Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, February 25, 1908, Page 10, Image 10

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    TIIE MORNING OREGONIAN, TUESDAY, . FEBRUARY 25, 1908.
10
WAYMIRE-RADDSNG
TIL IS NEAR Ei
Defense Closes Unexpectedly
and Case Will Go to Jury
' This Afternoon.
MANNING MAKES FINE TALK
District Attorney Followed by V. R.
McGarry for Defense Malarkcy
and Logan Will Cloxe Today
for the Kes-pettive Sides.
Final arguments alone soparate the
(Yavmire-Rariding blackmail case from
the" jnry. Tlie defense rested unex
pectedly at 2:5 o'clock yesterday after
noon, arguments on questions of law
were barred, and the opening argu
ments were heard. So that the one
question the jury will have to deal
with is this: Was Mayor Lane telling
the truth or were Mre. Wayraire and
Kaddtng?
lilko the testimony, the arguments
thus far presented by the state and de
fense are directly contrary. Villain,
wretch, vampire, vulture, ulcer, scoun
drel, devil, Hnd similar fiery descriptive
adjectives, were applied by District At
torney Manning to Kadding. He re
ferred to the woman in barely less com
plimentary terms.
Mayor Lane likewise came in for a
scorching in the opening statement by
T.awver McGarry. Gay Lothario, de
signing old bird, designing rascal, old
barnyard rooster and frivolous trifler
were terms applied to the Mayor. In
the last two and a half hours of the.
afternoon epithets flew thick and fast,
but it is said on authority that they
were mild as compared with what are.
to come toda5 when Special Prosecutor
Malarkey will close for the state, and
Lawyer joint F. Logan for the defense.
Defense Calls Couucilnicn.
The case will go to the jury rather
sooner than was expected. In view pf
the fact that the defense had at least
a dozen witnesses on hand, it was quite
generally believed that the arguments
would not be reached before today.
However, Mr. Logan announced that
he would dispense with calling the
members of the City Council, excepting
two, who were on the stand early in
the day. Councilmen Bennett and An
nand were asked as to how the Way
niire incident had affected the Mayor's
reputation. Both said it had not in
jured the Chief Executive, in their be
lief. "
"The Mayor's reputation is no worse
than it was before this thing hap
pened," Mr. Annand said. In reply to a
question asked liini by a juryman.
K. K. Radding, the woman's alleged
confederate in the conspiracy, and V.
M. Bell, her so-called sweetheart, were
the two witnesses who occupied most
of the day, and neither of them said
anything that did the defense any good.
Bell was a miserable witness, and not
only contradicted himself and got fre
quently muddled up, but insisted on
one thing that seemed altogether un
reasonable to believe. Thi6 was that
lie never discussed the case with Rad
ding, although rooming , and sleeping
with that Individual ever since the oc
currence. Bell's demeanor afterward
won for him the characterization of
"simpering idiot," this phrase being ap
plied by Mr. Manning.
Kadding Cool on' Stand.
Kadding was a good witness so far as
keeping cool was concerned and he made
what lie said fit in consistently with the
general contention of the defense.
Whether the jury believed anything he
was saying, however, is a matter of some
little doubt. Such sentiments and actions
as he attributed to himself are some
times met with in talcs of fiction but
seldom in real life. No doubt such things
as Radding said would be accepted as
truth more readily from that erratic per
son than from the normal man.
His story ran in this wise: He used to
love Mrs. Waymire but she gave her
transitory affections to Bell. Then with
that beautiful spirit of altruism which
can be met with so often in romance
and so seldom elsewhere, he turned the
tide of his burning love to aiding and
' guarding Bell's suit even at the sacritice
of his own happiness. It came to him as
a shock that Mra. Wayniire was visiting
the Mayor at the Hamilton building
office. He spoke to her about it. She
said, "Mind your business." He told
Bell. Bell spoke to her. She was none
the less gracious with that favored one.
Then he set out to learn the meaning of
these visits. Was she really worthy, after
all. of the devotion of the goodly Bell?
About this time Mandelay told him he
had seen Mrs. Waymire emerge from the
Mayor's presence with hair and clothing
'disheveled and disarranged. Mandelay
had noticed this while leaving the office
of a dentist and the discovery had been
quite by accident. Radding admitted that
he then deliberately set about watching
the woman.
He followed her into the Hamilton
building on the night of the "catastro
phe." He was loitering about to note
her condition when she emerged. He
heard her frightened piercing screams for
help. He ran to the door. The janitor
was fumbling with the keys so he
Bmashed the glass.
Tladding Tells What Me Saw.
What he saw was altogether different
from that beheld by the elevator boy
and janitor. He saw the Mayor wrest
ling with Mrs. Waymire and striving to
force her back onto a couch. The strug
gle ended as he and tie others stepped
inside. Mrs. Waymire emitted her now
historic ejaculation. "The old brute, he
tried to force me." and fled. Radding.
too. fled, going straight to the jiarquam
building where he found Mrs. Waymire
and Bell preparing to go to Vancouver,
Wash. Ho made no suggestion about
their flight, he said.
The cross-examination of Radtfing con
sisted chiefly of a wrangling match be
tween Manning and I-ogan. The Dis
trict Attorney got to asking a second
question before an answer had been
given to the first. To this Logan ob
jected and they delayed the game at least
half an hour by these tactics.
"How do you reckon I can cross-examine
a man with you hanging over my
shoulder?" Manning asked with some
show of Irritation. Logan was leaning
on the back of the prosecutor's chair.
"Tou'll find me right here a straddle
of your neck all day unless you conduct
your cross-examination in a proper man
ner." said Logan.
Manning brought out the point that
Radding offered Mrs. Waymire no assist
ance when he broke into the Mayor's
room and that he did not so much as
offer to see her out the building, notwith
standing his protestations of undying
love.
As a final question Manning asked Rad
ding what name he had gone under in
Missouri. The question was not answered
and Logan at once jumped up to accuse
Malarkey of having used confidential in
formation In the case, inasmuch as Ma
larkey had been Radding's lawyer sev
eral years ago when the Missouri inci
dent had been taken up.
"We rest," said McGarry. and. after
10 'minutes of discussing the advisabil
ity of, arguing points of law involved, the
court ruled that these could bn dispensed
with and directed that the state proceed
to argue.
Manning Makes Fine Argument.
Mr. Manning, in facing the jury, ex
plained that much of a talk could not be
expected of him, as he was suffering from
bronchial trouble. "That was the reason
Mr. Malarkey had taken so active a part
in the examination of . witnesses," he
added. Manning's statement to the jury,
however, proved a surprise in view of his
apologies. It was finely timed, terse, log
ical, well delivered and" effective. The
jury looked tired and very much bored
when the prosecutor started speaking.
Every man of the 12 was giving him the
closest attention before he had been
speaking five minutes.
It had been clearly shown, he said, that
the whole thing was a blackmail plot, in
tended to ruin the Mayor's reputation.
"Ft would be an outrage to the people of
this community if by your verdict you
should acquit these people," he said. "It
would not then be safe for me, as District
Attorney, to receive visitors on business
in my private office.
"How utterly absurd it is to say the
Mayor of this city is guilty of these absurd-
charges. It was simply the old
badger game worked over again. That
woman might have come to your office,
gentlemen, or she might have come to
I NEW HOME OF THE Y. W. C. A. . j
j , . -rT " j
!
l.DlX'ti COMM1TTTKK KKt'OMMBXDS THAT CONTRACTS BE IJiT AT ONCE
TURE MAIN AUtiHTOX. RAYMOND LAWRENCE, ARCHITECTS.
Within the next few week work is to be resumed on both the Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. buildings. A meeting of
the building committee of the Y. W. C. A was held yesterday in the offices of trie architects. MacNaughton, Raymond &
I.awrence, and it was recommended to the board of governors of the association .that contracts be awarded imme
diately. Contracts for the steel superstructure of the Y. M. C. A. have also been received and it Is expected they will 1
be let the last of the present week. It Is practically certain that work will be carried on without interruption until the
two structures are completed.
The Y. W. C A. building is to stand at the no&lheast corner of Seventh and Taylor streets, occupying 60x100 feet.
The basement for It and the Y. M. C. A. building, adjoining on the east, has been completed. The two structures will
be entirely separate and do not correspond closely in design. The accompanying perspective sketch has been definitely
adopted by the Y. W. C. A.
The women's building will be ofbuff brick, trimmed with light terra cotta and will cost $75,000. It 'will have a
marble entrance and the first floor will contain the reception rooms, lobby and business office. There will also be an
auditorium, seating 2o0 people, on this floor. On the second floor will be dining-rooms, 'cafeteria and a spacious kitchen.
A gymnasium. 40x100 feet, will occupy the greater part of the third and fourth stories. The remainder of the third floor
will be divided into classrooms, while the fourth floor will contain living-rooms for about 20 girls and are intended to ac
commodate transients, affording them a homelike place to stop while in Portland. A feature of this building will be a
large Bwimming pool in the basement. This pool will be IT by 40 feet and will be tile lined. All the facilities for ath
letic exercises will be unusually good, the gymnasium being much larger than those generally constructed for the use
of women. . '
mine; but. thank God, she went to Mayor.
Lane's office instead of mine."
Summing up the evidence presented by
the defense, Mr. Manning said Radding's
story was manifestly untrue, that the
woman's was obviously concocted, and
that Bell's testimony was not only a fab
ric of prevarication, but was too plainly
untrue to merit serious consideration. All
Bell's testimony was simply a confirma
tion of the report that he had loved Mrs.
Waymire, with various uninteresting em
bellishments. It was a reflection on the
intelligence of the jury for Bell to say
he had never talked over the case with
Radding, Mr. Manning said:
Says Bell Lied.
"Bell lied," said he. "He went on the
stand with a lie on his lips. His state
ment about not talking with Radding was
the most ridiculous statement lever
heard made by any man. But Bell comes
here not for himself. He is the tool of
these people. He is a poor, simple, un
fortunate fellow. In comparison with the
intelligence of Mrs. Waymire and this
man Radding, 'Bell is a simpering idiot,
worse than any that was ever taken to
the insane asylum at Salem.
ft'ow, gentlemen, what is this man
Radding? What has he ever done but
prey on other people? Look at his
past "
Logan here made objection to discuss
ing Radding's past and he and the pros
ecutor exchanged courtesies in character
istic manner.
"Put a burr under a mule's tail and
he'll whine," said Manning.
"Yes, and you're the mule." protested
!Mr. .ogun, loudly, whereat Manning
"started to shake his fist in Logan's
face, but ended by doing this with a
smile, as if a second thought had sud
denly seized upon him.
"When a man has any honest vocation
it comes out," said Manning. "But when,
like Othello, he's just waiting around for
something to turn up, nothing is said
about it," added the prosecutor.
"If these people hadn't been caught,"
he continued, "they would have ueen
back in 30 days. They would have called
on the Mayor and said: 'Here, now,
you'd better do this or that or we'll ex
pose you.' It's nothing more or less than
the old badger game. These are worse
cases than burglaries or even than mur
ders. Look at that woman for yourself!
I never saw a woman who had such des
peration written In her face. Her every
expression and every move shows it.
I'm sorry of It. I'd like to be able to
say this woman does not deserve to be
handled so roughly as this man. But I
think she is worse.
Pays Kespccts to Kadding.
"In making your verdict you must con
sider, too. how many of us would fall
into such a trap prepared by such a
woman with the help of that rascal Rad
ding. That fellow Radding has done
no good to society. Tie is of no use to
the community now. I believe ho Is the
most despicable creature that ever put
foot in Multnomah County. The deep
est, darkest shadow of Dante's Inferno
was a glittering ornament as compared
with this defendant.
'This woman, Mrs. Waymire, won the
Mayor's sympathetic ear by telling a
beautiful story of a child In Missouri.
Then it is alleged that he called her
'dearie' and 'girlie.' And when he kissed
and hugged her and made proposals to
her. as she says, why did she go uack
to see him again? For just exactly what
happened 1 . .
"I have taken a great interest in
this case, but not because Mayor Lane
was concerned. I am not here to de-
fend one act of Mayor Lane's: but be
cause this is the most dangerous of all
crimes the badger game. It is only
punishable by imprisonment for a few
months in the County Jail, but If I had
my way it would be possible to send
such people to the penitentiary for 20
years. . The eyes of this community
look on you to protect it in this case.
I predict that, in the face of the evi
dence presented, you will bring in a.
verdict of guilty within 15 minutes.
Then you can feel that you have done
your whole duty."
McGarry Oiiens." for Defense.
Mr. McGarry then opened for the
defense, but devoted his hour to a
summary of the evidence, paying only
casual respects to) Mayor Lane. He
will present a recapitulation this
morning. He said the theory of the
state seemed to be that because Mrs.
Waymire and Radding were poor and
worked for a living they were un
worthy of consideration or belief. The
whole case hRd resulted, he urged,
through the Mayor having wrongly
concluded that Mrs. Waymire was
loose in hJr morals.
"As to that letter of recommendation
for which, this girl called at the Mayor's
private office," said McGarry, "couldn't
he have left that letter with his stenog
rapher at the City Hall for Mrs. Way
mire. But no! He carted it around with
him, this' gay Lothario did; carted it
down to the private office where he had
his couch and his screen. And he had
the letter misspelled so that he could say
to the girl, 'Dearie, girlie, you'll have to
call again.' What was the old fellow
trying to do, anyway? Isn't it all plain?
"He made the mistake of thinking this
girl was easy. But he was wrong. Why,
even the barnyard hen will run away
from an old barnyard rooster like that'
After it was over he called on his friend
Dick Montague and his friend Tom
Greene, and they stewed the thing over
and decided this story that has been told
here would be the best thing for them.
Then, what did they do? They called at
10 o'clock at night at The Oregonlan and
told of what iiad occurred. They could
have found the editor at 6 o'clock, but
they did not have their story ready then.
They did not call on him until 10 o'clock.
"Another thing; why did the Mayor ex
cuse himself from the meeting of the
Fire Board on that afternoon? It was
one of the most important meetings ever
held, relating as it did to the purchase
of a water tower. Yet the Mayor could
not stay even when urged to do so. He
had to hurry away to his private office,
where he met Mrs. Waymire."
Judge Adjourns Court.
"How much longer will your argument
last?'' Judge Gantenbein inquired, noting
that it was after 5 o'clock. .
"About half an hour," was the reply,
and the Judge then adjourned court until
9:30 A. M. today. McGarry will be fol
lowed by Mr. Logan, from whom much
Is expected in the way of oratory. Mr.
Malarkey will then close for the state,
the court will deliver his instructions to
the jury and the 12 men will retire for
deliberation.
WHERE THE MONEY WENT
Officers of Associated Charities Re
port Their Expenditures.
PORTLAND, Feb. 22. (To the Editor.)
Will you kindly give space hi your next
edition for the following statement of
the accounts of the Associated Charities
for the months of December, 1907, and
January, 190S?
Pccenioor. January.
Salaries aOB.fxl S STi.OO
Telephones and telegraph.. n.BO It. 00
Rent, office 25.00 HS.OO
Meals 615.O0 1.B2.-..50
Lodgings 104.03 0H7.75
Meals and lodgings 22.5" lo."5
Groceries .; IiiS.43
Fuel 3U.75 10.25
Optical goous f.90
Tool 32.10 1H.8.1
Express charges '-1.55 2.ftO
DrygocKla and shos 02. 75 12.1K1
Printing and stationery ... 11. 40 6.05
Directory .00
Suudries 72.68 2HO.S0
ft. 577.41 ?S,O:!4.03
Sundries Acc6unt
Office sundries 23.r.B
far tickets .on 21. 1.50
Cleaning and Mending R.00 3.20
Hauling 7.SO 14.25
Milk for tubercular case .. A.itn
Newspapers 1.35 2.S5
Stamps 10.00
t;as 1 70 2.95
Shoe repairs 4.3 7.1
T.ent 1 6.00 1.75
Nurse - .
Transportation .: 3.70
Membership N C. C. & C 2.50
S 72.68 X 260.80
The item for carfare in January cov
ers the car tickets for the work gang
sent to Columbia Park from To to 90
men daily, and for a time two shifts
daily were sent out.
MILLIE R. TRUMBULL. Registrar.
W. R. WALPOLK, Secretary.
Spectacles $1.00 at Metzger's.
LIGHT TURNED ON
FURNITURE FIRMS
Council Committee Probes As
sociation Under Belding
Anti-Trust Ordinance.
TACIT FACT IS CHARGED
Witnesses Swear That Jobbers Re
fuse Goods to Independent Deal
ers and That Federal Fines
Did Not Kill the Combine.
That a tacit agreement exists among
rnembers of the Northwest Furniture
Dealers' Association to hold up prices
FOR KRKCTION OF ??5,000 STRIC
and drive independent dealers from the
field was declared yesterday by witnesses
before the special Council committee
which is investigating the alleged furni
ture trust. It was supposed that with
the fining of the members of the trust
in the Federal Court last Fall, upon
their pleading guilty to maintaining an
illegal combination, the trust had been
broken up. It Is asserted that whole-
salers stand together as stoutly as ever.
I and if conclusive evidence can be - se
cured, suit will be brought under - the
Belding anti-trust ordinance.
Could Not Buy Goods.
The special Council committee, com
posed of Councilmen Vaughn, Belding
and Concannon, met for the grst time
yesterday and prodded the alleged furni
ture trust. Witnesses appeared before
the committee and testified that they
had applied to wholesale dealers promi
nent in the old combine and were un
able to purchase goods from them. These
witnesses said the trust is still in effect,
but works in secret and is doing every
thing it can to . crush the independent
dealers.
A. Kalischer, formerly of the Indepen
dent Furniture Company: S. L. N. Gil
man, another dealer; D. P. Price, former
secretary of the trust, and Acting De
tective Inskeep testified. Mr. Kalischer
said he tried to purchase goods from
several wholesalers since the passage of
the Belding anti-trust ordinance and he
found an understanding exists among all
to refuse to sell to independent dealers.
The only excuse that was given was tnat
retailers desiring to purchase the goods
were not in harmony with members of
the former association and had assisted
in the Federal prosecution of the trust.
Detective Supports Charge.
The testimony of Mr. .Kalischer that
he was refused goods by wholesalers
when he sought to buy and tendered
money for the wares was corroborated
by Detective Inskeep, who accompanied
the independent dealer on his rounds.
3. L. N. Gilman. another independent
dealer, testified that his business ha,s
been ruined by the trust. He was un
able to purchase goods, he said, because
he did not belong to the Northwest Fur
niture Dealers' Association.
It was intended to show by this testi
mony that the association, while sup
posed to be broken up, is still working
quietly, with the purpose of crowding
out the independent dealers and main
taining a fixed schedule of prices.
Local manufacturers, it was testified,
were afraid to sell to independent deal
ers in some instances, lest they be boy
cotted by the powerful members of the
association.
D.. P. Price, formerly assistant secre
tary of the association, was called as a
witness and testified that so far as he
knew no combination of furniture deal
ers exists in the city.
The investigation will be continued by
the special committee tomorrow morning.
Probate Court Notes.
A part of the W. C. Noon estate is to
be sold. Judge Webster Issued an order
yesterday directing W. C. Noon. Jr., and
T. J. Armstrong, the executors, to sell
enough of the property to satisfy the
claims of the following creditors: Emily
J. Noon, City of Portland, Investers'
Mortgage Security Company, Ltd., Balfour-Guthrie
Investment Company, Wil
lamette Pulp & Paper Company. The
instructions of the court were to sell
the Columbia County property first. The
LYDIA E.
pinkhalvts
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
LYDIA E. PINKHAM
No other medicine for Woman's
ills in the world has received such
wide-spread and unqualified en
dorsement as has Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound, made
from native roots and herbs.
No other medicine has such a
record of success for woman's dis
eases, or such hosts of grateful
friends as has Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound.
For more than 30 years it has been
the standard remedy for feminine
ills, Inflammation, Ulceration, and
consequent Spinal Weakness.
It has relieved more cases of Back
ache and Local "Weaknesses than
any other one remedy. It dissolves
and expels tumors in an early stage
of development.
Irregularities and periodic pains,
Weakness of the Stomach, Indiges
tion, Bloating, Nervous Prostration,
Headache, General Debility, quickly
yield to it; also deranged organs,
causing pain, dragging sensations
and backache. Under all circum
stances it acts in harmony with the
female system.
It removesjthat vrearing feeling,
extreme lassitude, " don't care "and
"want -to -be -left -alone" feeling,
excitability, irritability ,nervousness,
dizziness, faintness, sleeplessness,
flatulency, melancholy or the "blues.
These are indications of Feminine
disorders, which this medicine over
comes as well as slight derangement
of the Kidneys of either sex.
Women who are sick and want to
get well should refuse to accept any
ubstitute for Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound.
property against which the Investors'
Mortgage Security Company and Balfour-Guthrie
Company hold liens is not
to be sold or less than enough to satisfy
these.
Charles F. Bailey has filed with the
County Court a petition for letters of
administration of the estate of his
father, Charles M. Bailey.
The real and personal property of
Frank W. Gla'ss is said to be worth
$1500. Linnle McB. Glass has petitioned
the County Court for letters of adminis
tration.
C. A. Alvord. George Howard and
William E. Spicer were appointed ap
praisers of the estate of Charles Lov
gren by the County Court yesterday. .
In the estate of Samuel P. Wheeler the
real property is worth about 9000 and the
personal property $800, according to Mary
M. Wheeler, the only heir, bhe was ap
pointed administratrix by the County
Court yesterday.
PERSONALJVIENTION.
W. H. Holmes, an attorney of Salem,
was in the city yesterday.
Mrs. T. B. Neuhausen returned yester
day from Spokane, where she was called
three weeks ago by the death of her
mother.
L. S. Cass, vice-president of the Chi
cago Great Western," will visit Portland
this week, on his way back to Chicago
from California, where he has been for
some time. Mr. Cass is traveling in a
special car, and his stay here will be
short, as he is engaged in an Inspec
tion of the whole Pacific Coast terri
tory. NEW YORK. Feb. 24. (Special.)
Northwestern people registered at New
York hotels:
From Portland Mrs. W. A. MacRea, at
Martha Washington; A. C. Burdick. at
the Grand Union.
From Baker City. C. P. Murphy, at the
6t. Denis.
From Spokane. Richards and wife, at
the Holland.
Xo Jury for Myers Will Case.
The motion that a jury be chosen to
try the George T. Myers will case will
be denied by -Judge Webster this morn
ing. The case wij came before the
County Court at 10 o'clock this morning.
The Myers will was filed for probate and
Is being contested by Mrs. Frances Stev
ens and George T. Myers, Jr., two of the
heirs. They allege that their father was
laboring under a delusion with reference
to his daughter when the will was made.
Case Will Come Up JIarch 9.
The question of the constitutionality
of the initiative and referendum act
will not come before the Circuit Court
until March 9. The case of the State'
of Oregon against the Pacific States
Telephone & Telegraph Company, in
which the question is raised by the
phone company, was to be tried Febru
ary 28. It has been postponed, by con
sent of the attorneys on both sides.
A FEELING OF SECURITY.
You naturally feel secure when you
know that the medicine you are about
to take Is absolutely pure and contains
no harmful or habit producing drugs.
Such a medicine is Dr. Kilmer's
Swamp-Root, the great Kidney, Liver
and Bladder Remedy.
The same standard of purity,
strength and excellence is maintained
In every bottle of Swamp-Root.
Swamp-Root Is scientifically com
pounded from vegetable herbs.
It is not a stimulant and is taken in
teaspoonful doses.
It is not recommended for every
thing. It is nature's great helper in reliev
ing and curing kidney, liver and blad
der troubles.
A sworn statement of purity Is with
every bottle of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp
Root. SAMPLE BOTTLE FREE BY MAIL.
Send to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingham
ton. N. Y., for a sample bottle, free by
mail it will convince any one. You
will also receive a booklet of valu
able information, telling all about the
kidneys. When writing be sure and
mention The Portland Dally Oregon ian.
NO EURMTDRB
TRUST FOR US
The afternoon papers yesterday
intimated' that all furniture
houses belonged to a trust. We
want to say EMPHATICALLY
that we belong to no trust. We
own our own building, occupy
one-half, collect big rents on the
balance. There is no big furni
ture house in to-vron such a low
expense basis. We would be
foolish, indeed, to yield our spe
cific advantage and join any
trust. Others pay rent. We col
lect rent (on half our own build
ing) . Who can sell the cheapest?
BALLOU & WRIGHT
ANNOUNCE ARRIVAL OF
1908 INDIAN MOTORCYCLES
H. P., S II P. TWIN-CYLINDER. S60
TRICARS
DELIVERY VANS
CALL ON US FOR DEM
ONSTRATION Several San Francisco lawyers will
present the case for the company.
SuflTerioc and Dollars Saved.
E. S. Loper, of Marllla, N. Y., says:
"I am a carpenter and have had many
severe cuts healed by Bucklen's Arnica
Salve. It has saved me suffering and
dollars. It is by far the best healing
salve I have ever found." Heals burns,
sores, ulcers, fever sores, eczema and
piles. 25c at Woodard, Clarke & Co.,
druggists.
Eye glasses $1.00 at Metzger's.
Kinetic Energy
Kinetic is a' good word. It
- means "power to make things
jo." A fat bank account, a
rock on the edge of a hill,
a barrel of gunpowder, and
SCOTT'S EMULSION all
contain "kinetic energy,"
so the professor tells us.
Power is stored up in
Scott's Emulsion
This force let loose in the
system of the consumptive
gives him the strength to
take on new flesh. It is a
powerful flesh-producer.
All Druz cists' EOc. and $1.00.
Some foods have the same
effect on the bowels as CascaretsJ
But one must select the foods and that's difficult
It's easier to take Cascarets.
Here is one way to keep cheerful :
Live out-doors and exercise in plenty. Eat coarse food, much
fruit, many green vegetables.
Here is the other way:
Take a Cascaret when you need it. That will supply, in a
gentle and natural way, the same laxative effect on the bowels.
Nobody questions that the first way is best.
So would it be best, for much the same reason, to do all of our reading
by sunlight.
But most of us are compelled to choose a second best way.
And that way is Cascarets.
No other laxative acts so nearly as proper living would act on the bowels.
The days of castor oil and salts, of pills and cathartics, are over.
What they did artificially, is now done by Cascarets gently.
' The right way is to take a Cascaret when you need it. Carry a box in
your pocket. Ward off those dull feelings, those headaches, before they
fairly get started.
Cascarets are candy tablets. They are sold by all druggists, but never
in bulk. Be sure to get the genuine, with CCC on every tablet. The price
is 50 cents, 25 cents and
Ten
BICYCLES AND AUTO
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Largest Stock of These
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86 SIXTH STREET
C. GEE WO
The UflURnowa
Reliable
CHINESE
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DOCTOR
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and is flvln to tba
world his wondsrful
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io Jii'iu'J . luiMiu ur Urujcs vera. lis
lures Wiiuuul Operation, or Without tbfl
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Catarrh Asthma. Lung. Throat. Rheums,'
tlm. Nervousness, Nervous Debility. StomJ
acb. Llvar Kidney Troubles; also Lost Man'
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A SURF. CANCER CCRK
Just Reo rived from l'ekloft. China Safe
finr ud Reliable. IP YOU ARB AP-
FLICTED. DON'T DELAY. DELAYS ARB
DANGEROUS. It you cannot call, write for
symptom blnnk and circular. Inclose 4
ctnt In stamps CONSULTATION FREK.
Xbe C. tie Wo Cbinrse Medklne Cow
13 First St.. Cur. Morii.oa.
Portland. Oregon.
riejUM Mention This rape.
Of all varieties permanent cured in a few days without
a surgical operation or detention from business. No pay
will be accrpted until the patient is completely satisfied.
:xnr fidelity Rupture Cure
714 swetland bldo.. Portland, Oregon
rs FOR WOMEN ONLY
Dr. Sanderson's C o m p ound
Savin and Cotton Root Pills.
The best and only reliable
remedy for DELAYED PER
IODS. Cure the most obstin
ate cases in 3 to 10 days. Price ti
per box, or three boxes 15. Sold by
druggists everywhere. Address T. J.
PIERCE. 181 First St.. Portland. Or.
Cents per Box.