The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, July 24, 1921, Section One, Page 13, Image 13

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TALE OF LOOTING AND MURDER IN CHINA
' IS RELATED IN LETTE R TO PORTLANDER
Lloyd E. Gale, American Company Agent at Hankow, Declares "Whole Country Is Fast Approaching
Chaos and Business It at Standstill" Natives Reported in Fear.
Better Drug Stores!
Proposed 30-Minute Limit in
Wholesale Slaughter Is De
clared Unwarranted.
Broadway Opposed.
cPorwder Stiffs that sold during the High-Price Era
DEALERS' STAND BACKED
FINLEY GIVES HIS VIEWS
at izc are Norm ior in The Oivl nia Store
Association Contends Convenience
Ex-State Game . Wardem and Biol
ogist Challenges Statement Made
' Ty Gold Beach Man.
to Public Demands Service
In Streets at Times.
THE SUNDAY OREGOXIANY PORTLAND, JULY 24, 1921
AUTOMOTIVE TRADES
EM PIfiKli FRAY
SEA LION MENACE
TO SALIVION DENIED
n. I
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The Portland Automotive Trades
association, with more than 200
members is pledged to stand behind
the north Broadway automobile
dealers in their fight to get a two
hour parking: period for lower Broad
way in place of the 30-minute limit
provided in the new parking ordi
nance. A communication setting
forth the stand of the dealers is in
the hands of City Auditor Funk for
presentation to the council next
Wednesday.
Public convenience demands serv
ice at the most convenient points,
even if the streets are partly utilized,
the dealers' statement declares. The
etand Is taken as a matter of prin
ciple to protect the automobile men
from encroachment upon privileges
that are granted other classes of busi
ness. Pnblle . Convenience Set IPf
The principle of public convenience
is recognized by every municipality,"
the dealers' communication pointed
out. "Business houses are permitted
to monopolize the streets in front of
their establishments under the guise
of freight entrances. Department
stores are permitted practically to
blockade certain congested downtown
treets of Portland.
'Theaters are granted street sign
permits which violate the law. on the
theory that they are a public con
venience. There are more than 35,000
motor vehicles In Portland and per
haps more than half of the adult
citizens are constant or occasional
users of them. These citizens are
entitled to convenience in automotive
service and that convenience cannot
be offered if the city pursues the
policy which will drive service estab
lishments into isolated sections of
the city."
All-Day Parking; Opposed.
The association further states that
all-day parking allows the business
folk to park their cars in front of
automobile service concerns and ham
per them. Therefore they oppose all
day parking in the district. Thirty
minutes is not sufficient for even
minor repairs, they state, but two
hours is apparently the ideal time
In the minds of the automobile deal
ers. Many of the establishments do
not have room for drive-ins and must
depend on the use of the streets for
making minor repairs, tire changes
and the like, the . communication
states.
Whether or not the dealers will be
able to influence the council to make
immediate changes in the new park
ing code; is doubtful.
Mr. II nrbur Demands Trial.
Commissioner Barbur declares that
the dealers should be willing to let
the new restrictions be given a fair
test. 1( it proves that the automo
bile men are suffering unduly from
its provisions they can rest assured
that the council will grant them re
lief. Commissioner Barbur says. The
traffic situation is critical, however,
and all classes must be prepared to
stand their share in the changes -If
it is successfully overcome.
The question is not merely that of
30-minute parkins or two-hour park
ins, in Commissioner Barbur's mind,
but living up to the spirit of the ordi
nance in an effort to give Portland
better utilization of her streets for
the benefit of the public as a whole.
Two Honrs Held Imposition.
With two-hour parking the dealers
easily can move their cars often
enough to keep within the law with
out improving traffic conditions in
the least. The 30-minute provision is
not a matter of holding a stop watch
on a man and moving him out on the
rims if he has not had time enough
to put on a new tire.
The 30-minute limit will mean that
the streets will not be used for mis
cellaneous storage and display pur
poses. Commissioner Barbur believes,
but that dealers will find storage fa
cilities elsewhere for their cars that
are not needed.
Service Not to Be Hindered.
The cars of the motoring public
which come for service, will not be
forced to double park to gain en
trance to a service house, but will
have opportunity to park at the curb,
make reasonable repairs if necessary
or arrange for service.
All members of the council have
not made definite announcement of
their stand on the Broadway question.
It is probable that further investi
gation will be made before Wednes
day. SODA MAKER IS ACCUSED
Arrest of James II. Duncan Or
dered on Adulteration Charge.
A warrant was Issued yestePSay by
Federal Judge Wolverton for the ar
rest of James H. Duncan, who is
charged by United States Attorney
Humphreys with adulterating a bev
erage known as "Wine-O."
Mr. Duncan is manager of the As
toria Soda works. He is charged by
government officials with having
substituted saccharin and phosphoric
acid for sugar and fruit juices and to
have added artificial coloring unlaw
fully. The government stepped into
the case when it was charged that the
federal laws were violated by an in
terstate shipment of the beverage
from Oregon to Washington.
Chocolate Adulteration Charged. .
Three hundred pounds of chocolate
coating shipped to Portland from San
Francisco on steamer by the Riesner
Chocolate ' company has been libeled
by United States Attorney Hum
phreys. The government alleges that
the chocolate is not pure, charging
that it has been adulterated with
cocoa shells. United States Marshal
Mann has been ordered to seize the
shipment and if the case is prosecut
ed, it is probable that the hearing
will be held in San Francisco.
Japanese Fisherman Fined $23.
S. Okamato. Japanese, of Indepen
dence, paid a $-5 fine at Dallas
Wednesday for angling In the. waters
of Lost lake without a license. Roy
liremtner of Salem, deputy game war
den, made the arrest, and In addition
to being without a fishing license,
Okamato was also without an alien
license. The case was reported to
the state gams warden's office here
yesterday. .
Phone your want ads to The Ore
gonian. Main 7070. Automatic 560-95.
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A PICTURE of distressing condi
tions in Iehang, Wuchang1 and
npfphSnrino1 PhlnAA fitiAa wi.h
were the scene of looting and murder
last month, has been received, in a
letter from Lloyd E. Gale, a Portland
boy, to bis mother, Mrs. D. C. Gale, ot
111 East Forty-eighth street.
Mr. Gale, who is acting agent for
the American Trading company at
Uankow, China, has been in China (or
more than two years and writes thai
"the whole country is fast approach
ing chaos and business is at a stand
still."
Hankow is just across the river
from Wuchang, where half the busi
ness section was burned to the ground
by looters, according to Mr. Gale's
letter.
"This confounded country is going
from bad to worse and the natives
here are living in daily fear of the
Hankow native city being pillaged
and burned," wrote Mr. Gale on
June 19.
Town Looted by Soldiers.
"Ichang, up the river from lere,
was looted again by unpaid soldiers
and they were then put on a boat and
sent to Wuchang, the capital of this
province, which is just across the
river from us and 20 minutes from our
bund by ferry. The night they landed
in Wuchang they plundered the whole
city, killed many people and burned
half the business section literally to
tllS ground. We were on tenterhooks
for several days, as they promised to
loot Hankow the same way.
"The military governor, Wang Chan
Yuan, has just returned.-to Wuchang
from Pekin. where he 1iad extorted
several millions from the government
to pay these and other soldiers, but
upon his return it is said that he is-
CELEBRATION AT PLYMOUTH
DESCRIBED FROM NEW YORK
y "
Correspondent Decides He Cannot Bear Mingling With Sifht-seers Who
Attend Pilgrim Tercentenary, and Writes Account While at Home.
BT ROBERT C. BENCHLET,
Aanoftate Publisher or Lire.
(Copyright. 1921, by The Oregonian.)
NEW YORK, July 23. It is such
a long trip up to Plymouth,
Mass.. and the place is prob
ably so crowded with sightseers stag
gering about in celebration of the
Pilgrim tercentenary, that your cor
respondent can't quite bring himself
to cover the event in person. A man
has his health to think of. We are
not very well equipped, therefore, to
write a dispatch on the tercentenary
celebration, but from what little we
have seen of pageants and red-hot
sporting events of that nature, we
feel that it ought not to be difficult
to work up a little story about the
thing without going up' there at all.
In the first place, it is more than
likely that the whole affair has been
placed in the hands of a professional
producer from New York city. If
such is the case, it is unquestionably
a big affair. A tremendous boulder
has probably been made of papier
mache, big enough to accommodate a
company of 300. (The original Ply
mouth rock is really a dinky thing
on which to stage a modern show
like this.) lip the harbor comes a flo
tilla of "Mayflowers," all agleam
with electric lights, with designs in
colored bulbs on the foremasts spell
ing "Plymouth, 1620-1920. A live wire
town."
Cnorns Girls Included. k
Then motor launches bring the cast
from the ships to the rock, on which
is centered the glare from 25 high
powered spotlights. First come a cho
rus of girls, dressed a cabin boys.
Thtn a chorus of boys, dressed as
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sued a proclamation to the effect that
no money would be paid out by him
and that all the soldiers in this divi
sion were, hereby disbanded those
who h'ad the price could go to their
homes and the others could get coolie
jobs or starve as they pleased. Nat
urally the whole bunch took the only
means of collecting they were famil
iar with and. yiat was to loot and
burn the city, which they did in
proper style. It was a mad orgy of
human (?) hoggishness.
Wreckage Is Visited.
"The next day I went over to Wu
chang to view the wreckage, and It
Is unbelievable. To 'save his face' the
tuchun wang sent a large party of
the looters up north on the railway
and gave orders that an ambuscade
should be prepared for them at a little
station north of Hankow. This was
don and when the train pulled in to
the station the engine was uncoupled
and run ahead and these soldiers in
the ambuscade opened up on the train
from all sides with machine guns and
killed every man, woman and chiid
on it nearly 1600 of them. The loot
cabin girls. These are followed by a
boatload of pretty Dutch maidens
evidently proseltyed during the stay
in Holland. They wear wooden shoes
and do a brief clumpety-clumpety
dance on a ledge of the rock. Song,
the closing lines ot which are:
Twelve little Dutch girls.
Can't do much, girls.
Xo take the "grim" out of Pl'.grim. you see
Then comes a rowboat with an Ev
inrude motor in it, containing the
comic relief, who is dressed aa a Pil
grim father. He is simulating intoxi
cation and reaches continually to his
hip for a flask from which he drinks
with comic relish. In attempting to
climb up on the rock he slips into the
water and is drowned if all goes well.
Bis; Scene Staged.
Now comes the big scene. The) cabin
boys and girls, together with the
Dutch maidens, all turn toward the
mother ship of the fleet of "May
flowers'lland point in the direction of
a large motor-propelled float, which
is making its way rapidly through
the water. The chorus is sung in uni
son, the burden of which is as fol
lows:
All hall! all half! ye brave little pilgrim
band!
All hail! all hall! a royal welcome to this
land!
It's the land of the free and the home of
the brave
And the Star-apangled Banner forever shall
- way.
Away down south In the land of cotton
Plymouth Rock shall n'r be forgotten.
So hail! all! all!
During the last three "all hails" an
hands of the chorus are raised aloft
and the fingers wiggled, giving a
smashing effect as seen from the
shore in alternating red and orange
spotlights.
At this point the float draws along
T
sr i ii -1 -
-sss"
was then brought back to Hankow
and sent over to Wuchang, where it
will (not?) be returned to the looted
shopkeepers.
"One of the missionaries of Wu
chang climbed over- the city wall of
Wuchang the morning after the loot
ing, as the gates were closed, and he
borrowed my camera to take some
pictures with. I am sending a few
of them. Anyone caught with looted
goods in his possession was executed
in the streets forthwith and fox sev
eral days the streets were full of
bodies and heads were hung over ail
the city gates.
"The worst of it Js that there are a
bunch of lookers still in the city bar
racks with all their loot and they will
not surrender to the tuchun, and in
addition they swear vengeance on the
tuchun for the slaughter of their com
rades at Siao Kan railway station. In
addition to this the Hankow Chinese
chamber of commerce is busy making
donations to tne troops stationed in
Hankow to keep them from looting
Hankow, as Hankow would be the
richest pickings in the whole Yangtze
valley.
side and, one by one, the famous
pilgrim fathers and others step down
the brocaded gangplank onto the
rock. A colored page with a mega
phone' announces the name of each
as he or she descends, and individual
applause is accorded to everyone. An
especially hearty greeting Is given to
John -Alden and Prisoilla. because ot
the sentimental regard, in which they
are held by the public, and .also to
captain Miles stanaish for the sports
manlike way in which he is later to
accept defeat in bis affair de coeur.
Indiana Take Part.
As soon as the principals are all
landed on the rock and the float has
backed away a fleet of canoes is seen
coming out from the- shore, contain
lngr Indian maidens dressed in badges
bearing the words. "Welcome. Pli
grims. Reception committee." On the
canoes are signa reading, "Any Pll
grim in uniform hop in. for a rids ai
far as we go."
The chorus of Indian maidens climbs
on tne rock with the rest and per
forms a dance, during which th Pll
grim Fathers keep time by clapping
their hands. Gradually more and more
people get on tne rock: it sinks alow
ly -into Plymouth harbor, while the
entire company sings "Brine-ins: In
the Sheaves" and "Hail, Hail, the
("Sanp'a All W "
At last It disappears from view
with all on board. (Thunderous ap
plause.) Here Comes the Bride.
Detroit News.
Sound forth the cheerless march:
Sing lustily, ye choir;
And with thy slnrlng strencth
The bride and groom inspire.
Stretch forth thy necks, ye guesta
That ye may catch a glimpse
A down the alale they come
These two mUgulded simps.
Bow down thy beads, yea all.
.nu aue-ni prayer prolong!
Bow heads, I say. in prayer
Another man's gone wrong.''
S. & H. green stamps for cash.
Helman Fuel Co., coal and wood
Main 353; 660-21. Adv.
-
Statements 'made recently by W. M.
Hunter of Gold Beach, Or., that seals
and sea lions along tne Oregon coast
are such a menace to the salmon in
dustry that wholesale slaughter of
the mammals is warranted, have been
branded as absurd by William L. Fin
ley, ex-state game warden and state
biologist, and now connected with
the national association of Audubon
societies, a body working for the pro
tection of harmless birds and animals.
"The statement that 1,840,000
salmon are eaten each season by eea
lions .along the Oregon coast is ab
surd and not based on facts," said
Mr. Finley.
"It has likely been given out to
minimize the inroads that are being
made upon the salmon runs by the
purse seiners, trap men and glllnet
ters. By making people believe that
a few colonies of sea lions along the
Oregon coast were doing such an im
mense amount of damage, it shifts
the blame and, gives commercialism
a reason for destroying another spe
cies, that is, the sea lions along the
Oregon coast.
. Complnlnta Are Noted. -
"For many years the salmon fish
ermen of San Francisco bay com
plained that the colony of sea lions
opposite the Cliff House were ex
terminating the salmon run that went
up the Sacramento river. The fish
ermen at Monterey bay had the same
complaint. The California fish and
game commission sent the late Pro.
fessor D. Ij. Dyche to make an in
vestigation. He killed 25 sea lions
and upon examination of the stom
achs, found not a trace of fish in any
of them. The sea lions were living
largely on squids or octopus. The
sea lions on the rocks opposite the
Cliff Hou:e near the entrance of San
Francisco bay have always been a
great attraction. It is one of the few
places where hese big sea mammals
can be seen by the ordinary person,
and --until the salmon cs.nners can
offer a reason based on facts for
their destruction, the state of CalN
fornia has not allowed them to be
killed.
"Later on. a commission consist
ing of three naturalists, the late
Cloudsley Rutter of the United States
fish commission. Professor Edwin C.
Starks representing the California
Academy of Sciences, and Robert E.
Snodgrass of the California fish and
game commission, visited most ot the
sea lion rookeries on the coast of
California, Oregon and Washington.
Off the mouth of the Columbia river
the fishermen claimed that the sea
lions were doing great damage to
salmon fisheries. But Mr. Rutter was
not able to secure very much con
vincing -evidence. As a whole, their
investigation showed that compara
tively little damage was done to fish
eries by sea lions.
Iavesttaratlon Xs Urged.
"'In the face of such scientific evi
dence as we have, before the Oregon
fish commission carries out its whole
sale slaughter of sea lions and spends
a lot of state money, it might be well
to Join with the United States bureau
of fisheries and make some additional
investigations.
"Many of the commercial fisher.
men do not distinguish between the
two sea mammals, the sea lion and
the seal. The latter. I believe. Is
more destructive, as they frequently
enter the rivers and bays and mu
tilate a salmon that has been caught
and held in a net. An investigation
of this kind should be carried on by
some of the scientists of the United
States fish commission, rather than
by commercial fishermen or by poli
ticians. "Inasmuch as the Oregon fish com
mission has hired a sea lion hunter
and is equipping a sea-going boat to
destroy the sea lions off the Oregon
coast, it is likely that before the work
is completed, notice may be given-by
the bureau of biological survey that
the fish commission or any of its em
ployes are subject to arrest under the
federal law if they kill any. of the
sea lions on Three Arch Rocks reser
vation off the Oregon coast."
PEJREBRED5 SELL HIGH
HOIiSTEtVS BRtXG TOP PRICES
AT SATSOP AUCTION.
Hamilton Herd of Xarly 60 Head
. Represents Biggest Livestock
Transaction of Tear. '
CHEHALIS, Wash., July 23 (Sp.
eial.) With grross total receipts if
J1S.110, the dispersal sale of the Ham
ilton Brothers' herd of nearly 60 head
of purebred Holstein cattle at the
Brady farm near Batsop yesterday was
the biggest event in the Pacific north
west in the sale of livestock for 1921.
The top price, paid for the heifer
Chimacura Lut.ik.e Marie, a 2-year-old,
was '(35, by 'William Bishop of Chi
macum. Senator Bishop also took
home with him two heifers, both be
ing unnamed daughters of the .King
of Chimacum, a great bull from bis
own line of breeding. For one of
these, dropped May 19, 1920, Senator
Bishop paid S576; for the other, born
June 17, 1921. he paid $335.
More than one-third of the cattle
sold were bought by breeders from
Lewis county and will find homes
tributary to Chehalls.
One of the largest Individual pur
chasers was the Taranikl Holstein
company of Prosser, Wash., composed
of E. F. Benson, former Washington
commissioner of agriculture; Edgar
O. Fawcett, and others.
LIMBS MENACE TRAFFIC
Property Owners Arc Warned to
Trim' Trees.
Low - hanging shade trees along
Portland's streets are screening beau,
tifirl homes from the sight of tourists
and are becoming a menace to the
tops of automobiles in many cases, ac
cording to Mayor Baker. Plans are
now-wilder way to enforce an ordi
nance that provides for each property
owner to keep the trees along his curb
line trimmed so that no limbs hang
lower than eight feet above the side
walk or street.
The matter is one of eivic pride and
all citizens should see that their
street appears the best possible to
visitors and tourists, Mayor Baker
There?s a Face Cream to Meet
Every Fancy and Condition
Day Creams, Night Creams,Massage Creams, Cleansing Creams,
Liquid Creams, and many special creams. You will always find
Nyal Face Cream 30c and 60c
Woodbury's-Face Cream 23c and 50c
Pond's Cold Cream .23c and 30c.
Pond's Vanishing Cream.. 30c
Anyvo Cream 69c
D. & R. Cold Cream. 25c and 50c
Hudnut's Marvelous Cold Cream.. .25c and 50c
Luxor Cold Cream 50c
Colgate's Charmis Cold Cream (tube) . . .25c
P. D. Euthymol Cold Cream 25c'
Red Feather Cream 25c and 50c
Satin Skin Cream V 33c
Hind's Cold Cream. 29c
'.Pompeian Night-Cream (jars) 45c
Satin Skin Vanishing Cream. 33c
Ayer's Luxuria Cream. 40c
Colgate's Charmis Cold Cream 40c
B. & Hazeline Snow.'. .' '35c
Ingram's Milkweed Cream. 39c
Charles Flesh Food 50c
A. D. S: Peredixo Cream (small) .-. . . . .35c
Hebras Viola Cream .50c
Egyptian Cream . .50c
Nadinola Cream. 50c
Palmolive Cream. 48c
Antia Cream 50c
Elcaya Cold Cream 50c
Hudnut's Violet Sec Cream 50c
Melba Skin Cream. . ... . . . , 50c
Melba Cleansing Cream 50c
A. D. S. Peredixo Cream (large) 65c
llrttSMBMiiil
stated. The ordinance provides that
the police shall warn persons to com
ply with the law, but it is hoped
there will not be need to call the at
tention of persons to their curb trees.
The low hanging limbs tear auto
tops and, following summer rains,
bend almost to the street line, hin
dering both pedestrian and street
traffic.
Artisan's Install Officers.
The officers of Liberty assembly.
No. 628, United Artisans, were pub
licly installed Wednesday night at
their meeting place, East Eixth and
Alder streets, with Dr. William G.
Keller acting as installing' officer, and
the cadetw of the ayspmbly assisting.
Thousands Are Nervous Wrecks
Cross, Crabbed and Care-worn
From Weak, Thin Watery Blood
wfllruit ever suspecting the real cause of
their trouble I ron-starva tion.
A New York Physician says that MORE THAN ONE HALF THE POPU
LATION OF AMERICA PERISHES BEFORE MIDDLE AGE sod that om
of the chief contributary cemses of this terrible waste of human life is the devit
alising weakness brought on by lack of iron in the blood.
THERE ARE 30,000,000,000.000 RED BLOOD CORPUSCLES IN TOUR
BLOOD AND EACH ONE MUST HAVE IRON.
0 r
An enormoas number of people who ought to be strong, vigorous sod In the
prime of life are constantly complaining of weak nerves, headaches, paina across
the back, disturbed digestion, shortness of breath, a general 4 ran -down' coodi
tioo, melancholy, bad memory, etc, when the real cause of all their Buffering is
IRON STARVATION OF THE BLOOD,
The proof ot this i shown by ths fact
that when orgmnlc iron la supplied to their
blood, that all their m altitude of yrap
tomi often quickly disappear and the very
men and women who were formerly so
complaining now become strong;, healthy
and vigorous, with even dispositions and
sunny, cheerful natures.
Nature put plenty of Iron in the husks
of grains and the skins and peels of veg
etables and fruits to enrich your blood, but
modern methods of cookery throw all these
things away hence the alarming increase,
in recent years, in anaemia Iron starva
tion of the blood, with all its attendant ills.
If you are not willing to go back to na
ture, then you should eat more such iron
containing vegetables aa spinach and car
rots and reinforce them by taking; a little
organic iron from time to time. But be
sure the iron you take Is organic iron and
not metallic iron which people usually
take. Metallic Iron is iron just as It comes
from Vie action of strong acids on small
all classifications well represented in The
Owl Drug Stores and you will always
find them offered at prices that are right
beyond a doubt. Note these favorites that
sell for 50c and less. Face creams are
certainly not expensive.
Owl Hieatrical
Cold Cream
is the most popular of all cleansing creams.
It is supreme in quality and a leader in
quantity; full-pound tins sell for 75c.
Gently massaged into the skin, then re
moved with a soft cloth, it clears the pores
of dust and grime that soap and water
cannot reach.
Sanitol Face Cream. '. 50c
Stillman's Freckle Cream 50c
Suprema Cream 50c
, Mavis Cold Cream 50c
Woodbury's Cold Cream. 50c'
Palmolive Vanishing Cream..'. . . ." 48c
MAIL. ORDERS RECEIVE PROMPT ATIKMIOV.
Broadway and Washington Streets. Marshall 2000
After the ceremony the cadets put on
an exhibition drill, similar to that
used by them at Astoria on July 4,
when they won the championship cp
offered cadet teams of the order in
competitive drill. A dancing party
has been arranged for the meeting of
July 27.
Finn to Be Deported.
Alexander Kanckos, a Finn who en
tered the United States from Canada
without a passport, will be returned
to his native land the latter part of
this month. Notification of the de
portation was made yesterday by R. P.
Bonham, Inspector in charge of the
Portland district of the immigration
service.
pieces of Iron and is therefore an entirely
different thing from organic iron. Organic
iron Is like the Iron in your blood and like
the iron in spinach, lentils and apples. It
may be had from your druggist under the
name of Nuxated Iron.
Nuxated Iron represents organic iron in
such a highly condensed form that one
dose of it is estimated to be approximately
equivalent (in organic Iron content) to eat
ing one-half quart of spinach, one quart
of green vegetables or half a dozen apples.
It is like taking extract of beef instead
of eating pounds of meat.
Over 4.000,000 people annually are using
Xuxated Iron. It will not injure the teeth
nor disturb the stomsch. A few doses will
often commenceto enrich your blood and
revitalise your wornout, exhausted nerves.
Your money will be refunded by the man
ufacturers if you do not obtain satisfactory
results. Beware of substitutes. Always in
sist on having genuine organic Iron Xux
ated Iron. Look for the letters N. I. on
every tablet. At ail druggmta in tablet
form only.
MIRACLE MAN
BANISHES ILLS
WITHOUT DRUGS
Wm. B. Thofhpson, A. 1NL,
-Ph.D., M. D Teaches
People How to Banish
Constipation,Headaches,
Rheumatism and Fain of
Every Description.
By a simple method, easily learned
and applied a child can do it you
can banish the above-mentioned ills,
also many others.
No Drugs; No Electricity; No Ap
pliances to Wear. Not a Mind Cure
Nor a Food or Hygienic System
just a simple re-dlscovery o Nature's
fundamental- law.
Thousands have used and are using
this always available DRUGLESS pre
scription and are enjoying boundless
health. Write for full free informa
tion. The price of this system is.with
In the reach of all. We guarantee
you satisfaction or money refirnded.
Wm. B. Thompson A. M.. Ph. D., M. D..
"The Miracle Man." Founder of the
Zonery System of Healing by Nerve
Pressure. 3211-T West Washington
St.. Los Angeles. Cal. Adv.
Broke His Vow
"After trying all remedies and doc
tors for stomach trouble for eight
long years I decided I couldn't be
helped and swore I would never take
another dose of any kind of medicine,
but when I saw what Mayr's Wonder
ful Remedy did for a friend, who also
suffered from bloating as I did. I con
cluded to try it myself. It helped me
at once." It Is a simple, harmless
preparation that removes the ca
tarrhal mucus from the Intestinal
tract and allays the inflammation
which causes practically all stomach,
liver and intestinal ailments, Includ
ing appendicitis. One dose will con
vince or money refunded. The Owl
Drug Store and druggists everywhere.
Adv.
Phone yur want ads to The Ore
eronian. io.:n i07U. AulomuUu 6u-b5.