Sporf xt Coach Mathews Expects To Develope Fast, Scrappy Team From Recruits Conch H. Ii. Mathews, of Willamette, cast his eye over his squad of gridiron aspirants as they trotted out for their first secret practice last night and di vided them Into acpiads for practice in handling the ball. " We are somewhat shy in weight and mighty short in experience but the boys re showing plenty of fight ami the real fight that wins, too. The boys are willing to learn anil will show the people of this city the first real foot ball they have seen on Willamette field in some' years if the sipiad comes up to my expectations." Coach Mathews went mi to explain tliBt it hud been necessary this year to put his men through the preliminary practices of falling on the bull and bundling it, tackling and running, all of which should have been learned in prep school. ''in fact," said the coach, "there is only one thing 1 do not have to drill intii them, and that is fight, fight, flgiit. They are going to be the lives! aggregation among the non conference colleges this year or they will fall by the wayside. It is not the beef that makes the football slar it is the speed and clear grit." Conch Mathews has been forced to use up a lot (if valuable time in the earlv season by teaching the rudiments of football but ha believes in building tip for future years. While he may not turn out a non conference chum jiioushlp team this year he intends to wild - toward this end nud the non- ((inference champion will come wheu the field is well stocked Willi ambi tious youngsters with plenty of meat on their frames and who have been couch ed in his style of play in other years. The Willamette jilgskin' crew this year is green and mostly Ireshinen which menus that some of them will be buck for several years to cmnn ami though thev may not iniike, it this year tiiny will have gulucd the experience for next that will put them to the front when the football call is issued next autumn. (li pi ii in Vlegel is the only letter mini back though o.i'e or two others have promised to show up Inter. Hmnll, the diminutive speed merchant that scored a touchdown on Oregon two years ago is mnkiiii itrriiiiL'cniciitH to don his padded togs agiiin this year, Mr.! Knillll mid I'm-I.i Hum conduct tin. 11. H. f bail business at Turner mtd "Sinnll.v"! is endeavoring to persuade his uncle at Washington, I). C to let Ii i til off for the foot hull season, Tim way the siiuid si.es tip at pres ent there is not a heavy ninii In tuo bunch, regardless of age, color, or pre vious condition of servitude. The mum- moth of the S(iiud look like he would tip I Iti bciiiu at about 105 pounds and tie may I cue sumo flesh in mulling the team and weigh a bit less before tiie final call Is made. This means tliut Willamette's line will average about l.'d pound ur perhaps less and the back field may be even lighter. Yet there is often plenty of ground gained l 150 pounds of real man, if he lias the fight and a stiff backbone as well as a (tiff tijiper lip and Concu Mathews is endeavoring to make tip in snnp and iiiuger what is lucking in weight ami enperleitce. Sett Friday a iimne Is scheilnleil wit.i the Alnninl nnil lor the first time the quail will lie lined up in actual hostile Mcriininaue. It menus sen'illiiir a ureeu ten in sninl the sturs of other venrs lint foot hull is only learned tiy luutips of the list during the summer race meet Hint after the luiva hnve rulitied some; inn at HoppcKnrten, llerllu, according nritlca the Muck nr.. I lilue plncc to word received here. What We Cwrntai Dart ScVaftaai ft aUr News uii'l spread on the "new skin niey will ! able to tackle the heavy end ; of their schedule which includes, L. of U). anil ). A. C. as well lis the hardest j nuts in the non-conference ranks. I I The game I'etv.Ven the varsity and ; the ahimiii will be called at 3:."10 fri iduy afternoon and tiie lineni will lie se-! Uected from a number cf old stars who, will be back for the occasion. Among I I those who have promised to report for ' this game are: haiincy linnop, jouu '( arson, Alfreil (Schramm, of Salem; jllrimier Mmall, of' Turner; Dr. Massey, ! Green and li. I). Day, of this city; Itowlnnil, of Astoria; Dr. l'ollanl, of, .Springfield; Dr. Hoss AKIutire, '8a- lent; I'.. Kinuey .Miller, 01 i-.ugenc-j. i It. (Ihirich, of Halem, and "I'runey Frances, of i'ortland; Burgess tord, (llcnii Uiiriih, and Walter Wiuslow, of this city; (jcurge H. himpson, of Van couver; Curtis Coleman, of Ht. I'aulj Walter Cuiniiiiiigs, of I'ortland; Kmery Dunne, of Wnldport, and Uric Bolt, of Lebanon. BTANDINGS OF THE TEAMS National League. I.. i'ct. .578 .5.i!t .5.(0 .470 .475 .47.1 .471 .454 Philadelphia 81 Huston 70 Brooklyn 75 Pittsburg filt Ciiiciiinuli U7 Ht. I.miis Ii Chiciigo OS New Vork 04 Sit 05 05 70 74 77 71! 77 American League. W. I.. Pet. .074 .014 .581 .558 .45.1 .419 ..1K.1 .288 Huston in Detroit it 2 Chicago 82 Washington 77 New York 0.1 Ht. Louis Gil Clovelimd 54 l'hilndelphlu .... 40 45 51 51 01 70 SI! H7 99 Federal League. W. I. Pet. .571 .5511 .512 .525 .514 ,490 .479 ..124 l'itlaburg HO Chicago 7S Ht. Louis 77 Newark 711 Kansas City 72 niiffura 70 Hrooklyn 09 Bnltiinure 45 0 . . Pacific Coast League. W. I.. I'ct. .577 .542 ..500 .4110 .442 .417 Hun Francisco Los Angeles . Vernon Halt Lnke ,.. l'ortlnnd .... Oakland .... .101 . I5 . H5 . 81! . 7.1 . 77 Yesterday 'g Results. At Portland Han Frnnciscn 0, Portland 5 (15 Innings). At Hnu Francisco Oakland 4, Los Angeles 2. At Los Angeles Vernon-Holt Luke, no game, train lute. JIM JEFFRIES Off THE JURT Los Angeles, Cnl., Sept. L Jim Jef fries must serve as n juror in the su perior eourt, according to Judge Myers decision today. Jeffries tried to escape by pleading pressing business, but the judge told him to dispose of his busi ness within two weeks and report for jury duty. WON'T RECOGNIZE FEDERAL. Chicago, Sept. 21. According to President Ban Johnson of the American league, there is very slight possibility of the demand of the Federal league for participation in the world's series . ucing grnnicii, AMERICAN JOCKEY WON. Him Francisco, Kept. 1. Seventeen firsts in forty-eight races put Archl linlil, the 'Ainerlriin iockey, at the head Have Ready Bigger Slocks and bettor Stocks than ever before -and THAT MEANS SOMETHING. We have been preparing long and earnestly to be ready with something that will be worthy of our high reputation and your steadily increasing patron age. Come in tomorrow if possible, get ready now for the fair. Our line of $15.00 Suits is simply the last word in moderately-priced Clothing- Hosts of others built to please every taste and priced to suit every purse. It won't take long step in and see the models, feel the fabrics, look at the make. This will prove mutu ally satisfactory. SALEM WOOLEN MILLS STORE THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL. SALEM, WEDNESDAY. SEPT. 22. U " .. ' m" !?r GOTHIC THE NEW ARRW a for 2Sc COLLAR IT FITS THE CRAVAT CLUITT. PfOOV a, CO., tc..auac $ Watching the Scoreboard $ t t t t t t t -i- -r- -.- -.- -r- Detroit bent Philadelphia whea the latter got away to a bad start, due to woozy pitching. Walter Johnson ruler the curves at Washington and Chicngn lost. I'ieh held Ht. Louis to two hits in the first game at New York, but the Yan kees lost the second, breaking even. They needed the wrecking crew in Ht. Louis soon after the melee began. Philadelphia took both of 'em from the Cardinals. The (Hants bunched hits on Vaughn in the first game and won, but the Cubs staged a come-back in the second ses sion and made it one all. The Angels continued their toboggan ing, biting the dust at the behest ot the ecllnrite Oaks. Long Tom Hughes lost the game early, being whaled unmercifully. The Heavers came back in the fif teenth but couldn't quite put it across, and Han Francisco won. Ping Bodie contributed a home run to the general result. TENNIS PLATERS COMING Heveral ranking Portland tennis play ers nre planning to make the trip to Halem Thursday and Friday for the second annual Willamette valley open tournament. Among these will be A. D. Wakeinun, J. H. L'dgnr, A. B. McAlpin, Kenneth McAlpin, (ieorge Durham and J antra Hhives, and among the women, Mrs. W. I. Nortlnup, Miss Stella Ford ing and probably Misb .Mabel Ityder. In addition there ill be several players from Heattle, and among the valley towns Albany and Uugene will be rep resented by liberal contingents. ' The play will be on the lately com pleted asphalt courts of the Halem Tenuis association. These have been built with particular care for drain age and piny is possible at all times except during rains. The chairman of the tourunineut is Paul Wallace and entries should be addressed to him a Huleui. Oregonian. Washington Wants Love. Hun Francisco, Held. 22. "Slim" Love of the Angels today la considering u contract offered him through draft to sign with the New York Americans and Manager Dillon or I.os Angeles, is considering the possibility of a mix-up with Alniuigcr tlrittith ot Washington If l.ove goes up, After Henry Berry sold the Angels, the new owner cast aside the working agreement with Washington, l.ove was turned over to the Angels without cost with the understanding ho could be re called uny time. Griffith pl'ububly will wuut' the draft money if Love goes to the Yankees. Pacers at Lexington. Lexington, Ky., Hept. "2. Some of the best pueers in the country, includ ing Directum I nutl llruden Direct, are entered in the Tennessee free for all pnee, the principal stnke lu the (irnnd Circuit trotting meet which opens here Octolier 4. Campbell a White Sox. Chicago, Kept. 22. l.arry Cumpbell. outfielder, will ugitlu wear a White Sox uniform next scuson, according to well defined rumors toduy. Campbell is non wit Ii the Milwaukee club. Hoston tllobe: There's ninny a man who this week will nm lie his wife a present of nil aluminum preserving kettle. For You Henry Clews Business Conditions Ahead New York Sent IS -The financial. .ew . iorK, oepi. ii. i situation, viewed on broad lines, t'on- t,lrn9 above allch a basis must neeessar tinues to suggest a substantial under"iiy be accompnnied with a carrespond tona The week's developments again, ' dpgree flf risk encourage confidence that a sutistac-j ()enerai trat, and industrial coudi tory settlement will be reached of 'htions are beginning to respond more reneweu strain in our in"n . tie rim t.tat raiKiweu we nuic hum; German Foreign Office seeking to justi fy flip siiilrinfr of the steamship Arabic. The note was disappointing, in vlew 0 rj tue assurances previously gien on ic half of his government by Count yon tsernstorrr, me uerman ' i However, there seems real basis lor the belief that the entire question ot sub-1 marine warfare, as affecting the inter ests of Americans, is now in a satis factory way of adjustment, wuai is i eaual importance from the financial j viewpoint is that this settlement prom- j wag bpow eral e9timateJ. This dis ises to be permanent in character, thus i on- tln rnlt u however, readily removing what seems to be the prime , it :n. l...i . . ihiIp rimii'ce.l source, if indeed not toe soie somcc, from which future shocks to the friend ly relations between Washington and Herlin might be expected. While the nesotiutions just referred to have been' in .progress there, not un naturally, has been some indication of restraint upon entering new sto'k mar ket commitments. Additional incen tive for delay, too, has appeared from the varying reports concerning the probabilities of the successful flotation of the large loan or credit tnat the llritislt and French commissioners have come over to our center to negotiate. No stiecific details seem to have been announced thus far of the proposals the commissioners are prepared to make or accept. That the visit of tnese tor- eign enperts must end witn success is, 1 think, a foregone conclusion, l ne Question is one as vital to the inter ests of our own country as it is to the countries across the sea. If our grain and foodstuffs in general are to be sold to the nations that under current con ditions are our natural customers, if, too. the products of our factories as vell as our farms are to go forward in such volume as will mean prmperity at home, it is imperative, under present unexampled conditions, that proper fin ancial facilities be afforded the buy- The question is the old one that is so freuuentlv misunderstood of the dif forenee between money and wealth. There is no question that the Ilritish and French governments have ample wealth with which to back up anv obli gations they may undertake. The terms on which the credits they desire limy .la f civ be left to the wisdom of t lie ex pert interests who are conducting the transactions. It would be conservative and goul judgment, I think, to confine the credit, nt any rate to start witn.to suv TiUO million's. The success of the negotiations, as I have intimated, menus much for our own country, it would provide in the first place not only fur the continuance, hut tor a very substantial increase the volume of our cxportntions. It has what may be termed a vital bearing up on the grent granger sections of our country since it will decide whether the Kutente governments will be prompt and liberal purchasers of our grains lit remunerative prices nt the beginning of toe senson or whether they will give preference to other sources of supply and bold back so far as our own grain is concerned until the eleventh hour. This would expose oir grain more free ly to the possinilities of the release of the huge quantities of Russian wheut tne growtn 01 two seasons that nre stored up awaiting the opening of the Dardanelles. As to the date that this event will occur any prediction would necessarily lie mere guesswork. There are some authorities who are convinced that the task is superhuman. On the other bund, with four of the world's great nations deliberately proceeding to accomplish this great task and making actual even though slow progress day "J nay, tne possibility of success is sucn as to clothe the subject with suf ficient importance to merit considera tion as one of the prime factors in f.ie broad financial problem. With the iKHsibility of the United States becoming an active participant in the Kuropean strugglo so greatly re moved and with the success of the Anglo-trench loan so elearlv in siirht theoutlook for the market for securities may be regarded as having correspond ingly improved. The favorable money outlook will not be modified materially by the practical steps that will be con cerned in t:i credit that li being ar ranged. The proceed of the loan are not to leave the country. Thev will re main on detwsit in the banks and trust companies until needed and will return tit the banking institutions when the payments for supplies for which they are intetuied are ninde. According to last Saturday s New York Clearing Mouse statement, the banks and trust companies added more than l,1,000,000 to tne already unexampled surplus car tied above reserve requirements, bring ing the total up to J24,122,000, which com pares with a deficit (instead of surplus) of M.iO.Oii.VOOO last year at this date, which irf course was a period when all the financial, industrial and mercantile activities of our country were guttering the first shock of waf. now have reached the active riod of crop financing. It is evident that there is to lu no strain' resulting from tiiis feature during the present year. The Secretary the Treasury has an nounced a H)licy irf depositing govern ment funds in the banks of the south to aid in financing the cotton crop. Kven without such arbitrary action and if the supplies of funds were not as completely redundant as they in fact are, the operation irf the new banking law would be sufficient to) prevent any important strain in money circles as a I whole. i With such a large aupply of Idle i funds as at tne moment exists throuuh lout the country and as la likely to eon i tinue for a protracted period, and with jur own ruuniry the single exception among the great nation of the world (that has not been drawn Into the mael 'Strom of the wr and has not had its resources cif lnhur anil property par .alyred and. furthermore, with taxation, present anil prospective. In comparison with other countries on a completely negligible scale, there I ctlv encour agement to look for tne pnafitableater atioa of our railroads and ot our great industrial combinations that are o thoroughly represetttailre nf our na tional activities. It still la desirable to exercise caution In the selection of investments, but there are opportnn- I itie to obtain sec untie paying for la- Sees Better stance between 5 and 8 per cent on the ;,.,,,,, ,hnt m,ear attractive. Re- freelv to the excellent crop uuuuu. The "usual statistics of clearings, rail road traffic returns, etf., are likely to make mare ravornnie coinpanauno than has recently been the case since thev jnc(ie a period a vear ago when tiie'fir9t 8u0ek of the war was in pro- re9H; furthermore, as the JNew lorn Prehanfe was closed the bank exi,hanee9 necessarilv are upon a faulty l,ni The recent statement ot iinriueu tonnage of the Steel Corporation snow- . ,wrnsP f about 20.000 tons as . . nPrtinn9 in Aiieust ' , j wnen it ig considered that the . I I. decrease was due not so much to back ward offerings of new business but to the fact that the plants of the corpora tion are virtually on a full capacity basis and deliveries consequently are taking place on old contracts at a phe nomenal rate. Meanwhile in a number of instances there is a disposition to re frain from taking new business at the present scale of prices. There are not unlikely to be addition al shocks received by the market from one source or another during the pro gress of a war of such unexampled proportions as tnat now in progress. Hut if. as now seeni9 so probable, our own country is to be successfully pilot ed through the recurrent complications, the general market's prospects appear such as to encourage conservative pur chases of dividend paying stocks of a responsible character. HENRY CLEWS. IS YOUR STOMACH CLOGGED WITH WASTE? Daniel J. Fry Guarantees to Return the Money If Ml-o-na Does Not Relieve You. "It's a pleasure to sell a medicine when my customers come in afterward and tell me how much good it has done them," said Daniel J. Fry, the popular druggist to a Journal man, "and that is why I like to sell and recommend Mi-o-na, the dyspepsia remedy. The distribution of samples that I made created so much talk and so large a proportion of those who received a sample have bought a box of Mi-o-na that my clerks have teen busy selling the medicine ever since. . I have so much faith in this article that I am going to guarantee it in .the future, and will return the money to nny purchaser ot Mt-o-ua whom it does not help. That may seem rash but rav customers have said so many good words in its favor that I do not expect to have many pack ages returned. "Anyone who has dvspepsiu, whose food does not digest well, ami who has to tako thought as to what ho can eat, and when, can leave 30 cents deposit nt my store and take home a box of .Mi-o-na nnd if the remedy does not regulate his digestion and help his lyspepsm he cm withdraw his money I don't know but what we would be willing to pity him interest." This shows great faith in the merit of .Mt-o-na. It is really a most unus ual medicine and the rapid increase of sales since Daniel J. Frv introduced it in Salem shows that it does all that it is claimed to do relieves dyspepsia, regulates digestion and enables those who use it to eat just what they want with no fear of trouble after. Rockefeller Makes Friends With Miners In Colorado Camp Berwind, Colo., Sept. 21. Miners at the Berwind "grub shack" of the Colo rado Fuel and Iron company still talked today of their meal with 'one of the richest men in the world vesterday. That waa John D. Rockefeller, Jr., out on a. "get acquainted" trip of inspec tion of his properties and men for the first time In eleven years. Tl... . ... .'""K niuui-uiiiiionaire was democratic. Without any formality he took his turn at the single tin basin, outside the shack and after "washing up" dried his hands and face oa the community roller towel, In shirt sleeves, just like the trrimv men about him, he sat down to a dinner of beans, mashed potatoes, beef with plenty or gravy, broad and butter, black coffee aud rhubarb and grape pie. "These look bully," said Kockefeller as he lifted a big dish of steaming baked beans. "I'll start them going." "You'll have pot luck," said the Irishman presiding over the shack. ' "That suits me." replied the oil kina heartily, Tony Sardakowski, engineer of an ore train, sooty and attired in greasv over alls, sat at Rockefeller' left. The camp superintendent, Tom Davis, was at hi right. Introductions were thus: "Mr. Iktrovich, Mr. Rockefeller." During the strike, it might have cost Rockefeller life to enter the shack. guards, though his private secretary and d itn a ur nnv Mfi'nni no rii.t i .. ... cu.upany omeiai Kept close watch. WORLD '8 SEMES OCT. BTH. Chicago. Sent. 21. lUn n president of the American league and a member of the National Baseball com mission,, today tentatively set October , the next day after the season dotes as the date tor the opening of the world erie. It i understood that Carry Iterr man of the commission. fvor"openlng h irrie oa the th. but it is generally ui-iirru mat jottmoa will have his Springfield Republican That todar President Wilson may finally succeed la restoring c in a aeiirhtuiriito country bv .v...,. t tuc matnoa or diplomacy I .urely the wideapread iW of ki. method of diplomacy foii.frvm. Your Family Doctor Wm will tellyou that a chew of "PIPER" is one of the most satisfactory meth ods for getting the taste, flavor and genuine joy out of tobacco. "PIPER" helps put you in good nature and enables you to think quickly and calmly. You'll find "PIPER" a. daily source of whole some, beneficial pleasure. i . i IB1D5IBCK Clcwbf Tobacco Cauapafaa FUtoT Made from ripe, long leaves of the finest tobacco plants, full of rich, smacking taste. In addition " PIPER " is that famous tobacco with the champagne flavor." This delicious mellow flavor adds as even greater relish to your chew. These two qualities put "PIPER" in a class by itself, as the one supreme chew ing tobacco. ' c m j . wharo.ii! Scud .-. euU unitary, .t..''piprD"(i.. 1 1 ' THt TOBACCO H rauiii 'irroiji i'JT li' tK Trrii PANT OF CALIFORNIA SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. Los Angeles, Cal., Sept. 21. Undertakers in an embalming establishment here were start led today when Mrs. Mary Keogh, aged 27, who had been taken into the place, supposedly dead uttered low moans, sat up the attendants and asked: "What room is this " Mrs. Keogh, who is ill, had wandered f rem her home and fallen unconscious in front of the morgue. The police were notified. A patrolman pro nounced her dead. S'.ie was cov ered with a sheet and curried into the enibaliiiing room. Af ter Mrs. Keogh "came tci life" she was taken to the receiving hospital. GOOD ADVICE A Salem Citizen Gives Information of Priceless Value. When you suffer from backache, Headaches, dizziness, nervousness. Feci weak, languid, depressed, Have annoying urinary disorders; Do you know what to dot Some Salem people do. . Read the statement that follows. . It's from a Salem citizen. Testimony that can be investigated: C. W. Hill, wagon maker, 1HM9 Uorth Front street, Salem, says: "I hnd more or less backache nnd my kidneys were disordered. Donn's Kidney Fills have always relieved me in a short time. I know of several other peoplo who have taken Donn's Kidney Pills with good results. You may continue publishing the statement I gave before, recom mending them." Fnce 50c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy get Donn's Kidney Fills the same that Mr. Hill had. Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y, Strangling of Mrs. Baker Still Unsolved Mystery San Francisco, Sept. 21. Whether the circumstances surrounding the atrnnrr. ling of Mrs. Mary Baker of Los Angeles in a local rooming house Sundnv niirht will be learned was believed today to hinge upon finding of the vountr mnn who posed as Mrs. Baker' "nephew." Alter a tnorougb search of the wo mnn 'a effects nnd the rented room, the police are at a loss to uiuVerstnnd whnt motive would prompt the murder of an apparently poor woman, without per sonal chnrm, money or jewels. The only two explanation occuring w iuo jiuuce so inr are tnat there was either somo relation between the mur- uerea woman and the man, which grew obnoxious to him; or, she was an ac- vumpuce or --rence" for a gang of crook. Search for the slayer of the woman turned from San Francisco to Los An geles todny for the police now believo he joined a former sweetheart, or pos sibly a wife, after committing the crime. That the slayer was a married man and that Mrs. Baker, because of inti mate connections, may have threatened to tell the wife, i considered quite po- l.cs importance ia attached today to "'"'PT0' dipping and pictures found In the woman' room. That the picture is that of some cabaret favorite i considered probable. Mr. Baker is thought to have been an employe of a cafeteria in Lo Ange- ...u ,1,-wnite uicntincatinn i ex pected to come from the southern city. Member of Bandit Gang San Francisco, Sept. 21.-U the wo- .W? J". Mr"' Ma,y kw who wa itrannled to .lc.iv, i- . v : - - - ruomtnrr h .TLnrtT-WM m""r of a bandit rins tt.. , 7, ' oannit f?.:?0.l" !" "Wlsh her real iwiiMiT wltnin a fear hnii. I identity within f v... i Tod.. ,-. z.;:r -r . ED 1717 8wi 10c n4 and we'll send a full-site ioc cut of " PIPES" and m h.nrf. ome leather pouch FREE. 10 : " foil. ioiuerDoui rittLK." Xh tobacco, pouch and mailing will cost ua 20c, which we Will gladly apend because a trial will make you a steady user of "PIPES." COM. MM, ,, The Wind Blows J Wants The first gentle touch of autumn winds is a re minder. It suggests that it is time to . eo over the I wardrobe and see what is needed. It is the messenger of ending summer and cooler days ahead. j .aV And it is a hint that t it is time to familiarize one's self with the right places to buy. And in such a season i the advertising in the i Dailv Capital Journal is of great assistance. man were taken by Detectives Sergeant Juel, of the identification bureau, anl will be ent to the police department, in many cities throughout the country to ascertain if she waa ever under ar rest. ... CATARRH CAUSED BY A GERM Must Be Destroyed Before Catarrh It self Can ..Be ..Cured, say Specialist Wonderful Results from Breathing Medicated Air. Modicine taken into the stomach will never cure catarrh. And neither will the spray, douches, lotions, dreams ana other temporary reliefs that so many catarrh victime make a habit of using. To cure catarrh bo it won't come back yon must first drive from your boay the million of germs that are flourish ing in the inner recesses of your nose and throat and are causing the disease. ' There i"a preparation which doe thi called Hyomei (pronounced High-o-me).' Hyomei is a germ killing vaporized i formed from the purest oil of Eucalyp tus combined with other healing and antiseptic 'ingredient. You breathe Hyomei through the mouth and nose by mean of a little hard rubber inhaler which druggist furnish with it. This medicated germicidal air penetrate in to every fold and crevice or wo mucou membrane of your nose ana throat, kill the catarrh germ that lodge there, soothe, reduce and heal the swollen inflamed membrane, stop the discharge and opens up the clogged nose and air passage in a truly wonder ful way. It give blessed relief in five minute from catarrhal diatress of every Mnd and if you make a practice of breathing Ilyomol for a few minute each day for' just a few week not only Will all t Via .nn,.,tnm. n aatarrti vanish but the disease itself wtll.be a thing- ef the past. No one need try or buy Hyo mei on pure faith. Daniel J. Fry and many other leading druggists in Salem and vicinity sell it with the positive guarantee that it must enre tatarrh or that the money paid for it will be re funded. Hyomei is very inexpensive nnd with this protecting guarantee be hind your nurcKan. (tiara ia absolutely no reason why any sufferer from ctrrk j print oi the dead wo- thould not give it a fair trial.