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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1909)
12 x THE MORNING OREGONIAN, MONDAY, JOE 21, 19Q9. 1 ' - Phases of Industrial Growth in the Pacific Northwest wra WATER MEN WILL BIG TRACT Project Entailing Cost of $1, 000,000 to Reclaim 20,000 Acres. Mnd IS VERY PRODUCTIVE ttocal Capitalists Organize Company and Prepare to Begin Operations at Early Date "Water Will Be Held In Reservoir. ' AVEI9ER, Idaho. Juno 20. (Special.) A gigantic project Is now under eonstruc ttlon near here -which means the expendi ture of upward of $1,000,000, and when com. Mleted means more to the upbuilding of Hthe whole of Washington County and ln foreaslng its ' resources than any other project undertaken In years. And that Is rthe construction of the mammoth Crane XIreek reservoir, Irrigation and power proj ect, by the Crane Creek Irrigation, Land H& Power Company, which Is backed sole !ly by prominent local business men and 'citlBens, men who own and control other Marge interests in the county. This proj 'ect has been quietly under way for many months past, but only a short time ago were all arrangements completed .and work has actually begun, and will be 'completed as rapidly as possible. The plans of the company carry with them the irrigating of 30.000 acres of some xf the very beet land in Southern Idaho, 'U1 of which is directly tributary to Wei Jeer. About 13.000 acres of this Immense tract lie south of the "Weteer River and (will be the first to be placed under Irri gation, and it Is hoped to have water supplied In time for next season's crops. The remainder of these lands lie north of the Weiser River and Include all that Stistrlet extending from the old smelter kstte, ten miles east of town, to beyond Ithe Industrial Institute, northwest of (town, and will be supplied the following reason. The (have mammoth reservoir, which will storage capacity of 71.000 acre- ifeet of water, capable of supplying 20.000 'acres, will be constructed some distance Uiove the mouth of Crane Creek, about ;20 miles east of here. The big dam will ,ie 60 feet long on the bottom, 313 feet on the top and SSO feet thick. The reservoir will represent a lake about four and a half miles long, two miles wide, with an average depth of 23 feet. Besides supplying this vast acreage, the company plans to generate upward of 12. WO electric horsepower, which can be sup plied to all parts of this section. The land, which will be sold In small tracts, :will find eager buyers, and where the stately sagebrush now predominates will soon be transformed Into productive fields, fine orchards and happy homes. Those ; familiar with the soil declare that It is eiual and In many Instances superior to that of the famous Wenntchee- and Yak ima Valleys In Eastern Washington. The organization of the company was perfected recently and the following offi cers elected attest Its stability and the successful completion of the gigantic un dertaking: President and treasurer, B. D. Ford: vice-president, A. G. Butterfield; secretary. O. M. Harvey. Board of direc tors. A. O. Butterfield. B. M. Heigho, R. C. McKlnney. E. D. Ford, Dr. J. L Co nant, Jr. The stockholders constitute many of Washington County's leading business men and influential citizens. FEDERAL BUILDING STARTS Moscow to Have New Structure Be fore End of Summer. MOSCOW. Idaho.' June 20. (Special.) Postmaster R. Collins has received 30 large sheets of plans and 50 pages of specifications for the Federal building in this city. Bids must be filed with the mipervlfing architect in Washington. D. C. on or before June 30, 1909. The ap proximated cost of the building nroDer the supervising architect estimates to be tM.W. The specifications provide it mtist be completed on or before August 1, 1910. The building Is to be finished In sand stone. The floors are to be reinforced concrete and the corridors finished in concrete and tarrazzo. The plans provide quarters for the Postoffice business to be In the ground floor and basement, the Federal Courtroom. Judges' chambers and clerks' offices on the second floor, while , the third floor is devoted to offices for the Vnlted States Attorney, Marshal, trial ; end grand juries, prisoners, closets and other general purposes. ADVISORY BOARD NAMED ! Commercial Club Governors to Have Help in Spending "Boost" Fund ORKGON CITY. June 20. The Board i of Governors of the Oregon City Commer fotal Club has appointed an advisory com 'mlttee of ten members from among the contributors to the advertising fund sub- scribed to boost Clackamas County. This I committee will work In connection with : the members of the publicity committee of the commercial Club. It Is the Intention In making the an 'To!ntments that the publicity committee shall seek the opinion and advice of the 1 advisory committee before takine anv sc ' tlon which would involve the expenditure of any considerable sum of money. The : following committee was named: Charles H. Caufleld. W. A. Huntley, K. A. Sam 1 mer. Franklin T. Griffith, Joseph K. Hedges. Duane C. Ely. Grant B. Dimick, 1 Harvey E. Cross. William Andresen, James I. Campbell. BOG IRON FOUND AT DOTY Valuable Deposit Discovered Miles West of Chehalis. OHKHAL1S, Wash.. June 30. (Special A valuable deposit of bog Iron ore has Teen discovered near Doty. 18 miles west or cnenans. on the line of the logcln road of the Doty dumber & Shingle Com pany. A quantity of the ore has been asstiyed and the test shows it contains 6.j per cent Iron. The cropnings thu far have been traced for a distance of 600 leet. I.. A. Doty, president of the com jrit. Is having the discovery fully lnves i titrated. Bog iron ha previously been re. , poriea in ljewis tiounty. In the Narwvin , neighborhood, and also near Little Falls, I w miner, near tne oia Ainsue station. r - " -.vf w-,.; ...x.,.. in . , t n, hit 1 1 1 ' i - - , LAND IS RECLAIMED Overflow Area at Clatskanie to Be Made Tillable. BIG DREDGES ARE AT WORK By System of Levees and Drainage 12,000 Acres of Fertile River Bottom Lands Will Be Re claimed for Cultivation. CLATSKANIE Or., June 20. (Special.) The Columbia Agricultural Comna n v with R. B. Maeruder as manaerer which opened negotiations for the purchase of a large tract of overflow or swamp land muuiary xo tnis place, about 15 months ago. has obtained title to about 12.000 acres in one body, and work of reclaim ing tne vast tract by a system of levees and drainage systems has begun in ear nest, a small tract of about 30 acres, one mile below town, being the base of opera tions at present. An average of 15 an acre was paid for the land, the greater portion being purchased from a large col ony of Russian Finns, who have moved to higher land. The first of a fleet of dredges of gaso line power, to be put in commission, is now at work, with the latest type of ma chinery, and the barge Is so constructed as to be adaptable for working on land or water. About 1600 cubic yards of earth are removed in a day, but three shifts are to begin work Immediately, running day and night. Another long-boom clamshell dredger. of the latest oil-burning steam type, of about 3509 cubic yards' capacity, will be put in commission in about two months. the machinery of which has arrived and is now being installed. This machine will have a boom 125 feet long, a single stick 18 inches square. The bucket will be of about four yards' capacity. This dredge will follow up the smaller one now in op eration, working where channels have al ready been cut through the land. The reclamations will be divided into lote of from 300 to 6000 acres each, and when completed the company will subdi vide the land into smaller tracts, with houses constructed and all Improvements ready for occupancy by renters or lessees. The advent of this company, which is composed of Western capitalists, as far as known, will mark a new era for Clats kanie and will prove to be a constructive force in the development of the surround ing country and give an Impetus to agri culture by the introduction of new and scientific farming methods. TOWN AND COUNTRY ACTIVE Forest Grove's Schoolhouse Being Rushed, as Is New Ditch. FORKST GROVE. Or.. June 20. (Spe cial.) Work on the new $11,000 school house has started and is to be pushed to completion with due dispatch so the building may be completed for the Fall term. The building will have six rooms, three of which are to be finished immed iately. Work on the ditching for the new nine mile pipeline for the new water system is progressing and about two miles are already completed. In order that all the work may be done before the rainy sea son, a large gang is to be placed on part of the work under the supervision of Ed. Dixon. The approximate cost of the water system is $50,000 though bonds to the amount of $70,000 were voted by the taxpayers to be spent on the project. The water is taken from Clearwater Creek, in the Soda Springs neighborhood. Banks Gets New Mill. . FORKST GROVE. Or.. June 30. Spe- cial.) The town of Banks, seven miles north of this place, is to have a new saw mill with a 50.000 feet capacity and rigged up with modern appliances for handling logs. The new mill will be op erated by the Banks Lumber & Manu facturlng Company, which has been in corporated with a capitalization of $30. 000. J. R. Stephenson. W. E. Davies and E. F. Willis are the incorporators and the principal office of the company will be at Banks. Some of the members of the new company are now interested In the old Davies Bros.' sawmill, two miles northwest of Banks, which they w-ill con tinue to operate until the new mill Is ready. STEAM THRESHER PASSING Combined Harvester Is Favorite With Idaho Farmers. LEWISTON. Idaho. June 3a (Special.) xne narvest operations of the Inland Em. SWAMP LANDS BEING RECLAIMED NEAR CLATSKANIE. jc; rrr , FOU KK-SHUVEL IN ACTION. pire have been practically revolutionized by the advent of the combined machines, and within the next few years the steam thresher, with its small army'ol opera tives, will have passed into history. In the Lewiston country there are no less than 75 of the combined machines ready for the coming harvest, which will com mence next month. The machines have a capacity of from 30 to 75 acres per day and are claimed not only to harvest the crop at less than one-half the cost of the old-time Jieader and threshing outfit, but also to save a larger per cent of the grain. The largest combined machines have a 36-foot cutting board, with threshing ma chinery in proportion, and are drawn by traction engines, with a separate engine Installed on the front of the machine to operate the equipment. These machines are supposed to harvest approximately 100 acres per day, but the season's aver age has been about 75 acres. Four men operate the engine and the machine, which, with a water and fuel-hauler, con stitute the entire force necessary to cut and thresh this acreage daily. RICH STRIKE III FIERCE RTJSH IS ON TO PIONEER MIN ING CAMP. Free Gold Ore Encountered at Depth of 55 7 Feet In Wild Rose Ledge and Stampede Is On. LEWISTON, Idaho, June 20 fSneo.ial The cutting of the Wild Rose ledge of iree goia ore at a depth of 557 feet in the Pierce City district promises to bring about a stampede not surpassed since the palmy placer days of the Pierce camp when men with rockers took from t,L ground hundreds of dollars a day. Fol- .owiiib me early days of placer mining the camp passed through a lethargic period of several years, and it was only the discovery of rich free gold-bearing ouartz that again brought the attention tne mining worm to the pioneer gold v--" 1 ' me x-acinc IMOrtnwest. Fr the past 15 .years, murt, i have been engaged in the development of nuiii properties, Dut until the past few years the work has largely been con fined to the surface. The development for ucpm was commenced two years ago on the Wild Rose mine by the Ozark Mining Company, and. after driving 1280 feet through solid formation where timbering .o uinreucssHrj, me company has tapped the free-milling stringers leading to the main lead, that will be cut within th next 160 feet. The ore shows greater val ues man at tne surrace openings, and the strike has filled the hills with prospec tors seeking new quartz locations. Indi cations point to a great rush for the camp before the close of the present season v hub tne quartz miners have been en gaged in driving their tunnels Into the mountain sides in search of the rich ledges, the modern methods nf ni, mining has made possible the handling of piacer oars tnat were above the water when only the rocker and sluice boxes were used in extracting h i j ,ftom the gravel. The Idaho Company two jto.ie5 o insiauen a aredge with a ca pacity of 1000 yards a day. and with a pumping system by which the water was elevated from the creek to the dredge for operation, the results have been that the company has been cleaning up an average of $8000 a month, with a force of five men, and the work on a second dredge with a capacity of 2000 yards, has been commenced. Four carloads of the necessary machin ery are now delivered at the railroad ship ping point, and will be transported to the camp within the next few weeks The work of constructing the dredgeboat has begun, and it Is expected to have the new equipment in operation before the close of the present season. It is estimated that 1500 men are now employed on the various properties of the Pierce camp, and the old pioneers of the district expect to see this number swelled to 6000 within the next few months. HILL BUILDS MODEL ROAD Highway From Maryland to Rail road Will Form Easy Grade. GOLDEXDALE, Wash.. June 20. (Spe cial.) Under the dlrecUon of Samuel Hill owner of the new town of Maryland and president of the Washington Good Roads Association, a mile of road will be built from the Hill property to the station on the Korth Bank road. The station will be moved about half a mile east of Its present location and the name changed from Columbus to Maryland. While the drop from the townsite to the railroad Is considerable, yet the road will be so built that the grade will be easy. This mile of especially constructed high way will probably not be excelled by any in this state. "A FOOL'S BARGAXN." An article entitled "A Fool's Bar gain, in June 19 Collier's, deals wifh the significance of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition. The "fool" in Ques tion was William H. Seward. ss, ..ii aaajSaa. ROAD IS EXTENDED Mount Hood Line Will Tap Rich Fruit Section. GO TO CENTRAL OREGON? Report Current That David Eccles Will Build Into Interior of State, Connecting With Sumpter Val ley In Eastern Oregon. HOOD RIVER, Or.. June 20. (Special.) The work of constructing the grade for the extension of the Mount Hood Railroad In the upper .valley is progressing rapidly and It ie stated by President Eccles and Superintendent Early that they expect to 11 io running on it in time to bring down the apple crop this Fall. About half of the six miles is already graded and the right of way all cleared. Two stations will be located along the new part of the line, one at the base line where the extension terminates, and the other about three miles from Dee. It is still rumored that the road is to form part of an extension of the Sumpter Valley road into Central Oregon, and Da vid Eccles, the Salt Lake capitalist and head of the Oregon Lumber Company who Is behind both projects, was here this week and went' over the new line. At present Mr. Eccles is noncommittal on the subject. The extension of the road in-the upper valley is rushing development . in fruit land there, and over 300 acres will be set to orchards this year. Thirty acres have already been set to strawberries this Spring, and it is stated that 40 additional acres will be set to berries -this Fall. Large tracts have been taken up there by Eastern men, who are clearing, planting and erecting fine homes. With the com pletion of the extension the Mount Hood Railroad will come under the jurisdiction of the State Railroad Commission, as it will then be over 20 miles in length Surprising Peach Crop Reported. NORTH YAKIMA. Wash., June 20. (Special.) E. F. Perry, who has a large peach orchard at Parker Heights, some distance down the Valley, says he will lTTTTvrrT?99 A ; J . , , , , uancr niciaeni 10 tne oraeai maices ns anticipation one of misery. Mother's Friend is the only remedy which relieves 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 danger is avoided by its use. Those who use this remedy are no longer despond ent or gloomy; nervousness, nausea and other distressing conditions are overcome, the system is made ready for the coming event, and the serious accidents so common to the critical hour are obviated by the gold," says many who have USpH it $1.00 per bottle -at lldVCUSCUll. drag stores. Book containing valuable information of in ret to all women, will be sent free. BEAD FIELD REGULATOR CO. Atlanta, Ga. Let Kodol Digest What You Eat Then yoi can Eat what you like," for Kodol will do exactly vhat your stomach does when it is well. Tou once could eat anything you wanted, and your stomach would digest It. But now there are some things which your stomach won't digest. Tour stomach absolutely refuses to ac commodate you when you eat certain food so you have been forced by your stomach to eat food which you digested and pass up those delicacies that you would have really enjoyed. - There is a way now to eat any thing you like. If you will-let Kodol digest It. Kodol-will do this. too. It won't talk back -or command, but will go right 'ahead with its work and digest all the food you eat. Kodol will let you eat anything you like. - -' Tou will not have - that heart-burn AFTER DOCTORS FAILED LydiaELPinkham's Vegeta ble Compound Cured Her. Willimantic, Conn. "For five years I Buffered untold agony from female troubles, causing backache, irregulari ties, dizziness and. nervous prostra tion. It was impossible for me to walk upstairs without stopping on, the way. I tried three differ ent doctors and each told me some thing different I received no benefit from any of them,, Vint . -n c.r -.i:.-" -iL!" :T i fer more. The last 1 uuiiwi Dam iiuiu. Ing would restore my health. I began taking l,ydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to see what it would do, and I am restored to my natural health." Mrs. Etta Dokovan, Box 299, Willimantic, Conn. The success of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots ana herbs, is unparalleled. It may be used with perfect confidence by women who suffer from displacements, inflam mation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, ir regularities, periodic pains, backache, bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indi gestion, dizziness, or nervous prostra tion. ' For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham's "Vegetable Compound has been the standard remedy for female ills, and suffering women owe it to themselves to at least give this medicine a trial. Proof is abundant that it has cured thousands of othnrs, and why should it not euro -- have a good crop of peaches on his two-year-old trees this year. In addition to the fact that two-year-old trees very sel dom bear, it is especially surprising that they should have a crop this year, when there is an almost total failure of peaches in Washington on all the older trees. Mr. Perry intends to use most of the peaches he will raise this year for exhi bition purposes at the Yakima building at the A.-Y.-P. Exposition. MONEY MADEJN BERRIES Ridgefield Farmers Declare Their Fruit Is Superior. RIDGEFIELD, Wash., June 20. (Spe cial.) When it comes to producing record-breaking strawberries, this 'lo cality takes second money to no other section in the Paoific Northwest. A Ridgefield horticulturist yesterday brought to this city specimens of the strawberry family that required only five and a half berries, to measure a foot when arranged in a row. In a field belonging to Mr. Lyons there was picked from one acre in a day $54 worth of strawberries and the, yield was hardly touched. On one plant alone there were 159 berries in differ ent stages of maturity. There are a number of strawberry patches in this locality that pay at the rate of $500 an acre. For Instance, one family, consisting of father and three children, sold from a patch 70x90 feet $78 worth of strawberries, besides canning and eating all they wished. This figures over $540 per acre. Ber ries are marketed here ten days earlier than they are in Hood River. One grower from a scant acre will sell this- year $500 worth of berries. Every night train for Seattle carries a carload of Ridgefield berries. More interest is being shown in strawberry culture in and around Ridgefield than has ever been shown in agriculture. Ridgefield people claim their soil will produce and is producing the best strawberries in the world. GOOD PRICE OBTAINED Xear Forest Grove 30 Acres House Sell for $12,000. and FOREST GROVE, Or.. June 20. (Sn cial.) The old I. A. Macrum property. just outsioe tne city limits. Including Every mother feels a great dread of the pain and dan ger attendant upon the most critical period of her life. Becoming a mother should be a source of joy to all hut the snfFerino- onH .. . . e which is so annoying at times, if you will lot Kiodol digest your food a while. You don't have to use Kodol long only for a little while just long enough for your stomach to rest a little. It Igets tired sometimes, too Just the same aa anybody or part of your body that works. Kodol will do the same work as the stomach, when it is well and strong. Every tablespoonf ul will digest 2 "4 pounds of food. ' Our nnorontpp Get a dollar "ii uuaraniee bottieof Kodoi. If you are not benefited the druggist will at once return your money. ' Don't hesitate; any druggist will sell you Kodol on these terms. The dollar bot tle contains 2 times as much aa the BOc bottle. Kodol is prepared in the laboratories of E. C. te Witt & Co.. Chicago. . ' TFBILEKL1) r 4r - DISEASES - 4 1 A TOtentlftl iDflnanM Im V. lff of any Individual la health: with out good health every ambition must wait and every sucoeaa must be postponed. The wise man who iulps himself for any future en terprise always looks to the phys ical side of life as well as the financial or Industrial side. He Knows that Chough he possessed tne. wisdom of Solomon , and the rold of a nation he would be bar. ren -of results without a txsalty mind and body. A clear Intellect free from worry and despondency is one of the most Important elements of success. If at times you are un abto to sleep soundly no matter how comfortable the bed. specks before the eyes. bad dreams, gloomy forebodings. or If tlve nervous system Is completely or partially exhausted from belns; overtaxed at some time in the' past, remember that these are nature's warnings of an ultimate breakdown that la sure to come if ytm do not protect yourself before It Is too late. These Danger Signals By nature are meant to be taken advantage of don't Imagine that because you have been foolish and Indiscreet at some time in the past that you are In a class alone and thus sacrlfloe valuable time on account of false modesty. Don t add criminal neglect to pas; mistakes and thus add fuel to the name. shoe. Ik mn the Mm" " a "boemaker would mend a pair of forbears Sve been VJ ""If, enouBh ,5 succeed because my whole time and study perlenc Thave branch i ne .Iln ot '"oueht. and my knowledge and ex found it m point of proficiency that the averag doctor haa round It impossible to reach in tha general practice of medicine and aurgery. There are Just, tour diseases that wreck men: BLOOD POISON VITAL WEAKNESS VARICOSE VEINS and the aftermath of INFECTIOUS DISORDERS .t. T.H,-.ifire .tnln in the Ui ot men that MAIM, CRIPPLE AND KILL, t. , ..,L Jn5 J"?.1- lvs them more power than they would have otherwise ,S "d. indifference of the Indifference of the individual. Neglect .v, mlnd' th8 mother of poverty, and the root of all evil. Habitual Sffi "?.ow" ?.L.5nl3 , weak hd ' faint heart- If you Intend to suc ceed in life get "The Today Habit" of doing your duty. m u. .f1 wno.,..,from natural conditions, must know that they are near the last mile-stone, still have the mad gleam of a bicycle rider in their eye. peering !L T straining every nerve In an effort to make a few more dollar.. Othe" . . Prime of life, for fear of losing a dollar, will not stop to correct a physical wrong or rest their weary brain. Are the lives of such men to be n W1.T. ; they are mentally wrong. The man who enjoys life Is tlve man W.-,v,B 1 digestion and good health, who thinks no more of a dollar than It la worth. He s eeps aa soundly as a baby, and gets-up in the morning refreshed, rie ckn smell a meal cooking for a block, and It sharpens his appetite. Ha Knows he can not be up late nights abusing his stomach and be fit for busi ness tne next day. If you are not observing nature's lawa. It Is time to com ?D,?C" . . yu "Poet to hold your own In the keen competition of life, you must get in full possession of your faculties. THE FOUNDATION OF SUCCESS in business and the most desirable of mil physical attainments la health. The capabilities and powers possessed by any man. or the brightest spirit with its wonderful possibilities, must depend upon health. Intellectuality, knowledge and ambition can do nothing without It, and health is. therefo.e. of the most commanding interest and Importance. I want every man who feels that he Is not up to the proper standard of health to come to my office and have a confidential heart-to-heart talk with me. Thla will cost you absolutely nothing and vou do not r 1 .-. vnnrtf un ST. LOOK "SBfeP DISPENSARY CORKER SECOND AND YAMHILL STREETS, PORTLAND, OREGON. handsome residence -which cost the- ori ginal ownar about $12,000 and 30 acres, has been purchased by Felix Verhoven and W. Schultz. both of this city. The place was recently bought by a Mr. For dyce, tout because of Illness he is obliged to dispose of It. It Is understood that one acre of ground will be eold with the residence and the remainder of the prop erty will be cut up Into lots and placed on the market immediately. Children's Dresses Below Cost. This week at the Needlecraft Shop, 147 Sixth street. MEN'S AILM CD BY MY SPECIAL AND DIRECT TREATMENT Note the announcements of all other spe cialists and medical institutes and you will see how little they say about their treatment for Mes's Weaknesses and how lightly they pass over the subject. Yet one man out of every four has a vital weakneaa which con stantly drains his power, and that man must iTOiiuiiiaiiy lorce nimseir along in nis every day path of living. There is no real joy or happiness that is not marred by his ever-present feeling that he is not as other men. Now to such men I offer hope. I not only hold out a helping hand to lift them up. but I urge them earnestly to accept my aid. I can gain their confidence from the first examination by locating the seat of their trouble ex actly, and can always entirely convince them of the logical effect of i'iy treatment when I explain its action. I never charge for this ex amination or consultation. Weakness" Means Just This : That there Is some functional derangement, the direct result of in flammation, enlargement or excessive sensitiveness of the prostate erlund the nerve center of the reproductive parts) brought on by early dissipation or resulting from one improperly treated contracted dis order. This condition cannot possibly be removed by internal medicines, and any tonic system of treatment that stimulates the activity of the function can but result in aggravating the real ailment. This is a scientific truth I have ascertained after a careful and scientific study and upon which my own original system of treatment is based. I em ploy neither tonics, stimulants nor electric belts. I treat by local direct methods exclusively, and my success in curing even those cases that others have failed to temporarily relieve with their tonics is conclusive evidence that my method is the only possible means of a complete, radi cal and permanent cure A Guarantee Worth Something I do not care what your experience has been with other treatments, what guarantees you have, and what promises were unfulfilled in the past, as unsuccessful, unscientific treatments and unreliable concerns are In no way a reflection upon honest, trustworthy business methods lived up to by me for years. I have an established reputation, and my guarantee means that my patients are Indisputably insured of suc cess in their case. There is all the difference in the world between a guarantee of this kind and the promise of those mushroom con cerns which are continually failing in business. I repeat my straight forward, square proposition to wait for my fee until the cure is ef fected. You Can Pay When Cured I aiso treat and cure promptly and thoroughly, specific blood poison, spermatorrhoea, varicose veins, contracted disorders,. kidney and bladder troubles, and all reflex ailments. V EXAMINATION FREE I offer not only FREE consultation and advice, but of every case that comes to me I will make a careful examination and diagnosis with . out charge. No ailing man should neglect this opportunity to get expert opinion about his trouble. , '. If you cannot call, write for Diagnosis Chart. My offices are open all day from 9 A. M. to 9 P. M-, and Sundays from 10 to 1. The DR. TAYLOR Co. 3344 MORRISON STREET, CORNER SECOND. PORTLAND, OREGON. NOT A DOLLAR NEED Bli PAID UNTIL CURED der tne iiKntest oDiigatlon to taloe treatment from me by so doing any more than you would be expected to buy a suit of clothes that might not suit you simply because you had asked the price. I will cheerfully give you any information concerning your case free of cost and if your condition Is one that I consider curable I will make price and terms that will unquestionably be perfectly satisfactory to you. My little booklet advertised tn the lower left-hand corner contains valu able points that you ought to know, and If you can't call, write for it. I will mall It under plain cover free from public observation. Consultation and advice always free whether at office or by mail. Medicines from J1.60 to $6.50 per course; within any man's reach. If you cannot call, write for self-examination blank. Ho 8 A. M. to I P. M. Sunday, to 12. Women a Specialty The well-known S. "K. Chan Chinese Medicine Company, with wonderful herbs and roots, has cured many suffer ers when all other remedies have failed. Sure cure female, rhrfinlf. nrtvnt A ta sis2 n r lIRS S JT V.UiU ousness. blood poison. rheuma mo.g. a.uiiAR tlgm asthmai throat. lung troubles, consumption. stomach, bladder, kidney and diseases of aJl kinds. Remedies harmless. No operation. Honest treatment. Examination for ladies bv Mrs. S- K.. Chan. THE CHINESE MEDICINE CO., 22614 Morrison St., bet. first and Second. DR. TAYLOR, The Lend in ft Specialist. ENTS -4