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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 26, 1919)
i 14 TnE SUNDAY OREGOMAX, PORTLAND, .TAM'ART 26. 1919. LABOR PROPOSES TO UNIONIZE ROAD Radical Measure to Be Intro duced in Legislature. II ChrUflndYMri; I JDBSI rianOveoecX I - l . r . mmmmmmmmmmmR ' ssbBb& CONTRACTORS NOT WANTED Bill Provides Tor Building of High ways Only by Force Account and by Day Wage. To provide tor the building of roads only by force account and ty day wage, eliminating all contractors. Is the pur pose of a measure which it is said organized labor will send to Salem for introduction in the legislature the coming week. Not only will the State Highway Commission be told how to build the roads, but directed as to the amount that shall be paid per day, a minimum wage to be indicated. If these ideas are adopted by the Legislature which is counted unlikely it would mean the unionization of every road Job in the state for the next step, logically, would be demanded for a union card before anyone could be em ployed in the pick and shovel brigade. In this connection it may be noted that when the road bond bill for 16.000. 000 was up two years ago, labor leaders fought the measure. It is also recalled that some of the members of the Legis lature now working for road legisla tion and trying to direct the policies of the State Highway Commission were making speeches against the bond bill in the House in the 1917 session and opposed the bill when it was submitted to the voters later. Lively Times Predicted. A monkey-and-parrot time is pre dicted the coming week in the road pro ceedings. Some day or night will be set aside when anyone who wants to tell how the Highway Commission has been imposed on by contractors will be given the widest latitude. At least three men who claim to know all about the paving business will be given a chance to tell how to get hard-surface pave ment at prices phenomenally low. Two of these men have been outlining their theories and submitting figures for sev eral years. Mr. Dennis did not warm up to the suggestion of having these private ex perts talk, but finally consented, as it was pointed out that if they have anything good the Legislature should know and take advantage of it, and if they do not know what they are talk ing about that fact also should be made clear. One of the subjects to be discussed will be the Clackamas County pave ments and their low cost, and the State Highway Commission will be urged to follow the example of that county. These are matters which the com mission has heard time and again, as well as the information which the three private experts are to reveal. Commission's Policy Stated. Here is the policy of the State High way Commission relative to hard-surface pav'ing: The lowest responsible bidder gets the job. Patented pave ment has been laid by the commission, but the award was given because the figure for the patented article was lowest. Cement, which was formerly a competitor, is no longer within reach for road work because of its high cost. Before the cement men went into a combine they were fighting patented bard surface, but since the getting to gether .of the cement people they have gone after bigger game than road work. The cement people long ago withdrew their expensive lobby from this territory. Only one request is being made of the Legislature by the Highway Com mission, and that is for a few meas ures to make the road law more work able. The commission has not indicat ed, what sum of money it wants the Legislature to approve for bonds. It is prepared to use such funds as are allowed, whether from bonds, millage, gasoline or other source'. The commis sion has outlined its road programme repeatedly. This programme requires that the main roads be completed first, and that each main road be built as nearly straight and on as low a grade as possible. When main roads are completed, feeder or lateral roads should next receive attention. BY W. A. ELIOT. T)ARIS We landed on French soil! XT at Havre and almost immediately I ran into Jack Crossley. chief radio operator on the Western Comet. Jack is a former Lincoln High boy who left the University of Washington for the service. His people live on Willamette Heights and his father is a member of the real estate firm of the Crossley Vigars Company. We exchanged "lack of news" from home, both having sailed from New York about the same time. At Havre we "Y" men were marched out three miles to a British rest camp for a 36-hour stay before coming on to Paris where we were turned loose to find our own quarters. Imagine a bunch of men like us with no knowl edge 'Of French on such a mission :it just this time! I succeeded soon in finding a room with a French family In their quaint old house, the Hotel d' Angleterre, on the Rue du Faubourg St. Honore, about a block and a half from the American "Y" headquarters at 12 Rue d' Aguesscau and about the same distance the other way from the Palais d' Elysee, the residence of President Poincaire. This has been the official residence of the President of the French Republic since 1871. The mansion was built in 1718 by Molet for the Norman Comte d'Evreux. Madame de Pompadour once lived here, so also did Louis Napoleon, while he was Pres ident of France. It was here in the beautiful grounds surrounding the mansion that I saw my I first rrencn Dira a saucy nine tit mouse, a small gray and white bird very like our chickadee fluttering from tree to tree and hanging head down from the bare limbs. I had my fourth medical examination yesterday. Afterward the doctor looked at me out of the corner of his eye, asked my age, and smiled as he told me to "beat it," stamping my card with another O. K. You see I am not only well as usual but I am putting on flesh. This morning I attended services at LETTERS FROM MR. ELl6T. The Oregonian prints here the first of a series of letters from W. A. Eliot, of Portland, who re cently arrived in France in the service of the Y. M. C. A. Mr. Eliot was the leading spirit in the Portland Audubon Society, and when he was detailed to go to France arrangements were made for him to show the Finley bird pictures and pictures of airplane spruce production in Oregon. He will travel about, giving lectures to audiences of soldiers, and will have exceptional opportunities to collect Information Tor his letters to The Oregonian. These letters will contain much news about Oregon men abroad and will be printed twice weekly. W. A. Eliot. Portland Y. M. ('. A. Secretary In France. Who Writes for The Oregonian. the American church on the Rue de Berri between the Avenues des Champs Elysees and the Rue du Faubourg St. Honore, a few blocks east of the ArcI de Triomphe. This church was founded in 1S5T, unking all Protestant denom inations. It is in a fine building al ways well attended. It was packed full today. Coming out of the church I met Al fred H. Harris, of 555 E. 58th street N., former editor of the Portland Labor Journal, who is now a "Y" worker in headquarters, having been here since last August. Mr. Harris acted as a guide to a party of us all afternoon while we viewed the captured German cannon, the Eiffel Tower and the Fer ris Wheel and came home along the Avenue des Champs Elysees. that most wonderful boulevard in the world. My friend, William P. Peyton, the Episcopal clergyman of City Point. Va., who was elected president of our class of 260 "Y" secretaries at Columbia Uni versity, has been sent, with many others, to the front with the Army of occupation in Germany. I hope to meet him again when I begin my travels. Tomorrow I give my first lecture In Paris at the Officers and Men's Club on the Rue Montaigne. I shall use the War Spruce reel and two of the Finley bird reels. It will be good to see old Oregon again, even in pictures. I hope the men will feel the lure of that glori ous land as I always do. We are told here that our presence in France is more needed now than ever and it makes one very anxious to make good. ALBINA SEWER IS ASKED NORTH PORTLAND TO PRESENT PETITION TO COUNCIL. Employment of. Hundreds of Men One of Objects Sought by Promoters of Project. Petitions for construction of a sewer along .ulbina avenue and other streets in the North Portland district are be ing circulated by the North Portland Commercial Club. Property owners of the district may sign up at the Liberty Temple or at 11 stores scattered through the district, according to H. J Kurth, who heads the committee which is pushing the matter. When sufficient names have been se cured, the petitions will be presented to the City Council with a request for Immediate action. It will be urged in behalf of the project that employment thus will be given hundreds of men. The proposed sewer would empty Into Columbia Slough, it is expected Any other outlet would be prohibitive in cost, according to Mr. Kurth. With the outlet into the sloufrh, the slough -would be kept open to the 'river, thus blocking plans for the drainage dam or making it useless in case it were constructed. Although the petition calls for sew ers only along "Albina avenue and other streets," the Commercial Club is hoping that the Albina improvement will be the entering wedge for sewers all over the North Portland district. Alberta Piedmont, Woodlawn. Walnut Park, North Albina, University Park and West St. Johns are districts that would be affected. JUDGE UMBERS PUSSES ON OREGON PIONEER AND PROMI NENT ATTORNEY HERE. Early President of McMinnville Col lege Took Up Portland Resi dence 2 0 Years Ago. J. E. Magers, Oregon pioneer and prominent attorney of the state, died at the age 6f 70 years at his new sub urban home at Risiey Station at noon yesterday, following an Illness of one week from diabetes. Mr. Magers was known widely as Judge Magers, having served one term as County Judge at McMinnville, Yam hill County. He was born at McCon- nelsvllle, Ohio. 70 years ago, and crossed the plains in 1852 with his par ents, Dr. and Mrs. W. B. Magers, who later became known to all of the early pioneers of the state. The little fam ily located at Oregon City. Judge Magers graduated from Wil- : m -. : for one term. He came to Portland 20 years ago and had resided here ever since. Judge Magers was a past president of the Oregon Pioneer Association and a member of the Masonic order. Sev eral years ago he was chairman of the state Republican committee. While re siding in Portland, he had been a prominent member of the East Side Baptist church. Up to the time of his death he conducted law offices at 902 Yeon building. Judge Magers is survived by his wi dow, Mrs. Dida E. Magers; two daugh ters, Mrs George I.. Roth, of Portland and Mrs. L. F. Wooster, of Corvallls: four sisters, Mrs W. S. Thompson, of Harrington. Wash.; Mrs. S. E. Wood ington. of Silverton, Or.; Mrs. J. B. Feller and Minetta Magers, both of Portland; and two brothers, A. G. Mag ers, of San Francisco, and James P. Magers, of Dallas. No arrangements for the funeral have yet been made. CEMENT CONTRACT PLACED Utah Product to Be Used In Warm springs Dam. VALE, Or.. Jan. 25. (Special.) The Warm Springs district has contracted for all of the cement, estimated at about 30.000 barrels, to be used in the construction jpt the big Warm Springs dam. which will Btore water for irri gation of about 40,000 acres. Utah cement was secured at $3.15 f. o. b. Ontario, $3.27 at Vale and 13.54 at Riverside, with an SO-cent sack re turn, which is 30 cents less on a bar rel than the price bid by the Oregon Cement Company from their Oswego plant. Hatfield Sentence Pronounced. D. A. Hatfield, found guilty by a I jury in the court of Circuit Judge Tucker, Thursday, of a fraudulent real estate transaction, was sentenced to from six months to five years In the penitentiary yesterday. Leniency had been recommended by the Jury. As Hatfield had a previous penitentiary conviction he would have to serve at least a year. Arguments on a motion for a new trial will be made next week. Judge J. E. Magers. Oregon Pio neer of 1852!, Who Died Here Yesterday. amette University, Salem, and later became one of the early presidents of McMinnville College. Later he attended Ann Arbor Law School at Ann Arbor, Mich., and returned to McMinnville after graduation to practice law. He was, for many years, one of the most prominent residents of the upper river town and served as county judge there Groom Estate Appraised. The estate of M. P. Groom, who died December 8, was valScd at 15,600, ac cording to the petition for probate of will filed in the County Court yester day. It is bequeathed to his widow. Sarah Groom, for life and is to be di vided at her death among nine chil dren. Grand Jury Returns Indictment. J. A. Huff was indicted by the grand jury yesterday for grand larceny, in connection with the removal of $900 from the Railway Exchange cigar store. According to Deputy District Attorney Pierce, he has agreed to plead guilty. ALLEGED FORGER IS HELD William Hines Charged With Pass ing Worthless Paper. William Hines. who, according to police records, has served four terms in the Oregon penitentiary and one term in the Washington penitentiary under different aliases, was arrested yesterday by Patrolman Hill and charged with passing a forged $20 check on John Bonelle, 25 North Third street. Police say the prisoner has been operating In Portland for several days, and has passed fully a dozen worthless checks. Some of the aliases under which the prisoner is said to have written checks which have been turned in to the police are Ed Nesbea, Ed Hines, William Ray, Ed Ray and James F. Hines. All were for small sums, and were passed on North End firms. Break a Cold In Few Hours First dose of 'Tape's Cold Compound" relieves the cold and grippe misery Don't stay stuffed up! Trunks, Traveling Bags, Suitcases ' We show a large assortment in leather and fabric goods at very reasonable prices. First, Second and Alder Streets Buy Cigars by the Box Corina Queens; box of 25 d0 cigars, priced 9 Natividau Ideals; box of 25 O'rTE. cigars, priced at &mt I D Little Bobbies; box of 100 flC Or cigars, priced tBDeaiieJ Twenty-five Smoking Jackets Regular $3.98 to $6.00 garments to close quicky $1.98 Beautiful Georgette and Crepe de Chine Waists $3.98 A wonderful surprise ! Lovely waists, fresh and new, in the very latest models, includ ing the round roll-front collars, V-necks, French squares and convertible high collars. Lovely shades in peach, maize, bisque, gray, white and flesh. Some are trimmed in dainty laces, pleating and pin tucks; others are hand embroidered or plain aq tailored. Shown on main aisle. Regular $5.50 to $7.50 Waists at J VO 25c to 35c Dress Ginghams 19c As long as any remain, we offer these beautiful ginghams at the special price. The showing in cludes plaids, stripes, checks and plain colors in good quality. 25c Outing Flannels, Yard, 19c A very large showing of Outings of good quality in beautiful stripes. A real bargain! Not over ten yards to one customer. 35c Hope Muslin, 25c Monday morning we place a quantity of this well known muslin on sale at the above reductions. The economical buyer will not fail to take ad vantage. Not over ten yards sold to one customer. Our Dry Goods Section Offers a Wide Choice of woolen and cotton dress fabrics in the newest shades and patterns at prices less than equal quality' is sold for elsewhere. For the Motorist Ford Tool Kits; 11 tools in PO canvas roll Wawn-sttf Five Drop Forge Double fl" ff End Wrenches in canvas roll wliVw No. 616 Fiber Flash lights, H-x6 with 2-cell battery and rose '1"1 O T end, priced at Two Kitchen Needs Tin Steamer and Cover; size rT 10x4, for t No. 53 Royal Enamel Dou- P" AO ble Boilers, priced .' Two Special in Glassware Pitchers with O",. . OK. Glass Syrup Metal Tops . Water Glasses; set of six, spe- OC cial at only OUC -nr-mimtnmtiiMininin'int White Snap Fasteners, , Stock, 3 Doz. 10c New Clark's O. N. T. SEWING COTTON Black and white all sizes. Spe cial, spool 5c Spool Silks Carlson & Currier Spool Silks. Black, white and colors; full 100-yard - O spools, at. . . A Three-in-One Shoe Special Women's Brown Kid Cloth-Top Shoes With Military Heels Women's Black Kid Shoes With Gray Cloth Top and Aluminum Louis XV Heels Women's Dark Gray Kid Shoes, Cloth Tops, Military Heels All Sizes in Every Line $4.49 SCHOOL HOLIDAY IS ASKED WASHINGTON BIRTHDAY BILL INTRODUCED IN LEGISLATURE. Patriotic Exercises In Morning, Fol lowed by Holiday, Provided by Measure. To make Washington's birthday a legal school holiday, with) patriotic ex ercises In the morning In memory of the first President, is the object of a bill backed by the Daughters of the American Revolution and Introduced in the State Legislature by State, Sen ator I. I.. Patterson. The bill has been referred to the education committee, of which Senator Ira Smith, of Coos County, is chairman. and favorable action in expected. A special legislative committee. headed by Mrs. C. S. Jackson, was named at the state conference of the Daughters of the American Resolu tion. This committee has been work ing for some time on the provisions of the bill and has secured backing for Its passage. Practically all patriotic organiza tions have Indorsed the bill, it Is said. "Now' the separate school districts celebrate this days aa they please." said Mrs. Patterson yesterday. "We want the celebration made state-wide and to be thoroughly patriotic in char acter, so that alien-born children will realize the importance uf the day in honor of our first President. "In many schools Washington's name is not even mentioned on Febru ary 32. In fact, we believe that the lack of celebration of the day has been due in part to German propaganda which has been insidiously at work for years. We are going to stamp that out and make a real holiday of the day. After an hour and a half of patriotic exercises In the morning, the children will have their holiday." alone for the band coat over $2000 and ; cost of uniforms, which Mr. Graves la addition to this there will be the ' acquiring for the men. GOD OF THE LIVING All Live Unto Him n. Dr. JAMES K. TALMAGE Of the Council of the Twelve. C'kurek af Jeans Christ nf Latter-day mm. Salt l.nke City. I tab. IVetei For free copies of other articles of this series, send request to the author. Band Will Appear In April. SHERIDAN. Or.. Jan. 2S (Special.) The band now being organized by Roy Graves, of this city, and under the direction of Bandmaster Fred Bradley, will make Its first appearance about April 1, it was announced today. The band is holding practice every Tuesday and Thursday nights and will be In Rood shape to play. Tha instruments 46 I am a nurse and I bee to say that I am using Mcntho-Laxene in many cases with the greatest success. Am now using it with a case of measles as an expectorant and it is doing splendid work. You may use my name and address so any one who cares to know about my cases and my use of Men tho-Laxene." Jfote: The extract shore Is treat letter written by Anna King. Liberty. Ssgauche Co, Colorado, t professional nurse, who has found that there Is nothing oqusl to Mrntho lows in the treatment of Incipient colds. In coughs, bronchitis, whooping eongh. hoarseness, catarrh, etc. Druggists sell it in ik oz. bottles, concentrated, and directions tell bow to make a foil pint of home-nude medicine which la laxative, tonic, antiseptic and expectorant. Millions now "swear by it- Said by druggists sl ahtaa. Relief comes instantly. A dose taken every two hours until three doses are taken will end grippe misery and break up a severe cold either in the head, chest, body or limbs. It promptly opens clogged-up nostrils and air passages in the head, stops nasty discharge or nose running, re lieves sick headache, dullness, feverish ness, sore throat, sneezing, soreness 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 "Papa's Cold Compound." which costs only a few cents at any drugstore. It acts without assistance, tastes nice, causes no In convenience. Be sure you get the g..i- 1 ulne. Adv. ECZEMA CAN BE CURED Free Proof To You All I want it your name and address so I can send yon a free trial treatment. I want you juit to try this treatment that's all lust Try psj i nat s my ooty argument. I've been in the Retail Drug Business for to years. I am a member of the Indiana State Board of Pharmacy and I'resident of the Retail Druggist' Association. Nearly everyone in Fort Wayne knows me and knows about my successful treatment. Over eight thousand aovon hundred Men, Women and Children outside of Fort Wayne have, according to their own state ments, been cured by this treatment since I first made this offer public. If you have Eczema. Itch, Salt frheum. Totter never mind how bad my treatment has cured the worst cases I ever saw glva mo a chanco to prove my claim. Send me your name and address on the coupon below and get the trial treatment I want to send yon FRF.E. The wonders accomplished In your own case-will be proof. ' "' CUT AND MA1I. TODAY ISS1SS11SHSSSSSSSSSSSSSS J. C. HL'TZELL, Dni exist, 3142 Wast Main St., Fort Wayne Ind. Please send without cost or obligation to me your Free Proof Treatment. "Bat aa touching the resnrrertlos of the dead, have ye not read that nhlrh was apokea mno you by t.od, saying. I am the .od of Abraham, and the t;od of aaae. and the t.ud of Jacob .o,l la not the ;od of the dead, hat of the living." See Matt. 22:21-13. These words ot the Master were ad dressed to a party of Sadducees, who had asked, though in Irony, concerning certain details nf the resurrected state, all the while holding to their unocrtp tural dogma that there could Sot bo a I resurrection from the dead. j The Lord dismissed their circumstan- j tial instance with terse reproof and hi cAiiBimiiuu, siiu went u 1 1 r 1 1 iu the real point of their queatlon the actuality of the resurrection then fu ture. He cited a Bcrlpture often quoted In the rabbinical discourses of the time, dally sung In the refrain of the temple chants, and of frequent occurrence In their ceremonial orisons: "I ana the God of Abraham, and the God of Iaaae. and the God of Jacob." Jehovah's affirmation of His own identity as expressed In this passage was made to Moses at Horeh. See Exo. S. At that time Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, with whom He who there spake unto Moses from amidst the fiery splen dor or the burning bush had made cove nant of everlasting erfect. were dead. The climax of the Master's explanatory and positive doctrine waa unanswer able: "He la aot a .od of the dead, hut of the living l for all Use unto him." (Luke 20:I). Small wonder that certain of the Scribes exclaimed "Maater. thou hast well said", nor that the multitude "were astonished at His doctrine." To acclaim as one of the distinguishing titles of Jehovah that He was the God of the patriarchs whom they most revered, and yet hold that those worthies were dead In the Sadduresn sense of death, was Inconsistency itself. The real import of death varies with the point of view. Looked at from this side of Uie veil ft means bereavement, departure, separation, and as aome Ig norantly profess to believe, annihila tion. From the other side it Is seen In Its verity as the disembodiment of the living, active. Intelligent spirit, which existed before Its entrance into a taber nacle of flash and bonas. which main tains Its Individuality after bodily dis solution, and which la destined to be reembodied In the resurrection. In these several states of existence the spirit Is the same being, with spe cific powers and functions, endowed with agency or choice, and therefore strictly accountable. Death of the body in no sense' extinguishes the conscious personality of the spirit nor does It terminate individual accountability. Peter tells us of disembodied spirits whs had lived in' the flesh during the j. e Name. .Age.. Post OSce . State.. Street and Ns. Noachian dispensation, and who through disobedience and wilful rejection of the Gospel had incurred bodily destruction, and Imprisonment of their undyins spirits throughout the centuries from Noah to Christ. Unto them the disem bodied Savior went aad preached the t.oapel. They were therefore alive, pos sessed or understanding, and capable of accepting or rejecting; the Gospel of saivanon. Yet they were all numbered among the dead as man counts the departed: and for that matter so was the Christ, for His visitation to those "spirits in prison" was made during the interval of His death on the cross and His emergence from the tomb with spirit snd body reunited a resurrected Soul. The Nephlte prophet Alma set forth in words of Inspired plainness the con tinuity of Intelligent existence after death: "Slaw eoueemlaa the state of the soul between death aad the rrurrrrllsa. Be hold. It haa been made known unto me. by au ausrel. that the spirits of all men. aa noon aa tkey are departed from thta mortal bodyi yea, the spirits of all men. whether they he good or evil, are takea home to that t.od who gave them life. And them It ahall eome to ssss that the aplrlta of those who are rtsbteooa are re-eelved la lo m state of hasalsems, which Is railed paradise; a state of rest; a atate of pence, where they shall rest from all their troubles and from all ear-, and aorrow. .... -Now thin to tke atate of the aoula ot the wtckedl yea. In darkaeaa. aad a atate of awful, fearful, looking for the fiery Indlsrua tlon of the wrath of t;od upoa themi thua they remain In thla atate. aa well aa the righteous la paradise, until the time of tkelr resurrection. (Book of Mormon. Alma 40). And as to the Individual existence in and after the resurrection, the same revelator has given us this Scripture: Ao tkere la a death wklck la railed a temporal deatki and tke deatk of Ckrlat akall looae tke banda of thla temporal death, that all shall he raised from tkla temporal deatk. The aplrlt and tke body ahall He reunited again la tn perfect form; kotb limb nad Joint akall be restored to Ifa proper frame. we akall be hrouabt to atand before ( od. knowing even aa we know now. and knve a bright roeolleetlon of all our guilt. Now tkla reatoratloa ahall eome to all. both old and young, hotb bond nnd free, both male aad female, both the wlched and the rlghteoua." Alma 11). For the Book of Mormon, etc.. apply to booksellers or write direct to North western States Mission. 810 East Madi son St.. Portland, Ore., or Bureau of Information, Salt Lake City, Uuh. Adv. RHEUMATISM Rixire. I will glsdly send any rheumatism sufferer a Simple Herb Recipe Absolutely Free that Completely Cured me of a terrible attack ot muscular and Inflammatory Rheumatism of long stsmdlng attar everything elaa 1 tried had failed ma I have gtvan It to many sufferers who believed their cases hopeless, jet they found relief from tbeir suffering by taking these simple herb. It also relieves Sciatica promptly aa wall as Nanxalgia. and la a wonderful blood purifier. Tou are most welcome to this Herb Recipe It yon will send for It st once. I bellave rou will consider It s God-sand after you have put It to tha test. There Is nothing injurious contained In u. and yon can aeo for yourself exactly what yon are taking. I will gladly sand thla Recipe absolutely free to any sufferer who will aend name and address, plainly written. H. U. MTTDN, toSO Magnolia Ave. tAC .j Las Angeles CaL How He Quit Tobacco This veteran, S. B Lampherr. was addloieU to tha exceaalve u o.' tobacco for many yearn Me wanted to quit, but needed something' to help him. He learned of a frea book that tells about to bacco habit and how to ronauer it auicklv. eas ily andafely. In a recent letter ho writes: ' I have ao c eat re for tobacco any more- i I feel like a new man." Anyone dealrlng a copy of thla book on I tobacco habtt. smokJnt and chewing can ! tret It free, postpaid, by writing to Edwarl J. Wood-. TD-2IR, Station P. New York City. You will be surprised mud please Look for quieter nerves, atronger heart. I better dlgeatlun. Improved eyesight. Increased vigor, longer Mfe and other advantages if you quit poisoning: yourself. Adv.