THE SUNDAY OREGONIANV PORTLAND, OCTOBER 5, 1919. OUALITY PHONOGRAPH PORTLAND PRODUCT "Stradivara" Distinctive Type and Making Gocd. in ENTERPRISE IS- NEW ONE Factory EtabllMird in MJdsnmnicr Now Scrno of Activity, Wllh Local Men at Ucad. Br LI.VTOX L. TAVIES. 1 J - I . 1 vtu jwin ioie was a merry enougn old soul in the rlamoroua days before strikes became contagious, but the odds are bljrh that he would have dis played a terrible streak of temper had he ever been Informed that his inree xiaatera were out on a sympa thetic walkout, or that his retainers were befuddled with that particular brand of whisky commonly known as "squirrel." Were he residing in Port land today, however, he would easily be able to maintain his traditional rood humor, for here he could go over to Ka.it Portland, buy a brand-new. Portland - factory - made phonograph, and blissfully cast from his mind all thoua-ht of the erractic flights of his temperamental musicians. Not every Portlander knows that his city has a phonograph factory that it can call its own. But that Is not sur prising, since it has been in existence but a few months. The Pacific Phonograph Manufac turing; company was organized in midsummer of this year by local busi ness men. W. B. Wiggins of the Broughton-Wigrins Lumber company. Is president. E. W. Barlow is vice president and manager, and 6. 1 Kddy. vice-president of the Ladd A Tiiton bank, is treasurer. W. B. Wig gins. Ira y. Powers of the Powers Furniture company, F. A. Doughty of the Multnomah Lumber sr-Box com pany. . L Kddy and F. X. Clark of the F. N. Clark company, are di rectors. Fartarr Safcutaatlal Oae. A large, airy, well-lighted factory at Kast Thirty-third and Burnside streets, originally built for airplane manufacture by Oliver K. Jeffery and his associates, was acquired by the firm .last summer and was equipped with costly machinery. The operating department of the factory is three stories in height. The building is solid brick and concrete structure. Mahogany from fhe forests of Af rica. oak from the groves of Asia, and walnut from the Mississippi basin all yield up their virtues within the fou walls of the factory on Kast Burnsid street. Lighter woods are shipped in from here and there to fulfill the! part in the construction of an instru ment familiar to and beloved by millions. Many and various are the stage through which the blocks and beams pass. The kiln receives the llsht. soft wood in the greenest condition and tarns it out in eignt to ten aays ready to be utilised. The costly mahogany and oak veneer material is taken from the mills and surrendered to the deli cately-adjusted planers and joiners. Process follows process as hard and soft woods go from machine to ma- cnine ana lae musical instrument takes chape. Quality ProJaot Object. A single product Is the entire work of the factory. It is a high-grade phonograph, distinguished among the many different types and brands by its trade name. Stradivara." The name comes from the fact that it tone-prtnclple is that of the violins of Stradivara, or Stradivarius. as the Latin has It. The sound'boxes of the famous "Utrads" and the sound-boxes f the phonographs made in Kast Portland are of the same material edge-grained spruce. Spruce, which went to war on for eign fields, now lends its-capacities to the delights of peace. The stately monarch of the forests of the Pacific northwest responds to a different call The aristocratic hardwoods that cross the seas to contribute to the beauty of the Portland-made machine must be content to give pleasure to the eye: to the spruce of stradivara and of the Oregon woods goes the honor of satisfying the more fastidious sense of hearing. The "StradlvarV phonograph was conceived by O. A. Price, an expert piano builder who found that in high grade pianos sounding-boards of spruce wer to be found lending, to the Instruments richness of tone not In evidence in pianos of Inferior con struction. It was first manufactured by the Compton-Prlce company of Coshocton, O., an old piano-manufacturing concern. From this company the Portland firm secured the patent rights for manufacture and sale in the states of Washington, Idaho, Ore gon, California. Colorado, Nevada and Arlsona and the western half of Mon tana, and for export from all Pacific coast porta. Kxpeaalve Machines ITaed. All manufacturing work on the in strument is done in the local factory, with the exception of the machinery. Melsselbach of New York and New Jersey, and a patented automatic atop Is manufactured in Rochester, N. Y. This mechanism is fitted in an install ing room, where testing of motors and attachments is done. On the ground floor of the factory stand two old machines. "These two machines cost $3000." remarked Mr. Barlow, manager of the company. 'Watch this veneer-planing machine." The expert in charge of the machine slipped a beautiful thin panel of Afri can mahogany onto the moving plat form. The panel rode along it till it reached the plane set vertically at one side, when the plane shaved the edge In one rhythmical motion. "Now watch this one." aald Mr. Bar Jow. as we turned to the second ma chine. The operator slipped two pan els In the platform, with the edges to- LYNCHING HELD TO BEAMED HIT tion of Negro. MOBS THOUGHT MENACE gether. They glided through and came out with a width of tape hold ing them In a perfect joint. The op erator turned the two panels over, and they were as one, so beautifully matched were they. Yaralxk la Hsrayed Oau Upstairs and down, planes rsn over grained wood and stains prepared the finished cases for varnishing and fit tlnsr. The nrenared varnish on the "Stradivara" goes on in five coats. ChUfCheS Plead fOf PfOteC u is feum mi showers, so .that it will lie evenly. At one side of the large room in which the varnishing is done a num ber of artisans go over each case with sandpaper after each coat is put on. The room is carefully shut off so that dust from this operation will not penetrate the air of the varnish ing room. The last operation In the birth of the "Stradivara" Is the rubbing of the varnished wood to give a soft, dull finish. The rubbing is done painstakingly by hand, but this pres ent method will be abandoned when newly patented pneumatic rubbing machines are secured. Compressed air will then do the work now performed by arm pressure. A complete system or cost cneca- ing Is in operation in the factory, so that at the end of each month the labor of the hundred employes can be estimated and the averages taken to give the cost of each piece of work In the manufacture of the phonograph. "The Compton-rrice company sent us its figures on production costs re cently." said Mr. Barlow, "and the figures show much more paid for the work done on Stradivaras in its fac tory than we pay. "That explodes the old theory that furniture and like products cannot be manufactured profitably on the Fa cifio coast." Failure to Recognize Black as Man Is Declared to Be Responsible for Racial Troubles. IRISH SCOUT PROPOSALS London Times Settlement Plans Not Taken Seriously. DUBLIN. Ireland has now had time to digest the proposals for a settlement published, in the London Times. There Is practically nobody of Irish nationalist opinion who is prepared to take these proposals seriously In their present form, for they give to the Ulster minority such powers of veto as would effectively cripple any legislation which might be put forward. But at the same time most Irishmen are glad to recognize that a genuine effort Is being made' in Kngland to bring the question of a settlment prominently to notice. This can be said to be the first oc casion on which such an erfort has r ii iiiauc miij f t' -1 v. persons representing unionist opinion and as such it has been taken as hav ing a value beyond that of the actual proposal. There is no probability that the scheme itself will be accept ed as workable it is In fact doubt ful whether the authors of it had any such intention but the putting for ward of it will be and is accepted as evidence that something will have to be done. It is expected that the effect on the younger members of the union ist party in Kngland and also on the general tendency of middle-class pub lic opinion will be far reaching. In any case the fact that the Times and the Obsehver, the two journals which probably carry the maximum of weight with a large and important class of the population of Kngland. have definitely taken up an attitude favorable to some sort of change, leaves the followers of Carson in a position of Isolation, which they have never before occupied. Consequently nationalists feel that the time is rap- Idly approaching when Ulster will be called upon either to accept any set tlement which may be proposed or to put forward her own suggestions as to the safeguards and so forth which she requires. Up to the present the whole strength of her position has lain in the fact that she haa not had to do this. We now count largely uppn Amer ca and the British dominions to see that it Ulster refuses either to take what is offered or to make construc tive suggestions she forfeits all claim to moral support. If this line should be taken, the two bogles of coercion and partition will disappear simulta neously. Is is to be hoped that American opinion will interest Itself in the matter from this point of view rather than focus Itself, either with favor or hostility, on the activities of President DeValera. which at the mo ment are really in the nature of a side show, designed to show Ireland that Sinn Fein Is doing something. Meanwhile the leadera of the Sinn Fein movement here realize that their proper policy at the moment Is a waiting game they are, from the op posite point of view, in much the me position os Lister, In that their strength lies In keeping up an un- ielding negative attitude. Sinn Fein has, however, this advan tage over Ulster that it is gaining results every day. It is perhaps not the case that a very large number of new people are actually joining Sinn Fein as a party, but there Is no doubt' hat there is a steady movement of opinion towards an advanced nation alist point of view. This tendency s most notable and most remarkable in the well-to-do professional classes and among the landlords of the south- m counties, who. up till now, have constituted the backbone of unionism. Two chief causes of such a change can be clearly seen. In the first place constant presence of an army of oc cupation in Ierland, supplemented by large plain-clothes police force, is producing a natural feeling of irri tation and revolt I all Irishmen who, whatever their political ' views may ave been, regard Ireland as their own country and want to see it fit to live in. NEW YORK. Asserting that, "we must face frankly the fact that most, dengerous inter-racial situation now threatens our country," the fed eral council of the Churches of Christ in America made public here a "con structive programme" for protectinfl negroes against mob violence, better lng their condition and removing the cause of racial troubles. The plan was formulated by the council acting in conjunction with i committee representing white and ne gro citizens from all sections of the United States. At a meeting of the committee held here recently a dis cussions of the racial situation took place and it was decided to issue "a callto the citizens of the United States to act In conformity with the high Ideals of democracy Mnd Christianity in the present condition of strained relations between the races." . The statement outlining the pro gramme Is signed by Frank Hason North, president of the federal coun cil: Albert G. Lawson, chairman of the administrative committee; Wilbur P. Thirkfleld, chairman of the com mittee on negro churches, and Charles S. Macfarrand, general secretary of the council. The first paragraph urges protec tion against mob violence. It fol lows: "The government, local, state and national, should impartially guaran tee to all classes security of life and property. Mob violence is becoming a crowd habit. When life and prop erty are ruthlessly taken, when men and women are lynched with no pro tection from officers or courts, law and order are trampled under foot. We call upon the pulpit, the press and all good people to create a public sen timent that will support necessary legislation for the entorcement of ex isting laws, that life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness may be equally secured to all classes." "The negro should have economic justice, equal opportunity to get and hold work on.the same terms as other men, with equal pay for equal work and with fair working and living con ditions," the programme continues. "The entrance of large numbers of negroes into the various industries emphasizes the necessity of an imme diate amicable adjustment of rela tions with white Employers and fel- low workers. Referring to crimes that provoke mob violence, it is said: "We call upon men and women everywhere to protect the sanctity of home and womanhood. We record with satisfaction the growing enlist ment of negro leaders In a pro gramme of education and Christian ization such as tends to preven crimes that provoke mob violence. icn home or the negro should re ceive the same measure aof respect and protection as that of other Amer leans and the sanctity of his home relations should be sefeguarded in every possible way. Swift and im partial action of the law should strike the violator of the sanctity of any home, white or black. Adequate recreational provisions are recommended for negroes on the ground that it Is "fundamental to the welfare and efficiency of society." The plea of the negro for "equal traveling accommodations for equal charges" is also Indorsed. "Adequate educational facilities for negro children and youth should be provided not only as a national obli gation, but as a necessity for national welfare," the committee says. "We emphasize the urgency of giving to tne negro nis run share of local and national funds." It is. also asserted that "qualifications for franchise should be administered irrespective of race, cred or color. The council advocates closer co operation between white persons and negroes. This could be brought about, it says, by organizing local commit tees of white persons and negroes in towns and communities for the con sideration of inter-racial welfare. The council also recommends that the governor of each state appoint a standing committee for the study of causes underlying racial friction with a view to their removal It advocates also that "congress be requested through, a nonpartisan committee to Investigate the disturbed and threat ening ltner-raclal situation through out the nation." The root of the matter." it says, "is the failure to recognize the negro as a man. If we propose to democratic programme for the protection and self-determination of the weak and oppressed people of Kurope as a means f permanent peace and gill will abroad, let us apply the same programme at home." A statement by the council asserts that "the recent race conflicts in some of our cities is a challenim t ,. PORK ACTUALLY GOES UP SlE.hh'! !;hhaTd7rl,h the p" ' I of the brotherhood of man. This calls for preaching the duty of economic- " ii In A "KNOWN FOR. TONt graphs Art Phono are made in Portland The Stradivara Phonograph, known for tone a tone so woody, fluty and sweet as to hold the ear enthralled from the beginning to the end of the record is an Oregon product. The unique principle that places the Stradi vara apart from all other sound reproducing instruments is ; j ! wmiim . i ii m I ' j Mmw Umlmmwm the. Patented Stradivara Sound Board gg Invitation to Visit the STRADIVARA FACTORY We are proud of this new Oregon Industry. We are proud of the complete ness of our mod em manufacturing plant. We are proud of the industriousness and skill of the men who actually make the one perfect phonograph. So we are glad to invite you to visit the Stradi vara Factory at East 33d and Broadway, Port land. The factory will be open daily, except Saturday afternoons and Sundays, between the hours of 10:30 A. M. and 5 P. M., for visitors. Be sure to take the first opportunity you have of seeing how the Stradivara Phonograph is built. The famous Stradivara, designer of the violin, per fected the sound board of edge-grain spruce. That identical sound-board principle of Stradivara is the fea ture that makes the Stradivara Phonograph desirable above all others. The patented sound board gives the same rare quality to the tone which emerges from the , Stradivara as is given to that made by a fine old violin or piano. Music from a Stradivara is not ' thought of as re-production. The tones are so pure, sweet and re fined as to be, in their effect upon the most musical ear, the original production itself. Hear the STRADIVARA " Until you have heard a genuine Stradivara violin played by a master you have no conception of what violin music may be. So, likewise, until you have heard the genuine Stradivara Phonograph, you do not know what surpassing music can be had in every home in the west through the medium of this wonderful instrument. In order that you may know, we invite you to hear the Stradivara played at any of the stores named here. Being made in Port land, close to the market and raw ma t e r i a 1 s, no high f r e 1 g ht tariffs are added to the cost of the Stradivara. You pay for the How to Slake a Gray Hair Remedy MIRROR USED IN SUICIDE Glass Employed aS Aid to Accuracy I inches thick. In Revolver Shot. Mrs. Mackie. the well-known New Tork actress, now a grandmother. and whose hair is still dark, recently made the following statement: "Gray streaked or faded hair can be Imme diately turned black, brown or licht brown, whichever shade you desire. YORK. Holding a looking . ,h I glass before bis face to determine ... . . . " the accuracy of his aim. Frederick .uai you ... maao ai nome: Rau J2 yearll OId of 47 Adeline "Merely get a box of Orlex powder Place. North .Bergen. N. J., shot him- at any drug store. It costs very little self in the bead and 'died Instantly, and no extras to buy. Dissolve It In Rau Jhjr"!f1 Instructor and , M j. j . masseur at the Biltmore hotel, Man- w ... w .v- v.i. hattan. i - - i r 1 Drafted In the -ar. Rao was a , ,, , ' . . I member of battery F. 330th rfield ar- I tiltery. 87th division, and returned from France a few months ago. He was very nervous and was said to fluffy. It will make a gray-haired have been suffering from shell shock, person look many years younger." I Recently he tol da friend that "life Adv. is not worth living. Famous Georgia. Duroc-Jersey Is I First of Hog Fliers. LA GRANGE. Ga. That cow that got credit for "jumping over the moon didn t have much on Lady Florence. Duroc-Jersey, imperious and hyphenated aristocrat of TOO pounds or so. For Lady Florence "Florrie" they call her on the Taylor farm Is the ery first pig to travel by aeroplane. Florrie was won In a competition by James Taylor, a soldier In the avi- llon service, and one of the condl- lons was that she should be deliv ered by aeroplane. She was Securely crated, she occupied the after compartment of a machine in a stormy flight that elevated pork to the highest level ever achieved by meat barring that doubtful incident which caused the dish to romp away with the spoon.. ana community justice lor the negro, thus securing peace and good will be tween the races." LOST METEOR IS . SOUGHT Academy W ill ray $25 for Big rel ief From Sky. PHILADELPHIA. Pa. Lost A me teors.. Return to Academy of Natural Science and receive reward. The meteor for which the academy is willing to pay fell one night re cently on the parkway at Filbert street, hurtling through the air with a swishing noise and crashing into the pavement, accompanied by a shower of sparks. According to Floyd Erlckson, an inspector in the division of housing and sanitation, a driver carried the meteor away in bis wagon. Mr. Erick son says the heavenly projectile seemed to De an irregularly shaped mass about 12 inches long and 6 i ouality alone Vf ' W. If. CAI.EF, 540 Williams Ave..-.. CHISHOI.M A SPEER, MUSIC SHOP 120ii Killingsworth Ave. DICKSON DI11G CO., 71 E. Sllth St. FOLEY VA!V DYKE, 106 6th St. . WM. GADSBY & SOS. 2d and Morrison. FRANK C. OASSF.R, 921 South Jersey St., St. Johns. EMU. GEIIRINU, 720 Milwaukie Ave. HOVENDEN PIANO CO., 146 Park St. HENRY JENNING A SONS. 5th and Washington Sta. LIPMAN. WOLFE CO., 6th and Washington Sts. IRA F. POWERS Fl'RMTl'RE CO., 3d and Yamhill Sts. J. H. REMICK SONG AND GIFT SHOP, 324 Washington St. SOCLE BROS., 166 10th St. WILSON DRUG CO., 1054 Corbett St. Pacific Phonograph Manufacturing Co. Portland, Oregon. STOCK SHOW IS MED SAX FRANCISCO'S FIRST DIS- TLAY TO BE IX NOVEMBER. Building at Exposition Grounds Will Be Used to Honse Some 1000 Animals for Exhibit. SAN FRANCISCO. Cal. San Fran cisco, the largest city in the country without an exclusive livestock show, will hold its first exhibition of pure bred stock during the first week in November, the California building at the Panama-Pacific exposition grounds being used to house some 1000 show animals, in addition to a large ex hibit of poultry and pet stock. The California international live stock show, as this exhibition is known, will fit into a circuit start- ng with Los Ageles the last ween n October and concluding with the Portland livestock show a week after the San Francisco event. This circuit will make possible the showing of a number of herds from the middle west and Rocky mountain states. The University of California has oaned the services of Professor H. Tue of the animal husbandy de partment to manager the first show. and Professor True reports that live stock men of the west will respond with a high-class showing of well fitted cattle, horses, swine and sheep. The stock and poultry classes will compete for 136,000 In premiums. As a night attraction 500u in prises will bring out a saddle horse show and exhibition driving of four and six-horse teams in the heavy classes. The state loir ana several county and district fairs, according to Pro fessor True, have eliminated some ol th plainer animals, so that the Cal ifornia international will be the final competition between, the best animals of the west. The commercial Interests of San Francisco are supporting' the first show with an organization headed by W. T. Sesnon. In which she was riding was going up Broadway. According to her husband, L. . Mandel, a traveling salesman, her Jewelry consisted of a nine-carat diamond ring, a gold brooch studded with diamonds in the shape of a cres cent, valued at J3000, and other ar ticles. The police learned from the chauf feur, Frank Grisso, that Mrs. Mandel and her male companion entered the taxicab from a restaurant on Broad way near Forty-third street. At Seventy-eighth street the man said his companion was ill and asked the chauffeur to drive to Riverside drive. The man then asked the chauffeur to drive to a drug store at Seventy eighth street and Broadway, where he could telephone for'a physician. After waiting three-quarters of an hour the chauffeur entered the store and found that the man had disappeared. Mr. Mandel was seen at the Hotel Commodore last night after he had identified his wife at the hospital, but he refused to discuss any of the de tails of the case. The Mandels have been living at the hotel since July 12. BASEMEliT STILL FOUND COMPLETE MOONSHINE PLANT WRECKED BY OFFICERS. Three Trousers Worn for Health. NEW YORK. To be healthy a woman must wear trousers, said Miss Fanny Harley, registered at an ex clusive hotel here. Demonstrating, she strolled down Fifth avenue in a pair of white flannels. Phone your want ads to The Orego nlan. Main 7070, A 6095. Are Fined After Haiders Slake Way Through Secret Door to Whisky Factory. KELSO, "Wash., Oct. 4. (Special.) Sheriff Hoggatt, John Taylor, deputy sheriff, and a federal revenue officer put the largest moonshine plant ever located in Cowlitz county out of busi ness Friday when they raided the James Powell place on the little Kal- ama, a tributary of the Lewis river. and found a complete still in a hidden basement beneath the house. Louie Eddy, Arthur Chisholm ana Bert Chisholm were arrested and fined $100 each and costs. These three men and Mr. Powell and his son, Louis, are being held for the federal authorities. When the officers entered the Pow ell home and arrested the men, they could find no way into the basement. ! The men, in fact, denied that there was a basement. Sheriff Taylor tun neled beneath the house until he gained entrance to the basement. He round that the only entrance to the I basement from the house was by means of a ladder and a trap door in the kitchen, which was cencealed by an ash mat. In the basement the officers found the most complete plant they had ever seen. It had two stills, and a large condenser of Improved type. There were nine 50-gallon barrels of mash. Their books- showed that 32 quarts of whisky had been deJlvered the day preceding the raid. The plant was completely demolished bjf the officers. Lungs Weak? GIFT TO WOMAN UPHELD Mrs. George Miller of Cove Sues Father,; Gels 80-Acre Tract. COVE, Or., Oct. 4. (Special.) Mrs, George Miller of Cove, formerly Miss Matilda A. Conley, daughter of A. B Conley of La Grande, to whom her father made a gift of one of the fines of the 80-acre tracts of land in low?r Cove with an oral reservation tha it was hers for a home during her lifetime, received a decision in her favor from Judge Knowles in a sui she had brought against her father to establish her right, title and interest in the property. Early this year Mrs. Miller s son John Miller, and one of the twin daughters o( Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Laird students of Cove High school, went to Weiser, Idaho, and were married The Academy of Natural Science hopes to gain possession of the me teor and add it to its collection of 83 similar exhibits. "This meter has no unusual value," said Samuel G. Gordon, who has charge o fthe mineral and rock col lection at ttie academy, "but it does have an unusual interest because of the fact that it fell right in the heart of the city. We will be glad to pay a reasonable amount for this speci men, and I judge from the meager description of its size that it ought to be worth about 125. "We will not fork over $25 to the first person that, brings us a chunk o f black rock." says Mr. Gordon. "We ( watched can absolutely identify a meteor,' J Apparently ROBBER DRUGS WOMAN Jewels Worth Thousands of Dollars Stolen From Victim. wrw YORK. Confined In he ob servation ward of Bellevue hospital, d victim of opium poisoning adminis tered by some unidentified man who robbed her of Jewelry valued at sev eral thousand dollars, Mrs. Maedel of Chicago, who has been staying with her husband at the Hotel Commodore, gave her version of the affair. Physi cians at the hospital said that Mrs. Mandel was in no condition to leave the institution. Detectives of the West Sixty-eighth street precinct are searching for the man who accompanied Mrs. MandeL They have obtained a good descrip tion of him from the chauffeur of the taxicab and an arrest may be made soon. The ponce also nave Deen iur nished with a description of the jew elry and every pwnshop is being Mrs. Mandel was KEVER GRIPE OR SiCKEN THEY'RE F!NE! , Cascarets" act without Griping or Sickening you So Convenient! You wake up with your Head Clear, Complexion 'Rosy, Breath and Stomach Sweet No Biliousness, Headache or Constipation. Generous Offer to Tuberculosis Sufferers of Trial of Europe's " Remarkable Remedy, SANOSIN-'- World's Tinted medical Bclrntlsts Hoc tors DanelluK, Kommerfeld, Wolff, Nol .authler Kssers df. lnre SANOSIN the " mjwt effective treatment for Pulmonary . -ailments yet discovered. Kellx Wolff. Court 1'hyaician. Diiertor of the Sanitarium, for ConsuiniMlves In iteiholil.ibrun. avM ha ' hiw awarded all other remedies. SANuSIN hail been officially recommended to the Herlln Medical association. Dr. C W A kssers, Amsterdam, Holland, declare It a. Jloral obliKation to make BANOSIN Known lo tho whole human race." Amer ican suTfererB, rich or poor, can use thin ... remarkable home treatment that haa met with such phenomenal success In Kurope. bA.NUbJN doea ita work by absorption of Kerms not an Injection. Produces calm, restful sleep without ilorphlum or siml- ' lar deadening drugs. Hnnus almost Ira-' mediate relief from couKhlnsr, blood spit ting and niijht sweats. SANoSIN is prov iiiB a blessing to all sufferers from Tuber- ' culosls. Bronchitis, Asthma, Hronchlal Catarrh, etc. Send for FRKK BOOKLIST (with testimonials) explaining this treat ment and how a trial can be made In vour own home at our risk. Address SANO.S1N. 5(7 Unity hldK.. Chicago, allow this to some unfortunate. Adv. NO MORE CATARRH This Simple Home Trentment Stood the Teat of Trme. Ilua Every fall and winter, for more', than t,wenty years, thousands of peo- pie have made it a daily practice to 1 breathe the air of Hyomel and so keep themselves free f rom C tarrh, Couirhs.- folds. Bronchitis, Sore Throat and In liuonsa. i. This is certain and vou should try it. If you will breathe Hyomel daily."'. as directed, it will free you and keep you free from all these troubles or it' ' won t cost you a cent. At the Owl Drusr Store or any relia- " hie druggist can supply you with the Complete Hyomei Outfit, including- a ' hard rubber pocket Inhaler. The in-.,,, haler will last a life time and extra buttles of the liquid Hyomel cost but';, a lew cents. A few drops of oil In the inhaler will last for days and Ita ' pure, sootliins;, antiseptic, healing; air, ' urea tiled deep in the air passages of your nose and throat, should keen you free from coughs, colds, influenza , and catarrh all winter lone:. Plnsssnt to use. takes but a few minutes dailv ' i and is guaranteed to satisfy or money uaca. juy. Loves Her Cows and t , Chickens Again "I have had stomach trouble for 20 years and for the past year have eaten nothing but stale bread and ' drank hot water. Was too weak to do any kind of work. Kix weeks auo I ". ook the first dose oflayr's Wonder- ' :ul Remedy and am now dolnn all my housework besides looklnz after my ' chickens and milking; two oows every day. Jline has been a wonderful recovery." It Is a simple, harm- ees preparation that removes the ca- arrhal mucus from the intestinal . ract and allays the inflammation which causes practically all stomach,. . liver and Intestinal ailments, includ-. nfr appendicitis. One dose will con vince or money refunded. At all , druggists. Adv.