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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (April 26, 1909)
13 THE MORNING OREGOXIAN, MONDAY. AKIL, 26, 1909. Phases of Industrial Growth in the Pacific Northwest ACRES TO BE Big Irrigation and Power Sys tem Soon to Be Perfected in Lane County. WINTER SNOWS UTILIZED Storage Reservoirs on McKenzIc River Will Furnish Water Sup ply In Summer Months for Valley Farmers. EUGENE, Or.. April 25. (Special.) Plans are perfected for bringing under Irrigation the extensive valley lands1 be tween the Willamette and the Lower McKensie rivers. The tract lies Just cross the 'Willamette from Eugene ari some 30.000 acres of unusually deep and Well-rirn1nwl Wlllo mat tA ITollow s.lt The problem of securing water for this a-rea u solved through the utllzation of Clear and Fish lakes, at the source of the MoKenzie. as storage reservoirs. The, water accumulated In these lake during the Winter months, through dams placed at their outlets, will in the Sum mer reason be taken out of the McKenzte at Hendricks" bridge, some nine miles shove Springfield, where the foothills merge into the level of the valley. The rapid fall of the river at this point and Its rocky banks there make it possible without the expense of a dam to lead out a canal to an excellent power site and have the water from the tall race exactly In position for the Irrigation of the magnificent expanse of the valley below. It is this combination of power plant nd Irrigation system right at the doors of a rapidly growing urban popu lation that has won support for this pioneer project. Power in Ready Demand. Springfield, which is rapidly developing as a manufacturing center, is only five miles below the power site and Eugene 1n three miles farther down the valley. These cities furnish a ready demand for the power generated. A single easily constructed canal syBtem will thus have double utility from the start. The most promising results obtained through the experiments conducted by the United States Department of Agri culture at different points in the Wil lamette Valley have been studied by the farmers here. The present project de veloped out of the Springfield Grange. The first master of the Grange Is the president of the McKenzie Valley Irri gation & Power Company. The farmers stand sponsor for the movement and are signing up their lands for the water most freely. The region to be irrigated now con tains some of the most famous cherry walnut and apple orchards in the state! also considerable areas in hops. But by far the larger portion is still held in large farms devoted to grain farming. The readjustment to the more intensive cultivation under Irrigation will take some time. The large holdings are be ing rapidly disposed of at from $100 to J1S0 an acre, to those who will cut them tip into lots of from 10 to 20 acres. . Land Products Multiplied. With water available the productivity , of these lands will be multiplied four or five-fold. Irrigation experiments have demonstrated that the net income from each acre will equal a good rate of in terest on J1000. While the whole area now supports about 100 families. It will In the near future furnish homes for 1000 Its advantages for dairying under irrl ' gation will be unexcelled. . In addition to these natural advantages IZT ?.-.?.reat lrr'Katln demonstration in 'the AVillamette Valley, the location has exceptional market facilities. The main line of the Southern Pacific skirts it the Woodburn-Sprlngfield branch passes through it and branch lines radiate from Springfield to the sawmills and logging camps at Wendling and Natron. Trolley lines to mines and Summer resorts o' ;the T.pper MeKenzle and from Eugene T.T xT".',? ar vlrtuy under way. I Probably the most Important advantage tZ?V,r- iS ltS Prox""l'y to the largfsi I "Ingle forest area in the country. New Combination of Resources. The thing that appeals to the imagina tion of the community Is that the enter- I prise represents a new combination of the great resources of the Willamette L",K,'yWat.er ""J1 SO" aro bought to gether during the growing season and the water la a portion of the unneces sary surplus, of Winter held back so that ; It is made to do double service in gen j eratlng power and in nourishing plant growth when the sun is furnishing the other requisite In heat. The enterprise j In combining storage, power development . and Irrigation under ideal conditions will ' l?-M, ypr to com be repeated in the " lllamette Valley many times over if T I nvjw s 0 GIVEN WATER i - ttt ,....i.'.v.T!!'7i.Trrr."' ox rijsi1 rd'ers wnji atbruu for joo kew this highly-favored region is really to come to its own. WILL- hold berry festival Rose burg Plans . Two Days' Pro gramme for May 14 and 15. ROSEBURG, Or.. April 25. (Special.) The date of the proposed strawberry Festival to be held in Roseburg has been set by the Commercial Club for Friday and Saturday, May 14 and 15. The two days will be given over to dis plays of strawberries. A programme for both days has been prepared. On the evening of the first day the women will give a musical. The occasion will also be taken ad vantage of by the Importers and raisers of blooded livestock, and a large par ade of animals is expected. The Ashland lodge of Elks, accom panied by members of that lodge from different towns in Southern Oregon, will visit Roseburg on Saturday, the second day of the festival. The visitors will number about 250. Douglas County strawberries are the first in the market each year and this fact will be widely advertised at the festival. It is proposed to secure pho tographs of the best displays and the parades and use them in booster book lets. DESERT IS RECLAIMED VAST AREAS PLACED CSDEB WATER IX SOUTHERN IDAHO. Towns and Farms Cover District Which Four Years Ago Was Sagebrush Wilderness. BY H. W. r.VGER. BUHL, Idaho. April 25. (Special.) In Southern Jdaho 1.600.000 acres are being irrigated under the Carey act which, together with the Government projects and others, make a total of over 3.000,000 acres. Where four years ago was sage brush are 6000 people. Buhl Is the new town near the-land which is being opened for entry and watered. It has about 1000 people, a 325.000 schoolhmisp cnlni v. i opera-houses, pressed - brick factory' ' u many line residences. Men from the large cities are found here superintending the construction of canals and reservoirs, of railroads and factories and clearing fields of sagebrush for orchards, alfalfa, grain potatoes and sugar beets. Under the Carey act the settler can pay 13.25 an acre cash, while the bal ance and the cost of Irrigating the land is made in ten yearly payments:- He lives on the land for 30 days and puts one-eighth of It In crop and receives the patent. Under this system land is easily bought and sold, and the poor man can get a start and pay for his land from the crops. Forty thousand acres of the West End lands w'll be opened for entry this Summer. At Buhl, the headquar ters, the warehouses and railroad yards are filled with tunneling, freighting and grading outfits. Here are herds of mules and horse order to advance upon the wilds of oaKcurusn prairie. Fourteen years ago a lone, weather beaten prairie schooner, an old-fashioned turn brake, drawn by an ox team, slowly moved through the un broken sagebrush waste, a m woman set restlessly on the seat and ""r eyes ior tne sight of foliage that gave promise of wates. But no where, since they had left the railroad, some 40 miles backf had they seen any-flowing water. A merciless sun beat down from t i the sagebrush seemed on fire. A chasm i mm. seen in tne distance. The canyon gave promise of water. On reaching the banks they found the de scent impossible, except by rope and pulley, and In this way they let down the oxen, the wagon and the children who had been tucked away beneath the canvas top. Here they found a stream of water and made a cabin and a ear. don by Its side. Other pioneers came. Necessity be came the mother of invention. They dreamt of taking the water from the deep, rock-walled canyon to the level lands above. Without money and often without necessities, they and each mem ber of their families worked with the crudest implements. At the end of six years of continuous labor and hoping and despairing, the water flowed upon the new homestead. . Today George Hartwell's ranch Is an oasis in the desert; a wonderland of orchards, meadows, shaded home and flowers. Tomorrow it will be the cen ter of the West End Orchard District , being watered and opened for settle ment this Summer. . Chehalis Sends Out Booklet. CHEHALIS, Wash., April 25. (Spe cial.) The Lewis County A.-Y.-P ex hibit committee has Issued a 24-nage booklet Inviting Easterners to see the Lewis County exhibit at the Seattle exposition, and to visit Lewis County before returning East. Arrangements have been made to distribute 35 000 of these folders In the East. The folder contains about 7000 words of printed matter, and a map showing the north western portion of the United States. 'Jo Spring Medicine "Van Haren b Liver Bean, 25c bottle. BUSY SCENT3S ALONG VANCOUVER WATERFRONT. rsrci- T" & A . CITY GROWING FUST One Thousand New Homes Are Building in Vancouver. MILLS WORKING OVERTIME Purchase of Right of Way by North Bank Road to Waterfront Leads to Belief Big Docks Will Be Built. VANCOUVER, Wash., April 25. (Special.) Building operations in Vancouver were never more active than now. It Is estimated that 1000 residences are in course of construc tion In Greater Vancouver, the build ings costing from 600 to $4000 each. The planing mills and lumber yards are undergoing the greatest demand upon their output they have ever ex perienced, and every lumber dealer in Vancouver is filling rush orders. Water System Improved. The Vancouver Water Vorks Com pany has contracted for over $30,000 worth of Improvements to be Installed this Spring. The new reservoir, on the heights east of thegarrlson. made of reinforced concrete. Is 100 feet by 200 feet and is 12 feet deep. This res ervoir alone cost $20,000. The new pumps, with a capacity of 600 gallons a minute, will be, installed within 40 to 60 days at a cost of $7000. Five thousand or 6000 feet of new mains are now being laid, with more than 12.000 feet of mains in prospect during the year. The private water works being In stalled by J. M. Lay to supply a por tion of Vancouver Heights and a large extent of territory along the carllne to the northeast, will cost In the neighborhood of $20,000 when completed.- Fed by living springs, a large reservoir will supply an Immense area of land, with a fan of 80 feet supply ing 500,000 gallons a day. $15,000 Business Block. At the corner of Eighth and Wash ington, Dr. Sedgwick is erecting a fine business block. It will have two StOrieS And hn.mon4- T 1. 1 1 1 i i - . -" ' ' uuuuuik will be of brick-, the foundation and' ueuar ui concrete, and it will contain five stores on the first floor and 21 offices fitted up in modern style. New $25,000 Schoolhousel A new brick schoolhouse will be erected near the recently annexed dis trict, in Arnada Park, at about Twenty-sixth street. The new school will be commenced In time to be ready for use In the Fall. It will cost $25,000 and will be modern In every respect The Order of Eagles has com menced preparations for the erection of a $20,000 business block on Its quarter block at Thirteenth and Main, which will have stores on the ground floor, the upper floors being devoted to clubrooms and lodgerooms. At Fourteenth and Main Is the new Carnegie Library building, which Is now about half completed. This build ing is of the massive type of pressed brick and concrete and is a most ar tistic structure. Building Activity General. To the stranger visiting Vancouver there is hardly a direction In which he may look that does not show many new houses in different stages of con struction. Every section of the city offers its share of new homes. Right of way has just been secured for the S. P. & S. Railway for a mile or more west of the city limits not far from the riverfront. This right of way Is through the Mulligan & Phlpps property, and It extends to the large tract of waterfront property bought last November through E M Rowley, and it has been generally sup posed, as he handled all deals for the S. P. & S. Railway, that this water front property belongs to the a P & S. line. The right of way ls for "the S. P. & S. Railway, which makes it practically certain that the North Bank Road is preparing to build to waterfont property, where for about a mile it has a deep water harbor, and between which and the mouth of the Willamette River Is a deep water channel, so that to and from this har bor all ships and vessels that make the Portland harbor may come and go - When the North Bank Road bougiii this magnificent waterfront property It was the general opinion in Van couver that It was bought for the pur pose of erecting thereon extensive wharves and docks and warehouses and nothing In the way of investment m Vancouver in the past three years created as much optimism among the business men of the city as did the purchase of this piece of property bv the railway, and now that the railway has ;iist secured a right of way to "his waterfront property there Is no doubt but that the company will soon begin the building of docks and warch ou 3es though official confirmation of this cannot be secured. WORK ON NEW ROAD BEGUN Klamath Falls to Lakevlew Highway ' Being Rushed. KLAMATH FALLS. Or.. April 25. (Special.) Under direction of the County Court, work has been started on the Klamath Falls end of the new highway to Lakevlew, over which it ls intended shall be hauled the traffic of Southeast ern Oregon. Already many teams are arriving In Klamath Falls loaded with the wool clip from the great ranch regions of east Klamath and Lake counties and from across the California line. Macadamizing will be In progress in a short time and In most cases it will not be necessary to haul the crushed stone far. Good material can be had at many points near the road, from which it can be distributed at low cost. There are many places where the stone can be sup plied to crushers without leaving the highway and this condition will go to minimize the cost of the work. Only bridges and culverts of the most substantial character will be put in and the work will all be of the best class. Other crews will be engaged in grading on the more distant sections of the road while the macadamizing force is working on the Klamath Falls end of the line. WEISER PLANS WELCOME WILL ENTERTAIN OREGON IDAHO CONGRESS. Meeting Promises to Be One of the Largest Attended Conventions A in Gem State. WEISER. Idaho, April 25. (Special.) The Oregon-Idaho Development Con gress, which meets here April 30, May 1 and 2, promises to be the biggest event of the kind in Southern Idaho. Special rates have been granted on the railroads leading to this city, and from the Information received by the offi cers of the Weiser Commercial Club the attendance will be large. Prominent men of Idaho and Oregon will be present and deliver addresses. Saturday evening a banquet will be served by the women of the Outlook Club of this city. Sunday the visitors will be given a free excursion over the Pacific & Idaho Northern Railroad to Evergreen, a distance of 76 miles. Among those who have accepted in vitations to address the congress are: Dr. J. R. Numbers, Mayor of Weiser; James H. Brady, Governor of Idaho; J. H. Richards, of Boise; Addison Ben nett, of Irrigon Or., "Central Oregon and Coos Bay;" Colonel E. Hofer, Sa lem, Or., "Development In Oregon and Idaho;" A. L. Frehafer, State Senator from Washington County, "Washington County, Its Resources and Possibili ties;" Rellly Atkinson, secretary of the League of Southern Idaho Commercial Clubs, Boise, Idaho, "The Work of the League;" C. M. Hill, president League of Southern Idaho Commercial Clubs, Twin Falls. Idaho, "What We Are Try ing to Do;" G. A. Hurley, Vale, Or., "The Wealth of Central Oregon;" Miss Estelle Riddle, editor of the Ontario Optimist, "Women Boosters;" Joseph P. Fallen, Commissioner of Immigration for Idaho, "The Upbuilding of Idaho;" George W. Shellenburger, Boise, Idaho, "State Aided Railroads;" Colonel C. E. S. Wood, Portland. Or., "The Railroad Situation In Southern Idaho and Ore gon;" a member of the Portland Cham ber of Commerce, "The Railroad Situa tion from the Standpoint of Business Interests." Automobiles will be at the disposal of visitors, who will be shown about the city. The handsome new quarters of the Weiser Commercial Club will be used as headquarters during the stay of the visitors In the city. FRUIT PROSPECTS BRIGHT Newberg Cannery Prepares for Sum mer Operations. NEWBERG, Or., April 25. (Special.) Cherry, prune, pear and apple trees are loaded with bloom, and Nehalem Valley has never had a better prospect at this season of the year for a bumper crop of fruit than is in sight at the present time. Barring killing frosts and cold rains, which are always to be feared in the Spring, the fruit crop will be a big one. The Weber. Bussell Canning Company ls arranging to start the big cannery here with the opening of the berry and fruit season, and will be prepared to take care of all that will be offered. Klamath Falls to Clean Up. KLAMATH FALLS. Or.. April 25 (Special.) In preparation for the celebra tion of the completion of the railroad Klamath Falls will have a "clean up day." It is the desire to make the city as near a spotless town as possible and put it In first-class sanitary condition. With the extensive street improvements being planned for the year, which will probably Include the paving of Main street Its entire length-the town will be one of the most attractive spots on the Coast for Summer visitors. English pumps at Rosenthal's. i hES1Dces, j AMC0 John Honi7.f i U '"I k6' th East- sPda"y the outdoor clinic of St. vfBin VhPhJt ShJV1S- f have for years devoted much time and study de VE1S and h. iH? vSSt 8,uce88fl method of curing VARICOSE ed thl suDDlv ?Ji Tlh-Tt lnie".ded before the varicose veins approprlat S "rpp..y,,.a.n1 tne Patient Is at once restored to a condition of health Sivy's wifist V-rswriRWAfi. s-Ss1 let Za WEAK Every year more brains and intelligence ar rnnir.fl -gencies of the times. It makes no di" ference whJthVr U Is famlna- 5? X'" chandise you are living In an age when it ll neclssirv to blnf out thl best there is in you or get left at the post. The man who is spent ofvigor Sapped tijTiVf.. T..T5;" sPation and encumbered with the evil consequences of vicious habits, may as well be in a ward for the infirm in a few years unl.. he shows stamina enough to pull out of the trance. years unless .hiJ-u?:I??oineTito cnte.r. the contest for success in this life, commence bv Skilled Advice and Scientific Treatment The old rule of doctor. The man i r treating every :h Sfayou.yU is asking too much Oar arrangements vrfta patients Coast. Ko man is too poor to take Our experience and facilities are we mean by "referred practice" patients referred to us taV ithn ,,,rM; reierred practice In the city, lly recommend their friends to us T for similar treatment. tner8 wno Previously treated with us and voluntary Our treatments are mild oar results are qnlck. We aneeeaafnllv . Blood Poison, Varicose Veins. Catarrh. Skin Disease.. f!!t i,yw,-"i lrntt- ( Tronic and Nervous Bladder Ailments, Nervous Debility, and manT otber disease. r p,le" H "'. K street number on our envelopes or nackases. nere. o nualness Consultation and advice free. If you cannot call at off).. cured at home. Medicines 1.60 to S.50 per course. au at offlc. write for self - addressed blank many case. HOURS A. M. TO 8 P. M . SUNDAYS, 19 A. M. TO 12. ST. LOUIS Surgical DISPENSARY C"-7oThm Y FI1RMS SOLO Easterners Rapidly Filling Up Clackamas County. OTHERS . SEND INQUIRIES Oregon City Real Estate Dealers Re port Active Movement in Farm. Lands Xew Settlers Delighted Vith Climate of Oregon. OREGON CITY. Or.. April 25.-(Special.) During the past week considerable real estate of Clackamas County has changed hands, and it is assured that during the coming Summer many people will come here from the East looking for a new location. Several families have already reached Oregon City, and have purchased property. Farm land ls more In demand than city property. All of the real estate men of this city say that business' has been good during the past month. Many Inquiries are com ing in from people who are desirous of obtaining information concerning the cli mate, crops and soil. If the real estate men had on hand a supply of literature pertaining to Oregon City and Clackamas County, so as to be able to send it out upon request. It would be a great advan tage to . those inquiring. Schooley & Cadell, real estate men, re port the following sales during the past few days: The Jacob Harry place, con sisting of 25 acres and Including the stock and farm Implements, consideration being J2200; the Holcomb farm of 60 acres on the Holcomb road, consideration 3800, and the lvle property In Portland, for $2800. Other Important land deals will probably be closed within a. few days. DOCTOR ADVISED OPERATION Cured by LydiaE.Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Paw Paw, Mich." I suffered terri- ' Diyiromremaieills, including inflam mation and conges tion, for several years. My doctor said there was no hope for me hut an operation. I began taking iydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound, and TTki?! x can now UT I am rsi-sswjp-i wen woman." fi i.. i .ii.j.-. Emma Tin i ttj-u Another Operation Avoided. Chicago, 111. " I want women to know what that wonderful medicine, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Coml pound, has done for me.' Two of the best doctors in Chicago said I would die if I did not have an operation, and I never thought of seeing a well day again. I had a small tumor and female troubles so that I Buffered day and B,lgb; A- friend recommended tydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and It made me a lwell woman." Mrs Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound, made from roots and herbs has proved to be. the most successful remedy for curing the worst forms of female ills, including displacements, inflammation, fibroid tumors, irregul Urities, periodic pains, backache, bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges. w'nS5rTra? P'o-tion. It cost., but a trifle to trr it. and the result -ff.Hn Worth mimn to many suffering women. MAN MEN of Vitality stranger like a gentleman and watching him Ilk tak hlS WOrd Ior dvtlslng claims wunout sh are una pnroarhahlfi Inr . . - treatment "haie nothl tf " " " -" speel.1l unequaled 1 n Prt 1-H " ' fZv?? " r to, The Gladstone Real Estate Association has reported the following sales at Glad stone within the past week: Mr. Lamber son, a recent arrival from the Bast, has purchased a one-acre tract and has the lumber on the ground for a modern home. Mr. Williams, so delighted with the cli mate, decided to return to North Dakota and sell his property interests and bring his family to Oregon. He has purchased S 1-3 acres at Gladstone. Thomas Patter son, a recent arrival from Canada, has bought property here, and his family will arrive the first of the week. Among other deals that have just been closed are lots 4 and 5 of block 27, to W. R. Darn; four lots of the Rockwell place to C. H. Dauchey; two "lots of the Mc Guire place to Mr. Graves, who arrived here last week from Michigan. This deal was closed by the Freytag & Swafford Real Estate Company. Many buildings are to go up in Gladstone during the com T Ttt Ivil I! iOI I M Becoming a mother AVl t Jl 1 fCjf should be a source of joy ?r?r? FHHni ,S the ?n,y remedy which lieves women of the : great pain and danger of maternity; this hour which is dreaded as woman s severest trial is not only made painless, but all the daneer is avoided by its use. Those who use this remedy are nc Ion "erdSS! ent or gloomy; nervousness, nausea and other cT.stressing condSs are overcome, the svstem ismarV rMn 1 "KrnaiI.,ons "It is worth its weight in gold," says many who have used it. conUisinr ralnable Information of ia vkrest to all women, will be sent free. BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO. Atlanta. Ga. Lastimg Cures For Weak Mem Never was the old saying. "He who hesi tates Is lost' more aptly Illustrated than In the case of the man who suffers from tVKtK KKSS. VARICOSE VEINS, a (OSTRAtTKD DISORDER or CONTAtilOlS BLOOD 1MS KASE, and who neglects to have his ailment treated. I do not scatter my faculties, as does the ordinary physician, but I concentrate them on diseases and weaknesses peculiar to the male. Recently I have treated scores of stub born cases for some of the best men of Port land and vicinity, and not a failure nor an unpleasant result has been reported. What I have done for others I can do for you. Weakness' My cures of this disorder are permanent and lasting. No tonics that stimulate tem porarily, but thoroughly scientific treatment ior tne removal of conditions responsible for . . ... u specialist. the functional derangement. "Weakness" is merely a symptom of inflam mation, or congestion of the prostate gland, and under my own original local treatment the gland ls promptly reduced to its normal state and complete functional activity ls the lasting result VARICOSE VEINS. CONTRACTED DISOKDERS. PILES and SPECTFTf BLOOD POISON I TREAT AND NEVER FAIL TO EFFECT A rrRV CONSULTATION FREB-MT HONEST AND CANDID ADVICE COST'S YOU NOTHING. I cheerfully give you the very best opinion, guided by years of successful practice. Men out of town In trouble write If vou cannot call, as many cases yield readily to proper home treatment and OFFICE HOURS 9 A. M. TO 9 P. M. SUNDAYS, 10 TO 1 ONLY The DR. TAYLOR Co. 834H MORRISON STREET, CORNER SECOND STREET, PORTLAND, OR, HAND SAPOLIO , FOK TOILET AUD BATH It makes the toilet something to be njoye-d. It removes all stains and roundness, prevents prickly heat and chafing, and ' leaves the skis white, soft, healthy. In the bath it bring 'a glow and exhilaration which n leommon soap can equal, imparting :th vigor and life sensation of xo!l& Turkish bath. All OrooazB &4 IPrnggist VEINS Not a Dollar Need Be Paid Until Cured e a rogue won't vui-t howlng the proofs as advertised list om the yon. Diseases. Idney and address or ing Summer and several are under con-fnT"0?-. Rcsiden re In demand, this thriving suburb of Oregon City It ls probable that there will be a'great deal of building in Oregon City during the coming Summer, as desirable houses are eagerly sought for. and very few va cant houses can be found in the city Among the attractive homes that are to be erected will be those of C T Tooze on his property facing Main street and the river, on Fourteenth and Main streets Several of these are already spoken for Corbett & Co. have closed up several land deals within the past few days, and have several other important ones which they expect to close shortly. Among soma of those they have closed are the seven acre tract of Mr. Cummings, located at Canby, the purchaser being a Mr. St-ott. of Canada, the consideration being Jison' Thta ls considered to be excellent farming land. The Kelson farm, about one and r- Every mother feels a great dread of the pain and dan i 2er attendant nnrm fVi O O ost criti cal period of her r - " vjuy i DR. TAYLOR, The I.radlnc Specialist. Diseases of Men Private diseases are successfully treated and cured by me. Call and see me about your case It you want reliable treatment with prompt and per manent results. Con- -nfidentia, .Office houTsY sT to' 8 P. M. feundays 10 to 12. Call on or address A 1 I t Vn n aa n I A . j . DR. WALKER -vt First st tor. TaiuhiU, Portland, Or. vlted