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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (March 16, 1908)
12 TEE MORXIXG OREGONIAX, .MONDAY, MARCH 16, 190S. Industrial Growth in the Pacific Northwest OGEE PUNS TO BEAUTIFY CITY Better Buildings and Paved and Lighted Streets Are Promised. PLANT FLOWER GARDENS University City Will Beautify Sonth ern Pacific Station Grounds to Give Travelers Pleasant Im pression of the Town. EVGEXK. Or., March 15, (Special. The yfar 1M8 will not only be the fjreatept bulldinc era In the history of EuKene, hut it will be remarkable as a year of jcneral civic: improvements. One of the most important matters which is being brought to a successful culmination is a eeriea of ordinances requiring all build ers to secure permits ami prescribing cer tain fundamental rules of construction and provisions for fire protection to which the many new buildings to be erected in th future must conform. The City Council and a committee from the Eugene Commercial Club are working on these ordinances and they will be ready for passage at the next meeting of the Council. The three organizations of JCugene, which have thus far taken the h'ad In civic improvements, namely, the Fortnightly Club, the East Kugene improvement Club and the Rleventh Street Improvement Club, will unite with the committee of rive from the Commer cial Club and through co-operation with the City Council will endeavor to make Kugene as beautiful a city as can be found anywhere. ; Eugeno has already, beside her two blocks of park adjoining the county I courthouse, two beautiful parks of con i sirierable area. The City Council, at its (meeting Monday night, appropriated $."00 ' to be expended by the Park Commission on Hendrick's Park during the coming ' year. This amount was spent last year and it will be sufficient to construct good driveways to all the main points of in terest in that beautiful place. Want Better Streets. . But the greatest interest being shown by the citizens of Kugene is in the im provement of the streets. In Fairmount about eight miles of trees have been planted on each side of the streets, in cluding maples, walnuts, chestnuts, lin flns and catalpas. For East Eleventh street, many trees have been ordered be side some 100 palms which will be in place within a "few weeks. Arrangements have been made with the Willamette Valley Company, on East Eleventh street, to run the porch lights all night. This street from Willamette to the University cam pus will be paved this Summer, and yes terday contracts for the paving of Pat terson street, from Eleventh north to the brldgo across the millrace, were signed. The civic Improvement committee from the Commercial Club has taken up the matter of street lighting and decorating, especially for the main business streets of the city. It is proposed to have street lamps on both aides of Willamette street from the Southern Pacific depot to its intersection with Thirteenth street and these lights are to be kept going all night. They will be placed on orna mental lamp posts of a uniform design and will flood the street with a bright light. The merchants will also arrange to keep their windows lighted until the hour when there Is little traitic in the business section and the night police will see to It that the lights are cut off about 11 o'clock. The committee will also Insist that the Willamette Valley Com pany give the service provided in Its con tract in the residence sections of the city. Will Plant Flowers. A committee from the Merchants' Pro tective Association is at work securing flags, pennants, bunting and eledric dis plays to be used for special occasions and these decorations will be in charge of a special decoration committee from the business men, and they will always be ready for use. About 100 National flags will be ordered for the decoration of Wil lamette street. But the feature which will strike those passing, through more forcibly than any other mill be the beautiful flower gardens placed and maintained by the citizens on the new Southern Pacirte grounds. The new depot is now tinder course of con struction and .the officials of the road are lending every encouragement to the peo ple of Eugene for the making of as beau tiful a station as can be found anywhere along their lines. A campaign against unsightly buildings and bill posting will soon be commenced and the people of Eugene seem to be united in their desire and determination to remove the blemishes that greet the eye in many localities and prevent their repetition by effective ordinances. STRING NETWORK OF WIRES Palouse Farmers Plan Extensive J,onK-Tistance System. COLFAX. Wash., March 15. (Spe cial. The farmers of the thick. y-pop-u ; a ted wheat belt lying south of Colfax, between here and the Snake River, have organised a company for the con struction and operation of the most extensive system of rural telephone line ever attempted In this part of the Northwest, if not in the entire "West. The first lines of this system, which the contractors are under bond to have completed by June of the present year, will aggregate more than 65 miles, and this is only the nucleus of the network of lines of communication that the promoters of the present company hope In a few ye are to have connecting all of the farms, from La Crosse to Genessee, and from Colfax to the Snake River. The new company is known as the Penawawa Telephone Company, limit ed, and the line starts from the long distance office at Colfax. PRODUCES WHEAT STATISTICS Expert Shows Great Future of Cereals In British Columbia. VANCOUVER, B. C. March 15. (Spe cial.) Looking forward to a, great ex pansion of wheat-growing: In the North west, R. E. Young, a government ex pert, gave important evidence yester day before a special committee on ag riculture of the federal government. Last year the wheat crop totalled 100, 000.000 bushels, with a total settled area of 66.000.000 acres of land. Fig uring from this, he claimed that it is no stretch of the imagination to believe ' thai in the future I,3a0,0u0,000 bushels will be harvested In a single season. There are only 5.000,000 acres in Can ada now under wheat. One farm of 375 acres he was acquainted with in Sas katoon, Sask.. gave a net return of $14.33 to the acre. Latitude did not govern the climate In Canada, he declared. Last year it was just as warm in Fort Simpson and in the Valley of the Mackenzie River in the North ae It was in the cities of Winnipeg and Ottawa, It is a fact that as fine vegetables were grown last year at Fort Good Hope, inside the Arctic Circle, aa in any place in Can ada. Wheat of good quality, 62 bush els to the acre, was grown at Port Simpson, which is approximately 500 miles north of Vancouver. The southern boundary of the Province of Tobolsk. Siberia, is 100 miles further north than Edmonton, yet that Siberian djtetrict last year produced 64,000,000 blisheis of wheat. Builtl Roads in Clatsop. XECANICUM. Or.. March 15. (Spe cial.) Albert Hill, Road Supervisor, has a force of men grading; the road toward the summit between the Ne canicum and the North Nehalem, there being miles yet to build before the road reaches the latter stream. The graveling of the road from a point one mile below Push Is to be continue! in the Spring, and when this is completed one of the best driving-roads in Clat sop County will lie along the Necani cum. The men engaged in road work are mostly residents of the North Nehalem settlement. During the fishing season ONE OF THE MONEY-MAKING CHEESE FACTORIES OF TILLAMOOK COUNTY ( F ... i smmmmfiimmmi PI-ANT OF MAPLB LEAF CREAMERY ASSOCIATION ON WIL80X "RIVER. TILLAMOOK, Or.. March 13. (Special.) The accompanying, picture is of the Maple Leaf Creamery Association s factory oh Wilson Itiver. It is one of the largest cheese factories in Tillamook County. During; the three years it has been in operation it has received nearly lu.UOO.OOO pounds ot milk and manu factured over 1.000,100 pounds of cheese, bi a good average price to the dairy men who patronize it. The Maple Leaf Creamery is owned and operated by the dairymen on the Wilson River. The records of this factory for three years are: Milk. lbs. . .2. SOS, 173 . .3.745.40 Cheese, lbs. 2fin,7S4 ;ts7.iso 1903 1!KH? ltM7 Totals . .,Sti7,S18 1,000, 4(H) nearly all of them leave for the Co lumbia, where they enpagp in fishing.. MALHEIU HAS LARGEST COUN TY ASSOCIATION. Many Questions of Interest to Sheepmen Discussed at the First Meeting. VALE, Or.. March 15. (Special.) The largest county Fheep organization in Ore gon is being effected in this county. A recent meeting resulted in the organiza tion of the Malheur County Wool Grow ers Association with the following offi cers: George McKnight, of Vale, presi dent; Harry Anderson, of Ontario, vice president; Elwood L. Clark, of Vale. Sec retary and treasurer. The executive com mittee consists of Hub Walters of Owyhee. Tom Turnbull of Cord. J. H. Seaweard of Skull Springs. George Mc Knight, Harry Anderson and Elwood Clark. Two sales days were set to be held in Vale, June 6 and 23. The growers esti mated that over 1,500.000 pounds of wool would bo shipped from Vale this year. President Monta Gwlnn. secretary Dan B. Smythe of the state association. Mr. Mc C'lure. Government inspector in charge of Washington. Idaho and Oregon, and State Inspector Lytle were present at the meet ing. Smythe, Lytle and McClure took an active part in the work and made ad dresses. The matter of the Burkett bill was dis cussed and opposed by all of the sheep" men of the county without a singly ex ception. The ground of opposition lies in the fact that under the lease system there would be no Summer, Winter and Fall range, and it would practically re sult in the destruction of the industry In the county. A resolutions committee was appointed and requested to bring in a re port condemning the Burkett bill or any bill of cuch nature at this time. The forest reserve matter came up next and the matter of the Malheur forest reserve, recently established, was discussed. It was stated that an advisory board made up of a majority from this county could be secured for this reserve for the reason that a majority of the sheep on it are owned by members of the Malheur County Association. The salt question was taken up and as an offer was made by the Idaho associ ation to give Oregon sheepmen an inter est in the Idaho plant for $2500 the Mal heur County Association took $500 worth of stock, which entitles members to about 100 tons of salt from the association salt mines. The association took up the coyote law and favored a bounty being placed upon the animals. J. H. Seaweard re ported that individually he lost about $1000 annually in sheep as a result of the coyotes. Estimated loss in the state each year is placed at over $1,000,000. The sec retary was instructed to get the views of all candidates to the Legislature on the bounty question and report to all woolgrowers before election for their in formation. Shipping rates were taken up and committees were appointed to get better rates. Over 50 sheepmen of the county were present at the meeting and fully 100 mem bers will be enrolled in the association. After the meeting was over a banquet was served at the new hotel and about 100 were present. Mayor Wheeler de livered the address of welcome. It is probable that Harney County will come Into the association and thus form a dis trict of th two counties, their interests be in identical in most respects. REPORT OH-WELLS Expert Finds Indications of Artesian Water. WILL IRRIGATE PLAINS Good Flow Can Probably Be Ob tained, He Says, in Southeast ern Oregon and South western Idaho. OREGOXIAX XEWS BUREAU, Wash ington, March 15. (Special.! Flowing ar tesian wells can probably be obtained In a number of districts in Southeastern Oregon and Southwestern Idaho, accord ing to a report .issur-d by thf! United States Geological Survey as Witer-Sup-ply Paper Xo. 78. This report, which was prepared by the late I. C. Russell, is the result of a geological Investigation in parts of Canyon and Owyhee Counties, Butter fat, lh. los.noo 14S.S.VJ 137,t!7 091,541 Amount receivpd. $ 3i..io.on 4.i.SH2.13 33.188.76 $130,040.00 Average price butter fat. 'K 1-0 cents 27 cents ;;4 i-3 cents Idaho, and of Malheur and Harney Coun ties, Oregon, and was made with the special object of discovering localities where flowing water can be obtained by drilling wells. The presence of artesian conditions In an area is frequently inferred by geolo gists from a study of rock structure. In what is properly termed an artesian basin, the layers of rock are bent down ward, so as to resemble a pile of shallow plate-shaped dishes placed one within another. One or more of the beds of rock is porous and allows water supplied by rain on its upturned edges to perco late into it. Above and below the water charged layers are close-textured rocks, like clay, that prevent the escape of the water In the bed between them. A num ber of such structural basins are found in the region studied by Professor Rus sell. Warm Springs an Indication. Confirmation of the supposition that water under pressure exists beneath the surface in any area is found at many places in the occurrence of warm springs those with temperatures ranging from 60 to 100 degrees F. As the water In ar tesian basins has descended from the surface, and as the temperature of the earth increases with depth, the deeper the water has penetrated Into the rocks the higher will be its temperature. The increase in the temperature of the earth below a depth of about 50 feet in tem perate regions is in general about one de gree F. for each 60 feet, but there Is con siderable evidence favoring the conclu sion that in Southern Idaho and adjacent parts of Oregon the rate of increase Is approximately one degree F. for each 45 feet in depth. At the depth of 50 feet the temperature corresponds to the mean annual . temperature of the locality chosen, which in this region is approxi mately 50 degrees F.,'so that if a spring in this region has a temperature of 65 degrees F., or IS degrees above the tem perature of the stratum of no seasonal variation, it would be safe to conclude that the water rises from a depth of at least 6T5 feet below the stratum, or 725 feet below the surface. Professor Russell calls attention to the fact that while warm springs may indi cate the presence of a water-charged layer that would supply flowing wells, a hot spring, or one having a tempera ture of more than 100 degrees, is not so favorable an indication. Hot springs or dinarily rise from depths so great that even if they come from a well-defined water-charged layer it would be unavail able as a source of supply for most pur poses for which artesian water is used, for the expense of drilling to reach it would be unjustifiable. Suggestions for Drilling. The report referred to, which may be obtained free of charge by applying to the Director of the Geological Survey at Washington. D. C-, contains a discus sion of the artesian conditions, illus trsed by diagrams, and describes the various basins. whose locations are shown by a sfcetch map. A detailed ac count of the wells and springs of the re gion is given, and suggestions are made in regard to the size of drill holes, cas ings for wells, and preservation of well records, the Importance of which is too often overlooked. The necessity for legislation restricting the utilization, or rather the waste, of subsurface waters is also emphasized. Owners should be compelled by law to case every drill hole in an artesian basin; that is to place an iron casing or tube lining In the hole made sufficiently tight to prevent water from rising outside of it. Such a casing should be put in every well that remains open. The lower end of the casing should be just above the water-bearing bed. This should be done, not only in the interest of the owner I t t i k . .. ? ." i 'V-:. ..' , -f.V . Doctors Ayer's Cherry Pectoral is a doctor's medicine. Doctors prescribe it, endorse it Use it or not, as your doctor says. Ayers Cherry Pectoral REVISED FORMULA You could not please us better than to ask your doctor about Ayer's Cherry .Pectoral for coughs, colds, croup, bronchitis. Thousands of families always keep it in the house. The approval of their physician and the expericipeof many years have given them great confidence in this cough medicine. We have no secrets I We publish the formulas of all our medicines. J. C AYER CO., Manufacturing Chemists, Lowell, Mass. himself, but because the escape of water from an artesian basin in excess of the natural overflow means a decrease in pressure on the portions remaining and consequently a lowering of the artesian head. In arid regions "especially the question of economical use of water and maintain ing the artesian head are matters of pub lic concern. It should also be required by law that every artesian well when not in use should be securely closed, and that every abandoned well in an artesian area should be completely filled with imper vious material. An artesian basin is not an Inexhaustible reservoir, and every practicable means should be employed for its conservation and legitimate use CAPTAIN F. H. WEST OIES OREGON AND CALIFORNIA PIONEER PASSES AWAY. Deceased Was Distinguished Mili . tary and Civil Engineer of Prominent Family. Captain Francis H. "West, a well-known Oregon pioneer and a distinguished mil itary and civil engineer, died at his home on East Alder, near East Twelfth street, Saturday night at 11:30. after a lingering illness. He comes from a family of dis tinguished men In the service of this country. He was a great-grandson of Colonel John Xixon, of Philadelphia, a prominent Revolutionary patriot. Captain West was born in Fredricks burg, Va June 10,. 1S32. He was edu cated in the Fairfax Institute and the Norfolk Military Academy. At the age of 16 years he was -appointed aid on the United States Coast survey, and on January 10. 1849, sailed from New York in the United States jhooner Ewing for the Pacffic Coast, arriving in San Fran cisco July 31, of the same year. Two years later, on the outbreak of the Rogue River Indians, in Southern Oregon, Cap tain West offered his services and spent the Fall and Summer of 1R51 assisting in the suppression of the natives. In the following year he visited the East Indies and the Atlantic 9tates. returning to California by way of Panama. For a time he was in command of the United States Coast Survey steamer Active, and also served as a member of the North west Boundary Commission. In 1859 he took command of the United States light house tender Shubrick. being well fit ted for that position by his familiarity with the hole Pacific Coast, which his experience in various surveys gave him. In 1867 Captain West became a perma nent resident of Portland, having received from Colonel R. S. Williamson, then United States Engineer, the appointment of superintendent, of Willamette River improvements. He served in that capac ity until the Spring of 1S73, when he re signed to accept the position of superin tendent of the locks at Oregon City. In 1883. by reason of ill-health, he removed to Portland from Oregon City, where he resided continuously. In 1SS Captain West was married to Miss Mary Sophia Stone, daughter of Louis Stone, of Janesville, Wis. Two sons were born to them, Whorton L, and Francis J. West, both residents of Port land. Captain West was a Democrat in sympathy, but was independent in political matters. He was a member of the Society of California Pioneers, , the Oregon Pioneer Association and the In dian War Veterans Association and for many years was an honored member of the vestry of the St. David's Episcopal Church. He was a typical Virginian gentleman, affable and courteous to all, and kept up with the times in scientific knowledge. Of late years, his health and failing eye sight made it difficult for him to be about. His accurate knowledge on a great variety of subjects made him an interesting companion and instructive conversationalist. The funeral will be held at St. David's Episcopal Church, corner of Bast Twelfth and Belmont streets. Tuesday afternoon at 1 o'clock- Plan Branch Library. Mrs. L. F. Additon and others of the state W. C. T. U. are making an effort to establish a reading room and library at Lents. It is proposed to change the pres ent quarters used as a poolroom into a reading room and support it by monthly, subscriptions. The books and librarian will be furnished by the Portland Library and it will be a branch depository of the i j Captain Francis R. West. main library. Books not kept on hand can be secured through this local branch. Also in connection with this reading room a rest room andperhaps a depart ment for athletics will be established if enough encouragement is received for the efforts that are being put forth. This room will be of great value not only to the people of Lents, but to farmers from the surrounding -country who come to Lents, where they leave their teams and come on to Portland. They need a place where they can rest and wash up before resuming their trip. There is no such place provided in the city. If Baby Is Catting Teeth Be sure and use that old well-tried remedy, Mrs. Wins low's Soothing Syrup, for children teething. It soothes the child, fteni the gums, allays pain, colic and, diarrhoea. Hanan shoes fit the feet. Rosenthal's. USEFUL HINTS TO KEEPERS. HOUSE- A COAT of Natural Jap-a-lac ap plied over old or new linoleum or oil cloth will double its life, by preserving, the original coat of varnish, which would otherwise soon be washed or worn off. WEATHER-BEATEN front doors are revived and beautified when coat ed with Jap-a-lac, and "newness fol lows the brush." It Is best to use the color nearest- that of the old finish. WINDOW AND DOOR screens should be coated with Jap-a-lac each Spring, using the brilliant Black on the wire, and the Mahogany, Oak, Cherry -or Walnut on the frames. It gives them new life and the wire cloth Is protected from rust. PORCH FURNITURE should be protected and beautified each Spring with Jap-a-lac. It is best to use the color of the old finish; but If you wish to change the color, use Red or Green Jap-a-lac. WICKER FURNITURE coated with Mahogany, Ox-Blood Red, Malachite Green or iGloss White Jap-a-lac looks better than new. WATER PIPES, furnace fronts, ra diators, hot-water tanks and iron fences are preserved and beautified with the use of Jap-a-lac. Use the Gold, Aluminum, Dead Black or Bril liant Black. PICTURE FRAMES, candelabra, gas fixtures, lamps, etc., given a coat of Gold, Aluminum or Dead Black Jap-a-lac are renewed almost beyond belief; the Dead Black produces that beautiful wrought-lron effect. OLD AUTOMOBILES, carriages, wagons, agricultural implements, etc., Jap-a-lac-ed with either Brilliant Black, Red, Green or Empire Blue, look 100 per cent better and are given new life. The cost is nominal,' and the work can be done by an Inexperi enced person. JAP-A-LAC Is a household neces sity, and can be used in a hundred and one ways, from "cellar to garret," and Is especially adapted for finishing old or new floors and woodwork. Ask your paint dealer. Rheumatism Do you want to get rid of it! If so, take Dr, Miles Nervine modified as di rected in pamphlet around bottle. In addition to the direct curative properties it has a soothing effect up on the nervous system by which the rheumatic pains are controlled, and rest and sleep assured. It has made many cures of this painful disease, some of them after years of suffering. If it will cure others why not you. If your case is compli cated, write us for advice, it costs you nothing and may save you prolonged suffering. "I was so crippled that I could scarcely walk. After having my shoes on for an hour or two I could manage to walk by suffering: the pain. Then I began to have pafns all through my system. My doctor told me I had an acute attack of Inflammatory rheumatism. I read about Dr. Mites' Nervine, bought a bottle and I com menced to set better from the start and for the pe& six months have scarcely any pain, and am able to walk as well as ever." JAS. H. SANDERS, P. O. Box 6. Rockaway, N. J. Your druggist sells Dr. Miles' Nerv ine, and we authorize him to return price of first bottla (only) If it falls xo benefit you. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, lad 1 fjf Sickness and bad luck test the sincerity of I rT-v i friends and often the tost is not satisfactory. There Is sickness rtlP. fW that is caused through indiftVrcnee or neplect. ft Sr Hard work or worry, the hustle and bustle of fHyVr modern life is overt n x in o- i hp rcsnnnvs of OI R FEES: 9.1 to 30 Medicines: 1.r0 to f 8.r0 a Course. Consultation Free. If we cannot cure you we will candidly tell you so. If we decide that we can cure you we will allow you to arrange to PAY OIK KKK VHK- ( ('RED or in small payments, as convenient. Of, if you wish to pay casn, we win give ou One-Half Price We have decided to do ' this to give every poor man a chance to pet a cure by our SYSTEM, which has met with such unprecedented success. I Xrt HABl.K ACCKITIT'. NO RIMV NO I'NCERTAISTV, EXPERIMENT OR (.1 MSSWOIIK, FOR THESES DISEASES CONSTITUTE OUR Sl'EUlALTV. We Treat Blood Potnon, Skin Dlftrane, Sores. I leer, Strlrtiirr, Varicocele. Hydro rele, Nervoim Devil ne, AVrsknesN, C hronic llKenr of the Kidney- and Prostate, and All Rectal DUcnacft. You will also find that we ar following out the plan's of science In our treatment of the various diseases of men. We eHpeclaHy invite all men- afflicted with chronic ail mentis or any acute conditions recently contracted. We cure to stay cured for lite. Our reliability and financial standing is unquestioned and from records, which, if you wish to dc so. you ma v look up. you will find that we are nil we claim to be. hoth in professional standing and the oldest specialists in the city, as this .institution has been here for 29 years and haa an irreproachable reputation. If will not cost you anything1 to cail at our office, and by so doing it may save you much time and money, because if we cannot cure you we will honestly and frankly tell you so, and you will not be under any financial obligation to us. We Want Every Man in the Country Who Is Afflicted to Write Us About His Ailments RIjOOO POISON There come have tried all the health resorts, and at times you consider life v of money trying to be relieved a will euro you of your dreaded m use any drugs that will cause a non. t.an and see us before it NKRVOrS DEKII.ITY Toss O tration of" thought, loss of mem teni, mental as well as physical, and physical condition is ptreng have your original strength1 and Varicocele is a diseased cond causpd hv blows, kicks, falls, he or may be a symptom only of so ceie quicKiy ana permanently. HOURS to 12 noon. -9 A. M. to 5 P. M.; ST. LOUIS COR. SECOND A.D YAMHILL. MEDICAL AND n Q SURGICAL UIO I TREAT MEN TOv EFFECT A No class of human ailments is so little understood ' among the profession today as the diseases peculiar to men. As a result the methods commonly employed in treating them are but relics of earlier periods in medical science. I have departed from every form of treatment that my own experi ence and research have proven in effective and unscientific. I have replaced them with original and thoroughly modern methods that have proven supremely effective. JO very detail of my procedure in each individual case is based upon accurate knowledge as to condi tions and requirements, and my cures arc duplicated by no other physician or specialist. My Fee for a Thorough Cure Is Only EXAMINATION, AND ADVICE FREE I offer not only FREE consultation and advice, but of every case that coms to me I will make a careful examination and diagnosis' without charge. No ailing man should neglect this opportunity to get expert opinion about his trouble. The DR. TAYLOR Co 234Vi MORRISON STREET. PORTLAND, OR. Corner Morrffton find Second Streets. OFFICE HOIRS 9 A. M. to 9 P. M. Sundayx. 10 to 1 only. DONT USE STICKY PLASTERS They cover op the pores of the sldn and prevent the secretion of poisonous waste matter from the Dioocu loan's iniment Kills the pain quicker than plasters, increases the secretion of the pores, warms the affected parts and gives permanent relief. Use 'Sloan's Liniment for Rheu matism Neuralgia, Pleurisy, Lum bago, Stiff Neck, and Pain in Chest or Back. Price, 25c. 50c, ana $1.00. Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Boston, Mass. CANADIAN PACIFIC Empress Line of the Atlantic. LESSTHAN FOUR DAYS ATSEA During the Summer wason, . the Empresses call from Quebec to Liverpool; fast and lux urious; 000 miles in sheltered waters of the t. Lawrenre River and Gulf. Short ocean trip. Use this route and avoid seasicknesw. Summer sailing lists and rates now ready. Apply to any ticket agent, or F. R. Johnson, Pa&a Agt., 142 Third St., Portland, Or. North Pacific S. S. Co's. Steamship koanoke and Geo. W. Elder feaii loi iuiea, au i'xaaciavca and Los Angeles direct every Thursday at 8 P. M. Ticket office l Third St., sear Alder. Both ptft M, 131-1. XL Young, Agent Q O As a result of neglect and indifference, minor ailments have at times developed into a compli cation of disease and sickness that have placed mortgages on farms and business and then foreclosed them. It has caused factories to stand idle and the families of husbands to be hungry. enough unavoidable bad lurk and in the world, but there should be none many. Past indiscretions or excesses resulting; in ailments and breakdowns have undermined the constitution of still others, but nature can not be cheated by quietly subit'it tingr. Men should be discreet enough t to correct these mistakes. Do you ever stop to think what the earning- power of good health means to you? It nays blc: to have srood health. discount. for a Few Days W will allow the rhrap r;ite to remain in force for a short time only, and tlo it onl v to prove io nil that our SYSTEM really does the work. and Cure s a time In your life where, after you springs, etc.. that you give up all hone ery dark. You have spent a great deal nd yet have received no result. We alady and by our methods we do not r.y bad effects or destroy your constitu is too late. f energy, will power, lark of eoncen ory, which weakens your entire sys- l his lowered vital i ty of the nervous thened so that in a short time you will be yourseit again, ition of the scrotal veins. It may be avy lifting,, mumps, early indiscretion me special weakness, we cure varico- evenings, 7 to 8:30; Sundays. 9 A. M. PEHSARY STS, PORTLAND, OREGON, CURE Pay When You In Any Case TRAVELERS' GUIDE. PORTLAND BY.. LIGHT ft POH'EB CO. CAKS LEAVE. Ticket (n ice and Waiting-Room. First and Alder Streets FOB Oron City J. :30 A- M . and every 40 minutes to and Including 9 P. M.. tben 10, 11 P. it ; last car 112 mid night. iireeham. Boring, Eua-le Creek, Est. eada. Cazadero. iairv&ew and XroutdaJ. 7:16. a.li, 11:15 A. 11.. 1:16. 11:44, u.li. 7iS P. It. FOB VANCOUVER. Ticket office and waiting-room Second and Wellington streets. A. M 11:15. t:60. 7:25. 8:00. :Si -.10. 8:50. 10:30. 11:10. 11:50. P. M 12:30. 1:10. 1:50. 2:30. 3:10. 8:50. 4:30. 5:10. 5:50. 6:30. 7:05. 7:40. 6:15. 9:25. 10:361. ll:5t On Third Monday in Every Monta the Lat Car Leaves at 7:0a F. M. Dally except fiunday. IDaily except Honda' San Francisco and Portland Steamship Company Fast and Commodious Steamers. Only Di rect Sailings: Only Sailings by Daylight. From Alnbwortn Dock. Portland, 4 p. M Senator, Marrh 20, April . Kofte City, March 27, April 10. From Spear .St . San Francisco, 11 A. M. Koe City, March 21. April 4, 18, etc. Senator. March 28, April 11. 25, etc. J. V. RANSOM, Dock Atftnt. Phone Main 2t-S. Ainsworth Dock. COOSBAY LINE The steamer B ; WATER Reaves Port land every WcdntaKiia 3ft ft I. M. from Oak tieet dock, tor .Nuriirriicnd, MarBliileld aod Coos ifetj points Freight received till 4 P. M- on day ot sailing. Passenger far, first- -class. $10; aecond-ciass. $7. including berth and meals. Inquire city ticket office. Third and 'Washington streets, or Oak -a treat dock. WILLAMETTE RIVER ROUTE Steamer Pomona for Salem, Independeaca. Albany and Cor vail la. leaves Tuesday. ,Tbursday and Saturday at 0:45 A- U. t earner Oregonia (or Salem and way land ings, leaves Monday. Wednesday and FrlUu 6M5 A. U. UKW.ON CITV TRANSPORTATION CO Office and Dock Foot Taylor aUreau fiooe; Main 0. JttU Are JjSyrf Cured ?frV DR. TAYLOR. TIr The l-eudlns Speclallfit-