Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, October 30, 1909, Page 16, Image 16

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    AMATEUR HOLD UP
Ml IS DIVORCED
Wife of Louis B. Reed Is Given
Decree and Monetary
Settlement.
AWARDED CUSTODY OF SON
Parents of Both Are Wealthy Osh
kosh, Wis.. People Defendant Is
Lawyer Who Was Fined for
Holding l"p Friend as Joke.
Ixnila B. Reed, an attorney employed
In the office of Giltner & Sewall. who
vat fined J200 in the Municipal Court
Monday for having held up a man named
Powers on Portland Hetsnjs as a Joke,
was divorced by Circuit Judse Gatens
yesterday afternoon. The d--ree was
I given to his wife. Madpe E. Reed.
daughter of A. E. Thompson, a wealthy
. attorney, of Oshkosh. Wis. Both parties
to the divorce suit come of wealthy par
. entnee. Reed's father being a rich judse
in Rinon. Wis. Reed was formerly a
; professional bicycle rider In the East. But
' after his marriage he was admitted to
' the law firm of Thompson. IMnkerton &
Jackson hi Oshkosh. with the under
. standing that he was to receive 10 per
cent of the profits. He was married -June
30. 1903.
Mrs. Reed testified yesterday that she
left her husband because of his (rambling
' habits and his unklndness. which later
grew into accusations of unfaithfulness.
-He said to me." testified Mrs. Reed.
"that our baby looked like Kd. Dunbar, a
man in middle life for whom we have
much respect. ly husband told me ho
could ruin me If he wanted to. A man
has only to give the public a hint," he
said.
"At another time." continued Mrs.
Reed. "I was detained at a dinner party
. a little longer than 1 had expected, and
. on mv way home met an old friend who
was cranking his automobile. He asked
' me If he could take me home, and I con
sented. When I reached home Mr. Reed
was very much out of patience with me
, beoause I had allowed Mr. Camm to take
' me home, and insisted that I sit down
and eat another meal with him. refusing
to accept my explanations or to believe
. that what I was telling him was the.
; truth. At another time but he was not
' himself that night he told me I could
1 take my baby, and go home Just as
quick as I wanted to. "
Father Shows Reed Is Kxtravagant.
The depositions of several residents of
Oshkosh were submitted to Judge Gatens.
Among them Is the deposition of Judge
L. E. Reed, father of the local attorney.
. who has been Municipal Judge in Ripon.
Wis., for 25 years. He testified that ho
gave his son a 15000 note as a wedding
present, with the understanding that It
was to be used in buildtng a house for
the newly married aon and his wife. The
, young man also had 130U0. said the elder
Reed, an Inheritance from his uncle. But
when he left Oshkosh, after his wife had
gone to live with ber parents. Judge Reed
said his son had no money except loose
change. He went to his aunt's in Chl-
' cago then to his uncle's In Bellingham.
Wash., then to Seattle and from there
Alaska and later to Portland.
Thomas Ryan, a saloonkeeper of Osh
kosh. said young Reed won $1000 at a
roulette game played at 10 a throw In
& room over his saloon. Harry C Jen-
! kins, a stenographer and- clerk for the
Thompson law firm, said he went with
Reed to a number of gambling-houses
in Oshkosh, while Charles Barber's depo
sition Is to the effect that he indorsed
a $1500 note for Reed as an accommoda
tion, because the young man had lost
U By "stipulation Mrs. Reed is given the
custody of their 9-year-old. boy. and be
tween $600 and $1000 due Reed from the
Thompson law firm, besides a $1000 note
payable by Judge Reed s executors 60
days after his death.
Six Decrees at Morning Session.
Judge Gatens granted Fix divorces in
the Circuit Court yesterday morning.
mong them was one to Frederick A.
Anstey a traveling salesman, who com
plained that Alma Q. Anstey spent six
months In New York and Boston without
informing him as to her whereabou s.
Sh returned home last January, he said,
ano he forgave hex misconduct, only to
find upon returning home from one or
his trips that she had left him a second
time. He told Judge Gatens that about
two years ago she began to drink to
excess, and that she would dnnk all any
one would buy. He married her at Ta
coma. Wash.. June 1. lf"2.
Ethel Mulkins told pathetically of
marrying Harry T. Muiklns expecting to
have a happy home, only to be neglected.
Fine their marriage. May 4. this year,
she said he has failed to provide food
cr clothing for her. and has) repeatedly
remained away all night. When asked
where he had been, she said he ln-
' formed her that it was none of her busi
ness. Judge. Gatens thought she should
have a dt 'orce.
Mrs. Frankle T. Browne also com
plained that her husband would not fur
nish her with the necessaries' of life,
compelling her to obtain these from her
i parents. She secured a divorce from
Edwin F. Browne, whom she married
September 25. 1905.
Cruelty and abuse on the part of Rich
ard K. Ha worth were charged by Lillie
"a. Haworth. who married him at The
Italics. March 4. 1S94- She obtained a
divorce and the custody of their two
children.
Desertion was the ground on which
' 3Ta A. Steele secured a divorce from
Jessie M. Steele, whom she married at
St. Johns. Mich.. December 23. 1S74. G.
!. Huston secured a divorce from Grace
Huston on the same ground. They were
married November 12, 1906.
Abased Husband Proves Case.
left bfore the honeymoon season was
over to prepare his own meals or eat
cold ones. J. R. Wiley brought a divorce
suit in the Circuit Court yesterday
against Gladys Ethel Wiley. He accuses
her of being equally lax with her other
household duties. When he remonstrat
ed with her. he says, she flew into a
rago and used language which he con
sidered shocking. Wiley goes on to de
scribe a trip to Oakland. Cal., which he
took with his wife, when they stayed at
the home of Mre. H. Spauldlng. His
wife produced a cigarette In the pres
ence of Mrs. Spauldlng. says Wiley, and
proceeded complacently to light and
smoke It. much to his chagrin. She be
came angry when he complained. Wiley
has met his wife op. the street In Port
land twice accompanied by men he did
not know, he says. He married her July
4. 1907. and she left him last April Fool's
day.
K. C. Bell After Commission.
Judge Gantenbein took under advise
ment yesterday afternoon the suit of
r. c. Bell against James E. Page for
11441 .tlAW& k n...ni. a fOmmlS-
c i . t u J ' w -. . r
sion on a timber deal. Bell alleged that
In March. 1907. John H. Haack owed
Page. S. D. Adair and himself $10,000
commission, which was to be divided
equally. He alleges Page failed to turn
over the cash, although he received the
money from Haack.
Decisions In Circuit Court.
Circuit Judges Cleland. Gantenbein and
Morrow will decide this morning the case
of C. C. Vaughn against R. L. Stevens,
iii which he applies for a writ of habeas
corpus.
Presiding Judge Bronaugh will decide
the following cases:
Lafayette Grover against Rachel Haw
thorne and others, motion to strike out
parts of the complaint.
R. F. Peters against the Northwest
Investment & Construction Company, on
the merits. 1
T. Newcomb against M. W. Wilkins,
on the merits.
Judge Bronaugh intended to decide the
George T. Myers' will case today, but
after working every night this week has
been unable to reach it. He said yes
terday he will decide It next week. This
Is the case in which Mrs. Georgia
Frances Stevens contends that Mr. Myers
was Insane when he made his will giv
ing the largest portion of his property
to her brother, George T. Myers, Jr. The
case was appealed from the County
Court.
PASTOR ACCEPTS GALL
KEV. D. T. THOMAS TO GO TO
FOHKST GROVE CHCRCH.
Head .of East Side Congregational
Organization Expects to Make
Change January 1.
Rev. Daniel T. Thomas, pastor of the
Pilgrim Congregational Church, of the
East Side, has accepted the call to the
First Congregational Church of Forest
Grove, and tendered his resignation to
the Portland church. Having been in
formed that Rev. Mr. Thomas desired
to take the pastorate of the Forest
Grove church, his resignation was ac
cepted, to take effect, if it can be so
arranged. January 1. This date for his
retirement from Pilgrim Congregation
al Church was made tentative, as it is
not known how such arrangements will
suit the Forest Grove Church.
Rev. Mr. Thomas has been pastor of
Pilgrim Church for the past two years,
during which the name and location
have been changed, and a new brick
building, costing $12,000. has been
erected In a prosperous locality. The
church has a membership of over 200.
The Forest Grove Congregational
Church Is the principal church in that
place, which is a college town, and Rev.
Mr. Thomas thinks he will have a great
field of work among the students of
Pacific University. His relations with
Pilgrim Church have been pleasant on
both sides, and the congregation ac
cepted his resignation with reluctance.
"I have been with Pilgrim Church
onlv two years," said Kev. Mr. Thomas
yesterday, "which is a short time com
pared with my usual pastorates, which
have averaged five years, but I shall
leave the church In a prosperous con
dition, and I feel that my duty calls
me to the Forest Grove Church. Pil
grim Church, however. Is one of the
most promising churches in Portland."
SEATTLE REPORT DENIED
COAL VESSELS NOT REQUIRED
TO RETURN EMPTY.
Assistant Secretary of Navy Explains
Rumors In Regard to Feder
al Shipments.
Beekman Wlnthrop. Assistant Secretary
of the Navy, in a letter received from
him yesterday by the Chamber of Com
merce, denied he had promised the Mer
chant Marine League of Seattle that in
future contracts with foreign vessels for
carrying coal for the Government from
the Atlantic to Pacific ports, would pro
vide that they return in ballast.
When it was announced In Seattle that
Mr. Wlnthrop had made such a promise,
grain growers and shippers began to
prepare protests, as the rule would pro
hibit low rates for shipping local pro
duce,' and would compel the Government
to pay twice as much for the transporta
tion of coal. Mr. Wlnthrop's explana
tion follows:
"No statement was made by me to the
effect that thl policy would be adopted
by the Navy Department. It was one
of the suggestions made by a committee
of gentlemen from Seattle In a confor
med with me With regard to the question
of the shipment of coal for the Navy
Department from the Atlantic to the Pa
cific Coast In foreign bottoms. I prom
ised the members of the committee that
their suggestions would receive careful
consideration, as I was naturally anxious
to aid the merchant marine of the Uni
ted States in every possible way, but
that It was lmporslfcle to state definitely
what action the Navy Department would
take in the matter."
Armeria Back From North.
ASTORIA. Or.. Oct. 29. (Special.)
The lighthouse tender Armeria returned
this morning from a three-months
cruise in Alaskan waters, as far west
Dutch Harbor, delivering supplies
to the various light stations in that
section. Captain Gregory reports that
while severe weather was encountered
at times, the trip was entirely success
ful and devoid of accident. .
The American-Hawaiian line steamer
Falcon loaded 6500 cases of salmon
here today for New York via the Isth
mus 'route.
SALE KIDG LOVES.
New 1909 kid gloves for women all
colors 98c a pair. Gloves fitted and war
ranted at counter. Special sale "Forest
Mills" underwear for women. Great spe
cial values In men's underwear, hosiery,
socks, shirts and Jackets. McAllen &
McDonnell, Third and Morrison.
BIG TIDE AT SEASIDE.
Now is the time to buy a lot in Cart
right Park, on board walk, facing the
ocean, south of Hotel Moore. Lambert,
Whltmer Co., Sherlock building.
Fine Sunday afternoon outing. Breathe
pure ozone In Alameda Park. the
"Tuxedo" of Portland, Sunday, October
31. Take Broadway cars to East Twenty
second and Thompson streets, where free
autos will meet you rain or shine be
tween hours of 1 P. M. and 5 P. M. Bet
ter ee this ideal home locality.
Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and
Diarrhoea Remedy is today the best
known medicine in use for the relief
and cure of bowel complaints. It cures
griping, diarrhoea, dysentery, and should
be taken at the first unnatural loose
ness of the bowels. It Is equally valu
able tor children and adults. It always
GRAIN EXPORTS BIG
Shipments for Month in Excess
of 2,000,000 Bushels.
STEAMSHIP UTGARD CLEARS
Cereal Exports, Foreign, Greater
Than for Corresponding Month of
Last Tear Fifteen Full Car
goes Afloat Marine News.
With the clearance of the German
steamship Utgard yesterday for St. Vin
cent for orders, with a full cargo of
wheat, the grain exports for the month
of October were brought up to within
a few bushels of two and a quarter mil
lions of bushels. These figures Include
STEAMER INTELLIGENCE.
Due to Arrive.
Name. From. Date.
Henrik Ibsen. ..Honitkonit In port
Alliance Coos Bay In port
fue H. Elmore. TlllamooK Oct. 39
Breakwater Coos Bay.... Oct. .11
Roanoke San Pedro. .. Oct. ol
Area Tillamook Nov. v. I
Rob City San Francisco Nov. 1
Geo. tv. F.lder. .San Pedro. .. Nov. i
Eureka Eureka Nov. O
Kamm City. . . Sun Francisco Nov.. n
Falcon San Francisco Nov.
Belja Hongkong Inden t
Scheduled to Depart.
Name. For. Date.
Alliance Coos Pay Oct. SO
Henrik Ibsen .. HonKkonc rcv. i
Roannlt. San Pedro Nov. -
Sue H. Elmore. Tillamook. . . Nov. -
Argo Tillamook Nov. 3
Breakwater... Coos Bav Nov. 3
Hose City Bin Francisco Nov.
Eureka Eureka.. Nov. 7
Geo. W. Elder. .San Pedro. .. Nov.
Falcon Ssn Francisco Nov. 11
Kansas City... San Franclaco Nov. IJ
Belja Hongkong. ...
Entered Friday.
J. Marhofrer. Am. steamship (Wln
kel). with general cargo, from San
Francisco.
Alliance. Am. steamship (Parsons),
with general cargo, from Coos Bay.
Cleared Friday.
J. Marhofrer. Am. steamship (Wln
kel). with rallast. for Astorra.
Kansas City. Am. steamship Kld
ston). with general .cargo, for San
Francisco.
Alliance. Am. steamship (Parsons),
with general cargo, for Coos Bay.
Utgard. Ger. steamship (Wurt
mann). with 220.S20 bushels of wheat,
valued at $209,784. for St. Vincent,
for orders.
wheat, barley and flour (latter reduced
to wheat basis). The Utgard left down
yesterday afternoon and will proceed from
Astoria to Comox for coal. The
cargo was dispatched by Balfour, Guth
rie & Co.
Wheat shipments, alone, for the month
will exceed 2,000,000 bushels. Today will
wind up the month, but one and pos
sibly two cargoes will be cleared. Ship
ments, foreign, to date are as follows:
Wheat. 1.907,533 bushels: flour, 3S.95S
barrels (175.2SS bushels: barley. 121.891
bushels, making a total of 2,304.712 bush
els of grain for the first 29 days of the
month.
Ten sailing craft and five steamships
carried the grain for October. The fig
ures are well in advance of the showing
made during the month of October last
season. During that time the total ship
ments of grain, foreign, amounted to
2.612.6S2 bushels. Both r.'heat and flour
were less than for this month and bar
ley was only one small cargo greater.
During the month of October, ij08, four
steamships and 12 calling craft cleared.
October was the heaviest month for last
season and that record has already been
smashed by the exports for the present
period.
JTEOTSFIELT) GOES TO CALLAO
Balfour, Guthrie & Co. Take Spot
Ship for Wheat Loading.
Balfour. Guthrie & Co.. have chartered
the British ship Neotefleld, Captain
Evans, to carry wheat from Portland to
Callao, Peru. The rate is named at 19
shillings. This is the first charter of
grain for the west coast of South Amer
ica for Portland loading in several years.
Lumber charters are frequent, but grain
is a commodity seldom sent south.
The Neotefield is also the first spot
ship to be chartered for more than a
year for grain loading. She has been on
i RE
( (
S. S. S. cures Catarrh by removing the causa from the blood. It so
thoroughly purifies the circulation that there 13 nothing left to Inflame and
Irritate the mucou3 linings of the body, which is the most prominent and
dangerous eflect of Catarrh. As long as the mucous membranes and
tissues are kept In a state of inflammation and irritation by an impure and
Infected condition of the circulation, Catarrh will remain. Its disagreeable
symptoms of ringing noises in the ears, mucous dropping back into the
throat, headaches, watery eye3, difficult breathing, and even stomach
disorders and weakened health, cannot be permanently relieved until the
blood is purified. Local applications alone can have no real curative value,
because such treatment does not reach the blood. Sprays, inhalations,
lotions, etc., are valuable only for their cleansing and antiseptic eflect, but
if depended on alone Catarrh sufferers will find a cure impossible. Nothing
equals S. S. S. for curing Catarrh. It goes down into the circulation, gets
at the root of the trouble, and removes every particle of catarrhal matter
from the blood and enriches this vital fluid so that instead of irritating
the different mucous portions of the body, it nourishes them with rich,
health-giving properties. Then the symptoms begin to pass away, and
Catarrh is permanently cured. Book on Catarrh and any medical advice
tree. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA.
OUT-OF-ORDER KIDNEYS WILL ACT FINE
. AND ANY BACKACHE SIMPLY VANISHES
Just a Few Doses Regulate the Kid
neys - and Bladder and Make
Lame Backs Feel Fine.
The most effective and harmless way
to cure backache and regulate out-of-order
kidneys, or end bladder trouble.
Is to take several doses of Pape's
Diuretic.
You will distinctly feel that your
kidneys and urinary orfcans are being
cleaned, healed and vitalized, and all
the miserable symptoms, such as back
ache, headache, nervousness, rheuma
tism and darting pains. Inflamed or
swollen eyelids, irritability, sleepless
ness, or suppressed, painful or frequent
urination (especially at night) and
other distress, leaving after taking the
first few doses.
The moment you suspect any kidney
or urinary disorder, or rheumatism, be
gin taking this harmless preparation
as directed, with the knowledge that
the disengaged list since November 24
of last year. She came north in hallast
seeking charter from San Diego. The
British ship Leyland Brothers still holds
first place on the disengaged list. Sh6
has been In port since March 6, 1908.
Night Patrol on Waterfront.
Beginning Monday. November L an all
night patrol of the waterfront will be
established by Harbormaster Speier. The
watches have been arranged and with
the new patrol boat Elidor the front
will be looked after between the hours
of 6 P. M. and 6 A. M. During the
daylight hours the harbormaster will
attend to the duties personally. He will
have two assistants during the day, and
the night watch of six men will be di
vided into two parts.
Advance Brings Coal From Coos.
Goodal. Perkins & Co., of San Fran
cisco, owners and operators of the Ore
gon Coal and Navigation Company, have
entered the local field with coal. The
steamship Alliance, arriving up Thurs
day night, brought 200 tons of Coos Bay
coal for a local firm. In addition the
Alliance brought a large quantity of but
ter and cheese and a large list of passengers.
Goes Ashore, but Little Damaged.
MARSHFIELD, Or..' Oct. 29. (Spe
cial.) The damage to the Gardiner Mill
Company schooner Lilly, which went on
the beach north of the Umpqua bar a
week: ago, was slight. She was washed
over the spit safely into the river and
is at her dock at Gardiner, where she
will be repaired. Her rudder was lost
and she had sprung a small leak.
I
Northland Clears at Astoria.
ASTORIA, Or., Oct. 29. (Special.-The
steam schooner Northland has cleared at
the Custom-house for San Francisco
with a cargo of 600.000 feet of lumber
loaded at Portland and 300.000 feet loaded
at Knappton.
The steam schooner Hornet left this
morning for Hoqulam to load lumber for
San Francisco.
Marine Notes.
The steamship Argo Is due tomorrow
from Tillamook.
The steamship Alliance is scheduled
to sail for Coos Bay ports tonight at 8
o'clock.
The Norwegian steamship Guernsey
sailed yesterday morning with a full
cargo of lumber for the Orient.
With a full list of passengers and all
the freight she could handle, the steam
ship Kansas City sailed for San Fran
cisco yesterday afternoon.
J. Walter Ransom, agent of the Port
land & Asiatic Steamship Company, left
last night' for Tacoma. The steamship
Hercules loaded flour at that port for
Vladivostok.
Arrivals and Departures.
PORTLAND, Oct.' 29. Sailed Steamship
Kansas City, for San Francisco; German
steamship Utirard, for St. Vincent, for or
ders; Norwegian steamship Guernsey, for
Rlmnplial.
3 Astoria. Or.. Oct. 29. Condition at the
H'Outh of the river at 5 p. M.. moderate;
wld southeast. IS miles- weather, cloudy.
Arrived down during the night French bark
Cornll Bart. J.ft up at 8 A. M. 'French
shin Marechal de Castries. Sailed at 7:30 A.
M. Steamer Eureka, for Coos Bay and Eu
reka. Arrived down at 8 A. M. and salted
at 2 P. M. Steamer Falcon, for San Fran
cisco. Arrived down at 10:30 and sailed at
2 P. M. Steamer Santa Rita, for San Fran
cisco. San Francisco. Oct. 29. Arrived at 8 A.
M. Steamer Northland, from Portland. Ar
rived at 10 A. M. Steamer F. S. Loop, from
Portland. Sailed last night bteamer Tamai
rt.ils. for Portland. Arrived at 5 P. M.
Steamer Asuncion, from Portland, and
schooner Virginia, from Astoria.
Kahulut. Oct. 211. Sailed October 27
French bark Neuilly. for Portland.
Grays Harbor. Oct. 211. Arrived yesterday
steamer Hornet, from Columbia River.
Victoria. Oct. 29. Arrived yesterday Nor
wegian steamer Tltnnla. from Portland, for
St Vincent, for orders.
San Francisco, Oct- 29. Arrived Steamer
Northland, from Astoria: F. S. Loop, from
Columbia River; Olson and Mahony. from
Everett; rmlsy Mitchell, from Grays Harbor;
Asuncion, from Portland: Virginia. from
Portland. Sailed Steamer Elizabeth, for
Bandon; Montara, for Seattle; Czarina, for
Coos Bay.
Hongkong. Oct. 29. Arrived Empress of
China, from Vancouver.
Los Angeles. Oct. 2. Arrived Steam
schooner Yosemite. from Columbia River
steam schooner San Gabriel, from Umpqua
River: steam schooner Riverside, from JEv-ar-
ett; steamer Coo Bay. from San Fran
Cisco; schooner Omega, from Coos Bay.
Sailed Steam schooner Olympic, for Belling
ham; at.1 am schooner Thomas L. Wand, for
Portland; steamer Coos Bay, for San Fran'
Cisco and way ports; steam schooner Yaqua,
for Eureka.
Seattle, Oct. 29. Arrived Steamer Mack
inaw, from Nome; steamer City of Puebla,
from San Francisco: steamer Admiral Samp
son, from Tacoma; steamer San Mateo, from
Port Wlnslow; steamer Hyades, from San
Francisco. Sailed Schooner Bega, for Port
Madison; steamer President, for San Fran
cisco; Bteamer Tamplco, for San Francisco.
Tides at Astoria Saturday.
High. Low.
1 40 A. M 8.S feet!7:S0 A. M .2.4 feet
1:25 P. M 9.9 feetl8:17 P. M -1.4 feet
To try Piper Heldsieck chewing to
bacco is to understand why it is sold
in more stores than any other chewing
tobacco. w
I0YES THE CAUSE
OF CATARRH
there Is no other medicine, at any
price, mbde anywhere else in the
world, which will effect so thorough
and prompt a cure as a fifty-cent treat
ment of Pape's Diuretic, which any
druggist can supply.
Your physician, pharmacist, banker
or any mercantile agency will tell you
that Pape, Thompson & Pape, of Cin
cinnati, is a large and responsible
medicine concern, thoroughly worthy
of yoinj confidence. i
Don't be miserable or worried an
other moment" with a lame back or
clogged, inactive kidneys or bladder
misery. All this goes after you start
taking Pape's Diuretic, and in a few
days you feel and know that your kid
neys, liver and urinary system are
h'-altliy, clean and normal, and all
danger passed.
Accept -only Pape's Diuretic fifty
cent treatment from any drug stora
anywhere In the world.
ITCHED AYEAR:
CURED IN A WEEK
Hands Cracked Open, Bled, Burned
and Ached Could Not Sleep nor
Even Dress Himself Professional
Treatment Failed to Help Him.
MAN OF 70 OWES SKIN
COMFORT TO CUTICURA
"I am a man seventy years old. My
hands were very sore and cracked open
on the inside for over a
year wish large sores.
They would crack open
and bleed, itch, burn
and ache so that I could
not sleep and could do
but little work. They
were so bad that I could
not dress myself in the
morning. They would
bleed and the blood
dropped on the floor. I
called on two doctors,
but they did me no good.
I could get nothing to do
meanv eood till I got the
Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment.
About a year ago my daughter got a cake
of Cuticura Soap and one box of Cuti
cura Ointment and in one week from the
time I began to use them my hands were
all healed up and they have not been
a mite sore since. I would not be with
out the Cuticura Remedies.
"They also cured a bad sore on the
hand of one of my neighbor's children,
and they think very highly of the Cuti
cura Remedies. John W. Hasty, So. Ef
fingham, N. H., Mar. 5 and Apr. 11, '09."
For Baby's Skin
The purest, sweetest and most eco
nomical method of preserving, purifying
and beautifying baby's delicate skin,
scalp and hair is the constant use of
Cuticura Soap, assisted, when necessary,
by gentle applications of Cuticura Oint
ment. For rashes, itchlngs, inflamma
tions and channcs of infants, children
and adults, as well as for shaving, sham
pooing, sanative, antiseptic cleansing
and aU purposes of the totiet, bath and
nursery Cuticura Soap and Ointment
are unrivaled.
Cutlctim Soap rjSe.). Cntlcur Ointment oe.
snd Cuticura Rrsolrent (50c.). (or in the form of
Obocolat Costed Pills. 25c. per vlsl of 60) are sold
throughout the world. Potter Drug Chem. Corp,
Sole Props.. 135 Columbus Ave.. Boston, Mass.
B9-32-pae Cuticura Book, mailed tree, llvinir de
scription and treatment ol a hundred skin affections.
THAT ARE
AILING, NER
VOUS AND RUN
COME TO ME
AND tit LUKtU
I See All My Patients Trfe
DOCTOR
Personally.
THAT CUBES.
E hire no substitutes and have no medi
cal company.
FEE FOR A CURE Is lower than any
specialists in the city, half that others
charge you and no exorbitant' price for
medicine.
I am an expert specialist, have had
30 years' practice In the treatment of
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 tne cause, remove it and
thus cure the disease.
I 1 1 ItE Varicose Veins, Contracted
Ailments, Piles and Specific Blood Poi
son and All AllmeutM of Men.
CUKE OR KO PAY I am the only
sneclnlist in Portland who makes no
charae unless the patient la entirely
Hatinfie-d with the results accomplished.
and who srivea a written guarantee to
refund every dollar paid for services
If a complete and permanent cure la
not effected.
lP'4j Visit Dr. Lindsay's private
A-" 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.
12S Second St Cor. of Alder,
Portland, Oregon.
BING CHOONG
Chinese
Uoctor
Cures Cancer,
Dropsy, Catarrh,
Stomach, Lnlf(
Liver and Kld
aey T r o a b 1 ea.
All chronic dla
ensea of men and
iremrn. Room
11. 225 V4 Alder
St., or 133H First
St. D r u s a tore
SMS Flandera St.
Kodol
For Indigestion
Dyspepsia. Sour Stomach. Weak' Stomach,
or in fact ANY Stomach Trouble caused by
Indigestion. Get a bottle today and try it,
Kodol is (tuaranteed to relieve you and if it fails
your money will at once be refunded by the
dealer from whom you purchased it. Every tab
lespoonful of Kocol digests 214 pounds of food,
Yonn Ming Chinese
Medicine Co. Wonderful
remedies from herbs and
roots cure all diseases of
men and women. Honest
treatment. No operations.
We cure when others fall.
Hundreds of testimonials
from frrateful patients.
Consultation free. 247 Tay
lor st.. bet. 2d and 3d.
CHICHESTER'S PILLS
y TUB JMAMOWB BRAND.. yy
Lsdlrel Aik yoir UrBrls'
lhl-eketerB lNimondBn
tis lor - i-v :
m
Fill, la Hed Sad Uold BetalllcX
boxes, scaled with Blue Rlbboo. 1
Take other. Bar of rrrar 5
brna-slftt. Ask for CI
k foe C U I-C CTES.TEBn
BRAND PILLS, for 5
DIAMOND
years known s Best. Safest, Alwrs Reliable
S0 D BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHKS
OPIUM
or Morphine Habit Treat-
ea. r ree iriai.
ii Visra nthop rTnHfM
nave tauea. -pmnj uwirru. ""tvviiii.i;
nr R. O. fONTREIX, successor to HARRIS
tl-'nT-frrnn'tT -Dm KQl AAA 12V' 9JIA K.Y.
MEN
In .ifiiDi'-l
GREAT NORTHERN RAILWAY
NEW TRAIN SERVICE
71 12 Hours Portland to Chicago 71 V2
VIA
NORTH BANK GREAT NORTHERN BURLINGTON ROUTE
EFFECTIVE OCTOBER 31
We will operate through Standard and Tourist Sleepers, Portland
to Chicago, without change. Passengers in these sleepers will have
benefit of ORIENTAL LIMITED service, including Compartment Ob
servation Cars and best of Dining-Car Service. All meals served a la
Leaves Portland daily 7:30 P. M. from NORTH BANK DEPOT,
Eleventh and Hoyt Sts.
For Rates, Folders and Sleeping-Car Reservations, call on or
address
H A. JACKSON, A. G. F. & P. A., H. DICKSON, C. P. & T. A,
Telephones Main 680, A 2286. 122 Third St., Portland, Or.
MEN REBUILT, MADE STRONG
AND RESTORED BEYOND QUESTION
A generation of honorable
and successful practice in cur
ing men of ailments that other
physicians fail to cure is a rec
ord that cannot be acquired by
extravagant advertising claims
all in the space of two or more
years. Any man less than 30
years of age cannot remember
the time when St. Louis Medi
cal advertisements were not ap
pearing at regular intervals,
but it has taken more than this
to establish a reputation as the
most
Successful Specialist for Men
on the entire Western Coast
it has taken skill, honesty and
superiority.
I have made a specialty of treating all ailniRnt.t of men
for years. Nervous debility, physical decline and kindred 'lnents. I
cure with certainty and thoroughness. Where the mind or body is weak
from any cause, nervous exhaustion and a gradual growlnn debility of
either the nervous or physical system, my treatment at once greets
thebe evils and rejuvenates and builds up. It supplies new nerve force,
promotes a free circulation to the body and overcomes any tendency to
mental derangement or paralysis. v
Debility undermines the mental and physical strength of man, there
by unfitting him for the ordinary duties of life. Men who are suffer
ine from vital lassitude, loss of memory, wandering mind and other
life-destroying symptoms can be cured by n:y treatment to stay cured.
If I cannot cure you, I will candidly tell you so.
My specialty, besides being limited to men only, is confined to less
than a dozen ailments. But of each ailment I have handled many thou
sand cases. Mv reputation has been built upon my ability to cure those
that others could not cure. Inasmuch as I do rot accept for treatment
anv case that I am not absolutely positive can be given a perfect and
permanent cure. I am able to offer my services on a basis that no
other specialist can.
I cure all kidney, bladder and urinary ailments, lack of vitality,
blood poison, sores, ulcers, falling hair, lo.s of memory and-all pelvic
ailments never to return. My charges are lower for. cures than the
average physician generally gets for failures.
Consultation and advice free. If you cannot call at office, write for
pelf-examination blank many cases cured at home. Medicines l.o0 to
$6.50 per course. 1
HOIKS 9 A. M. TO 8 P. M. SUNDAYS, 10 A. M. TO 12 M.
ST. LOUIS MEDICAL CO.
COHXER SECOD A USD YAMHIIJ, STREETS. PORTLAND, OREGON.
Dr. TAYLOR'S $10,000
MUSEUM OF ANATOMY
OPEN FREE TO MEN
All men visiting Portland should see Dr.
Taylor's Free Museum of Science. As far
ahead of all other advertised museums as the
Dr. Taylor methods of treating men's dis
eases are superior to the old, haphazard and
guesswork treatment. An exhibition prepared
at a great cost of time and labor. No charge
to -see museum, which 19 entirely apart from
medical offices.
CONSULTATION AND ADVICE FREE
Not a Dollar Need Be Paid Until Cured
Office Hours 9 A. M. to 9 P. M. Daily.Sundays. 10 to.l.
If You Cannot Call, Write $or Symptom Blank.
The DR. TAYLOR Co.
JiOT A DOLLAR XEWI BE PAID
I'KLESS tl'RKD.
DR. TAVMR.
The LradllJC Sprrialikt.
234V4 MORRISON" ST,
CORNER SECOND.