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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (March 3, 1912)
Oi'ae Feared at Lawrence :a Busings Men IlaTe rian for SettJoniont of Tetxile Strike,, but .Owners lies-Hate- to lwi.-fc 'Tussive Resistance," or the Wreck ing of Machinery by Operatives Once They Return to Work; Facts About Trouble by Lincoln Steffena. By Lincoln Stiffens. , Lawrence, Mass, March 2. A plan, an intelligent plan, .for a settlement of this textile sorters' strike has been marred' out at last by torn men who m . . ti.a.. - r TtAcfnn men. unaeraiana 11. xij m.. experienced in business diplomacy and -I.ibor pontics. Tliey imy settled ether strikes, big ones, and they see some 01 :the differences between this and other such problems that they have tackled. ;That is to say. uitj ..v. - --- - fpromise and :et the workers back to iork. , But will that end the matter? i Toafa- the question which bothers those men and the owners of the mills. ; Thev have in the councils of the strikers 'snles who report that the worst form j of fighting is to follow a compromise. 'Vhen the workers have returned to their looms sabotage may begin. The men. women and children are being enrolled and organised now. After that It Is said, they are to be taught how to spoil r' goods In the making and to mangle ma chinery. -And there you have the true 'reason why It has been so difficult to deal with this striker Two Side to Coatrorersy. not bean radv to setUe it, and the employers r afraid t0rrank P. Sibley, the correspondent of the Boston Globe, put It straight to one ... Via JtBn,Mh,fl "The millmen dread the and or the strike and the starting of the nilUs." he said. And he went on to tell how tone of the officials of tha American 5 Woolen company took him through a 'wool mill. "He pointed out," Mr.- 81bley 'wrote, "the baskets of various worsteds : which are made Into cloth and explained that If one kind got mixed with another ; a cloth might result which would crinkle up like crepe. And it Is Impossible to ! guard against the mixing, which would I be tho easiest thing In the world for a malicious operator to da" - - t -It Is not only emery dust In the oil ! boxes we fear," the official said. "There : are a thousand ways in which mills and machinery are at the mercy of . the workers. The owners know this, and they are lying awake night In their worry over sabotage.- ; Sabotage reared. "Sabotage" Is the French word for a way itor has louna to make war be f tween battles; to fight more fiercely and more safely while at work than on strike. Tradition has It that, a French i worker In a rage one day threw ; his i wooden shoe (sabot) into some machln very and when the others saw the dara jage done they picked up with the shoe the suggestion to destroy property and spoil goods as a polkfy. It spread like a disease in France and in Austria. The Scotch have the thing, and a phrase of their own for lUca' canny." The English and American workers did not take to It generally, but they know it. They name it "pais'va reslstanoe," And the spirit that prompts it 1 here: We hd it in Los Angeles. "Direct action" is one manifestation of the hate which resorts to sabotage. The sticks of dynamite thrown back of the Times building were", in a sense, developments of the 'wooden shoes. The trials prepar ing at Indianapolis are dealing with it The 87 or lie bridges and buildings blown up around the country were des troyed as a policy. And what the mill men dread at Lawrence Is the "passive resistance" which their agents tell them the strikers are contemplating after the "active resistance" ef - the strike is settled." , V , Manifestation f Condition. - In other word V this textile workers strike is but another manifestation of a serious, general, national condition which should bo generally understood and seriously met; not piecemeal; not at haphazard; here and there, now and then; hut by the general, national poli cy. And the aim of that policy should be to seek and, if possible, to cure the cause of the trouble. Repression isn't enough. That was the old way. There was a strike somewhere. We fought it out or starved It out or we "settled" it. . The mill -owners here are fighting It out. and they are not afraid to fight, you understand. But they are afraid to settle, as you see; they are afraid that it won't stay settled. "It's a new kind of a strike," said one of the Boston men who are trying to settle it "It Isn't new," said William P. Hay- wood, who is In command of the strike. "It'i neither the first of Its kind, nor," he added. In his grulf. contradictory way, "nor will it be the last." BeeaUa Great Strikes. And ha went on to recall the groat strikes In the mines out west, where he and the. Industrial Workers of the World come from. Which Is tho point that the Boston man appreciated when he and his strike-settlers showed that they understood the difference) between this and other strikes, and why it was so hard to deal with. This Is an I. W. W. strike. It's a westernstrike in the east; a strike con ducted in New England bywestera,niin ers,' who have brought here the meth ods and the spirit employed by. them in Colorado, liako- sr.l Npva'.i, tmrrfvo.l if you pies??, or correctoi by their ex perience there and by the radical phU osophies from abroad. The strikers at Lawrence are not westerners, of course; they are not even Americans. They are as mixed a lot cf foreigners as you could find anywhere in America. They are innocent. The mill owners, who Im ported them, by the way, are talking now of exporting them again gradually and bringing in French-Canadians. Why? It isn't the foreigners that are making the trouble. These poor. Ig norant, innocent foreign workers are led by Americans. --1. - Movement Spreading", The L W. W. which is conducting this strike, is an International organl- rnttnn, n0W but it trtA nut Wftllt and is spreading with the rapid growth of what may be called the Insurgent labor movement against conservative labor and capital. It is a rival of the American Federation of Labor. It is revolutionary in character. ' Its stated purpose is not merely to increase wages, but to abolish the whole wage system; not' to close shops, but to open them; not to make collective bargains with capital, but to undermine and finally destroy what it calls capitalism; and, finally, not to organise the work era by crafts, but industrially, or, as I heard the Lawrence foreigners taught to say, "all in one big union." . All I.. W. W. strikes, therefore, have purposes beyond those expressed in the demands made by the employes upon their employers. ' The, textile workers, for example, went out on strike to pro test against the reduction of their pay when the state law reduced their hours from 5 to 62 hours. After they were out, the L W. W. taught them to ask other things: a 15 per cent increase in wages, the abandonment of the pre miums (an abused speeding up) sys tem, and no discrimination against strikers. No : discrimination against scabs Is asked; and no closed or union shop; no contract, The L W. W. ex pects any agreement to be departed from by the employers in time, and It wants to be free to judge for itself when that occurs and to be free to right it In its own way. In brief. It wants to keep up the war after the battle is over, whether It be lost or won. , Situation at Lawrence. - This, then, is the, situation the mill owners of Lawrence sire facing . alone. This is - the problem the settlers are trying to settle. How are they doing It? Well, for one thing, they are trying to effect' their settlement, through the Central Labor union, which is the local labor organization affiliated with the American Federation of Labor." It's an appeal from Haywood to Gompers. One of the Boston men put It well. "Haywood makes Gompers look like an angel." he said. "The L W. W. makes the millmen sign for the A. F. of L" It may seem amusing to have a lot of anti-labor union business men sigh ing to reestabllBh the union In their mills. butthereaaona,4tor theifc-change of attitude take all the fun out of it for them and their friends, and if bus! nrs men in otrser rarts r-r trp cvitrv are Inclined to resent this aa a wea enir.g In their fight ssaisst Gompers and the American Federation ef Labor, let them wait a while before passing Judgment. I quoted Haywood above as saying this textile strike was not the last of its kind. He meant that The textile strike Is but one of a se ries of industrial uprisings planned not only to carry en in ft new way the war of labor upon capital, but toforce the reorganization of the American Federa tion of Labor along industrial lines or put it out of business and set up in its stead the Industrial Workers of the World. FOR STATE SECRETARY BRING US YOUR OPTICAL PRESCRlPTIONSWe do no eye testing. Frames repaired, lenses replaced. We guarantee all our work. When You Travel Next to the ticket, your trunk is the important thing. With a Murphy or Likely Trunk you 'can be sure of its safe arrival, at your destination.. Let uS show you these justly celebrated triinks. " Just Now Selling at one-fourth off. PEROXIDE DENTAL CREAM "CrfQQJ1 "iSS As the name implies is prepared with the AjIIUIjS M ingredients necessary to produce a tooth- jgjt cleansing cream of highest quality. , ,. 1 j-. Trk n -cJwKSL- Peroxide Dental Cream is invigorating-to VJlUVCu AA sensitive gums. Whitens the teeth without ' , '' ' 'r(fot injury to the enamel and sweetens the breath Chamois Gloves in tan L)l with its exquisite perfume. Our . guarantee and biscuit" shades a I J 1 1 i 1 1 1 fll) with every tube. Price only... . . ,25t prettier color or style is I 1 5 1 1 i R 'WOODURK'' NAIL POUSH fflffi ffi UjlIliP A wonderful Nad Paste no need to use a vnnf tu - IBlP9 powder when you use "Woodlark" Nail Pol- y !Ll n "JK ish. Guaranteed. Price, the jar.,......25 9oC GND0tV J" ONE FOURTH OFF THEATRICAL FOLK Wallets in handsome seal, walrus and Mo- , , rocco leathers. Selling regular at $1 to $12. We carry a complete line of Hess, Leichner s, Your choice at one-fourth less. Meyer's and Stein's Grease Paints, Face '" Creams and makeup. We will deliver your . (fa ' PERFUMES phone orders. ; X haSme'ScV.lfjm: LET US SUPPLY YOUR KODAK yzxr .., packages, exquisite odors . v NLLD5 . t . 5 1 such makes as Coty, Violet Develop, print and enlarge your pictures. If O (Ve-o-lay), Roger & Gallet you would have best results right prices fvuS and Pinaud's. Selling regu- we can deliver them to your satisfaction. pwVw$W lar at $2 to $25. Your choice - ' fw a0,?1t"thpilcs8' , .v MENS CUFF UNKS Wv Bulk Perfumes from the yC-w j finest European makers all -GoW filled Cuff Links for men; handsome and aa9 odors, selling regular 50c to newest designs, selling regular ai 75c to $2. $4. Your choice, the ounce, at one-half less. Your choice at ONE-HALF LESS. You Will Miss a Great Treat If You Do Not Inspect Our Beautiful Line of Art China, , Cut Glass and Art Brass on our Third Floor. Prices reduced one fourth to one half. Come in any daytomorrow is better. . '. SUITCASES ONE THIRD OFF Wicker Suit Cases are light and durable. They're particularly appropriate as a ladies article because of their light weight Made in various sizes, wjith leather protected corners, patent lockand bolts; lined inside, with extra inside fold. ; Suit .Cases that sell regular at $1.50 to $15." Your ; choice at one-third less. IMPORTED CARBONS FRENCH MIRRORS Va OFF OFF .... . ... -.. ." v A change in your wall decoration may be just what is, needed. Visit our Art Room to morrow and see our handsome French Mirrors framed in antique gold. Selling regular at $5 to $40. Imported Carbons In pretty walnut and rose wood frames, selling regular at $5 to $20. Take your pick at one-fourth less. STATIONERY SALE Two-quire fancy Box Stationery, excellent fab ric finish paper, long pointed flap envelopes, selling regular at 85c. Your choice at 49 One-quire box, fine linen paper, square and pointed envelopes, selling regularly at 35c, your choice at only.;. ..... . . ... Jli WE INVITE YOU TO OPEN A MONTHLY CHARGE ACCOUNT WITH US (Spedal to The JoiinnH Salem, Or., March I. "Faithful, hon est and efficient servicV Is the prom- who filed today as candidate for the uemocrauc nomination lor secretary of state. He la the only Democrat who has filed for this office. , W. L Cottel of PorUand, filed for the Republican nomination for dnJrv nrf food commissioner. His slogan is; "Business man, physician and chemist I will five all a square deal." Walter L. Toose Jr., of Dallas, Repub lican, filed for representative from h Twelfth district, . Bartlett Cole of Portland, filed for delegate to the Democratic national con vention. - , "Let well enough alone: reelect Tft lS the Slorath of Fred S Rvnann nt Ki. lem, who filed today as a candidate for delegate to the Republican national eon. tention. John Dltrhhnrn of Pnrtlanif nM.i. for circuit Judge of Multnomah county, department 4. filed his completed neti. tion today. Four filings were mfl terday, as follows: V, G. Gosad of ' Canyon City, Democrat, for dis trict attorney of the Ninth dis trict; James W. Maloney of Pendleton. Democrat, for delegate to national con vention: Homer C. Camnhll nt Pnrtlanjt Republican, for delegate to the natlonai convention; w. H. Ragsdale cf Moro, Republican, for senator, Eighteenth dis trict, comprising Sherman, aillim nri Wheeler counties. Coos Candidates Are Stirring. (!tnafUI i fV AH.t a - Marshfield. Or., March 2. There Is not as much stir in local politics as would be expected at this time.- Several candidates, however, " are out. O. O. Lund has announced himntf u a an. dldate for the Republican npmlnatton iur Bnefirt ana 11 is understood that Sheriff Gage will be out again for the Democratic nomination. Most of the old county officers will be out for re election.; w. H. Meridith of Port Or- rom is a canaiaate ror Joint represents tiye from Coos and Curry counties. There has been some talk of Hugh Mc Lain, chairman of the Democratic coun ty committee, for the .,. McLain has not announced himself but many of his friends are urging his csn dldacy. .. . VJiV.i. Un.t KJi 4.., ...... . L m and the Grczt G;'::J:::cihcr of Tivcnifj-tivo y ... . . - ' 1 . . -T- , . . . V - ' j , - - ;y;;r.. , J Mrs. Melissa Conlee of Dallas, aged. 80, and two sets of four generations.. . At the right of Mrs. Conlee, on the top row. Is her son, Zlmrl, his daughter, Mrs. A. O. Stewart, and her chlldren5 Reta and Irvin. On her left Is her son, Avery, his daughter, Mrs. ; Laura Huffman, and her son, Elmer. Larea. The other two are Harry Hinshaw and daughter, United JPn. Leteeil Wife.) Falls City, Or., March t. , Mrs. Melissa Conlee of Dallas celebrated her eightietft birthday in that city, Febru ary 27. . Mrs. Conlee was born in Indi ana In 1822. She moved from there to Iowa with her father, Ellas BuelL and from there to Oregon, . where, she has since resided, the greater part of the time In Dallas. She was .married to Isaao Hinshaw January 1, 1850. : Thir teen children were born, eight of whom are atUl llvin Zlmrl, Tillman, Avery, Zenas. Anderson. Villa, Ellas Hinshaw and Sarah Walling. . : 'V " !" She is the grandmother of 21 grand children, great-grandmother of 22 chil dren and . great-great-grandmother of two children. Her first husband died June 29, 1872. On May 24. 1874, she married Isaac Vanhorn, who died In bUlLu lLh .... L L JI EVADES CO.i iiiISSiUi 1 (Special to The Journal.! Albany, Or March 3. A curious suit was filed here today in which A. W. Roth and George Edleman, real estate dealers here, are suing A. Kamley for $!7S damages on account of his failure to carry out an alleged agreement. Kam ley came here in December from the east-looking for ptopuity, andamriir contact 'with the plaintiffs, who showed him a piece of property which satisfied him. He said he' did not want to live on It alone, however, and It is alleged made the statement, that if the dealers would furnish him a wife he would take we- property, it seems tne dealers in-, t reduced him to a woman named Emma O. Peterman, and that according to the records In the courthouse he married her January 15. The commission on the sale would have amounted to $275, hence the suit. ; . 188S. . She then married Jamea Conlee. June U. 1896. adoui o oi ner relatives gathered at the family home in Dallas on Febru ary 271 Mrs. Conjee Is very active. Her son, Tillman, was married to Mrs. Waldon on that day. ANNUAL LANE FAIR GETS $2000 AID FROM COUNTY 'w . (Speettl to The Jotu'nl. ' Eugene, Or., March 2. The- Lane county court this afternoon, after listen ing to a committee from the Lane Coun ty Fair' association, decided to appro priate 12000 for the annual fair to be W01)ERFUL:SUL 1TMU 0 Septuagenarian Hopes to Travel. Klamath Falls. Or.. Kr&n-h vi. math countv will have twn kh.i.. for delegates to the national conven tions, captain o, C. Applegate for the Republican convention- and Charles W. Sherman for Baltimore. Captain Apple-, gate was a delegate to the national Re publican convention 12 years ago. Mr. enerman is a veteran of the Civil war. Past 70 years 'of in. w v.. w.M acUve worker In the Democratic ranks au nis me When young Mr. Sherman resided In. Nebraska and' was r-ina William J. Bryan, having served as his private secretary during Bryan's first ierra in congress. SHORT TERM FOR HOOD RIVER COUNTY OFFICIAL . i(8lem Bureau of Th Jirnl.) Salem. Or.. Marnh llHhm.h n r Thompson, school sunerlntendant nf Hood River county, was elected at the general election of me to an office wnose usual term is four years, his term will expire at the nA nf twn years, so that the state law, which pro- viaes mat, Degtnning with 1900, county scnooi supenntendents shall be elected every four years, may be carried out This lS according to an onlnlnn ronLI r aerea toaayny Attorney General Craw ford, to whom tho question was put by nupenntenqeni , Thompson. . Thompson was appointed countv sunerintendent t the tim Hood River county was created in 1908. Then in 1910 he was elected by the people. HOGGAR TRIBE CHIEF CAPTURED BY FRENCH Paris. March 2. A tlrrm w Sfax, Tunis, says that a French column has succeeded in capturing near Tarat, in the Sahara, Atticl, chief of the Hog gar tribe, who was the mittm nt h. massacre of the Flatters mission at cigarama in issi.. . Colonel Flatters lf Annth In May, 1880, for the south of the Sa hara for the purpose of planning a rail way trom Algeria to the Sudan. On I'Ki-i i a ,. la L.M , i . . - j b vi uio lunuwing year ne was betrayed bv his biiMbx. mi vk the mission of 93 men were ambushed by natives. Only a few escaped. . CuIIom in Moving Pictures. ' . . Washington. March Renntnr Pnl. lom has given a sitting to a moving pioture company. A npnhw nt wh.. law Reid, who had superintended the maiug o . uie moving picture in the office of th president at the , White House when he signed the certificate admitting Arizona to at&tehnrut bJ Mr. Cullom, as the dean of the senate, ior permission to mage pictures of him. The moving, picture machine was set up In the senator's officii and nlntnr. ann will be appearing In moving picture nouses mrougnoui tne wona. "SULPHURRO" STEWARTS Liquid Compound of Sulphur 50c and $1.00 Size We also bare the accessories as Indicated in book of direc tions. No. lfl and 18 Tabes COc each. ' . -Wccdard,- Ckrkefir Cor Rheumatism, Stomach Trouble, Goitre, Tumors, Skin Dis eases and Blood Affections Yield Before Its.Power SULPHURR0IS PR0VINGAB00N TO MULTITUDES People of This City Buying It. Because Their Systems Need It Marvelous Record For- Just Two Short Months Stewart's Compound of Sul- ?hur Going All Over ', the odd-Read Booklet Care- fully, as Information Will , Help You-Sulphurro Baths for Tired Feet. Portland is proving that it needs Sul. phurro. Men and women who have suf fered for years have at last found relief and health through the wonderful cura tive properties or the medic ne discov ered by C. M. C. Stewart, of Seattle. j nai one meaicine could accomDllsh so much good for mankind in lta- short existence as Sulphurro seems incredible. Although It has been on the market only since the first of the present year Just two months its name is known au up and down the Pacific Coast. It has been sent into almost every 'state in the union by friends who have been benefited by Its use, and bottles of it are on the way to destinations all over the world. Many of those whom Sulnhurro has cured of various ailments rheumatism, omach disorders, goitre tumors, skin diseases . and blood affections have friends or relatives living "in the old country," nnd these admirer have pur chased Sulphurro at the drug stores and have forwarded it themselves, hop ing U would prove as beneficial on the other side of the water as it had in their particular cases. .- Isn't that a pretty good record for two months In the public ever Previous to January 7 Sulphurro had never been mentioned in any newspaper. - - ftalpnurro. Wortiy of Snoossa. t Another - question Could Sulphurro gain such wonderful success if it was not worthy In every respect 7 The mends or sulphurro those who have been cured after long suffering from diseases they feared might be their undesired companions the remainder of their lives are the most constant and persistent spreaders of the Sulphurro gospel. "- ... The remarkable fact 1 that5 wherever Sulphurro is taken or applied in accord ance with the booklet accompanying each bottle, and is given a fair chance to Improve the condition of the patient it works wonders. Mr. Stewart has yet to hear of a single case where benefit or cure has not followed when his di rections were given rigid adherance. 'In this conneotlon he desires to em phasise the necessity for reading care fully the booklet and getting from it all the information possible about the need for cleaning out the system and the way to do It -m Sulphurro Baths Beneficial. Along with the Internal and other treatments, Sulphurro baths . will be found especially helpful in the cure of disease. The Sulphurro In the water renders, it soft and pleasing to the senses; the skin-Immediately feels the benefit of the tqnlo, and. the entire .sys tem responds.. A Sulphurro foot bath is restful for tired feet. Sulphurro van be, used In so many ways with immediate advantage that It is establishing a stronger claim every day to be called Dame Nature's own remedy. The system needs Sulphur. That fact has been known for generations. But in these later days the tendency is away from the -old traditions and Practices. Our mode of living is so dlf erent from that 'of a generation ago that we have carved out new liven hurried busy lives that do not give us time enough to think of our own physi cal welfare or that of our children. Sulphurro Is getting back to first prln. ciples. It is the ideal blood and system cleanser, and now that Spring 'Is here we all need to have our physical be ings freshened and given new vigor. Sulphurro will do it, and do it better than it has ever been done before. Sulphurro is convincing. Every state ment made in the newspapers about It ha' been founded on fact; with the proof right at hand. No extravagant or unwarranted statements have been al lowed to appear. v-Onlv a. few of the hundreds of letters of appreciation have been shown the public by the . news papers. ; JBenefatoroLJtfa&kia4. ft - v Portland,, Or.. Jan. 9. UU. Mr. C. M. C. 8tewart, 1620 Thirteenth avenue, Se attle. Wash. -Dear. Sir: The bottle of Sulphurro received and the writer has READ THIS INTERVIEW Belden Main, In charge of the shipping department of h Ernst Bros." hardware store, at the corner of Sixth avenue and Pike street, Seattle, is one of the most enthusiastic lndorsera of Sulphurro. - To it he owes the fact that he Is stronger and better today than he has been for years. Said Mr. Main to a representative of this paper: For the last six years I have been suffering from rheumatism. This became particularly violent not long ago and was accompanied by a case of shingles, the nervous disease that fa so excruciatingly, painful and. so often fatal. I was in bed twelve days, and most , of the time was under the influence of opiates, not being able to stand the pain. "Riding on an Alkl Point car one day I fell Into conversation with a stranger. j . - 'What -you need,' said he. It Mr. Stewart's Liquid 8ulphur Pre paration.' - ., ' " 'Never heard of 8tewart or his medicine,' I replied. "But I immediately got from-Mr. -Stewart a 10-ounce bottle of IJauid Sulphur (Sulphurro) to give it a trial. - At first I didn't like it and took only one or two drops of it Then I went back to my old medicines. 'These did me no more good than before. I suffered great pain, my Joints were stiff and I was a wreck. Then my daughter urged me to try ' Sulphurro again, declaring she was convinced it would cure me if I would follow directions; so many others had profited by its use. "I went back to Sulphorro -and Increased the dose slightly. In seven days rwas perfectly well Not an ache or a pain was left, and my rheu matism had disappeared entirely. -AU the effects of the shingles went with- Mr. Main urge! all his ailing friends to try Sulphurro, In the sincere belief that it is a true benefactor of mankind. He will be glad to relate his experience personally to any one wishing to hear them. used It for general ailments. It is what every family should have in the house and use for It purl fee, the blood and reaches the root of so many ail ments. It is easily taken and may be applied externally, as well, with immed iate results, permanently favorable. The sulphur In a liquid state that you so wonderfully have succeeded In extract ing in its pure state will make one think of Sulphur Borings: besides It is economical and cannot possibly do any injury to the person taking it. Permit m to congratulate you in your wonaerrui success in extracting the sulphur and maintaining its liquid state without even the least settling in the bottle, many will call you a bene factor. Very truly yours, Jno. E. Davis. 108 Second street - SEVERE HEMORRHOIDS . YIELD TOSULPHURRO 918 24th Ave.,4 Seattle, February 2. 1912 C. M. a Stewart Sulphur Co.. Seattle, Wash. Dear Sirs So far I have seen no testimonials of Sul phurro as a remedy for hemorr hoids, so I wish to tell you my experience, as I know there are many people, who suffer untold agonies from that source. . "' I have "for years been afflicted, many times being unable to turn, myself in bed. j ' : - - ... Lato in September I received my first bottle of Sulphurro, being one of about four hundred who were that day given ferlng than I have been for IB years during all of which time I have been afflicted with rheumatism, which would not yield to the usual treatments and t credit my present good health to the use of Sulphurro, for which I have been Indebted - to - you for the past two months. Gratefully yours. (Signed) D. B. Ward, Superior Court Room, Seattle. Shetunatlsm. Seattle, Feb. 15, 1912. The C. M. C. Stewart Sulphur , Co.. Seattle, Wash. Gentlemen: Have been using your Sul phurro for Rheumatism and am entirely cured. Want to thank you for same, and if at any ttme 1 may be of any service to you in recommending Sul phurro will gladly do it. Yours truly, CHA8, J. JOHNSON, Hotel Wasnington Annex,' city...-.;-. ... y-";!i . Btomach Troubles. Seattle. Wash.. Jan. 18. 191 1. Mr. C. M. Stewart Seattle, Wash. Dear Slrt Words cannot express my gratitude for vour klndnetis tn m for ulno takinff your Sulphurro I am, now, a well, wo man after suffering 'tortures for the last ten years irom stomacn trounies. It has done miracles for me, and what it has done for me I know it will do for others, and have recommended It to several of my friends who have used it and are all pleased with the results. Tours respectfully, (Signed) MRS. E. MATHEU.. Federal Hotel ,v , - VenrastbanlSj. Nanalmo, B. C, Jan. 2, 1912.?. M. C. Stewart Ksq., Beattie; wasn. Dear Sir: I cheerfully' testify that I received great benefit from the use of your Liquid Compound of Sulphur. ' I was suffering from neurasthania, and a mild form WOMAN CURED OF 15-YEAR ASTHMA CASE ' Seattle, Wash., Jan. 80, 1912. Mr. C. M. ,C. Stewart Sulphur Co,, Seattle, Wash. Gentlemen: I have received such benefit from the use of Sulphurro that I feel It my duty to write you this letter in the hope that it may be the means -of inducing other sufferers from asthma to try your truly won derful remedy. - I have been treated for asthma for fifteen years by some of the best physicians and specialists in Philadelphia. Buffalo and Pittsburg, and have undergone Jtwo surgical operations in hopes of effecting a cure, but have never received any lasting benefit from any of them. In October, 1911 I began taking Sulphurro, .knowing it could hot do any harm even If It did no good. In about two 'weeks I began to breathe better, ami today I believe I am as free from asthma as any. normal person could be in spite of the heavy fogs common here and other conditions which were a .dread to me in the east.. -v.. . I eat and sleep better than I ever have 1n my life and 1 have no cough at all. In fact, I am cured of asthma after having suffered for fifteen- years, and I cannot thank -you - enough - for having " placed your great discovery in my hands. , , Very truly yours, , . . .. (Signed) MRS. S. A. POWELL. of the wonderful remedy at Mr. Stew art's home. I immediately began its use, snd was stmply astounded at the sudden and complete relief from pains from both hemorrhoids and rheumatism, which had given me no relief for many months. Now after five months I can say I have felt no return of pain from either souroe ana feel as agile as a girl. My daughter had a bad stiff neok. We applied the usual remedies for two days; she grew worse, then tried Sul- fhurro ss a liniment. We used it but wlce. The relief was Immediate; the cure speedy, " , . A friend gave It to her children for worms with, the desired result. . I know of many who have had mar velous relief from the use of your won derful remedy and hope many, many more will seek and obtain relief and cures from the same source. I will gladly answer any inquiry either personal or by phone or by letter If postage for reply is enclosed. Very gratefully yours, (Signed) MRS. LOR A SMITH, No. 91$ ; Twenty-fourth Ave, city. v -' v.,;,: - " " .f ' ' Catarrh. ; : Seattle. Jan. 2. 1911. C. M.' C. Btw. art Seattle, Wash. Dear Sir: I have used' a 10 ounce bottle of Sulphurro; am much improved in health; it is a sure cure for catarrh If properly . used. I consider -it a godsend to the people. Rev. J. C. Scott, 982 1 Woodland avenue. Btsttmr F.- SeattlerWftan ' " C. M. C.-Stewart Seattle? Wash. My Dear Sir:' Prompted by a sense of grati tude, I want to say to you that I am now more free from, acute pain and sul ' J' W -.v.; -:;,.v -f .?,'.'. .":, . of rheumatism. After a closo applica tion of -the prescription for one month the rheumatism vanished, and a sturdy upbuilding of my nervous system fol lowed.. . , " -V. Thanking you for the great good de rived from your treatment I remain, Yours very truly. (Signed) T. J. Shen tori. Box 673. i . . .' If You Cannot Obtain Sul phurro From Druggist s, Send Direct for a Bottle. Sulphurro. is on sale In drug store throughout ; this territory, but b cause of the difficulty In supplying all the trade on such short notice, it may be poasiWe; that her nnd there a store has been overlooked. If you find you can't get Sulphurro. from your regular drngglst, send direct to 4ht office of the C. M. C. Stewart Sul. phur Company. 810. 811 and 812 Northern Bank building, Seattle.' and your order will be promptly filled, Pleas.' let us know the name of your druggist, so thfit he may have an opportunity to obtain a supply of Sulphurro from us-. ' ' ri: d the &dbl express.. v. r u' i