TIIE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, OCTOBER 17, 1915. APPROVAL IS GIVEN PLANS FOe DEFENSE Army to Have 665,000 Men in . Time of Need, With Conti nentals and Militia. HEILIG STAR ADMITS HIS START IN DRAMATIC CLUB Oscar Figman, Who Has Neither Taken H"nsh Money," Nor Receives' Fab ulous Offers From Movies, Has Many Hobbies. NAVAL BOARD IN SESSION Two Battle Cruisers, Two Dread nought and 25 Submarines to Be Built at Once, Accord ing to Programme. Washington, Oct. 16. The Admin lstration programme for National de fense to be recommended to the forth coming? session of Oomcress. proposing total expenditure on the Army and tne .Navy next year of about $408,000,090, "was practically completed last night. Secretary Garrison's plan, approved by tne President, calls tor an Increase of J75.090.000 in the War Department's annual appropriation to be usett for augmenting the regular Army to 140, O00 men and the creation of a new con tinental army of 400,000 men, which. togeiner with the militia of 125,000, would give the United States a mili tary force In time of need of 665.000. Approval also was given today to the proposal of Secretary Daniels and the general board of the Navy for a live-year naval construction pro Kramme to cost $500,000,000, giving the -vy J new dreadnoughts and six battle cruisers, as well as more than 70 submarines, 60 destroyers, 10 scout cruisers ana a host of auxiliary ships. Navy Board Has Late Session. Secretary Daniels and members of the general board were in conference until late tonight, discussing the exact numoer or snips to be recommended for the first year and a scheme for equal izing: the expenditures over the five- year period. The programme for the first year which seemed likely of adoption called for two battle cruis ers, two dreadnoughts, 25 submarines, 1? destroyers and three scout ships. At present the Brooklyn Yard Is the only one equipped to build battleships. The Navy estimates this year will in clude provision for construction of adequate slips at Philadelphia for this purpose. The slip built at Philadelphia for construction of a Navy transport was so designed as to permit its ex tension. Army Programme Snmmarlied. Secretary Garrison has carefully Ruarded his plan for strengthening the military establishment and or ganizing a great continental army for aeiense ana practically nothing was known of it until tonight. The pro gramme proposes: First Regular Army. 140,000 men. an increase of more than 50,000 men In the present establishment. Second A co-ntinental Army, 400,000 strong, enlisted for six years for serv ice within the continental United states. . These men would serve, two month a year for the first three years with the colors, undergoing a period or intensive training. A remaining three years they would be on furlough, sunject to call in yme or need. It Is estimated thrtt 40,000 of the 540, 000 men thus provided for would be non-combatants in the medical corps or other auxiliary forces not included In the fighting line. National Onnrd to Be Strengthened. Behind this Army would be the Na tional Guard, now Some 125,000 strong, but whose numbers might be substan tfonally augmented by the organization of the continental Army. The plans contemplate the transrer of such Na tional Guard officers and- men as de fire it into the continental Army, and more liberal treatment of the guards men would be nrged and increase of these state forces encouraged in every possible way. Increases in the regular establish ment contemplated are: Infantry 10 regiments. Field artillery four regiments. Coast artillery 52 companies. Engineer corps 15 companies. Aviation corpse two detachments. All of these new commands would be organized at peace strength. Adequate KUIM'lies of small arms and field guns and howitzers and of reserve ammuni tion for the enlarged establishment would be sought. Citizen Army to Be Basis. The plan is erected on the theory that the Nation must depend upon a citizen Army', largely of a volunteer character. In time of war. There are many hun dreds of thousands of young men, it is said, who have both the time and In clination to devote at least two months a year to rigid and intensive military training, aid the continental Army would be composed of these, leaving to the National Guard those citizens whose responsibilities prevent their de voting more than one night a week or so to military service. KAISER LOSES 2 WARSHIPS British Submarines lieiiorteil Victo rious Off Denmark. COPENHAGEN'. Oct. 16 A British suomarir.e torpedoed and sank a Ger man destroyer this morning at the southern entrance to The Sound, a nar row strait between Denmark and Swe den, which connects the Baltic with the North Sea. A great explosion fol lowed the striking of the torpedo and the destroyer foundered immediately. Dispatches to the evening news papers here say hat a second German torpedo boat was sunk by the British submarine E-19 near Faxe. Accord ing to these telegrams a German flo tilla, ojio boat of which sank "Wednes day, returned yesterday with rein forcements and fishernu-n heard an other explosion aid saw a torpedo boat disappear. Thereupon the flotilla hur ried away. GUNMEN ROB BOY OF $23 rilling Station Held Vp and Cash Register Is Killed. Two men held up the Standard Oil filling station at Kast Eleventh street and Broadway early Friday night and obtained $23. after forcing H. K. Hub bard, the boy in charge, to open the cash" register. Hubbard told the police that lie was lone in the station v when the men entered and asked for matches. Hub bard nays he reached in his pocket and was immediately covered with a revolver in the hand of the smaller robber. "Get back trt the comer and keep quiet or I'll shoot." Hubbard says ths man told him. Then the larger man tried to open the register, but could not. Hubbard was then foreed to work the. machine, he says. f K eufhfnl K,n h ft htMim. Atchison Globe. Toufhful enthusiasm makes its Meas urements without yardstick or tape. BT LEOXB CASS BAER, OSCAR FIGMAN has not yet taken 'hush money." That is his own original term for salary as a motion-picture artist. Not bad. eh? Also he ia the first actor I have ever met who has not received fabulous offers to pose in the movies. "And why?" I asked. -"Why, nobody asked tne. sir, she said,'" misquoted the comedian. "loo see, not one of the big film concerns has approached me with flattering offers to immortalize my classic, not to say classy, outlines on the screen, and since they do not come to me, De sure 1 am not going to seek them out. If I wait for them It means more money when the call does come. un, yes. i nave my ear to the ground, so if they are hunting for me I can holler." Seriously, however, if Mr. Figman wanted to take up the movie work all he would have to do is to tell big brother Max about it- Max and his wife, Lolita Robertson, are big folk in the picture world you know. And Max got brother Oscar his very first job in theatricals. Max was already established as a calcium favorite while young- Oscar was holding down various grand jobs. First he was an office boy for a big jewelry concern and for the magnificent salary of $2 a week he washed $200,000 worth of diamonds every day. "I got so sick looking at diamonds I quit." he says. Then an emporium in fashions called him and in the women's notions the Figman artistic temperament simmered, until a real estate firm recognized genius in the budding and gave him a Job real-estating. All this time Oscar was rehearsing every week with a young men's dramatic club. They presented plays even going to such lengths as writing them as well I wanted to leave out about his springing from an amateur dramatin rinh i seems like encouraging vice. But how else can I tell the story of Oscar Figman? He shamelessly admits spring ing from a dramatic club right into an important role in his brother's com pany. And before his first ,.j ended he had played every role in the company. "Occasionally I run across some of my associates in the amateur art of my real estate davs ana T at them in amazement. too many of them hava Vit i-j fat. smug look," says Mr. Figman "And their invariable excuse is -Won yu see Oscar I'm married and 1 I - - ' :: -f: - ; . , Oscar Figman, Comedian at Hellic, Wno Admits Start In Dramatic Club. don't have time for other things. And it always makes me sing anew that old ballad. Gee. but I'm glad I m free. Mr. Figman ia absolutely urtique in his position as the only comedian in cap tivity who has never been married. He lives with his brother Adolph and his sister Rose in a great, big house on Long Island, right on the beach. , His fad is making mission furniture. He designs all sorts of things from grand father clocks to beds big enough and strong enough to sleep in. He hasn't gone into it so extensively that Grand Rapids, Mich., is sitting up to notice, but he's some gay little carpenter, take it from one who saw pictures of things he'd made. BANK FORGER TAKEN R. A. Henry Surrenders at Woodburn for Crime Here. $1287 CHECK IS CASHED Part of Money Sauandered Tor Dress Suit and Silk Hat In dictment for Former Embez zlement Still Standing. Richard AHenry, aged 25, wanted in Portland for passing a forged check for $1287.43 on the First National Bank, was arrested at Woodland, Wash., Fri day while on his way back to Port- and to give himself up. F. S. Alkus. manager of the Burns Detective Agency, brought Henry back, and he is in the County Jail. Mr. Alkus caused the arrest of Henry at Woodland, where he formerly was cashier of a bank and City Recorder. after Henry, on Thursday night, tele phoned an assistant cashier of the First National Bank of Portland that he was in Woodland and asked that tte Burns agency, which he knew to be on his trail, should be notified. This telephone message came about mid night. When the Burns man arrived it Kaiama, the county seat of Cowlitz County, in which Woodland is located. he found Henry in the custody of Sheriff Studebaker. Woodland Indictment Stands. Henry is under indictment in Wood land for the theft of city funds while City Recorder. This charge has been allowed to drag, however, and it was understood that it was to be dropped. Henry's father having come from Mich- gan and made partial restitution. At the same time the father bought the young man an automobile truck in Portland, and Henry, his wife and their 3-year-old baby went to Tilla mook to live, Henry having secured work trucking for Stone & Hicks, con-' tractors there. It was a check pur porting to be' signed by this concern which he passed on the First National penitentiary doors, and that she would next hear of him when his body was recovered from the bottom of the river. He wrote another "suicide" letter to a friend at Woodland. Wash. He- then started north, purchasing a ticket for Woodland, but going on through to Seattle and thence to Van couver, B. C, from which city he pur chased a ticket to Duluth, Minn., over I the Canadian Pacific and Soo lines. At uaigary he turned back, reaching Woodland again via Spokane and Ta coma. His movements were traced by means of the hatbox. which- was so out of the ordinary as to excite the pecu liar interest of train porters, taxicab drivers and hotel bellboys on the route between Portland and Vancouver and in that city. He traveled under aliases. . Wife Has Checking Privilege. " The account which Henry had at the bank was subject both to his own checks and those of his wife. Mrs. Henry was notified of the fact that there was money in the bank in her husband's suicide letter to her, and be fore the forgery was discovered she checked out all the balance, amount ing to about $300. She has since repaid the balfk.. Henry surrendered more than $300 in money and personal prop erty when arrested. Henry last Spring won an automobile in a subscription contest conducted" by a Portland daily newspaper. Recently he moved his family to Portland from Tillamook and established a home at 1100 East Market street. w ! t . . - - ' J t f , I - - 1 Richard -t. Henry, Who Cashed Kora-ed Cheek for nd letter S nrrendcred Himself. Bank on October 4. During the past three or fonr months he has had an account at the First National and had deposited several checks drawn by Stone & Hicks in his favor. Conse quently when he presented the check for $12S7.43 on October -4 the amount was placed to his credit. "Suicide Letters' Written. According to Mr. Alkus. Henry then went out and spent about $300 in cloth- iTtff and jewelry, paying for it with cheeks on the First National. His pur chases. Included a dress suit, silk hat and a leather ease for tfr hat. The same day he wrote bis wife, who was visiting friends af Albany, that ha. had committed a crime, that he was facing THEFTS LAID TO BOYS HIGH SCHOOL. YOUTHS SUSPECTED OF MISDEEDS SOT ADMITTED. Detectives Who Received Bartrlary Con fessions Seek to Learn Foil Operations of Band. That the three Lincoln High School boys and the one Glencoe School stu dent arrested Thursday by City De tectives Hellyer and Tackaberry on burglary charges have been implicated in ''jobs" other than those to which they have confessed is now thought probable by the detectives as the re sult of evidence they secured yester day. The detectives plan to push tho work in order to learn definitely the full extent of the operations of the youthful band. After making confessions to the de tectives Thursday the boys. Harry Bos ton, Arthur Durbin and Harry Waldron, of Lincoln High School, and Milton Prink, of the Glencoe School, were turned over to the Juvenile Court and released on their own recognizance. Probably the heaviest loser at the hands of the band, according to the de tectives, is Charles Moore, elevator starter in the Yeon building, whose houseboat near Windemuth was broken into some time about the last of July or the first of August. The burglars took various articles of clothing from the place and a watch, a valuable shav ing outfit and a gun. The gun was secured in a second-hand store some time ago, but at that time its theft was not known to be connected with the arrested boys. Some of the stolen goods which the boys haa in their possession has been recovered, but the majority of it is be lieved to have been sold. VILLA REPORTED KILLED News of Death at Casas Grandes Heaclies El Paso. British Take 24 ticrman Trawlers. LONDON, Oct. 13. That 21 more German trawlers have been captured and taken into Grimsby since Septem ber 15 is disclosed in an official state ment printed in the London Gazette tonight. Gallipoli Venture Costly. LONDON. Oct- I. British casualties in the Dardanelles up to October i were officially announced today to have been 1S.S57 killed, of whom 1185 were officers, and 77,942 wounded, a total of yty,t99. Casualties to the Australian New Zealand contingent were 29,121. This pnnouncement does not take into account the French losses. Turk ish casualties in the same time are de scribed as enormous. Lord Milner last night, in the House of Lords, characterized the expedition as hopeless and suggested Its abandonment-. Lord Lanseowne responded for the government that it was impos sible to give any promise that the troops would, continue in tls Darda nelles operation or -would De withdrawn. FIELDS FOR LUMBER TRADE POINTED OUT National Association Official Advises Manufacturers to Study Demands. drugs) 0J School Tickets at Special Discounts This Week Hand Bags, Picture Frames Greatly Reduced (jfflgft UNITED EFFORT IS NEEDED Product Is Declared Superior to Steel, Iron and Concrete for Numerous- Purposes Modern Salesmanship Is T7rged. How to extend the trade of the lum ber industry was the problem that re ceived 'earnest attention from a large body of lumber manufacturers and builders at the Chamber of Commerce Friday night. The question was discussed from various angles and it was universally agreed that the lumber business must be treated to modern merchandising methods if the increased U6e of lum ber that the Industry now demands is attained. E. A. Sterling, manager of the trade extension department of the National Lumber Manufacturing Association, was the principal speaker. His utterances were supplemented by those of P. S. Ridsdale, representing the American Forestry Association, and C. J. Hogue. a Portland architect. W. It. Mackay presiaed. Mr. Sterling emphasized the necessity for, united effort on the part of the lumbermen to impress the public with the superiority of lumber for many pur poses. He declared that the lumbermen themselves have been ignorant- of the true conditions surrounding their in dustry. How. then, is the public to know what are the uses and the possibilities to which lumber can be put? is the question that he implied by his dis cussion. Stndy of Demand Vrtred. Mr. Sterling explained that the pur poses of the National organization are, first, to gather all the statistics and information relating to the lumber in dustry that may be essential in in creasing the demand for lumber prod ucts. When all such data are available a systematic campaign of publicity will be undertaken. In fact, the dis semination of information already Is under way. Before the use of lumber can be in creased, he pointed out, it is necessary to know why the use has decreased. He said that the decrease is due only partially far less than popularly Imagined to the general business de pression. "The industry." he Insisted, "suffers from causes entirely outside of, and independent of, the general business situation." He continued with the assertion that the lumber market has been suffering by the fierce competition of substitutes iron, steel and concrete being prin cipal among them and blamed the lumbermen themselves for apathy and lack of aggressiveness in maintaining their prestige against this class of competition. Wood Best In Many Fields. He advised his hearers, however, that it is unwise and undesirable to com bat the invasion of steel and concrete for many special uses to which they are unquestionably superior to lum ber. "But," he continued, "there are many legitimate fields for wood where wood is superior but where steel and con crete now are getting the business. This is due entirely to the modern salesmanship and the efficient mer chandising of our competitors. They have been conducting their business on an up-to-date basis, while wood has been going along in the same old way, selling itself or, I am afraid, not be ing sold at all. "The lumber industry has overlooked a fertile field for development when it has failed to follow the methods estab lished by our competitors." Mr Sterling then enumerated the many effective methods through which forest products can be placed favorably before the consuming public. Primarily, he emphasized the avail ability of wood, which under the con servation, fire protection and reforesta tion methods now practiced by the United States Government, need not be reduced. He also laid stress on the adapta bility of wood. Tests have shown, he said, that a column of Douglas fir, long leaf pine or hickory has greater strength than its same weight in steel. Wood is a non-conductor of heat and cold and of electricity and therefore better adapted to use for garages, alios and farm buildings, he declared. Fire Theory Unfounded. Finally he dwelt on the ornamental qualities of wood, which make fts choice for interior finishing for homes indispensable. Mr. Sterling quoted statistics from authoritative sources to show that the popular fancy that wood construction is responsible for many of the destruc tive fires of this country is unfounded: Tests have shown, he added, that fires in wooden buildings are more easily controlled than fires in so-called fire proof buildings filled with combustible material. Modern methods of treatment, he said, have overcome the tendency of wood to decay. In this particular he urged the people of the Northwest to give more general use to creosoted wood blocks for paving. He explained that in many European cities wood blocks are the accepted standards for paving in the principal streets and that in some of the largest Eastern cities of the United States wood blocks are coming into more frequent use. Waste ia Bin? Problem. By studying these various uses, he continued, and by conducting a sys tematic campaign of exploitation and solicitation, the lumber industry of the Northwest can do much to redeem itself from Its present state of partial de moralization. Mr. Ridsdale explained the work of th American Forestry Association both in conserving the lumber supply and in developing a greater use for lumber products. He said that one problem that the organization now is trying to solve is the elimination of the tremen dous waste that constantly goes on in the forests. Mr. Hogue related many Interesting experiences as an architect, in which the superior qualities of wood have been proved to him. He urged co-oper ation among all lumbermen and. build ers to promote the increased use of wood products as outlined by Mr. Sterling. Thrown "BlUy" Foils Fugitive. After three policemen had chased William Martin several blocks through the North End last night. Patrolman Ferry threw his otub at the man and succeeded in knocking him down and arresting him on a charge of disorderly conduct. Martin is accused of strik ing Fred Fritz, "proprietor of a saloon at Third and Burnside streets, and of breaking a window in the saloon. The other officers in the chase wereDetec tive Hill and Patrolman Nelson. MAGIC RESULTS FROM "ROBINSON" BATH The results produced by a R O B I Sf S OX "THERMAL BATH inside of 30 minutes are almost beyond belief. It has been found, for instance, in the case of rheumatism, that uric acid in the blood can be extracted from the system completely in a few days time. After one or two ther mal baths, nervous wrecks find the change to strength and vigor hard to realize. II SCHOOL CHILDREN We Have on Sate in Our Basement. From IA.1L to 8 V. M. SPECIAL SCHOOL CAR. TICKET BOOKS. 33 HIDES FOB Sl.OO. Bring your principal's cer tificate the first time. Re member, you save 6Sc on 33 rides. J B SALE OF HIGH-GRADE HANDBAGS AT PRICES A. "YOKE CAV AFFORD. $12.60 to $17.50 Bags (C OC priced at. 0i03 $10.00 to $12.50 Bag s: nr priced at Ui3J $8.00 to $10.00 Bigafl MC priced at 0'rtr3 $5.00 to $8.00 BagsfQ7C priced at uil 3 $3.50 to $5.00 Bags now M 7c priced at Cil Q $1.50 to $3.50 Bags now f I rq priced at 01 1D0 S10 to S12 BLACK AKD TAW C O W H IDE TRAVEL- P Q CfJ It BAGS, choice for. . OOiUU 30 discount oif.! 31-aln Floor. WE KNIT ELASTIC HOSIERY TO YOUR SPECIAL ORDER i?r on own FACTORY., Thus we are able to give you absolutely per feet satis f a c t ion at all times. We have both men and women who are expert fit ters, and very s p e clal atten t i o n will be given you when you call. Fourth Floor. GLUTEN FLOUR "FAREWELL A RUI.VES'' Rich in PROTEIN AND GLUTEN. A flour for diabetes and allied forms of kidney trou ble. Sold by us in ten pound sacks. Main Floor. CUTLERY DEPARTMENT 50c Scis- 07p sors for. .wl b 66c Scis- On sors for. .tub 75c Manicure Sc Issors C7f for only... ' $1 Shears 7 On now at.. . I ol 25 off VB SHARPEN $1.25 Paper ShearsDQn now for. . O 3 $1.25 Bar ber ShearsOQn now for.. 0 0b $1.00 Poc ket K n I v es OOp now for.. OUU ALL RAZOR STROPS. RAZOK BLADES Main Floor. SEE THE MAKATOY This Ingenious Toy for Chil dren Will Be Shown in Our Windows During the Coming Week. They are loads of fun, OC- . Main Floor. each at only. WHEN ONE TRUSSES has been fitted for your par ticular need by one of our ex pert men and women fitters, you will enjoy a sense of se curity and comfort. Thousands of Oregon men and women can testify to the merit of our service In this particular line. Fonrth Floor. V off ON READY MADE PICTURE FRAMES iui u 11 u o y - -- and Tuesday. -Seoad Kloof. RUBBER DEPARTMENT $2 to $2.25 Fountain Syringe, two-year g u a r a n tee, I 0 Q special at 1 13 $1.00 Rubber Gloves on 7 On sale now for I U. $2.00 Bath Spray, spe- t I I Q viiiw Mala Floor. w 0 0 A R C L A R K E ciai now for. J. B L. CASCADE Sold on Small Monthly Payments. OUR HOMEOPATHIC DEP'T On th MMMnine Kloor. carries the most complete stock of Homeopathic Reme dies in the Northwest, OUR NEW KODAK PLAN We Have Worked Out a Way to Sell You ANY KODAK YOU WANT ON YOUR OWN TERMS. See Our Photo Department In the Basement for full details. A full course In photo Instruc tion with each camera sold. We Deliver MAZDA. LAMPS and Charee .No lore. See Our Batrment TOIertrical Department A BOOK OF B. t H. GRKKN STAMPS SAVKD T HFV1TRAI. nOI.!.-R- KARVFO AUjm STKEETAT WEST BM3K -MABSrtAH- 7QO-rlOWE A WW J FREE 10 STAMPS with all Ice cream or soda pur chases in our Tea Room or at the Soda Fountain from 2 P. L until we close at 9. try liKA 8 SUSPECT TRIES TO DIE AtOlST FOTINGER ARRESTED AFTER STORE ROBBERY. Man Found Trentlnir Wound In H'.a Lee After Officer Fires at Thief. Notebook Clew Followed. August Fotlnger was arrested early yesterday morning as he was sitting in bed treating a bullet wound in his leg after Special Officer Pete Kalich had fired three shots at a man, who. he said, fled from him when he caught him stealing cigars from the cigar store cf William Schlesinger at Gold smith street and Albina avenue. Fotm- ger, the officers say, tried to commit suicide with a revolver when arrested. A small notebook found near the scene of the robbery bearing Fotin- ger's name and address led Sergeant Brothers and Officers Kalich and iN el son to his home at 105 Revere street. Fotinffer later was treated at the Emergency Hospital at the police s:a tion. He is 25 years old and a tinner. His mother said yesterday she would make good Mr. Schlesinger's loss. 1200 OPEN HIPPODROME JIMMY RICHARDSON FIRST ON ICE FOR 1015-16 SEASON. Crowds of Skaters Glide Over Surface On Which Dntes of Games of Leacne Are Frozen. Opening night Of the Portland Ice Hippodrome, Twenty-first and Marshall streets, brought out more than 1200 ice skaters Friday night and from all standpoints it was a decided success. according to E. H. Keller, manager. From the time the first skater cut the Ice with his steel until after 10 o'clock there were no dull minutes. A' riot was nearly caused by young Jimmy Richardson In his attempt to be the first skater on the ice for the 1915-16 season. After considerable squaring off, he finally received the first ticket from J. George Keller, as sistant manager. The second one to pass through the new turnstiles was J. J. Burdett, of Newport, who came all the way from his home town to be present at the opening. He will remain In Portland until Monday night To keep the coming hockey game dates of the Pacific Coast Hockey League in the rninds of the patrons, the management has frozen the dates right in the skating surface. Morning sessions will be held, start ing at 10 o'clock today and tomorrow. but Saturdays and Sundays are the only days on which the early skaters will be allowed. This may be changed later in the season. Reduction of prices have been made to children for the morning gatherings and night prices have been reduced, also. Plenty of instructors, are on hand to help the novice. The hockey season of the Pacific Coast Hockey League opens December 7, but at that time the Uncle Sams will be working against the Vancouver Millionaires at Vancouver, B. C One week after the first game is played in Portland, Pete Muldoon and his Seattle Metropolitans will be brought before local spectators. Ran McDonald, the fleet-footed Uncle Sam last year, who was traded for Tommy Dunderdale. of Victoria, was out last night. He will remain in Portland for some time before leaving ior nis new nome. GIRL QUEEN RAT CATCHER Maid of 13 Demands Bounty on Bodies of 1 7 Rodents. MARINETTE, Wis., Oct. 11. Pearl Parlmeteer, 12, has given another proof of woman's encroachment on provinces heretofore occupied by men. She took 17 dead rats into the office of Menominee's City Clerk and asked for the bounty of 5 cents a head. In the number of rats caught Pearl is second only to Lloyd Mason, the champion 6-year-old rat catcher of Menominee, who has killed and col lected bounties on 4 rats. Mother Hunts for Son. An attempt is being made in Port land to learn the whereabouts of Stromie Brandt. 17 years of age. who ran away from his home in Seattle July S and has not been heard from since. It is thought possible that he may be here. The hoy's mother. Mrs. S. W. Brandt. Ths Promotion raifeaAjS;k arson 1 JK8l of Health pood health must have its start in the Stomach, Liver and Bowels, for these organs are the controlling power and have direct in fluence on the entire system. If stomach weakness is allowed to develop, diges- ,J.""i tion becomes impaired, the appetite begins to wane, the liver becomes lazy and the bowels constipated. Therefore the great im portance of establishing and maintaining strength and vigor in these organs at all times. To this end fust try HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS It is Nature's one best aid in the promotion of health. LT3 aCfcsatfABssl jMBsnaw3 0 0 B,D D G who lives at 445 Thirty-ninth ave nue southeast, Seattle, describes her son as beinjr six feet in height, with dark hair and a scar on the right jaw. CHILDREN HATE PILLS, CALOMEL AND CASTOR OIL Give Fruit Laxative When Cross, Bilious, Feverish" Constipated. or "California Syrup of Figs Can't Harm Tender Stomach, Liver, Bowels. Look back "at your childhood days. Remember the "uose ' mother Insisted on castor oil, calomel, cathartics. How. you hated them, how you fought against taking them. With our children it's different. Mothers who cling t- the old form of physic simply don't realize what they do. The children's revolt is well-founded. Their tender little "insides" are in jured by them. If your child's stomach, liver and bowels need cleansing, give only deli cious "California Syrup of Figs." Its action Is positive, but gentle. Millions of mothers keep this harmless "fruit laxative" handy; they know children love to take It: that 'it never fails to clean the liver and bowels and sweeten the stomach, and that a teaspd'onful given today saves a sick child tomor row. Ask your druggist for a 50-cent hot-' tU of "California Syrup of Figs." which has full directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown-ups plainly on each bottle. Beware of counterfeits sold here. See that it is made by "Cali fornia Fig Syrup Company." Refuse any other kind with contempt. Adv. KIDNEYS KEEP - ACTIVE WITH A GLASS OF SALTS Must Flush Your Kidneys Occa sionally if You Eat Meat Regularly. Noted Authority Tells What Causes Backache and Blad der Weakness. No man or woman who eats meat regularly can make a mistake by flush ing the kidneys occasionally, ways a well-known authority. Meat forms uric acid which clogs the kidney pores so they sluggishly filter or strain only part of the waste and poisons from the blood, then you get sick. Nearly al rheumatism, headaches, liver trouble, nervousness. constipation. dizziness, sleeplessness, bladder disorders come from tfluggiBh kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your back hurts, or if the urine is cloudy, offensive, fuU of sediment, irregular of passage or at-, tended by a sensation of scalding, set about four ounces of Jad Salts from any reliable pharmacy and take a table spoonfull in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This fa mous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon Juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for genera tions to flush clogged kidneys and stim ulate them to activity, also to neutral ize the acids in urine so it no longer causes Irritation, thus ending bladder disorders. Jad Salts is Inexpensive and cannot injure: makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which all regular meat eaters should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and the blood pure, thereby avoiding eerious kidney complications. Adv.