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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 6, 1909)
12 v . THE MORNING- OltEGONTAy, MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1909. Phases of KLAMATH IS GOOD Oregon Trunk Seeks Timber of That County. KLAMATH FALLS TERMINUS People There Believe Their City Will Be Road's End Until Such Time as Hill Is Ready to Push His I,ine on to San Francisco. KLAMAlrf FALLS, Or.. Dec. 6. (Special.) There Is no longer any doubt that the objective point of the Hill railroad through the reschutes country Is the srreat soft pine timber region of Klamath County, and that Klamath Falls is to be the terminus until such time as the road is pushed on to San Francisco. Two crews of en gineers have been engaged in the northern part of this county, one mak ing a preliminary survey of the entire route to the east side of Upper Klamath Lake and going out over the Southern Pacific from here, and repre senting that the party was a band of timber cruisers driven out of the woods by the heavy snows of the past few weeks. Beginning nearly four years ago with the acquisition of the Klamath Lake Railroad, extending from Thrall to Pokegama, and some 30,000 acres of timber land that had been brought into the holdings of that company by ervey Lindley, the Weyerhaeuser Timber Company has bought other holdings of the Jenny Creek plateau and throughput the choicest belts of the great Klamath foreBts until the holdings of the big syndicate now 'ap proximate 159,000 acres. This repre sents the investment of several mil lions of capital by this one company. Shevlin & Carpenter, .heavy operat ors, have recently made extensive pur chases. The reschutes Lumber Com pany, formed by Alpena, Mich., men; the Tockey Lumber Company of Min neapolis; the Hixon Lumber Company, S. S. Johnson and G. H. Gilchrist have secured holdings aggregating about 200,000 acres. Hill Interests Break Ice. The coming of these timbermen to this section of Oregon Is recognized by those in touch with the facts as the first advance of Hill Interests into this territory. Confident of the speedy revival of business following the dis turbance in the Autumn of 1907, these associated timbermen, all friendly and In close touch with the Hill railroad Interests, sought to take advantage of the existing depressed condition of the lumber market and demand for timber, thereby driving many good bargains in taking over holdings of the best of yellow pine timber. It seems "this was done with an understanding that the Hill roads would build a branch as soon as necessary to bid for the traf fic to its natural outlet in markets of the Middle West and Mississippi Valley States. The market demand is rapidly being stimulated In the country east of the Rocky Mountains by bumper crops of wheat and corn and the roads will make an effort to meet the neces sities of te occasion with rates that will place the lumber in that terri tory. It is recalled by a man well in formed on the railroad situation that the first advent of Hill emissaries to prepare the way for building the North Bank road into Portland was the selec tion of the site for a great sawmill on the Peninsula near St. Jtfhn by the Weyerhaueser Timber Company, which It afterwards developed was done in the interest of the railroad. There fore, it is pointed out, the entrance of the greatest timber combination in the country into the lumber industry of this section means that It is the fore runner of the Hill railroad, which will claim a large share of the traffic that will be developed by the plants of the timbermen. Small Road Bought First. The first railroad mileage in Califor nia and in Oregon south of Portland, virtually owned by the Hill railroads, was tne little Klamath Lake road, for the. Weyerhaeuser Company acquired It with tne idea of eventually tearing up the track and relaying the rails to carry the logs from the Jenny Creek plateau to the shore of Upper Klamath Lake unless it could in some way be utilized- as a link in a line that would better , serve the purposes of the big timber syndicate or the Great North ern and its asociated lines. The like lihood of its being utilized as a link is small, for it has heavy gradients, sharp curves and a trackage extend ing only about 25 miles. But It Is not alone lumber that the new road will haul out of Klamath County. During September cereal ex perts employed by he rxill lines made an exhaustive examination of the up per portion of Klamath County as far east as Silver Lake and Paisley into Lake County, and throughout the Deschutes district, to report upon the adaptability of that section, and also of the Klamath Indian Reservation to wheat growing. The report -was of the most favorable character, one of the experts declaring that no section of Eastern Washington has any advantage over this portion of Oregon as a wheat producing country. Much Grain to Ship. Klamath County wheat has long been known for its high milling quality, but until this year lack of transportation prevented its shipment to outside mills, though it was sought for blending pur poses. This year the crop harvested was the largest in the history of the agricultural development of the basin, and as a result a good many carloads have been shipped, California millers drawing on this source of supply. Three local - mills, at Klamath Palls, Merrill and Bonanza, are steadily grinding and receiving their full com plement of the crop, but there is more than may be required for local con sumption during the coming year, and this surplus will be quickly absorbed by the mills of. the Southern Pacific lines in California and Oregon. Each succeeding year will record largely increased production of cereal crops in this county, for the Irrigation system is being pushed to completion and will add many thousands of acres to the producing areas for the seasons of 1910 and 1911. That means more tonnage for the railroads and new wealth for Oregon. Frost May Get Potatoes. WOODLAND, Wash., Dec. 6. (Special.) After two days of cold weather, ice having frozen to a thickness of one and a half tnohes last night, the weather Industrial . M'MINNVILLE, IMBUED WITH BOOST SPIRIT, PLANS COZY CORNER OF MM INKVILXB COMMERCIAL CLUB RECENTLY l-'CRNrSHUD EY ACTIVE ORGANI . ZATION. M'MINNVILLE, Or., Dec 5. (Special.) Tbia city is making preparations to cultivate the boost spirit ef fectively next year. A soliciting committee has secured pledges from the business men of , the city suffi cient to Insure a great amount of publicity work proposed to be done in the name of the Commercial Club. The local Development League, which formerly had charge of the publicity funds, will merge with the Com mercial Club. It is a social organization formed nine years ago and still retains a flourishing membership. The publicity bureau of the Commercial Club has secured a suite of rooms adjacent to those of the so cial organization. moderated a trifle this morning. A stiff wind sprang up about noon and snow began falling. Many farmers have not harvested their potatoes and stand to lose heavily on account of the freeze-up. - GRAIN ACREAGE IS SMALL Bad Weather Hinders Farmers in J French Prafrie.- GERVAIS, Or., Dec 6. (Special.) Not over one-quarter of the acreage usually sown to Winter wheat In . this vicinity has been plowed, and of this not all has been seeded. Most of the acreage is in cheat hay and little Pall wheat is sown. Last year at this time there was an unusually large acreage of Fall grain in and as a result the harvest , was the largest In many years. There was also a large acreage and yield of cheat hay which will not be grown and harvested the coming year. The weather this sea son did not permit farmers to sow their grain. If the weather will permit, there will be an unusually large acreage -of Spring grain sown which can be utilized for hay in lieu of cheat and will turn off fairly good crops, although Fall-sown grain thrives best in the French Prairie section. Baker City May Back New Mill. BAKER CITT, Or., Dec. 6. (Special.) C. B. Stout and W. W. Stevens, owners of the flouring mill which was consumed by fire three weeks ago, just after it had been completed, announced today that they were ready to rebuild the mill If a certain amount of etock could be sold to local people. Without doubt this can be done, as the community In general is loyal and enthusiastic for a mill. O. R. & 3f. Gives Picture Show. r HOOD RIVER, Or.. Dec. 5. (Special.) Under the auspices of the O. R. N.. mem bers of the Hood River Commercial Club and their families were entertained by a lecture and moving picture show at the Opera House last night. The subjects were the Columbia River and Willamette Valley and 'California- Snake River Canyon Gets Smelter. BAKER CITY, Or., Dec. 5. (Special.) By the closing of a deal on the "Arkan saw" mine, in the Seven Devils country, which has Just been completed, a local mining company asserts that the ques tion of the "erection of a smelter in the Snake River Canyon is settled. FORTY-FIVE POTATOES FILL A SACK. '. 1 ' ' : if SAMPLE OF TUBERS RAISED AT MYRTLE POINT. , MYRTLE POINT, Or., Dec. 5. (Special.) Forty-five potatoes grown by Folsom & Bros, here made a sack full, and the weight thereof was HO pounds. A great part o the potatoes raised In' the same field from which these came were nearly as large. Growth in WESTON DAM IMMEHSE WAIil 'WTH. BE 1100 FEET LOXG AND C 1 0 FEET HIGH. Project Will Cost $250,000 and Will Furnish Water for 24, OOO -Acres. WESTON, Or., Dec 5. (Special.) Maps of the reservoir site and plans of the dam for the proposed Weston irriga tion project have just been filed with the Secretary of State. Maps, of the high lines and laterals were filed several weeks ago. The project as planned is a stupendous one. The huge dam will be no less than 1000 feet wide at its base, and will ex tend across the canyon for 1100 feet. Its concrete core will be 210 feet high, four feet wide at the . bottom and 18 Inches at the top. The dam will haye such a gen tle slope both above and below the core that teams may be driven at will over its entire surface. It will create a reser voir extending three miles back into the mountains, and containing 15,000 acre feet of water. Two million cubic yards of earth and rock will be required for the fill, and the estimated cost of the reser voir alone Is $250,000. The extreme width of the dam In proportion to its height Is specified by Government regulations, and renders breakage Impossible. A natural site has been selected for the dam a short distance above Rocky Ford, on Pine Creek, about three miles above Weston. Three sites offered almost equal advantages, but the engineers finally de cided upon this location because of bet ter opportunities for securing earth and gravel. High lines will leave the canal on either side of Pine Creek, each of them about four miles long. Laterals will con vey the water many miles further, one of them extending to the town of Athena, which will profit equally with Weston by the project. It Is estimated that 24,000 acres of extremely fertile land can be Irrigated. Most of this is now valued at $100 an acre, and its Increase In value will reach Into the millions. H. P. Marble, of North Takima, Wash., Is the engineer In charge of the project, and confidently asserts Its entire feasi bility. Mr. Marble has had much to do with Irrigation projects,, and Is now su perintending the Furnish dam in the west end of the county. Local promoters are sir 5 I the Pacific TO ADVERTISE. 4 bearing the preliminary expense. Daily measurements are being taken of the flow of water In Pine Creek, which is now a good-sized stream, and reaches torrential proportions during the Spring floods. Farmers are giving the enterprise cor dial support, and are. expected to enter into contracts to take the water when available. INDIANA MAN LIKES OREGON He Thinks the State Will Stand Ex pansion for the Next 2 5 Years. LOGANSPOET, Ind.. Banks of the Wabash. Dec, 2. (To the Editor.) I have been reading in a recent issue of The Oregonian regarding a man from Polk County, Oregon, who is afraid that the State of Oregon is going to be over boomed. Just put that man in a bottle and cork up the latter tightly. I visited Oregon in 1886 and again in 1909, spending one week at Medford, Or., with my friend, Jesse Enyart, formerly from Logansport, Ind., and also one week with my cousins, David Crelghton. 920 East Everett street, Portland, and Samuel Creighton, of The Dalles, Or. I must say that If I were not a man over 67 years of age, Oregon would have me for a solid citizen in less than 30 days. I was surprised last Fall, while on my visit to Oregon, to see the strides that it had made in such a short time. I would not believe the stories told me by the Creightons until I had seen things with my own eyes. I am convinced that Medford, In the Rogue River Valley, as well as my friend, Jesse Enyart, now at Medford, have bright futures before them, espe cially in pear orchards; also The Dalles and Hood River County. Think of the undeveloped Central Oregon, and then think of any one fearing the overboom ing of the great State of Oregon. I saw land sell in 1886 at The Dalles for $2.50 per acre, and now this same land sells for $100 per acre. This makes me tell the young Hoosiers to take Horace Greeley's advice: "Go West, young man"; go to Oregon. I know of several Hoosiers who are preparing to leave Hoosierdom next Spring to help fill up Oregon. I have a brother who left Portland in 1868, and he almost sheds tears every time he thinks of Oregon. He is now closing out his business of farming and is preparing to take the Creeley cure at the age of almost 70 years. Oregon will stand booming for the next 25 years. I. N. CRAWFORD. THROUGH SLEEPERS PLAN Portland-Lewlston Service Possible by Joint Operation. LBWISTON. Idaho, Dec. 5. (Special.) Through Pullman sleeper service will be established between Portland and Tjewiston over the O. R. & N. and the Camas Prairie Railway, beginning tomorrow evening, the running time being 14 hours. This is the result of the Joint operation of the O. R. & N. line between Lewiston and Riparla and the Lewiston-Grangeville branch of the Northern Pacific. Under the new plan of operation, all of the coast travel arising on the Grangeville branch, as well as the Clearwater line and the Palouse branch as far north as Moscow, will be di verted through Lewiston and down the river. Prior to the Joint operation, the Lew-Iston-Riparia line was dependent upon Lewiston for its passenger traffic, and the travel was not sufficient to warrant the maintenance of a first-class service. F'rultgrowers, gardeners and poultry men will seek a market In Portland for their products. In order to accom modate this traffic, the O. R. & N. will inaugurate a through refrigerator service on Tuesdays and Thursdays, and a special livestock train service will be effected. 5 ACRES SELL FOR $2500 Cliffs Takes on Spurt, Many Realty Deals Being Made. CLIFFS, Wash., Dec. 5. (Special.) T. L. Crum, one of the oldest residents of Cliffs, has disposed of one of his five acre tracts half a mile from town, con taining an assortment of young fruit trees, to Fred Tucker, a former resident of California, for J2500. Three of the va cant ten-acre tracts a mile from town were sold last week to nonresidents for $3000 each. Several other real estate deals were made here in the last three weks. two of the most important being the sale of a half interest in the Tucker-Curran block, the largest business building here, and the Short restaurant. Cliffs has been quiet for several months, but has taken on a spurt and bids fair to contain several hundred inhabitants soon. Canada has 20 wireless stations, and new wireless service Is being- established between Prlnoe Rupert and Vancouver. Northwest KLAMATH LAP RICH Oregon Man Proves Produc tiveness of Property. WATER IS AID TO COUNTRY Market Value of Farm Lands in Southern Oregon County on Which Crops Are Grown Is Quoted at $70 an Acre. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash ington, Dec 5. The pleasant climate, beautiful natural surroundings, abund ant and constant water supply, and the fertility of the soil on the Klamath project in Northern California and Southern Oregon are proving attractive to many farmers in other sections of these states, and a large influx'of new settlers has begun. In this connection It is especially In teresting to read he experience of a former farmer from the Imperial Val ley of California, who took up his home on the Klamath project a little over a year ago. Mr. Maston's experience in Southern California, wnere irrigation is now practiced so successfully, 'was doubtless very valuable to him in his new home, but his success must be credited largely to the natural ad vantages and Climate of the Klamath country. Mr. Maston says: During; our residence of only one year in the Kalamth Valley we have raised grain, including- oats, barley and wheat, also al falfa. In this country grain yields abund antly. Having: a Spring- of four months in which to sow crops, the farmer has ample time, with a small outfit, to put In a large crop. We sow wheat in March. April and May, and our yields average 30 bushels per acre. Oats will make a sure crop It sown as late as July 1. Our average yields per acre this year are as follows: Wheat. 30 bushels; barley. 60 bushels, and cats, 60 to 7B bushels. Our alfalfa yielded four tons to only two cuttings, thus making the labor on each very small in comparison to the yields. It , sold for $12 to SIS per ton baled. Prices received for other crops are as follows: Wheat, 90 cents per bushel; oats, $1.50. and barley, $1.25 per hundred weight. The alfalfa yielded us a gross of $60 per acre, and it Is my experience that the labor required to farm Klamath land is about 10, per cent less than In the ma Jorty ox farming districts of California and elsewhere, where the same crops are har vested. In this section the probable yield of these crops without water is a little less than half that on the Irrigated farms. The market value of the ranch on which our crops are grown Is $70 per acre, and it Is all under Government ditch. Mr. Maston expresses himself as be ing well -pleased with his change of location and expects to- do even better with his land next year. HUGE POTATOES RAISED STATTOX MAN GROWS SPTJDS OP TWO POUNDS EACH. From Single Acre He Gathers 450 Bushels of These Tubers, Which Strew Ground Thickly. STATTON, Or., Dec. 6. (Special.) A man who raises big potatoes and whose farm is in Stayton's environs is Willis Caldwell, who on Tuesday ot this week brought to town three spuds averaging two pounds, apiece. They were sound of body and minus bumps or lumbs. Mr. Caldwell says he gathered 450 bushels of these fine Oregon potatoes from a single acre, and so thickly did they bestrew the ground after being dug that it was next to impossible to walk across the field without crunch ing them beneath one's feet. After 460 bushels had been carried away, four sows and 26 pigs were turned into the acre tract and left there one week. At the end of this period Dennis Cald well, a brother of Willis, went into the same patch and gathered up enough more potatoes to fill two sacks for feed. He said that even then the po tatoes remained thick about the place. One potato from this acre was found to weigh Z pounds, and this has been sent east of the Rockies to astound the natives of the Mississippi Valley states. which the expectant mother must pass, however, is so fraught with dread, pain, suffering and danger, that the very thought of it fills her with apprehension and horror. There is no necessity for the repro duction of life to be either painful or dangerous. The use of Mother's Friend so prepares the system for the coming event that it is safely passed without any danger. This great and wonderful remedy is always applied externally, and has carried thousands of women through the trying crisis without suf fering. Send for frse book containing information of priceless value to all expectant mother. TBX BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO. Atlanta. Ga. DISTRESS FROM A BAD STOMACH, GAS AND INDIGESTION WILL END. Your out-of-order Stomach feels fine five minutes after taking a little Diapepsin. , Take your-, sour, out-of-order stom ach or maybe you call It Indiges tion, Dyspepsia, Gastritis or Catarrh of Stomach: it doesn't matter take your stomach trouble right with you to your Pharmacist and ask him to open a 50-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin and let you eat one 22-graln Triangula and see if within five minutes there is left any trace of your former misery. The correct name for your trouble is Food Fermentation food souring; the Digestive organs become weak, there is lack of gastric juice: your food is only half digested, and you become affected with loss of appetite, pressure and full ness after eating-, vomiting, nausea. Let Kodol Digest What You Eat Then you can Eat what you like, for Kodol will .do exactly what your stomach does when it is well. You once could eat anything you 'wanted, and your stomach would digest it. But now there are some things which your stomach won't digest. Your stomach absolutely refuses to accommodate 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 light ahead with Its work and di gest all the food you eat. Kodol will let you eaf anything you like. You will not have that heart-burn For Self -Wrecked Men WHO HAVF BV THEIR OWN ACTS OF- DISSIPATION AST HABITS BTOBD THEIR HEALTH, WTIECKED THEIR NKRV ES, WKAKEXED THEIR BRAIN A NO POISONED THEIR BLOOH I HAVE A SURE, SPBKDY CURE NOT A DOLLAR NEED BE PAID UNTIL BENEFITED I HA r-nn KllfTHI MEN only of ailments of the NERVES, Alt1 rUn MLN. blood, bladder and kidneys. X Alf THE ONI SPECIALIST IN PORTLAND WHO TREATS MEN ONLY. TF STTFFERIXd PROM A DISEASE IS IT NOT REASONABLE! I AM THE PROPER ONE TO COME TO t I Cur All Blood and Skin Diseases Never to Return. I Cure Nervous Debllltrs No Stimulant, but Permanent. I Cure All Urinary Ailment Without Surgery In Any Form. I Cure All Complicated and Associate Ailments ot Men. Consult Me (Free) Before Placing Tour Case Elsewhere YOUNG MAN. DO YOU KNOW every"Ji. future depend V .iV . , rxiMVJV on a healthy nervous system more than anj-thing else? I would advise any reader to call me at once 4f suffering. MIDDLE-AGED MFM 8nould not forget that no matter what the I!MWU MUUU mt-IH cause of their TISSUE WASTE, they can be cured by my NEW SYSTEM where all else tried falls. I have the quick cure. OLD MEN toJay y tne use my NEW SYSTEM need not undergo y , ' ' the misery they have had to undergo in years gone by. I heal and strengthen. Call at once if you need relief. , r.1"1"' added to our office equipment, for the benefit of MEN ONLY, FREE MISEUM of Anatomy and sallery of scientific vronders. Man. know thyself. Llfe-mlxe models Illustrating the mysteries of man, ihow. Idk Ihr body In health and disease, and many natural subjects. CONSULTATION FREE MY HONEST AND CANDID ADVICE rflSTS YOU NOTHING. 1 cheerfully give you the very bet opinio guldld by years of successful practice. My cures are permanent and lasting. No tonics that stimulate temporarily, but thorough scientific treatment for the removal of conditions responsible for functional derangement. Call If you can. Write today for self-examination blank If you can not call. No business address or street number on our envelopes or packages. Medicines from 1.50 to 6.50 a course from our own labora tory. Hours from 9 A. M. to 8 P. M, Sundays from 10 to 12 lara Oregon Medical Averaging two pounds apiece. It re quires 30 of these giant spuds to make a bushel. Carrots, also, of Brobdingnagian pro portions, were raised by the Caldwells, and a sample of one of these red fel lows was also brought In. They raised 45 tons of carrots to the acre, and with carrots selling at $S a ton the profit on each acre is astounding. ABERDEEN BRIDGE IS PLAN Eastern and Local Capitalists to Build Over Cbebalis River. ABERDEEN, Wash., Dec. 5. (Special.) Announcement was made today that local and Eastern capitalists have prac tically completed arrangements for the erection of a steel wagon and foot bridge across the . Chehalls River at this city. Plans provide for commencing work early in the Spring. The motive for the project is to offer means of reaching the south side of the city without paying toll as Is now necessary over the only bridge, and at the same time build up the south No woman's happiness can be complete without chil dren; it is her nature to love and want them as much so as it is to love the beautiful and pure. The critical ordeal through heartburn, griping in bowels, tender ness in the pit of stomach, bad taste in mouth, constipation, pain in limbs, sleeplessness, belching of gas, bilious ness, sick headache, nervousness, dizzi ness or many other similar symptoms. If your appetite Is fickle, and noth ing tempts you, or you belch gas or if you feel bloated after eating, or your food lies like a lump of ?ead on your stomach,- you can make up your mind that at the bottom of all this there is but one cause fermentation of undi gested food. Prove to yourself in five minutes that your stomach is as good as any; that there is nothing really wrong. Stop this fermentation and begin eat ing what you want without fear of dis comfort or misery. Almost instant relief Is waiting for you. It Is merely a matter of how soon you take a little Diapepsin. which is so annoying at times, if you will let Kodol 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 gets tired sometimes, too just the same as anybody or part of your body that works. Kodol will do the same work as the stomach, when It is well and strong. Every tablespoonful will digest 24 pounds of food. Our Guarantee. S?botu2of Kodol. If you are not benefited the) druggist will at once return your mon ey. Don't hesitate; any druggist will sell you Kodol on these terms. The dollar bottle contains m times aa much as the 50c bottle. Kodol is pre pared In the laboratories of E. C. D Witt &. Co.. Chicago. I Do Not Treat All Diseases, But Cure All I Treat or Do It Free If in need of a physician, why not go to a specialist before your case reaches an advanced stage, perhaps a serious complication arises where it requires months to cure it before you place yourself in the hands of a specialist, an many times an incurable condition is reached before you realize the necessity of going to one who treats MEN and Inst. 91 MORRISON ST., Bet. Fourth and Fifth, PORTLAND, OREGON. side of the city, which has suffered to a fref, ,cxtent because of lack of traffio facilities. ,ii2,eStimated that the "ridge will cost $125,000 and will be supported on steel supports in turn resting upon concrete bases sunk below the river to solid foun dation. No profits of large proportions are anticipated by the promoters, tho idea being to sell the bridge to the city in such payments that there will be no material burden to the taxpayers. Tha realization of the project will mean mucl to the city. THAT ARE AILING, NER VOUS AND RUN DOWN COME TO ME AND BE CURED I See All My PatlenU THE DOCTOR Personally. THAT CURES. I hire no substitute and have no medl cal company. FEE FOR A CURE Is lower than any specialists in the city, half that others charge you and no exorbitant price toll medicine. I am an expert specialist.' have had 30 years' practice in the treatment ot diseases of men. My offices are the best equipped in Portland. My methods are modern and up-to-date. My cures are quick and positive. I do not treat symp toms and patch up, I thoroughly examine) each case, find the cause, remove it and thus cure the disease. I CUKE: Varicose Veins, Contracted Ailments, Piles and Specific Blood Pol sun and All Ailments of AJen. CUKE OK NO PAY I am the only specialist in Portland who makes no charge unless the salient Is entirely satisfied with the results accomplished and who gives n written guarautee to refund every dollar paid for services If a complete and permanent cure la not effected. IVfC'fU Visit Dr. Lindsay's private Museum of Anatomy and know thyself, in health and disease. Ad mission free. Consultation free. If un able to call, write for list of Questions. DR. LINDSAY Office hours 9 A. M. to 9 P. M.; Sun days 10 A. M. to 1 P. M. XSSH Second St., Cor. of Alder, Portland. Oregon. All My Family Benefited My family consists of seven persons. Each one of us had Home difficult sickness. Wo had tried different remedies. -r4t'3 Hearing of Mrs. Lr. S. K. lAftaitt Chan's ereat cure with lino o u nmiiw n d e r f u 1 medicines, my mKb.5.R.CHANjaueter and I went to ses her first. Serins yreat im provement in a short, time, I went with, my husband and children, all of whom wer sick. To my amazement we vera entirely cured and once more free from, sickness. f will never forget her wonder ful cures and honest treatment, and I will gladly recommend hr to all sufferers of any sickness. Mrs. DURSIIMITT. 229 Gihba street. Call or write to THE S. K. CHAN CHIXBSE MEDICIXH COflAXY. 2264 Morrison M. Bet. l&t and td. Portland, Or. MEN