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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1912)
THE SUNDAY OREGONIAX; FORTLAyP, OCTOBER 13, 1913. WOMAN IDENTIFIES M'NAMARA LETTER Unions Notified of Temporary Suspension otAccount ing for Funds. HOCKINS' TRAVELS TRACED Judge Anderson Kales Letters and 'Telegrams Taken In Raid on Offices or Union Can . Be Held by Prosecution. INDIANAPOLIS. Oct. 12. Miss Clara E. Smftb. a stenographer formerly em ployed by John J. McNamara, a the "dvnamlte conspiracy" trial today Wen. tified a circular letter as having been addressed to all local unions of the International Association of Bridge and Structural Iron Workers notifying them of a. temporary suspension of a detailed accounting of the union's finances. It was In this letter that. the execu tive board, the attorney charged, headed by President Ryan, in 1906, be gan allowing J1000 monthly to Mc Namara that he secretly might carry oh the explosions which continued until his arrest in April, 1911. Crew at Work, Govermmeaf Says. The Government said the explosions against builders of viaducts, of bridges and office buildings who had declared for the "open shop" in the employment of iron workers, previously were few. but that after the regular allowance to McNamara a paid "dynamiting crew" composed of Ortle E. McManigal and Janfes B. McNamara and directed by Herbert S. Hockin, was put to work and was kept working until after the Los Angeles Times building was blown UP. v ' Miss" Smith was the first former employe of the iron workers to testify. The purported circular letter, announc ing that the executive board during the fight against the "open shop" employers had decided to suspend the rules was handed the witness. . "Did tou ever see that- paper be fore." asked James W. Noel, counsel for Ihe Government Letter Mailed to All Locals. "Yes." answered Miss Smith. "It was mailed to all of the 92 local unions by direction of J. B. McNamara" McNamara was secretary-treasurer of the union whose headquarters then were in Cleveland. ' Miss Shelvla- Smith -and Miss A. J. Hull, employed by McNamara as stenographers, identified letters taken from the ironworkers' .flies after the headquarters were removeu to India napolis. Many of the letters, which the witnesses testified were In Mc Namara's handwriting, referred to the executive board or to P. M- Ryan. They were the letters which the Government in its opening statement said would show that a dynamite conspiracy was conducted through the malls and that the defendants were "linked together in guilt." Tbe witnesses identified letters as having been received from W. Bert Brown. Kansas City: Edward Smythe, Peoria 111.: Paul J. Morrin. St. Louis: Fred Mooney. Duluth. and Milton H. Davis, Westchester, Pa, all of whom are defendants. ; About 700 letters are still to be iden tified. Their contents will be made known when other witnesses, testify. Hotel Clerka Still Testifytagi Visits to various cities of men ac cused of being "advance agents of the dynamiting crew; were traced through hotel registers by other witnesses. Referring to a bulky register EL L. Shipp. a hotel clerk t Cincinnati, told of the arrival in Cincinnati on May 1, 1908, of Herbert S. Hockin. Hockin is charged with being one of the men who "went ahead" to arrange for ex plosions. On this occasion Edward Clark, who has pleaded guilty, said he was induced by Hockin to dynamite a bridge at Dayton, Ohio. The explosion occurred three days after Hockin'a visit. When Clark was locked up after his arrest on the Federal Indictments, Hockin, according to the Government charges, visited Clark in jail and asked, "Are you talking?" to which Clark replied, "No, but I understand you are." Clancy Registered la Chicago. William H. Sturmer. assistant man ager of a Chicago hotel, testified that Eugene A. Clancy, San Francisco, was in Chicago October 14. 1910, two weeks after the Los Angeles Times explosion. The Government contends that Clancy took part in hiding J. B. McNamara; that Clancy became "alarmed" at the loss of life at -Los Angeles and that, after hurrying to the Paciflo Coast from Boston, he returned East, tele graphing on the way he would meet McNamara at Chicago. The witness testified that "G. Clark." the alias of McNamara. was registered at' the hotel when Clancy was there. Clancy also is charged with instructing labor leaders to "clean house," after the explosion. . Defease Cannot See Kvideace. Letters and telegrams taken in a mm nn th international Association of Bridge and Structural Iron Workers and upon which too oovernmem oases its charge that the defendants directed explosions through the mails and tele .nh will tint hfl returned to the de fense until the trial is ended.. Judge Anderson so ruled today. . He denied a motion tnac me aeiense oe permuivu ta inspect the Government's evidence v. rfrt r it la InlrndllAfl The evidence was secured after the arrest of J. J. McNamara, the raid, ..n.ln t n nietriot Attnrnev Miller. being secretly arranged by Hockin, acting secretary or me union. POHLMAN GOES AFTER. PAPERS Labor Leader Says Production at Trial Will Bo Resisted. . . LOS ANGELES, Oct. 12. (Special.) who recently was found gTitlty-of c an te ra.pt Ol COUl I. UJ UUfin v ciavua li, au the United State District Court, be cause he refused to produce certain papers before the United States grand jury in session here, canie to Los An- i . a. nnesacDlnn rtt th airkf11- reies iu bi - . nserfls, which were deposited in a safe ty deposit vault here. T-fc. 1 n Kan han rVMi With & BUb- pena duces tecum to produce the same papers. Deiore me r ouemi v.wu. mi .rnvvAVB Trr Trhl TTiAn BAT that they will not produce the papers at Indianapolis, ri'muiau oFi"' , jt.in- n4 i tui q-a W'pllhorn m a writ of error to the Circuit Court of Appeals and nis writ wn momicva. KILLING IS DONE TO ORDER fContinlKd From Second PsKf.) opened negotiations, with the District Attorney, naa you vpcucv, uli tiations with the District AttarneyT' "Did you ask immunity for Schepps?" "No I asked mat me name ptwicc tion bo extended to Schepps and Val Ion as to me, if they would tell the truth." Yon rflnrrt tell Pr-henns in your let ter to tell the truth, did your' 'No.' Tbin't ai fnwn nn vour knees t .Ka TnmhH ..Ian. " rMR11ITIH Mf.1 11 - . "m-nA wnr 1(1 thflLrle Plltt OH the grave of your dead mother that Becker bad nothing to do witn m. murder?' "I did not." " rtin't vn .av trt jaiv Sullivan that vour only way to beat the case was to frame-up Becker?" - T did not." Rose Admits prevarleatlac "Tnn taken to Mr. Whitman's office, weren't you?" Yes, and had a talk witn mm uicro. I saw Deputy Police Commissioner Dougherty first." t 1 1 .j rtAiichrtv that vou bad nothing to do with tbe murder and knew nothing ol itr 'I did." , . t-iih vn,i toll him that Becker had nothing to do with the murder?" "Yes." "When you told him that, did you lleT" . . "I was there to protect Becaer Rose began. "TMdn't you lie! snoutea mr. why, yes, 1 aia, wwo xnn-ccu. Tit j Aii TwitiffhArtT that you - .... . never collected any money for Becker?" "Yes." "And then again you lied, didn t you?" "Yes; I lied."- ni. uMntvra t-a In 1 v gousrht to get on . V. -.J . -q anrt nf And t (TITIS of me i lui u " " ..... - immunity granted Rose. Schepps and Vallon. Finally, amid strenuous od- jections of Mr. Whitman. Mclntyre asked: . "Did Mr. Whitman tell you he wanted to get the big fish, not the small fry?" Guinea Paid by Rose. T...ti. nff i tniftii th. witness not to reply, and told the jury to dis regard the question. "Who paid the gunmen?" resumed Mclntyre. "I did." "Was Schepps present?" "Yes." "How close was he to you then?" Rose indicated a distance of about 10 feet. He said he paid the money Lilt; vicvj a.iri .mo ... . - brought the gunmen to him, ho said. "Did you tell Schepps to go and get the gunmen?" . . i ft .h mil rrlcr MIlenDB Yes." 'Who did Schepps bring?" T Ln-ta' .nrl nnnthfir. I am not sure whether the other was 'Dago Frank' or not. There were two." "Who did you pay?" " "Lefty Louie.' " "How much?" . t j n ' . i.nnw W.hhpr t ill d me i UUU b - - there was a thousand dollars in the roll he gave me. Attorney Mclntyre proaucea mo .i i . n cia-na tnr Rpcker and ubvii ftwno " passed It to the witness, who identi fied his signature. "Did you swear to the contents of this paper?" .. ea ti-i.ia 17 nr vnnterdav that vlIU y- ' - - Becker said to you, 'If the gunmen are i i. of a Doliceman shoot Rosenthal down anyway?'" Yes." said Kose. trMj ...... -i, that PapkAt tnid vou he would shoot Rosenthal down himself? t. H -i ,1 i on rrl Becker Bay he was being driven to desperation and would "blaze away himself if the kill ing was not done soon. "Didn't you say a month before the Rosenthal murder to Louis Plltt you Intended to have Rosenthal killed?' "I did not." "I I COLONEL CRITICISES IDAHO COURT rcECISION. Candidate Send9 Telegram to Friends in Gem State and Appeals for Help. KOTKR. Idaho. Oct. 12. (Special.) Severely criticising the Idaho Supreme Court for its recent decision barring the Roosevelt Progressive party Presi dential electors and candidate for Con gress from the official ballot and mak ing a vigorous appeal to the electors of Idaho to fignt lor tneir rignts. uuiuuei Theodore Roosevelt tonight made known his attitude in a telegram to Paul Davis, secretary of the Idaho Roosevelt Progressive party. The colonel s telegram is as lunuwo. --"Chicago, 111.. Oct. 12. Paul Davis, DnlaA Iflahn- Thmiiffh V n 11 T desire tO appeal to the men and women of Idaho . n pn.mit thomuivH ta be dis franchised as the court has sought to disfranchise them, it is lmpossmw w protest too strongly against what is literally the infamy or tnis aecision. "Viynrtr tinhnirinr nf the law and or der and every sincere well wisher of the cause should take the ieaa in con mninr mmh ntterlv reactionary con duct by a reactionary court. "Absolutely without warrant 01 iw and in the interest only f the great apostles of special privileges in poll tics and industry, the reactionaries wish to disfranchise the people wnom they recognize in the Progressive ao tha nnlv nartv which, really and in good faith stand for the peo ple. It is an attempt to dbh tne tuo by trickery and chicanery because those who inspired the attempt know that they have no chance of success in a fair and open fight before the people themselves. "This action by the court has shifted it. 4hii in Tdpihn to a sauare issue as to whether or not the people are to be allowed to express tneir oeuoomu judgment. It Is an attempt to stifle such expression of deliberate Judgment by the people. it was an imsmuuB iuiub i Republican state central committee to , w attrtT -twI riontslon bv the reactionary, partisan court beforeq which it was Drougnt was againi. iu law, against equity, against Justice and against the whole course of decis ions in all our American courts. "I have a right to ask now that not only every progressive, but every hon- tTxA avaiv honest woman in the state stand with us. The. Repub lican State Central wiuimm uu reactionary court are counting upon . i . o t inHlvlduallv men and wo- 1 1 i (T UUfl, v " ' men will not take the trouble to write in the names of the Progressive candi dates on the ballot. "I appeal to the men and women of Idaho to disappoint this hope and frustrate the outrageous the reactionaries. EX-BANK TELLER ARRESTED Silas Rich, of Salem, Faces Inquiry on Embezzlement Charge. SALEM. Or.. Oct. 12. (Special.) Silas Klcn, ex-paying " United States National Bank of this city, was arrested by a United States Marshal at the Marion Hotel here to night and will be taken to Portland tomorrow. Rich la being held pend tn his connection with the alleged embezzlement of 12400 from the Salem nana. ... V. 1 1 .i niuiilfttlnna wre dis ia o 1 4i . k,. h KnV officials several months ago. and Rich was relieved of his position. They are saia to nvo c tended over a considerable period. EUROPE BELIEVES VI WILL SPREAD "Concert" Fails Sultarv Fore shadows Reply in Order . v ing Mobilization. GREECE PREPARES OPENLY Turkey Expected? to Send Great Force Against Bulgarians, Leaving Montenegrin Outposts for: Present " to Fate. (Contlnned From First Page.) note and, it Is understood, will present It to the representatives of those coun tries tomorrow. The reply declares that the representations of the powers are vague and' were made at too late a date. . i Situation Mnofc Complicated. ' The military prospects are so com plicated that experts are unable to make prophecies, while the political conditions are still more complicated. Vienna and St. Petersburg newspapers are printing articles hinting at bad faith. The Austro-Hungarian press accuses Russia of secretly backing the combination against Turkey. A sec tion of the French press blames Great Britain, declaring that she prevented tho powers from making a strong stand against the war. Europe is amazed at Turkey's fail ure to accept the Italian peace terms at this critical moment and is worried. because in Italy's participation in the rar (Lere is danger of drawing in he other poweis. All the stock markets suffereo a de moralized day. ' Berlin appears to have teen the most distressed. British consols reached the lowest point in history. ' The Rossia. St. Petersburg, says the fall in prices was due less to the Balkan situation than to the oper ations of a clique of bear speculators anxious to enrich themselves at public expense. Lloyd-George Has Two Hopes. Tha British Chancellor of the Ex chequer, David Lloyd-George, In an ad dress tonight said: 'The urosDect seems to be that m a very short time the Eastern horizon will be ablaze. We may express two hopes that the area of conflagration will be limited and that whatever may be the issue of tho conflict between the combatants one result will ensue, that tho boundary of freedom ana gooa government will be extended. . The British Red Cross Society is pre paring to send large contingents to the front. TE2TSION INCREASES HOURLY Note of Powers to Turkey Carries No Prospect of Peace. t ftwnnv nnf 1 2 T-Vnm all the cap itals today came news of increasing tension and contlnuea preparation ior war, and this has spread now to Vien na and Budapest. Reassuring state- . - Kan latt11H - from Several V.H imriAiihi dlv with the ob ject of "stemming the panic of selling on the ourse. - The text of the note handed by the nf hm nnwerR to the mJionutauiB, v 1 . Turkish government proves to be more feeoie even tnan was eit;iow, ... contains no suggestion that the powers .in .iiartaVA tn guarantee the carry ing out of reforms in Macedonia, it Is not likely to nave any eiiect iu uj"in publio feeling in tho Balkans, which is all for war. The reply of the Balkan States, like that of the Turkish government, has not yet been delivered. In Turkey war Is accepted as a certainty. n. i ..Rnni,ailnn nf smn.ll bands Of Bulgarians and Servian irregulars to operate in certain districts of European Turkey is described in a special dis patch from saionim. meir be chiefly that of inciting the village ii. in tiiA frontier districts to lfWui . revolt, and in case of their refusal to do so, the bands are saia to nav oecu ordered to burn the houses and massa cre the inhabitants. The reports of maltreatment of the Turkish population in Bulgaria are de nied in a dispatch from Sofia, which de clares that no Insult of any kind had been offered to the Turkish legation or consuls in Bulgaria Austrlasays a Vienna dispatch, in tends to take immediate action in case either Turkey or Servia snouia mvu the sanjak of Novlpazar. mv. ..ntniinn nf the Servian forces has been impaired by the scar city of transport taciiities. Three main armies, aggregating 200, 000 men, are being formed by that country. One of them Is mobilizing at the Tzarlbro, on tn Bulgarian iniuuc, and is to co-operate with the Bulgarian . .1. i a valharlnff At Mllan- iroups. - ovatch and Nish In preparation to ad vance against usaup, uio m im mobilizing at Kralievo, Intending to penetrate the sanjak of Novlpazar. Seventy Servian vumibj j" lak of Novlpazar are reported from VI . j. t ,in mrolnst the Turks. enucb w . w The Moslems are said to have taken swift reprisals, and to nave suiyreu the revolt by executing all the ring leaders, including numerous priests. OUTLOOK VIEWED WITH ALARM London Observers Alarmed by Stand Taken by Austria. -r v- i ssnMHaJ.) ' w nan MKjxxLjyjt v-- ' the nowers meet to review the Balkan ... . I T t nawln 1 0 situation," - declared J. " ' -editor of the Pall Mall Gazette, shrewd d rennets are convinced mi .u.i. --..Ha nn tha tahl. Trains n im uioii j . u - of srunnowder connect the Balkan the- ater of war wim the explosion of which would crack the map of Europe with yawning fissures." , Mr Garvin s metapnors on nut aerate the gravity of the European . . vtaw k tho tiAst informed - im T nniliin This week elTd gnawiDi, . . . , will be the most anxious xne women and Chancellories of Europe have passed in many years, im miprii crisis at its oeignt i"1 The central source ui oa&xiu ,o military preparation being made by . . i A ,K, nmfnaufl words Of Count Berchtold, foreign minister of that country. It is leu in uowmns street and elsewhere in London that Austria at any moment may eurut" . - j mfinniMit In connection VD Cb 11 T. u with the sanjak of Novlpazar, thus rousing the Russians to greater fury than they are displaying and .making t7" . . m war nlmnlt r prt ui Tl . riuivicui The correspondent today tried to get some idea wnat tjntaau wuum .. Austria and Russia became Involved in a war over the Balkan peninsula, xne government Is lnscruiame on mo u j. Thia In tnlir.h with the ZOV6TXI meat, bo wover. - glvo the impression Are You Men and Young Men Prepared to Buy Your FALL SUIT NOW ? We Want You to Come in and See the x Hart Schaffner & Marx Fall Styles They are far superior from the ordinary run of good clothes. The fit quality of fabrics and styles are in a class" to themselves. Better tailoring, strictly hand-made and absolutely all-wool-steam-shrunk materials. When a Hart Schaffner & Marx suit once fits it always fits; there's no chance for shrinkage. Follow the line of fashion and youU not -go wrong with one of our Fall suits. . A Great Range of Colors and Sizes to Choose From in Grays, Browns, Mixtures and Solid Blues . Suits $20, $25, $30, $35, $40 Overcoats $18 Up Raincoats $15 Up Sam'l Rosenblatt & Go. This Store Is the Home 'of Hart Schaffner & Marx Fine Clothes. N. W. that England would do nothing be yond the limits of diplomacy. It used tn ha ealil that whnlAVftT WAS dOIlfl in Europe must be done only with the sanction of England. "That time is past," said a prominent member of Parliament to the corre- cnnHnt "Austria miffrht OCCUDV Salo onlkl and. Russia Constantinople, thus smashing England s Mediterranean pol icy to bits, without England's dream ing of going to war." PANIC SEIZES OK BERLIN Financial Circles Lose Heads in Be lief War "Will Spread.' BERLIN. Oct. 13. (Special.) In suite of official optimism and assur ance that all the great powers, are united, the German public fears a gen eral European conflagration. The Ber lin Exchange experienced yesterday one of the blackest days in ts existence and the panic continued today on a sensational scale, prices tumbling in ail the markets. Not onlv do speculative and nnnan- cial circles seem to have lost their heads in the belief that the sensational rumors of mobilization in Russia and Austria are true, 4ut panic has also seized the small provincial investors. whose sale orders are pouring in upon the bankers with every mail. The srreat Berlin banks, which con trol $8,000,000,000 of Germany's national fortune, has called meetings of their directors with a view to stopping the panic. CROWN" PRINCE GOES TO FRONT Athens Cheers Departure of Constan- ' " tine for Thessaly. ATHENS. Greece, Oct. 12. Crown Prince Constantine. of Greece, accom panied by his eldest son and. several staff officers, left today to take com mand of the army of Thessaly. Their deDarture was marRed Dy a demonstration of popular enthusiasm. PENNSY ALUMNI GATHERS Members From as Far as Alaska Meet and Elect Officers. Th. .nnnnl meetinor of the Pacific Northwest Alumni Association of the University of Pennsylvania was held last night at tne imperial nowi, m.Th.ra hAinsr nresenu Some from as far distant as Alaska attended and helped to plan for a better year and a more extenaec ors"uuii years to come. Officers were elected, Er. M. B. Mar cellus, of Portland, being the new pres ident; "William B. Hurley, vlcerpresl dent, and Dr. A. N. Creadick, of Port lands secretary. lfr. Hurley Is of the Hurley-Mason Company, of Tacoma. Retiring resioent ur. v. eott, of Seattle, was one of the princi pal speakers of the evening. P. B. Kauffman, of Tacoma, also outlined plans for tne next year. The subject of the Sl.000,000 endow- . e wi,ipli tho alumni of the IUCU1 1 U 1. 14 . . t,M11crinilt th. UnimtTT HftVC UIUVCIBlJ ,,w agreed to raise was broached and a lib eral sum coiiecteo. j Miss Bernard1 Goes East. . n T n nf PMllv.lfi- - anna i-l fnr Olds. WOTtmiUl at King, is now in new im BOWELS SLUGGISH, STOMACH SOUR, GASSY, OPSET? CflSCMBS GREAT! . That awful soreness, -belching of acid and foul gases; that pain in the pit of the stomach, the heartburn, nervousness, nausea, bloating after eating, feeling of fullness, dizziness and sick headaohe,. means your stomach is full of sour bile your liver Is torpid your bowels constipated. It isn't your stomach s fault it Isn't indigestion its biliousness and constipation. Try Casoarets; they Immediately sweeten the stomach, romova the sour, undigested and fermenting food and foul gases; take the excess bile from the liver and carry off the constipated wate matter from the bowels. Then your stomach trouble is ended. A Caacaret tonight straightens you out by morning. 10 CentS. rCASCARETS WORK WHILE YOU SLEEP." Cor. Third and Morrison Sts. DOUI GliASS NAMES REAITY SIAN AS HER ASSAILANT. Nurse, However, Refuses to Sign Complaint Against Him or Make Direct Charge. An elderly real estate dealer and broker, reputed to be wealthy, is named by Miss Dolly" Glass, the nurse who was discovered beaten and. hysterical at Pacific street and Union avenue a week ago, in a statement yesterday to Niles and Hutchins, plain-clothes offi cers. She qualified her accusation by saying she. "thinks" he Is her assail ant and that she "will not know sure ly" -until she sees him. The police have his name. - ( In Her interview' with the officers Miss Glass attributed the attack to Jealousy. She says he has been an ar dent admirer of her since she met him, two months aeo. She declared he has threatened her several times. Beyond this she would not commit bersell ana refused to sign a complaint against him. She declares she would take no action until she had talked with him. Efforts of the police to. locate the accused man at his business address or his home on the East Side proved futile. He has not tried to communi cate with her, she says, since the story of her troubles .was published. From the little Miss Glass has told the officer and a number of small "iadn." thev have established the fact that she disappeared from Portland September 27, resigning ner place in a moving-picture theater on Alder street. She dined with Byron Playfair, 695 Front street, one of .her admirers, that night and left on a late train for Ta coma. She left here, it is believed, without the knowledge of the broker, against whose attentions she com plained to the theater manager a few days before. In xacoma sne was mm by B. H. Swisher, who is said to be her fiancee. She told him she had a position as nurse at Roy, Wash, and he purchased a ticket to that place for her. She did not use the transporta tion he furnished, but paid a cash fare to Portland. Arriving at the Union Depot here, she was met by a man answering the description of the one "she accuses. That night she was found In a dazed condition. In case Miss Glass refuses to prose cute, the officers have no alternative but to drop the case. - i R. G. Pierce Dies. OREGON CITT, Oct. li. (Special.) B, G. Pierce died at Falls View this moraing of paralysis. Mr. Pierce was born in New Jersey, July 8, 1849. He moved to Illinois and from there . to Iowa in 1870. In 1872 he married Miss Jennie Cleveland of Iowa Falls, Iowa Mr. and Mrs. Pierce came to Oregon in 1890. . . Senator Chamberlain to Speak. United States Senator Chamberlain win ha tha nrlnnlnal sneaker at the next meeting of the Woodrow Wilson League of Oregon at the new Lincoln High, School auditorium, yarn ano mar- - New giipm or sicken, Multnomah Hats, and quality Stetson, $4.00 ket streets, next Friday night. The . 1 Regular HOT BLAST Special $17.50 STOVES 13-00 Regular 3 POUND HOT POINT Special $4 00 v Electric Irons ?2 25 Quart Size, YANKEE "aL Ske' Regular 50c, V.i ' RegUlar 9C Special 40 'CLEANER Special 75 Cleans painted and other surfaces. Cleans carpets,, rugs, oil cloth and wall paper, bath tubs, marble and tile floors. Pol ishes silverware, brass, copper and nickel. ' FOURTH ISIIhIS Washington Street HARDWARE CO. ndSlark OUR FACTORY rooH, TO" pit mo;,. r. p'a.d. Here the family Joys are realised. Here to where there ought to be the very height of furniture comfort. LIVING-ROOM, DEN OR LIBRARY DAJTDT LITTLB OAK DESK FOR TUB LADY. Mission style throughout, in any finish you wish. Large drawer. Inner com partments and wide writing shelf. Don't miss putting one in your library. MAKER-TO- 10 tJA USER PRICE.. ....... "9 SALESROOMS 3S AIDER STREET, ODDMlte Olds. Wortman A Kins'.. MY GOES CATARRH AND COLD IN THE HEAD IF YOU USE ELY'S CREAM BALM I (Hears the Head, JNose ana Throat Instantly and Makes You Feel Fine. No matter how bad your catarrh, how much your head aches, or how miser able you are with a cold In the head, nostrils stopped up, hawking, spitting, bad breath, you always get Immediate relief by using Ely's Cream Balm. Don't let your entfre system be poi soned by the deadly catarrh .. germ . Copyright Hut Schafiher & Man' unequaled in style dJO ff .7 .Vi and $5.00. Trimble, $5.00 new political parodies which it will . ... r.ll .1V.. mT1T1ir. TO YOUR HOME SOLID OAffHAGA MNE TABLE. Large top, extra wide low er shelf, roomy drawer and exten sion shelves at each end for magazines. This table is made for real use. You'll appreciate It, it's so handy. MAKER-TO- , PRICE- $14.75 which, sooner or later, causes complete decay of bone .and tissue. The con tinual dropping of the germ-Infected discharge down the throat leads to catarrh of the stomach and bowels. Get a BO-cent bottle of Ely's Cream Balm from your druggist today, and you will get relief a few minutes after using it. Tour headache and cold wfll vanish, and in a short time you will be completely rid of catarrh. Give it to the children for colds and croup. It Is perfectly harmless. Agents. Owl Drug Co.