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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (March 30, 1907)
THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL PORTLAND. SATURDAY EVENING. MARCH 30, 1907. DOUGLAS FRUIT LIEU ORGANIZE Gct'Your History of Such ' Organizations Elsewhere Is All En- , ' coliragement. ' v Beater . Blow THAT IS WHAT MAKES QUALITY AND PRICES Douglas Vast Unoccupied Area and ' the Opportunities It Offers Will "'Be Duly, Hplltl Hood River . 0. A. C. DEBATERS VJHO YJILL UEET McHJJWfUJE Range TT is Water land Man's Cheering Words. " ' fffwctal I)4aitk to Th. JotimL , Roseburg, Or., March 10. Th Doug las County Fruitgrowers' association, . recently organised In this city, has alV .' ready grown from a membership of ,11 to 14. The capital stock la 0? including- 69 share at $10 each. . Thar is hgdo,gJt. toft remaining M member will soon b mad lip from among the . enterprising fruitgrowers of the county. Hundreds of thousands of acres of x- ... cellent tree and Tine fruit lands are yet untouched and ready and good-paying . markets are dally Increasing. A quar ' tr of a century hence, good judges pre dict, Douglas county will have In ' creased Its tree and vlns acreage 500 per cent. - Some steps hare been taken looking to -, the building of a modern cannery. ( Fruitgrowing oostbllltiea. ' Wonderful possibilities, within reach : of any who are willing to grasp them, - retet forth in an article by A- I. Ma son of Hood River, Oregon, and con tributor to the Northwest Horticultur ist Mr. Mason says: "Horticulture is recognised as the ' most pleasant. Independent and proflt--abls"of the industries. Oregon fruit ' growers have demonstrated the possi bility of profits derived. , O. A. Hoover, ' in Rogue river valley, netted 12,70 from his 10 acres Comics and Boas 1. pears last season. Many Hood River , , strawberry growers - have netted from .$150 to $300 per acre. I received $7f0. , per acre from my Tellow Newtowps, and Sft77.ll per acre from Spltsenbergs " last season. These figures wer gross receipts f. o. b, at Hood River. The Bp ray That Kills. .' "Apple growers of Oregon ar almost unanimous - in using the arsenate of f ' lead as the best Jpray for the codling motn. In our section soma growers ar of the opinion that by using this ln- . ' sectlclde Intelligently In every apple orchard we will almost exterminate V thla dreaded apple worm. , Bo effective la ' this spray that, though my 1108 crop was at least two and a half per Cent , wormy, in 1I0S. out of 1.711 boxes of Spltsenberga and Newtowns I had ex- actiy t, apples injured rrom worms. This record Included every wormy apple found en tree or ground after Septem . ber 1. . " It rays to Organise. community depends upon their support and loyalty to local organlsatlona Hood River fruitgrowers have a strong local society besides the strawberry and ap ; pie growers associations, and are loyal ;: in support of each of , the; three, ... The members of the Hood River Apple . Growers' association received from - It to 60 cants more per box for every va- . rlety of apple sold tnan did the outsiae , grower.. . Home . growers received . from , $500 to tl.600 less than would have . , been paid them through the associa tion. )-. " The Tim to Olv Support, s, "The time for earnest and undivided support to local fruit associations Is when they are in their Infancy, need- ll , ic .,.'..". a. v.... , has been done at Hood River Is evident. . I do not believe we can placo too much trs . upon the Importance of this ".Northwest. Fruitgrowers' association ' and the benefits derived from It."- Douglas county Is splendidly adapted Xo the raising and maturing of nearly every kind of fruit produced In the " temperate sone. The appeal la being made by members of the new organlia ' Vtlon to growers still outside to com In . . ami put Rogue river In the Hood river -rlasa. Thla valley ha or can have a"a good or better fruit. It -will get tlte ' prices when it organises foe them. ' 'Wii-,1 eta. r- 1 s - - ' " " '..UUIl.niifUni.nnti . THROUGH POSSE I n in. m m i n h. . . . " " ' (Special DUpateh te The Joarnal.) tr. -r-,n a n Minli IA.mAh unknown ' outlaw who bad taken refuge In a-oobln : near Lorene successfully resisted a siege of 17 men who surrounded the cabin, then dashed off Into the darkness and mad his escape. He was first ap - proached by a constable and seven men. The constable called on the outlaw to -surrender, but instead he picked up his -iiii, iii. lawalled It at the constable. ' whose men then shot at ths outlaw. He retreated within the cabin and tb con stable's force was strengthened. This - morning at t o'clock th outlaw dashed .through th line of men who had sur rounded his cabin and escaped into th ' WOOdS. .,.,.. ( BAD MAN JAILED BY . ) : . ; rue iinnrcT CTBAMfiCD ' (Special TMepateh te Th Joeraai.) . i Oakland, Or., Maroh $0. After defy ing the town constable, his deputy snd 1 th remaining cltlsena of this place at ths point of a gun for two hours, Rob art Tann. a oonvlct. wss arrested by a stranger from California, M. J. BnelL Tapp served a term, in the penitentiary , everal years ago for trying to kill his mother. Yesterday afternoon ha beat his aged father and defied anyon to arrest mm. his deputy hsd provsd unable to do it, Snell was deputised and. had the big Thnllv IB lail in lesa nmu ramuiw. DYNAMITE IN ARMS AND CIGAR IN TEETH tflptotal Wspstrti te The aaral.t ' s..... unnt Maech 10 Klther bra-1 vado or his utter absentmlndsMneas caused an Italian named Fafortl to be blown to pieces at Lewlaton yeaUrday afternoon. Th Italian had gon to ths powder-bouse of a grading outfit on . th MJlwauk road, isturnlng wltli th dynamite, at th sam tints smoking . a cigar, several eparke from which" ar ' believed to have ignited 4h powder in th man's arm.. fJ . fcost and Found. Lost, between l:0 s. m.. yesterday and noon today, a bllloua attack, with MUseaTsnd slrk headache. This loss ' iii occasioned by finding St the Red Cross rharmacy a box of Pr. King's i Tiro Pills. Guaranteed for bilious- Carr Clark. ' - ' tSpacUl DUnatra to The Jaaraal. CorvaJUs, or., March i. Carl C. Clark. Carl M. 8tblnger and Philip H. Cal compoa th. trio that will repre sent O. A. C In the debat with Mo MlnnvtllreotlegorAprtl Or-A.-C.-has thr affirmative of th question. "Re solved, That th United State should subsidise her merchant marine." While all three of the team ar Inexperienced la intercollegiate debating, they ar f GARVIN TO WED blind mm Wealthy Former Oovernocv 7, 7 Rhode Island to" Many Soon." , of Iseda Providence, R. I., March SO. From a smsll tenement In a four-family house In a mill village, to mistress of a large and fins residence in Lonsdale, Is ths step which Miss Sarah Emma Tomlln son, a blind woman, soon will take. Bh la to wed ex-Governor L. F. C. Garvin, one of th moat prominent Democrats In tha state. The ex-governor is 60 year old, well preserved, snd accustomed to the beat society; she I II years old, th daughter of a mill operative, an so- compllshed musician, and ha bean to tally blind sine she was 7 years old. x- Miss Tomllnson's home. In - what Is known ss Lonsdale Old Village, la sit uated near the mllla. in which practi cally all of th residents of the village work. In it th young woman has lived for years. Her early education In th Perkins Institute for ths Blind snd her natural aptitude for music gave her an opportunity to gain a livelihood by teaching piano" playing, and ' by this Dr. li F. C Garvin. mean she ha managed to support her self and contribute Ho ths maintenance of ths household. ..:. Bosas of Kuxary. . . Dr. Garvin's home, to which h will shortly go as mlatrass, is built of th old substantial colonial style and is th first object which a visitor to Lonsdale New Village sees as be enters ths place. It is situated on a high htlkand is sur rounded by well-kept grounds. Ths doc tor In his boyhood wss reared on a plan tation near Knoxvllle; Tennessee. His father was a professor in ths East Ten nessee university... The younger Garvin, even In his youth, was surrounded by th best minds ' of ths then growing country. He was graduated from Harvard Medical school In1 th class of 1807 and since that time has practiced medicine at Lonsdale. .He is a widower and ths father of -three daughters, all matured women, who .ar on- the beat term with tbe'woman who ia aoon to become their stepmother. - Nine years ago Mrs. Garvin died and sines that tlm her husband's life . haa been lonely. : When' asked concerning his engage ment to Miss Tomllnson, Mr. Oarvln said. "Tea, that Is true. I am going to. marry her, I am not doing, this from pity, but because I love her more than any ather woman In the world." Dr. Oarvln, then . the leading physi cian of that region, snd a potent figure In political affairs even' at that time, was the physician,- who attended Mlas Tomllnson's mother When ths girl was born. . . , . 1 ' Always Xntersstad In Xsr. ' ' ' Be always manifested a deep Interest In th little girl snd his house wss al ways open to her. Bh would play with other children among the great trees which shad ths porches and often, as th doctor, 4eavlng for hi dally round of professional visits passed through the grounds, he would stop to pat th child on th head and talk with her.' , When th girl wa aeven years old she became 111. Dr. Oarvln was called. He found that she wss fsst losing her eye sight. All that could be dons to save her vision was don but finally, with s grief equal to that experienced by th Cart M. 8tb!nser. atrong speaker and will be able to present a good argument. Carl C. Clerk, leader of ths team, Is a forceful talker, atrong In rebuttal, and Is on of th best debgters in, ths eol-lege-H Is. a member of th senior clas,a popular atudent and Ti as always been an active worker In th T. M. C. A. Clark waa . a member of th football aquad, playing right guard. Carl M. Bteblnger Is also a senior. He has always been actively engaged In child's parents, ths physician was com pelled to admit thst shs would never see again. ... Through his influence she wss placed In th Perkins Inatltut for th Blind. Th blind child remained In that sohool for 11 years, during which tlm ah became a devoted friend and admirer of Helen Keller. Her natural love for things beautiful encouraged her 'teach ers to Instruct her la music. Her mem ory waa remarkable and at II sh oould dIit without fault, and with- splendid effect some of th most difficult sonatas. "". " " When shs was II years eld shs -returned to Lonsdale to take up anew her life among tho mill folks. Her de votion to Mra Oarvln, ths doctor's wire, wss marked. ' When Dr. Oarvln first began his polit ical life and went to the general as sembly as a representative from . the town of Cumberland, her delight waa greater even than members of his fam ily. "Ho Is a grand man," said sh last week, "a true, noble man, -and any honor which ths people may bestow on him -Is not too great for mm. As tlm 'went and"" Dr." Oarvln be came the avowed advocate of th rights of ths common people, he found instruc tion and aolacs In ths advice given him by tb blind girl. Her opinion was often sought by1 him snd thus It was that th romance began. Nino years ago Mra. Garvin died. Her husband was grlef-atrlcken. Bho was a gentle woman whom every on in th village loved and to Mlaa Tomllnson her death wss a personal loss. ' After that th doctor devoted himself to polltlca He procured th enactment pf-govsTat lsws relating -to-oondltlona of labor In the mills. He admit now that many of these wera first sug gested by th warn an who Is shortly to b his wlfs. Married ta MoaDa. ' In 1CI after on of the moat sensa tional campalgna tha state has ever known tb couny physician became governor. His triumph was Miss Tom llnson's, too. During the worry and car of that campaign the doctor, re turning to Lonsdale, found no better comforter than ths blind woman. After serving two years In the gubernatorial chair Dr. Oarvln waa defeated for re election and . retired to 'his -country home. . Tho date of hi marriage haa not boos announced. Dr. Oarvln aya It will probably taks place next month. It will ha very quiet, only a few lntlmatr friends and members of ths family be ing present After s few weeks Mr. and Mrs. Oarvln will do some traveling. MAJOR CHITTENDEN ON BRIDGE SITE INSPECTION (Special ntrnateh tn The Joarnal.) Aberdeen, w aaa , niren mMjm Chittenden at Seattle, government en gineer. Is here, snd held a public meet ing last night to consider th ap plication of the Grays Harbor and Pu- get Bound railway for a onag across h. naV.l! rlv.r f ,r. and tha eroaalm of the Hoqulam river at Hoqulam. The application of th Northern Pacific rail road for a change of location of Its bridge across the Hoqulam river was alao considered. Major Chittenden and a party of prominent business and news paper men went on a tug yesterday to inspect the rivers snd th harbors. Hoqulam. Wash., March . Major Chittenden and a large party of promi nent men left this city on th tug 8koo kura yesterday to look over th har bor. They went to visit th proposed alt for th north aid jetty and also th south side bfor returning. Th trip took five hours. Those in the party Included Senator Poison, George H. Emerson, W. L. Adams, O. M. Kellogg and others. It la announced thst ths spot selected for the Jetty I about $00 feet east of th "Ions tree," well known to navi gators, snd that it will start from a spot about f.900 feet from ths edge of the flats. ' A trestle will be built to deep water, so thst steamers and barges can land Preliminary -work is. to begin at once. . . . FILE PROTEST AGAINSTv ' REMOVAL OF PETITIONS A protest was filed yesterday In th bankruptcy case of George H. Allen and Etta Allen agalnat tho discharge of the petitioners. Ths protest was mad by Dennis T. Alyn and ths firm of J. 3. Fink snd George H. Lewis. Th first objected on thh ground that tho petition era own a couple of lots of real prop erty not Included tn the Hat -given the court, ths second on the ground that not sufficient tlm had been given th creditor to file clalma against th es tate, Fink -and Lewis holding grocery clalma against th petitioner. , usro ' and remember the next time yon suffer from pain -cauaed by damp weather when your head nearly hursts from neu ralgiatry Ballard s Know Liniment It will cure you. A prominent bualneaa man of Hempetead. Texas, wrttea: - "I have uaed your, liniment Previous te using It I waa a great sufferer from Rheumatism and. Neuralgia. I am ft eased to say ths now I am free from heae complaints. 'Asm sure I owe this to your llnlment" Sold by all drug gists. - CE P. H. Calft. student enterprises and is at present president of th Oratorical and Debating association. He la a good thinker and an eloquent speaker. . During the foot ball season he won th official mono gram through hi excellent work as teartpr-ofthw rooting alusy Philip H.' CaJe Is member ,4f -the sophomore class and la one of ths most promising young debatera In the school. Thla is his first year in this work, but ha Is looked upon a an abls debater. L TO STAND TRIAL Scion of Proud Family Accused of Stealing Jewels It an Ex-Convict. ; (Jbarsal-aeeUI Harries.) -London, March 10. When Lord Wil liam Nevlll i brought into court next week to stand trial on a ehargo of stealing jewelry by means of a trick It Is not pro bible that tb court room will bo filled with th fashionable and titled throng that . waa present some nine year ago. whan his lordship was sentenced to flvo years' penal servitude for fraud. . : That was Lord. Nevtll first offanae the first at least, for. which he had to stand trial. It hsa been ourrent gosalp lno he was released from Wormwood Scrubbs prison that his punishment hsa not worked any great reformation In his oharaeter Or habits and for a long tlm society hsa boon of ths opinion that it was only a ques tion of time tlU he would b in the hands of th law again. That great Interest was . taken in Lord Nevlll' case 1 but natural in vllw of th fact .that he la descended from ono of the "proudest families. In England. Th nam of Nevlll Is his toric Ths founder of th house in England was Gilbert d Nevlll. one of the companions In arm of William tho Conqueror. His , descendants. In the senior line, were the famous saris of Westmoreland. - Lord William Nevtll wa married In llll to Mile. Loulaa Maria Carmen da Murletta, th eldeat daughter or th Marquis de Santurc. th well-known banker. He wss once -an kld-de-camp to th vioeroy of Ireland, snd later a lieutenant in tho third batalllon of th Royal West Kent regiment His broth ers snd sisters are married Into th cream of th Norman' and th English aristocracy. " Th crim 1 for whloh , Lord Nvlll served five year in prison waa fraud. It was proven st th trial that by means of a trick he secured th In dorsement of Lieutenant J. Spender Clay to two promissory notea, upon th atrength of which he obtained som IB 6. 000 from rsam" Lewis, th notori ous money lender, who died not, long sgo. . MONTANA IS PROMISED A SECOND PIKE'S PEAK (Special rttaoatrti t The georaaLI Helena, Mont, March 10. A project to- make Mount Baldly, southeast of Livingston, a pleasure -resort that will equal in popularity Pike's Peak. Is now In contemplation by Pitman Llndley, a capitalist of St. Joseph, Missouri. Mount Baldly Is the main peak of ths Snowy range, II miles southeast - of Livingston, and has sn altitude of 1,750 feet It nearness to Livingston snd Ita gradual ascent make a railway Una moat feasible. The summit can bs reached by a lt-mlls drive from town. Tho scenery along the rout and th wonderful view from th summit malt tha trip an object of great tntereat to local sightseers snd tourists. Springs of purs wster gush from th solid rocks at th very summit It is ths purpose of Mr. Llndley to build a cog-wheel railroad. x FEW BETTER TRAINED TOWNS THAN GARFIELD (Special Placate te The loereat.t Garfield, Wash- March 10. Within 40 days the Spokan Inland electrlo trains will be running into Garfield. There Is the promise of 11 trains a day; six each -way. Garfield now has 11 paaaen ger tralna dally. sixon-tho-Northen Pacific and five on ths O. R. A N. - With tho addition of II dally pas senger trains on th Spokan electric, Garfield will hava an average of nearly a train sn hour. This will giv Oar field tha beat railway facilities of any town in ths Inland empire, outside of Spokan. With th coming of the Inland elec tric road, come a great "demand for small tracts of land near Oarflem. Many commercial men have" signified their Intention of buying .flvo acres. CHEHALIS COAL MINE SOON TO BE REOPENED ' (Special Plapatefe to Th JosmaLI ' Chehalla. Wash., Msreh 10. The Che- halls coal mine, which was closed down for a few dsys and wnicti it waa reared It would be Impossible to work sny more, is soon to be reopened. The fir In the old abandoned shaft has been so handled that no danger Is feared from that source and a new sir shaft Is be In? nut In. A pump with three-Inch discharge Is being Installed and three shifts of men working eight hours each ar bending every energy to put th mine In safe condition. It Is announced that when th Improvements are corn Dieted the output of th mine wfll be doubled. W. I). Sheldon, lease of th mine, I tn charge pt th work,- ENGLISH ORD If you could see how many people are clamoring for Gas Ranges right now, and the number of them who are installing Circulating iWatereaf erst ffiesamTtime. you would agree with bs that the - time to purchase tomorrow. No home in Portland is complete without a Range is essentially complete without a Circulating Water-Heater. The conveniences afforded by a Gas Range are universally known. They make the summer kitchen comfortable; make quick meals possible and save time, labor and money; There is so much comfort, added Jay aGaaWater-Heatethat- It-surprises people when they leara of the great advantage of this appliance. ' Whether you buy or not, it .wilfinterest you to investigate this, latter convenience. .Wehave samples on our floor In opera tion that we will be pleased to demonstrate to your satisfaction. Call any day you Company TI70 FLUID ISSUES IN -ElECTIOH AT CORVALLIS Milk and Whiskey Represented by Wide Open Saloons and the Town Cow. ("pedal IHapstca t Thm lenrsaL) Forest Grove. Or., March 10. Th little town of Comsllus 1 now In th heat of a city election campaign, whloh will end Monday, when the voter will decide th saloon and cow questtona As fsr back as ths oldest inhabitant can remember, Cornelius haa had on or more saloons, snd st present haf three. But there is dire fear among ths "wet" element that this long-atandlng policy of humidity shall be changed. Last? year ths saloon candidate for mayor, Thomas Talbot, was elected by a . very small majority, and thla year tha battle, it is said, will be still closer snd th "drys" hava ardent hopea ' -- On of th "wet" candidate' re marked th other day that there Is dis sension, a split In his party, which may end in defeat. ' Tha wta" argu that ths abolition of th saloon would not only do a great injury to tho town by stopping ths lions Income, but that th town's trad would absolutely be killed. Each oontlngent has ita tloket In ths field. Th "wet" are headed by Gas" Because of Llquozone,M i Now Said z. All - th world .. ovr ther ' srs m 11 ltons of people who know tho power of Llquosone. They know it from actual experience from ths results they hav felt from th good" It brought 10 thsrn. ' Flv years sgo people said that suo'h results were Impossible. 1 Now, If on ays, that, bis own neighbors will an swer, "I ant well because of Llquosone." Please don't say to yourself that thes things csn't be dona when millions know better. Try th product snd sea, and we'll pay th cost of your tart, ' What Llquosone Is. Llquosone Is a lonlo-germlclds, th virtue of which sr derived solely from oxldo gasea No alcohol, no nar cotic, nothing but gas enters into It. Ths prooeaa of making requires large apparatus, and consumes 14 days time. Th object la to so combine th gasea with a liquid as to carry their virtues Into th systm. Ths result Is a germlold so certain that w publish with every bottle an offer of 11,000 for a disease germ that Llquosone cannot ' kllL It destroys them because .germs ar of vegetable origin. But to th body Llquosone I exhilarating, vitalising, purifying. That Is Us main distinction. Com mon germicide ar poison when taken Internally. They aro Impossible, for either or both of these appliances is today, not v - ' : h like: M Your Service and v Yamhill Charles Buchananfor mayor; for eoun c 11 men. Shoone, Benson, Holtser, Mer rtl; treasurer, C. C Hancock; recorder, W. B. Vlckere. Th "dry" or Cltlsena ticket la: For mayor, M. H. Henderson; councilman. Sturduyvant, Hartman, W. Patton, Odell; recorder, Phillips; treas urer, Challaoombe. ' Ths blty will also vote on tho ques tion ss to whether or not tho cows shall run at large. . DOG HE KICKED PROVED TO BE OLD MR. COUGAR Wallowa. Or, March 10 Kicking a cougar, thinking II waa a dog, result ed tn a thorough fright for Ira Lively at a logging camp on ths Wallowa river laat night. Ths animal entered th ahanty in whloh Lively and a oom pan Ion were sleeping. After they retired th cougar arrived and crawled under Liveiye bunk. Lively, thinking it was a dog, got up sqd ordered it out of th cabin and kicked it to enforce hi order. He was severely scratched on th leg and still more frightened. The cougar than left th cabin and tho meq locked tho door. - - - - - Land Graft In England. From ths American Magailne. -' Ths land underlying London is valued today aa it waa la tho seventeenth cen tury. Much of It Ig on tho tax dupli cate as th hunting preserves of som great estate. It is a though Manhat tan Island war still valued for purpose of taxation as. it waa when th City HaU park was on tho outaklrta of th town. 'I'm Well they destroy th tissues ss well ss ths germs. That Is why medicine proves so helpless In dealing with germ dtseasea . Llquosone, on ths contrary, seta as a remarkable tonic We Paid $100,000. For ths lights to Liquoson, after thousands of testa hsd been mad with it, after its power hsd been - demon strated for more than two year in th most difficult germ dtseasea- Conditions whloh hsd realated medicine for years yielded at onco to It, and diseases con sidered Incurable were cured. . :, V That was flv years ago. Sine then millions of people in every part of th world hav shared in th benefits of this Invention. Nearly every hamlet, every neighborhood, has living examples of its power. Now we ask you to let It do for you what It did for them. . - - . - Germ Diseases." ' Most of . our! alcHnesa haa, In late years, been traced ' to germ attacks Som germs as in akin troubles di rectly attack th tlssuea Som create toxlna, causing such trouble as. Rheu matism. Blood Poison. Kidney Disease and nerve ' weaknesa. Rome destroy vital organ, ss In Consumption. Some like the germs of Catarrh Tate In flammation; some c'i !-nl' .-.tlin. In one rf V m, t- 'y e .ry-serious ar Gas Range; no Ga: Fiilh COULD USE EIGHT f.TEH FOR EACH ONE ,HT I708K Labor Famine Causes Snake River Line's Construction ' to Lag Sadly. . ' (Special Dispatch ' The learaal) Baker City, Or, Maroh 10. Because of tb labor famine throughout th weat tho Hartiman 'engineers ar badly handicapped in grading th roadbed for th new Northwastarn railroad, which is being constructed down tho Snake river from Huntington to tha rioh cop per camps of aaatern Oregon. While from 4,000 to 1.000 men should b em ployed on th road there are but 100 or TOO men in tho grading camps. W. R. Armstrong, ssslstant chief en gineer in charge of eonatrnottpn, who 1 In th city, stated this morning that tho time of completion of tho grade could not be estimated, owing to tho scarcity of labor, but that ovary man who la willing to work is being hired and it ta hoped that a crew mora than flva time th sis of that bains aaed now will be secured within a short tlm. At present seven corps of engineers sr In th field supervising tha work and about 11 or 10 grading oampa hav been established. . . the World Over, Such conditions call for a grmiolda not fos common drugs. Liquoson does what other mean cannot accomplish. And it la wrong to ellng to old way when mllllona . of people know a way that Is better. -. ." ' .: 50c Bottle Free. If you wish to know what Liquoson doe pleas send us this coupon. We will then mall yon an order on a local druggist for a full-stie bottle, and will pay th drugglat ourselves for It. This Is our free gift, mad to convince you; to let tho product Itself show yon what It can do, i In Justice to yourself, pleaae accept It today, for It place you un der no obligation whatover. Liquoson costs loo and It. CUT OUT THIS COUPON Pill tt eat ai4 stall It Tb. I,lrme Ooaaaay, 464 Wakeah Are, Chleafa, My dlsaas Is. ...... '. I hav. btP rrM the saw l.lqtManee. tnt If Too will supply bm a so sat lie ftee I will lake It. ............... Wa are mm arm., t.-4t ' ol'l n-' Ir.ra I f.... I