THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, WEDNESDAY EVENING, JULY! 22, 1908.
DOCTORS
BEAT COURT
Dr. Eisen lprivcd of Li
cense by State Board of
Medical Examiners Before
Injunction Can Be Served
on Them.
MUST RING HOSES
OF POWER HOGS
rincliot Says Such a Trust
Would Make Oil Octopus
JiOok Small.
The state bare! of medical examiner
beat Dr. W. T. El sen and an injunction
tunned by .Judge Hronaugh out In a
close race this afternoon and revoked
the licensa held ly Klsen.
Learning that It was the Intention of
the tate board to revoke hla - license
because he had been convicted of hav
ing; performed an illegal operation, lr.
Elsen hastened Into the court of Judge
Bronaugh end asked for an Jnlunotlon
restraining the atate board from re
vokig the permit to practice hold by
him. In, the meantime the state board
. was preparing to have a meeting which
was held this afternoon at the office
of Ir? R, C. Coffey In the Corbet t
building. Before the service In the in
junction suit was served on the board
the action revoking the license had been
taken by the board, which was Ignor
ant of the move mane hy Elsen to ae
. cure the restraining order from the
court.
Dr. Elsen waa convicted last winter
in the circuit court and sentenced to
pay a fine of J500 for performing an
Illegal operation.
A abort time ago Dr. A. W. Moore
started nroceedlnsrs before the examln
ers to have Dr. Eisens right to prac
tice revoked. About the same time a
similar move was. made to revoke the
license of Dr. J. W. Morrow ana ini
afternoon waa set aa the time for
: iaklnar ud these cases.
Dr, Elsen asserts that new evidence
was discovered after it was too late to
be used In a motion for a new trial,
whereby he might have been able to
prove himself Innocent. He lias taken
.an Anneal to the state sunreme court.
and he asks, that the medical examiners
be prevented from revoking his license
until after the case Is finally decided.
Dr. F.lsan was convicted of contrl out
ing to the delinquency of Jennie Sieg-
hers. a lts-vear-Gld girl, wno testified
against him. She was treated at the
X-Rav sanitarium, which became no
torious for several similar cases. Ern-
est Hay-mans, who was In charge o
the institution and was a witness for
the state, afterward was sought by the
officers and could not be round.
The members of the state medical
board are Drs. A. C. Panton, E. B.
McDanlel, R. C. Coffey, Byron E. Mil
ler and J. 8. Mott. They were to meet
In the Corbett building this afternoon
to consider the Elsen and Morrow cases.
(t'ultrd TrtM Lird Wlra.l
San Francisco, July 22 tJIfford
Plnchot. chief forester of the l.'nltej
States, went to Berkeley today after
making an appeal to the people of Cal
ifornia to protect the wutersnene 01 mu
state and stop ruthless destruction of
forests.
Declaring that the question of allow
ing a giant monopoly of the power In
terests In the United State will come
before the people before next winter,
Plnchot warned California that such a
combine must be prevented
He said the monopoly would be of
auch proportions that the Standard Oil
comnanv would look small beside It.
After speHkln at Berkeley today Mr.
Plnchot will depart for the east tomorrow.
HUGE FIXE SET ASIDE
(Continued from Page One.)
WATER SYSTEM TAKEN
OVER BY EOCENE
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
: Eugene, Or., July 22. At a meeting
of the city council yesterday afternoon
the proposition of the Willamette Vel
ley company to turn over its water
. plant to the city for 119.000 was ac
cepted, and as soon as a few minor de
tails are. arranged- by the fire and water
an finfl n no nnmmlftui."th. nanr will
be signed. ' The city will collect all bills
. due the plant for the month of July, the
oate or aurrenaer in tne contract ana
deed for the property being July 1.
Some agreeable arrangements will be
" made) for the operation of the plant by
the company up to the present time of
. toe month.
A contract was also made with the
Willamette Vallev company to furnish
v- electric power for the operation of the
.pumps at 1 cents per giiowat. i nere
-are three 350-horsepower pumps at
tne Dumping plant and during the sum
mer time they are all operated, but In
the winter only one is necessary. The
' comDanv. in Its contract, holds Itself
: responsible for all power the city will
'--.heed or can use in the operation of the
pumps, and the manager says if will
. fee obliged to add another dynamo and
nglne to the electric plant. This will
' tie don immediately.
. By the purchase the cjty also ac
quires the valuable Skinner Butte
property, sn eminence in the north
part of the city, on which the reser
voirs are located. The- butte la one of
the most beautiful sites for a natural
' park in the state and the city will
probably take steps to beautify it.
T The- surveys for the proposed gravity
water svstem is going on and the work
Trill soon be completed. F. C. Kelsey,
Portland civil engineer, and McArthur
A McClaln, a Eugene firm, have the
, contracts for the construction of the
system. While the gravity . system Is.
i feeing constructed the city will operate j
the present pumping system ana Rive
the puhJio the best service possible un
,'der the existing conditions.
DENTIST, MINUS A
, LICENSE, FINED $50
(Ppedsl DtsMtch to Tlie Joarnal )
T Orande, Or.. July 22--J E. Ptev
enson. a practicing dentist here. is on
trial for the 'second time today for
practicing without a license. Tie was
lined $50 a week ago on the name
Charge. Stevenson alleges a conspiracy
between the state board and the La
Orande dentists
Standard OH company of Indiana $18,
240.000.
The higher court orders that the case
be given a renearing ana remands u
for that purpose.
The decision Is scathing In Us ar-
ralanrnent of Land! a. holding that he
Imposed the fine on the corporation
when It had not been indicted and was
not even on trial.
When Judge I-andls rendered the de
cision nearly a year ago, assessing the
greatest fine ever known In the history
of Jurisprudence, it was the sensation
of the day.
The case waa based upon alleged re
bating on oil shipped by the Standard
Oil company of Indiana.
I,andla assessed the highest possible
fine in each separate alleged offense,
making the enormous total.
6reve Defeat for Government.
The decision today came as a great
shock to the government counsel In the
trust-busting cases, as they appeared
confident Tuesday that Land la decision
would he affirmed In every particular;
The federal court of appeals, which
handed down the decision today, is com
posed of Judges I'eter B. urosscup,
Francis E. Baker and William H. Sea
man.
The Standard OH company of Indiana
Is one of the subsidiary companies of
the Standard OH company of New Jer
sey. It has a capital stock or only i,
000,000, but the government investiga
tions showed that during some periods
It has earned more than 1,000 per cent
profits.
BUM wrong uorpoiwuon.
Judge Qrosscup delivered the opinion.
wmch in part was as inuowa:
"Rrleflv. the reason for Imposing the
sentence was because, after conviction
and before the sentence, it was brought
out in the examination of some of the
officers and stockholders of the Stand
ard Oil company of New Jersey that the
stock of the standard un company, or
Indiana was owned principally by tne
New Jersey corporation. That corpor
ation was not before the court for
trial, the eourt adding (upon evidence,
however, to be found in the record, but
upon no information specifically re
ferred tol that in concessions of the
character for which the defendant be
fore the court was Indicted, tried and
convicted, the New Jersey corporation
was not the Virgin' offender.
Is a sentence such as this, based on
reasoning such as that, sound?
Severe Criticism for Landls.
'Passing- the fact that no word of
evidence or otner inrormation, support
ing the trial court's claim, If duly
proven. Is to be found in the record,
would comment, if duly proven. Justify
a sentence such as this one that other
wise could not have been Imposed?
"Can the court, without abuse of Ju
dicial discretion, wipe out all the prop
erty of the defendant before the court,
and all the assets to which its credit
ors look, in an effort to punish a party
that has not been convicted, not tried
and not even indicted?
"Can an American Judge, without
abuse of Judicial discretion, condemn
anyone who has not had his day in
court?
"That to our mind, is a strange doe
trine of Anglo-Saxon Jurisprudence.
"No monarch, no parliament and no
tribunal of western Europe for centur
ies has pretended to have the right to
COAST DEFEASE
NAVY NO NAVY
Newport. R. I., July II. Twenty-one
guns greeted President Roosevelt when
he arrived here today on the yacht
Mayflower. He was escorted to the
war college by a delegation headed by i
Hear Admiral Morrill.
In a brief speech the president de-j
clured that to assume an attitude of I
meekness toward other nations Is sure
to Invite disaster and Humiliation, in
part he said:
"If we limit ourselves merely to de
fense In case of war. it would bo as
well to give ud Hawaii. Porto Hlco and
Alaska.
"If we Intend to put forward the
claim of being a great nation, we must
te ready to make good that claim.
"This is always certain, though
there are a number of wtili-meiinliig
navy officials 'who would like the navy
to ne merely for defense, and who advo
cate a const defense navy.
After his arrival hare. President
Roosevelt arranged to have the captain
and crew of the wrecked schooner
Menawa provided with money and trans
portation to their homes In Now lorn.
Captain Pnowden of the Mayflower
transmitted a report of the accident to
int navy department at Washington
STRUGGLE OVER
VIEES'SUCCESSOR
Reorganized Factions
City Council to Test
Strength.
of
Bnshllght wsa elected president of
the city council at thle afternoon's ses
sion. The vote stood! Kushllght, G;
Bennett, 2; Dunning, 1 1 Menifee, 1 ;
Vaughn, 1.
That a test vote will be made this
afternoon which will show the strength
r
Landls erred in excluding the testi
mony of Hollands, a government wit
ness, who wished to change former tes
timony In which he stated that he did
not remember telling anyone that the
six-cent commodity sheet had been flledJ
wiin tne interstate commerce com
mission. The decision says that the finding of
the lower court Is reversed because "ev
idence thus proffered was cxoluded by
the court for the sole reason that, as a
matter of fact, the court (not the Jury)
found that the application sheet con
taining this stx-oent commodity rte
had not been filed with the Interstate
Commerce Commission. The Jury
should have decided this, not the JudKe. '
The opinion states that I-andls erred
In ruling that Ignorance of the le
tariff rate on the part of a shipper ac
cepting rebates may not be pleaded as
a defense
The opinion further deolares that the
lower court should have determined tlw
number of offenses by the number of
transactions consummated. Instead of
by the number of carloads.
Another section of the opinion reads
as follows:
"Would a cab driver, convicted of vio
lating a city law against excessive cab
fares, be sentenced to nay a fine that
would leave him bankrupt many times
over and unanie to pay anything out
the least proportion of his debts to
other creditors?
"Is this case another case simply be
cause. Instead of being an Individual
the defendant is a corporation; and be
cause. Instead of being up for sentence
under a city ordinance that was not In
tended to destroy, nut to regulate the
defendant, is up unfler a national law
a law that was intended, not to de
stroy, but to promote?"
In conclusion the decision declares
that "the sentence was Imposed wholly
because of facts wholly outside the rec
ord.
The Standard Oil's Offense.
The offense for which the Standard
Oil company was convicted and fined
consisted in a secret deal whereby It
secured frelgh-t rates lower than the
published schedules. By an Illegal ar
rangement with the Alton road, tho
company was given a rate of 6 cents
per hundred pound on oil shipped from
whiting, Ind.. to East St. Louis, while
independent shippers, who knew no
thing of this secret deal, were forced to
ray 18 cents, the published rate. For
three years the Standard Oil enioved
this secret rate and the evidence ad
duced before Judge Landls showed that
during that period the profits of the
corporation amounted to $200,000,000.
The Immense advantage enjoyed by
the Standard Oil company, by means of
mis secret rate, enaoied it to crush out
competition and the Independent ship
pers were being 4rvn mi--ef the field.
OIL ATTORNEYS
SAY GOVERN
IS HELPLESS NOW
of the respective organized parties
the council Ih expected In an effort
elect a president of the council to auo
ct-ed Councilman Wills. Rushlight and
euurs urr wio muii on wnum me par
ties will make their fights sod strong
trrorts lire nemg made by tne minority
party, reinforced by Drlacoll, to eject
Kushllght
.So far the members of the majority
party deny Having selected a nominee,
but it ih generally Deuevea II the mat
ter comes up this afternoon that they
win vote ror c ellars. Ail morning, un
til tho squabble aross over the transfer
of the liquor license to F. X. Bouthller,
efforts were being made to make
trade on votes which would decide the
contest Before the work oould be ac
complished the transfer debate arose
and nothing more was done, but It la
expected that efforts will be made along
trie same lines sit this ariernoon s sea-
Ion
Kushllght la practically assured of
the five votes of the minority party
and Iirlseoll's. Two more votes will
be necessary and It Is believed that they
can be secured. Just who these men
are wlllnever be known, because the
election Is taken by ballot.
Since lrlscoll renounced the major
ity party for alleged bad faith on the
part of his former confederates there
lias been no way In which anybody
could predict which way the vote would
go on any measure. When the council
assembled this morning the members
were In an unorganised state which waa
ludicrous at times. Compared with the
fine machine-like methods of the ma
jority party In the past the antics of
the members this morning resembled
nothing so much as a kangaroo court. J
Business was hurried over or else al- '
lowed to hang 'fire, privileges of the
floor w;jre granted to anybody who
asked for them, and much time was
taken up In conducting business of
trifling nature. The council was never
so thoroughly demoralized since It was
organized more tnan a year ago.
Wills watched Drlscoll, while An
nand also kept his eye open for any
move or tne ex-member of the ma
jority party. Baker maintained a
"grouch' all the morning, whereas usu
ally he is the one who is generally In
jecting humorous remarks into the de
bate. Drlscoll and members of the mi
nority party were busy as bees, and
Kellaher and Rushlight were having
the power to transact business that they
have longed for for more than a year.
But all efforts to secure the required
votes for Rushlight's election fell
through so far as the morning session
was concerned.
Rushlight's succession to Wills' po
sition as presiding officer of the coun
cil would be the sreatest blow Driscoll
could Inflict upon his former friends.
and he Is striving with all his might to-
oici mm. juriscoa lanaea several
blows on Wills this mornlna- In trans.
acting business, but will not be satis
fied until he ousts him from the pre
siding officer's chair.
FEAR AGED MAN MAY
HAVE BEEN OVERCOME
Andrew McCullum of 8t. Johns has
wandered away and it Is feared may
have become prostrated by the heat or
overoome by fatigue, as ha has been
111 for some time. Ha la 69 years of
SCDIII OOES
SOI SHIHG
'hi ini mini ii n i im r-m iiijin iiiim
'-
:. ;
? f 1
: mmt. . ;
Facific Mall Mojul Loses
Espee PasfU-lIarriraan
Fixes Him Out
DLL OF
IBIS'
PEOPLEARESAVED
Vessel From the Wreck Re
ports Camp Made on
San Miguel.
Andrew McCullum.
age, baa gray hair, gray moustache and
short gray beard, which has been grown
since the photograpn was taken. He
was last seen at Second and Morrison
streets Monday noon, when he was
dressed In a pepper-and-salt gray suit,
and black Fedora hat. He is about 6
feet 10 Inches In height and weighs
about 165 pounds. One of the Identifi
cation marks is that the middle finger
of the right hand Is stiff.
SALEM SALOON MAN
UNDER INDICTMENT
Balem, Or.. July 11. August Screlber,
Salem saloon proprietor, was in
dicted by the grand jury yesterday for
ell ins- llouor to minora Screlber was
before Municipal Judge Wiley Moores
last week on the same charge, but the
rase waa dismissed. The grand Jury
has indicted the saloonkeeper under the
state law for the same offense.
By agreement of both the Btato and
the defendant, Screiber's trial will not
take place until the October term of
oourt. He was allowed his liberty on
putting up 1300 cash ball.
Ban Francisco, July 2. After losing
hla free Interstate transportation for
21 hours, R. P. Schwerln, vice-president
and general manager of the Pacific Mall
Steamship company, regained hla passes
today by being elected a member of the
board of directors of one of the South
ern Pacific's subordinate oompanles.
All (lout'trul passes wers recently
canceled by the railroad companies upon
receipt of a circular from the Inter
state commerce commission notifying
them that they were violating, the law
by Issuing transportation to the of
ficials of steamshlD. telephone and tel
grarh companies. The circular also
stated that It was the last notice and
that prosecutions would follow If the
law were not complied with Immedi
ately.
Schwerln's passes were among those
called in yesterday by the railroad and
he was In a lowering rage until itarri
man came to his assistance by making
him an official of the railroad, thereby
entitling him to the transportation he
can use.
KELLY WINS IN OLYMPIC
(Continued from Page One.)
WANTED NO NOMADIC
KNIGHTS AT EUGENE
(Stctl Dispatch to The Joarnal.)
Eugene, Or., July 22. The police of
Eugene have determined to vag" all
tramps found In the city hereafter.
Three were Jailed yesterday and given
four days each on the streets. During
the past few months Eugene has been
overrun with hoboea and there have
been a number of burglaries.
broad Jump, hla mark being 19 feet H
inches. Kelly of America took second
place and Brlcker of Canada captured
third.
In the finals in the 100-meter dash.
Walker of South Africa finished first,
covering the distance In 10 4-6 seconds.
Rector of America took second place In
this event, and Kerr of Canada .carried
off third. ,
Ensland won the final match In the
water polo contests, defeating the Bel
glum team by a soore of 9 to 1.
in tne nnai matcn in tne ureco-Koman
wrestling, Weckman of Finland de
feated Saarola of Finland.
Two Olymnin records were broken in
the semi-finals of the 400-meter flat
race. liallswen or England breasteoi
the tape In 48 3-5 Beconds, and Bobbins
or America mane it in 4 seconds riat.
The Olympic record waa 48 1-5 seconds
J. C. Carpenter and Taylor of America
qualified ror the finals in their neats.
making the course In 49 2-6 and 49 4-6
seconds, respectively.
(TnlUd Ptmi leased Wire.)
Santa Barbara, Cel., July 22. The
sloop Ynei arrived In the harbor today
from San Miguel island, where the
(Cosmos line steamer Anuhls wont upon
a reef early Monday morning, und re
ports the rescue of all hands on the
stranded vessel? She left the wreck ut
4 o'clock Tuesday afternoon.
Captain Nldever of the Ynes brought
dispatches from Captain von Salxen,
calling for tugs. At that time It was
believed quick action would cave the
steamer, which Is stranded on a reef
on the west coast of San Miguel. She
hsd 16 feet of water in her hold when
the Ynes left.
The passengers, 19 in number, and
the crew of 44 men, had been safely
landed on the island, where a camp
had been made, and they were well pro
vided with provisions.
The Island, which la owned by Cap
tain Waters of thia city, has few in
habitants, the only habitation being the
ranch-house belonging to Waters.
Early this morning the launch Charm,
with Captain Pillsbury, head of the Ma
rine Underwriters of San Francisco, on
board, left for the wreck from the oil
port of Qaviota. The tug Redondo of
the Redondo Railway company dennrt-
ed from Redondo last night and should
have been at the side of the disabled
ateamer this morning. It Is thought
possible that one or more of the coast
wise steamers, whose schedule would
bring them in the vicinity of ihe wreck,
may be standing by to render aid to the
Anubla.
In this event, those on board would
likely be landed at one of the I,os An
geles ports or at San Francisco.
The reef where the Anubls struck
bears a sinister reputation on this
coast Several ships have been wrecked
there within recent years, notably the
schooner Coleman, lumber-laden, which
became a total loss on San Miguel three
years ago.
Portland Man Takes Morphine.
Newport. Or., July 2 2. Thomas N.
Fltchard. a moving picture man from
Portland, took morphine here today,
with results that narrowly escaped be
ing fatal. It was supposed at first that
he had taken the poison" with suicidal
Intent on account of business difficul
ties and because he was threatened with
trouble because of a number of worth
less checks which he Is alleged to have
passed In Newport. Fltchard himself,
however, claims that he took the nor
phlne accidentally, thinking that if was
water he was drinking. He says he was
experimenting with ether and morphine
In connection with his moving pictures..
He Is reported out of danger today.
Los Angeles. July 22. The steamer
Roanoke of the North Pacific Coast
Steamship company, south-bound, was
picked up by wireless this morning
while she was off San Luis Obispo, and
her captain was ordered to change his
course and proceed to the assistance
of the steamer Anubls, which Is break
ing up on a reef off San Miguel island.
The Roanoke should reach the wreck in
three or four hours.
NOTTINGHAM IN
ARMS OF THE LAW
C. W. Nottingham was arrested to
day on two charges preferred hy Bulhl-
lng inspector uonson. I lie complaints
were signed Saturday. One alleges vio
lation of the fire law and the other
charges Nottingham with erection :i
frame building at East Second and Hast
Washington without first obtalnlne a
permit from the building Inspector.
Mr. Nottingham was released on his
own recognizance.
CANADA WAITS
WITH WELCOME
punish except after due trial under the
forms of law.
"Can that rightfully be done here cn
the basis of the Judge's personal belief
that the party marked by him for pun
ishment deserves this punishment. If
that is so. it is because the man who
happens to be Judge is above the law."
Decision Unanimous.
The decision was unanimous, being
signed by all three Judges of the court.
United States IJlstrlot Attorney Sims.
who led the prosecution of the case to
day said:
'The effect or the decision If the
case Is retried. Is that the fines 1m
posed must be materially less than the
Landls fine.
"If the fines are assessed acrordinc
to the number or snipmenls involved.
the maximum penalty would be about
J10.000. If they are assessed according
to the number of settlenien ts Involved
the maximum sum would e about
$720,000. The minimum In both in
stances would bel-6 of the amounts
named.
"Including this case there are (1,000
counts asainst the Standard (ill com
pany waiting trial In this federal dis
trict alone and about 1,600 counts out
side this district.
"The decision leaves the case as If
It had never been tried Nothing will
be done toward a beginning of a nev
trial until I have had an opportunity to
consult Attorney i.enerai nonaparte.
The opinion cltr-s the law In regar i
to all the Incidental points derided by
the lower court It declares that Judge
Chicago. July 22. Counsel for the
Standard Oil company this afternoon
issued a statement in which they av
it will be Impossible for tlu' govern
ment to prosecute the case successfullv
again. The statement asserts that asl-le
from the question of "Intent and
knowledge," which It Is essential for
the government to establish, the case
depended upon establishing the rate of
18 cents on petroleum and petroleum
products, as the only lawful rate under
tariff sheet No. 24 of the Chicago and
St. Louis Traffic association.
THINKS CASE WILL
NOT BE APPEALED
Washington, July 22. Solicitor-General
Hoyt of the department of Justice
was surprised and disheartened at the
reversal of Judge Landls' decision bv
the Chicago court of appeals today. He
said he did not believe the government
would carry the case to the supreme
court, even though the recent law re
garding the appealing of the rebate
cases gave the government the right.
MANGLE CRUSHES AND
BURNS GIMS HAND
(Special Dtsptch to The Journal. k
Castlerock, Wash., July 2J. Nineteen-year-old
Maxle Newman's hand
and wrist were badly crushed and
burned In a mangle at the stt-am laun
dry at S o'clock this morning while
preparing the mangle for the dav's
work. The girl wis sent to St. Vin
cent s hospital. I'ortlanil. tor an oper
ation on tne nana. ir. I I
hell attended her.
Quebec, July 22. Thousands of visi
tors thronged Into the city early today
to witness the arrival of his royal high
ness, George Frederick, Trlnce of Wales
and heir apparent to the throne of the
united kingdom and the British domain.
on the fast cruiser Indomitable, the
mystery ship of Uie king's navv.
The streets are Tilled with enthusias
tic Canadians, singing, shouting, cheer
ing and laughing, every one from the
youngest to the oldest, entering into
the spirit of the occasion.
F-orrnal welcome, the civic 'address,
will not be delivered to the prince until
tomorrow afternoon, hut late today the
governor general, Vice-President Fair
banks and a number of important Ca
nadian officials, according to the pro
gram, will be received on board the In-
uurniianip.
rus oyai Highness Is accompanied by
a brilliant staff, and the meeting this
afternoon, although called informal
will be ceremonious.
Many elaborate ceremonies have been
planned, and the prince will participate
In some of the most spectacular events
In recent history before taking his de
parture from Canada next Wednesday
One of the most notable features will
bo the great review on the Plains of
Abraham Friday, followed bv the dedi
cation of the Quebec battlefields. The
tercentenary pageant will be the prin
cipal event Saturday, and on Sunday the
prince will attend religious services
Tuesday there will be a tree planting
5nd .faJ y Wednesday morning the In
domitable will sail.
Great curiosity has been aroused by
he mystery ship" and she Is the cen
ter of Interest to everyone Interested In
maritime matters. The secrets of her
: . nBver "en made pub
lic, although it Is B-enornllir !,. .v..
ltlV
e
r
That mental or physical exertion uses up tissue cells
that must be rebuilt daily by proper food?
If strength and the power to "do things" are to be kept
at highest efficiency, the human body must have Right
Food to rebuild brain and nerve cells, and to keep in store
the tremendous amount of "energy" required now-a-days
to "strike the gait" that wins money and fame.
That's the mission of
Nute
food. It has stood the test with thousands of sturdy,
thinking people for more than a decade, and is in greater
liomas Camp-
Can? you digest starch ?
r
Starch that is half-digested ferments and
breeds germs and these cause appendicitis,
and other bowel disorders. In the making of
the starch in the w heat iscpnverted into dex
trine by our scientific malting process thereby
partially digesting the food before it enters the
stomach. The "sunny" food the sustaining food.
" FORCE" is made of the best white wheat, steam-cooked, roiled into
thia flakes, combined with the purest berky-malt end baked. Alwiyi
"cries)" it before errinf it by pouria into pen end warming it is ovea.
The serve ia large dish with cream, pilief the fake is oe tide oi (be
4ih estd poarin the crea ia the other side, dipping the flake as reiea.
Yur grvcrr tells it.
A' other Flaked Food is "just as good.
some rarilnal i
Vlce-President Charles W. Fairbanks
arrived today, with Mrs. Fairbanks to
represent the Inlted States at the ter
centenary celebration here
a"6, ,a8"'e,t.al .!'?I,L''" by Rear
r ,V ?' :' .: Jrm :-Ptain Wlnslow
,aullP ew Hamnnhlr.
a salute In honr.r .k-
on the
which fired
American official.
favor now than ever before.
Grape-Nuts is scientifically made of wheat and barley;
contains the necessary phosphate of potash grown in the
grains for cell-building, and soluble Grape Sugar (dextrose)
for energy storing.
DEFACED RECORDS
WILL KILL ORDINANCE
That Councilmen Annand and Coo
cannon have defaced the public records
ot the ,-itr by withdrawing their names
from the report of the committee on
health and police rrcornmendlng the
passage of the ordinance Introduced I
t v Driscoll to nroMMt w .- i
from a. lowing wormn to enter their sa
loons Is believed be-jiuse of sn opinion
m..le by City Attorney Kavanaugh this
mernirg on the same point In respect
t - Ui.ib' srratcWr.g hg name from the
import of the liyuor license committee
i v. a transfer
Tl-roi.gr. the action of Annand and
t r. .inm.n no artiou can be taken on
-ruianr. keying women out cf the
s.,.o.,:s un,M omc members cJl it
Inasrnurf, a u members of the I
nty I arty r fighting hack at
oli Tor .oavn.ar them tnr. n. 1
:.e likelihood that anv of them will
' ' H the measure, although several
of the m. mbers would rote for It
Had the measure come un thl.
-r it no-jid have m. Enough votes
,fr' counted nhxK would hare ln
j.ired im paajte. tut wben the reports
Jr..m the hf-a.th and police committee
were read there wan nothing from the
commute on the ordinance
It ts proble that the ordinance will
corn up for rcr.siderstion ben some
member asks why Annand and Cnoan
non ratched their names from the re
T2r Tbr will either hare o replace
rar flumes or wtmnA sm wtM i
leefdVroTdi' UaUt tTl
I
Try cutting out meat and heavy,
greasy food for breakfast and lunch
A Little Fruit
Saucer of Grape-Nuts, with Creaxii
A Soft-Boiled Egg
Slice of Crisp Toast
Cup of Postum
Enough to keep one comfortable and
"in trim" for business, no matter how
hot the weather.
Then you'll know
"There's a Reason" for
GRAPE,-NUTS
SHORT STORY
rood That Changed Kla Life,
Many level-headed business men pay
too little attention to what they eat
until sickness attacks them.
Sedentary occupation. Improper food
and dally resort to drugs, coffee or
liquors to "smother" the disease has
put many a good man away.
"For many years my labors have
been entirely Indoors," writes a New
Tork man.
"Naturally, want of exercise, coupled
with hasty eating of lunch with more
or less greasy food and pasty told on
my digestion.
"For a long period I tried scores of
remedies without avail, and finally I
was compelled to resign my position
aa secretary of an Important business
association. My weight had run down
from 145 to 118 pound. I was unable
to sleep naturally, rose unrefreshed and
without ambition, simply dragged about,
feeling more dead than alive.
"Finally I was advised by a friend
to try Orape-Nuta and promised to give
It a fair trial. I began the following
day, and, to make a long story short.
In lees than a rear I have revolution
ised my physical and mental condition,
now weigh close to ISO pounds and can
digest all my food, which is eaten with
relish. This change is due to Grape
Nuts." "There's a Reason." Name rlvrn by
PtMtum Co.. Ltd- Battle Creek, Mich.
Read the famous booklet. The Road to
WellTtUe," In pkge,
Postum Cereal Cp.. Ltd., Dattle CreeK, Mich., U. S. A.