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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1915)
THE SUNDAY' OREGOXIAX, PORTLANI, 3IAHGH 21. 1913. 5 PEOPLE OF MEMEL RESIST RUSSIANS Petrograd Says Populace Par - ticipated in Street Fight ing in German City. PRZEMYSL TRIES SORTIE Austrian? of Beleaguered Fortress Reported to Have Suffered Enor mous Losses, Without Reach ing Ftusbian Trenches. PfiTItOGRAD (via London). March to. The following official statement from general headquarters was issued tonight; "On the right bank of the Niemen the Germans, after an engagement at Taurog-ffen. have been forced beyond the frontier. Another Russian detachment, dis-playing- an impeiuous offensive, reached vtemei at 8 o'clock Thursday night and after street fighting, in which the in habitants took part, captured the town. "On the left bank of the Niemen, the enemy, as a result of the battle of the last few days, has been compelled to evacuate the township of PUwlskl in the region cast of the Ozero-Dusla-Kopciowo line. "On the rijrht bank of the Narew Xtivor. the engagements still bear the character of partial attacks by the (iermans. In the neighborhood of Mysznfec, in the direction of Kadzldlo, an engagement resulted In complete defeat of the Germans. The latter at tacked in close order and sustained enormous losses. 800 Austrian Prisoner Taken. "On the left bank of the Vistula j there Js no change. J n the Carpathians, according" to supplementary reports, our counter attacks on Thursday in the region of Ciezkowk-e inflicted a serious defeat on the Thirty-ninth Honved Division. In the region south of Gorlice our troops delivered a counter-attack on the Aus trian forces, which were operating en ergetically. "We made more than S00 prisoner. Near Moldowsako we cap tured a fortified height from the uemy. His attempt to recapture this position, as well as his repeated counter-attacks in the region of Tozanka, was unsuccessful. "in Kastem Galicia fighting is pro ceeding north of Xadworna, the enemy occupying a strongly fortified post Uon. Pnem)il Garrison Attempted Sortie. "At Przemysl 'the enemy opened fire ou our positions on Thursday and con tinued all day and the following night. wasting an unprecedented amount of ammunition. At 5 o'clock yesterday morning the garrison made a deter mined sortie In an easterly direction on the Medvka-Bykow-Plezwice front. "At 2 o'clock in the afternoon the enemy, without having succeeded in reaching our trenches, had suffered enormous losses by our fire and was forced back on his own line of forts. "Up to the present we have captured SOOt) prisoners, including 78 officers be longing to the Twenty-third Honved Division, which forms the nucleus of the garrison, together with seven ma chine guns." The taking of Camargo, It is added, gave the convention, forces complete control of the State of Nuevo Leon. Details of recent ftg-htlns about Monterey reached the agency today in a letter from General Felipe Angeles, commander at Monterey. "A large Carranzista force, march ing to attack Monterey, was surprised near Paredon and defeated with heavy losses," the statement says. "On the following day another Carranza force attempting to attack the city from the north and east was repulsed after se vere artillery fire. Perfect order now prevails through the Monterey section." RICH OF YUCATAX LEAVING Shipload of Kefuges Keacb Havana on Cuban Cruiser. HAVANA, March 20. The Cuban cruiser Cuba arrived here today with refugees from Frogreso, State of Yuca tan, Mexico, to which port the warship had been sent to extend aid to Cuban citizens. The Cuba had 457 passengers on board, including 33 persons who xrfr-o.- t ra nnfprrH from thA United States cruiser Ies Moines, which was lying off Progreso. Most of the refugees are Mexicans, including some of the rich est men in Yucatan, and more than half of the total number are women and children. The refugees traveled from Merida to Progreso, port of the former city, on a special train. They report that im mediately after their departure from Merida followers of General Carranza entered the city and began sacking it. They also declare that Carranza ad herents are burning, sacking ".nd shoot ing indiscriminately throughout the State of Yucatan. The French Consul at Progreso and GERMANS BELIEVE IN FINAL TRIUMPH Nation United to Its Last Citi zen, Deeming No Sacrifice Too Great. FIGHTING RESERVE BIG Carolyn Wilson Says Opinion Pre vails In Germany That America -Is Hypocritically Giving Help to the Allies. (Continued From First Page.) Austria. But they care too little for their land to stop their amusements.' In Vienna they say:1 "If my husband, my son, were only safely back, I wouldn't care what happened to Au stria." In Berlin, though, they say: "My 17-year-old son, a volunteer, fell .at Longwy, and my husband . died ' of wounds at Koln, but (with a faint, ap- BIRDSEYE VIEW OF DARDANELLES, SEA OF MARMORA AND CONSTANTINOPLE. ' 1 GUI TO EXCEED NEEDS IXSTITl'TE AT HOME ESTIMATES WORLD'S CROPS FOR 1014-15. beat Froductloa 36,000,000 Quintal Above Average Conaumptloa la Put Mae Yeara Predicted. ROME, March 10. The International Institute of Agriculture has published statistics of the world's comingr crops of wheat, barley, rye, maize and oats, which have particular interest at the present time on account of the war. Compiled from official data supplied by each country, these figures show that the production of wheat in the whole world in 1914-15 will be 1.004. 000.000 quintals (a quintal Is 220.44 pounds). This Is equivalent to 91 as expressed in the scale adopted by the institute, in which 120 is the maximum. The fiRures for rye show 443.000.000 quintals; for barley SOS. 000.000 quin tals; for oats. 6J5.000.000 quintals; for maize, 937,000.000 quintals. The production of wheat for 1914-15 will exceed by J6.000.000 quintals the average consumption of the last five years. Rye this year wi!1 exceed the average consumption for five years by 2.000.00 quintals and maize will be 41.000.000 quintals In excess of the same average. The production of barley will be 1S.000.000 quintals less than the average consumption of the last five years and the production of oats will be 17,000.000 quintals less. Allied Fleets Are Still Wlthla Ibe Narrow Straits, Although Outer Forts Have Been Reduced and Otbera Are Gradually Falling" Once Within the Sea of Jlarnora the Invaders Still Most Contend Against Mines, Shore Guns and Possibly the Turkish Fleet Before Completing- Ita Movement on Constantinople. his family were among the refugees arriving here today. DRESDEN'S CREW DETAINED Chileans Confirm Story That German "Was Attacked In Neutral Waters. VALPARAISO. March 20. The Chil ean cruisers Esmeralda and Ministro Zenteno arrived here today from Juan Fernandez Island with the crew of the German cruiser Dresden, which was de stroyed in an action with British war ships off the island on March 14. The members of the crew will be detained here on board the German steamer York. No official announcement has yet been made as to the result of the in vestigation into the naval fight by the Chilean government. J.ne t.nnean schooner Argentina, however, has ar rived from the scene of, the battle, where she was damasred by shells, and the members of her crew confirm the German version or the encounter, which was that the Dresden was at tacked in Chilean waters, being at an chor in Cumberland Bay on the north side of the island. ILLINOIS PLEADS ECONOMY rotate Government Change Recom mended to Mabe for Efficiency. SFRTNGFIZLD. 111.. March 20. Com plete reorganization of the Illinois rttate Government is recommended In a report of a legislative committee on state efficiency and economy, made pub lic here today. The Kxecutlve Depart ment of tha United States Government la taken providing a general out line for tha proposed system, which wo-uM comprise tea main depart men ta. Objection mad to the present ar renxTeraefits are that It duplicates sal aries, positions and work, and makes tor InWTiWaiu-t, besides burdening the Governor wltrt fnore detail than pos slhly can p l.-ko.l after by one man. Tile iHtfielativ committee -was an ftointed 1 months age end has been aav Misted by John A, Patriae, professor of political s"ifl4 at the University of Illinois. lie irofmrod tha report. WASH1KGTGNASKED TO AID tCijttaHs4 r r"lri Fnm.J fuii retreat faard tha Burrougn MauBtain. Piedrae ticgras is quiet, but without cemmuaieation. with tha outh. No recent news has been re ceived at PfeoTaa Hegraa from Pabina. A statement issued tonight by tsa convention agency flare reported tha citui'e uf C-a.'ssaraga, border city, between Fi;sq ijreaa and Mataraoraa, avith t-Iis-ik ru.'iaoc. adding that tha defeated (?3?uas4 troops continued laeir HijSf toward Hatataoras, wits contention troops in hot pursuit. Hesrx iencs Indicated. "rre iranberj pf grounded ata ar riving Is VaUaoru, indicating heavy tosses to the 6arr3sxa followers." the statement caaliajc&s, and It predict iSj-) fail of Miiimgnw wittxtn- a imm day. STRIKERS DELAY VESSELS Government Service Hampered Again hy Liverpool Goalheavers. LIVERPOOL, via. London. March 20. The strike of coal heavers at the Liverpool docks was renewed today. Two thousand men quit work and in consequence sailings of several vessels, some of them in the government serv ice, were delayed. The men struck last month, tying up sailings from Liverpool for several days, but returned to work March 3. when it was announced that a settle ment had been reached. DEPUTY COLLECTOR NAMED Charles 1". Miller Will Aid in Sup pressing Traffic In Opium. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU. Wash ington. March 20. Charles F. MiUer. of Portland, has been appointed deputy collector of Internal revenue for the Portland district and will be assigned to duty under the Harrison anti-narcotic law, suppressing traffic In cocoa leaf and opium derivatives. Samuel B. Foster, of Portland, was appointed a veterinary inspector of the Bureau of Animal Industry and will be at Portland. Peter Hanson, of Mc MinnvlUe, received similar appointment and will be stationed at South Omaha, Neb. MARSHALL AT EXPOSITION (0mtlnnd From First Pa.) represent the President at the exposi tion 1 Tha Vioe-President will have a busy time of it during the eomlng week, al most every hour of which will be orewded with luncheons, dinners, recep tions, dances and military inspections and reviews. Tha meeting between ma vioe.rresi dent and Governer Johnson, who were rival candidates fer Vtoe-President in 1811, was their first, The meeting was private and laBted but few minutes. As te the eenversatien, the Vice President said: "Wo enly exchanged a raw broadsides aBd neither ef us hit the target. We forge ta talk about tha 1813 campaign. It was the first time I ever met tha Governer before wo were like ships that pass each other in tha night,' Pupils' Work Displayed. KELSO. Wash.. March 88. (Special.) Another excellent display of the prod ucts of the Kelsa schools was made yesterday afternoon at tha exhibit ef the Pallia building at the annual Par ents' day meeting. Tha building was thronged a!i afternoon b? paresis and patrons oi the school, who wett loud in their praise of the work feat is be ing accomplished. An exhibit of prod uct of the high school and grade man na) training decrtmoo citraotad par. Ucclar nrtewttotv pealing smile) it Is for the sake of our country." Wounded Crowd Vienna Cafes. . In Vienna, of course, one sees much more real war than any city in Ger many. It is there that all the wounded come. The only decent hospitals in Austria are there, and the accommo dations in ambulances are so poor that trailers full of . wounded are hitched on all the streetcars. The cafes seem overflowing with poor devils in enormous bandages or cripples hobbling about on crutches. At the stations you see thousands of autos coming back from the front to the repair shops, and a hard job it is to repair them, too, with the shortage of rubber. None of this appears in the German city. The wounded are kept out of sight until they are almost well. Of ficers in peace uniform fill the streets. Soldiers change the watch and do the goose step as of yore. Custom, habit, routine keep Germany almost un changed. Germany Has Large Reserve. The thing which I felt most marked ly, the thing which I speak of most frequently now that I am Dack, Is the enormous number of men on the streets the well of .fighting material which has not even been tapped yet. Ger many exhausted! Why, it can say with perfect confidence, large as have been its losses, disappointing as have been its defeat, careful as has been its conservation, "I haven't begun yet." With a small exception o a portion of East Prussia and a piece of Alsace, the war has been entirely waged on alien territory. Is it any wonder that, almost to Warsaw, not many miles north of Paris, and with several army corps now attacking the Serbs, the Germans say with amazement: "Do you really mean to tell us that the allies consider they are winning?" The Germans know what is going on outside and they like to talk auout ;t. They are not fooled into believing all sorts of silly, inefficient lies, as the French are. They have ill the papers, the magazines and literature written on the . war by all countries, and. what's more, they read it. Hatred of English Intense. Their attitude toward ' the different nations deserves a paragraph ox two. England they hate that'B simple enough; those three words, unadorned. represent the unified feeling of I for get how many million people. This hate has been well cultivated, too, by the government. There was a "movie" in Frankfort showing the soldiers on Christmas day. It had been obviously posed about seven miles outside of Berlin, but was ac cepted as actual. The English and Ger man soldiers moved freely between the trenches, exchanged gifts, etc, and finally, after they have all gone down Into their trenches again, a German soldier stands up and lifts his glass to the English, calls out, "Tour nealth" and falls back dead with an English bullet in his heart. A little thin?, that film, but. shown Dandruff Surely Destroys the Hair Girls If you want plenty of thick, beautiful, glossy, silky hair, do by all means get rid of dandruff, for it will starve your hair and ruin it if you don't. It doesn't do much good to try to brush er wash it out. The only sure way to got rid ef dandruff is ta dissolve it, then you destroy it entirely, To do this, get about feur ounces of rJinry liquid arvon; apply it at night when re tiring; use enough te moisten the seals and rub it in gently with the finger tips. By raerning, mes it not all of y ur dandruff will be gene, and three erfeur mere applications wiii completely dis solve and entirely destroy every single sign and trass ef )t. Tgu will find, toa, that ail itching and digging ef the $cal wiil step, and your hair will leek and fsei a hun dred times batter. Yea ean g"et liquid arvon at any drug store. It is inexpen sive and four-ounces if aij yen will need, no mattar haw much 'dandruff yon have. This simple ramady saver lailav-ad-a. !nseveral' thousand playhouses in Ger many, it can do much to augment the ever-increasing hatred. Toward the French there is a pity and a real tenderness which I should never have believed If I had not seen it myself. It makes the French simply furious to have mo tell them this; it hurts their pride so, for they have cul tivated a healthy hatred of all things Prussian ever- since 1870, and this friendliness seems to them to smack of condescension. France Regarded aa Catspaw. The Germans feel that France never was and never will be a warlike nation, though one of the biggest surprises of the war to them has been the remark able military qualities of the French. They consider that France has fallen neatly into England's little scheme and Is sacrificing itself for England's com mercialism. "They will not believe us when we tell them that we like them. We always have, and admired them, much as a man admires a deft, delicate-fingered woman whom he can never hope to copy. We don't want to be fighting them, and when we take them prisoners we always share everything we have with them." This is absolutely true, as I find from scores of released prisoners and from Debnle who have made an examination of the camps. There was a splendid lit tle incident which came up about a week ago, of which little was made in tho papers, but which I thought un usual. . Kaoul Dovidot. a prisoner from Mou- iins, got word that his mother was des perately ill. mainly from worry, and that nothing would save her unless she could see him. Dovidot wrote to the Kaiser himself, promising to return be fore March 1 if he could get oermls sion to see his mother. -The permission was granted. He was escorted to Lin dau and set free. Russians Held In Contempt. He stayed about 10 days in Moulins and had already returned to Germany when I came through Llndau on the 17th. for I talked with several Swiss guards who had delivered him to the German soldiers. A humane little act, that, and not nearly enough spoken about. Toward Russia the Germans have more or less indifference. "An ignorant lot." they say; "don't know what they're fighting for and awfully poor fighters." Toward Belgium they seem to have a grudge. They say that Belgium has deliberately and falsely besmirched their good name before the world. 1 don't know anything that "makes a Ger man madder than to whisper the word "atrocities." If they don't start argu ing with you about the necessity of punishing the enormous number of franctireurs, they regale, you with sickening stories of the horrors of the Cossacks in East Prussia. "Six of one and a half dozen of the other." I kept saying to myself. - Sentiment Against America High. The feeling against America is run ning very high. It was never higher than those days when I was in Jail. A man in Berlin in the government service said to me seriously the day after I came out: "Perhaps the luckiest thing possible. Miss Wilson, was that your arrest did not become known, for there would un doubtedly have been a public demon stration, and the officials might have had to keep you weeks. You probably feel that England is exaggerating the sentiment for its own ends; so it is. But the feeling is there. Merchants are refusing to buy Ameri can goods; American wares are taken out of the windows: people speaking English are disliked for their own sake now, rather than for the language. I was talking on the street with a man from the consulate, and a German came up and plumped himself directly in front of us. "Stop talking that accursed lan guage." he cried. My friend in a mild voice said: "But we are Americans." "So much the worse." he growled as we passed on. Diplomatic Problem Delicate. . The American diplomats have a deli cate problem to handle. The cartoons in the morning papers represent Uncle Sam in various forms of devotional prayer, beseeching God for peace, but with the hand that isn't covering his eyes he Is slipping tons of ammunition across to the allies. In all the time I was In Germany 1 never heard an estimate of the length of the war. "We will fight until we a r a iHplnHniM 11- until th.to ia ,1 n f n German soldier left one' of the - two things." The Germans expect their Poland campaign to be successfully finished by the end of March, finished enough to allow them to spare huge forces to make a break through Alsace. They in tend to sit calmly on the line they have 'The Stem-Bloch Smart Clothes for Spring Are Here! Fresh, new patterns colorings soft and pleasing styles full of smartness with the characteristic Stein-Bloch refinement. Faultless tailoring the same perfection of detail that has helped Stein-Bloch clothes maintain their supremacy for sixty years. We'll be glad to show you the new models; drop in tomorrow and see them. $20 to $35 BEN SELLING Morrison at Fourth Dunlap Hats $5 Brewer Hats $3 drawn across France until such good time as it pleases them to take the of fensive. Those are their ideas. Tw.i. inaM V. o Keen Tirm vv: their defeats have been humiliating; their business, nas sunerea terrioiy; inejr must take precautions to avoid starva tion; but in spite of all these things i- m .- 1 nrttr fi-.ioh pnnftHAnt. buoyant. If It is to Germany's exhaus tion that you are looKing ior me eiiu of this war, you will grow weary In the waiting. ONE IN AUT0 IS KILLED Three of Family Badly Hurt by Acci dent Near North Powder. LA GRANDE, Or, March 20. (Spe cial.) Myron. Riggs died at North Pow der last night as the result of injuries received during the day, when an auto mobile he and his family were driving to Baker tipped over. Mr. Riggs' son, Edgar, and sister, Mrs. Prince, were badly cut and bruised, but will recover. Charles McCrary, a witness, affirms that the road was cupped at that point and in trying to get out of the rut while going at a good speed Mr. Riggs struck a sagebrush at the side of the road. It turned his front "wheel and the machine toppled completely around and over on its side and again upon Its wheels. "Mr. McCrary hurried to North Powder and obtained a physician. published by the Vossischo Zeitung con cerning un insurrection in Sudan and an English defeat has proved to be un true," says an Overseas News Agency item made public here tonight. A dispatch from Berlin on March IS said that a German merchant who had recently returned from Egypt was au thority for the assertion that the whole of Sudan, including Khartum and also parts of. Nubia, were in possession of the Dervishes. These travelers, whose statements were published in the Vos sische Zeltung, also described an en gagement near Fashoda last December m which, he said. General iiawiey, oi the British army, and other officers. together witii almost 2000 men, lost their lives. VERA FIGNER IS ARRESTED Russians Take Noted Socialist. De spite Permit for Return. PARIS, March 20. Vera Figner, one of the most widely known leaders of Russian Socialism, has been arrested at Unghenl, near the Roumanian frontier, according to Humanite, although her brother, an artist, had obtained permis sion from the Russian Minister of the Interior, for her to return to her native land from Switzerland. Vera Figner, who Is 74 years old, has been constantly under the surveillance of the Russian police since her release from Schlusselburg fortress, where she was confined for 20 years for partici pating in the plot against the life of Alexander II. WITH THE FRENCH WOUNDED The Woman's Sacrifice SUDAN UPRISING UNTRUE Berlin News Agency Finds German Newspaper Was In Error. BERLIN. March 20, by wireless to Sayville, L. I. "The report recently HOOD RIVER SPRAYING ON Weather Permits Orchard ists to Get .Most of Plowing Done. HOOD RIVER, Or March 20. (Spe cial.) On account of the Rood weather for the past three weeks, local orchard ists havj been able to do most of their Snrlne nlowinc. Early spraying is in progress this week. Most of the ranch ers have planted their eany garaens. Every Indication points to good crop prospects in the Hood River Valley. On account of the new trees coming into bearing, the local apple crop should be of about the same tonnage, if not a little heavier than last season, despite the fact that this is supposed to be an off year in Hood River. The crop last year was approximately 1220 carloads. INSURANCE SURVEY IS ON Hoqulam Expects to Re Granted Lowr Fire Insurance Rates. HOQUIAM. Wash., March' 20. (Spe cial.) After negotiations extending over a number or montns. a crew ui four men representing the Washington Survey and Rating Bureau yesterday hp imn makinsr a resurvey ot Hoqulam with a view of reducing fire tnsurance rates. The survey, which Is the first since 1908. will require about 10 days to complete. Before the resurvey was ordered the rating buerau agents made a careful investigation and reported that no city in the United States possesses a better water sumilv for nre-nghting than Hoqulam, Persia Orders Russians Out. BERLIN. March 20. (By Wireless to Savville.) "The Persian Government has called on Russia to evacuate the Province of Azerbaijan (Northwest Persia)." says an Item given out by the Overseas News Agency nere tonignt. LIBERAL CREDIT: This Store Extends It to Buyers of Furniture and Home furnishings And you are not charged an exorbitant price here for any article or articles you might purchase on credit terms or for cash, nor do we apply interest on credit or charge accounts. Our low-expense location and operation make possible the reasonableness of the prices throughout our entire new stock of Dependable Furniture, Carpets, Rugs, etc Prove it to your own satisfaction by coming here and comparing quality and prices. This Is the Final Week of the Big Sale coM Gas Ranges Twn carloads of new Steel Ranees and Gas Ranges will arrive here in the next few days. That's the reason for this hurrying-out of our present line of samples and a few duplicates. Buy during the final week if you wish to place a modern and dependable wood, coal or gas range in your home at a price that means a great saving. Buck's Other Gas Ranges ?14 Buck's Single-Oven, Three-Burner dJQ Af Gas Range, now tBO.t J25 Buck's Double-Oven, Four-Burn- dj J tZf er Gas Range, now J" J35 Ideal Superior Gas Range, double oven, four burners, sanitary base, canopy top, 2 J 50 J42 Ideal Superior Gas Range, with JJO'T Cf 3 ovens, 4 burners and sanitary base isi f UJ $42 Ideal Superior Gas Range, with double oven, four burners, sanitary base 4tO7 CfJ , and canopy top, now '-' '"v 4S Buck's Double-Oven Gas Range, four burners, canopy top. sanitary base, white 4JQQ Of enameled doors "Wf'0" Buck's M Ranges $40 Buck's Imperial Range, with COO sanitary base and 18-inch oven, now PsIiOiw $40 Buck's Victoria Range, with 18- COQ Of inch oven, now POAiJ $47.50 Buck's Imperial Range, with too Ati polished top and 16-inch oven, now JOArtJ $52.50 Buck's Cascade Range, with polished top, splash back, sanitary base and 16- 4JJOQ 7C Inch oven, now iSftJU I J The $55 .Cascade Range, with 18- 4JJ4.0 f( Inch oven, now H'-t,JJ $52.50 Buck's Cornell Range, with polished top. sanitary base and 16-ineh oven, 75 Prices Way Down on These Odd Chiffoniers j 1 t. buuu rAiir,nas jr . cn i , . ....... ... . $J7.B0 Chiffonier, quarter-sawed 1 f r olden oax, (Joioniat pattern .. w w 32.50 Colonial Chiffonier 4J1 Q Cf of blrdseve maple J 1 ivJVJ $42 Chiffonier of birdseye 4fcO 1 tCrt manle. now Wlu $40 Colonial Chiffonier'of dJOl Cf mahogany, now Js-lOVF (45 Large Colonial Chlf- COfi Crj fonler, Circassian walnut, J-WJV (66 Large Colonial Chif fonier, birdseye maple ; $32.50 Your Old Furniture Accepted as Part Payment for New Goods I It rx" FURNITURE CO. GRAND AVE. and EAST STARK Our Location Meant Low Prices Paris. Marvh n. &:3o V. M. Away from the battlei lM one uvea war utrlpped of Its Klaniuur. W tlie heroic work of Tiurttes who arc on duty day and niRht. Thorc in demotion, self sacrifice, suffering patriot 1mu quali ties which only a Kicat war and its terrible consequences can lnni'ire to th highest development. Thw women c ery wliere ar helping and everywhere on sees self-sacrifice nd devotion to country. The women of the United Stales do not know how fortunate they arc. ltr there are plenty of women who suffur in silence, whoo atruiiKth Is out of proportion to their aml.it ion. Their hands are tied by pome chronic din ease common- to womankind; that weak back, aWompauiud by pain hcr or there, extreme nervouanKri. nlreples ness, 'maybe fainting- pelln or spaa in x are all signals of distress Tor women. Mhe may bo growing from girlhood into womanhood, passing- from woman hood to motherhood, and later Buffer ing from that change which Icavca no many wrecks of women. Al any or all of these periods of a woman n life the should take a tonic and nervine, pre scribed for just such eases by a phypi clan of vast experience in the dtiteuMca of women. Dr. rieree Kuvorltt Pro scription has pucc-PMsf ully treated more cases the past fifty yenra than any other known remedy. AVheii you feel dull, headachy, backache, dizzy, or per haps hot flashes, there is nothing you can accomplish, nothing you cnn en Joy. You can find permanent relief in Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescript n. It Is sold by medicine dealers, or trial bo by mail from Dr, Pierce, Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N". on receipt of &0 cents, or one dollar for large, box. Adv. IF KIDNEYS AND BLADDER BOTHER Take Sails lo Flush Kidneys and Neutralize Irritating Acids. Kidney and bludder weakness result from uric acid, says a noted authority. The kidneys lilter this acid from the blood and pass It on to the bladder, where it often remains to Irritate and inflame, causing a burnlnx, scalding sensation, or selling- up an Irritation at the neck of the bladder, obliging- you to seek relief two or three times during; the nlxht. The autlerer la In constant dread, the water passes some times with a scalding sensation and la very profuse; again, there la difficulty In avoiding It. Bladder weakness, most flka call it. because they can't control urination. While It Is extremely annoying and sometimes very putTiful, this is realty one of the most simple ailments to overcome. Get about four ounces of J ad Salts from your . pharmacist and take a tablespounf ul in a frlass of water before breakfast, continue this for two or three days. This will neutralize the acids In the urine no It no longer Is a source of irritation to the bladder and urinary organs which then act normally again. Jad Salts is Inexpensive, harmless. and Is made from the acid of grapes and lemon Juice, combined with lithlu. and is usbd by thousands of folks who are subject lo urinary disorders caused by uric acid Irritation. Jad Salts la splendid for kidneys and causes Do bad effects whatever. Here you have a pleasant, efferves cent llthia-water drink, which uulckiy relieves bladder troubl --Adv. How to Make Your Hair Beautiful Ten Mlaotes H Tremeat VfrU Wonders, Stops r aillna iiair, irrnins Scalp and Dandruff and Makes the Hair Koft, Rrllllnnt, I.uatrona and Klnffy. rwter than all the so-called "hair tonics" in the world is a simple old fashioned home recipe conntMina; of plain Bay Rum, Lavona de Compose), and a little Menthol Crystals. I he.a three mixed at home in a tew minutes, vnrk wonders with anv scalp. Try It Just one nisrht and see. Get from your druss'st 2 ox. Lavona, o. Bay Rum and H drachm Menthol Crystals, liis solve the Crystals In the Bay Rum and pour In an 8 o. bottle, 'i nen aua h TjtvnniL hake well and let it stand for an hour before uslna. Apply it by putting- a little of the mixture on soft f-loth. Draw this cloth slowly throuali the hair, taking- Just one small strand at a time. This cleanses the hair and scalp of dirt, dust and excessive oil and makes the hair dMiprhtfully soft, lus trous and fluffy. To stop the hair from falling- and to make it grow analn mb the lotion briskly Into the ealp with the flnirer tips or a medium stiff brunh. Applv nlKht and morning. A few day. i. .! vnu will not find a single looi-f or straKRlinr hair. They will be locked on vour scalp as ttirht as a vine. Dan druff will disappear and ltchinK -aiw. You will nna rine oo-wn? u-" nir .rvuttliK up all over yo'ir irniij. nn.i Is new lialr will crow with wonderful .ptlit Anv druKxI-tt ean aell r be al-o-ra. Th proscription Is very (iMxrnt aud kwew vf vothtnjr rfctl aui it eertaiu la tu wil-ii.