Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 7, 1909)
16 THE 3IORNIXG OREGONIAN, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1909. SIMON BUYS BONDS Mayor Gets $26,500 of Im provement IsSue for City. ;N0 COMPETITORS APPEAR Kxeoutlve Disagrees With Kava naugh, Who Holds Competition Is Required by Ijav Dr. Mack's Salary Restored. Mayor Simon appeared before the ways and means committee of the Oity Coun cil yesterday afternoon and secured the award of $26,500 improvement bonds, the life of which Is eight years, at par and accrued interest. He purchased $25,000 worth for the Water Board, and the balance for the police and fire relief fund. The bonds draw 6 per cent Interest. This Is the first time the city has ever secured improvement bonds without bid ding against competitors. City Attorney Kavanaufrh had ruled that the city must compete if it desires the bonds, but the Mayor said he could see no objecion. W. F. White secured $321,000 worth of the bonds at par, accrued interest and 4 1-10 per cent interest premium. There were many bids, all for good premiums, but Mr. White's was the best. City Treasurer ' Werlein has $190,000 in the "treasury belonging to the improvement bond sinking fund, which he will probably put Into bonds at the next sale, now that the Mayor has set the precedent. Rushlislit Sounds Caution. Councilman Rushlight raised the ques tion that the City Attorney had ruled against the city taking the bonds with out actually competing with the other buyers, but the Mayor replied that he would not listen to such argument. "It Is my policy to give the city the best of it on all occasions,-' said the Mayor, "and I can see no reason why the city should not have these bonds at par and accrued interest only. If there nre any left after the. city gets what it wants, why, let the other buyers have them." The committee discussed briefly the proposition to sell $275,000 worth of bonds for the construction of a steel fireboat and reinforcing mains for the waterfront district, and requested the engineer of the "Water Board and Fire Chief Campbell to nubmtt a report as to the bast method of Installing the mains and as to the neces sity for the additional boat. More Honda Opposed. Mayor Simon is opposed to the sale of any more bonds at this time, and the majority of the members of the commit tee will not vote to sell the bonds, it is ; ald. If they do sell them, the Mayor will swobably not execute the order for The mains and the boat, as he thinks ! they are unnecessary at this time. City Health Of fleer Wheeler asked the committee to amend the pure-milk ordi nance, so that Inspector Mack may draw Ills salary of $125 a month legally. This expense was repealed inadvertently by the new measure. The committee assent ed. Dr. Wheeler also asked for an ap propriation for the installation of a labor atory, that milk may be tested by a chemical process. This will be considered by the committee when the Mayor's an nual budget Is taken up for discussion, probably in two weeks. TRIP PLANS ARE MADE Excursion From Spokane Will Ar ' rive Here January 17. Final arrangements for an excursion from Spokane and other Washington points to Jjos Angeles were completed fcere yesterday at a conference between the passenger representatives of the Har rlmnn system in Oregon's neighboring state and William McMurray, general passenger agent. The first excursion of the new year will be run from Spokane January 17. The following day will be spent by the excursionists in Portland nnd plans will be provided for their re ception and entertainment. This will be the beginning of a series of excursions the Harriman system will run from Washington points via Port land and the Sunset route to Southern California for the convenience of Ca nadian tourists residing west of Winni peg. For the purpose of Interesting Ca nadians in this scenic route for reaching Ix Angeles and other California Winter resorts, the railroad company will give a number of illustrated lectures In the prin cipal Canadian towns better to acquaint the people with the advantages of the route offered. . Among the out-of-town passenger rep resentatives of the O. R. & N. attending yesterday's conference were: If. c. Mun son. city passenger agent at Spokane; W. S. Skey. traveling passenger agent, of Spokane; J. Itoss Nagcl. traveling passen ; ger agent, of Seattle: and C. F. Van de Water, traveling freight agent, of Walla ' Walla. !'ORTH BASK HEAD COMING Ocorge B. French Due to Arrive Hero Next Week. Latest advices received here from St 'Paul axe to the effect that George B. Krench, the new president of the Spokane, j Portland & Seattle, will arrive here early . next week, preliminary to assuming the I presidency of the North Bank. ' The board of directors for this road " to have held a meeting at Vancouver ( Wash., last Friday when Mr. French was I to be elected formally as the successor of I Francis B. Clarke. This meeting was not ' held and the directors have received no intimation of when another meeting will j called. It is probable that the next i meeting will be deferred until after the arrival of Mr. French. , , 2 69 Soldiers on Way. A special train, transporting the First ; (Battalion and Batteries A and B, Second . Artillery, from Fort Russell. ' Cheyenne, Wyo., to Vancouver Barracks, left Chey enne yesterday afternoon. The train of 12 cars will reach this city over the O. B, & If. early Wednesday night. There are 11 officers and 258 men included In this transfer of troops which will replace a similar detachment which was transferred last week over the North Bank from Van couver to Fort Russell. Railroad Personals. M. G. Murphy, general traveling pas ' senger agent for the Canadian Pacific, with offices at Winnipeg, was in the city yesterday. Waldo O. Payne, traffic manager of the Bpokane & Inland Empire Railroad Com pany, with head-quarters at Spokane, passed yesterday In Portlands GERMANY A WORLD POWER Its Success Attributed to Its ''Lilviiig IjanKuage." i SUEM, Or.. roc. (To th Kditor.--Ths -&Horlai4 "Tha .Boyish. Geimaiu," in last Fridays Oresonian calls to mind a remark able aeries of lectures, "Addresses to the German Nation," delivered a century a so by Fichte, before a body of German university students. These lectures were delivered dur ing the time of Germany's deepest shame, when the country was rent by feud and faction, prostrate under the iron heel of Napoleon. Patriotism was strangled by de spair of national autonomy. Klchte demonstrated that a people like the Germane, speaking a living, growing language, are influenced by mental imagery that be comes an element of force and vitality in its political and intellectual Ideals; while the Xatin nations, npeaklng a dead language, are Influenced by mental imagery that is life lean, and hence these are productive of doubt, error and sophistry in their intellectual and political conceptions. He also showed that in eon sequence of this vitalizing power of it language over I la mental life, Germany had within itjwlf the power of political and intel lectual rejuvenation, by training a new young manhood, along the lines of physical, moral vid intellectual education, which should re sult in new and better political ideals. Fichte declared that such a course was not open to the French, since in consequence of their dead language the Latin nations were already lo umed . and that it w as only a q uem ion of time when the process of decay and dissolu tion should be complete. It must be remembered that this remarkable conclusion was announced at the very time of Napoleon's most brilliant success, and the correctness of its reasoning will be found all the more surprising as we recall from our point of view how Germany dictated terms of peace to France in 171. It was essentially a victory of the German schoolmaster. Ger many had wisely acted upon the suggestions of Fichte and established a thoroughgoing publlo achool system. The Turn Vereine. es tablished by Jahn. provided the physical training required for building up the new manhood. Educationally and intellectually Germany today is without a peer. Indus trially and commercially it seems destined to achieve the hegemony of Europe. Another illustration of the correctness of Flchte'n theory may be found In the results1 of the American-Spanish war of 1X98. when the T'nited States, another young and virile member of the Germanic family, came to blows with Spain, another of the . neo-Latln nations, speaking a dead language. J. C. ZINSER. ANIMUS BEHIND REPORT JIDGE WEBSTER SCORES GRAND JURY IXDICTMEXT. Jurist Declares He Takes Responsi billty for Way Kelly Butte Is Being Conducted. Declaring that there was animus back of the report made by the county -grand Jury to the Circuit Court December 2, in which the management of Kelly Butte, the county rock quarry, was severely scored. County Judge Webster Sunday night in an "address before the People's Forum made a defense of that institution, further declaring he could name the source of the report's inspiration. "Let me tell you something, friends," said the speaker. "Don't you believe everything you see In the newspapers. I am the man who built Kelly Butte and I take responsibility for the way it Is being conducted." Judge Webster further explained the establishing- of the Linnton rock quarry and the recent purchase of a farm by the county 15 miles from the city. "We propose to use that farm as a place to send our prisoners who have been sentenced for less serious offenses," he said. "We are going to make it a place where a man can be sent and still feel he is not a criminal, but merely work ing for our social organization to re munerate us for having offended against the law." Judge Webster's address was a plea for a more humane treatment of prisoners with a view of making better citizens of them. He proposed as one of the means pof doinc this to let a man work his way out of jail. "First, I believe the bad criminal should be placed at Kelly Butte, and if he works well and shows a disposition to do better, send him to the Llnnton quarry, then to the county farm and then to freedom," he continued. The placing of state criminals on the state highways to earn something for the state instead of being hired out to a stove factory at 85 cents a day, was an other suggestion offered by Judge Web ster. Judge Webster also made a defense of the establishing of the new county hos pital. He declared that every man, no matter how bad or how good, has a right to medical attention and food when ill and the more fortunate should give it to him. WOMEN OPEN NEW HOME Housevrarming Reception Held at Xew Exchange. A housewarmlng and tea was given yesterday at the new quarters of the Portland Women's Exchange, Fifth and Tamhill streets, which was al6o in the nature of a pretty compliment to Miss Henrietta Failing, the president of the organization, who returned from Europe Monday. Despite the storm, hundreds of women called during the afternoon. In the receiving line were Miss Fail ing, Mrs. Aaron Meier, Mrs. H. W. Corbett, Mrs. Philip C. chuyler, Mrs. Charles Scadding, Mrs. Richard Koehler and Mrs. J. B. Montgomery. The tea-table was handsome in its appointments of silver and damask, with quantities of Christmas greens as a decorative note. Presiding were Mrs. Lucius Allen Lewis, Mrs. I. N. Fleisohner, Mrs. Slg mund Frank and Miss Mary Falling. Assisting in the various rooms were Miss Frances Wilson, Miss Muriel Williams. Miss Evelyn Wilson, Miss Caroline Burns. Miss Use Koehler, Miss Leila Shelby, Miss Dorothy Morrison, Miss Isabella Gauld, Miss Hazel Dolph, Mrs. Hunt Lewis,' Mrs. Frank Branch Riley, Mrs. David Honeyman, Miss Flora Flelschner, Miss Florence Wolfe and Mrs. Guy Talbot. DR. WULLNER SINGS DEC. 15 German Artist Arrives In Portland Early Next Week. Recent announcement that Wullner, the well-known German singer, is coming to Portland created a stir in musical circles. Dr. Ludwig Wullner will sing .here Wednesday evening, December 15, under the direction of Lois Bteers-Wynu Coman. The recital will be one of the ex traordinary events of the season and will be given in the Masonic Temple, West Park and Tamhill streets. $560 PIANO FREE. Voting for the prize Kimball piano will begin tomorrow morning one vote for every 10-cent purchase. See Morrison-street window, Mc Allen & Mc Donnell store, noted for best goods and lowest prices. Goods purchased- today entitle you to votes. Ask the clerk. Yakima Inventor Dead. NORTH TAKIMA, Wash., Dec. 6. (Special.) Edward Bunce, for the past 18 years a resident of North Yakima., is dead at his home in this city aged 80. It is said by his relatives that he was the first to conceive of the compound engine, and also the modern roller machinery for flour mills, but that he never received substantial returns from either of these inventions. He was born in England and came to this country in childhood. TO CURE A COLD IX ONE DAT. Take LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine Tablets. Druggists rotund money If it falls to cure. IS. W. GROVE'S signature is on each box, 26 o. BALLAST CASE ENDS Chamber of Commerce Settles Matter at Special Session. BROWN & M'CABE WIN OUT Special Committee Decides That All Stevedoring Firms Entitled to Work Ballast Ships at Linn ton Dock Marine - Notes. On the showing made by W. J. Jones, local manager of Brown & McCabe, stevedores, the committee of the Chamber of Commerce, at a special meeting yes terday morning, decided that all vessels entering the harbor in ballast should be entitled to equal privileges, and ballast should be discharged by any stevedoring firm employed by owners or masters. The special meeting was called by President Wheelwright, on account of the trouble In connection with the discharg ing of the French bark 1 Hermitte. The STEAMER INTELLIGENCE. Dae to Arrive. Name. From. Data. Breakwater. .. .Coos Bay. ...In port Geo. W. F.lder. .San Pedro... In port KaniM City. . . San Francisco Dec. 7 Sue H. Elmore. TillamooK. ...Dec. 8 Alliance. ...... Coos Bay.... Dec. ! Jloanoke. . . . . .San Pedro... Dec. 32 Hose City ...... San Francisco Dec. 1- Falnon Pan Francisco Dec. 1 Henrlk Ibsen. .'.Hongkong. .. .Tan. 3 Belja Hongkonc Indefl't Scheduled to Depart. Name. For.' Date. Geo. W. Elder. .San Pedro. ..Dec. 7 Sue H. Elmore. Tillamook. ... Dec. 7 Breakwater. .. -Coos Bay.... Dec. 8 Kansas City. . . San Francisco Dec. 1 0 Alliance. ...... Coos Bay ..... Dec. 1 1 Roanoke San Pedro. ... Dec. 14 Rose City. .. . . ,Ean Francisco Dec. 17 Falcon San Francisco Dec. 20 Henrik Ibsen. . Hongkong. .. Jan. 12 BeIJa Hongkonz. ... Entered Monday. Geo. "W. Elder. Am. steamship (Jessen). with general cargo, from San Pedro. Cleared Monday. Geo. "W. Elder, Am. steamship (Jessen). with general cargo, for San Pedro. craft arrived in Portland in ballast, and was under charter to load wheat for Eu rope for Kerr, Gifford & Co. McCabe & Hamilton, stevedores for the charterers, demanded that they discharge the bal last. Brown & McCabe had a contract with the French owners to discharge all 'vessels belonging to them. Managers of the Linnton dock stood with McCabe & Hamilton, and the boat was held up for several days. Later Brown & McCabe agreed to allow the rival stevedoring firm to discharge the IVHermitte provid ed future vessels would be accorded equal privilege!. At the meeting yesterday the matter was gone over carefully, and all phases carefully threshed out. A lengthy letter from Mr. Jones was read and each para graph carefully noted. It required less than half an hour to reach a decision. OWNERS OF EUROPE RECOVER Steamer Annie Comings Held to Be at Fault for Collision. Blame for the collision of the towboat Annie Comings with the French bark Europe, on the Willamette River, six miles below Portland, on the night of December 30, 1907, was placed by Judge Wolverton in the United States Court yesterday on the navigators of the tug boat, which was sunk, and sums for dam ages amounting to a total of $3078.87 were awarded to proprietors of the Europe. In the lengthy opinion filed by Judge Wolverton, he states that the testimony shows that the Europe carried two lights, as required by law, and that she ,had a watchman on board. The lights, how ever, were not at the required heights, and the watchman was not on the fore castle at .the time of the accident, but these facts, did not affect the case, as the navigators of the Annie Comings should have seen the lights and known what they meant. The Annie Comings is the property of the Western Transportation Company, in whose name the suit was brought. The Europe was delayed 18 days as a result of the accident, and left port by filing a bond of $41,000. Whether the Europe is entitled to a return of the money laid out for the bond Is a matter Judge Wal verton will further determine later. LINCOLN" ROCK LIGHT BURNING Recent Explosion. Carried Away Big Portion of Government Works. Lincoln Rock Light Station, which was partially destroyed during the gale of November 27, has been placed in an habitable condition and the light is now burning. A force of workmen, under the direction of Assistant Engineer Warrick, are repairing the damage done by the storm and the structures will be restored by the first of the year. A dispatch from Mr. "Warrick yester day stated that the total damage would amount to about $700. The loading plat form had been carried away and the front of the lower house, facing the east, carried awav. - Th wAf mif .11 " rwaej uouij wrecked and the shingles stripped from ji ma ouuamgs. una engine, which op erates the fog signal was disabled and until repairs can be made there will be no fog horn on Lincoln Rock. Dayton to Be Port of Call. DAYTON, Or., Dec. 6. (Special.) This place, for many years a prominent river shipping point. Is again to have steamer service. The Oregon City Trans There Is nothing that causes more worry and discomfort than a chronic, festering ulcer. As it lingers, slowly eating Into the tissues and surrounding flesh, and by its tendency to grow worse In every way, it suggests the possi bility of being cancerous In its nature. Efforts to heal the ulcer by means of salves, washes, lotions, etc., always result In failure, because such treat ment can have no possible effect on the blood where the Impurities and morbid matters form, 'and are carried thorugh the "circulation to the plaoe, to keep it open, Irritated and diseased. The Impurities In the blood must be removed before the healing process can begin. S. S. S. goes to the fountain-head of the trouble, and drives out the germ-producing poisons and mor bid. impurities which keep the ulcer open. Then as this rich, purified blood Is carried to the diseased place the healing commences, the Inflam mation gradually leaves, the discharge ceases, new tissue and healthy flesh are formed, and soon the sore is permanently cured because the source has een destroyed. S. S. S. does not make a surface cure, but by supplying the blood with healthful, tissue-building properties it begins at the bottom and causes the flesh at the diseased spot to firmly and permanently knit together, and the place is left sound and well. Book on Sores and Ulcers and &ny medical advice free to all who write. . THE SWEPT SPECIFIC CO., ATLAHTA, CA. portation Company's steamer Oregona, plying between Portland and Salem, will call here on the up trip Monday and the down trip Saturday of each week. Last Saturday 6he took 850 sacks of wheat and oats from the Gabriel ware house. Captain Julius Oliver, for many years prominent in Oregon steamboat c'lcles, is now acting as pilot on the Oregona. He came to Oregon two weeks ago from Alaska. YVENONA HITS SNAG, SINKS Vessel Is Beached and Passengers Landed Safely. ASTORIA. Or.. Dec. 6. (Special.) While coming out of Grays River yester day the steamer Wenona struck a snag which stove a hole in her bottom and she was beached in about ten feet of water, where she now lies. Her passengers were landed safely and the vessel is in no immediate danger unless a gale should arise. A portion of the hull of the wrecked steamer Argo with the masts standing Is reported to have drifted ashore at Smuggler's Cove, near Ecola, a short distance north of Elk Creek. Marine Notes. The steamship Breakwater will sail for Coos Bay ports tomorrow evening. The steamship Stanley Dollar is dis charging the general cargo at the Couch street dock. With the barge Monterey in tow the steamship W. S. Porter arrived up last night from San Francisco. The Union Oil tank liner Santa Rita arrived up last evening and Is discharging at the Portsmouth tanks. The steamship Kansas City Is due to arrive this morning from San Francisco with passengers and freight. - - - Arrivals and Departures. PORTLAND, Dec. 6. Arrived Steamship W. S. Porter, with barge Monterey in tow. from San Francisco; steamship Roma, from San Francisco; steamship Santa Rita, from San Francisco. Sailed Steamship George W. Fenwick. for San Francisco. Astoria, Or., Dec. 6. Cape line down; no bar report. Arrived at 7:15 and left up at 9 A. M. Steamer Santa Rita, from San Francisco. Arrived at 7:25 and left up at 9:15 A M. Steamer W. S. Porter with schooner Monterey in tow, from Monterey. Arrived at 8 and left up at 10:15 A. M. Steamer Roma, from San Francisco. Arrived at 8:40 and left up at 11:30 A. M. Steamer Eureka, from Eureka. Arrived at 12 noon and left up at 4 p. M. 6teamer F. S. L6op. from San Francisco. Arriyed at 6 A. M. and left up at 2 P. M. Steamer Shoshone, from San Francisco. Arrived at 1 and left up Steamer Kansas City, from San Francisco. San Francisco. Dec. 6. Arrived at 2 A M. Steamer Rainier. Arrived at 5 A. M. Steamer Rose City, from Portland. Steamer Majestic is ashore 30 miles below Point Pinos. Arrived Steamer Doris, from Grays Harbor; Governor, from Seattle; Cascade, from Astoria; Atlas, from Seattle, towing barge Three; Bessie Dollar, from Kushiro; bark Emma Laurans, from Hobart. Sailed V. 8. transport Logan, for Manila; steamers Elizabeth, for Bandon; Chehalis, for Grays Harbor; Daisy Freeman, for Wiliapa.' Redondo. Dec. 6. Arrived yesterday Steamer Yosemite, from Columbia River. Honolulu, Dec. 6. Arrived vesterday Schooner Churchill, from Portland. Shanghai. Dec. 6. Arrived previously Gurnsey, from Portland, Or., via Comox and Victoria. Seattle, Dec. . Arrived Seattle Mara, from Tacoma; steamer Jefferson, from Skag way; U. s. s. Tohoma, from Port Townsend. Sailed Steamer J. L. L.ukenbach, for Ta coma. Tides at Astoria Tuesday. High. Low. :07 A. M T.8 feetl2:40 A. M 2.4 feet 0:45 P. M 6.3 feet4:OQ P. M l.S feet CORNER GAINS $15,500 G. FREIWAIiD SELLS THIRD AND FLANDERS SITE. Property Brings $36,500 Bought Six Years Ago for $21,000. Otto W. Nelson, Buyer. Otto W. Nelson has purchased as a site for a three-story building to be erected for business purposes In the early Spring a lot located at the southwest corner of Third and Flan ders streets. The property, 50x100 feet, was bought from G. Freiwald for $36,500. The sale was negotiated through the agency of the E. P. Mall Company. The sale represents an increase in property values which has kept pace with the growth of the city and which at all times paid a good return on the original investment in rentals. Mr. Freiwald bought the corner six years ago for $21,000. It is at present im proved with a two-story frame struc ture In poor repair, which, however, nets J250 a month in rentals, or over eight per cent on the purchase price. Mr. Nelson will remove the old build ing and replace it with a modern three story brick structure for stores and rooming purposes. He has, it is said, already been offered a good profit on his investment which he declined. DIMICK AND HIGH TAXES 31 r. Chapman Returns to the- Fray and Talks of Clackamas Debts. PORTLAND, Dec. 5. (To the Editor.) It seems that I have everlastingly raised the ire of Brother XHmfck, of Oregon Ctty, ty suggesting the name of Mayor Simon for Governor. Now, notwithstanding imfclc3 assertion to the contrary, the only object I had In the world In suggesting Mr. Simon's name was that I would liR to see a man elected Governor who would give the state a clean, businesslike administration. If my memory serves me right, and I think: It does, xlmlck made the assertion many times before he was elected Judge of Clacka mas County, that if he was elected he would have the county out of debt within two years without increasing the taxes, or he would resign. The county is not out of defet. The taxes last year were almost doubled and no one has heard, of Dlmick'a resigning. As to his having the right to have any views he wishes in regard to the direct primary, no one questions his right to have any views on any su'bject. As for my holding office undr the old system, I did. as he says, hold a position at the Insane Asylum for several years and voluntarily resigned that position some years before the direct primary came into exist ence. If Judge Dtmicle doubts my statements along these lines I would refer him to rr. Cal breath, superintendent of the asylum at that time. E, C. CHAPMAN. CURES CHRONIC ULCERS To Stop a Cough in a Hurry With this recipe you can make a pint of cough remedy at home in five minutes. A few doses usually conquer the most obstin ate cough. Simple as if is, no better remedy can be had at any price. Put 2 ounces of Pinex (SO cents worthy In a clean pint bottle, and fill up with Granu lated Sugar Syrup, made as fol lows: Take a pint of Granulated Sugar, add a half pint of warm water and stir for two minutes. Take a teaspoonful every one, two or three hours. The taste is very pleasant children take It willingly. Splendid, too. for colds, xchest pains, whooping cough, bronchitis, etc. Granulated Sugar makes the best syrup. Plnex. as you prob ably know. Is the most valuable concentrated compound of Nor way "White Pine Extract. None of the weaker pine preparations will take its place. If your drug gist hasn't the real Pinex, he can easily get it for you. Strained honey can be used In stead of the syrup, and makes a very fine honey and pine tar cough syrup. Even Pure In Sanitary Enough to Eat fllll 25c & 50c Tubes 11111111 Write or Ask Druggists For this Free Sample There Is enough Kondon's Catarrhal Jelly in this free sample sent for a penny postal for several days treat meet enougrh to give instant relief from cold tn the head or nasal catarrh, etc. This wonderful, pure remedy (in sani tary tubes) Is applied direct to the raw surfaces. It is so soothing: and healing: that it fives instant relief, and its con tinned use will cure permanently all forms of catarrh. Over 35.000 druggists sell it In 25c and 50c tubes. Doctors, nurses, drnerffists recommend it. The samp'.o proves. Ask your druggist or write to day for free sample. " Kondon Msunafaetnrlnfl Co. Minneapolis. Minn. THAT ARE Ailing, ner vous and run DOWN COME TO ME AND BE CURED 1 See All My Patlenta THE DOCTOR Personally. THAT CURES. 1 Ire mo substitute, and ban mo medi cal compuBj, FEE FOR A CURE Is lower than any specialists in the city, half that others charge you and no exorbitant price tor medicine. 1 am an expert specialist, have had SO 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 CURB Varicose Veins, Contracted Ailments, Piles nnd Specific Blood Poi son and All Ailments of Men. CITKE OR NO PAY I am the only specialist in Portland who makes no charge unless the patient Is entirely satisfied with the results accomplished, and who gives written suarantee to refund every dollar paid for services If a complete and permanent cure is not effected. lf f?N vlalt 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. ISSii Second St., Cor. of Alder, Portland, OreBon. ECZEMA CURE A MIRACLE? NO, JUST SOUND SCIENCE Physicians now admit the superior value of simple medicines for all dis eases. For eczema and other skin diseases certainly nothing in the world could be simpler than oil. of winterreen, care fully combined with such well known healing- and antiseptic substances as thymol, glycerine, etc Read this letter: "A few years aro eczema, covered my limbs, part of my body and began breaking out on my face. "I began using- oil of wtnterrreea mixed with thymol and glycerine In D. r. r. Prescription. Used five bottles and was cured sound and well. My druggist said It looked almost like a miracle to bim, but he explained to me that the use of this oil of wintergreen was Just sound science. "That has ibeen almost a, year ago and I see no signs of the disease returning. "My skin Is Just as soft and nice as it ever was." D. P. MIL.L.ER. Smlthville. Mo. Such a wonderful experience we feel speaks for itself. Woodard, Clarke &" Co., Skidmore Drug Co. "For over nine years I suffered with chronic constipation and during this time Z had to take an injection of wti in water once em j 34 hours before I could have an action en my bocii. Happily I tried Oascarets, and today I am a well man. Daring the nine years before I used Cascarets I suffered untold misery with Internal ilea. Thanks to yon, I am free from all that this morning. You can nse this in behalf of suffering humanity. B. P. Fisher, Roanoke, DL Pleasant, Palatable. ' Potent. Taste Good. Do Good. Never Sicken. Weaken or Gripe. 10c. 25c 50c. Never sold in bulk. Tbe gea nlne tablet stamped C C C Guaranteed to core or your money back. 930 Innammatloiu, Irritations or -ulcerations of all mu cous membranes, unnatu ral discharges from nose, throat or urinary organs. Sold by Druggists or in plaia wrapper, ex press prepaid, on receipt of SI. or three bottles, $.7S Booklet oa request. . EN Constroation IT 7 Catarrh, CIds- Yi?a ft Era Qmical Co. Making the Standard Rye piiiigiMr iiwiiffiilil The Little Green Stamn is the final step in the making of the Standard Rye Whiskey of America. It means that a Government official has inspected every process in the making of Good old Bottled In Bono from the grain, as it goes into the elevator, to the whiskey as it goes into the bottle. It is your guarantee that the whiskey is pure, fully matured, and that you get full measure. The little green 6tamp does not guarantee quality, but when placed over the cork of Good Old Guckenheimer Pure Rye insures your getting a quality that has been the Standard of America, Since 1857. Write us for a beautiful booklet tellmg the whole mtereatine storr ' ' " niuM.y vi 1 j ia mT1T. A, Guckenheimer & Bros Distillers, Pittsburg, Since 1857 HIDomflt I Can't Cure I treat for real and lasting cures. Every rem edy I employ has its part In bringing positive and permanent results. Under my treatment the patient who notes improvement in his con dition can feel assured that real benefit and not a temporary drugr effect has been obtained, and can continue with confidence that a thor ough cure is being- accomplished. My success as a specialist is due to the fact that I accept no incurable cases and always treat with a cure in view, never resorting to the use of a remedy that brings but temporary encourage ment to the patient. The Man With an Ailment I use neither knife nor caustic In my treatment for Vari cose Veins. I posi tively cure this ail ment by an abso lutely painless meth od and without de taining the patient from business. Should learn and the sooner the better that what may seem a trivial ailment very often has most serious and far-reachinir effects. The man who tries to be his own doc tor is always the patient that later comes to the specialist with the chronic, stubborn, deep-seated case, which is the hardest kind to care. I can not hope that all men will ac cept my statement that the quickest, the safest and the cheapest cure is had by con sulting an expert specialist at once, but the intelligent man will readily be convinced or the value of this advice upon investigation. My treatment for Blood Disorders forces the very last taint from the sys tem, and all this Is accomplished with out the use of dan gerous dosing, l af ford you a complete and permanent cure. My colored chart af fords an interesting study In men's all-' ments. Free upon application. Consultation and Diagnosis Free Ore-ICIS HOURS- A. M. TO V. M. 81 I, AYS ,o TO 1 OSLT. The DR. TAYLOR Co. 23 MOHR.SO, STREET, CORNER. SECOXD, POKTL AS ORKGO iESPONDENT 'ISCOURAGED w Let Me Offer You the Relief and Comfort I Am Giving Other Men Daily ( The past century has vltncud - wonderful progress in the science of medicine and surgery. Discoveries for the amelioration of pain and the core of afflicted men, undreamed of years ago, are now In use by the spe cialist who has kept himself abreast with the rapid advancement of the medical profession. This ap plies only to the specialist who was well prepared by advantages of study and experience in a chosen field of medicine. It is unfortunate that all specialists who go by the name are not competent to do the work en trusted to them, hence the many fail ures that are made. By my own Original Methods I cure Nervous Ailments and the ef fects of dissipation and early wrong doings that have resulted in weakness and derangement. My success has, of course, called forth competition, but my competitors have utterly failed to give "something just as good" as a substitute for my treatment, and sub stitution is always a poor makeshift, anyway. In the low'prices I make there is no sentiment the great num ber of people I treat makes it possible and this plain-fact nronoaltinn is h- ing found out every day by dozens of thinking men who take time to In vestigate. Patients who have been treated by me for Blood Poison and Skin Diseases will vouch for the fact that I cured them, never to return, after being disappointed and deceived so long by others that they thought there was no cure for them. No man on earth has my methods of treating Varicose or Knotted Veins The simplicity and freedom from danger of which Is the marvel of all physicians who have been privileged to witness it. There is no knife used, no chloroform, no pain, no subcutaneous ligation, no going to bed and not a single week's delay from business. Every case of Varicose Veins treated by me is a willing recommenaatlon to any man who will Inquire. JVo business address) or street number on onr envelopes or park. acres. Consultation and advice free. If you cannot call at office, write for self-addressed blank many cases cured at home. Medicines J1.60 to S6 so per course. ' HOURS S A. M. TO 8 P. M. SUNDAYS, 10 A. M. TO 13. ST. LOUIS MEDICAL CO. Cor. 2d and Yamhill Sts. Whiskey of America, No. 10 epic ll 1 jmtm sir is ' Let Me Cure You First Pay After Being Cured DR. TATLOR, The Leading: Specialist. I cure thoroughly nd in less time than s commonly required to even cure par tially. Do not en-itang-er your health by relylna- upon pat ent not rums or other uncertain measures. Pains in the back, dull, sleepy feeling, sleeplessness and all reflex ailments ara but symptoms. There Is always a deeper cause, which must be found and cradl es ted- t make no chares for consultation, ex amination or advice, All afflicted men may feel free . to call upon me or write regarding- their cases. EAK AND ORN OUT NOT A DOLLAR NEED BE PAID UNLESS CURED. PORTLAND, OREGON