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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1908)
THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL. PORTLAND. SATURDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 21, 1908. RUSSIA WILL SEIZE PERSIA Time Opportune With Other Powers Tied Up in the Bal . kans Outlet to Fcrsi an G ulf . InvolvedDeal ' Deep "' , Down -HVith Western Europe" Is Surmised. " (United Pro Und Vrn.) i Constantinople, Nov. 21. Formal n nouncement of a Russian' grab of all Persia Is expected hete dally..' The of 'flclal family of Turk bases its , opln . Ion oh reports from its agents at fit, ' Petersburg, London, Paris, Berlin, VU enna . and Teheran. They are said to ' corroborate one another so fully as to remove au doum concerning tne nature of the tsar's Dlans. it, is Denevea nrmiy that Nicholas will begin by occupying the capital and filling the country with his troops under the pretense of restoring ordtsr and vlr tual if not actual . annexation -will speedily follow. . :.-,: ' Haste la predicted, not alone because all reports Indicate it, but also because of the fact that-the vest of Europe is so deeply 1 involved In , the Balkan contro versy as to - make it difficult for the powers ttf Interfere with the scheme. Besides, the ' territorial question, the Issue of an outlet tnrough the "Persian gulf to the far east is Involved In Rus ia.'s desire to 1 control Persia, j 'With satisfactory railroad connections to the gulf, the route will be far more con. venient than the Rues canal and give 28,000 WORTH OF BONOS SOLD Weiser Plans Extensive Im provements of Electric Power System. (Specltl Dispatch to The Journal. 1 . Welser, " - Idaho, Nov. 21. Electrio light -and power bonds to the amount of $28,800: were sold last night by the city council to' McDonald, McCoy & Co. of Chicago, . The entire issue was taken by that firm.' The premium was 1 144 for five and one-half per cent bonds.. The issue is for the purpose of Im proving the lighting system of the city, extending wires, , etc. The city has closed a contract with tffe Idaho-Oregon Light and' Power company, owner of a big electric plant at Ox Bow, on the snake river oeiow this -euy. to rurnisn light ana power. .Eight bids were sub. mitted. ARDOR NOT DAMPENED (Continued from Page One.) known quantity so far as strength is concerned. The Varsity has been tried and has succumbed only in the confer ence to the superior' strength of the university of wasnington, a jeam which undoubtedly outranks any that institution nag ever turned out Rach team will he srtven a roval sun. port The "UP supporters bank on the famous Oregon spirit to defeat the Aggies or at least to hold them to a no- ncore gumo. Eugene Confident,- " Oregon reviews the . history of the past ten years and its one score record and believes that the game today will result as in former years. Always loy al -to their -eleven, there is a feeling deep down in the hearts of the varsity students and supporters that they will not losd to the Corvallis eleven. This feeling permeates the atmosphere of the Portland hotel, the headquarters of the Eugene contingent. .It Is every where. Some of the more adventurous of the Eugene people are backing their team to beat the Aggies at the pre vailing odds. On paper the Aggies-figure to. win today's game. They have a splendid collection of ball players led by a clever captain and following out the battle plan of a skillful coach. j; Hot cross, " s , Not in" the three years that Norcross has been coaching the goal line of the Oregon Agricultural college been violated, In 1906 his freshmen eleven held the University to a scoreless tie. Iast year they beat a team of Oregon veterans, 4 to 0, a place kick by Wolfe, being the only score. This year the tables are. turned. Coach Forbes, as fine & player as Tale unlverstty ever turned out and a coach who brought West Point to a high state of efficiency, is the one who has the freshmen team. Norcross for the most part has veteran men and this is where the edge enters Into the game. Forbes has wrought a great machine out of his young and Inexperienced ; squad. He has imparted to then) his own indomi table spirit, the spirit that has made Yale famous over the world. He has taught them plays that won for Tale on a score of fields. They mind him and they will do, their best for him. Multnomah's huge steel grandstand IS a mass of college pennants. Everywhere there is the yellow and green and the orange of the colleges and the red and white of the club, the sponsor of the greatest collegiate game ever pulled off in Oregon. Tonlarht the Streets will rihsr -with college yells for the victors, whoever they might be. The game wll be over at 4:80 o'clock easily and the students will become guests -of the hotels or friends in the metropolis until their excursion trains leave for their respec tive cities. , SCHMITZ BONDSMAN INQUIRY POSTPONED Ban Francisco, Nov. 21. The. court inquiry into- the ? financial status of William J. Dlngee, the San Francisco and Oakland millionaire, whs is on the bail bond of ex-Mayor Eugene B. Schmits for $80,000, was continued to day until Wednesday morning, Novem ber 25. Assistant District Attorney Daniel J. Deaay stated that the had been able- to i subpoena Schmits' attorneys but that he had not been able1 to find Dlngee "nor his attorneys. . It is thought that Dlngee and his at torneys have been evading summons un til the millionaire can . rearrange his financial affairs, which are said to be in bad, shape. i i s Reserve your- table at the Perkins Grill for Thanksgiving dinner. Extra line iubhu.. &yviicLi iiLuBium prugrttm. Bryan Joins Hunting Party. Corpus Chrlsti Texas, Nov, , 21. William Jennings -.' Bryn .. and Mrs. Bryan have left here for monterey, Mex ico, where, as the guest of Colonel A. J. Robertson Bryan will spend a- week with a hunting party In the mountains. .Mrs. Bryan will remain at Monterey, Reserve your table at the Perkins v r 1 1 1 i iur x imyiinKi v uiiiiiu fine menu. - Special musical liner. ' Extra program. 3 The Policyholders Company Is Best for (Iregonfftfc its possessors vast commercial. military and naval advantages, so far as the orient is concerned. Russia, England, Germany, France and Austria have been trying to get it Tor years. . , ' Tiirltev r'.drfs Ihhh for the Persian gulf opening than for Persia itself. The grab would be the gravest possible menace to the sultan. What the porte la trying to learn now Is whether Rus sia has arranged with western Europe to keep Hands off wnue sne executes er plan. Although there have, been f no negotiations with Turkey it is suspected there have been such with other powers. Germany Is believed to have been promised a free hand with the Bagdad railway, which would give it,1 also, the Persian gulf outlet. ' - . Austria's price is presumed to have been a pledge of non-interference with Fraris Josef Balkan program. How. England and France have been provided for. If at oil, is wore puzellng. The closeness of their relations since the Balkan nrlsls is believed to suggest some kind of an arrangement, however. It is believed that England would ob ject strenuously to Russia s .acquisition of, Persia,, giving the czar. literally ac cess to India's backyard, unless ther were some handsome recompense. . WHO PROVIDES Mrs. Haas Too Poor to Hire One Gun Marks Offi cer Ryan's Foot. (United Press Lmmh! Wire. Ban Francisco, Calf, Nov. 21. Sub poenas were issued today at the order of Coroner T. B. W. Leland for Joseph F. Seymour Jr., the Los Angeles attor ney who has been representing Mrs. Morris Haas during the inquest Into the suicide of the assailant or. rancis J. Heney. , - , . , . Mr WnciH tnrlav on " the stand In formed Coroner Leland that she did not know who employed Seymour and that she had no money to pay for legal ser vices. The nollce. coroner and those Interest ed in the shooting of Heney and the pe culiar manner' in which Haas procured the derringer with which he shot hlm ir. in his celL are desirous of know ing who requested Seymour to repre sent' Mrs. tiaaa. Mrs. Haas was near collapse when she testified regarding her married life eiw, AnorA that Jinn was aerltatea and sleenlres many nights before he shot Heney, but that she never saw i,i m h iffiAr rtvnlvr or derringer. Detective Sergeant Tom Byan, who slept .with the derringer In his Bhw, SnOWOCl, On vne witness maim, mi tumio marked with a rust stain and a nolo worn in 'bis sock. This corroborates the testimony of the gun expert who declared that if Haas had carried the little pistol in his shoe for 24 hours, as Chief of Police William J. Blggy piaims he did. it would have shown rust marks. ,.-. . ' .-. ; ; KLAMATH PUZZLE fiiYBjjiOLVED Engineer's Discovery Prom ises Expeditious Drain insr of Tule Lake (Stxclal Dispatch to The Journal.) Klamath Falls, Nov. 21. The outlet to Tule lake has been tested by the reclamation engineers, and water has been found to disappear at quite a rapid trait. For several weeks large force of men has been at work enlarging the been made 15 feet wide and 100 feet UII.JUOCM Vl. Lit,., 1. 1. tl CI .1 uumiillK U.J long.v into this the water has been al lowed to flow, and the rate at which it disappears has led the government engi neers u Qfciutj to cuuunue tue wwrK If lt can be proved that there is an underground outlet to the lake, the re clamation service will be saved money and time in draining Tule lake and mak ing tne bed suitable tor cultivation. Work on the outlet will continue dur ing the greater part of the winter. NEAR PRIMA DONNA . SUES HAMMERSTEIN (United Tttn je& Wire. "' New York, Nov. 31. Just at the be ginning of his double Season here and In Philadelphia,' Oscar Hammerstein faces a suit for $100,000. The suit was brought - by Miss Frances Lee for al leged breach of contract Miss Lee says she will Introduce letters of endearment-written to .her by the im presario. Miss Lee, who was heralded as 'The Texas Patti,'.' claims In her suit that Hammerstein promised to make her a grand opera star and failed to do so. She says she has been compelled to sing in amateur productions because Ham merstein did not sign her with his com IMuues and that after spending ten years preparing for her promised career with Hammerstein she Is getting no revenue out of her voice. Miss Lee came here from Texas 12 years ago and her remarkable riser in the operatic world Was the wonder of her first season here. ? One of the alleged letters from Ham -mersteln which she says she will in troduce In the case ends as follows: "I am counting on the days when, I have you In my arms again, the only i woman in tne worm x aaore. It is signed ''Oscar. " r EXCEEDINGLY LONG : QUAKES IN MEXICO (Cnlh Press txt& Wire. City of Mexico, Nov. 21. Earthquake shocks of f xceptlonal duration shook 11 cities and towns throughout Mexico resterday, according to reports received oday In this city., No particular dam age is reported,, and no personal harm befell the Inhabitants. According to the records of the meteorological de partment, the longest "Shock lasted 23 second. '. .. ...., -, , i , , r - Home Office t CORBET BrjIIJDXira. Carner Fifth and Morrison Streets, : FOUrfcAJO), OREGON. -. A. U MILLS. ............President X BAMTTBIj, ... .General Manat CLARfNCB a BA1CUKU Asst. stgt, Oregohians IR ATTORNEY? 1 10 HER Oi'lll CHILD Unfortunate Is Barred hy Court Decree After 13 .Years Search. fOBtted Press Leased Wire.) ; BelUnglmm, Wash., Nov. 21. Follow. Ing a search that lantetd fnr thirteen long years for her boy, whom she left in- a refuge home at St. Louis, Mo., Maude, Fields has been denied the right to care for her child by Judge Netterer. For the- last week a legal battle has been waged in the superior court for the possession of the child. Miss Fields being supported by counsel from St. Louis and of this city. Miss Fields is alleged to have desert ed her boy when he was a baby. ' She claimed she was in destitute circum stances at the time. Later she came Into a small amount of money and then sought to secure possension of her child. She was told at the refuge home that she had relinquished all right to the boy by placing it in strange hands., All information was refused as - to where the boy was. , 1 For twelve years she has been search ing for the child, finally locating him in Bellingham as the legally adopted son of Mr. and Mrs, Arthur M. Doming. Demlng is engaged tti the fish packing business in Bellingham and Is classed among the wealthy men of the north west. ': The mother of the child is tlH poor, having soent all the monev she had been, able to make as a dressmaker in searching for her lost baby. When the court rendered the ruling she collapsed- and became frantic In the courtroom. . Judge Netteref ruled that the welfare of the child must outweigh every other consideration, that the boy -was now at the age when his character would be made or marred within the next few years, and that, any effort to transplant nis arrections rrom tne roster parents, whom he loves, to his mother, who is a stranger to him, would probably be dis astrous. PIHGHOT FAVORS HIBLEY'S PUH For Buying .Logged -Off Lands by Government for Reforesting. (Washington Buresn of The Journal.) Washington, Nov. 21. A conference today betaveen C. W. Nlbley of Salt Lake, Utah, George M. Cornwall of Port land, Or., and Forester Plnchot over Nlbley's plan for government acquisi tion of privately owned lands whence timber has been removed, resulted In the forester saying he Indorsed the scheme In Its general phases, If con gress could be induced to grant the authority. Nibley will leave tonight for home, Cornwall remaining to present an ex tended brief covering the views of the Oregon lumbermen in favor of the re tention of the existing duties. The hearing has in no wise altered tho belief that the ways and means committee is already pledged to let the present duties alone. SIGlsWo; THREE KILLED Freight Trains Pile Up on Ann Arbor Railroad in Michigan. (Doited Press Leased Wire.) Toledo, Ohio. Nov. 21. Three men were killed and one badly injured -In a collision between' freight trains on the Ann Arbor railroad near Lakeland. Mich., today. The collision is said to have been caused by a mistake In sig nals. One of the freight trains, it T believed, was run past a signal, follow ing a change In oraers. Both trains were badly piled up. The dead taken rrpm the debris are: "Andrew Gregan, fireman, Toledo, Ohio. William Kyan, engineer, Owosso, Mich. Fireman, name unkngwn. . Injured: M. draper, 'Engineer. COMPROMISE IN B. OF P. CASE (Tjnltfd Press Leased Wire.) Los Angclos, Cal., Nov. 21. Agreeing compromise ror a sum said to be 13,500, Miss Lena Packard of this city is ready to dismiss the $25,000 breach of promise suit she brought recently against Edwin C, Arnold, a wealthy clubman and wholesale druggist of To peka, Kan. Advices from Topeka and a statement by the young woman's father. F. M. Packard, confirm the report that the suit will be dropped. Nearly two years ago, on the eve of the wedding, Arnold disappeared without flving any reason for his strange con uct. He sent a brief note to the bride to be statlner that he was un worthy of her. She was prostrated, for weeks. When Arnold reached hom he denied himself to all callers and absolutely re fused to gi6 any reason for his con duct BOYS "HUNT DUCKS; ONE KILLS OTHER (United Press Lesssd Wtrai Santa Ana. Cal.. Nov. 21. Claude McDowell. 14 years old. died today I from a gunshot wound received at the t hands of S-year-old Augustus Jones I last night. The boys were duck hunt i Ing when Jones' hammerless shotgun was accidentally discharged. The charge entered McDowell's abdomen. ' liurglars in Ppstofflce. ' (Unite Press Leased Wire. Ban Juan, Cal., Nov. 21. Burglars blew open the safe In the postofflce In Alvlso, near here today and took all the stamns and monev. representing a total value of about $300. The store I next to the. postofflce Is occupied by J Japanese but they -did ; not hear the. noise of the explosion. Dynamite was ! used and the safe door was blown com- ' pletely off and hurled across the room. 1 The burglars left all the doors of the I postofflce open. There are no clues. - f . v General Weston Assigned. indite Tres Leased, Wire.t Washington, Nov,- 21. Army orders nave been published placing Major Gen eral John F. Weston in command of ,the department of California, with head quarters at San i Francisco, on his return from the Philippines. .He will sail for America December 15. He will relieve Brigadier Oenera ' Frederick--A.. Smith, whose future assignment has not yet been announced,' Before golnlf to the Philippines General Weston was com missary general of the army, with head quarters at Washington. :V OFF WITH HEAD OF ISIVOLSKY His Underling Has Under " mined Him and War Is .; So Much the Nearer. . -. (United Press lessrd Wire.) St, Petersburg via Eydtkuhnen, Nov. 21. Beaten in every detail of his Bal kans policy by his own assistant, Under Secretary Tcharybeff of s the foreign office, Foreign Secretary Iswolaky Is thought to have prepared his resignation and it Is stated that It is a matter ; of but weeks at most before he will present it. ,.: His retirement will certainly mean Tcharykoff's elevation to the head of the department and the substitution of an attitude toward Austria that it is thought can hardly fail to precipi tate the threatened Balkans conflict in the spring. The under-secretary's theory has been from the first that any compromise with the Austro-Ilungarian government would involve a loss in Russlon prestige and Influence in southeastern Europe from j which the czar could never re cover.1 He has tried to conceal neither his efforts to fuse Turkey, Bulgaria, Servia, Houmanta and Montenegro Into an alliance under Russian protection nor his conviction that the combination to escape a war with Russian and prob ably many other European, powers must necessarily be Involved. Through court influences and the Rus sian newspapers he controls, Tchary koff has fought Iswolsky for months. He has - convinced the country that Iswolsky learned from Foreign Minister Aeranthal of Austria last September what the Vienna government planned to do in the Balkans, While Iswolsky worked to arrange a conference of the fiowers, Tcharykoff fought to prevent t and finally dealt his superior officer a severe blow by prevailing on the czar to refuse to recognize the annexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina by Austria. POISON III BEER FOR FIVE GREEKS Americanized Greek Gets $227 From Unsuspect ing Countrymen. (United Press Leased Wire.) St. Louisi Mo., Nov. 21. The death of Forte- Sotar, a Greek, the approach ing Heath of his cousin, John Sotar, and of Theodore Peto, together with the Illness of two other Greeks, is caus ing the police to seek a- compatriot fce lieved to have poisoned the entire party and to have robbed them of $227. The Greeks had been 'drinking beer in a room with a well-dressed Ameri canized Greek, giving the name of Illo, before tney were seizea witn convul sions. When they fell unconscious he disappeared and their money vanished at tne same time. When the Greeks were found one was dead and two dying. At thehospl'tal those who recovered consciousness gave the police a description of the stranger. They aeciarea ne naa promisea tnem work. DIES HORRIBLY ORDER WHEELS Horace Felt of Auburn, Wash., Killed Before ' . Eyes of Wife. ' (Onltea Press Leased Wire.) Auburn, Wash., Nov. 21. Dragged to his death In eight of his wife and three children who were waiting at the train to meet him. Horace Felt aged 45, met an awful fate near here last night. Hanging desperately to the guards of A COMPLETE FOOD Baker's Cocoa 50 Highest Awards in Europe and America Registered U.S. Pat. Office A medical wriWr says : Baker's pure cocoa acts as a "gentle stimulant, invigorat ing and correcting the action of the digestive organs, fur nishing the body with some of the purest elements of nutrition. Walter Baker & Co., Ltd. Established lrso. DORCHESTER, MASS. The goodness of every thing else at breakfast de pends on the coffee. -, ' " i ' ' " v ' ' ? YosrYrocer returns oar money U jou too l tk Settling's Best, par turn. , " SIX ENTOMBED III FIERY fllE Employes of Northwestern Company Believed to Have Perished. - (SpecUl Dlcpstcb to The JoorniiLI Butte, Mont.. Nov. H.-Advlces from Red Lodge, Mont, today state that de spite the heavy streams of water pour ing; into the workings of the east side coal mine of the Northwestern Improve ment company, the mine openings are belching forth immense quantities of smoke, giving the hillside the appear ance of a volcano. The fire Is raging fiercely In the vicinity of stope No. f, and the water thus far seems to have had little effect In staying the advance. It is feared that unless It Is - soon brought under control the damage will be enormous. The underground work ings of the east side mine embrace a very large area, a small lake would be necessary to bring all portions of the ?!ne under water In the event of an ex enslve spread of the fire sone. All efforts at further rescue of the six entombed foreigners has been aban doned, and everv effort dlrerted tn bring the fire under control. There Is not one chance In a hundred that these men have escaped, as the path they sougni o ine sunace was through a drift through which the flames are roll lng the fiercest So intense is the heat that there Is slleht chance of even the bodies of the men being recovered, as in all probability their remains have oeen incinerated. The east side mine is the largest col llery In Montana, and affords employ ment to about 1,000 men: It Is owned by the Northern Pacific company and operated by the Northwestern Improve ment company, and its output is used exclusively by uiu rauroaa. cosWiT HO BETTER (United Press Leased Wire.) Paso Robles Hot Springs, Ca!., Nov. 21. Governor-elect Cosgrove of Wash ington is no better today than he has been for the past five days and the doctors refuse to make a statement of the case. Cosgrove was treated with cabinet baths this morninsr. following a restless night that left him pale and. haggard today. He is some better thart ne was last night but Is still In bad shape. He Is still unable to walk, but seems to be In good spirits. , HOMESEEKEIT RATE ' SYSTEM RETAINED (United Press Leaned Wlrn.t Chicago, Nov. 21. Deciding against the proposal to place air passenger ousines.J on a 2-oent minimum rate after January 1, western railroad's today recommended that a reduced homeseekers' rate be adopted once more. The rates will ap ply to all western, northwestern and southwestern territory to which they have hitherto applied, and will be In force during January and February. The rate will be one and one-half fares for the round trip. It has further been, agreed that the committees representing the various roads shall have a meeting soon to work out the dotalls for homeseekers" rates to be in effect during March and subse quent moit' i. Homeseekers' excursions will be run on the first and third Tuesdays, of the month as In past years. Wright and Alexander Lose. (United Press Leased Wire.) Melbourne, Nov. 21. The American tennis team, Wright and Alexander, lost the championship tournament here to day by the following score: 6-3; 6-2; 4-6; 6-2. The American representatives showed championship form only in the third set. the car while the train was In swift motion, Felt sped across the tic and striking a cattle guard lost his hold and was swept underneath the wheels. It took more than an hour to disentangle Felt's remains from the trucks. Felt leaves a widow and six children. louble 66 Effective Trains leave Portland for Camas, Washougal, Ste venson, White Salmon, Goldendale, Roosevelt, Pasco, Walla Walla, Spokane and all eastern points reached via the Great Northern and Northern Pa cific Railways Dining Cars Parlor Observation CITY TICKET OFFICES: Corner Third, and Morrison Streets 122 Third Street, near Washington :, i Eleventh and Hoyt Sts. HASKELL WANTS SUIT IN THE STATE COURT vr01",', ?kla-l Nov- ".--Governor C N. Haskell has i Instructed his attorney In the $600,000 damage suit against William R. Hearst to ask ths federal court at Omaha to remand the case to the state courts for trial. Hearst's sit torneys had ths case transferred to- the WOflAN'S TRUE FRIEND Women of All Ages From All Paris of the World Join fa Extolling the Uerlfs of the Great Tonic Stimulant and Elixir of life. The following extracts are taken from letters which were selected at random from thousands that have been received from grateful patients who have been healed and kept young by the use of Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey. MRS. CAROLINA BEACDIN Vigorous at SO Mrs. Caroline Beaudln, who resides at 10 Plunkett Ground, Adams, Mass., on March 21, 1908, wrote: "I have been using Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey for a long time. It has done me consider able good and I am fsellng fine. X am 80 years old, still working nine hours every day In & paper mill. I recommend Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey to all my friends, particularly to the aged' ones." Mrs. Framan 114 Years of Asi In an Interview with Mrs. Campbell, who lives at Bed Banks, Pa., and who is the daughter of Mrs. Freeman (114 years of age), she stated: "My mother has been using Duffy's Pure Malt Whis key and is anxious to hay me tell you: that she - felt Its strengthening effects at once. We know that it has done her a great deal of good. 8 he la 114 years of age and needs something to sustain her strength. She thinks It is a great stimulant and no old person should be without It. I myself, know what she says about your medicine la the truth-" These letters and interviews are the world's greatest body builder and Men and women in all walks of life great good derived from the use of Duffy's ure Malt Whiskey, If you wish to keep young, strong the glow of perfect health, take Daffy's Pure Malt Whiskey regularly, ac- : j: Ti .t a. t ... i the entire system,. It is recognized at everywhere. CAUTION. When you ask your Pure Malt Whiskey be sure you get the genuine. It's the only absolutely pure medicinal malt whiskey and is sold in sealed bottles ojily ; never in bulk. Price $1.00. Look for the trade-mark, the "Old Chemist," on the label, and make sure the seal over the cork is unbroken. Write Consulting Physician, Duffy Malt Whiskey Co., Rochester, booklet and free advice. . ' T Daily Train VIA The North ' aiik Road. Sunday, Nov; Trains Arrive Portland from Same Points NLW EQUIPMENT Cars Standard and Tourist Sleepers ' First-Class Coachs federal courts, November T, but 1I kell wants it tried in the state cmrt. The suit grew out Of the churKe urn j In the campaign. , If his re.juest In re fused Haskell says he wlU ink for at! early hearing In the federal court , ' , Official Idaho Volo. Chicago Nov.' Jl. The offlolnl elec tion figures ;lve the - vote of Idaho: Taft, 50,091; Bryan, 34,81)1); Debo, 6. 305; Chafin. 1,740; Hlsgcn. JQ7. n MRS, KfelFB Wearing; Cough Mrs, Kelfe, of 803 Root St., Chicago, HI, , recently wrote: "X "am 65 year of age and have been imlng Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey for. a. great many, years. Seventeen years ago I wal com pletely broken down with a wearing cough. I began using your medicinal Whiskey, and sines then have not paid out one cent In doctors' bills. Today I feel that I can run a race with the) best. My head is clear, my nerve steady and my whole system iiv goodt order. When my children are In neeoV of a tonic I do not hesitate to give thenv? Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey according to directions. "I persuaded my aunt, who Is 79 years nf mtrA mnA urhA r. fail n tr vav-tr. rnnM. . ly, to take Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey. Since she commenced using It aha does not look over 60 years old." Unsolicited Praia e. Mra. Thomas McKee, who resides at 103S S. Colorado St, Philadelphia, Pa., on March 30, 1908, wrote as follows: "I have taken Duffy's Pure Malt Whis key as a medicine, having been In poor health prior to taking it, and can con scientiously say that I haVe been much benefited by same. This 'testimonial Is given unsolicited.". convincing and forceful truths about renewer of yduth. , , testify as these women have to the and vigorous and have on your cheeks. the world's leading" family medicine f druggist, grocer or dealer for Duffy's N. for a free. illustrated medical t J " , . Jj: Service 4i 22, 1908 9:15 A.M. 5:35P.M. 7:30A.M. 5:30P.M. Street Passenger Station