lO THE MORNING OREGOXIAN. MONDAY, JANUARY 24, .1910. Phases of Industrial Growth in the Pacific Northwest NEW PROJECT SURE Malheur Irrigation Plan Has Warm Support. PLANS ARE BEING DRAWN Owyhee Ditch Subscribers to Unite in New District, Which Will Take in Both AVet Land and Dry Land Fanners of County. ONTARIO. Or., Jan. 23. (Special.) Attorneys are now busy drawing up the contract by which owners of irrigated lands In this portion of Malheur Coun ty, particularly those lands now under what Is known as the Owyhee ditch, will subsc'rlbe their lands to the pro posed irrigation district; which is being formed. This district has been in pro cess of creation for several weeks, and the TrowbrldRe-Nlver Company, of Chi cago, has plas and specifications for a large project to be built. In case the district is successfully organized. It was at first thought to Include In the district only the. dry lands of the vicinity, but much of this is yet un patented land, -so the wet land people expressed willingness to come into the district under favorable conditions, and thus assist the dry land people in float ing their bonds. The Owyhee Ditch Company, the old est ditch company In this locality, has held several meetings with .the pro moters of the district and the irriga tion project, and has agreed with them Upon the terms of a contract upon which It will enter. These terms in sure to. Owyhee ditch stockholders a perfect water right, free of any charge except that of maintenance. The entire bonded indebtedness of the Owyhee ditch will be paid off by the district, and a new drainage system will be con structed, which will drain the lands under the Owyhee ditch and all those under the new ditch. Owyhee stock holders will pay for the drainage sys tem in proportion as they are bene fited by it. These are the important points which' are being incorporated in the new con tract and which, when ratified by botrl the Owyhee Ditch Company and the district will practically assure the suc cess of the new irrigation project. The Trowbridge Company has every detail of its preparation for construction ot the project completed. There are even now on the ground men and teams ready to go to work as soon as all legal matters can be adjusted to the satisfaction of the people and the irri gation company. These workmen are at present working on the Brogan branch of the Oregon Short Line from ale to Brogan. It is expected that early .Spring will see dirt beginning to fly for building the new reservoir and ditches. FARMERS PLAN RAILWAY Xchalcm Valley Seeks Outlet for Its Products. CLATSKANIE, oTT Jan. 23.-(Special.) At a meeting at Mist, nine miles from here, in the Nehalem Valley, committees were appointed by the Commercial Club to ascertain the cost of surveying a route for an electric railroad to Clatskanie and if the estimated cost of construction is not placed too high, the citizens of the va ey. assisted by those of Clatskanie. will endeavor to build the road The Nehalem Valley is about 50 miles long It averages about a mile wide and is one of the most prosperous sec tions of Oregon. No outside market is provided for the large crops raised, and the only method of transportation is by Um,..PVer a niountaln road, which in the W inter months is almost impassable. Several routes have been surveyed into the Nehalem and built on paper, but in each Instance the companies' demands in subsidies, right of way privileges and land are more than the residents believed that it will cost to build and equip a roud. AEERDEEN AWAITS GRADE I'nton Pacific Road Announced Work to Commence Soon. ABERDEEN, Wash., Jan. 23. (Spe cial.) Work of grading for the yards of the Grays Harbor & Puget Sound (Union Pacific) Railway at Cosmopolis across the river from Aberdeen will commence In a few days, according to a statement just Issued by the railway . Non-arrival of iron, expected daily' is alone responsible for holding up the completion of the Rochester bridge damaged by the recent floods. Ten days "will complete the structure when the metal arrives, and as ballasting is already completed it will not be many weeks before the new railway enters Cosmopolis. which also means Aber deen, DORMITORY IS IMPROVED Chemawa Indian School Undergoing Extensive Repairs. OMEMAWA. Or., Jan. 23.-(SPecIal.) The large- brick dormitory of the Chewawa Indian School is being over hauled and extensive repairs costing more than $3000 are nearing comple tion. This building waji erected in 1903 at a cost of 125.000. the contractor be ing Charles A. Gray, of Salem. The entire building Is to be replas tered. Hard plaster is being substi tuted for lime and sand. Several changes and improvements are being niade so that the building will be bet ter noapted to the needs of the Insti tution and more convenient than ever. COOS BRIDGE DISCUSSED Action of- Xorth Bend Commercial Club Revives Interest. MARSH FIELD, Or., Jan. 23. The ques tion of the Southern Pacific Railroad bridging Coos Bay. in the event that the branch from Drain Is built this year. Is being agitated, as It was three years ago. The discussion was started by the ac tion of the North Bend Commercial Club in passing a resolution that the f-ody would favor the railroad bridge if it were acceptable to the War Department. The subject has not yet been taken up with the railroad company. IDAHO STATE AGRONOMY ASSOCIATION ELECTS HEAD AT CLOSE OF PURE-SEED SHOW. ! v 1 -t - f ; : t r f f$$ 1 F f A h - 4 t . f , 4 I jf, , - - s . . i k i - , 4 Ralph H. Sehneelock, Ireisident. MARSHRELD PLANS BIG CITY TO SPEND $100,000 OX STREET PAVIXG. Work on Electric Iitnc Under Way. Road From Coos Bay to. Roseburg Sought. MARSHFIELD, Or., Jan. 23. (Special.) Marshfield expects to spend J100.000 this year in street paving. City Engineer Sandberg finds that improvements will amount to more than 30.000 square yards of paving and, with the grading, will cost $100,000 The city will . advertise for tentative bids to be opened in three weeks. Reports to the City Council by an ex pert show that the total value of real estate and other property owned by the city is $34,166. and the debt is a $54,000 bond issue and $1300, still owed on a steam roller. Work on the electric streetcar line, for which J. M. Blake was granted a fran chise in Marshfield, has been started in the south part of the city with the driv ing of test piles for the track. In North Bend a city warehouse Is rising, and the city has decided to spend $30,000 on the plank waterfront roadway which will connect with the plank extension of Front street after the county has built a short stretch between the limits of the two cities. i The County Commissioners have been petitioned to spend $50,000 for a first-class road from Coos Bay to Roseburg. Extensive work is planned by the com missioners of the Port of Coos Bay. The commission aims to secure the tide fiats that they may be under the control of the commission. Dredging of the channel is also being arranged, the commission planning to make it 18 feet deep . from the bar to the head of the bay. It is also the purpose of the commission to purchase suitable sites for public wharves. Since the wreck of the Czarina the commission has urged the maintenance of a seagoing life-saving tug such as is used on Puget Sound, and have it at Empire with steam up all the time. BURKE SEES GREAT CITY Seattle Man Predicts Consolidation of Grays Harbor Towns. ABERDEEN. Wash., Jan. 23. (Spe cial.) Declaring his belief in the fu ture greatness of this harbor and the inevitable consolidation of Aberdeen, Hoqulam and Cosmopolis into one city. Judge Thomas Burke of Seattle, guest of honor at a banquet at the Hotel Washington, urged the business men of this city to begin preparations at once for the business and trade which, he insisted, would be . sure to come. Judge Burke declared that this city needed not only appropriations for the inner harbor and the bar at the mouth of the Chehalis River, but that It need ed docks and wharves as well. BONDS TOO LOW TO SELL Cottage Grove to Vote on 6 Per Cent Issue for Water System. COTTAGE GROVE. Or., Jan. 23. (Spe cial.) The municipality having found it Impossible to sell its $100,000 water bonds GRANTS PASS LODGE USES OVER TWENTY VARIETIES OF JOSEPHINE COUNTY WOODS IN MAKING NEW FURNITURE FOR LODGEROOM. wiiiimw iiimii.n. . , , , . fi . n ! .t - t "11111,1 i iji i.m i ii ill in ii innnninrriri-tiiffTLjruuiiiimiijuu imuuuui unnwiiiLnwtmnmniiiuj'iw ihilwii Ill . f ,L.f- - $ j f ; , iTEftioi GRANTS PASS. Or., Jan. 23. (Special.) Josephine County wood was used exclusively to make the new furniture of the local Oddfellows' lodge which was recently dedicated. Over 20 Varieties were employed and all the pieces were given a careful polishing by hand. Oak is used for the main patterns, with man zanilla and madrona trimmings. Occasionally other native woods are used to inlay patterns. The uphol stery of the set is of leather, and all the work was done locally. The local lodge of Oddfellows is in a prosperous condition and owns its building of brick in the business part of the city. Isaac Best is noble grand. John V. McPhrrnon, Lecturer at Kxhlblt. at 5 per cent, the City Council will be obliged to commence proceedings again by calling for a special election to vote 6 per cent bonds to the amount of $100, 000 for the proposed gravity water sys tem. The survey has been completed, the estimate made and the right of way se cured for the entire 18 miles from the Umpqua Forest Reserve, where the mu nicipality has been granted a water right of six second feet. HOLLEY MAY PRODUCE OIL Big Firm, Incorporated by Spring field Men, Lays Plans. ALBANY, Or., Jan.' 23. (Special.) The Calapoola Oil Company, which was incorporated a few months ago by resi dents of Springfield, Or., plans to begin boring for oil in the immediate future near Holley. The company has leased several tracts of land for. oil-boring purposes and just as soon as the roads are in good condition will ship oil-boring machinery up the Calapooia Valley from Brownsville. C. F. Reynolds, an oil expert, wrio Is a member of the company, asserts that he has discovered unmistakable indica tions of oil In several places in the Cal apoola Valley near Crawfordsville and Holley and that he expects to- find oil in large quantities. CINNABAR MINE CLOSED Prices of Producing Metal Eound to Absorb All Profits. COTTAGE GROVE, Or., Jan. 23. (Special.) The quicksilver mines. 18 miles southwest, have been abandoned. That there are large deposits of cin nabar ore here has been demonstrated, but the process employed in producing the metal proved too expensive. W. B. Dennis, who was at the head of the company several years, razed the old furnace three years ago and construct ed a new one in the hope that by the new method quicksilver might be had at less cost, but after expending large sums of money in testing the process the work has been found unremunera tlve. Albany Club Plans Trip. . ALBANY, Or., Jan. 23. (Special.) A series of trips which the Albany Commercial Club plans to make to sur rounding cities during the next few months probably will be inagurated next Saturday with a trip to Harris burg. Definite plans for the proposed trip will be completed at the next meet ing of the executive board of the club Tuesday evening. The club plans these visits to stimulate the existing friendly feeling among the cities of the valley and to advance the work of mutual Im provement of this part of the state. Trips are in prospect to Salem, Cor burg and Scio, and perhaps other places. ' .Springfield Asks Better Service. SPRINGFIELD, Or.. Jan. 23. (Spe cial.) Springfield wants a better tele phone service and the Commercial Club has instructed the secretary to register a protest or at least ask for improve ment. The population of Springfield has doubled during the past two years and the small switchboard, say the lo cal operators, is far too small. There are 340 subscribers connected by only 57 lines. On one line there are actually 30 parties. Morgan & Robb, 250 Stark street, can place your loans on good real estate. i. o. o. v. lod(;e onoii, CIUW SEED SHOW EXCELS Exhibit at Caldwell, Idaho, Is a Great Success. SWEEPSTAKES PRIZE GIVEN Settlers Reclaiming & Operating Oo. Wins Trophy for Shelled Grains and Potatoes Display Organization Formed. CALDWELL, Idaho. Jan. 23. (Special.) The display of seeds and potatoes at the Pure Seed Show held in this city last week under the auspices of tha State Agronomy Association, exceeded all expectations. The display was much larger than expected and the interest manifested was great. The Twin Falls country was represented by an exhibit that proved it pays to select pure seed for planting. The Settlers' Reclaiming & Operating Company, of Jerome and Wendell, Idaho, captured the "sweepstakes" prize for the best exhibit of shelled grains and poto toes. This organization Is a co-operative farming company of the Twin Falls North Side tract. Its exhibit showed great care in seed selection at the be ginning of operations and planting. The personnel of the company is composed of practical men in' such branches of work. The company reclaimed 2000 acres of land In the last year, with average results as to yield and excellent results as to quality of crops produced. The company plans reclaiming an additional acreage this year, and expects to farm about 3000 acres next year. Although this meeting was the. first of Its kind ever held in Idaho, It is assured that it will not be the last, as a per manent organization was effected. The state was districted and a representative appointed for each district. His duty will be to obtain as large a membership as possible. The time and place for the next meeting will be selected by the executive committee" some time this year. John V. McPherson. of Jerome, Idaho, superintendent of agriculture of the Set tlers' Reclaiming & Operating Company, read important papers on cereals and po tato production at the State Agronomy Association's meeting. Ralph H. Schneelock. also of Jerome, president of the same company, was elected president of the Idaho State Agronomy Association. FOREST GROVE GETS HALL City Offices and Fire Department - Home to Cost $10,000. FOREST GROVE. Or., Jan. 23. (Spe cial.) The authorization of the Mayor and Recorder of the city to enter into a contract with the Catching Brick yard, of this city, assures Forest Grove of a modern, up-to-date City Hall. It is under the administration of Re tiring Mayor B. H. McLaughlin that the building fund was instituted for the special purpose of erecting a City Hall. Besides the city . offices there will be quarters on the lower floor for the city fire department and stable to maintain horses. It will be a two-story structure, to cost about $10,000. The contract is for 85,000 red bricks at $8 per thousand. PIONEERS TALK BUILDING Aberdeen Association Discusses For mation of Stock Company. ABERDEEN, Wash., Jan. 23. (Spe cial.) Discussion of plans for the for mation of a stock company among the pioneers of the city to construct an "Aberdeen Pioneers' Block" was thp most important, subject before the an nual meeting of the Aberdeen Pioneers' Association. The proposal to admit pioneers of H'oquiam and Cosmopolis was lost. The election of officers resulted as follows: Mrs. A. D. Wood, president; H. H. Car ter, vice-president; Mrs. William Ir vine, secretary (re-elected); Mrs. J. M. Walker, treasurer. SANDY BOOSTER CONVENE Commercial Club Discusses Various Topics of Progress. SANDY, Or., Jan. 23. (Special.) Twenty-two members of the Sandy PS. PINKflAM CURES Added to the Long List due to This Famous Remedy Oronogo, Mo. " I was simply a ner vous wreck. I could not walk acros3 the floor without my heart fluttering and I could not even receive a letter. Every month I had such a bearing down sensation, as if the lower parts would fall out. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound ha3 done my nerves a great deal of good and has also relieved the bearing down. I recommended it to some friends and two of them have been greatly benefited by it." Mrs. Mae McKnight, Oronogo, Mo. Another Grateful Woman. St. Louis, Mo. "I was bothered terribly- with a female weakness and had backache, bearing down pains and pains in lower parts. I began taking JLydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound regularly and used the Sanative Wash and now I have no more troubles that way." Mrs. Al. Herzoo, 6722 Prescott Ave., St. Lotus, Mo. Because your case is a difficult one, doctors having done you no good, do not continue to suffer without giving Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial. It surely has cured many cases of female ills, such as in flammation, ulceration, displacements, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that' bearing-down feeling, indigestion, dizziness, and ner vous prostration. It costs but a trifle to try it, and the result is worth mil lions to many suffering women. Commercial Club answered roll call at the regular meeting held Monday night. President F. E. McGuggin pre sided. Chairman Burns, of the good roads committee, reported that he had waited on the County Court regarding the improvement of the "Bluff road." and had received encouragement and a promise of more material help. -The club decided to insist that this road be opened and improved, as It will give access to a large territory adja cent to Sandy with Its wonderful scen ery, making It one of the most attrac tive automobile drives in the state. Casper Junker spoke of the need of a bank in Sandy, and said he would be willing to donate a lot for the site of a building If the proper parties would take hold of the mater and direct sucH institution. It was reported that $10, 000 has already been pledged toward capitalizing a local bank, and that the prospects of it being established were promising. On motion of J. B. Tawnly a committee was appointed to wait on the- property owners of Sandy and ask them to provide wide sidewalks. The peculiar properties of Chamber lain's Cough Remedy have been thor oughly tested during epidemics of in fluenza, and when it was taken'in time we have not heard of a single case of pneumonia. Sold bv nll1ealer8. LEFT OH HER DOORSTEP FOR THIS MOTHER Mrs. A. G. Tuson, of Livermore, Cal., writes: "I picked up from my door step one day a little book in which I soon became very much, interested. My little girl of five years of age had been troubled for a long time with loss of appetite, extreme nervousness and undue fatigue. She was all run down and in a very delicate condition. "This little book was very compre hensively written, and told of the new method of extracting the medicinal ele ments of the cod's liver from the -oil, eliminating the obnoxious oil which, Is so hard for children to take. " 'Just the thing,' said I, 'for my little daughter,' and I immediately went for a bottle of Vinol. It helped her won derfully. . She has gained rapidly in flesh and strength, and she does sot take cold half so easily. "I am" extremely grateful for the good It has done her, and I hope other mothers who have weak, delicate or ailing children will be benefited by my experience and just give Vinol a trlaL" W00DARD CLARKE & CO., DRUGGISTS, PORTLAND. Woman a Specialty The well-known Chinese DR. 8. K. CHAJf, with their Chi nese remedy of herbs and roots, cure wonderfully. It has cured many sufferers when &11 other y ni.dlA. hav. failed. Sure cure for male -artVi i ',W and female, chonic. private ti?jjfl diseases, nervousness, blood unn n y pniu poison. rheumatism, asthma, Olliu. u unAli pneumonia, throat, lung trouble, consump tion, stomach, bladder, kidney and diseases of all kinds. Remedies harmless. No oper ation. Honest treatment. Examination for ladies by MRS. 8. K. CHAN. Call or write 8. K. CHAN CHINESE MK1HC1JCE CO., 228 Morrison St.. Bet. 1st and 2d, Portland. Or U Habits Positively Cured. Only authorized Keeley In stitute in Oregon. Write for 111ns- V?'d,iiIIlni?r- Institute. IX E. N Portland. Onion il:: (1 J Lincoln's Rule For Living "Do not worry, eat three square meals a day, say your 'prayers, be courteous to your creditors, keep your digestion good, exercise, go slow and go easy. Maybe there are other things that your special case requires to make you happy, but, my friend, these, I reckon, will give you a good lift." Follow Lincoln's words of wis dom and keep your digestion good. When you have dyspepsia, indiges tion or any form of stomach trouble you can eat what you want and eat heartily if you take Kodol. Starva tion seems a strange remedy for any disease; yet starvation by vig orous diet was once generally re sorted to in case of indigestion or other stomach trouble. Even yet it is sometimes tried. Such a remedy la worse) than useless. AILING QUICKLY AND PERMANENTLY CURED You need not pay any doctor an exorbitant or fahcy price for treatment when I offer you a thorough, and permanent CURE for a moderate fee. I have a quick and absolutely certain sys tem of treating the cases I undertake which positively insures the cure in less than the time called for by methods used in ordinary practice. Contracted Ailments Every contracted ailment I treat is thor oughly cured. My patients have no relapses.. When I pronounce a case cured there is not a particle of infection or inflammation re maining, and there is not the slightest dan ger that the ailments will return. No con tracted ailment is so trivial as to warrant uncertain methods of treatment, and I espe cially solicit those cases that other doctors have been unable to cure. VARICOSE VEINS, I use neither knife, ligature nor caustic in my treatment for Varicose Veins. I posi tively cure this ailment in one week bv an absolutely painless method and without de taining the patient from business. OBSTRUCTIONS. My method of curing obstructions is new and entirely original. No cutting or dilat ing. The obstruction is dissolved and en tirely removed and all affected membranes thoroughly cleansed. CONSULTATION AND ADVICE FREE. Come and have a private talk with me concerning your ailment. Even if you are not prepared to undergo treatment at this time, I can always give helpful suggestions to men who are ailing. If you cannot come to Portland, write for particulars of my sys tem of home treatment. The DR. TAYLOR Co. 234H MORRISON STREET, CORNER SECOND. PORTLAND, OREGON. HOURS ft A. M. TO O P. M SUNDAYS 10 TO 1 ONLY. MEN I TREAT fl!EN AND MEN The past century has witnessed . wonderful progress In the science of medicine and surgery. Discov eries for, the amelioration of pain and the cure of afflicted men, un dreamed of years ago, are now in use by the specialist, who has kept himself abreast with the rapid ad vancement of the medical profes sion. This applies only to the specialist who was well prepared by advantages of study and ex perience In a chosen field of medi cine. It is unfortunate that all specialists who go by the name are not competent to do the work en trusted to them, hence the m a n y failures that are made. There are thousands and thousands of special lets today who cling to the old ob solete method of 60 years ago, at which time people hnd to continue to suffer without relief or hope of ever being cured. I mvself can readily recall the time when I first began my study and practice of my specialty, when diseases that today I so easily and quickly cure sound and well were incurable If a man was suffering from blood disease at that time, he was Just considered unfOr- tllnnt. ii ml nnthlniv ...... 1 .1 . I or was thought or being done to eale toh,? 1.,' '. a n,,V wV i ";Pn Just because In the nnVt he ha ay and neP'ects to have himself cured scTeUspVcansl 'commUtiSr" a.nhi'lf '"f aPwaT bausen, -&Mihsis at ine'SltS?,? f SSiS Inf tJlt- l?Zlo'V2?S tratmlnSHdm"Siitr , experience, KNOWS what to do aSd DOES IT through long ceives my own person! l iSd lndlri fPeftment '-,0re at ,ny 'natltute re ?heVposmve0asnsuPrancentL1unw Ae skiU-an fdhS haVS by ?,1f e fO"ince dictates I'VoWfji' icSt honorably served . Rlnriilnr Sim.1.1 ...! . ' I . - ".. .? thesrteCanmentreqUaled r.eco"" by the man? "l ha" ve cured" ',. A., "i" , j T" ""e fellows. If you are older physically than vo,i are in ver. .iri, , , despondent, run down and discouraged com! to n?v Affi? b,roMn talk maters over. I take broken-down wrecks of hum let f Indiscretions of whatever cause k,,i?.u" ' -hliman'ty from nilst at office or by mail. One personal visit is preferred, but "if this i Im practicable, write us a full and unreserved historv of vour case and our opinion free Many cases cured at home. Medicines fresh f from n,t own laboratory, $1.50 and $6.r0 per course sfl from our HOIKS A. M. TO 8 P. M. SUNDAYS. 10 TO 12 ST. LOUIS MEDICAL CO., Inc. CORNER SECOND AND YAMHILL STS., PORTLAND, OH. HAND SAPOLIO FOR TOILET AND BATH. Delicate enough for the softest skin, and . yet efficacious In removing any stain. Keeps the skin In perfect con dition. In the bath gives all .the de sirable after-effects of a Turkish bath. It should be on every washstand. ALL GROCERS AND DRUGGISTS. When the stomach cannot do its work the task must be performed for the stomach. Kodol is the only preparation that does this. Any one who wants a healthy stomach can have it. Merely take care of the stomach when it is working properly and take Kodol when it commences to go wrong. Kodol will find the weak spot. Kodol is the one substitute which accomplishes Nature's results by Nature's one method. ' Every tablespoonful of Kodol digests 2 pounds of food. Our Guarantee, fafbouieoi TCodol. If vou are not benefited th druggist wtfl et once return your mon ey. Don't hesitate; any druggist will sell you Kodol on these terms. The dollar bottle contains 2 times as much as the 60c bottle. Kodol Is pre pared In the laboratories of E. C. D Witt & Co., Chicago. , pt If DR. TAYLOR, The Leadlsc Specialist. YOU CAN PAY WHEN WELL FREE MUSEUM 0 DR. TAYLOR'S t O.OOO Ml SEf M OF ANATOMY. Every man is invited to visit, tills won d e r f u 1 educational exhib it, showing the human body in wax reproduc tions. FREE TO MEN WHAT YOU WANT TO KOW CAN YOU HE CURED f IIOY I.OMi Wll.l, IT T4KE ? WILL IT BE PERMANENT f WHAT WILL IT COST f ONLY YOU CAN BE CURED Not a Dollar Need Be Paid Unless Cured !? awful death which the dia- tne surre Aliment.. Serv,,. ... " 1 i Pllex. Kid- Am,n,K, and All Ailments Periilinr E W THAT ARE AILING, NERV OUS AND RUN DOWN Come to Me and Be Cured Pay When I f 5a - Cure You: or pay me a yon r;ct " ii gsaiftSP tne benefit of in y THE DOCTOR ...1.?,me,,' THAT CURES. FEE kok A CURE Is lower than any specialist in the' city, half that others cnaree you, and no exorbitant charge for medicines. I am an expert specialist, have hr.d 80 years practice in the treatment of ailments of men. Aly offices aro Mie best equipped in Portland. My methods are modern and up-to-date. My cures are quick and positive. I do not treat symptoms and patch ud. 1 thoroughly examine each case, find the cause, re move it and thus cure the disease. I CL'RK Varicose Vein. Contracted Ailment. I'llc and Spec! lie lilood I'ol on nnd all Ailment ot Men. (PKflAl, DIskask Newly con tracted and chronic cases cured. All burning. itching ami inflammation stopped in twenty-tour hours. Cures effected in seven days. THE GREAT I'RKA'CH ELECTRO MEDICATED CRAYOX insures every man a lifelong cure, without taking medicine into the stom ach IVT'R'N' v,slt Dr- Lindsay'! private ,""J-,'t" Museum of Anatomy and know thyself in health and disease. Admis sion free. Consultation free. If unable to call, write for list of questions. Office hours A. M. to 8 P. M. Sun days, 10 A. M. to 1 F. M. only. OR. LINDSAV X28Vi SECOXD ST., COR OP At'OEKi PORTLASD, OR, rer. : iiicui up as strong as their