The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, April 21, 1912, Page 13, Image 13

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    13
TIIE SUNDAY OREGONIAX, PORTLAND, APRIIi 21, 1912
WOMAN TO FIGURE
IN DARROW'S CASE
Mysterious Voice Over Tele
phone Identified, Prose
cutor Declares.
WARNING NOT EXPLAINED
That MrXinur Lawyer BelleTed He
Waa Hearing From Friend Said
to I rave Been Shown by
rrompt Response.
IXS AXGELES. April 10. (Special.)
Mystery surrounds the Identity of the
woman who. It 1 aliened, on the morn
Ins; that Bert H. Franklin, ex-chief of
detectives for the McNunira defense,
wis arrested by attaches of the Dis
trict Attorneys office on a charge of
bribery, telephoned to Clarence it Dar
row. warning him of the plan to ar
rest Franklin.
This woman will play an Important
part 1 1. the case when Darrow comes up
for trial on Hay li for the alleged
bribery of Juror Bain and Juror Lock
wood. Neither Captain Fredericks nor
Earl Roarers will divulge the name of
this woman, though both admitted to
day th-y knew who she is. Borers said
she Informed narrow of the District
Attorney's plan to arrest Franklin, and
also urged the attorney to hurry to
the scene.
That Darrow believed that the In
formation came from a friend was
proved by the fact that he lost no time
in ettln to Second and Main streets,
where Franklin stood. Mr. Darrow was
close to the scene when the actual ar
rest was made by attaches of the Dis
trict Attorney's office.
It Is admitted by both sides that the
woman was not connected with either
the District Attorneys office or the Jlc
Namara defense. For that reason the
mystery deepens. Neither side will e
plaln how one outside the District At
torney's staff could have learned of
the plan to arrest Franklin.
Accrdlns; to Information In the hands
of the District Attorney. Mr. Darrow
was in his former offices on the ninth
floor f the Hlairtns buildtns; when the
mysterious warnlna- reached him. It is
asserted he then hurried to the spot
where the voice had Indicated that
Franklin was about to be arrested.
A WOMAN-BANKER RULES
Miss Hester, of Teaas, Authority for
Hog- and Cattlo Bayers.
New Tork Evening- Post.
On the letterheads of the Lee County
Slate Bank of Lexington. Texas. Miss
Minnie Hester Is modestly called "Asst.
Cashier." But that does not tell the
whole story. Actually, she Is paying
teller, receiving teller, cashier, general
ledger bookkeeper and customers' finan
cial adviser. The president of the
Lee County Bank la active. In that "he
passes on all loans made." but Miss
Hester assumes all office detail, with
the help of a bookkeeper, also a woman,
and no man Vorks behind the counters
In any capacity whatever.
Banking hours begin between and
A- M. In Lexington and close during
the dull season at 6 P. M.. but during
the busy season, which Is the Fall of
. the year In that agricultural region, she
just locks the same at closing time
each day and keeps on working until
lrk.
Not having a man chief. Miss Hester
has the responsibility of keening-ip the
bank's reserve, and her weather eye Is
always out to see that 10 per cent of
her deposit account Is In cash In her
vault, and that 15 per cent Is with her
reserve agents As general ledger
bookkeeper, she handles the accounts
with city correspondents, the profit and
loss account, the daily cash account,
the amount of notea outstanding, total
of deposits, etc. As acting chief, she
must keep watch, too, on the collec
tions, which come In by every mall.
These she enters In the collection regis
ter and malls out notices to the per
sons on whom drafts are made. Then
she must watch her bills receivable and
see that no note runs past due.
-In fact." to quote Miss Hester her
self. "I must be on the alert every
moment to see that the inside work
ins of the bank are In good order
and kept well oiled; otherwise a cylin
der might blow out. an explosion would
occur, and great harm would be done
In other words, a bank examiner would
be sent out by the Banking Department
to close our doors."
e
She has found that a woman can't be
"a banker In a country town without
having to meet and solve the country
banker's problems. Chief among these
she names overdrafts and past-due
paper and collections. To the farmer
she awards the palm as being the
satisfactory customer from the bank's
point of view. Aa she has found him.
he understands banking requirements
fully, expects to glva security three to
one when he borrows, and pays prompt
ly when his paper falls due.
Her troubles-He chiefly with cattle
men and small merchants. Ho far as
the cattleman Is concerned, the ex
planation Is that when he has corralled
the animals be has bought, he unex
pectedly find other bunches that he Is
no more able to resist than a woman
ran resist a bargain counter. And then
when Miss Hester posts him up that
evening, his account goea red by a hun
dred or two. and she goes home some
what solemn, t'ast-due paper la a point
on which she has to be careful. State
and National banking laws are rigid on
this matter, and. besides, she has her
own convictions that a surety should be
protected. Her collection department,
she thinks, gives her more trouble
than all the. rest of the bank together,
being expensive and annoying. Phe
has had some close calls In the matter
of demand or sight drafts, and It
makes me shiver to think of them."
she says.
Besules her work as executive of the
bank, she Is called upon to be the book
keeper of every business roan In the
county to a certain extent. To Illus
trate, the hog and cattle buyers who
ship carloads to market keep no record
of their transactions except the ac
count she has of their deposits and
checks, and their profits and losses are
figured out by taking the difference
between the two.
Concerning the personal relations
that are established, she says: "It Is
right pathetic how perfectly dependent
some people become, who learn to de
pend upon roe to attend to all their
business, figure up the Interest due
them, and -e that their lesral docu
ments are properly drawn. There are
almost as m-ny men In the number as
women. They have never made busi
ness a study, but are honest, hard
working tillers of the soli and depend
upon their banker to look after their
business."
see
Women, h thicks, hart been -un
justly treated all these years by not
being taught even the first principles
of business." She considers that every
woman, rich or poor, should know
something about business. Experience
and observation have shown her the
unlimited disaster that can overtake
the widow who has been left a nice
competency for herself and children by
the man who was "a good provider,
but didn't believe In "pestering women
with buslnefcs matters."
-So often." says Miss Hester, "such a
woman will not have the remotest Idea
how to Invest her surplus money to the
best advantage, nor how to take care
of the property left her and make It
Increase Instead of decrease." It Is In
these cases that the woman banker
may be an effective counsellor and
business agent. -
When women get fairly into busi
ness they apparently show the same
disposition to let themselves be 'con
sumed by It that men do. and the
banker of Lexington Is no exception.
-The bank work engages my whole
attention." she admits. "It has utterly
become a part of myself. After work
hours or on Sunday, when I meet cer
tain people, I can scarcely refrain from
speaking to them about some business
transaction that we are to have to
gether next day."
As to social features, she has little,
"compared with other women who go
out every evening.- I learned long ago
that business ami pleasure do not go
hand In hand. This being a quiet lit
tle town, there Is only occasional op-
fA. mamnt I attend
T VI I .... " - - . I
Sunday school and church services, and
when a gooa lecture r .--
comes to town. 1 attend these with
pleasure." but most of her evenings are
spent with books and magaslnes.
Before ahe became a banker, Mlsa
Hester -pas a school-teacher and later a
stenographer. That her trend toward
business may be Inherited la suggested
by some further testimony from her
concerning a woman'a lack of business
training and consequent helplessness
when the management of resourcea de
volves upon her.
-Our family hks been more fortunate
In that line than some others of whom
I know. In that we have had a sensible
economical mother, who. upon the
death of my father, many yeara ago.
did not give up and grieve her heart
out for him. but kept her sorrows to
herself and assumed the responsibility
of keeping the business going which he
started, and succeeded so well that
today the etate Is worth more than It
was at his death." . t
From the viewpoint of the sociolo
gist, she offers In evidence an Inter
esting conclusion. "I have no desire
whatever to get married." she con
fesses. "I cannot assign any reason
for It, unless it Is that Just coming In
dally contact with men and studying
their wsys has made me feel Jhat I do
not want one for a husband."
THE PARENT OF RADIUM
BrltUh Scientist Points to the. Pos
sibility of Ionium.
London Cor. Christian Science Monitor.
A lecture was given at the Royal
Institution. London, by K. Soddy, F. .
S lecturer In physical chemistry and
radioactivity at the University otGUiB.
.. nririn of Radium. The
gOW. on aim ' - ,
lecturer said that when Madame Curie
succeeded In separating irom p."-"
.h. tun. radioactive substances.
radium, polonium and activlum. It wa
first thought that pitchblende simply
contained a mixture of radioactive sub
stance: but Sir William iro. .
years later separated from uranium a
radioactive substance known aa uran
ium X. which gradually lost its radio
activity. - oontlnucd. he
In 19V-. Hie '-. u .
and Rutherford at Montreal, separated
, - jin.ntiv. substance
from xnoriura .-v... - ,
which they called thrtumx-1,Th' ,
stance, they founa. grauu.,,,
M..iriv while, the thorium slowly
became redloactlve again. It Is on
this regeneration oi inn"'" ".,7" "
radioactive, substances that the t0
of atomlo disintegration la based. There
are many stages In this disintegra
tion, and for every stage the rate of
change obey, a simple "P""""'
law. for this rate of change Is always
proportional to the quantity which re
mains unchanged.
During the lecture an Ingenloua in
strument traced out exponential curves
to illustrate, the law obeyed in each
successive stage.
The period of radium, the lecturer
explained, has been ascertained by Mr.
Rutherford to be tSOO yeara. Thus In
a few thousand years none of the ra
dium prepared by Madame Curie will
be left. The question then arises how is
there any radium left now? There
roust have been a parent of rad urn
which continually regenerated radium
as fast as it decayed.
Radioactivity tests are extremely
delicate, far more so even than spectro
scope tests: In fact, the presence of
two or three million mllllonths of a
gramme of radium can be detected. To
Illustrate the delicacy of the tests, the
Image of gold leaf electroscope which
had ben charged several hours before
was thrown on the screen. A tube con
taining three milligrammes of radium
emanation was then broken In the ven
tilator through which air passed Into
the room. The air of the room was
then slowlv drawn through the electro
scope and the leaf gradually fell
Continuing the account of his re
searches to determine the origin or
radium, the lecturer described tome ex
periments made with uranium. It was
found that uranium generated radium,
but the amount generated waa only a
thousandth part of what It should have
been If uranium- was the direct parent
of radium. This showed that there
must be aome Intermediate product,
uranium X with Its life of only 354
days being neK.llg.ill-
r.viaence pginieu m
this Intermediate product, and the
curves obtained of the regeneration
of radium from Ionium support this
view. Several curves, obtained from ex
periments extending over several yeara.
were ehown: and It Is believed that
In the course of a few more yeara still
more definite proofs will be obtained
to show that Ionium la the direct parent
of radium.
The perloda of these radioactive ele
ments vary enormously, aa can be seen
from the following list:
Cranium. dOO.ooo.OOO years.
Cranium X. 35 H days.
Ionium, according to the latest esti
mates approximately 100,000 y-ara.
Radium. 1600 years.
Radium emanation. 5H days.
There are numerous subsequent
stages which also vary greatly In
length, and It Is believed that the ulti
mate product la lead, but this, the
lecturer said, has not been proved. .
Art as lie freshmen!.
. John Galsworthy, in the Atlantic.
Art la the great and universal re
freshment. For art Is never dogmatic:
holds no brief for itself; you may
take It. or you may leave It. It does
not force Itself rudely where It la not
wanted. It is reverent to all tempers,
to all points of view. But It U 'willful
th- very wind In the romlnga and go
ings of Its Influence, an uncapturable
fugitive, visiting our hearts at va
grant, sweet moments: since even be
fore the greatest worka of art we
often stand without being able quite
to lose ourselves! That restful
oblivion comes, we never quite know
when and It Is gone! But when It
comes. It la a spirit hovering with cool
wing, blessing us. from least to great
est, according to our powers; a spirit
deathless and varied as human life It-
seit. . .
New Upholstered Furniture
See the new upholstered furniture in our windows
this week and you will admire it. Try it and you
will be delighted with its luxurious comfort. Ask the
price and you will want to buy it.
We have never before shown so much upholstered fur
niture as is now in 'stock. -We have never shown so
wide a range of styles and sizes, nor at such attractive
prices. We show literally scores of pieces, most of them
new. In davenports alone we offer twenty-five or thirty
patterns: There are beautiful framed davenports in ma
hogany and oak; comfortable overstuffed and tufted
pieces; luxurious English models with' loose cushions
ohittVh with down. There are lounges, couches and
chaises, lounges, and there are chairs of every size and pattern. Easy, chairs range from $25
uoward We have davenports at $50, $70, $85, $100 and upward to$225. Many of these
pfeles are wholly exceptional values and all are marked at prices that invite comparison.
Much of the new furniture is covered in inexpensive cretonne -no more expensive than denim,
and charming for the Summer season. See our windows.
FIFTH
and STARK
J. G. MACK & CO.
FIFTH
and STARK
,
.
, . 1 1
I absences." I
HUNTED
MAN
F
OUND
Alleged Embezzler Faces Ac
cusers at Bcise, Idaho.
CHARGE FLATLY DENIED
Funds of Auto Company, Amount
ing to flo'.OOO, Held by R.
rroudfit to Have Been I-ost
Through Mismanagement.
BOISE. Idaho. April 20. (Special.)
Supposed to be a fugitive from Justice
and missing aln.ee last January, when
he waa charged with the embezzlement
of approximately 110,000 of the funds
of the Intermountaln Auto Company, of
which he waa bookkeeper at the time
and who haa been hunted high and
low throughout the Northwest, Robert
Proudflt. a son of S. V. Proudflt. As
sistant Commissioner of the General
Land Office, suddenly appeared in Boise
yesterday to face his accusers.
He was Immediately given a hearing
In Justice Court and bound over to
await trial In the District Courtinder
1 1000 bonds, which he furnished. The
charge of falsifying the accounts of
the company's books waa waived, leav.
tng only the embezzlement charge
standing against him. This he will
fight In the District Court, and the
trial promises to be one of the most
sensational seen In this city.
('later Charge .Made.
Proudflt and lils attorney, K. K. Bar
ker, aa well aa his brother-in-law. O.
U Ingram, of Walla Walla, make a
counter charge against the manage
ment of the Intermountaln Auto Com
pany, declaring that the reason that
concern was short $10,000 In its ac
counts was due to mismanagement, and
not to Juggling of the books by Proud
flt. The latter has Influential con
nections In Walla Walla, where he met
and married his wife. He haa been
making his home in that city since the
preferment of the charges against him.
During January Deputy Sheriffs made
a search through the Northwest " for
Proudflt. but could not locate him. It
was given out at that time he had
The owners of the Intermountaln
Auto Company assert that Proudflt as
secretary of the company waa given
every confidence and considered abso
lutely honest. However, when the
shortage was discovered and Proudflt
left this city, they preferred the em
bezzlement charge.
reaeera Leal as Preposltlom..
The concern was a losing proposi
tion." stated Attorney Barker, speak
ing of the charge against his client aa
made by the owners of the Intermoun
taln Auto Company.
"It lost money right along, and the
owners did not have the moral courage
to admit their losses. They tried to
convince themselves that some one had
stolen the money they had lost.
"Proudflt has never been a fugitive
from Justice. The county authorities
have known where he was nearly all
the time. Since leaving Boise he has
been In both Walla Walla and Coeur
d'Alene. He has never been away from
Washington or Idaho, and any atorlea
as to his fleeing towards the Canadian
line Is the worst kind of drivel.
Freud 8t Ready for Trial.
"Some time ago hla brother-in-law,
O. L. Ingram, and Arthur Cromwell put
$1000 up with the Ada County authori
ties that they would produce Proudflt
any time te waa wanted. We are now
here to face any charges that the auto
company will bring and to prove they
are false.
"The authorities have held this case
up while they were trying to get evi
dence against John Moore. Moore left
Boise about the same time that Proud
flt did. . He waa Interested in the com
pany and knowa more about the case
than he haa told. I think he can tell
where the company's money went. I
know there Is nothing criminal. o f al
as Proudflt or Moore ara concerned.
There la a lot more to tbls story and
It will be told when the proper time
comes."
ZOO BEARS' DEATH FIGHT
Jealous Male Kills Mate for Flirting
With Polar Neighbors.
New York Sun.
Jennie Ursus. who waa disposed to
be flirtatious with the two bachelor
polar bears in the next apartment In
the Central Park menagerie, brought
upon herself the fate of Desdemona,
after repeatedly arousing the Jealousy
of Joe Ursus. her mate. Joe and Jen
nie were the finest specimens of the
black bear family the menagerie ever
had. Joe was older and larger than
Jennie, and seemed to the keepers to
k., fnnd of her. At feeding time
f she seized upon the fish or loaf of
bread or chunk of meat he waa eating, I
he permitted her to take It away with-
nut rhantlaement When It came to
flirting with her neighbors he was not
so amiable.
An Iron grill work separated Joe and
Jennie from the Arctio bachelors, who
developed a liking for their handsome
female neighbor and passed vmuch of
their time at the grill swapping nose
rubs with her. Such evidences of mu
tual admiration always stirred Joe to
anger. He would hasten to the meet
ing place, push his mate to one side
and strike at the polar's nose with his
paw.
Jennie was exchanging bear gossip
with one of her neighbors when Joe
butted In. He gave her a cuff on the
side of the head and sent her sprawl
ing on the cement floor. Jennie got
up 'and went back to where the white
bachelor waa standing at the. bars and
looking Into her home. The two got
to rubbing noses again.
There was fire In Joe's eye as he
approached In a slow and deliberate
stride. He gave Jennie a blow with
his right paw that knocked her sev
eral feet. Before she had fully re
covered he had pounced upon -her with
savage growls. Then began a life and
death struggle. He bit her on the
body and pulled out a mouthful of
skin and glossy hair. Jennie seemed
to realize that the matter was serious
and fought for her life.
But Joe waa too strong for her. He
got her down and fixed his Jaws In her
throat. She used her feet vigorously and
the claws tore out patchea of fur and
skin from Joe. A crowd of visitors stood
In front of the Inclosure and watched
the fight. With a sudden effort of all
her muscles, Jennie broke from her
mate's grasp and got upon her feet.
She sought to escape further attack,
but the Jealous mate was after her, and
Jumping upon her with his fore feet,
trot her down once more and took a
I throat grip with hla Jaws, and Jennie's
I efforts to shake him off were futile.
I Joe held her fast long after she
ceased to struggle. When he let go ana
she lay there limp and motionless be
went for a distance and kept watching
her. He was still watching her when
keepers came to remove the . body. He
started in to give them a fight, but
changed his mind.
Reflections or Vnclo Kzra.
Roy K. Moulton in Judge.
Ell Hanks drinks whisky In the Sum
mer to cool him off and in the Winter
to warm him up. In the Spring and
Kail he drinks it for medicinal pur
poses. .
Outside of the skyattlo rheumatli.
about the hardest thing in this world
to get rid of Is a life-insurance agent.
No matter what kind of a pie a feller
orders In a restaurant, he Is always
aorry he didn't' order some other kind.
Ren Frlsby says he rarely goea by a
saloon, and. In fact, he never does, un
less his wife ia watchln' him.
Some fellers are dum" fools naturally,
while others go around lookln' at them
selves In plate-glass winders.
If Job had ever tried to color a meer
schaum pipe or to get a seat in a sub
way train, he would never have gained
a reputation for patience. .
I never see a feller that carried his
loose change in a purse that ever died
In the poorhouse.
About the only way an Indian can
make an honest llvln' nowadays la by
playln' football or posln in front of a
cigar atore with a bunch of wooden
cheroots in his hand.
Mercury Vapor and Diamonds.
Scientific American
" Von Bolton thinks that diamonds
were formed In nature by action of
metal vapors, such as Iron or mag
nesium on carbon dioxide. He haa
succeeded in making microscopic dia
monds by the action of mercury vapor
on carbon, -
PRINCE IS ATTACKED
CROWX HEIR OF GERMAN Y SUB
JECTED TO CRITICISM.
Newspapers of Emperor's Iand As
sail Poor Military Showing as
Head of Hussars.
BERLIN. April 20. (Special.) An
article attacking the Crown Prince for
neglect of his military duties Is at
tracting great attention, and Is repro
duced in many leading newspapers. It
appeared originally in Der Tuermer, a
monthly review, and was written by
Herr Guenther von Vlelrogge, a retired
officer.
The article observes that up to the
time when. the Kaiser appointed his
heir to the Colonelcy of the famous
"Death's Head" Hussars, at Danzig last
September, the Crown Prince had never
done any military service worth men
tioning. It was hoped that the Danzig
command would at last fill the Prince,
In whose veins the blood of so many
warriors flowed, with genuine enthu
siasm for his profession. "Up to the
present, however, the hopes aroused by
the transfer to Danzig remained un
fulfilled. The Crown Prince Is absent
far too much on leave. Indeed, one
might ask when he la at the head of
his regiment at all.
"Immediately after his appointment
the august young gentleman went trav.
ellng for four weeks, principally to
hunt. "Soon after hla return we saw
him In Berlin, sometimes in the Reich
stag, where he attended the Morocco
debates, and sometimes at the flying
grounds. At the beginning of Decem
ber he spent a week in Silesia hunt
ing, and at the end of December and
commencement of January he waa in
Berlin again.
"Between the last-named leaves he
was prostrated by illness, which not
only confined him to his room, but to
his bed over the Christmas holidays.
This illness could not have been too
grave, otherwise the Berlin newspa
pers would not have been able to re
port that he was dedicating himself to
Winter sports In the Tlergarten.
"At the end of January the Crown
Prince again came to Berlin to partici
pate In court festivities, and those con
nected with the Kaiser's birthday and
the christening of his own son. When
these were over he betook himself to
Switzerland, where, in the company of
his gracious consort, he threw himself
into the Joys of sleigh and ski with
his accustomed zeal. That he remained
In Switzerland longer than waa Intend
ed, waa due to an injury received at ice
hockey.
"On March the Danzig Hussars saw
their commander again, and were at
last able to give the "Winter ball.'
which they had to postpone on account
Lying and Fooling.
National Monthly.
Jim Mann was on his way back from
Chicago, and couldn't help hearing the
conversation of the couple In the sec
tion right behind his. They looked like
newly married folks but were not on
their honeymoon, as Mann learned by
deduction. The woman laid down a
newspaper she had been reading and
said to her husband:
'Do you know, I wish I had one of
those affinities. Oh, I think it would
be Just gr-a-n-d to sit on a rock with
somebody and have him rave about the
Incomparable golden color of my hair,
and tell me that my eyes were the most
beautiful in the whole world, and "
"Uh, huh." said the husband, yawn
"And that the delicate pink of my
cheeks had been painted there by the
angels, and that he couldn't live with
out me. O-oh, I think an affinity like
that would be "
"'Tisn't an affinity you want." inter
rupted her husband. "What you seem
to want is a plain, old-faShioned liar."
Are You Fat?
You know you cannot stay fat. don't youT
That Is, you cannot be fat and be In style.
The day when a fat woman was tolerated Is
passed. Xowadayaall women must be In
proportion . or be ridiculous. This does not
mean you should become skinny, however.
Tou should not get below the hard .flesh
line. All you ought to lose Is the bulky fat.
That done you will find youself to be a
well-formed and therefore handsome woman.
Now, how can this be done? By exercis
ing and dieting? Yes, and no. These two
means will bring some results, but not eas
ily nor soon. One Is very bard work;: the
other is torture. Besides, neither can be de
pended on to cause a uniform reduction.
They may take off a fleshy shoulder, for
example, and leave the double chin un
touched. ' What you need, you see. Is some
thing pleasant to take that without Injury
to your health will take the fat off uni
formly and quickly, say at the rate of a
pound a day or so, until It Is all gone where
you want It to go.
For this purpone nothing Is less expensive,
safer or simpler than Marmola Prescription
Tablets. Inexpensive became one large case,
costing 73 cents only, will produoe results;
safe because tbey cause no wrinkles or stom
ach trouble, but rathee Improve the health
and complexion. If anything: and simple, be
cause tbey do all the work without asking
thought or effort on the part of the taker.
In short, they are the ANSWER if you are
fat and wish to be thinner. K your druggist
Is of the better kind he will have them. If
not write the licensees. The Marmola Com
pany. 608 Farmer bide, Detroit, Mich.
Trustee Sale
I have on hand and am offering to the highest
bidder the following autos and other assets of
a defunct auto conipanj': .
1 Regal "20," 4-passenger, used as r
demonstrator.
1 Regal "20," Roadster, used as
demonstrator.
1 "15-30" Stearns, used as demon
strait or
1 "20" White Steamer, used as
demonstrator.
1 "30" White Gas, used as demon
strator. .
1 Smith, 5-passenger.
1 Tourist, 4 passenger.
3 "20" White Steamers, fully
' equipped.
1 25-ft. Launch and Boathouse.
2 50x100 Westmoreland lots.
40 acres Hood River apple land.
. Office furniture, such as Desks, Chairs, Rugs,
Mattings, Desk Lamps, etc. Phone Main 692
for appointment. .
G. R. HUBNER
Sixth St. at Madison x .
THIS MEANS MUCH 1U YOU.
..... ... - . . -
S? Your kidneys and Irver cany oft the waste matter rrom
the system.
You can't nave good health unless the kidneys and liver
$3j perform their proper functions.
When you ate bilious, have headaches, and backaches, 5g
take
H Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Remedy (
2 The best for 35 years. Ask your druggist, he knows.
S3 Send us picture of remedy from this advertisement and get a
itgdv free test package. 53-
Over a half million requests caused us io reprint 5
ike famous Warner's Safe Cook Book. A Cofrr for
.".i - ..." ..c . . .
you wnen you senx us a aje" iraae-ntark cut s?
from actual pasteboard package and twelve two-
- ,JmAr rWrt -iA'e Cfi .4. Jk-J S
eCw ' V t- J aW t,cnu IfJa --vvw.
a
Wararr's Safe Eesatdies Co.,
Dept. 205
Rochester, K. T.
'Wills la
4