l!
THE MOKXIXO OREGOXIATf, TUESDAY. JUNE 21, 1910.
11
CITY NEWS IN BRIEF
ORECOSIAN TELEPHONES.-
Pacific States. Hoitib.
Counting-room Main 7O70 A 6005
City Circulation Main 70T0 A COOS
Managing Editor Main 7070 A 6i'J5
Sunday Editor Main 7070 A S0!3
Composing-room Main 7070 A 6005
City Editor Main 7070 A 60B5
6upt. Buildings , Main 7070 A 6Q93
AMUSEMENTS.
OKPHEUM THEATER (Morrison between
61xth and Seventh) Vaudeville. This
afternoon at 2:15 and toniBht at S:3.
BAKER THEATER (Third, between Tarn
hill and Taylor) Baker stock Company in
"My Wife." Tonight at 8:15.
GRAND THEATER (Parle and Washington)
Vaudeville. This afternoon at 2:15; to
night at 7:30 and 9.
I.TRIC THEATER (Seventh and Alder)
Armstrong Musical Comedy Company In
The Belle of Tokio." This afternoon at
2:30 and tonight at 7:30 and 0.
BTAR THEATER (Park and Washington)
Motion pictures.' Continuous, from 1:30 to
10:8O p. M.
OAKS PARK (O. W. P. carllne) Llberatl's
concert band, this afternoon and tonight.
Charles A- Walters Dies. Charles A.
"Walters, 512 Delay street. Lower Alblna,
died at St. Vincent's Hospital Sunday
night from paralysis. Mr. Walters was
an old resident of Alblna. He was 6i
years old, and had been a pastmaster of
Harmony Lodge No. 12; member of Port
lad Chapter, Nd. 3, Royal Arch Masons;
. Oregon Commander, No. 3. Al Kador
Temple, Mystic Shrine and ' Myrtle
Chapter, Eastern Star. Mrs. George V.
McBride was his daughter. The funeral
will be held this afternoon under the
auspices of Harmony Lodge, (rem Hol
man's Undertaking Chapel at 2:30 o'clock
and the burial will be in Kiverview
Cemetery.
Indian War Veterans Meet Today.
Indian War veterans of the grand en
campment of the Pacific Northwest, from
Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Mon
tana, will hold their annual meeting to
day in the White Temple. Twelfth and
Taylor streets. The business session
will be open at 10 A. M., for election of
officers for the ensuing year. At noon
a banquet will be served by the Sons
and Daughters of the Indian War vet
erans, of whom Mrs. Minnie McGregor is
president. The afternoon will be de
voted to a reunion.
Sale of City Bonds Easy. An im
provement bond issue of $178,000 found
ready sale yesterday when bids were
opened by the Council committee on
ways and means. The bonds, which run
from three to ten years, and draw 6 per
cent interest, were disposed of in small
lots to local buyers at premiums as high
as Among the purchasers were: D.
W. Burke, Morris- Bros., W. F. White,
H. Whipple, H. Teal, Ukase Investment
company, A. E. Jackson and J. Keller.
State Congress of Mothers Meet. A
meeting of the State Congress of Mothers
will be held this afternoon in the City
Hall, at 2:30 o'clock. Mrs. George W.
McMath and Mrs. Thomas Hawks will
speak, the subject to be the Denver con
vention. At today's meeting the presi
dent, Mrs. Robert H. Tate will appoint
the cbmmittees for next year. Mem
bers of the congress, mother's clubs and
the public are cordially invited to attend.
All grammar school students above
the third grade who have failed to pass
in"any work will be permitted to make
it up in the Summer school, conducted by
the Holmes Business College, at Tenth
and Washington streets, beginning Mon
day, June 27, and running six weeks.
Certificates of conditional promotion will
be given by the City Superintendent to
those who do this work satisfactorily at
the Holmes Summer school.
Street Vacation Opposed. A mass
meeting has been called tonight at Car
penters' Union hall. East Pine street
and Union avenue, to protest against the
vacation of Eat Side streets for the O.
R. & N. Co. that may come up at the
next meeting of the Council. This meet
ing will be held by the East Side Im
provement Club of which Rev. George B.
VanWaters is president.
- School Term Exds Today. Today
marks the end of the school term, and
thousands of pupils will learn as to
whether they passed. Many will be
graduated from the grammar grades and
will take up their work at the Fall term
in the various high schools. While the
children are on vacation, the work of
repairs on buildings will be pushed by
the Board of Education.
Sellwood Republicans Meet. The
Sellwood Republican Club will hold a
meeting tomorrow night in the basement
room of the building of the Sellwood
Commercial Club, on Umatilla avenue.
The meeting will be held to assist in
naming judges and clerks for the Novem
ber election. J. A. Miller is president
and Walter Adams secretary.
One' Will Graduate. Concordia Col
lege, on Holman street, near Woodlawn,
will close next Saturday for the school
year. There is One graduate in the
preparatory department. H. Westerdorf,
who will enter the St. Paul Concordia
College. The Portland school is for theo
logical students only, and the number
who can attend is limited.
Dr. Yoakum Comino. Dr. F. E. Yoakum,
M. D., will be in Portland June 27 to
June 30 and hold a series of religious
meetings at the Christian Alliance Taber
nacle, Ninth and East Clay, three after
noons and evenings, beginning June 27;
and at Centenary Methodist Church,
Ninth and East Pine, June 30. The public
i Is invited.
By Request. Dr. Benjamin Young will
deliver a free illustrated stereoptlcon
lecture on Yellowstone National Park
at the Taylor-Street M. E. Church
Wednesday, June 22. Lecture will be
gin promptly at 8 P. M. The public is
cordially invited.
Carmen's Excursion Planned. The an
nual excursion of the carmen of Yhe
Portland Railway, Light & Power Com
pany to Estacada will be held next Thurs
day. The company furnishes the electric
cars to the employes and they go with
their families.
Waverly-Ricthmond Club Meets. The
Waverly-Richmond Improvement Club
will meet tonight in Waverly hall, at
East Twenty-sixth and Clinton streets
lor general business. Every one in
terested in the district is invited to
attend. "
Milwaukik Mothers' Club Meets.
The Mothers and Teachers' Club of Mil
waukie will meet Friday afternoon at
2:30 o'clock in the library room of the
City Hall for the election of officers and
other business. Refreshments will be
served.
Success Lecture Due Friday. Dr.
Perry Joseph Green, will deliver the
third in the series of free succejis lec
tures at the confr.oe, 653 East Morrl
wvi, Friday evening, subject "How to
Overcome Poverty and Failure.
Rate War. Steamer sails Thursday for
San Francisco and Los Angeles. Cabin
J18 and $10. steerage $5 and $12, berth and
meals Included. Frank Bollam, agent, 12S
Third street.
For reservations please address Mrs. M.
H. Henderson cr Mrs. B. A. Percy, Jewett
Farm Resort, White Salmon, Wash.
Diamonds. Gems of the first water
only. C- Christenyen, s?cond floor Cor
bett building. Take elevator.
Swiss Watch Repairing. C. Christen
Ben, 2d floor Corbett bldg; Take elevator.
Five-Room apartment for rent; furni
ture for sale. - Owner 5S Lucretia street.
Hill Military Academy Summer Camp,
June 27; make reservations at once.
Large assortment of these celebrated
Waists, linen. Madras and silk.
Dr. Edgar H. Brown, rectal diseases.
P22-82S Corbett building.
Hewett. Bradley & Co., 344 Washington.
Dr. May II. Cardwell has returned.
Electric Cleaners rented. Main 1233.
Jas. JIoCctcheok Tailored Waists.
Miss Tracy's cooking lesson today.
rWoxvER's Xor fruit. 408 "Wash.
:
Way Clear for Bridge. Councilman
Menefee reports that the way is now
clear for the erection of the East Twen-ty-first-street
bridge across Sullivan's
Gulch as far as the north side landing
is concerned. " On the north sidr? of the
gulch in East Twenty-iirst street there
is a vacant block, which the city has
purchased. The plan is to make two
approaches to the bridge through this
block, one from East Twenty-first and
another from East Twentieth, and beau
tify the remainder of the block with foun-'
tains and lawns. There wall be no diffi- (
culty about securing right of way over i
the O. R. & N. Co.'s track, and work
can be started on the bridge as ,soon
as the contract has been let.
Neighbors Go to Court. Coming to
court to prosecute a complaint of as
sault and battery, S. Gustafson, Sixteenth
and Quimby streets, found himself held
as a defendant on a charge of throwing
garbage on the street. Both charges grew
out of unfriendly, relations between resi
dents of the neighborhood. W. S. Or
mand is charged by Gustafson with the
assault, while Gustafson is accused by a
Mrs. Dascomb of throwing the garbage
on the street. She admits that relations
between the families have been unfriend
ly and that, seeing Gustafson trundling a
whet-lbarrow full of refuse, followed him
to see what he would do with it. Both
issues will be tried out today.
Shift in Officers Made. Through the
annual transfers authorized in Army cir
cles, Vancouver Barracks will lose two
of its popular officers. Major George Bell,
Jr., and Major George Blakely, both at
tached to the Coast Artillery Corps.
Orders were issued at Washington on
June 11 and Just received sending both
of those officers to San Francisco, where
Major Bell will become inspector-general
and Major Blakely assistant inspector
general. Lieutenant-Colonel Millard F.
Harmon, of the Department of the East,
with headquarters at Governor's Island,
will report at Vancouver on August 15 to
assume the duties of inspector-general.
Board to Meet at Medford. The
State Board of Health will hold its
regular quarterly meeting in Medford
June 28 and 23. The Board will devote
the greater part of the session to con
sideration of a pure water supply for
the southern part of the state, particular
ly at Medford and Grant's Pass. There
has been an unwarranted number of
typhoid fever cases in that part of the
state, said to be due to impure water,
and the Board will endeavor .to find a
remedy for the conditions complained of.
Medford is how installing a new water
system which is expected to give that
city an abundant supply of pure water.
Woman Fails at Suicide Attempt! A
supposed attempt to commit suicide was
made Sunday night by Mrs. Jim Drew,
living at the Barnes Hotel, Alblna and
Killingsworth avenues. The woman took
a small dose of strychnine, but was
easily saved, the dose not being of suffi
cient strength to causa immediate death.
Mrs. Page had a quarrel with her hus
band, a streetcar conductor, it is said,
and took the poison to frighten him. She
went to the bathroom and returned in
a few minutes and announced that
was going to die. A physician was
called hurriedly and prompt action re
moved the poison.
Joyriders Names Sought. That his
car was taken out of the garage "With
out his knowledge on the occasion when
it was speeded around the corner at
Hawthorne and Grand avenues, was the
defense made by J. K. Jeffrey in Muni
cipal Court yesterday. Patrolman Adams,
who made the arrest, was unable to
identify Jeffrey as the man who was
driving the car, but said that it was
filled with women and went around the
crowded corner at a high rate of speed,
skidding dangerously. Jeffrey told the
court that he would make an effort to
find out who had taken the car and
would let the court know the result of
his search.
Revenge Is Sought. Determined to
have satisfaction from Roy Courtney for
injuring his son in -a vehicle collision, J.
Renfro, upon the dismissal of his charge
against Courtney of violating the traffic
ordinance, filed an information with the
District Attorney alleging assault and
battery. Renfro charges that Courtney,
driving on the wrong side of the street,
knocked down a set of skids and injured
the Renfro boy's leg. Courtney says that
Renfro had the street blocked so that
he- could pass only on the left side. The
boy was not seriously injured.
Bar Takes no Action. The charges
against Attorney Milton W. Smith, made
in open court last week by Mrs. Grace E.
Russell in the case wherein Smith was
suing her for attorney's fees, were dis
cussed informally by the grievance com
mittee of the Oregon State Bar Asso
ciation at its meeting yesterday. No
action was taken, however, either vindi
cating Mr. Smith or accusing him, there
being no charge formally before the
committee on which it could act.
Stabbing Costs $100. For attempting to
stab a bartender with a long dirk, George
Murphy, an Austrian, was fined $100 in
Municipal Court yesterday. In evidence
against him was produced the weapon, a
blade with a trick handle by which the
blade was concealed when not in use.
The man was arrested by Patrolman
Martine. The blow was aimed at the
bartender's heart, but he threw his hand
over that part of his body and received
a cut in the hand Instead.
Husband Beats Wife's Admirer. -A
battered face and a fine of $20 was all
that Charley Qualion, an Italian, got out
of a persistent pursuit of Mrs. P. Wells,
of 3S8 East Pine street. For the third or
fourth time Sunday, the man was caught
following Mrs. Wells by the Iatter's hus
band, who administered a sound beating
and then caused Qualion's arrest by Pa
trolman Murphy who also had witnessed
the chase.
Girl Found in Saloon. Lelo Clark, 19
years old and a recent arrival from a
small town in Washington, was arrested
Sunday charged with being a vagrant
and being a minor in a saloon. The girl
was taken at the Valley Grill, on Main
street, and appears to be a beginner at
frequenting the grills. Her case was
continued until today, when the pro
prietor of the place will be brought into
court.
Meads Circle to Meet. The monthly
literary meeting of the Florence Meade
Mission Circle of the First Universailist
Church, Broadway street, will be held
Thursday afternoon,' June 23, when the
members will be the guests of Mrs. J. S.
Mc-Cullagh at her home on Market street
drive. The paper of the afternoon will
be a character study of Isaiah and Mrs.
J. D. Corby will be the leader.
Milk Dealer Fined $50. Quick action
was given C. Balmer, a milk dealer, ar
rested on the street yesterday on a
charge of selling bad milk. He was taken
from his wagon to the courtroom, pleaded
guilty, was fined $id. this being his sec
ond offense. He paid his fine and went
back to his wagon to sell the remainder
of his day's supply.
Vagrant Gets 90 Days. Charles Hanon
was arrested Sunday on a charge of
vagrancy and was given, a sentence of
90 days imprisonment and a fine of $100 in "j
Municipal Court yesterday. The man is
accused of living on the earnings of a
woman and pleaded guilty to vagrancy
gladly to escape a term in the peniten
tiary. Yeogmen Ousted From Town. William
Wllliami and John Beresford, yeggmen,
arrested Saturday by Detectives Carpen
ter and Price and charged with vagrancy,
pleaded guilty yesterday in Municipal
Court and were given an opportunity to
leave town. They were held until their
train departed.
Maxwell Caught in Eugene. Alex
Maxwell, wanted here for a statutory
offense, was arrested yesterday in Eugene
and is being held by the Sheriff there
for return to this city. Detective Crad
dock left last night to bring the man to
this city.
Sunday School to Have Outing. The
Sunday school of the Universaltst Church
of Good Tidings will have an outing at
the City Park on Friday-
Olson Again Candidate. The first man
to register, Fred L. Olson, was also the
first candidate to file his declaration of
intention. This he handed to County
Clerk Fields yesterday. He is a candi
date for Justice of the Peace. He says
he will "positively continue past and pres
ent efforts to make the Justice Court a
decent and fit place to practice law. I
will give every individual who comes
into my court a square deal in reality. I
will positively not allow any judgment or
decision in any way to enter into my
future political ambitions. I will .not
build my political future at the expense
of injustice to any living being. No
man, I care not how influential, shall re
ceive more than justice, ar.d no man, I
care not how humble he may be, shall
receive less."
Woman Is Bemuddled. Unable to tell
anything about her home, through what
seems to be " a lapse of memory, a wo
man of about 65 years of age, giving her
name us Margaret McDennett, is being
held by the department of women's
safety of the Police Department, until
her relatives can be located. Miss Mc
Dennett. as she calls herself, is laboring
under the delusion that she is in some
other city, and insists on being sent to
"Portland, Or." She said a nephew,
Frank Weachter, was a cook in a Port
land restaurant.
Former Portlander Dies in China.
News has been received in Portland of
the death of Mrs. H. E. Gibson, in
Shanghai. China. Mrs. Gibson was for
merly Miss Mattie B. Naylor, a teacher
in the Portland schools. Her death was
caused by black smallpox. She was in
her usual good health on Friday, May
18, entertaining a party at bridge and
on Saturday was -taken with the fatal
disease that ended her life the following
Monday.
Through typographical errors in the
Eilers Music House opening announce
ment of their grand annual clearance sale
of talking machines, the reduced prices
were misquoted. Some of the prices were
a little higher than the figure at which
they are now offered and one was lower.
The announcement as it should be Is
published on page 12. The Oregonian
takes this means of rectifying the errors.
Fruitgrowers Meet Saturday. A
meeting at Firwood of the Mount Hood
Fruitgrowers' Association will be held
Saturday. This will be the regular
quarterly meeting of the association and
will be attended by Professor C. I.
Lewis and Professor Jackson, both of
the Oregon Agricultural College faculty.
These men w'lll deliver talks on the care
and management of apple orchards.
Report Incorrect. In the report re
cently published concerning the graduat
ing exercises of St. Mary's Academy,
through an error, Rev. William Deeney
was given credit for a sentiment ex
pressed to the class by Judge J. P.
Kavanaugh, who introduced the former
to the audience.
The finest butter north of the Panama
Canal and the best and cheapest meat in
the United States. The meat's as pure as
T. Roosevelt wants it. The butter will
give you a Taft smile. Come all ye
patriots! Read Smith's adv., back page.
Wardrobe Trunk Wanted. First-class
condition, state price. AN 67, Oregonian.
JOSSELYN OPPOSES TUBE
Car Company Will Not Stand Cost of
Building: It, He Says.
Substituting a tube under the river for
the proposed Broadway -bridge does not
meet with the approval of B. S. Josselyn.
president of the Portland Railway, Light
& Power Company, who said yesterday
that his company would not stand such
an expense.
"The tube could not be built." said Mr.
Josselyn, "for less than $5,000,000, and
I don't know who would foot the bill,
for it would not be a paying proposition
for us to invest in it. We would receive
no revenue in addition to that which we
would get without the tube, and the in
terest on the money necessary to con
struct it would amount to about $50,000
a year.
"The tube would be more expensive
than many people would imagine. To
bring it to he necessary grade, it would
have to be extended on the West Side
at least as far back as Seventh street,
for the river channel on that side is
about 60 feet deep."
The question of placing a tube under
the river was recently revived by the
announcement that C. K. Henry had se
cured the services of an engineer to de
termine the cost of a tube to be used
for cars only.
COMPANY ALLEGES MALICE
Firm Sns for Damages Following
Attachment Proceedings.
Charging Guy D. Kenney with having
maliciously brought suit against the Port-
Everyone deeply respects
A person who is guided
By cool judgment
And common sense.
If one finds that habits
Of food or drink are producing
Hints of disease, he should
Heed Nature's warnings and
Adjust his diet to keep the
Human machinery in order.
One doesn't always know
Where to commence
To correct a diet,
But one thing to stop is coffee, .
An alluring, insidious enemy
That "sings one to sleep and then
knifes him." .
The slow but sure effect of
Caffeine the active drug in
Coffee on the heart, finally
Produces weak pulse and a '
Deranged, nervous system
Which grows slowly but
Steadily more pronounced
And ends in some
Fixed organic disease, .
Unless the cause be removed
Is scientifically made of
Selected parts of the grains
That yield the phosphates
Which rebuild and give
Vital energy to body and brain.
"There's a Reason"
o
T
U
M
rXtHapi JjH j5Ha kJbHoJ
) very many (
I) to see d
f There are many, very many ytX
pieces of acreage offered for sale I XI
adjacent to Portland, end If you
fwleh to make a purchase of that y
sort it will pay you to investigate
all of these offerings. But be sure v
and see Banner Acres. We do not 7t
jr care whether you look our tract
y over first or last, for we feel sure .
-,r that If you are intelligent enough IT
to want a, few acres for a home- a
site or an Investment, that Banner lg J
j Acres will appeal to you as the
m best offering on the market. The Art
?J best of soil, the best of good I
roads, pure water, easy of reach v'
fand the most sightly. And the . yv
price 10O to 130 per acre is III
far, far below its real value. Let
2k us "show you.w 7t
F. B. H0LBR00K GO. $
fx Room 1, Ground Floor, J
AVorcMter BldK. Vg
- Phones Main 5300, A 7507. . Y
5h3 kjHX kbHcx xjjHoJx ki'
land Hardware Company and putting the
store in the hands of th Shrlfr fnr !-
days, the hardware firm brought a dam- !
age suit in the Circuit Court yesterday.
demanding JSOO. Manley L. Smith and
Blanche E. Kenney are named as co- .
aerenaants. Kenney 8 suit was brought
in May. 1909, the amount asked in the
complaint being $763.80. The hardware
company says in the complaint filed yes
terday that Kenney not only levied an
attachment upon the store but upon J1S00
which was on deposit in the German
American Bank. The firm was obliged
to go to the expense of employing an
attorney, and was not able to fill the
orders of customers while the place was
in the Sheriff's hands.
WHERE T0 DINE.
All the delicacies of the season at the
Portland restaurant. Fine private apart
ments for ladles. 305 Wash., near 5 th at
CARD OF THANKS.
The family of the late Mrs. Mary A.
Clarke wish to thank their friends for
their many acts of kindness and sym
pathy during the illness and death of
their beloved mother.
VSi!IUin...l U
Success is simply the
care of details.
IMPEIMEES
MOUTHPIECE
are successful because every
detail of their fragrant blend
is given strictest attention.
Smoke them.
10 for 10 cents
THE JOHN BOLLMAN CO, Mfrs.
The Road to
Independence
wealth-and happiness-is the
road everyone would like to
- travel.
It is within your power to
accumulate much money if
you but practice the habit of
saving.
Start now today. Open an
account with Ashley & Rume
lin, Bankers, with $1 or more.
4 Per Cent Interest Paid
on Sayings Accounts.
Portlnna, Oreg-on.
Open 8 A. M. to 5:30 P.
Saturday to 8 P. M.
M.
ASS
A good selection of designs to choose from,
square drawn tube, as "well as the regular round
tube. All our brass beds are heavy lacquered
and are made to last for years.
J. G. MACK & CO
Fifth and Stark
Ask for the
Berger Line of
will
If your dealer does not
handle them
call
Berger Bros.
128 FIRST STREET
SVMMER RESORTS.
HOTEL!
Offers special
i n d ucements
I to the Sum-
At Columbia Beach seeker. . It is
located on an elevation overlook
ing the ocean. Boating', bathing-,
canoeing, clam digging, hunting
and fishing. Rates. $2.50 daily,
15 weekly. Cuisine the finest.
Open for business June 15.
TENTS
Fully equip'd
with bedding
and complete
cooking out
fits may be had at $5.00 per week.
Located on the banks of Neacoxie
Creek, in the Nob Hill, section,
close to Idlewild Park.
Columbia Trust Company
BOARD OF TRADES BUILDING.
Sea. Croft
EA VIEW, WASHINGTON.
Mm. W. I'i. Hntchlnnon, Manager.
Ideal Location. Facing Ocean. Home
Cooking. Clam Soup and Beach
Vegetables a Specialty.
HOME OPEN JULY 1.
The Hackney Cottage
is now open. Have enlarged their
dining-room capacity and electrified
their house. Beautiful surroundings
and most pleasant spot on -e beach.
Unsurpassed surf bathing, home com
forts, excellent table board. Speciafl
rates by the week. Reservations by
mail or wire. Address, Sea View, Wash.
"Spend your vacation at
ELK GREEK HOTEL
ON GANNON BEACH
the scenic beach of Oregon. Take train
to Seaside, thence by conveyance. Good
fishing and hunting. Sea. foods served
at all times."
HAND
SAPOLIO
FOR TOILET AND BATH.
Kinder roughened
needlework
cateh every stain and look hopelessly
dirty. Hand Sapollo removes not only
the dirt, but also the loosened. Injured
cuticle, and restores the Anders to thda
natural beauty.
ASA, GROCERS AXD DRUGGIST!.
Protzman
Campbell 146 Fifth
SOLE
AGENTS
a Portland. Ore&ron S
bKMlrlmil: and Dbt School for Gfrra under kiwT
W care of Sisters of Bt. John Baptist ( Kpiscopsi )1
Collect-ate, Arademlc and Llvmentory
Jepts, Muffle. Art. Elocution, Gymnasium.
(Kesident papils mast be over 14 years of te and
well recommended. The number is limited to
fifty. Application should be made eerly.) Address
The Sister Superior. Office 2, St. Helens Hall, Portland, Of.
BEDS
Portland has grown so rapidly that
sites, close in, for manufacturing plants
have become scarce.
There is available a tract of 3 1-10 acres,
immediately north of the North Pacific
Lumber Company, north of Guilds
Lake and on the bank of the Willamette.
It has a frontage also on the line of the
Northern Pacific Railroad, which
makes it an ideal location for a Factory
Site.
This tract is offered for sale by the
PORTLAND RAILWAY,
LIGHT & POWER CO.
At a reasonable figure.
Land values in this district are advanc
ing rapidly, and the present time is
most auspicious for concluding a deal
certain to return big revenue.
Gall on, or address, for terms
and price,
Land Department, Portland
Railway, Light & Power Co.
Room 623 Electric Building, Portland
THE
FAMOUS
QUALITY
BEAUTY
The Only Solid Desk Made
GET CATALOGUE
Exclusive Age-fats
KILHAM
Fifth and
Let All PersonsTake Care of TheirTeeth
Better health will be their reward. If your teeth are Decayed, have them
attended to at our office by DR. WYTHE, or one of our expert Workmen who
are skilled In DR. WYTHE'S SYSTEM.
We KNOW what to do and how to do it. That's why all our work is posi
tively PAINLESS. That's also why all of our work is GUARANTEED to glva
lasting satisfaction. Popular prices that are within the reach of everyone ara
charged.
Coupled with our incomparably low prices for dentistry of guaranteed relia
bility is the fact that we do not expect the pay until the work is satisfactory
t0 A SET OF TEETH THAT WILL BE A CREDIT TO OUR OFFICE, DOUBLE
SUCTION. PATENT AIR CHAMBER, NON-BREAKABLE PLATES, NATURAL.
COLOR. PERFECT FIT GUARANTEED. A FULL SET SS.OO.
THE ftUALITV OK OUR WORK IS OUR BEST INDORSEMENT.
Fillings in Gold. Silver.
Platinum and Porce
lain 50 to 81
Gold Crowns and Bridge
work. S3. 8-4 and S5
Honrs 8:30 to 6:00; Sundays, 8:30 to 2:00.
PRIDE IN EVERY STRIDE IN
EVERY SOROSIS SHOE
KNIGHT'S
OFFICE
DESKS
SOLID
OAK
AND
STATIONERY &
PRINTING CO.
Oak Streets
I Am Making- a Special
ty of Porcelain Bridges
work.
This is without doubt
the most beautiful and
lasting work known to
dental science. Spaces
where one or more teeth
have been lost we re
place to look so natural
that detection is impos
sible. Ask to see sam
ples of this beautiful
work. All dentists here
are graduates of from 12
to 20 years' experience.
148 Fifth St., Opposite
xueier A: Fraort Fiftn
t Street Entrance.
Lady Assistants Always In Attendance
WASHINGTON, NEAR
SECOND