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! ! ! , T> e _ No Additional P.vidonpo "Re no AUUlllonai JbViaence rse fore County Board At . torneys Accepting Fees — n Vr a _ . , — Report on Notary Said to Be State Official. MANYDMFÎMEN ARE CLASSIFIED BY IDE BOARDS Percentage Claiming Ex emption Large, but Does Not Equal Numbers ported From East. "While many exemptions are being claimed by registrants under the sec ond draft through their questionnaires filed with the county and city ex emption boards, the percentage is not as large as had been expected, any members of the two boards who closed a busy classification week Sat urday. A large number of names of registrants classified were announced. Fully five-sixths of the question naires sent out by the city draft board have t>3en returned within the seven day limit, according to the announce ment of Miss Phoebe Orvls, city clerk, who has been doing the principal part •f the clerical work in connection with the mailing and receiving of question naires and classification cards. Miss Orvis would not make an estimate of the number of men who were claiming exemption from service, but she is certain it is not as large as in many Of the eastern cities from which re ports have been received. DISTRICT BOARD MEETS MONDAY. Chairman Atwater of the county hoard stated that no additional evi dence has as yet been laid before the board -hat would indicate attorneys had accepted fo?s for assisting regis trants in making out questionnaires. It was reported to the adjutant gen eral's department that a state official who is commissioned a notary public had charged a fee for taking an ac knowledgement from a registrant. While this is not countenanced, it is said there is nothing in the rules ana regulations which specifically prohibit them from doing so, or request that they do not charge a fee/ The regu lations are silent in that regard, it is laid. The following are the names of registrants classified by both the county and city exemption boards: COUNTY CLASSIFICATIONS. CLASS NO. 1— Eugen»? C. Ottis. Portland: Robert (Ï. Duvall, Route No. 2, Meridian; Frederice W. Parkin, Route No. 4, Boise; John Frank Mar tin, Boise; Love! Withers, Eagle; Jesse H. Mahaffey, Eagle; Grover A. Evans, Moridian; Soloman J. West, Kuna; Harland H. Hutchinson, Meri dian; Oliver Grover, Caldwell; Alvin B. Clark, Cagle. CLASS NO. 3—Maynard E9 Elmore, Its r. I ! ; CLASS NO. 4—Charles P. Ourada, Route No. 3, Boise; Arthur n. Bloom. Star; Richard D. Martin, Route No. 1. Boise: Grant Winn. 408 O'Farrell i street. Boise; Georg»* G. Geil, Route' No. 1, Middleton; George M. Tallman, i Kuna; David S. Meglny, Kuna; Harry | Warrick, Route No. 3, Meridian;! George Hiram Saxon. Route No. 1. Boise: Joseph H. Radandt, Caldwell; | Ernost Sptizler, Route No. 4, Boise; Albert Ritts, Boise; James W. Stoner. Route No. 1, Eagle; Marshall J. My singer. Route No. 2, Boise. CLASS NO. o —Samuel R. Caldwell, j Route No. 2, Boise; Phelan Granville; Hayden, Rout»"* No. 1. Boise, enlisted; j John M. Lilleo. barber, enlisted. i TO DISTRICT BOARD. Classified by local board, but have agricultural or industrial claims which must be determined boa rd: CLASS NO. 1—Harry R. Price Eagle; Charles T. Harris, Route No. 2, Kuna; Hiram Mills, Rout* 4 No. 1. Me ridian; Arthur McClain. Route No. 4, Boise; Homer E. Rawson, General Ra dio company, Cambridge, Mass.; Lo gan J. Grice. Meridian; Leslie Alger Wattles. Route No. 1, Boise. CLASS NO. ?— Lut lier E. Taylor, Route No. 1, Engl*'. the district • CL , A p S rt °'r <: vv di H D n F ?' v° U / *o. 1, Eagle, Guy Wood, Route No. 3. deridian; Leslie C. Wildman, Route . — . .. ... .. N Meridian No. 1. Boise; George C. Evans, Box 31, Meridian; Cljarles A. Goettlitig, Eagle; Joseph C. Scrlviner. Kuna; Ralph C. McColm, Route No. 2, Boise; Roy E. Mathews, Route No. 2, Meri dian; Wylie T. Ix-lghton. Route No. 2. Boise; James D. Agenbroad, Route No. 2. Nampa; Miller Henderltder, Rout-' No. 2, Meridian; John C. Lane, Route No. 4. Nampa; Glen Ray McConnell, Route No. 1, Middleton; Walter R. Stevens, 742 East Jefferson street, Boise; Montle Morgan, Route No. 2. Nampa; Emil von Mnrenholtz, Route No. 4, Boise; Niels Erederick Jensen, Route, No. 3, Boise; Lewis Abnei Hoalst, Route No. 1, Meridian; Clinton R. Maw, Route No. 1, Meridian. HELD FOR APPEAL. Classified but holding for appeal: CLASS NO. 1—Claude Faler, Boise: Jens Karlson, Barber; Howard S. Pierce, Eagle; Chester C. Mlndon, Me ridian; Ben H. Powell. Route No. 1, Middleton; James D. Warner, Moun tain Home: Leo Sailor, 212 North Twelfth street, Boise; Earl Scott Campbell, 1119 Warren street, Boise. Walter L Fowler of Star had his case 'ransferred to local board, divi sion No. 2, Portland, Ore., for classi fication and If accepted for physical examination. CITY CLASSIFICATION. Class No. 1—Nick Mitchell,- sheriffs Office, Boise; William Lloyd McNeilly, 426 South Twelfth; Fred S. Chisholm, Salt Lake; Peter Solomon Butler, 1010 Main street; Carl Albert Nelson, 1124 West Bannock; Fred Stivers, 1512 Nineteenth; George B. Cummans, 818 Ryanklln; Pliny Milton Arnold, Quartz ! STOMACH UPSET? Get at the Real Cause—Take Dr. Edwards ' Oliv e Tablets That'« whqt thousands of stomach ! sufferers are doing now. Instead of ! taking tonics, or trying to patch up a , poor digestion, they are attacking the real cause of the ailment—clogged liver and disordered bowels. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets arouse the liver in a soothing, healing way. When the liver and bowels are performing their natural functions, away goes indigestion and stomach troubles. If you have a bad taste in your mouth, tongue coated, appetite poor, lazy, don't-care feeling, no ambition or energy, troubled with undigested foods, you should take Olive Tablets, the sub stitute for calomel. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets are a purely vegetable compound mixed with dive oil. You will know them by their olive color - The y do 016 worlt without griping, cramps or pain. Take one or two at bedtime for quick relief, so you can eat what you like. At ioc and 25 c per b»*., An druggists i i | | burg; Selmer Lewis Lower, 615 Warm Springs; Robert Edward Jones, Coun cil; Jack Darling, Sheridan, Wyo.; Fordyce E. Newell, Manitou hotel; Christopher Columbus Morrison, 917 Washington; Theodore Thompson, 1906 West State; Harold L. Shaw, Denver, Colo.; Charles Alexander Johnson. Spokane; John Lobert, Stag rooms; Otto Johnson, 810 Fourteenth; Paul Redmond, 610 Idaho; Louis Alek Alexander, 615 North Seventeenth; Murray Raymond Buchanan, Eleventh and Main; George Washington Myer, California hotel, Boise; Offie Erwin Sales, 2111 North Seventeenth; Adolph George Nelson, 711 North Nineteenth; George H. Deuten, Redondo hotel, San Francisco; Lloyd Clarence Harmon. Regena; James Owen Murray, 2514 Jefferson; Phillip Acey Ames, Payette; Ted Forrest Wasson, 1117 Lee; Wilson Howard Day, State auditor's office; Oliver Harris Higgins, 1608 North Twenty-sixth; Dee Wallace Herron, 423 Main; Earl Coughman, Boise; Wil liam Alex Youngblood, Boise; Paul Francis Brooks, 1009 Washington; Ed ward Parsons, Barber, Camp 1; Berle H. Thorp, 1710 Irene; Joseph S. Wil cox. 318 Thatcher; Roy A. Hohberger, Camp Dodge, la.; Gerry Olden Donart, 1510 North Thirteenth; Harry Abbott Bell, 218 East Huron, Chicago; Samuel Irvine Donley, 419 South Fifth; Charles W. Hargraves, 1412 North Fourteenth; Nick Alex Alexander, 615 North Sev enth; Roy M. Pyper, 711 Franklin. Class No. 3—Adolf L. Koehler, Y. M* C. A., Seattle; Luke Carlyle Cotter, Oxford hotel; 1-eon Clifford Massey, Boise; Guy E. Smith, 1510 Ada; Clif ford Rose, 1210 North Fourteenth; Charles E. Jones, 1702 Washington. Class No. 4—Clare Fremont Yahne, Camp 1, Barber; Charles McBride, 110 State; Marble Spencer, 1121 Lee; Ralph H. Temple, Belgravia Terrace, Boise; Byron Robert Hill, 1301 North Fifteenth; Arthur J. Sparling, 1615 I North Seventeenth; Wilbert Earl ! Trask, Jerome; Dwight Kuchenthal, ; Austin, Ore.; Lewis Martin Lomgetelg, 1511 North Fifth; Robert W. Arthur, 415 South Second; Peter Anggelo, 407 North Eleventh; George Humphrey, 1915 Rcsseguie; Charles Reuben Class, 204 Broadway; Charles Henry Kuntz, 1719 North Seventh; James Aikman, 928 Main; Lester Jay Fisher, Brand hotel; Harry Sheidler, 1501 North Eleventh; Howard Earl Rankin; Idaho Falls, William Gray Ash, 1909 Wash ington; Richard Booth Custer, 406 Grove; Clarence Lundstrum, 1718 Har rison boulevard; Ray Newell Castle, statehouse; Allen Cleveland 807 East State 1020 y 3 Franklin; Farley,'the Arthur L. Holland, Milton Elliott Moore, 1305 Vermont; James Taylor Hunt, Kansas City; Charles Herbert Cran dull, Portland; Sevley Howell, 1309 j North Sixth; Isaac Alfred Burtch, Middleton; Roscoe Isaac Collard, 1116 j O'Farrell ; Olie Cox, 408 Lover's Lane; i Winfred Ray Cooper, 1S08 North Six teenth; Ephrim Lemuel Davis, Bel gravia apartments; Archie L. Gray, j 1408 North Sixth; Roy Sleighter, 1213 ! Bannock; Robert Lincoln Scott, 2515 Ada; Edward Sebastian Marnon, 2111 North Fifteenth; Claude Douglas, 1315 North Nineteenth; Ben Harrison Tittle, Nyssa; Lee Daniel Sharp, Fair-! field;' Jesse Clyde Berry, 1800 North Nineteenth; Sydney Allen Nelson, Longmont street; Cyrus Everett Smith 1722 North Eighth; Lewis eorge Sprinkle, 1538V* S. E., Tacoma; I Raymond T. Weills, 1714 North Twen ty-third; Florence Henry Steele, Ver 1 mont stroct and Boise avenue; Edward rft - v r -.nklln Rav Frank Lorance 505 kranklln, Raj Earle Nelson. Thirteenth and Wash Ington; Robert Darrell Long, 1310 East Jefferson; Allen J. Campbell. 80 ^ p f> rk lait I-ake; Nello John Dodds, 1408 Jefferson; Walter Edward Blcm gren. 1502 North Twelfth; William Lawrence Whyman. Halley; Ludger O. Genereux, 923 East Washington; David Henry Williams, 1320 Jefferson; Wil lard Wellington Burns, 811 North Twenty-fifth; Fernando Pidal, Em mett;' Harry R. McLaughlin, 1316 Main; Haven Theodore Dauer, 1512 State; Donald A. McPherson, 524 Ida ho building; Tracy Adelbert Higby, 1726 Falrvlew avenue. Class No. 5—Fong Doon, 620 Front; Reilly H. Joy, 1102 Hays; Antony Sur ion, J302 Grove; John Brjavac, 1006Vi Main; Jose Ignacio Lewis, 816 Grove; Felipe Sconofua, Grove street: Lucio Bilbao, 521 Grove; Francisco Ocamlca, 619 Grove; Elmer Guay, East Highland street, Boise; Fernando Madariaga. 118 South Seventh; Mileton Arrsabalaga, 816 Grove; Pete Corlek, 1302 Grove; Arlando C. Montandon, 818 Washing ton; Ventura VerlBtaln, 509 Main; Carl Malmtn, 621 South Thirteenth; Pedro Btlbatua, 216 South Ninth Louis A. Welch. Camp Lewis; Doratto Farurla, 403 Idaho; Chester Clarence Logan, 1116 River; Clarence Shaw, 203 Main; Victor Rarerla, 216 South Ninth; John Robert Wyman, 1502 Franklin. Oriental novelties at Schackner Art and Gift Shop. Fine picture framing. * Adv-tf Oriental novelties at Schackner Art and Gift Shop. Fine plcturo framing. STREETS OE NYSSA WILL BE IMPROVED; BUILDING ACTIVE Series of Entertainments Given for the Benefit of the Red Cross Nets Good Sum for Cause. Nyssa, Ore., Jan. 7.—A big Improve ment is being made to Nyssa's streets, all of which are being brought to grad* and' will be given four Inches of gravel. L. C. Beck has the contract to do this work for $2200. The streets will be graded and graveled from the railroad on the east to tho corporate limits on the west where they will Joint with the state highway running to Ontario and Vale. The grading is practically completed and the gravel ing was begun today. In connection with the street im provement the old bridge crossing the Wilson ditch on Main street was torn out and the street at that point was opened to its full width. Another street improvement of im portance is the putting in of a new wagon crossing over the Wilson ditch in the south end of town. This opens a more direct road into town for traf fic from the big Owyhee country tv) the stock yards, flour mill, cheese fac tory, lumber vard and to the main business district. The Oregon Short Line Just finished a plank crossing for traffic over its tracks at the east *?nd of Main street, and the railroad has indicated its in tention to supply water for the stock yards here. RED CROSS VERY ACTIVE. The Nyssa chapter of the Red Cross gave the fourth of its seriös of enter tainments. 'The gross returns from the four is $835 and the net receipts are $650. This chapter now has a membership of 400. BUILDING ACTIVITY. The year 1917 was Nyssa's most active season for building operations in years. A $2000 residence was built for John Forbes on the ranch he pur chased from Mr. Sheffield. C. C. Forbes and A. R. McCarty are building the house. Adolph Schneider has Just finished a neat cottage in town. Frank Leock built a three-room bouse on his 90-acre farm north of town. Frank Stubbs will live there. F. A. Carman has the building con tract. The Eastern Oregon Land company will build two sets of buildings on land the company owns west of town. The buildings will cost about $4000. The company is breaking up and lev eling 960 acres of land south of Nyssa. M. M. Greeling is building a new house In Kingman colony. The Hotel Weston has been reopened and is now being operated by Mrs. C. C. Forbes, who is also operating th»? Star hotel. The Malheur County bank is issuing a very appropriate calendar to its patrons. It represents the stars and stripes unfurled to the breeze. It is a work of art. Y. W. C. A. NOTES. Miss Gertrude Griffith of the Na tional War Work Council, and Miss Grace Maxwell of Seattle, are expect ed to arrive in this city about the mid dle of the week. They are coming to Idaho to organize the southern part of state for the coming campaign to raise Idaho's share toward the war work that is being done for women both through the hostess hous»*a and clubs In this country and for the $1,000,000 which is to be used abroad. The week of Jan. 21 is to be used all over the country for raising the neces sary $4.000.000. The second semester of class work will open at the local Y. W. C. A. Jan 14. The following courses given this past fall will be continued: Span ! ish and French two nights a week; | auto mechanics. one night. New j classes will be formed in choral work j under the direction of Mrs. Lida Adams. Interior decoration. Miss Vir glnia Mann. Bible class, R. W. Adams, "ho will give a most interesting course °n the "Teachings of Jesus as applied I to today's problems." Other classes in banking and dramatic art will oe formed if 10 register for the work. The Y. W. C. A. office will be glad to an «»wer any questions relative to the time and tost of the various courses. ___ I ». ». ____ . » __ To Cure a Cold in One D»y. | Tftke raXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets. Druggists refund monej- If it falls to cure. E. W. GROVE'S signa ture is on each box. 30c. The Ford Agency now In their new quarters. Eleventh and Front streets —Adv. tf Tnxl with reliable driver. 266. Mickey— Adv. tf I TRACE DISEASE TO CONSTIPATION Ou of the points oa which different schools of »ed i ct«# prac tically agree la, that «boat »8% of all huaan disease Is directly traceable to latesttaal putrefac tion of stomach waste duo to In activity of the bowels. or consti pation. The eliminative p r o csss Is aa essential factor in digestion and on Its proper functioning do peads the welfare of system. should aevor Sö n e gl e c te d . Am soOn os the bowels ovldsneo the ■lightest disposi t ion to slow up, n mUd laxative should ho ta lon . The ooablaation of simple laxa tive herbs with pepsla, known an Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pronin aad ----- *---terse for Efty cants ■eld in drag storm u bottle, la Ughly i ________ n correc ti ve, acting gently, In an I SVTÖJK'J'asLäft s.*8 ssaa ' of eluunge 1 _by_ - McADOOS "BIG THREE" WILL HELP HIM RUN RAILROADS OF NATION U Left—John Skelton WiNiams (above) and Alfred H. Smith. Right—Halo Holden. Director General McAdoo of the United States railroads will lean on three big men for the bulk of his support in the operation of the country'! big network of rails and terminals. The "big three" are Alfred H. Smith, E resident of the New York Central lines, assistant to McAdoo, and John kelton Williams, controller of the currency, and Hale Holden, president of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy railroad, members of the advisory board. BUSINE8S BESSIE. Bessie had been given a dime to in vest in Ice cream soda. "Why don't you give your dime to missions?" said the minister who was calling. "I thought about that," said Bessie, "but I think I'll buy the ice cream and let the druggist give the dime to- the missions." Wc Are No Stronger Than Our Fighting Blood PHYSICAL FITNESS OUR SOLE RE LIANCE. The great world struggle will be won by stamina. Courage without physical fitness is absolutely worth less. That is why our great army is made up only of men who are with out the slightest physical defect. But there is a constant warfare closer home, that you are vitally in terested in. It is the warfare of dis ease against your health, a struggle that is always going on, and one for which you must always keep your sys tem prepared. And your blood supply is the fort ress upon which you must depend. If it is kept pure and free from any weakening influence, the germs of disease cannot find lodgement, but are promptly expelled, and good health is Og en. Laiwie E DDIE POLO, who plays the port of "Ed. Cody," foreman of the Clayton ranch, in the Universal serial, "The Bull's Eye," is a young man of many accomplishments. He loves danger. It is the tonic of life to the active young screen hero, for his past adventures as acrobat, tumbler, aerialist, and all around strong man have brought him face to face with the grim reaper on more I than one occasion. In "The Bull's Eye," Polo has al Peady had a number of narrow escapes, but a few little items like being buried under tons of dirt while filming an explosion scene or swinging across a sixty foot chasm on an ordinary lariat, mean nothing in Eddie's young - life. He thrives on it. His friends, however, say it is rather harrowing to their feelings, as every once in a while they get out g»««- trusty typewriters to dash off Eddie s obituary, only to find that he isn t dead ftt all, only badly hurt. . The ex-Czar of Russia had an easy of it, cbm pared to Eddie, for Nick spe.it most of his time dodging danger, while Polo sits up nights try ing to figure out some new way to risk his neck. Although he has done some remark able "stunts" in various motion pic ture productions, it is "The Bull's Eye ' that will endear him forever to photoplay audiences. He plays the dashing young cowpuneher to the queen's taste and many n fluttering pulse will rise way above normal dur ing the screening of each new episode. universal rushes HALIFAX PICTURES. Among the first pictures ef the Halifax disaster to reach the motion picture audience# throughout the United Stetes, were those taken by the Universal Weekly cameramen They were on the spot soon after the news was flashed over the wires and obtained views, that gives the public a good, idea ef the reign of horror and suffering, which the C a n adian city went through. HARMONIOUS FIGURES. "Well, Mary, you have chosen a hymn very appropriate to the Fsson. But what made you chose that par ticular onf?" "Please, miss, it's the same number as my policeman." Always on the Job. Mickey's taxi— Adv. tf assured. But you should take no chances with this mainstay of defense. Im purities are liable to creep into your blood and so weaken your system that it is unable to resist even the most or dinary ailments. This means the be ginning of the attack, which will re sult in the undermining of your health. S. S. S., the world's most renowned blood remedy, will keep the blood ab solutely pure and free of every trace of impurity. This great old remedy, which has been in constant use for more than fifty years, keeps the system in perfect condition by purifying the blood and cleansing it thoroughly. Write for valuable booklet about the blood supply, sent free by Swift Spe cific Co., A-54, Swift Laboratory, At lanta, Ga. à « mmm. ■ £ -dr' | '< \ : * ä*Li MtiMMÉ EDDIE POLO BLUEBIRD FEATURK NOW A NOVEL. The publishers of Vnrlck Vnnnrdy*s novel. "The Girl by the Roadside," te be released as a Bluebird feature De cember 81, with Violet Meraeraau Mar of the screen-version, will soon issue a special edition of the novel to con form Identically with the moving pic ture. Stills from the Bluebira pro duction will be used as illustrations and the book-trade will be supplied at about the time the photoplay is re leased throughout the country. "The Girl by the Roadside" had an exten sive sale in its original form, and the publishers ora depending upon the moving picture to create a re n ewed demand, these sales, at the same time, having a probable tendency to adver tise tho photoplay. GREATEST MAN'S ENEMY Is Most Prevalent of All Present-Day Diseases, Declares L. T. Cooper—Victims Are Whimsical and Melan choly and Suffer Great Mental Depression Disease Can Be Cured, He Says. Explaining the record-breaking purchase of Tanlac by the Jöj Drug Stores, Smith-Fans Drug Co., S:flt Lake City, and the lead ing wholesale and retail druggists throughout the United States and Canada, Mr. E. C. Harris, representing the international dis tributor of Tanlac, stated last night ihat the hundreds of ques tions now being asked all over Boisb make it imperative tKat some explanation be made to satisfy Jniblic interest. Speaking of Tanlac, he siid: ''Thou sands of the most prominent people— In fact, people representing all walks of life—In the larger cities of the coun try, where the celebrated medicine has been accomplishing such remarkable results, are even more enthusiastic over Tanlac than Mr. Cooper himself. "In explanation of this, it should be stated that Tanlac Is believed to be the first actually direct specific for catarrhal inflammation membranes and the complications which follow them. "Catarrh of the stomach Is one of the most frequent causes of dj-spepsia and catarrhal inflammation of the nose and throat leads to Inevitable complication, such as kidney and liver affections, rheumatism, etc. "Show me a man whose cj'es are in flamed, whose sense of smell and hear ing Is affected, and I will show you a man who is suffering from catarrh. Frequently the lungs become Involved by the extension of the catarrhal in flammation or germs to the lung sub stance. Specialists concede this, but it has remained for Tanlac, the new formula, to provide the remedy, as has been so conclusively and convincingly proven by the hundreds of thousands who have been relieved by Its use." At this point Mr. Harris quoted from one of Mr. Cooper's recent lec tures, In which he said: " 'Of all the distressing conditions that afflict humanity, catarrh of the stomach, or what is more commonly known as chronic dyspepsia, Is proba bly the most prevalent. This most universal malady has baffled the med ical profession for years, and tho most skilled specialists have been unable to cope with It successfully.' "Hours might be consumed In de scribing the sufferings, mental anil physical, of the sufferers of chronic dyspepsia and their failure heretofore to get relief. A morbid, unreal, whim sical and melancholy condition of the mind, aside from the nervousness and physical suffering, Is the usual con Jltion of the average dyspeptic, and life seems scarcely worth the living. "Dyspepsia, or indigestion, as the case may be. Is caused by the taking of too much food, or unsuitable food, end the mucous membrane ,,f the stom ach becomes Irritated, and there Is set up an acute or subacute gastric ca tarrhal condition which prevents the of the mucous ! PINNEY THEATER I AM QjIA WEDNESDAY—THURSDAY Jfll 1 # Ö I U Bargain Matinee Thursday, 2:15 p. m. First Time Here of America's Favorite Drama OLIVER MOROSCO PRESENTS The Fascinating Hawaiian Romance Bird o/Paradis The Story of a Woman's Sacrifice for Lovs With the Hawaiian Sihgers and Players. MAIL ORDERS NOW-SEAT SALE SATURDAY Make Your Reservations Early if You Wish Choice Seats. Prices: Matinee, $1, 75c, 50c; Evenings, $1.50, $1, 75c, 50c. Curtains, 2Ü5-8:15. Men's Private Ailments Successfully Treated We are fully equipped te give yofi the most thorough and p-«-«—i treatment of diseases with which men suffer, and oar results speak for themselves. We have treated and cured numerous oases of Private disease, stricture, syphilis, blood and skin diseases, Bladder and Kidney troubles, Nervousness, Sexual weakness. Varicocele, Piles and fistula*, during the past year, soma ef whom were os complicated and es long standing as yours. The Idaho Medical Company 4, 8, 8, 7, and 8, Odd Felle«»' Bldg. Boise, Ida. Car tth and Idaho Entrance M6|A Idaho 6L HOTEL GRAND BOIBE'B NEWEST HOTEL, Commercial Men's Headquarters— Most Attractive Lobby In the State. FRANK BLACKINQBR, PROF, Strictly Modern, Regular Price». THE BRISTOL Belee'e Popular Hotel, New and Btrlotly Modern POPULAR PRICES. DR. H. A. GALLEGLV, propel digestion of the food. This food is opt to ferment and de compose, and as a result the familiar distressing symptoms of dyspepsia may arise. In mild cases there Is nothing more than an uncomfortable feeling In the 8toinnch, with a certain amount of depression, headache, loss of appetite, perhaps belching of gas and occasional vomiting. There may be also accom panying intestinal symptôme, such aa constipation, pains in the back, colic, 'etc. .There may be only the familiar heartburn, due to the inflammation of the stomach from excessive gases of fermentation or putrefaction. "In the most severe cases—those that last over a day or two—the symp toms enumerated may be much more Intense. The distress may be marked and the general constitutional symp toms more evident When this stags Is reached the loss of appetite, the mental depression and the general un comfortable feeling in the stomach ars much more pronounced. This Is par ticularly true In acute gastritis. "It frequently occurs from continued errors In diet that this condition be comes chronic, and the symptoms per sist for an Indefinite period; the appe tite s very apt to be varied, although at tifnes very good. Heart-burn Is fre quent, If not constant, the stomach is painful on pressure; the tongue la coated, there Is a bad taste in the mouth and there are changes in the .amount of salivary secretion. Consti pation Is usually present, diarthoea may alternate. although "Most cases of dyspepsia can be ured if the diet is properly looked cure after and with the proper treatment. Proper eating and the proper amount of food are the most Important fea tures In the treatment. Most eat too fast and eat too much. peopli Î here Is not a single portion of the that Is not benefited by the help action of Tanlac, which begins Its bod ful by stimulating the digestive and assimilative organe, thereby enriching the blood and invigorating the whole system. Next, It enables a weak, worn out stomach to thoroughly digest tho food, promoting the assimilation of the nourishing producta to be converted Into blood, bone and muscle." Tanlac Is no.w sold In Boise by the Joy Drug Stores, under the personal direction of a special Tanlac repre sentative.—Adv. THE IDAN-HA LEADING HOTEL OR BOMB. European Plan, In the venter ef everything, Commercial and S t eehgvowosq Headquarters, FIRST-CLASS DINING ROOM Rates, without hath, |1jBB top, With hsth, $1.80 up, IDANHA HOTEL CO,