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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 26, 1908)
"-J-J-.JU'Jg" ' THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL. PORTLAND. SATURDAY. EVENING.; SEPTEMBER 28, ; 1903, S - BLIND ORATOR SWAYS THRONG BY ELOQUENCE Headache? United States Senator Gore Tells Vast Audience Demo ' cratlc. Truths at Armory Kally Auditors Cheer the V.'.-v.;. Name of Bryan and Democracy. ; " , 'Convulsing with laughter by his wit, wa'lng their hearts by hi eloquent holdlna their mlnda attentive by. M 'reasoning, United Btatea Senator Thoni aa P. Oore of Oklahoma last night tha armory -entertained and Instructed tMt people of fortland for two houra ana mora in a msouaaion or poimra is ,, suae and remedlae for political ma. i '' Party, admitted Ita arret ml union ami ta areai work: durlna- ita early ratal nce and deplored Ita departure - from -. me principle upon wnicn 11 wu munu ad. lie took ua the tariff and tho truata. ha anoke of tha bank auarant " plan and the Injunction planka .of the platforms. Vila lauded Bryan anu pre dicted bla WctH In November and thrnuab all tits lima the audience aa .'responsive to hie mooda, lauaulne; when ha willed, obaervant or studious, by turna, chancing under tha magloof m oratory, . Irraa'i Jfame Cheered. It waa a great meetlna-. ' Those who have contended that the cauae of Bryan la dead In Or iron could not help being shocked and grieved at the wild out bursts of applause and long continued tha mention Nor couldMhey fall ta of cheera which, greeted Rrvan'a name. Nor c be concerned at the enthualaam which v areeted tha doctrines of the great com limner aa act out by the blind advo cate. ' v . From tha time that Senator Oore took hB place upon tha platform, and watted until the cneera naa oiea away, until he finished hia peroration, mora than two houra later, ha had hie audi ence with htm. He waa Introduced, by Jnhn.M. OnarJn. briefly, and In begin nine hla addreaa acknowledged the com. pllmenta paid him alncerely. lie ao knowledged tha debt . of Oklahoma to flroeon In that hla state had followed the lead of Oregon In the enactment of the direct primary law and other re- mrms. , . A President rroa the West. He felt that ha waa a neighbor to Oreaon. the sneaker aald. ha waa from the weat and of It. In- New -York ha had told the people that tha eaat must come to the west for gold, opportunity and prosperity Tha weat muat coma to to eaat for-aunrlsse. panlca and preai . dents, but now the west waa going to Ko tha east one better and give It tha president. Senator Gore aald he waa a friend of Portland and of Oregon, and here he paid Governor Chamberlain high com- - pliment. . "I am a friend of Oregon," he aald, "for one thing; because you have select ed and In January will elect to the United States senate an old friend and fellow-Mlsslsslppian, Governor Cham berlain. You have riBen above partisan ship in your selection. When Senator Chamberlain takea hla place in the senate there will be seven native born Allsslaslpplans there, and we will form - a flying- wedge and give Oregon what ane wants. wrong with Uncle Joe sitting on tha lid and hooting- "aland pal.' 1 do not know who your repreaenlaUva In from this district la, but no Kepublltwu rooareaa voter should cant hla ballot for him . If it does, you should try Dr. Miles' 'Anti-rain Pills.--AVhy ..not do , bo. They ! will relievo tho .pain in just a few min utes. Ask ybur druggist ; There are 45,000 druggists : in the U. S. Ask any' of them. 'A' .package of ',25 doses costs 25 cents. Ono . tablet usually; stops a .'i'lWrii'n!!!,1 headache. .( They,;, relieve an to, earn with- , 1 A V until ha alana and awaara. In black and whits, that ha will not vote for Cannon for speaker, either In out out Ot, caucus. . Waal Democrats Ballere. Tha- Democratic oa It la wrong for any man earning, or for any man to earn with-1 j j , i . - ' out getting. Tha Uemocratlo party has J ' palll WltllOUt leaTlUg SJlft aisagreeaDio aiier-enecw f or political and Industrial power In a few handa aa equally dangerous and de structive to human liberty. - Tha Ita- publican party believes In botn." Tho senator than turned to tha truat question. ' ' - "The truata", ha aald. "rifle tha eradlo and rob the tomb. They - ta tba swaddling clotha of tha Infant and lay their handa upon tha cerementa of the dead. They would. If they could. put a meter -upon tha breasts of tha mother and charge tha hungry infant ao much per gram." lie then took up the Illustration of tha housewife, ahowlng that from tha time aha arose from her truat-mada bed in the- morn ing until aha went back tired at night she paid tribute to tha truata In every thing aha uaed. - ....... Even the beef aha uses, ha - aaid. "cornea from the beef truat. tha worat enamel house of them all where they make two klnda of Dotted chicken and several kinds of canned beef out of tha lemains or one poor brlndla ceJr. .About (hat truat I want to Bay what I aald In tha aenate, that there ought to be a law passed not only requiring that the data of canning be a tamped upon the ran but also the disease of which the cow died." One Farty Truata1 Mother. The truata." continued tha speaker. 'are tha offspring and tha apawn of of the Republican party. The president admlta that he ia unfriendly to the trusts, but In heaven's name ir ne ia, what would have haDDened had ha not been. But where la thia legion of truata that have been killed and burled by the present" administration. I want some Republican sexton to take me to he cemetery where thejr lie punea inai may go there and ween teara 01 joy above their aanea. They have alaln But one trust, witn II the machinery of the administra tion behind them but one truat haa been wiped out our Trust in God. That la tha only trust that has felt tha with ering touch of their power and the blighting weight of the big atlck. I am nnnoand to taktna- from our currency our trust In God X'lst aa I would be in removing- Jesua Chrlat from our- re- Hfflnn. . J "But who are you going to have curb the truats? Are you going to give them over tn the Democrats for correc tion, who are their old enemtea. or give "isn't that .what you want! V. l ' "Mr aoa Frank Snyder hia. oaed Zr. MUea' Antl-Faln Pill for a lone , tlme.v Ha never bad anything to help him ao much for headache. .A year ago he came borne, and I waa down alck with auch dreadful nerr ua headache. Ha gave mo, on of tha Antl-Faln Pllla, and after while I took another and waa. entirely re lieved. I always keep thera in tba bouse now, and gave many away to Oti era Buffering- with headache." , . , JIE8. LOUISB "LEWELLTN, Fowell. South Dakota. Your druggist sella Or. Miles Antl Paln Pllla, and we authorize him to return the price of first package (only) - ir ix raiia io oenent you. . f - f Miles McdicAl Co Elkhart, Ind HIS SEVERE INJURIES KING EDWARD DOUBLE Must Buy Out a Motion Pic- lure Outfit That Shows Him Doinjr. Things at Ma rienbad (Jraft That Has Worked Well Before. ' iP Mitt "J Cnntlnuinir. the Renator nald comnll- nient to the Republican voters of Ore Kon. He lauded them fdr their enact ment of the direct primary, the initia tive and referendum and other reforms. The XapubUoana of the Past. "And now I an) going to say some thing which I hone my Democratic friends will not take offense at." he eald. "If there is 'anything- that I love in mis worja 41.1s a -lew. nepuDiicans. That is the only fault I have to find with Oregon Republicans, there are too many or inera, xne rtepuDiiran party waa a great party, it struoK the shack les from the hands -of a million slaves and-made thia countr" In fact as In name the land of the free. But that wa the Republican party of yesterday, not the Republican party of today. 'The great leaders who formed the party, who enunciated Ita principles, left It when It forsook those principles. Then , it waa the party of principle, now It la the nartv of 'mammon. You can not emulate the fame of these great xnmi, out them to the ReDiibllcana. expecting the parents to kill their oww chlldre renT" The protective tariff waa taken up for discussion by the speaker. He con tended that it waa unfair for the Am- n or, aw n .1 .4 wa,..wfli'br to niiv more for the trusfcmade tools they used wreck of yesterday at Youngs Point up (lotted Preti Leased Wire.l Butte, Mont., Sept 2. The death of Samuel Slonowits, a prominent citi zen of Billings, Mont., today brlnga the number of dead In the Northern Pacific nil (Me lnthea thev wore than the Ger man peasants along the Rhine, and this I was the result or ine tartii. . . Who Will Seduce the Tariff. 'The RpDiibltean Darty eaya tha tar iff ought, to be reWsod, the Democrats! that It ougni to oe revisea, ana reuueeo. Which will you favor to do thia. Will ou commission ine wemocrais wnicn 1 sn, but you can emulate their ex- down, not up, (iple and abandon the party that has I pVomlsed to r to 20. Of the 15 who are seriously hurt It Is believed today that three can not recover. They are: ' P. Dyer of' Mount Carmel. Ill Susan E. Cord la of Flathead Mission, Montana, ,. Benjamin 8. Westbury, address un known. Si-yVrrfrS; Tl body of Charles E. John.on of - n un 1 t'enver. ainci ijawaeiiicer iKeni ui uia llll" ntnJi for hia-h and brotect va tar- N'el Plate line, was takeH from the have atood for high and protective tar- wreckag.e today ln Buch a crushed con- ll ..Vp. .. ,. t.rirr. mhniA dltion that it bore no resemblance to a b.Je.u.-.raVIa'iedK.r'Lhe.,V" hT?ront o?- the" amoker 3 the"tfmS of which tariffs he would raise and which th cl,n- ,, . rt lower. The Democratic nartv says, 'nut . Colonel H. Hudson, a prominent real- all truat-made goods cn the free list.' aentorutan. naa Deen ta iKing to a inena The Remihlicans will revise It up, not n the dining; car and left him Just be down. The Democrats will reve it for "je collision. Hudson had just en- The Republlcana nave i " i.,,, V i A (tailed PrH Laaud Wlre. tfondon, Sept 2. King Edward's reo- reaentativea are negotiating for tha pur chase from a Vienna photographer of a bl batch or plcturea. Including a ctne- metograph aeries, auppoaedly represent ing hla majesty during hla recent atay I at Marlenbad. The royal version la that the plcturea are really not of Edward at all, but of a German who makea a good living out of hla resemblance to ine raigusn monarch. Home Af tha snanahnta in M. K. I onaigniriea. Mtepa might be taken through the Austrian aovernment ta nave tnem confiscated, but thia would Involve a acandal. besides, there la aome Fiprenension that the photographer has ready amuggled them out of the coun ty The king complains bitterly that he suffers from the "double" nuisance every twne lie ventures abroad, and sometimes wnen ne stays at home, i.ik, aeveral other European rulers, he Is a not uncommon type and plenty of peo ple 4ook enough like him to cauae mia- takea, especially 11 . tney cuitiv resemblance. The same agents who are cond tha preaent negotiations are known to have bought off an Auatrlan who came to England while Edward waa atui Prince of Walea and nearly caused In ternational complications by the things he did in royalty's name. He refused to leave the country when the police asked him to, declaring there waa no law to prevent him from looking, . talking or acting aa much like the Prince of Walea aa he wanted to. Finally he retired to private life In consideration of a finan cial allowance which cornea out of Ed- ward'a private purse to thia day. aW. - ....... JH'- All Grocers 5 SiMBRy OFFICER TO HIS GRAVE WIFE IS LEFT IN odd predicament; Policemen Will Act as Pall bearers at Funeral of Young Tomorrow. abandoned ita principle. You can turn I have deceived the people three times. n ilia Tlntvi i-r -n la tAae L. aW-! . . n I a. 1 a. - v a-n;itiwvi aai vi vj uai ij, irju It V f.nZ revise it three tlmea and eame and waa killed instantly. matchless Bryan, which holda still to the Jcrrersonlan principle that all men are equal, not in riches put in the righ of Justice. Jfew Slepbaat Principle. "The Democratic party haa insisted that men be equal in rights, whether or not equal in ricnes. 1 ne nepuDitcan party ia insisting that they must be equal In riches to be eaual ln riehts. Turning to Oregon again the speaker aaln acknowledged the apirit of the people and their desire for reform. "in Oklahoma, he said. "we followed mdrnthroned the neonle ny ine enactment 01 ine initiative and referendum. The Republican candidate came out nere ana rougnt mat princi ple, contending- that it loosened the foundation atones of self government lie cast his influence against the judg ment or jregon voiers, ana tney ought to repudiate him. Taft la an enemy to aelf government, aa he In the enemy of tnoxe wno work with tneir nanas. "The Democratic party believes that th union Is an Indestructible union of indestructible states. It believes no union, no states; no states, no union. The Democratic party believes In the Vnlted 'States of America. The Repub lican party believea in the United tnista of America. "The Democratic party does not be lieve ln the old and exploded Tory doc trine that the king can do no wrong. Ko man would argue that the senate was aanctifled with such men a Aid rich and the rest serving there. No onei would say that the house would do no Mra. Bert Anderson, of Hardin, Mont, Kt,tsr (inr ruiirf attention tn thft who was compelled to nae in me campaign contribution question. He smoker on account of the train being mai that ts rtomnoi-atin convention rte. I crowded, had Just left her husband. eln-eri tnr niihlicitv of r.amnalarn tricutions. ana air. 5rvan aeciarea 1 ner un con- having gone out -of the smoker to wash ared her face and hands before eating three rinv hefnra thev dM ao that un-1 hreakfast A minute after she had gone less the action waa taken he would not the crash came and her husband waa accept the nomination. The Republican I ground to shreds. convention oy a vote or eignt to one -rne miraculous escape 01 rrans decided against the plan. Silvers of Seattle was one of the most OorpomW OontribnttoBa. remarkable features of the wreck He .... .".. ,. , waa anting in a double seat with three ALl tn! Li2Sn, r S2rtnJi an other mm. The otlieiy three were killed 2?f, .Eldt In nt nen 1- ?.ln Instantly but Silvers escaped with only at yit WhJ then J?re the RnublicanS alight abrasion. The wreckage was Snwl'lHmr to adopt It" ThekSew they Plied up all around him but when he would" hSve to Save a aVlat camoai waa dug out he was found to be almost u."!? L Al ?JI.tn.jy thus far seem, to It is known that the great corporation P,ace y,"b,"n'or,thwS. ?5!fLJ n ,he contributed vast sums. Thev did not cr.ew f th" engine of the freight train do this for their health. They did It wn.u "e?m vlJ 'iYn- Vhl aa an investment time on the passenger by making the "The Democratic party relies upon "'a'" T?.un',r"4nn: .f .nTt "iS" in" n2 the individual citizen. There will be no m.ln?r J?!" Jf '"211. mortgage upon Bryan ff he la elected.' XJUZiS?LVrU In discussing- the injunction plank of i e umit.rf -i,i,h ra ttle two platforms th speaker aald that proaching at the rate of 60 mtlee an the Republican platform held that the f,our. The hrakeman who rushed for injunction law-hould be changed, the .Ara with the signal flag waa not seen Democratic that It Should be Changed l t1 hllnHlnv annwatnrm Ihnnrh ha and that no man should be held aulltv I i,ri th. in- mimt tha inr).v nt or conBiruciit. uunmnpi wiinoui iairin cab OT the passenger engine. inai. no bbkbo wnicn party ine voters would commission o make that change, the Republlcana whose candidate had been the rather, of the preaent practice. or the Democratic party which belleVea that tne writ or injunction should be protection rrom surrering and not a e I,ate last night a aleepy, wo- 4 man. well dressed and refined, appeared' at police headquarters 4 and asked where she could ae- 4 cure lodging- for "the night. She e and her husband, R. Hoensteln, had come to this city from 4 "up country," ehe aald, yeater- e day afternoon. They ate supper e at a local restaurant and atarted in search of a hotel , when her' husband, who ia aald to have been drinking, left her to go for another drink, and the two 4 became separated. Hoenateln had all tha money and the wife had nothing with which to obtain a room any- where for the night She searched all . evening . for her husband but failed to locate him and aa a last reort went to the ndlice for aid. . .She waa given a bed on the thirB floor of the Jail building, 4 where ahe spent the night. 4 This morning she left to make 4 another attempt to locate her e wayward husband. 4 HONOLULU TURNS ON YELLOW PERIL. IN LABOR-CAMP PHASE (United Press Uisee" Wlra.t Honolulu. H. T., 'Sept 2. An agita tion to restrict the Japaneae coloniea In the Hawaiian islands to certain limited districts In incorporated cittee and to limited areas outalde the cltiea haa been atarted by the ritisens of Makikl. a sub urb of Honolulu, and the- agitation against the Japaneae may be carried Into the next territorial legislature. - The trouble atarted with the applica tion of a colony of Aalatica to erect a new Japaneae labor camp Just a rroa a the street from a scboolhouae o Beretanla avenue, one of the fashionable drives out of Honolulu. Sunerlntendent Ca mobelt. of tha miblfei V-ulldinra department, refused to laaue the permit, oa the around that the plana were unity. 1 ne .jaoaneae amenaeo their plane and applied again. They threatened mandamua proceedings, and the permit waa la sued. The reeldenta nf the diatrk-t are high ly Indignant and threaten to atop the rone t run tow of the building by Injunc tion prnraad In ga. tha groend that It fa a eutaenre and disfigures the resK tne district Several ramps have already been atarted in Maklkt, which is one of the moat beautiful districts near Honolulu, and the residents say that Instead nf moving out ar.d giving the place to the Japanese." as has been the custom, they will fight the encroachment of the Orientals. They have formed a club for the pur pose of combating Japanese invasion of their district, and are prepared to carry the contest to ronareae If neceaaarv. They propose a law to be brought up at the next territorial larlalature to keen Asiatic labor camoa out of residence district a altogether, and If thia la not successful the superrlaora of Honolulu wtll he risked to restrict the Japaneae aa the Chinese are restricted at San r ranciaco. The Jananeae labor ramoa are Inclosed ! with high and unsightly board fence. win 1 central court on ine inside, around which small housea are ranged for the accemmedatlon of the Japaneae laborers who are crowded Into the place. Frequent brawls hare taken place In these labor cam pa, and the qoaetlon of their suppression ia one of the tnoal harasalng problem to' be met by the officials. TT g none Office t OrcgonFifc-'scr AaasT aMHuaaaaBBBiiiaBaaj A, U UtLLM PreaMaat U ejirrRU. Oeaaret Ma CLAftExca a uiictu Th Potlcytieldmr Company Is Best for Oregoniaris lag sword for the destruction of the Inno cent. Panlca ftepubUoaa-Made. The speaker dealt with the subject of panics. He contended that the study of history showed that the panics of the past were Republican ln origin and' not Democratic. All the old Republican speeches had dealt with the panic of '8J and Cleveland's administration. One heard nothing of that now. The Repub lican orators were not taming- panic now. The recent, panic waa a meaalv ranlfl th. itiMk.r rnnt.nil.il. tn hi. 1 1 In on a Republican administration when It could have waited Tor a rew - month a and been born ln a Democratic adminis tration. "But this panic," the speaker Taald, should not nave come, i ne cay artei It came there waa the fame money, the same energy, there were the aame In dustries that were here the day before. And I will tell you what I told the aen ate. that they should have Investigated tha causea and the causers of that natilc and let the people know who the finan cial pirates were. 1 inina 1 Know wno I hay were . but I would not like to name them until I learn how to differ entiate between Mr. Roosevelt's unde alrabie citizens and hla conservative bualneaa men.. Two Paaio Care. -"What la the .Republican partya remedy for panics That piebald mn-j stroalty. the Aldrirh-Vreeland bill What la it? It is a temptation to the financial sharks to bring on a panic. It is a bribe of li.ooo.eoa of emergency currency piled up in the vaults aaytng to these pirate, "bring on a panic and row get. me, de not bring erne and you don't "And what la the Democratic remedy for paa.'? What la a panic? Make aertag-a eemr. It la a Inea of confldem-e. We pro pose to enact a law hi whlcn ewerr wan will knew when he tyta a dollar In the hank that be will bare absolute cer- Ity, and that he can get that dollar back when ne wame ti They say thia would be unfair t tba banker. I am not In fa tot of any law that wnuld be unfair to them. . We Ovaht ta bare tha heat banks ta the warld. and that la what the Imocratkc party Intenda tn bar "I nay se.trt bth the nthMar and tH 'dTalnr. That ta fair and not gn)gft. They ear It caala af trn a tha benka foea nt tha Bt-arTtwnt fr-a tla nat'onat baka t a-uaean' Ita d'-isita with theaat Should not the GR0CEES LOOK TO BIG CONVENTION An organization of the retail grocere in all of the smaller twns in Oregon win w made at once by a state or ganiser to be employed by the president and secretary of the state association, This action was agreed upon at a meet- in of the executive committee of the Oregon Retail Grocers' and Merchants' aa- anniatinn held vesterday afternoon, ine reason for organising the grocers In the smaller towns nf the state is to get readv for the national association con vention which meets' in Portland next June. The state association will meet in Portland January 4. The following compose the executive committee of the state association: firesser of Seaside. Dan Kellaher of Portland. W. M. Green of Eugene, W. T. Schofleld of Aa torla. R. H. Greer of Hlllshoro. G W. Ingram of Pendleton, state president, S. I Kline of Corvallis. C B Merrick, secretary of tha state association, was not present at yee- terdav a meetlna 01 ine nnuuv. wm mlttee, being detained at home on ac count OI 1III1FB. i TENNIS FINALS ARE ON THIS AFTERNOON Tennis finals In the Irylngton club tournament will come to a close thia aft ernoon. . In the mens singles those old-time rivals, W. A. Goss and Brandy Wlcker aham, wtll fight it out. In the ladles' singles the race haa nar rowed down to Mrs. w . 1. .--im-jnrup mnu Miss Stalla Fording. This match prom isee to be unusually exciting. The funeral services of Patrolman Sam S. Toung, who waa murdered Wed nesday night in a saloon at Sellwood, will he held tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock from Flnley's chapel. Six pall bearers will be selected this evening by Captain Moore, and while arangements for attending the funeral have not yet been made it la probable that the en tire first night relief wdll attend tha funeral in a body. Rev. John Dawson will officiate at the funeral. Inter ment will be held in River View ceme tery. The coroner's inquest ia scheduled to take place this afternoon. The only witnesses which . have been aubponaed to appear are W. S. Woods, the nronrl- etor of the saloon in Sellwood in which Younr was murdered, his bartender. I and Detective Tom Coleman. VTA a - 1 . j . . . . f apprehension of the murderer. De tective Captain Baty still holds the Idea that the crime waa committed out of revenge and places absolutely no atock in the robbery motive. He has lven oraers to tne detectives to run own every possible clue and to waste no time prospecting as to what the mo tive might have been, but to eet tha murderer. Boundary Suit Dismissed. Judge Bronaugh in the circuit court has dismissed the case of A. Andrews against Oliver J. Brown, which was tried before him some time ago. It In volved a boundary line between their land. The court decided that it was without authority to grant relief in' GOOD LU Io all who eat Butternut Bread The Bread of a superior quality, won oxiruTJrB without nza unn Have Your" Thimble Exchanged When You Call for Your Premium if it Don't Fit : : : : : X OTP c Watch for the Names of Other Thimble Finders in Tuesday's Journal BEWARE OF IMITATIONS" TODAY X8 OOIO THTJfBIiB DAT Ask for Butternht Bread You may be lucky enough to find on. Below are the names of a few of the many who have found Silver Tbimblsa and received thalr premium si Mrs. J. Beal, Kast Harrison and 29th at. Silver Thimble. - Miss Dora Hummel,' 141 Eleventh St., Silver Thimble. Charles Rebatock, Lents.. Or., Silver Thimble. Miss Mabel J. Smith, 801 41t at.. Silver Thimble. Miss Edith Hindman, SZ5M, First at. Silver Thimble. Mrs. A.,W, Young, 414 Klickitat st.. Silver Thimble. ' Mrs. E. J.'Hogan, 817 Belmont st.. Silver Thimble. Butter Nut Brea d Co. SECOJTB AWD COLUMBIA ITS. 1 . equity, a question of title being, in volved. In the case of Herman F. Loeding against Louis Klug judgment of the Justice court ln favor of Klug waa sua tained. Thia was an action for a small amount of money loaned. Both Bides Saw Meyer. t United Press Leased Wlre.l San Francisco, Sept. 25. The chal lenging and excusing of Juror M. B. Meyer, a grocer, who had been tem porarily selected for the Ruef Jury, to day depleted the Jury to 11. During the examination of Meyer It developed that he had been visited by represan-, tatlves of both sides since he had been ; sworn aa ajemporary Juror. . Pnolic Take Notice. Do.yoii' believe in a square deal? ' If ao, see us; the owner's price la our price; no commission tacked on. We put you with the owner; you deal with, him. For farms, acreage, city property - or , business investments. - , . . PINE TREE LAND CO.. 609-510 Buchanan Bldg.. 2SH Wash. Bt, Phone Main 88SO. Strength, Sleep and Appetite Restored at 1 00 Years of Age firlvate cltnen ne nmr aa well aa the Kovernment? Who t . . w . - v. 1 .. hia fmnnev fha in l II w urn. al,ir ' m ttt. arovernment or the wfegeworkerT Shame on a goremmer.i inn wmim iitmr. 1 own money and not protect that or ita cltlaens. . . -We have tried the system in ia- homa. and it works well. The jruaran- im banka hare Increased 14.00e.oee in deposits, and the banka not guaranteed have decreased f l.eoe.hne. 'Four hanks failed and it waa posteo that the atate mould par the depositors and the farmers were too busv to cotra ta and get their money, mere were nu howling mobs there, KrvabUoaa Baak-aleUaay. "They aar it will make dishonest bankers. There ere aome now. And , now all the depoaltora all tbelr money. Who fim the fnonev ot ef tbei banking bualneaa? Wouldn't It be better that a thtaf ret away with tba matter ami that I h men who prwflt by the bualneaa abould make gnod tfca loaa, thae that the eitrr ebmM ba torn and wracked by loaa of maftdawce and pantef A pank Is leee ef enaifMaee. Pwr tmm Cleveland a adanlntetratkmi l banks renaed. and they relief H panic, lur. Ins tlowaa rlt a adnttntetra'ioa lby ail, rai4 am they eue II a BMMKtay. tm Itmwrtlle party eiai BMX waat Bay blidare Ilka thai Senslor tjora r lose 4 be 4draa with an te- t arral tnr P-jaa and Km and at the rttr I eww ft bni r"rti naa evi aa bv tb aoOem a. 14. ief ina wm-iig far emitbera Ore go and va:ifim.a. a rfA" ' - w,'rvs. "V T-:; . f " s t ? -' - rl I I St - - - ' - , 1 l ' ';rrY"- x v?vr I V I . ... . At Mrs. Susan vHurlbut, 81 N. Franklin St., Wilkes Barre, Pa., who celebrated her 100th birthday anniversary on Jan. 7, 1908, and is the only centen arian in that city, praises Duf fy's Pure Malt Whiskey as the world's best tonistimulant and invigorator for the. aged. It has restored her appetite, given her health .and vigor, and enables her to sleep well. She is remarkably well preserved for one of her advanced years. , Mrs. Hurlbut, in a letter, received . Jan. 29, 1908, says: "I have taken Duffy's Pure Malt WhisKey and J , can truthfully say it has given me j strength, makes me sleep well am) ! (fives me a good appetite. Your med- . icine is the best, tonic for people to- take if they want to live to be old and to be in good health. You may print this if you wish." " ; Thousands of letters like Mrs. , Hurlbut's are received from grateful men and women in'all walks of life. Temperance Advocates, Ministers of ; the Gapel, Doctors, Statesmen and , the working men and women, who thank God for what Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey has done for them. Duffy's Pure Mali USiicfiey ' is an abtolutrly pure diatilTation of malted 'grain; fc-rrat care bring naed to have every krrnfl thoroughly mtltti, that drttmjring the (trni'ind producing a prrdigtted liquid food in the form of a tnalt ernce, which ia th inojt efective. tonic timulant and inyigoralof known to cirnce; softened fcy warmth and moiture it pa'm-bt'Iitj- and frredom from injurko subtances render it ? that it can be retained by the mot senitire ti-.n.. H. It i irralaable for orerworVed men, delicate -women and jckly children. It ttrrr.jr.'irn and : rt 1 t system; if a promoter of bealtb and longeritj-; make the old fonng and keeps the young" iirong. . CAUTION Wbea ask yonr drnggisc grocer or dealer for Duffr'a Pwrt Malt WHVry rtrtyi i the gensine. It's the only absolutely pure medicinal mi H .wheiikry and ia sold ia larie seaUi bt' r-'. r in balk. Price $1.W. Look for trie trade-mark, the "Old Chemist," on the label, and rn sure ti! -cork ia nbrokrn. Wrha Consulting rhyaician, Daify Malt Whiskey Co, Rocherter, U. Y, f ?r (- : mrdkaJ bockiet and free adrkt. f MRS. SVSAN HVRLBUT. Tears OIU.