THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL', PORTLAND . SUNDAY MORNINGr 'AUGUST, 17, "1913. ENGLISH LOAN SHARKS WAY HAVE TO DISCARD CLEARING OF STUmPS TO BE A SUCCESSFUL BRONCO" BUSTER ISTO OUTGUESSiTHE HORSE l . .,.,., .. . 'i , 1 ' ' " '" ""T ' ' "I ! i in MM ' a iiaimnapii isn I ip nan . . ,. " " """'"'-'''"IIT"""" IIi"lii""Wi..H-li"'"t!'lll'llllll I -nSMHWIH II IU lIMSMSMillSaMMNIBIII SMI II atf MIGHT BE DONE. ON A COOPERATIVE PLAN THEIR FANCY NAMES -Nobleman , Becomes ' Huffy at 'Daughter Receiving Adver ts tisementsj Proposes Law, Qr, Withycombe Suggests the . Community, Ownership , of -Donkey, Engines,, ; , (United Pr mi Lmh4 TOiw.) v London, Aug:. 1 a. Solomon Levi and hia money lending brethren are quak ' ing in- their Shoes over the bill now going- through parliament, which In ad dition to prohibiting the mailing of 'their business circular to persons who have not asked for them and do not wish to receive them will require all -such philanthropists to operate under their real names. N longer wilt Montgomery Fits Monagu be able confidentially to Inform his supposed fellow aristocrats of his ardent .'desire to relieve their pressing financial needs, and1 he will be compelled to stand forth In the clear light of day as Abraham Isaacson, or . whatever his propel patronymic may be. The bill, which originated in the house of lords, ,1s being supported by , all parties and will almost certainly be adopted by the commons end receive 7 the royal signature In the present year. ' . It was Introduced by Lord Newton. ' ' Now, Newton Is somewhat of a re former, but he probably would not have thought of this particular field for his Activities If ne of the moneylenders hadn't carelessly vent a clroular to bis daughter. ., Xs Annoyed. ; ' The Implication that Newton was not " supplying his ' own, family with, suf . flcient spending money was exceedingly annoying to bis lordship. The daughter, being under age, Newton was able to prosecute and scours the conviction of the sender -of the circular for breach - of the law which forbids professional moneylenders to lend or- even offer to lend money to minors. """"" Then he started out after the whole 1E0 per cent fraternity. Besides assess ing a fine of $600 -for the unsolicited sending of such circulars, his bill pro vides that documents shall be signed by the real names of the send ers, as well as their trade names. At present moneylenders In England may assume any name they choose, and vn-4 ually they select one of aristocratlo sound. Borrowers Tavor Pretty Jrames. The. financially embarrassed man or woman who would hesitate to go to Joseph Einstein for relief, r might read ily fall for an Invitation from Claude Montmorency de Vere, suggesting a - kind hearted gentlemen of the Upper classes who would appreciate their po sition and treat them sympathetically. As Newton pointed out in the house of lords, a concern calling Itself "Crewe & Lansdowne" might well be mistaken ' for connections of the noble marquises of those names, and certainly would In spire more confidence than the properly styled firm of "Moses and Aaron." The man who offered to lend his daughter any sum up to a quarter of a million dollars called himself Harms worth, Limited, and might have been mistaken for one of the proprietors of " the Dally Mall, but his lordship dis covered that his real name was Isaac Levene, Pawnbroker' Aliases, ' Other examples of names assumed by the profession' are: Burton (real name Blumberg); "Curion (Samuel Cohen): Rosslyn Stuart (Joseph Abrahams), Leslie Fortescus (Abraham Cohen), Charles Russell (Rose Cohen), Henry -Arthur Pearson closely resembling the millionaire newspaper proprietor, C. Arthur Fearson (Agnes Abram), James Carter (Meyer Cohen), and Maple & Co., (Lewis Isaacs). The big money lenders are desper ately fighting the measure which they say will not only seriously affect their business but will probably prevent their residing In fashionable dlstriots, as many property owners would not con sider thera desirable tenants. Most of them live In good style under their as-, eumea names without their neighbors being aware of their real Identity. Would Divorce Atheist Wife. ' Chicago, Aug. 18. Is a minister Jus tified in abandoning his family because his wife doe's not believe in God and ttoes her disbelief in the existence of a divine being give him grounds for dl vorceT Thesa unique,, questions will be de bated during the hearing of divorce pro ceedlngs which soon will be Instituted by Rev. Paul Jordan Smith, pastor of the Chicago Lawn Congregational church, for whose arrest on a charge of wife abandonment a warrant was sworn out yesterday by bis wife, Mrs.. Ethel Smith. : LARGE ALL OVER FARE . ,v K . . v Festered and Came to Head. Scratch ing Made Sores. Caused Disfig urement. Used Cuticura Soap and Ointment, face Now Clear. . ' 1413 E. Oenessee Ave., Saginaw, Mich. "Cuticura Soap and Ointment cured me ot a very bad disease of the face without leaving a scar. Pimples broke out all over my face, red and large. They festered and came to a bead. They Itched and burned and caused me to scratch them and make sores. Tbey said they were seed warts. At night I was restless from itehnd. When the barber ' 1 would shave me my face would PIMPLES bleed terribly. .Then scabs would form, afterwards, then they would dop off and .the so-called seed warts would come back i again. They wers on my face for about ; t nine months and the trouble caused dls 'd i sfigurement while It lasted. ., ; ..; ..0ne aay i read' In the paper of the Cuti--icura Soap ad Ointment. I received a free ' !t ' sample of Outlcura Soap and Ointment and :.J.LXlt wal so much value to ma that ! bought . a cake of Cuticura Soap and m box or Cutir cura Ointment at ths drug store. In abojj ::; " ten days my face began" to heal m,' ljfp ' on using Outlcura Soap and OlntmenT and . ,in a very short time after, ths scabadropped r5 '- "0(T the red spots where they wore vanished -' alio.. My face is" now cleaf othe warts and not a scar Is left." (Signfcd) LeBoy O. , ' ' O'Brien. May 13. 1813. ' r Cuticura Soan 28c. and Outlcura Ointment . SOo. are sold every where. 14beral sample of ' . S each mailed free, with 8p Skin Book. , Ad f drei posVcard"Outlc8ra, Dept. T. Botton", ; ' TMa whoshave and shampoo with Cu , ', : Ucura Soap wlU And It best for akin and scalp. h-AJ''-ll " t' ' ir 41 ) fv fxi - ;F Y ' ' Vv liiL 1 r -J-J-rrmp - jtf 4 " THE BUCKAROO : I " JrV ... ... ' "il'.-ar-v i ueaicaiea to jo an r. Kotunson. nesiaent or uia Feiuiintnn i 11 1 - i , pr- - III -5-.sot T', Pendleton Round-Up Offers Wide Variety of Thrills. to the Spectator. Pendleton, Or., Aug. 1. What Is riding and what do they , ride at the Pendleton Round-Up 7 What are the essential qualifications for a champion bronco buster, relay rider, roper or pony express rider that makes the game so uncertain, that brings new stars into prominence over night and totally obliterates old champions In the twinkling of an eye? At the Round-JJp this year at Pen dleton, September, 11. 12 and 13, there will be entered more than 100 would-be champion bronco busters. Out of this number there will be only one man to win the .honors, and In the past three exhibitions .this selection' has always met with .the approval of the thou sands of people who witnessed the per formance from day to day. One man out of a hundred and only three days' riding, and that man has only one ride to make himself known to the Judges, and another In which to convince them that ha is superior to all others. The chief requisite of a champion Is that he must sit free and easy In the saddle, bis body straight, lithe and supple, giving and taking with an easy, graceful abandon to every Jump and twist of the bucking bronco. He ac complishes this practically by out- thinking the horse. He must keep his wits about him and anticipate every movement the horse makes. The cham pion will out-guess the horse. The would-be champion gu'esses wrong and off he goes. As long as he guesses what the horse la going to do and beats him to It, the rider can ride with class, but when he guesses wrong, class or no Wild Horse Hill was a famous rider I auu nau Lliu . ihiwt, V t ill. r i lie . ci mwA Vail V ..trnt. .inn n k,HMa, been thrown in an exhibition ride In 10 years. He saw a boy ride the famous little Hotfoot, and Wild' Horse Hill Im mediately declared the 4)Orse had been sadly over-rated. "Any rider," said Hill, "can ride that horse to a dead finish, because all you got to do is to guess that horse is going to Cakewalk and beat him to it." Hill was jubilant, when in, the contest he drew the little Hotfoot,' and mounted with ' confidence before an audience of about 20,000 peo ple. And Hill did ride Hotfoot as long as the horse cakewalked. But when Hill guessed that Hotfoot would do nothing but Cakewalk he guessed wrong and consequently he has ., been very muchly occupied ever since trying to explain how it happened, and In com memoration of his fall he composed the following couplet: ? ' "There ain't no horse what can't be rode, An' they ain't no rider what can't been throwed." -Benny Corbett, of La Grande, studied Long Tom for two years, and finally announced that Long Tom could be ridden by a certain person named Benny Oorbettj Long Tom Is a noted guesser himself, but Benny stoutly maintains that he outguessed Long Tom even at the last Jump, "but," he concludes, "I jest naturally wasn't quick enough to beat im to it. John Spain's case is in the same line. Although Spain now boasts tha pos session of two championship saddles, he lost out on one by misjudging "his horse. It was the little Lightfoot. When Spain drew this horse he nearly rrted from disappointment. "No chance for me to make the finals on that little, muasley cayuse.V- Spain snorted. He REVIEW OF THE Continued From ContInued From Preceding page.) onado mine near Qllfton,. Arls.. when a cable pin snapped and the car in which they were seated dashed down a sharp grade for a distance, of 8S00 feet. ' Three Americans on tho runaway car promptly rolled off hd escaped. , v . The vlnterhational Typographical XJn tOH has rejected "the Seattle plan" by a vota -of 107 ito 87,- at the r annual con ventien in session at Nashville, Tenn. General News Notes UN STORMS were general Monday K throughout Iowa, nearly three Inches falling at Pes. Moines.' Fruit and, corn profited by the downpour, and It is believed that the corn crop will now be 71 per cent of normal. ,: : 'An automobile occupied by Earl Hock ey,' the Zl year old son ef a prominsnt pioneer, was struck by a train Monday near Raymond, Wash, Rockey died In a few. hours from hit injuries. Three persons were killed and eight Tighten the cinch and take off tha blind. Let 'er buck in front, let 'er buck behind. We'll- both go' up and come down together. But I hope to die. If I'll "pull leather." Oh, I love the life of a buckaroo, And I love the scream of the wild curlew, And the coyote's howl is musio to me. As I gase on the stars In tha, milky way. Awaiting the dawn of another day, As I He alone, alone, did I cay? No! my bronoo's with me, my cayuse pet. And he's tethered to me with a lariat. Our Teddy was once a buckaroo, ' And he could handle a lasso, too; He loved the scent of the-wild sage-brush; He loved the silence, he loved the hush. Of the boundless range, where the cattle roam. His pony his pal, his saddle his home, He gathered an inspiration there. Which led to the presidential 'chair. -I never expect such great renown, TBut I may be marshal of some cow town, Or sheriff, or Judge, or something like that, And choke some guy with my lariat. My chaps are worn, and my hair Is long, And I'm humming all day some dear old song, gome dear old song, which my mother Bang, Before I learned all this cow-boy slang. Before I knew of the wild, wild west. And I'm thinking of her whom I loved best, And I'm wondering should I -go home again If she'd . welcome a cow-boy of the plain? But I must tighten my latlgo For I'm off with the morning's first faint glow, Over the sage-brush plains I ride, Like a bucaneer on a rising tide, With new sombrero and silver spurs I'll search the herd for stray "slick-ears," For I'm off to the Bound-Up, sure, this Fall My broncho and I. Say, I've got the gall To ride with any old buckaroo. And to show 'em a trick with a lasso, too, I'm not much good at that "bulldog's", stunt, But I'll show 'em a pace at a maverick hunt 'Mongst them beautiful eastern Oregon glrlsr"""'' I'll show 'em a trick! how my lasso twirls Straight out from the heart of a cow-boy true, They'll go some. If they beat this buckaroo. Then tighten the cinch, take off the blind, Let 'er buck in front; let 'er buck behind. For neither of us '11 show tho "white feather," But I hope to die If I pull leather. was touted as the winner of the cham pionship. Spain mounted with confi dence but the little Lightfoot had hardly got started before the big Telo caset buster was going down after the guard and he squeezed it until the pickup men relieved him. Bpaln sim ply couldn't guess With Lightfoot. Harry Brennan or Bait liae wouia have made the finals If he had not drawn anything but a cow to ride in the-try-out.1 But he drew an unkonwn horse, a little midget of a thing that didn't lopk like it had a good buck in It. Harry guessed he could ride the unknown, and all the unknown had over Harry was Just one good guess, and Harry passed out of the champion ship class "over the unknown's head. "Whipping" Xs Bad rorm. So when ehe top of the good riding Is reached, tho finish is simply a matter of out-guessing the horse. And WORLD'S NEWS the Preceding Page.. seHously injured Sunday night at San Lorenso, CaL, when two automobiles were struck by the Stockton Flyer oh the Southern Pacific, Fragments of both machines were1 Scattered along the track for a distance of 200 yards. Hundreds of fish leaped about In f ren sy Monday near the Main street bridge at Pendleton. Or., and subsequently died. Theycame down the Umatilla river in great numbers, and congregated near a dam. It is believed that the fish became poisoned in some manner. 4.,JSS: When Arthur Smith, a sawmill man, Wahklaous road near Centerville, Wash., a burning tree fell across the road and crushed them to death. Edward Cox, another occupant of the rig, was Injured, but dragged . himself to a farni. honst andtold ef the accident. Tha Smiths leave two small, children.- , The annual Conference of the Method ist church In western Oregon will con vene September 14 at Eugene, si Charles Carruthers, a farmer residing Commercial Club. 5v X f the reason that the finish riders are thrown so easily is because they are riding loose in the saddle, straight up, slick and merely keeping their seats by anticipating every move of the horse. It is easily seen that when they make the least bit of an error In their calculations or guesses they go off without further ceremony. There are riders and riders who can ride a cham pion outlaw horse-to a finish, but they ride for blood and not for class. They will hump over, crook their legs so aa to get a purchase with their heels and spurs, grip with their legs like a vise and let 'em go. They stay In the sad dle, but that Is about all that can be said , for them. Their heads and shoul ders will be jerked Violently backwards and forwards and from side to side. This is known as "whipping," A rider who "whips" is no rider at all. There is neither rule nor regulation near Fenn, Idaho, was struck Monday by a bolt of lightning while doing chores about his barn, and instantly killed. A1 heavy hail storm swept over a large territory south of Orofino, Idaho, Tues day afternoon, badly damaging farm crops. Hundreds of acres of grain fell beneath the hall. , Twenty-three persons were thrown In to the waters of St Louis bay near Puluth, Minn.f when ths flimsy top of a launch in which they, were riding collapsed. Sixteen were picked up by other boats, but' seven were drowned. A girl baby weighing Si pounds was born to Mr. and Mrs. William Trueman at their home In Portsmouth, N. H. Her name Is Minnie Louise, and she Is tha fourteenth bhlld to arrive In the family. The longest dry spell In Seattte slnce the summer of 1896 was broken Tues day morning, when a slight rain oc curred after an entire month without moisture. , M. H. DeToung has resigned as chair man of the concessions committee for the Panama-Paclfio exposition, saying that president Moore had Interfered with the .committee's work: He continues, however, as one of the1 board of direc tors and as vies president of the ex position company. J. J. Newton, a Molalla, Or., farmer, Top, left to right Johanle and Tillle Baldwin, two of the cleverest riders in the game; group of Sharkey, the famous Belgrade longer than seven seconds at a Center Lett and Buck, the two by the Round-Up association. Bottom Buckaroo, conquering a blindfolded horse. 1 governing or defining - "xflass" iln- ,f Id- ing. It is a matter of opinion with the Judges. There are many other un written laws of riding which have evolved in slow process from the cow ranges. The only written rules and regulations are that the rider must ride straight up and slick saddle. That Is a universal law. "Straight up" means Just what it says. No difference how the horse jumps dr bucks the rider's body must maintain an upright position. By "slick saddle" is meant that his leas must be straight and hla'spurs free.' Many riders- attempt to make the finals by sticking their spurs In the clnoh. The Judges are quick to see this and the rider is immediately disqualified. The "classy ' rider and the champion rider must sit his saddle free. After he has once learned that and mastered the art of so doing, he muBt then avoid "whipping or "showing daylight" and outguess the horse. "And believe me," says Art Acord, a man who has perhaps given more exhibition rides than any other Round-Up character, "any little old cayuse is Jest as apt. to make you show daylglht as Angel in the high dive, because the critters ain't got hawse sense enough to buck de cent, but bob up and down ' like they thought it was a tango they was dancln' instead of doln' a genuine buck ing act." "Sharkey" Xs a Problem. "And,' people continually ask, 'If they . are such good riders why can't they ride a bull?" They can, or at least they could if you would get them a bull shapedfllke a horse. Take Shar key, the famous Belgrade bull, now owned by the Hound-Up and for which there is a standing offer of $100, to any one who sticks him ten seconds. Why can't these champion riders ride that bull and make $10 a second. The reason is very simple. Take a bucking horse and he Is liable to throw any rider in any direction, but a 'bull al ways dumped them off to, one Bide. Invaflgbly they go off to the side. Now look r.t .the bull's physical devel opment. He is short, perfectly straight from shoulders to tail, and his back Is as broad as a platform. Riding that hull then is about the same aa riding the ridge pole of a Swiss chalet in an earthquake. The rider's legs are stick ing out to either side almost at right angles to his body and the bull jumps so rapidly that the rider loses his bal ance and off he goes, to one side. That Is all there is to the bull riding. But It's lots of fun while it lasts. Steers and cows come In the same category. Buffaloes, of which the Round-Up owns two, are a little different, owing to their peculiar hump. They are better has arranged for a fireworks display at his ranch, in accordance with his an nual custom. He will invest $400 In fireworks for the occasion, and a thou sand people or more are expected to at tend. Reports reached Kansas City Thurs day of exhausted water supply, burned crops and of. much illness throughout Missouri, following the seventh consecu tive day of excessive heat. The same se rious conditions prevail in Kansas and Oklahoma. ' Bert Ingle, the 17 year old son of A. N. Ingle, a wealthy sheepman living near Baker, Or., met his death from an ac cidental revolver -shot-while evidently crawling ln'pursuit of some animal, He had been missing since Saturday, . and his body was found Thursday on 'Fall creek. ' '.s--.''"'. Giant Mackerel Threatens Ship. Philadelphia, Aug." It. The fishing Schooner M, P. Howlett cam Into port yesterday, .with a harrowing, tale of . a giant" horse ; mackerel : that cut up so many .capers after a harpoon had been Inserted in its hid that the crew were panlo-strlcken for more ' than three hours. They feared the fish would sink the ship. , Just to show that it resented 'being 7i Umatilla squaws, in Round-Up attire; bull, which has never been ridden time. bucking buffalos, recently purchased buckers than bulls but not aa hard to ride. In the girls' riding the classification Is about the same, except that you will always see more girl riders "whipped. Just why girls should fall for this is hard to say. Tillle Baldwin, one of the most finished and famous of the girl riders, gives it as her opinion that the girls are "whipped" because they ride with hobbled stirrups. That Is, tho stirrups are tied down to the cinch and as long as the girl keeps her feet in the stirrups she will stay In the saddle, and the variations of the bucks of the horse cause her head to - whip back and forth. It Is noticeable, too. that girls who ride slick saddle are never "whipped." Tillle never bobbles her stirrups. Crowds Pavor Girl Xtldsrs. While the audience dearly lovea to see a cowboy bucked off a horse they take no delight In seeing a cowgirl go tne same way. consequently tha man agement is always desirous of getting as many poor riders in the boys' class as possible, but will not let a girl ride until she has been tried out and found competent to stick the horse. On the first day all the young boys are given their chance and about 75 per cent of them aet thrown. But thev are learn Ing to ride and by watching the top- notcners on tne seeona ana third day, they prepare themselves for the cham pinnship class for the next year. In relay riding all depends upon the ability of the cowboy and cowgirl to make the changes. And therein lies all the excitement of the race after the first dash. Many good riders are out of the relay clsss because they get nervous and excited in changing sad dles and take more time than the poor rider wno Keeps nls head and makes his change in the least possible time. With the girls the same thing is true, ex cepting tnat many good riders are either too small to make the mounts. or have not strength to work through tno rpur changes. But still, everything considered, the real apnal that grips one in witnessing either cowboysor dowgirls ride buck ing horses or relay strings has never been analysed. Even though the audi ence may not ' understand the fine points In the riding, they do catch the thrill and the primitive emotions surge upward to utterance and expression In cheers and muscular motion. It is primitive emotion, the conquest of man over beast, and It lives In every human breast. The thousands who annually witness -the Round-Up - go' away ifully contented with never a thought of why It Is or what it Is that makes them feel so strangely content with what they have seen. struck with that kind of a hatpin, the nuge fish, according to the crew, beat the sides and bottom of the schooner with its tail, smashed a small boat into kindling wood and spilled two frightened nsnermen into tha sea, - nni Asn innivTH mm MUMUWU IIMUI I " M S ar twwlii ToImm SMk. Wartk lip wdThtia p.14. If pJI4 livm mn wnwwvw, T 01AUI MP ftvf n.flCW I Ufa, H. I, Do You Hear Well? Test, without riik, la your . two" bom, the Aodtphooe- with latest iiutantpupoup ad justment. It Is almost ho - manly sentltlra to sound, and KKVIVK8 at one ksan. dis tinct, aldtd hearing power to those ' who sra almost totally Ua.r. Wa Prill lat van taka aa Auatphons horn for a moots. w a amsu rental. Eotl appllsd ea pur cbiss. This should ap peal te you 'as a prop. i; !t f osltlon that oufOt to Be V STOlI ELEOTEOT- J -phone .' . ,,.; . i .3 COMPANY 830 Xumbarmpos fiidf ., Uor. Fifth aid Itark. r ws Li , (Spteial to The Journal. , Oregon Agricultural College, Corval lis, Or., Aug. 16 As It is to ths ad vantage of merchants and bankers to advance the agricultural' interests of their sections of the state, cooperation between these business men and farm ers is the natural method of bringing new lands into productivity. This prin ciple applies with special force In the - work of clearing the logged off lands, according to Dr. James Withycombe, director of tha Oregon Agricultural col- lege experiment 'station, who has been 7 making extended Investigations Of this difficult problem. In any economical method Of clearing these lands, Dr. Withycombe believes, 'a considerable investment of money or; , cradlt Is imperative. Powder should be purchased in large lots for blasting loose the stumps and splitting them up, and donkey engines should be obtained1 for pulling them up and piling them- ready ,to be burned. If the local mer-i chants and bankers were to supply the, money or guarantee the credit, at lew rates of interest, to purchase powder , in wholesale lots, farmers could cooper- . ate In the purchase and use of the engines. ' "A group of farmers working ;under, ' this method of combined labor and re--sources," said the doctor, "could, In my opinion, rid their land of stumps in' much less time and at much less coat 'i than others have been compelled to em ploy in the past . "All modern manufacturing Industries are founded and developed In strict ac cordance with the principles of coopera tion, which are fully as applicable to agricultural industries. These princi ples have already been found of lnesti- f mable value in marketing farm crops, and If properly applied to the clearing of logged off lands, will mean Just as much." Late Queen's Chef Diea (Br tha IateraatlouBl News Serrlee.) -London, Aug. 16.-rThe death has Just occurred here of Henry Arthur Manning, who- foreman y years-was -QueeaVlcto ria'a chef at Windsor. Manning was said to have been the only cook In Eng land who could make a plum pudding to the late queen's liking. Summer-Spoiled Skin Removed by Absorption (From Homa Queen.) . : As undue summer exposura' usually leaves an undasirabte surface of tan. dust or greaaa. often freckles, too, It would seem nxre senslbis to remove such aorfaca than to hid a It with cos metics. There's nothing better for this than ordinary mercolised wax, which ac tually absorbs an unwholesome' com plexion. Tha ihin layer of surface skin ' is itself absorbed, gently and gradually, so there's no Inconvenience and no de tention indoors. Just spread the wax lightly over the entire face at' bedtime and taks it off in the morning with warm water. ' If you will get one ounce of inercolized -wax at the drug store and use for a week or so, you may ex pect marked Improvement dally. When the underlying akin Is wholly in view your complexion will be a marvel et spotless purity and beautiful whiteness. Don't let those summer wrinkles wor ry you; worry will bread more wrinkles. Better to banish them by bathing tha face in a solution of powdered saxolite, 1 os.. dissolved in H pint witch hasol. Usjd daily for awhile th: will l'e found wonderfully effective. (Adv.) Ask This Man to Read VourLilc Hi Wonderful Power to Rend Human Lives at any distance amazes all who write to him. Thousands of people in all walks of life have, benefited by this man's advice. . He tolls' you what you are capable-o(, and how you can be successful. He men Hons your friends and enemies, and a, scribes the good and bad periods in your life. -. f,,:-' " , His Description as to past, present . and future events will astonish and help you. All he wants is your name (writ ten by yourself), yourt birth date ami sex, to guide him in hik work. Money not necessary. Mnton the' name of this paper and get a Trial Reading f re.. Herr Paul Stahmann, an experienced . Astrologer, of Ober Niawsadern. Ger many, says: . .- ,.-' ' 'i- "The Horoscope which Professoe Rex roy worked out for ms Is quite afford ing to the truth. It is a very clever and conscientious piece of work. As n As trologer myself. I carefully examined his Planetary calculations and Indies-,, tlons, and proved that his work In every detail Is perfect, and that he is up tci date In his science." Baroness BlanqueT, one of the most talented ladles of Paris, says: . . - f "1 thank you for my complete-t.tfe Reading, which lsv-really of extraordina ry aocuracy. I bad already coneultaj several Astrologers, but never befota have I been answered with so muru truth or. received such complete satis- faction. With sincere pleasure I will recommend you and make your marvel ousaeienoa knawtv to my friends aid -oualntances." If you want to take advantage of this special offer and obtain a review of vonr life, almrilv send your full nnrri. address, the date, month, year and pla. of your birth (all clearly written , at to whether Mr., Mrs. or Ml, and air., copy tha following, ver.se In. your n handwriting: .. . v . "your aavice is useiui, v Bo thousands say. ' st wlih success and happinass:'" .. Will you show mi tti wv?' If you wish you may shicIo io c'i (stamps of your own country ( ( postage and clerical work. y r Oroote Markt. The Haitu. I t-i!,..t. i , not anciose .coins tn- your t-u,-r. r , ag pn letters to HolUnd f,v wi . " J a. ':J t wr PJ i Vf f - l5' s Vv, -.. ,S. i.uA'.- ' ,i-