn iwnmTilu all Vi i . d u ucrw uueuu I of the club. The main topic for the eve nine will be the establishment of some nre wtnung system In the Woodstock, Lexington Heights and Ivan hoe districts. Every public spirited citizen as well as every property owner is urged to at tend this meeting, as the entire situation will be threshed out and some decisive action will be taken. Memorial Church to Be Built. A new Methodist Church to be known as Clinton Kelly Memorial Methodist Church will be built on the Powell Valley road and East Forty-first street. It will cost between (4000 and (G000. Plans hava been drawn and accepted by the building com mittee, although the building material has not been decided on. This church will be in memory of "Father" Clinton Kelly, a pioneer of 1S49. who was the original owner of Waverly-Richmond, Ken 11 worth and the Williams tracts in the southeast part of the city. A lot was donated for the site by J. B. Kelly, a descendant. Rev. H. W. Hampton is the pastor. Work will be started in th early part of 1310. Remarkable Mother. . That the day of miracles is not passed was illustrated by the action of a woman on an eastbound Mount Tabor-Sunnyside car yesterday. She entered with a little girl, which is not at all unusual, but it was not Ions be fore something remarkable happened. The girl wanted to look ' out the window, as children are wont to do, and the obliging woman, probably the mother, was agree able. And then the strange part of tha story occurred. The woman took off the little srirl's rubbers, so other passengers would not be besmeared with mud. Humphreys' Seventy-Seven Famous Remedy for Grip & Don't wait till yon begin to Cough and Sneeze take "Seventy-seven" at the first feeling of lassitude and weaknesti and you will never have a Coldr because the checked circulation of the blood the cause of all Colds will be restored and the Cold broken np before further developments. "Seventy-seven" breaks up hard stubborn Colds that hang on Grip. Handy to carry, fits the vest pocket. All Drugstores 25c. Humphreys' Homeo. Medicine Co. William and Ana Strut Mew York. Cor. Standard Equipment: 5 Lamps, Generator, Magneto and Full Set of Tools , The coming- out of this car at $1380 Is the biggest event in tha automobile world. Tou can't understand the 'full force and scope of this statement until you know what has gone Into the making of the -Everftt 80." The newest factory and tha oldest builders tells tha story in a single phrase. Experience In building Is the only left-over factor that has gone Into " tha construction of this car every thing else brand new! No machinery has been used in the building of this car, because it was on hand, and had to be -utilized. Tha Metzger Motor Car Co. starts out with a clean slate. Its officers are tha pioneers of the automobile business. Mr. Wm. Kelly, Who designed tha "Everltt SO," worked, on tha first automobile built In Detroit. - The officers of this company have been foremost In every movement which has made Detroit the greatest automobile manufacturing city in the world. The machines made by these men - nave made cood a every road and every kind of a road In this country. Their names are on ' the maker-plates of tha leading American successes. They saw that a change was com ing In tha automobile business. They recognized two things of prima Importance: First, that the demand of 1910 was not for a cheap car, but for a high-class car at moderate yes at low cost. Second, that tha time had . about passed when tha automobile manu facturer could dictate to the' public. owing to the excess of demand, and say: "Here is the car you get take it or leave it-" Seeing these two things clearly, these pioneers sold, out their old cant nections, lock, stock and barrel, and started a new factory to make the "Kverltt SO. Perhaps yon dost realise what a brand new factory means to yon. Machinery has to ba specially built to make the parts of any automobile model. This machinery is surpris ingly expensive. Naturally manufac turershesltata about improving any part of their models, because any change, however small, means the change of costly machinery the throwing out of an expensive ma-' chine Into the discard, and replacing it with a still more expensive one. Boston New York City Philadelphia , -Syracuse Indianapolis Detroit, Mica. Chicago, 111. Minneapolis Kansas City, Mo, Denver Lincoln, Neb. San Franciaoo Right side of engine, showing e DETROIT, MICH. V ' :' at -' . - - That Is why old established auto mobile factories often cannot sea their way to making Improvements in their cars which would lessen tha original cost to those who buy them, lessen the cost of operation, and make tha cars better in many ways. So, you see, the manufacturer's stock of machinery is a big element In blocking progress of Improve ments, both for himself and for you. But the Metzger Motor Car Co. made a clean, new start without this - handicap of old machinery. They were not loaded down with a bolt or a screw that had to be used, because they hated :to throw it 'away. They made their plant and their machinery to fit the model which they wanted to produce. , Then these progressive pioneers woke up to another important angle of the situation. . :- - " They saw that in the new - condi tion of things the' public must be represented. . So . they sent , put to the various parts of the country and called In twelve of the foremost dis tributors - and sellers of automobiles in the United States. This move is bound to become historic in the auto mobile business. . It is the first instance of the pub lic invited to participate in the man ufacture of an automobile. 'Ton know - these men. If yon do not know them personally yon know them by reputation. They are the largest automobile sales agents and distributers in this country. They have sold annually for the last ten years an average of eight million dollars' worth of auto mobiles. They know every success and every failure in the business every kink and quirk, and every kick that the public has made on every car from the most expensive foreign im portation to the cheapest American model. These ' men, whose names appear below, were invited to come into the enterprise with their knowledge of conditions, their knowledge of cars, their knowledge of 'men and their capital. They were invited because the prime movers 1ft this enterprise believed the knowledge-of these men was ncessary to the making of the ideal moderate priced car for 1910. The "Everitt SO" is the result of the combined focused knowledsre and experience' of all these meau -r 3sWr The J. W. Bowman Co. The H. J. Koehler Sporting Goods Co. W. Wayne Davis C. Arthur Benjamin Motor Car Sales Co. Security Auto Co. Grtthens Brothers Co. The McArtnur-Zellars Motor Co. . F. 8. Der The Johnston-Fetcher Motor Co. Tha Lincoln Automobile Co. Th H. O. Harrison Co. .WSi;-::.'":.:?:: lam xtreroe simplicity In construction. ft THE H. O. HARRISON COMPANY. SAN FRANCISCO Distributors and factory lUjjreaentative for the Pacific Coas - ,' - ' - - There is nothing marvelous about Its production. It Is only logical and simple and this Is the reason why It can bs sold to yon at S1350 la the year 1910. Probably in. a year or two from next January it will be produced or paralleled by every auto mobile manufacturer In America, but that cannot happen this year. For 1910 tnia car will stand out as the Kins: and Standard of Its class. Until the other manufacturers can discard their old machinery and over take the "Kverltt SO," it must re main the car by which all others in Its class are measured and Judged. "With present equipment no other manufacturer can produce It orany thing ilk' It for. Its price of S13B0. Every Everltt 80" that can ba turned out in 1910 has1 already been demanded and allotted to tha men whose names are below. . And what aTe the special merits of this car made by., the oldest build ers In, tha newest automobile factory in -America? . Simplicity Is, tha keynote of this' car. - Its mechanism has . been aim-, pliried at every ' possible ' point. Things which could not ba elim inated to tha clear working advantage' of tha' car have been consolidated. The Everltt . 80 motor contains 15 fewer parts, than Its closest compet itor. Think of it 150 less parts. What does this element of sim plicity mean to the man who buys the car and runs it? A much lower original cost without any cheapen ing in the quality of materials for the manufacturer can and does put the same ma terials into this ma chine that you find in $5000 machines. It means simplicity and ease of operation. The "Everrtt 80" is so simple that any man can run it; that the hiring of a chauffeur is not a matter of necessity, as with a car of complex mechanism, but a matter of conven ience only. To save a chauffeur's wages means in many cases tha difference between having and not having a car. Again, -this simplicity means greatly reduced liability to Injury to parts and greatly increased ease In making repairs. The, machine of many parts and that means our nearest competitor Is a bewildering puzzle to tha ordi nary garage mechanic, to say nothing of the man in the car. But is Is dlf- TWTT diokc ferent decidedly with the "Everltt 30." Suppose one of the connecting rods needed attention. You do not have to spread down a cloth and establish a picnic machine shop by the road side. By removing Just eight bolts, the lower half of tha crank case is taken off, and immediate access given to all tha working parts of the en gine, the connecting rod and piston removed without disturbing the cyl inders. One casting; for the upper half of the crank case, the four 4 cylinders and the water Jacket: And this element of simplification of consolidation, of combining two or more parts into one casting, is con sistently carried out through the car. The repair bill and the irritating delays on the road are reduced to a minimum with the "Everltt SO" be cause it is so simple and sound in its parts. The double drop frame is another Important feature. Some . expensive machines have it, but none has car ried it to quite the perfection of the "Everltt 30" which .has .a five-inch drop,, as .against a3-lnch for any other competitive car. This puts tha weight of the "Job," the load, the center of gravity, close down to the ground so that the car will stick to tha earth, and not skid or overturn. The road traction is an Important matter, and in no other car is it so perfected as in the "Everltt 30." On the other hand, the man who runs on country roads wants a free clearance. This la accomplished by desla-nlng onr axles and steering mechanism, so that they are not as near to the ground as are those of our competitors. In a word, this car la made for every kind of driv-lna-. It has a a-eographlcal adapta bility that no other car of any price possesses. Take the matter of "weight that, too, is Important in more ways than ' one. The "Everltt 80" does not weigh . to exceed 2200 pounds or about 300 pounds less than its nearest compet itor. Tire manufacturers prescribe weight limits for cars without their loads. The "Kvrrltt SO" will take its load, and still be almost under the pre scribed limit of weight. You know what that means It costs a lot less rr tires. And, by the same token, this light car will run "the same dis tance in the same time as the heavier car and at much lower cost for fuel. Ii Rear axle assembly, showing- transmission. Incorporated on rear axle. The two brakes on rear wheal operating Internal expanding and external contracting on brake drum. In the upper right hand is shown the spring suspension. Standard Equipment: 5 Lamps, . Generator, Magneto and Full Set of Tools In no other car on the 1910 market can you get so much automobile for four money as in the "Kvrrltt 30." Remember, it's not a cheap car elaborated; it is a costly car focused by adroit engineering, by skillful cor ner cutting, by special advantage of tha newest factory and the oldest builders, down to the low cost of S13SO. And this has been done without the sacrifice of a single point in quality. Absolutely the best is to be found in every part of the "Everltt SO." It is not an assembled machine. It is built in its own fac tory by specially designed machin ery, and under the watchful eye of those who must and do stand back of it. This warrants the standarlzatlon sf parts, and enables you at any dis tant time to replace Instantly . any part In your car without special fit ting. Here is a car which is worth wait ing for. Once more we say that " the "Everitt 30" Is the greatest event in the automobile world. Look into it. Prove every word we have said about it. Find out more about the car and the men behind it than wo can. tell you here and find It our for yourself. . SPECIFICATIONS "EVER ITT 30" Color Seating Capacity Clutch Wheel-base Gauge Tire Dimensions Brake Systems Royal 'Blue Two, four and five persons Cone 110 Inches B6 Inches 84x34 lnchea Two sets con tracting and ex panding; on, both rear wheels ' Thirty Four Vertically under hood En Bloc. Inches -4 Inches Water Vertical tube Jump spark Dry battery and magneto Shaft Selective sliding gear on rear axle. Three forward, one reverse Horse-power Cylinders Arranged Cast Bore Stroke Cooling Radiator Ignition Electric Source Drive Transmission . Gear Changes DETROIT, MICH.