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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 29, 1916)
17 SCHOOLGIRL GIVES OTHERS WARNING LU OPPOSITION OUT ASSOCIATED PRESS TO RUSH VOTE RETURNS ELECTION DAY i . 1 Great News-Gathering Organization to Flash Result as Soon as Large Force of Trained Men Sends- in Figures From Nation. rr Chinese Parliament -Would Block New Move. - TIIE SUXBAY OTiEGOXIANS PORTLAND, OCTOBETi 29, 1916. T eo wo ,fl Must Have Been Crazy,' Says Accuser of Indicted . Man in White Slave Case. OFFER OF MARRIAGE GIVEN Bridgeport, Coun., Resident Says He Would Make a Good Husband for Caroline Kaufman, Who Relates Slavery Horrors. TCEW YORK, Oct. 22. In the hope that other unfortunate girls may be Impressed by her warnings and so be aved. Mis3 Caroline Kaufman, the one time high school girl whose testimony brought about the indictment of Gus tave Kugelman on a charge of white slavery, told her story to a reporter. "Now that the experience is passed. Miss Kaufman said, "and the terrible reality is slowly becoming like a hor rible dream. I want to do what I can to warn others. I must have been crazy. In no other way can I account for what I did. but I know I was so infatuated with the man that I would have done, and did do. everything that he asked me. It wad done just to preserve that ouality which I thought was his love for me, but which I nW see was no thing but his Intense selfishness. "My meeting with Kugelman was perfectly proper, and he courted me in a. gentlemanly way. I had never been crazy about men. There was some thing, though, that peemed to draw me to him, and I thought it was love. It may have been, but now I believe It was more of an infatuation. But even then he made no improper advances and I thought that we were exception ally fitted to marry. That gives some indication of how completely deceived I was. "My first bad mistake, though, was t'hen I surrendered myself. Perhaps if my mother had been near me at that crisis things would have been different. I do not know and I don't want to put the blame for my wrong on mother, but it is much harder to resist when one is alone. You see. mother and father had gone to the country and left me here. "Once laving done wrong I became convinced that if our relations were changed I would lose the man, and I was so blinded then that I could not see how life would be possible without him. Even when I was sent away from home I went gladly, knowing that I would be with him. I thought that our love was real and that as soon as Ife could get a divorce he would marry me, for he told me then that he was mar ried to a girl in the South. "Even in those letters, which I now BPe, were so brutal, the little messages of love, or what I thought was love, ex cused all the other parts where money was demanded. I believed what he said about his not having a chance in New York and that he could make good following the races. I was eager to send him all the money I could so that he would make good quicker and we then could be married. The vision of a marriage never faded from my mind. "The discovery of his marriage again to a Brooklyn girl was what woke me ud. Then for the first time 1 began to look at things sensibly. I realized the horror of the whole thing and my great mistake. The desertion alone brought me to my senses and it was the best thing that ever happened. Now, if it is not too late, I am going to makt, good, but I hope that other girls ana mothers can see the danger from my experiences and profit by my mis fortune." Story Has Effect. That Miss Kaufman's story as it was detailed to the grand Jury is already having something of the effect she hopes for. was evidenced by the number of complaints that have come to the District Attorney's office telling of similar conditions. Miss Kaufman's example has caused many parents and relatives to put aside the pride that lias held them back and come forward with facts which will aid greatly in stopping the traffic of women. Five women talked with Assistant District Attorney James B. Smith, who is handling the vice investigation, and related stories to him similar in many instances to that of Miss Kaufman. Many of these were so vague that they will be of little assistance, but others gave names and addresses which dovetailed with Information already in the hands of the prosecutor. A man who described himself as An thony Martell, of 754 Arctic street. Bridgeport, Conn., wrote to District At torney Swann expressing his sympathy for Miss Kaufman, his belief in her story and saying that he would like to marry her. The District Attorney said lie would not answer the writer and intimated that he was not running a matrimonial agency. The writer of the letter listed his qualifications as a good husband, amonrj them being the asser tions that he did not drink and did not go out nights. Mr. Smith had subpenas issued for 10 other New York girls who, it is al Jeged, worked for Kugelman. They are all said to be in the city now and three f them are employed in hotels in Broadway. They will be asked to tell ineir stories to the grand jury. What Grade of CoalT Engineerinsr Masrazlne. The selection of the proper grade of fuel to use in the furnace is one of the most difficult problems that confronts the manager of everv Dower niant Furnaces are very much like watches no two or them are exactly alike, and no two of them are subjected to exactly similar conditions. The fuel that gives the best and most economi cal results in one plant, may prove to be a most expensive failure in the plant . -1 unn me ireet. EVERYONE LIKES THIS COLO CURE 'Tape's Cold Compound" Ends a Cold or Grippe in a Few Hours. Your cold will break and all gripDe misery end after taking a dose of "Pape's Cold Compound" every two - nours until three doses are taken. It promptly opens clogged-up nos trils ana air passages in the head. stops nasty discharge or nose running, relieves sick headache, dullness, fever- ishness. sore throat, sneezing, sore ness and stiffness. . Don't stay stuffed-up! Quit blowing and snuffling! Ease your throbbing head nothing else in the world gives such prompt relief as "Pipe s Cold Compound." which costs only 25 cents at any drugstore. It acts without as distance, tastes nice, and causes no in convenience. Accept no substitute Adv. NEW YORK, Oct. 28. F-Lr-A-S-H! is elected! On the night of Tuesday. November 7, the missing name in the foregoing sen tence will be supplied by the Associated Press. In the business of news-gathering as developed by this world-wide organiza tion, the first word over the wires tell ing of any extraordinary ' event is "Flash!" It Is the signal of a thrill. The ordinary routine of the Associated Press bureaus and their - hundreds of newspaper-members is often punctuated with the "F-1-a.-s-h!" Operators from Bangor to San Diego, from Tampa to Tacoma, tighten their lagging nerves, and editors come scurrying to the wires to hear a Pope is dead, a Titanic sunk, another country at war, a Lusltania tor pedoed, a battle won, a king deposed, or a President elected. Associated Frens Moat Knw."- This latter thrill has a recognized periodicity, like the passage of a comet, and the experience of it is again im minent Within a few hours after you have scratched your ballot, the Associ ated Press will have flashed the verdict which you and 16,000,000 fellow voters have rendered will have flashed It per haps within a few minutes after the last of these 16,000,000 ballots has been dropped in its box in some of the West ern states, where three hours' differ ence In time makes late the closing of the polls. How, in this brief time, anything ap proximating an accurate accounting of these 16.000,000 votes can be achieved, the returns assembled, and the result made known throughout the land is a process both simple and marvelous. It is true, of course, that all of those 16, 000,000 votes are not counted, but when the Associated Press announces the election, that announcement will be as trustworthy as If they were. Flaali Once Given at 8 o'Cloclt. The gathering and distribution of re turns this year will mark one of the greatest co-operative efforts that has been made on any similar occasion to accomplish this purpose. In previous elections the Associated Press, relying more largely on its own resources, has done notable work In the prompt and accurate reporting of the election fig ures. In the Roosevelt-Parker contest of 1904 the organization was able not only definitely to announce the result, but also to Indicate the full extent of the victory as early as 8 o'clock on election night. Equally remarkable service has been rendered in other elections, and the value of the Associated Press' figures has been such that defeated candidates themselves have, on the strength of them, sent their telegrams of con gratulation to their victorious oppon ents. The service has been such that it has Invariably brought to the execu Uves oT the 'organisation a" flood of telegrams on the day after to the "comprehensiveness," in tribute to the "comprehensiveness, speea. and "accuracy" with which the work has been done. This year it is pos sible that all records will be broken, for the Associated Press has for the com ing election enlisted the co-operation of its members from coast to coast in a more concerted effort than ever be fore. Thousands of Men Employed. More than two years ago prepara tions were begun, under the direction of the general manager of the Associ ated Press, to "cover" the news which will be served to the public on the night of November 7. Election experts "of the organization have, during these two vears. canvassed every state in the Union, and arranged with the papers of each state to work together on a co operative basis under the supervision of the established Associated Press hiireans. Thousands of special rorms have been prepared for the systematic conduct of the service, tnousanas oi typewritten sheets distributed, listing candidates 'and showing , votes four vears ago as a basis of comparison, spe cial correspondents appointed and spe cial wire facilities arranged for this particular work. In the collection or returns, me country is everywhere made the unit, and it is the purpose of the system to hear definitely from every election district of the more Important states. In New York state alone these dis tricts number 5700. In Illinois there are more than 5000 and in other states a proportionately large number of dis tricts to be heard from. Taking New York state as typical of the system that will be followed in principle at least by other states, the sprvice there is worked out broadly as ioiiows Many Extra Wires Used. Having arranged for some competent an to take charge of eacn county up state and for co-operative effort with the Lew York City News Association for the collection of the metropolitan returns, the New York hearquarters of the Associated Press is made the cen ter of tabulation. The up-state county man is stationed at the most conveni ent center, usually the county seat, from which he throws out his net for tho gathering of his local returns. For the special work in nana, -a ex tra wires are strung into the Associa ted Press offices in New York, giving direct and exclusive connection with the principal cities. Before the it erators is stacked a varied assortment of printed forms, whose blank spaces await the figures that tell the story. There are pink forms, blue forms, buff, green, yellow and white, to make the various compilations of the vote for President, Governor, Senato, Congress and the two Houses of the State Legis lature. In an adjoining room there have been assembled a staff of 100 men to serve as tabulators. Previous to the election the Associated Press has ar ranged with some of the best banks in tbe city to furnish expert account ants for this work. They work in re lays, the first crew reporting at the close of the polls, at B o'clock, compil ing the figures until 2 o'clock In the morning. New England Returns First. Less than 10 minutes after the clos ing of the p'olls, the work begins. The first returns in New York, are invari ably from some of the up-state cities, where voting machines are employed. There are, however, some localities on Cape Cod and down in Maine, which for years have prided themselves on being the first In with their vote. In such small places the law permits tbe opening of the ballot boxes as soon as it has been made certain that the full vote of the place has been polled, and the result is then made nown It is only by driblets that the figures come in, but once the avalanche is started there is no let-up to the tick of the telegraph sounders, and a swarm of the colored blanks is kept flying from the . receiving operators to the tabulators. Tho figures are first en tered by the tabulators and passed along lo the designated chief who keeps a "doomsday book" showing the running toiai or ine vote mroughout the night. Every 15 minutes the business of tatu- latlon Is punctuated by the issue of bulletin on New York state, which is rushed to the leased trunk wires of the Associated Press and over these main arteries and secondary ones- some 47,000 miles of them, some 80 dif ferent circuits the news circulates. keeping all of the 940 newspaper-mem bers of the association posted on how the country is going. Tho form of these bulletins is known to thousands who have seen them flashed on the election screens "506 election districts out of 5700 In New York state, for President, give: wnson ; Mugne So, district by district, these bulls- tins prow until it looks so certain to some of the experts that one paper or another will concede somebody's elec tion. But the Associated Press con cedes nothing. It must know. In the year of the Odell-Coler fight for Governor In New York, In 1900, Its system had a severe test. Coler ran up a big vote in New York City, and the heavy vote of Odell up-state was overlooked by many of the -newspapers which conceded Coler's election. The Associated Press, in the midst of this confusion, was led. to wonder If its figures were right. The general man ager had an abiding confidence In his men and figures, but in the face of concession that some of the papers were making of Coler's election some thing must be done to check the mat ter. He ordered a recount. The sys tem provided for Just such an emer gency, and this Odell-Coler year Is tile only .time it has ever been called Into play. All of the county returns, after being tabulated, are hung on a large rack of hooks, classified by counties, where they are immediately available for recount. Off the hooks came these hundreds of telegrams, and in Just 15 minutes' time the entire state vote was recounted. The head tabulator, forgetting for the moment that he was In a newspaper office Instead of his bank, exclaimed: "Mr. Stone, we check to a penny." The recount tallied exactly with the figures the Associated Press had previously given out, and the pa pers which. Independently of the As sociated Press figures, had conceded Coler's election had eventually to ad mit their error. The accuracy of the Associated Press figures has seldom since been ques tioned. In connection with the recent New York state primary, in the fight between Calder and Bacon for the Re publican nomination as candidate for a seat in the United States Senate, tne majority given by the Assoclat3d Press was only 79 votes at variance with the official count. In a Massachusetts state election last year the Boston bu reau scored'a record by announcing the returns only three votes off from the official figures. machinery Best In Hlg State. The election machinery of the Asso ciated Press is at work in all the states. but it is developed to its highest pitch or eiriciency in the states having the largest electoral votes and the smallest average of consistency in Presidential years. Given a definite line on New York state, on Massachusetts, which is In variably prompt, and a reflection of the vote in the Central and Western states, where a difference in time is a handicap to early returns, the result of the Presidential election mav be ft? "2 hour and often the full extent of the victory indicated, so accurately has the gauge of election figures been fixed by previous experience. Knowing with a near certalntv whether it is Wilson or Hughes will be sufficient for the throngs at the bul letin boards on election night, but the Associated Press goes on to a still big ger task than the mere announcement of the result. That would not go far to complete the morning paper. There are columns to fill with state tabula tions, with lists of Governors elected, the detailed constitution of the next United States Senate and the House of Representatives, and similar tables for each state, locauy nandled, on the con stitution of the State Legislature. There are comprehensive "leads" to write in summary of the figures, and contests in particular states to be ex plained. Returns Carried by Riders. There is one human cog in the elec tion night machine that is even more interesting than the general manager of the Associated Press. He is the Paul Revere of the backwoods districts, who gallops his horse or drives his motorcycle on election night to the nearest telegraph station. There are still some remote regions a great many of them where the polling of a Presidential vote is almost a game of solitaire, and from some of them couriers must ride 20 miles before they can release by wire to a waiting Na tion the fact that a plurality of one for (it would be partisan to an ticipate the name) had been cast at ranch 49. There are several such re mote districts, even in New York State, whence news leaks almost as slowly as in Montana or Idaho. And there is no deprecating the importance of the vote that is cast at Clover Four Corners. It is the will of the people that rules, and the Associated Press can know no distinction when it comes to the counting of honest ballots. Otherwise it would not pay for that 20-mile ride. New Jersey has been a thorn in the flesh of the election tabulators for many years. In the first place it re fuses to close its polls until 7 -o'clock, and its law requires that the counting of the entire ballot from top to bot tom shall be completed before another ballot is taken up. There are upwards of 240 names on the Jersey ballot this year' in some of the cities, and it is doubtful whether on election night President Wilson will know how his own state has gone. The Jersey method is employed in some of the Central and Western states, adding a further handi-l cap to the difference in ttme, but New York and a majority of the Eastern! states put the Presidential electors on a separate ballot to facilitate the count. Human Factor Important. If the. foregoing has not helped you to visualize the process by which the greatest news-gathering organization tries to satiate your election curiosity and furnish masses of figures to back up its announcement of the victory, pic ture to yourself this one fact: On elec tion night the facilities for wire com munication over practically the entire country are for the moment devoted almost exclusively to the collection and distribution of returns. The mileage of those wires you will find run up into the millions. The Associated Press leased wire system itself is almost dou bled on election night, and the tele graph companies in their own way are co-operating directly or indirectly in the great effort to bring the figures to a head. Consider also tbe human factors thousands of operators at the key and telephone transmitters, newspaper re porters and editors at work on local situations, while the army of trained Associated Press men are assembling all their matter, and you arrive at something like a general glimpse of the efforts that will be made on election night to supply the missing name in the first sentence of this article. Surpassing though it will public In terest in the great war, or in the multi tudinous events that the world daily contributes to the excitement of the breakfast table, the news of a Presi dential election will by no means at tract all of the argus-eyes of an or ganization whose field is the world. So elastic is the system of this clearing house of news, that Its correspondent in Pekin may come in at the height of excitement , over the election with a new revolution in China, its representa tive in Panama with a disastrous slide in Culebra cut, its bureau in Petrograd with a stirring speech in the Duma, or its men at the front with a great vic tory. ' The usual designated men are on deck to handle any emergency, la the election or out of it. The sunflower It cultivated to a conald abl extent in Central Rus.tla. where ever? part of the plant is put to certain. ecoaomlc APPOINTMENT IS FOUGHT Pekin Says It Would Be Pity If Parliament Refuses to Indorse Nomination of Suggested For eign Affairs Minister. PEKI13. Oct. 3 (By Mail.) Al though the appointment of Mr. Lu Cheng-hsiany as minister of foreign af fairs has not yet been formally gazet ted, there is little doubt that he will accept the post. " Some opposition on the part of Parliament to the appointment has been foreshadowed. It is difficult to understand why there should be any opposition. Mr. Lu Cheng-hsiang is a polished and accomplished diplomat. and his character personal and politl cal Is unblemished. In the extremely rellcate negotiations in relation to the 1 demands put forward by Japan last year he undoubtedly did excellent work for China, and it may safely be said that no contemporary Chinese states man could have done better. From every point of view it will be a pity If Parliament refuses to endorse the nomination. There is no better man in sight, and delay in appointing a sub stantive minister of foreign affairs in volves a further postponement of the negotiations in regard to the Cheng chiatun affair. Until these negotiations are brought to aconclusion and some definite arrangement is made respect ing the anomalous position in South Manchuria and Eastern Inner Mongolia, where the authority of the Chinese and Japanese officials, respectively, has not yet been clearly defined, there are other Incidents occurlng which might easily be of a much graver character. Were they to. occur It is more than probable that more dramatic demands would follow. An interesting memorial has been sent by a Chinese merchant to the min istry of finance In relation to the ex port of Chinese cash to Japan. The memorial states that according to the return of the Japanese firms which deal in Chinese brass cash, they made a profit of J16.000.000 in a period of six months, from July to December of 1915. and that this amount does not In clude the gains of their agents and their Chinese employes in China, en gaged In the collection of these cash. There is no doubt that up to the present hundreds of millions of brass cash have been exported. Up to De cember 31, 1915. in Tsingtao alone 9000 tons of brass cash were exported, and If the cash exported from Canton, Swa- tow, Amoy, Foochow and other ports be taken together, they must have amounted to several hundred thousands of tons." There has been very high demand for brass in European markets. In Tientsin alone more than 70 foreign firms have been engaged in the busi ness, and several thousand Chinese have been employed at high salaries for the collection of the same. The memoral lst urges that if the Interior districts become denuded of cash the price of the necessities of life would rise and people would suffer distress. This memorial is. of course, inspired by the fact that a proposal has been made that the Japanese capitalists who recently lent the Chinese Government $5,000,000 should forego the right granted them to work mines in Anhui and Hunan, and should Instead be given the right to buy up an unlimited amount of cash. There seems to be almost as much opposition to the one proposal as the other, and the question is seriously engaging the attention of Parliament. It is clear that, whatever happens, the Japanese capitalists will exact adequate compensation if they forego the right to work the mmes in tne central provinces. THREE ARE BOUND OVER ACCUSATION AGAINST FOUR MADE BY 16-YEAR-OLD ALDA WALTER. Olln Yates, Jitney Drlveri Virgil Yates. Henry Clukls and Balrd Temple--ton Are Involved. Olin Yates and Virgil Yates, brothers, with Henry Clukls, three young men, were bound over to the grand Jury yes terday in Municipal Court on the charge of contributing to the delln quency of a minor, Alda Walter. Balrd Templeton, on the recommendation of Deputy District Attorney Roblson, was released on his own recognizance to appear before the grand Jury. The oth ers furnished bonds in the amount of 250 each. The testimony of Miss Walter, who Is 16 years of age, directly involved the Yates brothers and Clukls. whom she declared she had met on different occasions at hotels. Olln Yates, who is a jitney driver, was charged by the girl with first enticing her to a hotel. Templeton was represented by At torney J. C. Moulton. while Attorney L. C. Mackay appeared for the Yates brothers and Clukls. The offenses re cited range rrom two months ago up to the middle or the present month. FIVE MINUTES! NO INDIGESTION, . . NO GAS OR ANY STOMACH MISERY Don't Suffer! Here's the Quickest, Surest Relief Known for Dyspepsia. Sourness, Heartburn PAPE'S 22 GRAIN TRIANGUL.ES DIAPEP5M STOPS INDIGESTION I ill m FIVE MINUTES. V; SETTLES UPSET STOMACHS f i rni mi iii t Wonder what upset your stomach which portion of the food did the dam age do you? Well, don't bother.. If your stomach Is In a revolt; if sour, gassy and upset, and what you Just ate has fermented into stubborn lumps; your head dizzy and aches; belch gases nd acids and eructate undigested food; breath foul, tongue coated Just take a little Diapepsln and in five minutes you will wonder what became of the indigestion and distress. Millions of men and women today know that it is needless to have a bad stomach, A little iapepsia occasion A- hitherto untold Secret of his Great Victories over Jack Johnson and Frank Moran. Ordinary Nuxated Iron will often increase the strength and endurance of the delicate nerv ous folks 200 per cent in two weeks' time. v SPECIAL NOTE. Dr. E. Ciuer. a Tthvel- clan who has studied widely In both this country ana Europe, lias been specially em- floyed to -make a thorouxb fnveatlg-atton nto the real secret of the great strength, power and endurance of Jesa Willard. and the marvelous valuo of nux&ted Iron aa a strength builder. NEW YORK. TTnon httnsr Inter viewed at his apartment in the Co lonial Hotel. Mr. Willard said: "Yes. I have a chemist with ma to studv the value of different foods and prod ucts as to their power to produce great strength and endurance, both of which are so necessary in the prize ring. On his recommendation I have often taken nuxated iron, and I have particularly advocated the free use of iron by all those who wish to obtain great physical and mental power. With out, it. i am sure tnat 1 should never have been able to whip Jack John son so completely and easily as I did. and while training for my fight with c urns, moran x regularly took nuxated iron, and I am certain that it was a most Important factor in my winning the fight SO easllv." C!rn tknlllnc Dr. Sauer said: "Mr. Wlllard's case is only one of hundreds which I could cite from my own personal experience, which proves conclusively the astonishing power of nuxated Iron to strength and vitality even in most com plicated chronic conditions." inoi long age a man came to me who was nearlv half m. Mnturv ni, and asked me to give him a prelim- examination tor lire insurance. I was astonished to find him with the blood pressure of a boy of 20 and as full of vigor, vim and vitnlitv six . young man in fact, a young man he really was, notwithstanding his age. The secret he said was taking iron nuxated iron had filled him witu re newed life. At 30 he was In bad health: at 46 careworn and nearly all In. . Now. at 60. a miracle of vitality and his face uci.iiiins who me ouoyancy of youth. As I have said a hunHrpH t1m. -mw iron is the greatest of all trenrth builders. If people would onlv throw away patent medicines and nauseous concoctions and take simple nuxated Iron, I am convinced that the lives of thousands of persons might be saved who now die everv vmr tmwn n..-..- monia, grippe, consumption, kidney. liver and heart trouble, etn Th ret and true cause which ,tnHH v. t .. diseases was nothing more or less than a weakened condition brought on by lack of iron in the blood, irnn ! Hn- lutely necessary to enable your blood to tooa into living tissue. With out it. no matter how much or what you eat, your food merely passes through without doing any good. You don't get the strength out of it. and CALIFORNIA FOR HUGHES DISTRICT ATTORSEY EVANS FI.VDS SENTIMENT IS STRONG. Multnomah Official Delivers Addressee ShonlnK Effects of Prohibition in Orecoa. "California will roll up a good ma jority for Hushes." -was the predic tion of District Attorney Walter H. Evans, who returned from a week's trip in the south yesterday. Democrats hoped for heavy support from the Progressives," he continued, "but since the leading- Progressives of tho state, including Governor Hlrara Johnson, have taken the stump for the Republican standard-bearer. Wilson hopes have Massed." Mr. Evans went to California at the invitation of the dry forces to give the results of his personal Investiga tions of the effect of prohibition in Oregon. He addressed two big meet ings, one at San Jose, under the aus pices of the V. C T. U-, and one at Stanford University, where ho shared the platform with J. Stitt Wilson, ex Mayor of Berkeley and strong worker for the dry cause. Mr. Evans did not speak as a par tisan, but from the impartial stand point of an officer whose duty It was to observe and record the effect of laws, regardless of personal convictions. He discussed the effect of the dry law on Oregon both from economic ooclologic viewpoints. and Caa a Sterilising; Aaent. Engineering Magazine. Coincident with induced ventilation, the gas units also affect a sterilizing action on the air. The air around the burners becoming warmed rises, and in so doing draws air from the lower levels up to the burners. A consider able proportion of this air, is actually drawn through the burner, and coming as it does from the breathing level, it contain not alone the Impurities and organic matter given off In the process of respiration, but also other impuri ties arising directly from the work in hand. A removal of the germs and or ganlo matter is brought about by actu ally cremating these foreign elements through the agency of the bunsen flame or an Upset Stomach Try it! OF ally keeps the stomach regulated and they eat their favorite foods without fear. , If your stomach doesn't take care of your liberal limit without rebellion; if your food is a damage instead of a help, remember the quickest, surest, most harmless relief is Pape's Diapep sln. which costs only fifty cents for a large case at drug stores. It's truly wonderful it digests food and sets things straight, so gently and easily that it is astonishing. Please don't go on and on - with a weak, disordered stomach; it's so unnecessary. L mmm I Vou want plenty of 'stay Endurance and Health and z v : u t r JESS WILLARD AT HOME Among til (he prominent figures of the prize ring, probably none ft so de voted to family life as Jess Willard. After each engagement (he champion hurries to his wits and children and remains si their side until publio de mand forces him to leave for new encounters. Everything is done to bring up the "little Willards" with strong healthy bodies Mr. Willard accounts for his own success by saying: as a consequence you become weak, pale and sickly looking. Just like a plant trying to grow in soli deficient in iron. If you are not strong or well, you owe it to yourself to make the fol lowing test: See how long you can work, or how far you can walk without becoming tired. Next take two five - grain tablets of ordinary nuxated iron three times per day after meals for two weeks. Then test your strength again and see for yourself how much you have gained. I have seen dozens of nervous, run-down people who were ailing all the while double their strength and endurance and entirely get rid of all symptoms of dyspepsia, liver and other troubles in from 10 to 14 days' time simply by taking Iron In the proper form. Ail this after they had in some cases been doctoring for months without obtaining any benefit. But don't take the old forms of reduced iron, iron acetate or tinc ture of iron simply to save a few cents. You must take iron in a form that can be easily absoroed and assimilated like nuxated iron if you want It to do you any good, otherwise It may prove worse than useless. Many an athlete or prize fighter has won the day simply because he knew the secret of great strength and en- with its temperature of about 1500 de grees Fahrenheit. Intclllaeiit DisclpTme tor Boys. Engineering Magazine. While most lenient with the appren tice boys in all cases, certain regula tions or restrictions are placed upon them. They are absolutely prohibited from smoking cigarettes or using In Don't Let Your TEETH 7 I'- t 4 V Pi - -5 My Practice Ie LlmHrd to High-Clasa Dentistry Only. (4- h3 r s BY HONESTY. OF PURPOSE, SKILLFUL WORKMAN SHIP, PAINLESS METHODS and VERY Reasonable Prices, I Have Made My Business a Sweeping Success. AllWork Guar . anteed 15 Years Open Nights Examine the crown and bridge work of the old-time Dentists (if any of it has survived) and compare it with the kigh-class work turned out every day in my laboratories. The people are interested in the fact that I have prac tically eliminated pain in Dental work; that I have made possible Dentistry at half the former prices ; that I have set the example of Antiseptic Dentistry, and have given my personal guarantee of satisfaction on every piece of work done in this office a guarantee that means the workman ship and material are CERTDJTED CORRECT. MY PRICES FOR GUARANTEED WORK Electro Whalebone Plates Flesh Colored Plate Ordinary Rubber, All Red Porcelain Crowns $3.50 Gold Fillings, from 22-K Gold Crowns S3.50 22-K Gold Bridge $3.50 Electro-Painless Dentists IN THE TWO-STORY BUILDING Corner Sixth and Washington Streets, Portland, Oregon there Strength and muscles like mine." 1 K r v consider that plenty of inn in my blood is tht secret of my great -strength, power and endurance.' durance and filled his blood with iron, before he went into the affray, while many another has crone to inglorious defeat e imply for the lack of iron, E. Sauer, Al. t, NOTE Nuxated Iron, recommended abov by Or. Sauer, la not a patent medlcln nor secret remedy, but one hica Le well known, to druggist end whose Iron constituents r widely prescribed by eminent physicians everywhere. Vnllke the older Inorganic iron froducta, tt Is easily assimilated, does not njure the teeth, make thm black, nor upset the stomach: on the contrary. It Is a must potent remedy In nearly all forms of Indigestion, as well aa for nervous, run down conditions. The manufacturers have such rreat confidence In Nuxated Iron that they ofter to forfeit $100. OO to any charitable Institution If they cannot take any man or woman under o who lacks Iron and In crease their strength 20o per cent or over In four weeks' time, provided they have no serious organic trouble. They also offer to refund your money if It dos not at least double your strength and endurance In tn days" time. It in dispensed In this city by The Owl Drug Co. and ail other drug-lsta toxicants In any form whatever. If a boy Is found breaking any of these rules be Is disciplined by being re quired to serve a certain number of hours longer to complete his appren ticeship, the amount of discipline be ing regulated by the seriousness of his offence. If he persists in committing the infractions he is dismissed from the service. Go to pieces just because you were buncoed once by some incompetent work man. Thousands of people from far and near come to me with their teeth trouble. Why? Simply because I give them a SQUARE DENTAL DEAL Go back a few years and compare the prices paid for Dental work with the prices I charge for the same or better work. Recall the pain and torture of the Dental Chairs of former days, and then think of the Painless Dentistry of to day, made possible by my system. B H All Other Work Proportionately Low We Have the Knowledge, Ability and Experience S15.O0 $10.00 $5.00 to $5.00 $1.00 to $5.00 to $5.00 tt N D Hi3