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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1909)
Germaiiy'is Gist of Important-. Topics; London Correspondence Late News from; 'France TT3 4 i . i-VU-i TO BALK AN NEW 'AMBASSADOR SENATOR CLARK IX LONDON INVASION; OF ENGLAND Elaborate Sclieme Has Been Already Worked Ont and Approved by the' War Off i.ce Ifome IMeuse ,. , . . Army ui u Jiiiiiun. , . OTHERS re TRAINING 11 ill OF HORRORS COIICI IliiS TERRIBLE TALE t v 1 5-. r 4" - ? . -? - -1 -,.'" fr ' . J S V Prom Staff CorreBnondent. London, ..Feb. .- .- -One. rather poorly written play has done for. England what years -of agitation liy her greatest gen erals'' and her moer- far-flighted public - men ha failed to do. ,- Or perhaps It Ja fairer to-say that the play hat rrownod the work of the eminent agi tators, and has 'brought home to - the Knglish" people in concrete form " the terrible danger to' which tliey were ex posed as a result o.f neir military :un- 3 he play la entitled "An Englishman's Home.'1 , it Is the work of Major Du Murler, an officer fiow.serving in South Africa, eldest won r of ithe late George Du Murler. author' of -""Trilby." and a brother of Gerald Dtf Maurier, the well- known Encash actor, but owing to trie army regulations which forbid an offi cer on . ttie active list irom engaging in any other occupation than soldiering, - the author-Is referred to merelie as , "a patriot.? - : - - ' r v ' Problem of Xtefsasa, , ?..':'- The fclay has come at the psychologic . al moment when all England Is talking . about tue problem of national jerens, and-It has caught the national Imagin ation despite Its crudeneas. It ) Impos sible to buy a seat at the theatre at which it is being produced in London, for two montns aneaa, at.a arrangements are being hurried forward for produc ing., it simultaneously at another Lon don theatre More than a dosen tour ing companies are already being organ ised to take It to the provinces, and the War Office authorities are nego tiating with the producers to send com panies to every town and village In the country to wake up the people to the danger to which the country U exposed vy ineir. apatny, k- , ' Thsa of play. 'The theme of the play is a very simple one. It deals with an imaginary inva sion of England bv theforces of the "Empress of the North.'' but- there is very Mule attempt to disguise the fact that Germany la the-Invader. The volun teer orce on- which. England must de pend to epel an Invader 1f the regu lar army Is engaged elsewhere, and the enemy has managed to elude the fleet end effect a Undine', breaks down hone- lesaly and In the end a respectable Brit-j isn nousenoiaer is rutniessiy snot Dy the enemy's soldiers because, being a civilian, he' has nicked up a rifle to de fend hia own bouse from attack. The whole secret of the popularity of the play is that it depicts on the stage the condition of things which Lord Roberts, England's greatest living general, and a host of other military and public men, have been trying to de pict on the platform. v Assuming that the regular . army should be . engaged un viiu n uoj in ii army viiuuiu mnn age te evade the fleet, which 4s said to i py no jneans impossible, Eng- land wpuld be at the nrcy of her en emy. About -nine months ago Mr. Hal dane. the minister of - war, , worked -out an excellent scheme under which the territorial army was established. This Is organised on a voluntary basis for home defense, and the establishment asked for was 800,000 men. Only 200,- Place for - May CADILLAC ' THIRTY All the Cadillac Thirty Touring Cars that we can deliver between , now and May 1 are sold. We have a few Demi-Tonneaus and Roadsters for earlier delivery- but very few. Here a list of our sales; it ought to prove a pretty convincing argument to those who have been delaying placing their order. It is ai unquestionable fact that our allotment of one hundred cars is going to prove inj sufficient tomeet the demand. - .- . . f .'?E. R, Edmundson ' ' Blaine R. Smith - Harry Tattle . ; , . H. R. Kincaid : ' D.C. Lewis ,;,v"-v Russell Smith V v Abe Tichnor r - W. A. Avery Jr. v jf. C. Olds' . ' C. W. King . ' , J. H. Cook " . . S. J. Storey : . Dr. J. W, Morrow " Besides these thirty - ' J v to agents CADILLAC Goyey: Motor, Gar. CoiBpany PIERCE-ARROW CADILLAC BABCOCK ELECTRIC SEVENTH AND; COUCH STREETS OflfJ men have come forward, and It la admitted that even 800, 000 would be altogether inadequate for the. purpose for which the- army is intended. : The failure pf the territorial army is largely due to two facts. One is Uiat tne averace young Briton does not take kindly to soldiering. - He, is wrapped up in sport, and anything; revey -business,-, which Interferes with hia watch ing cricket and football games and oc casionally day Ins them Is of second- J ary importance lc his eyes. The second reason isrnai nis employers .'orje,oi to his. being taken- awav for a month or so every year '.when the territorial arm! is undergoing it training In camp, and! nave discouraged volunteering. - The ' employers, however, are fully alive -to the need of an adequate home aerense army, and' tney are pretty wen agreed that there would be nox obieo- tion to soldiering if everyone had to do his Jiliare of it. Then, they declare, the employer who allowed and -encouraged hia men to train for the defense of their country would not be placed at a disad vantage in competition with those who refused, to allow their men the neces sary time for training. .. - 'He Alternative. The - is ' an alternative which haa been preached by the soldiers for more than a year, ana which I am in a. por tion to state Iks approved'Tiy the War Orf Ice authorities, although they have not felt it to be politic to declare- them selves openly'. "Service for all". Is com ing tin England within a few years In spite of the opposition of, the Socialists and extreme-Radicals who see in "con scription," as, they call it. a dangerous fore leading towarda extreme militar ism on the German model. Tbe scheme which has been worked out fort universal . training la very different- however, from the meth od of conscription adooted by moat coun tries on the Continent. Under 'the new English scheme, no one,- except those physically unfit for soldiering, will be exempt, and the' young men wilt not be taken away from their business for two or three years just at the time -when they should be receiving their most val able business training. . ! " ;:; ..,,,'; '' .'. , Training aobolara, . '''"...'':'.'' V' It Is proposed la start with the boys in school, when they are about 10 years old. They will be drilled and taught to shoot with miniature r-fles, graduating to trie service arm as they increase In bodily strength. At the age of 18. they will pass into tne territorial army and 111 be compelled to. spend about four months every year lit camp or barracks for three years, and to perform a-certain nnmhav tt ovenlnor Arm nrln . ta period when thev are not with the col- lor: Knr the fnH,ilnii Hitpit -vim-nt every year and keep tip their rifle shoot ing and drilling. After that , they will passvtlnto a first reserve and will be liable to first call in -the event o an emergency until the age of 30, after which they will form part of the second reserve ag long as they are physically fit. ' M It is estimated that after the irst four years of this plan the territorial . iv- .. 'V '!' - .. Your delivery THIRTY PURCHASERS Kenneth Beebe- - W.J.Fullam - ? A. J. Winters , w W. J. Zimmerman 4 A. Neppach M. L. Holbrook's s C' F. Swigert Lou Baldwin ' F. E. McEldowney -'Lewis Montgomery ! Dr. J. C. Zan t Ed Holmes' : ' Newell Barnard ight cars sold at retail, we have forty cars sold in the various towns of the state. Courjt Johann Helnrlck von Bero Btoff, the new German ambaisador to Americl. ' ' ...( ' A, J. , Goodbrood, PJoneer.of 1872. Silett - Squaw WJh Chin Tatooed -After Fashion of a Past, Ganera Hion. ' " ' army will have 400,000 men on Its ac tive list and 160,000 additional recruits undergoing their first four months' training. 4 This would be .the average strength of the territorial force, but be hind It ; Would be tli first reserve of 600.000 men, and behind that an indefi nite number of efficient men In the sec ond reserve: The annual cost of the scheme la , estimated at about $20,000. 000, which is certainly cheap as an In surance against Invasion and against the scares which constantly .upset business under present conditions. Another strong point in favor of the scheme is th effect it would have on the physique of the British people, which has been deterior ating so rapidly of late years that the war office, has been compelled to re duce the minimum height for recruits' for the regular army by"mwo inches in five years. The regular army would not he touched under the new scheme, for tbe Idea of the territorial army is that it ehall be wholly for home defense. Eng land must Always have a large nrofes- sional army recruited voluntarily on a long service basla. for aervim nwruo in her colonies and dependencies and for foreign' wars. 8he never has snv diffi culty in finding all the men she needs lor inn service. What she -needs and what she la going to have is a nation in arms to aerend her against Invasion. Indians and Grafter. ' From the Boston Artvir'law The lawbreaklng Inril coddled or supported In Idleness at the national expense. But the government certainly will not help the solution of u" nuian priroiem -ny turning tne In dian tribes out of their lands at the urg ing of greedy speculators or- settlers wno want the rich reservation lands. This Is not a - matter : on .which th friends of, the Indians can afford to be i ooos. . . . W. P. Hawley Dr. A. H. Johnson Mrs. J.'R. Wyatt George H. George George Warren H,' B.vThielsen L.H. Tarpley. J. W. Perkins William killings worth' J. B. O'Shea W. W. Caldwell Louis Gerlinger Unfortunate Country Trying . . to Convince World There 'Has Been Much Economic ' and . Social Improvement Densorsliip Is Strict, V By Charles P.i Stewart. (European Manager United Jrues.) -London. Feb. i0. The year 1909 prom ises to be , one of horror In Kussia of horror even to a country ao accustomed to horrors , that conditions . must be nothing short of . appalling ' before the people consider them particularly bad. The government has been trying lately to convince the world that there has been a great economic, social and polit ical improvement in the fears realm in the past two or three years, The cen sorship was vigorously tightened a rew months ago. with the comment to the official news agency that Nicholas wanted accounts of crimes, epidemics, executions and famines suppressed, and as much as possible made of stories cal culated to impress outsiders with the people's prosperity and content. Tne unprecedented freedom with which news had been transmitted for some tlnae before, the order wan issued had resalted In a general abandonment of the old channels for smuggling it 'out as contraband, and while they were be ing reopened no one nad mucn idea wnat was going on in the country. Now that they are working again wtth' tolerable freedom, it Is beginning to be verv clear whv the nrevlnua nolirv of comparative publicity was so sudden ly apanaoned. Arrairs have , taken a serious turn for the worse In Russia. and- the government is plainly deter mined to keen its troubles as aulet as possible.- : ''tne aimcultles rt races are not con nected with the internsl political situa tion alone. The countrv is. as a matter of 'fact in the throes of one of the most startling "graft" investigations any na- t fin ho. .UU. lrnnw. T , lu . n .1 m . K aI 1 ., too, on the eve of a violent outbreak oi terrorism. But It has other troubles, perhaps even more threatening Tpr the future If not quite as Immediately alarming. Experts are agreed" that warm weather Kill bring with it one of the worst cholera outbreaks Europe has ever known. Agricultural conditions flk many provinces are. such as to renderwde spread famines Inevitable. ', Finland is on the verge of rebellion.. J With .Eng land there Is a possibility of grave fric- iiun uvrr cersisn arrairs. , inquiry into draft. The "graft" Inquiry Is being pushed throughout all of Ruesia and BlbeHH. The .entire official clsss appears to have been saturated with corruption. On one side the authorities bled the people; on the other tbey robbed the government. In not a sinale Hcnari. ment. charged with the handling of a cent of money, it is said, have the cof fera escaoed. From s-enerala. iilmlnin and governdrs of provinces down to the pettiest police officials everyone seems to have been involved. ' i It Is not alone trim that thn rur la' horrified at the discovery of the un trustworthlness of practically all his servantsgovernmental losses have been enormous. What figure they will reach It Is Impossible to say. It is not likely that the government Itself has a very accurate Idea of the amount as yet, so widespread was the plundering. Scattering reporta of bomb outrages, shootings and stabbings have been leak !nL?ut ,rora St. Petersburg. Moscow, Keiff, Odessa and other Important cities for several weeks. Unable to sup press news of them entirely, the govern ment has tiled to minimize their Im portance and to represent them as the work of common criminals unconnected with any of the great revolutionary or ganisations. The truth is. according to members of the exile colonies here, In Paris and in Geneva, T.he various demonstrations are all part of a widespread conspiracy which contemplates a campaign of steadily Increasing violence as the year progresses, culminating In a series of such startling outrages by the time the expected cholera epidemic Is at its Height, that the ferrnrlii. think will stand a fair chance of actually overturning the government. It Is conceded that the mvnhillnn.r. operations thus far this ,vear hsve ac complished Jittle but several are de clared to have failed by only the nar rowest margins to remove high offl c,lB flnst whom the terrorists bear especial grudges, while the Tsarskoe Belo explosion is asserted to have been so well planned that the merest acci dent was all that saved the Csar. Activity of Polio. The increasing activity of the police ft late appears to bar out the revo luttonarlea claims that the authorities know what was In store for them. Not counting the prisoners and suspects killed for alleged attempts to escapa. for minor breaches of discipline or while resisting arrests, 191 men. women and children of 16 to 31 years of age were hanged in Russia during I06. All died for political offenses. Twelve hundred others were con demned but secured commutation of their sentences to perpetual exile in Si beria, a change which means death bv a slower process in the course of a few years, or In the case of the bolder spirits, bv the bullet or under the lash for breaking rules which vary witn every individual official In charge. -. The- executions show a steady In crease during the year. The total num ber in January was 63 and In December III. For the first Quarter of the vi the monthly average was 62.. In th second J. In th third 6 and In the fourth 3. ' The showing indicate -more hang ings monthly at present than for anv decade In th nineteenth century. They usually take place -at night and almost Invariably in a dungeon. Th custom im to pinion the victim, thrust him Into a sack, tie the mouth over his head, noose the rope about the part of th sacking where the neck is supposed to be and then to hoist the kicking bundle a few Inches fi-?m the floor by pulling th free end of the rope over "ft beam or a hook' in th wan. The terrorists maintain that the gov ernments Increasing' resort to th death penalty Is maklrg them more followers than any other on thing In Russia at f resent. Kven the most Ignorant mou ik Is beginning to realise, thev aay, that there la no Juatic in a legal sys tem which Imposes a sentence of but a few year' exile upon a patricide and hangs th drunken . merrymaker , who strikes a policeman. It Is figured also that tbe elimination of the arch-spy. Eugene Asefi, who was denounced by the revolutionary central committee will be Immensely helpful to the terrorist cause, information he gave to th police having led to the ar rest of score of their ablest disciples end Invariably frustrated plots against the officials they wer most anxious to kill. . . " . - ' 1 Incidentally, one etory of Axef that it was by his order that th revo--lutionartes. murdered Fsther Qspon. the priest wh led the disastrous entl gavernment demonstrations In St Pet- -" Till if , V - Former Senator William A. was on crutches in London the result a fall on the Lucanla. PARIS TURNS TO f. BEAUTY SPOTS" Daring: Creatures of Society Beffin to Revive 'For gotten Customs. Pari. Feb. 20. Beauty patches, which were rare during the 1-ecent pom padour period, are reappearing in Parts as a result of the anticipated revival of Louis XV fashions. They are to be revived with great favor because Frenchwomen have never entirely aban doned the cunning little devices which the ladies of Louis' court found so use ful. Recently patches have been mot ly seen on the stage and at costume balls. Now the more daring leaders ol socl eTy are laying In supplies and are ad vising their friends to use them. Beauty patches are made of tiny pieces of black velvet in the shspe of stars, nioons and crescents. The patch . is placed on the side of the ee to make the ye appear larger, and it gives a vivacity of expression. On the corner of the under lip it attenuates the face; if. on the contrary, a woman wishes to obtain a shortening effect, she places one niouche on the right cheek end an other on cne side of the left eye. In the time of Marie Antoinette some famous beauty noted for her extrava gance appeared at court with patches on her cheek representing a hearse and mourning coach cut out of black silk court plaster. Mouche eccentricities went so far in those days. In fact, that the clergy Interfered and denounced them as vanities. An Orchid Wonder. London, Feb. 20. Orchid growers have several times done what the Dar winians held to be almost Impossible and hare crossed species. A Mr. Bull of Chelsea has created a new orchid i of unusual beauty and botanical In terest. It haa been christened Odont loda Chelselensis and is a crocs be tween Cochloda Vulcanlca Grandi flora and Odontoglossum Crispum, which are distinct, in species and in appearance. Th new wonder, which bore its first spray of bloom during the hardest frost of the year, has all the virtues of both parents. It has the long, graceful sprsv or the one and the broad, shape ly petals of the other. The color is a "crushed strawberry" of a peculiarly delicate shade. Tbe plant la also a pre cocity. It has flowered In -Its fourth year, which is -young for an orchid, and the present sprsy the only example In the world Is as nothing to what may be expected of the older plant. Sot Hanged, but Married. London, Feb. 20. -Twenty-three years ago John Lee was sentenced to be hanged for the, murder of Kmma Kevse, by whom he was employed as a butler at Babba combe. Three attempts were made to execute him. On each occasion the gallows mechanism failed to work A respite was granted him. Twelve months ago he was released by th home office. Now he is married. The bride of "the man they couldn't hang." as he is called where he lives, Miss Jessie -Augasta Bulled, chief nurse of th female mental wards of Newton Abbot workhouse. Every care was taken to Insure the -ceremony should be kept secret, but the report of the wedding soon spread, and when the newly married couple left th church a large crowd had gathered outside , and threw confetti over them. . ,. ... Chicago's coroner is arranging to use the phonograph to take the last denials or confessions of condemned murderers snd the dying statements of victims of foul- play for use as evidence in court. ersburg three years ago and after waul beenma a police spy. - Aief was not onlv Jealous of Gstflin. it is said. but. sus pected him of knowing thst he. tK. was a sny and feared he would ". h--trayed t the trrorit - i i t - ? 3 i - I-.?-a V crark aud ilrs. Clark. Senatornciafir of an Injury o his leg, caused by, EUGENE M St. Petersburg, Feb. 2ft. -A new ver sion of the escape of Eugene Axef, the government police spy, from the terror ists a(ter his duplicity was revealed and told today. Azef, who took a prominent part in the revolutionary movement and at the same t im- mad reports to thegQvern ment, whFn accused by the terrorists persuaded them to let him go- to pri vate vault In Paris to fully -prove his Innocence by documents. Four revolutionists accompanied Axef. They were under pain of death if they allowed Axef to escape. Axef arrived In fans and returned here but none oi nil companions came' back. - it. Is not known whether tne spy killed tln-m or corrupted them., He managed, anyway, to elude their, Vigi- lno Revolutionists are searching for the fcu.f men. -t Government Annoyed. 1 ' Offers by Russian terrorist exiles to come to St. Petersburg, if. guaranteed mmunlty from arrest: to remain strict ly- on their good behavior during their stay- in the capital, to furnish full in formation concerning police complicity n scores of assassinations,-tn the in stigation of massacres and In th or ganization of strikes and riots, and tinauy to get promptly outaiae .tn country on completlnr their testlmon. are causing the government the utmost annoyance. . ' ' ' - The radical and reform ' elements throughout the country; and especially In the douma, are vigorously urging the acceptance of all these propositions on the ground that there la, in any case,, nothing to be lost by hearing what the terrorists have to say and that ' they may render valuable assistance in bring ing many of the worst type of official criminals to justice. If tne government speaks the truth in repudiating connec tion with the crimes of which the revo lutionaries tell, it is argued,, it ., has nothing to fear from publicity. . Of fleiala Oppos. : -. Officialdom, however, rules the gov ernment, and wtth suspicious unani mity, the highest officials in the rani tl are opposing any dealings with th ex iles, as an indignity to which It wouTi never no jor n administration to sub mit. There is a pretense on their part " i-"- uui'wpi ror a run inves tigation, but the radicals charge that, wkli as 'little ostentation as possible they are really doing evervthing in their power ta hush th scandal un aa auicklv as they can- 5 3 Aaauionii inrormattnn Axef s activities is constantly turning SP- " PP" not to have confined himself to plots sgalnsf the cxar s sup porters but to hav instigated various attempts, successful and otherwise, against prominent liberals ' - . - Keodoroffi the terrorist exile, who ??.v.?rt.h'T8tif, uo "i Parirpolice and insists on belna- TtrHii . r.. !nmI?."i?irr k,llj"S In which he admits he particloated tell. n,.-.... Siin.?'i1!!r'5 0"Ptrcies. From what nfr Vf "P lions, Feedof- off Rays he thinks nm.tki.. tn.. x. - Of his assasni nation plots were Intended to succeed and that the others wer ar "Ifw10 nab, he polite to gain credit by appearing to discover them lust In time'; fV,u.iin,n.- u-.,... -thes -delayed too long nnj the murders would i earned out strictl'v according to program. -. A French scientist lias made this dis quieting din-r- ti at ttisease germs ran 1-e transmn ') hv ' hresd mnirr throncb th"ir r- i rt t;- t,u ,.f f I -c i - . . . . RUSSIA Escapes From Strong Prison in France, Faces Hard- ships in South America and Finally Lands Back . in Paris Jail. Paris, Feb. 20". Several months have passed since Paris was astonished with a report of the escape ;f mm one of the strongest of the penal forts' of France, at, Cayenne, in French Guiana, of Jacinto Bartelomy and five com panions defying all th penalties of recapture. Bartelomy has been caught and gives an account of an Odyssey that would appear a work of fancy if It were not alt proved true. - y- The six fugitives, after , a voyage full of dangers by sea, rivers 'and virgin forests, living on roots and herbs, ar rived on Venexuelan territory, and de termined to - go to Caracas. On the way two of their number-were-crushed by great serpents, dying almost in stantly. One was devoured by a croco dile at the Orlnco river and one was the victim of the voracity of 'a puma. After unrelatable fatigues Bartelomy with his one - remaining companion reached Caracas. " , :' ( " JTot .'Wloomd. '. : But they were not permitted to llv in the capital ef Venezuela, being French, and. the authorities threatenel to shoot them If they did not leave at once. Without loss of time the two unfortunates fled towards the Interior, where the only compsnion of Bar telomy was devoured by, the "cannibals, Bartelomy arriving alone at the ooast, A few days after, a ship passed within sight and by signals .he got attention and a boat went ashore to receive hint, taking him to what proved to be a Spanish vessel bound for Bordeaux, where he was again left to his fate. Bartelomy treading once more Frenm soil, thought only of reaching Paris, where his mother and . three sisters lived. After unheard of difficulties he finally- arrived at Paris, only to find that his family had disappeared. - Ani this man who had run -the course . of such extraordinary dangers 'to regain liberty- found .himself alone and -mtg known In the great city, suffering In consequence, a terrible mental depres- Slon, whlc,h led him in desperation ti deliver himself Into the hands of the authorities. ' . Again a rrisonar. Bartelomy Is now again a prisoner, but the public, acquainted with his unlucky history feels for the unhappy victim of such circumstances, a great compassion and even the police regard him from the popular point of view and wun a singular respect. Because, con trary to all the logic of th law and the rigid letter of the codes, this man, full of misfortunes, appears to have a right to liberty, which he cannot be allowed to' possess, in spite of all the risks, which he has faced with a cool ness worthy of the sentiment of com miseration produced in all who know th facts. ! , ... . "The Changeling" These verses from the "London Acad emy" would seem to prove that all the poets ar not dead. The English news- niMn hava . vau.An.v k.. A .1 . . i . , - . v -.....j kts. i, . tivuurins many poems that have merit and "Thi. Changeling' la as meritorious - as any. For those who came from Fairyland. The world is hard to understand And I wss born in Fairyland -Under a lucky star. r s, Perhaps Al women are! ffyfathf was a golden Ung.'tT My mother was a shining queen; , I hearri.the mevfe KlMe.HiiH- ,ln They wrapped m in a mantle green. They led their winged whit horses ut.. We rode and rod till dawn waa mv! "We rode with many a song and shout "rivee the Hill They stol the crying. human child. And left me laughing by .the fire;. And that is -why my heart-is wild. And all-my. lif-a- long. desire. The .old enchantments hold- me stilt , ' And sometimes tn a waking tranc I' seek again th Fairy Hill, The midnight feast, the glittering - dance! Th wlxard harpers play for me. ; - I wear a erown upon my head. , . A princes In eternity. , I dance and revel with the dead "Vain lies!'1 I hear the people cry, ' I listen-to -their weary truth; Then turn, again to fantasy, - -Ana im uniruuoiea nana oi louia - I -hear the laughter of th kings. - I see their jeweled flagons gleam O- wine, of Jlfe! immortal things -Move In the splendor of my dreaanv My spirit Is a homing dove ' I drain a crystal cup, snd -fall Softly into the arms of Lov t 'And then the darkness covers all. '-.I a T..- .';... Ollv Douglas. it CURES RHEUMATISM r sottl. " l AJT nmKJTAI. 9XVXBT TCVV RHEUMATISM xx its ma iTT roftao. Sciatica ' , Neuralgia Nervousness Sleeplessness Nervous Headache Neuralgic Headaches Nervous Pyspepsta Nervous Affections ' TRAPS SUPPLIED BT A. W. Allen & Co. Wbolfl and Retail Druggista Idio i KanMl SU.. Fcrt!ani, Cr. . PACiriC COAST AGENT a Cclurrbii Tr