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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 11, 1907)
a Tnrnmmiiim JUMimiUlRII Why Physicians Recommen C ASTORIA has met with pronounced favor on the part of physicians, pharmaceutical societies and medical authorities. It is used by physicians with results most gratifying. The extended use of Oas toria is unquestionably the result of three faots : Mrst The indisputable evidence that it is harmless: Second That it not only allays stomach pains and quiets the nerves, but assimilates the food: Third It is an agreeable and perfect substitute for Castor Oil. It is absolutely safe. It does not contain any Opium, Morphine, or other narcotic and does not stupefy. It is unlike Soothing Syrups, Bateman's Drops, Cordial, etc. This is a good deal for a Medical Journal to say. Godfrey Our duty, however, is to expose danger and record the means of advancing health. The day for poisoning innocent children through greed or ignorance ought to end. To our knowledge, Castoria is a remedy which produces composure and health, by regulating the system not by stupefying itand our readers are entitled to the information. EaiVs Journal of Health. Letters from Prominent Physicians Addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher. THE MORNING OREGONIAN, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1907, d Castoria JiVee table Preparation for As -similatlng theFoodandRegula ting thz Stomachs and Bowels of Promotes DtgestiortCbeerfirt ness and RestCon tains neither Opiiim.MoTphme nor Mineral Not Narcotic. JliipaivuMt -form Set ji- A perfect-Remedy forConsfi na tion.. Sour Stomacb. Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions .Feverish nes and LOSS OF SLEEK facsimile Signature cf VTEW "YORK. EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. 'A s. 1 1'J iThe Kind You Have Always Bought and which has been in use for over 30' years, has borne the signa ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his personal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imi tations and " Just-as-good " are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children E xperience against Experiment. GENUINE Dr.W. L. Leister, of Rogers, Ark., says: "As a practicing physician I use Castoria and like" it very much." Dr. W. T. Seeley, of Amity, N. Y., says : "I have used your Castoria for several years in my practice and have found it a safe and reliable remedy." Dr. Raymond M. Evarts, of Santa Ynez, Cal., says: "After using your Castoria for children for years "it annoys me greatly to have an ig norant druggist substitute some-, thing else, especially to the patient's disadvantage, as in this case. I en close herewith the wrapper of the imitation." Dr. E. II. "Ward, of Kansas City, Mo., says: "Physicians generally do not prescribe proprietary "prepara tions, but in the case of Castoria my experience, like that of many other physicians, has taught me to make an exception. I prescribe your Cas toria in my practice because I have found it to be a thoroughly reliable remedy for children's complaints. Any physician who has raised a family, as I have, will join me in heartiest recommendation of Casto- ,i'V .llilliiiiliili-lth!;;!!!;,.!!' Dr. W. F. "Wallace, of Bradford, N. H., says : "I use your Castoria in my practice, and in my family." Dr. Wm. J. McCrann, of Omaha, Neb., says: "As the fa.ther of thir- teen children I certainly know some thing about your great medicine and aside from my own family experi ence, I have, in my years of practice, found Castoria a popular and effi cient remedy in almost every home." Dr. Howard James, of New York City, says : "It i3 with great pleasure that I desire to testify to the medici nal virtue of your Castoria. I have used it with marked benefit in the case of my own daughter, and have obtained excellent Teeults from its administration to other children in my practice." Dr. J. E. Clausen, of Philadel phia, Pa., says: "The name that your Castoria has made for itself in the tens of thousands of homes blessed by the presence of children, scarcely needs to be supplemented by the endorsement of the medical pro fession, but I, for one, most heartily endorse it and believe it an excel lent remedy." Dr. B. Halstead Scott, of Chicago, 111., says: "I have prescribed your Castoria often for infants during my practice and find it very satis factory." Dr. William Belmont, of Cleve land, Ohio, says: "Your Castoria stands first in its class. In my thirty years of practice I can say I never have found anything that so filled the place." Dr. E. J. Hamlen, of Detroit, Mich., says: "I prescribe your Cas toria extensively as I have never found anything to eqnal it for chil dren's troubles. I am aware that there are imitations in the field, but I always see that my patients get Fletcher's." Dr. Channing H. Coot, of Sain! Louis, Mo., says : "I have used your Castoria for several years past in my own family and have always found it thoroughly efficient and never objected to by children, which is a great consideration in view of the fact that most medicines of this character are obnoxious and there fore difficult of administration. As a laxative I consider it the peer -of anything that I ever prescribed." Dr. L. 0. Morgan, of So. rAmboy, N. J., says : "I prescribe your Casto ria every day for children who are suffering from constipation, with better effect than -I receive from any; other combination of drugs." Dr. H. J. Taft, of Brooklyn, N. Y., says : "I have used your Castoria and found it an excellent remedy in my household and private practice for many years. The formula is ex cellent." Dr. Wm. Ii. Boss em an, of Buf falo, N. Y says: "I am pleased to speak a good word for your Castoria. I think so highly of it that I not only recommend it to others, but he.ve uaed it in my own family." Dr. F. H. Kyle, of St Paul, Minn., says : "It affords me pleasure to add my name to the long list of those who have used and now en dorse your Castoria. The fact of the ingredients being known through the printing of the formula on the wrapper is one good and sufficient reason for the recommendation of any physician. I know of its good qualities and recommend it cheerfully." Bears the Signature of ...ni!l l!'l!K,.iiHllE!:il! "Hill" w- ' M ,r 3 .! r ,i ii" mm nil1""11"11 w I"""""""11 ar -janr m j r , f trip iB' SfiSfis'' I ASK YOU PHYSICJA Nxiiniiitifliiiiitiuiiiiun Miiianiiiiniianii PHASES OF INDUSTRIAL GROWTH IN THE STATE OF OREGON LOG DRIVES ARE THING OF PAST Railroads Now Haul Timber Formerly Floated Down the River. STREAMS TOO UNCERTAIN lld-Time Loggers Hnd to Walt on Seasons, While Modern Tim bering Can Be Carried on at Any Time. LA. GRANDE, Or., Feb. 10. (Special.) For the first time since the big sawmill was established at Perry, there will be no attempt this Spring to make a log drive down the river. As far as the Grande-Ronde Lumber Company is on-T-erned this is an off year for the "River boy." The "Winter has been an uneventful one at up-river sections lor the reason that there have been no logging camps at work; no- Interest as to whether the weather would be good for skidding or as to the prospects for an early drive. The Perry Mills will be supplied prin cipally by the lodging road which goes up Rock Creek. The logging train is busy and makes daily trips and the logs are not even dumped into the river at llilgard, but are brought on down and unloaded on the ice above the Perry dam. The river drive is being abandoned for the logging road in a good many places and it is believed if the Perry enterprise were to be started with the experience of today there never would be any log drives, but a logging road would extend as far up as necessary to reach the lumber. The Grande-Ronde Lumber Company has extensive timber holdings below Klgln and it is assumed that when it turns to that district for a log supply, it will use the rails the same as the Palmer Company and the "Wilcox Com pany will do. It is said that in some parts of the country logs are being hauled distances of 150 miles or nmre to mills. The logging train is the more depend able and the greatest advantage is that it can be used at any season of the year. It is different with the driving plan and especially when an unfavorable season comes. Logs can be hauled along the river to advantage only during the Win ter when there to plenty of snow. In several seasons since the Perry mills were started the logging contractors have been "up against it" on account of unfavorable- weather and lack of snow. Steve Richardson lost thousands of dol lars one year. "Old Men" Coombs, Mike Nelson. Jack Reilley and 'others know what it means to have a big outfit as sembled on. a couple of million feet con tract and an open Winter to contend with. Mr. Reilley says a man is foolish to talk logging contracts unless he can stand an occasional loss of a season's work. In the average the business win pay, but he must expect a set-back about one year out of every three. Modern ideas will not tolerate so large a percentage of fruitless energy and that is why the logging road is looked upon as a per manent and indispensable factor in the lumber mill business. CHEHALIS CREAMERY SOLD Xelson & Justesen Dispose of Plant to Newcomer. CHEHALIS, Wash., Feb. 10. (Special.) Nelson & Justesen have sold the Che halis creamery to O. Brewer, who re cently came here from the northern part of the state. The creamery here has been a success ever since it was 'started, the business having grown with the de velopment of dairying in the Chehalis and Newaukum valleys. During 1906 over 25,000 pounds more butter was made here than during the previous year. Nelson & Justesen will engage in business in Portland. The Chehalis milk condensing plant is now receiving almost an even 25,000 pounds of milk daily. This Is a very great increase over the Winter months of a year ago. The new building which the company is erecting here is now un der roof, and the finishing of the inner portion is now well under way. Superintendent Saves Fish. NORTH BEND, Or., Feb. 10. (Special.) Eight million flsh are being saved the Government because of the patriotism of Superintendent of Fish Hatcheries Smith, of Coos County. Last week the Government appropriation applying to the Coos and Coquille River hatch eries ran out and all of the men employed, except the superintendent, quit. There are 4,000,000 fish fry in each hatchery, of the chinook variety. The flsh are too young to be turned out of the hatcheries now. In eight weeks' time they will be old enough and the superintendent will stay and mature them until that period. He does not expect any sort of recompense for the eight weeks other than a clear conscience. Supervisors Discuss Roads. ALBANY, Or., Feb. 10. (Special.) Linn County Road Supervisors held their an nual convention in Albany yesterday and discussed the best methods of road build ing. All phases of road work were con sidered at the meeting, the discussion tending to the adoption of more syste matic methods of work. The most im portant action of the convention was the adoption of a resolution calling upon the Legislature to pass a law permitting any road district to levy a special tax for road purposes under the same methods of pro cedure by which special school district taxes are now levied and collected. Show Interest in Roads. CHEHALISv Wash., Feb. 10. (Special.) Chehalis is the center of tlfe good-roads movement In Southwestern Washington. Accordingly, last night 8. C. Lancaster, of the office of public roads. United States Department of Agriculture, was given a good audience, although but very short notice was given of his coming. Mr. Lancaster delivered an address at the Grand Opera-House, illustrating it with many interesting views. In the after noon Mr. Lancaster appeared before the Lewis County Commissioners and took up with them the matter of building a sample mile of road near this city. The arrangement has practically been closed for this to be done this coming Spring. Lumber Company to Enlarge. WALLOWA. Or., Feb. 10. (Special.) The regular monthly meeting of the di rectors of the Wallowa Lumber & Manu facturing Company was held in the sec retary's office Saturday. The 'company voted to place orders for the necessary belting, shafting and fixtures to operate the plant as soon as Spring opens. The company has bought equipment Tor a Morton dry kiln, and a building will be erected. : Buys Site for Bank. FOREST GROVE, Or., Feb. 10. (Spe cial.) The First National Bank has closed a deal with C. . F. Miller for the lot at the corner of Main street and First avenue North, on which a new bank building will be erected this Summer. This is one of the best business locations in the city. AVallowa News Will Move. WALLOWA, Or., Feb. 10. (Special.) The Wallowa News, edited at this place by Fred G. Conley, has announced its in tention to move to Enterprise some time this month. Mr. Conley has many friends in Enterprise who have often requested him to come to that city. BEEF COWS DRIVEN OUT DAIRY INDUSTRY SUPPLANTS CATTLE-RAISING. Ranges Overstocked and Ranchers Turn Attention to Supplying Creameries With Milk. PRAIRIE CITY, Or., Feb. 10. (Special.) A creamery for Prairie City is now as sured, as grading for the building has been commenced. E. D. Severance, rep resenting the Rock Creek Creamery Com pany, has been here lately to make ar rangements for the erection of a build ing to be used for a cream station, and will, as soon as completed, install, the necessary machinery for separating and pasteurizing the cream. The company will buy all the cream it can obtain, pasteur ize it, and .ship it to Baker City. But, this Is only the beginning. Owing to present conditions here, the company did not know how large a plant this section of the country could support and It. will therefore start the -enterprise on a small scale and increase it in proportion to the support the stockmeil give it. The Rock Creek Creamery Company is now operating at Haines arid Pine Valley, near Baker City. The stockmen are raising cattle for beef only, which used to be very profitable, but as the range is overstocked the grass as a consequence is short and the cattle cannot now live on the range in good growing condition for more than about six months of the year, and the remainder of the year they must be fed or kept in pastures. As a consequence the cattle-raising business is not now profitable, and the stockmen see the ne cessity of adopting new methods to make i their ranches pay. DAIRYMEN HAVE PROFITABLE YEAR Report of Tillamook Cheese Factories Shows an In creased Output. STATISTICS TELL STORY Rich. Coast Region Adds Largely to Dairy "Wealth During 1906. One Cow Nets Her Owner $74.. TILLAMOOK, Or.. Feb. 10. (Special.) Carl Haberlach, who is the secretary for a number of the largest cheese factories in Tillamook County, is preparing his re ports, which show another profitable year for the dairymen in this county. Mr. Haberlach, in his report of the Maple Leaf Creamery Association, which is situated on Wilson River, and was started only last year, has a record of nearly 4,000,000 pounds of milk for 1906, and gives a detailed Account which, in brief, is as follows: Account of milk received January, 21, 06H pounds: "February, 24.384 pounds; March, 140,104 pounds; April. 436,424; May 623,203; June, 579.491; July, 564,177; August' 458,0i50; September, 336.141; October. 316,181; November, lio,753; December, 66,556. To tal, 3.745.4SO. This is a gain over the pre ceding year of 1,146,505 pounds, or oyer 45 per cent. Amount of butter fat In milk, 148.853.22 pounds. The average test for the season was .03972 per cent. The amount of cheese manufactured and sold was 3S7.180 pounds. The average yield was 10.34 pounds of cheese per 100 pounds of milk. Other figures are: Amount received for cheese, J46.484.2o" average price received, 11.75 cents per pound for cheese: number of cows kept 681, average per cow, J66.78; average amount of cheese per pound butter fat, 2.60 pounds; average amount of milk re quired for pound of cheese, 9.68 pounds Patrons were paid for butter fat as follows: January, 29 1-3 cents; February, 31.8 cents; March, 33.1 cents: April, 29.5 cents; May, 23 cents; June, 25 1-3 cents; July, 26.6 cents: August, 26.7 cents; Sep tember. 27.5 cents: October, 29.5 cents; November, 30 cents; December, 29 cents. The returns for the Clover Leaf Cream ery Company show that the factory re ceived 1,510,802 pounds of milk in 1906. Figures are: Amount of butter fat In milk, 59,182.71 pounds; amount of cheese manufactured and sold, 162,616 pounds; amount of money received for cheese, $19, 154.12; average test for the season, .03.92 per cent; average yield, 10.74 pounds of cheese per 100 pounds of milk; average price received for cheese, 11.77 cents per pound. Prices paid for butter fat for the season -were as follows: March, 35 cents; April, July, 26.3 cents; August, 26.5 cents; Sep tember, 27.6 cents: October. 30 cents; No vember, 29.5 cents; December, 30 cents. This makes the average price received for butter fat 26.S7 cents. The following are four individual cases where the dairymen grow all their own feed and do all their own work. water channel in Puny Inlet, an arm of Coos Bay. The inU't now has but a depth of seven feet at high tide. The chan nel will be 50 feet wide and will have a depth of 20 feet at low tide. The channel will enable sea going ves sels to handle the output of a $25,000 saw mill which is being erected at Swing Lbs. milk. Butter fat. Proceeds. "W. B. Alderman J28,!tr 52. $14J. :7 Nels Hanson i:!7,:t27 SI4 14114.47 Gust Wirklund 172,tl40 filtttl 1SSI2.2M D. Fltzpatrlck 122.105 .Vi:m 1411. HI Per row. $74 X7 74.72 72 7S 70..-itt Northern Pacific Paying Tijxes. CHEHALIS, Wash., Feb. 10. (Special.) Jay Sedgwick, tax agent of the North ern Pacific, was in Chehalis yesterday and paid the company's taxes for 1906, a total of $30,3S0.55. This payment included these items: Main line right of way,' $15,882.53: personal, $3690.36; South Bend right of way. $7215.09; personal, $1992.34; Olympla branch right of way, $1232.78: personal, $317.19; realty. $42.96. Later the company will pay on its land holdings in the county. Taxes are coming Into the office of County Treasurer Summersett in a very satisfactory way. many owners taking ad vantage of the 3 per cent rebate. Logging Camps Suspend. LA GRANDE, Or., Feb. 10. (Special.) Work in the Palmer Lumber Company's camps. in the Looking Glass country has been suspended for the present, on ac count of the slow progress of the O. K. & N. track extension. The lumber com pany has 6,000.000 feet of timber cut. which will be available as soon as the big mill is ready to run. Work on the track extension below Elgin has been practically at a standstill for several weeks, principally on account of the weather conditions. Little Damage to Grain. FOREST GROVE. Or., Feb. 10 fSpe cial.) An Investigation of the Winter grain fields in this vicinity during the last day or two shows that very little damage resulted from the recent cold weather. Some of the blades of the growing' grain have yellowed from the effects of the freeze, but the plants themselves are all right and a few days of warm weather will make them as green as ever. Perry Mills Start Early. LA GRANDE, Or.. Feb. 10. (Special.) It Is the Intention to start the mills at Perry by the middle of this montn, or as soon thereafter as possible. This is much earlier than usual, but the demands are pressing, and it is not the intention to lose any time. At present the annual work of overhauling and repairing the mill is in progress. Some important changes are-being made, with an expendi ture of about $3000. Astoria Reorganizes Work. ASTORIA, Or.. Feb. 10. (Special.) A mass meeting of citizens for the purpose of reorganizing the Chamber of Com merce and merging the other local com mercial organizations with it has been called for Thursday evening, February 14. Invitations to address the meeting have been accepted by Tom Richardson. Walter C. Smith and Charles B. Merrick of Portland. Will Dig Deep Channel. NORTH BEND, Or.. Feb. 10. (Special.) L J. Simpson, Mayor of North Bend, will spend $10,000 in constructing a deep- Point on the Inlet. The channel from the sawmill to the main channel in Coos Bay will be one mile long. Grant's Pass Hunk Enlarges. GRANT'S PASS, Or., Feb. 8. Josephine County is evidently prosperous. The Grant's Pass Banking & Trust Company, of this city, has added $50,000 to its cap ital stock, put in a savings department and enlarged its offices by the ddition of a new parlor. The cashier, L. L. Jewell, is Josephine's Representative in the present Legislature. Commencement at Monmouth. MONMOUTH, Or., Feb. 10. (Special.) . The baccalaureate exercises of the Feb ruary class of the Oregon State Normal School occurred in the Normal assembly hall this morning. The school chorus sang 'Mozart's "Gloria," from the Twelfth Mass, and Mr. Daughty sang Shelley's "Resurrection." The' sermon was delivered by Rev. E. W. Mowre. of Portland, and was a strung appeal for a clean, upright wtandard of intellectual Christianity. The graduating class num bers 14 members of whom five have com pleted the advanced course. On Monday evening occurs the com mencement exercises at which Dr. Schafer of the State University is to deliver the address to the class. Monday morning the closing chapel exercises are held and in the afternoon of the same daj occurs the cls-d;iy proeramme. Is What You Want Others May Treat but We Cure Our Fee ' In Any Uncom plicated Case. Tou miiMt come to "a sooner or later. Whv not now? Refuse to suffer longer on promises of other?. Consultation Is Free, and All ro Cordially Invited to Call. There are so many men suffer ing from chronic pelvic diseases, and the greater number of these victims are still more unfortu nate in treating with doctors who know only enough to pro duce temporary results, or a false cure, if they succeed In benefiting the sufferer at all. There is no such thing as a par tial cure of a disease, and the physician whose method does not eradicate every vestige cannot rightfully claim to do more than relieve. Our Pelvic Methods In sure Kvery Man n llfelnnfc rare for prostatic trouble, varicocele, kidney and bladder, blood poison, aneelnl dlaeases. Our cure is a thorough and scientific course of treatment, which acts at once upon the nerve force, stopping the drain and replacing the worn out and run-down tissues. It increases the weight in sound, healthy flesh and muscles that give strength and fills tho brain and nerves with fresh vitality, building up the entire system and transforming the suf ferer into a type of perfect manhood. CONSULTATION FREE AND INVITED. Write, if you cannot call. All correspondence strictly confidential, and all replies sent in plain en velope. Office Hours S A. M. to 8:30 P. M. Sundays, 9 to 12 M. Established 25 Years in Portland NO PAY UNLESS CURED ST. LOUIS MEDICAL AND SURGICAL DISPENSARY CORNER SECOND AND YAMHILL STREETS, PORTLAND, OREGON