THE SUNDAY OREGONIAST, PORTLAND, MAY 17, 1905. THE SENATORS NEXT Sacramento Team Scheduled for Games With Browns. LOHMAN'S OPINION OF StflTH Oakland Slanncer ThlnU He "Will 31 nice- a. Great Ball Player-Deacon Van Bnren Leads Lepue la Battlnar. There -prill be one more -week of the Browns at home. After closing -with Mike Fisher's Senators the team will go to Seattle for a week, then back to Port land for another week with Parke Wil Eon's remnants. After closing with Se attle the Browns will again make another trip through the Bear State. Jn the week Just passed the Browns have had a couple of upsets. Oakland and the Browns, the two tallenders In the league, have been battling It out, and eo far Lohman's red-hosed crew have a shade the best of the engagement. Smith and ZInssar, two exceptionally clever players, have been dropped by the man agement and are helping Parke Wilson, who up to date has lost nine of his play ers via the hurdle route. Both Smith end ZInssar are good batters, and If Wil son will be a bit patient with them he will develop two star players. Jt was a mistake for the Browns to stop Smith. He was batting over a .200 clip, and some of these days he will develop Into a crack outfielder. This Is not alone the opinion of the fans, but of Pete Lohman, a man who knows a baseball player when he meets up with him. In speaking of Smith, Lohman said: "Some of these days the trick of working In the outfield will open up like a fan to this player. He has the makings of a crack player In him, and when he hits his stride he will make them all sit up and take notice. He is a natural hitter and can place the ball ajmost anywhere he wishes. I would have liked to have signed him had I known that he was to be dropped. Mind what I tell you, this boy has the real baseball material in him." Smith, if he remains with Parke Wilson, will get a couple of chances at the Brown pitchers, and when he does there will be things doing in Swattsvllle. for he cer tainly can clout the ball. When this does take place. Manager Vigneux may regret that he allowed him to get from under his control. While with Wilson, Smith pitched an ll-Innlng game. He was touched up for 12 hits, but at that, that fast Sac ramento crew only defeated the Seattle team by one run. Taken Into considera tion that this was the second game that Smith had pitched this season, and also that there are some great hitters on Fisher's pay roll, his work was exceed ingly good. Bussey, the new first baseman, left for Portland last night. He will be In Port land in time to open with Sacramento. Deacon Van Buren is leading the Pa cific Coast in batting. That big center guardian has certainly been clountlng the ball some of late. Umpire Jaok O'Connell has found a sure cure for bunions. He waits for a hard hit root grubber to come near him, then he plants his pedal extremity with the bun ion side out in the way of the ball. By this scientific process he drives the bun Ion in. If h worth the price of admission any day to see Whispering Phil Nadeau elid ing to base. In yesterday's game this clever leftfleldci made three hits while three times at bat. Schmeer and Anderson are now called the "Sauerkraut Brothers." while Carlo Smith and "Dr. Levy" Shields were known as the "Redhot Sisters." There have been no end of knockers buey with Jay Andrews' playing at third. These pachydorms attempt to criticise the work of a man who plays baseball every minute he Is in the game. It is true that Jay makes many blunders, yet at the same time It must be remembered that every time he does, it Is done on dif ficult chances. Then, too. until Raldy came Into the game the third baseman has had not only his own position to play, but he has been Xorced to spread his sphere of action into short. Let An drews alone. If every player on the teaip was as faithful as the ex-manager and worked as hard." the thimble-brained fana would have little chance to kick. Jo do Kos or Joe the Rake, and Charley ZInssar were roommates. ZIns sar got a deal fo delight out of his com panionship with Kostal because the Jolly little twirler, in addition to being de lightfully good-natured, is a wit of no mean ability. Joe would not win a rib bon at a beauty show, and Zlnesar took special delight in telling Joe Just how homely he was. The worm turned at last, however. The Oregonlan photogra pher, in snapping the players in action the day before he left to join Parke Wilson caught one of Charley Just as he was swiping viciously at one of Joe's benders. Zinssar's facial expres sion Is a study, and as a likeness It hard ly does him Justice, but It delighted Kos tal wonderfully, and for several days Joe had his bunky on the gridiron. Speaking of Joe Kostal: Few people who know him will realize that he earned his coin up to two years ago in the roll ing mills of Chicago. Joe did this and In order to support a wife and a couple of bairns, he labored from 10 to 15 hours a day. Joe's friend Is holding down his Job in the mill for him, but any time he wants to break back into making iron again, his position awaits him. Stick to baseball. Joe. It will feed the good wife and bairns, and the years you will live will be longer and crowded with more happiness. With the Pacific Nationals playing the foul-strike rule and the Coasters playing without It. the fans who divide their at tention between the two leagues very often get their think tanks clogged on strikes. In the case of Raldy. the foul strike may as well be In operation. At the game of tipping fouls, the new shortstop has Roy Thomas, the National Leaguer, beaten a city block. In the opening game against Corbett, Raidyfshowed how easy it was to worry the pitcher. Morley's $4000 pitcher yelled "murder" after about eight balls had danced along the foul line or had skyrocketed over the grandstand. Corbett yelled to "Umpire O'Connell for protection, or Raldy would have been tipping them yet. In Monday's game against Los Angeles. Hall came in for the same sort of grueling from Raldy This time the umpire, after about the tenth foul, called a strike on the little Inflelder. Then Raldy was good and soaked out a single. When Umpire Mc Donald arrived on the scene last week he way laying for Raldy. The laundry shutout will not bother the Browns. Each member of the team has received a couple of fine Summer shirts as a gift from an admiring friend. Pitcher Shields won a $5 hat on the re mit of the McGovem-Corbett fight. The bet was paid at Los Angeles and the thrifty southpaw. Instead of buying a panama hat as he had promised to do with the money, he paid JL27 for the sky piece and sent $3 to his father with the instructions to pater that ho purchase the Widow Jenkins white drake that won the prize last year. Talk about love at first sight and the other f angles which go with it, it Is hard ly creditable that Shortstop Raldy would fall a victim to the blind little god and his bitter-sweet barbs. He did, though, and it all came about while he was tour ing a garment factory in Portland. Sev eral hundred young and pretty women are employed by this concern- Raldy's eyes fell upon one pretty lass, and ever since he has carried with him her likeness framed in a mental picture. Whispering Phil Nadeau has a vest that Is a beauty. The cloth and pattern are new and novel and not the kind usually used in vesting. Phil, when not playing baseball, works in a big shoe factory that is noted for Its fancy footwear. The cloth in Phil's vest Is made from the material used in making the tops of fancy dress shoes. If Timothy Woodruff, of New York, noted for his weakness for fancy vests; ever gets his lamps on Na deau's brisket cover, ho will drop dead with envy. Spalding Brothers last week sent to the sporting editor of The Oregonlan one of their new 1903 morocco -covered baseball score books. The book without doubt is the best of its kind printed. Joe McGinnlty, who Beems destined to lead the pitchers of the league this year, as he did In 1P00, has outstripped Christy Mathewson In favor with the New York fans and ho was the most talked about player on the field. And yet the "Iron Man" Is the most modest of boll playens, with a heart story that Is a stern reality compared with the pathetic ballads writ ten by song writers. His wife has been an invalid for years and Is at their home In the Indian Territory, half way across the continent. He keeps In constant com munication with his daughter, who Is now 7 years of age. When the Brooklyn players presented him with the J300 cup won from the Pittsburgs In 1900, Mc Ginnlty had a photograph taken with the little girl seated in the big silver bowl. The cup Is now In storage in Baltimore, where Joe played early last year, but be intends to bring It to New York to bo placed on exhibition. TO OPEN INTERSTATE LEAGUE. MonoKranu and Vancouver Maroon to Play Today at Vancouver. The Monograms and the Vancouver Maroons will open the season of the In terstate League today on the Vancouver grounds, and as the teams are very evenly matched and have been practicing hard, a good game will no doubt be played. There is considerable Interest taken by the Vancouver people In the Maroons, and today will no doubt see the largest crowd that ever witnessed a ball gome In Vancouver. The Monograms will leave on the 12:15 o'clock car from First and Washington streets, and a crowd of rooters will ac company . the team to try help them to win the opening game In. the league. The line-up: Monograms. V. C. Maroons. Brown c Bentley Whltehouse p Howard A. Parrott 1 b Hardy Smith 2 b Christian Glels 2 b Refern Johnson s. s Gleason R. Parrott L f Spray Jacobs c. f Graves Oliver r. f Malloy Tho game will be called at 2:30 P. M. sharp. Charles Glels will umpire. BANKERS PLAY BALL. Clearlngr-Honac Nine Defeats Flrat National Team. The Clearing House nine yesterday de feated a nine representing the First Na tional Bank by a score of 24. to 9. Unusual interest was taken in the game, and the grandstand at the Pacific Na tional Park Was well filled. Sinn Ben nett officiated in the box. while Charles Nelson acted as backstop for the Flrat National Bank aggregation, while the Bishop brothers formed the battery for the Clearing Houbc Bishop's curves were a mystery to the First Nationals, and Joseph Muehe's errors at shortstop also assisted the Clearing House in piling up runs. The line-up of the teams follows: Clearing-House. First Nat'l Bank. B. BiFhop p Bennett W. Bishop c Nelson Myers 1 b Hartman Nelson s. s Muehe Baker 2 b Root Lively 3 b Fields Crow 1. f Orth Burke c f a.. Sewall Stringer r. f Hufford Corvallls Students to Be in Line Arrangements have been completed whereby the students of the Oregon Agri cultural College at Corvallls will come to Portland to participate In the parade on May 21. There will be about 300 of these students, all attired In their blue uni forms, under command of a Regular Army officer, with full arms and sldearms, and they will be a feature of the march. The students will come to Portland on the morning of May 21 and return to Cor vallls the same evening. 7 The accompanying diagram illustrates tho formation of the President's parade and the position in the column of the respective organizations. The parade is expected to move at 2:30 P. but all organizations are directed to be in line promptly at 2 o'clock, in order to avoid confusion and delay. The col umn will be preceded by a squad of mounted police. General Charles F. Beebe, grand marshal, and staff, will follow In advance of the Spanish-American War Vet-. erans. A mounted escort of regulars from Vancouver Barracks will form the body guard of the Presidential party, which will be flanked by the Loyal Legion and Grand Army of the Republic Immediately following the carriages will come the regular troops from Vancouver, consisting of a battalion of the Seventeenth, Infantry and the Twenty-sixth Battery of Field Artillery. The next section of the parade will be composed of the Third Infantry and Light Battery A, of the Oregon National Guard. Following them will come cadet organizations from the various military HELENA IS TIRED "Record" Takes Gloomy View of Baseball Situation, SEES BANKRUPTCY IN SIGHT Ad-rises Pacific National League to Drop Friaco and Los An gel en Brief Bits of Goulp About the Players. The Helena Record says, editorially: "Signs are beginning to multiply that the Pacific National Baseball League is in for a strong season. With receipts of 5100 for a series in Los Angeles as a starter, with small crowds in San Francisco, with a series In Portland coming, and the knowledge that Portland Is a town that can't stand to lose and will pot patronize its club In a league of which it Is not the head, the future does not look Darticu- j Iarly bright from the standpoint of the boxofilce. Just how long the Pacific Na tional can stand the strain Is a matter of conjecture. If there were indications of improvement, it might not be so bad. But the men who have studied the situ ation fall to give any reason for believ ing that the second round in the Coast towns would prove any more profitable than the first. "It happens that the financial side of professional ball is all Important. We have started out to 'buck' a league, al ready popular. In Its own territory. Port land and Seattle would have been com mon ground as much ours as theirs. But wo extended the limit to Los Angeles, a city which, 3s the Reco&l has heretofore said, is as far distant from Helena as Cleveland, O. The figures, after a round or two of playing, show that the move has not added to our strength. It has certainly added to the burdens of the Montana clubs. The receipts of the first week would' hardly pay board to say nothing of salaries and railroad fares. "The Helena people will have to turn out en masse if their club Is to be saved. The money must come from somewhere. Doubtless the visiting California clubs will find when they reach here that this Is, in the parlance, the 'hottest baseball 1 town, in proportion to Its size, of them all. The home club, without being to blame, is almost sure to come home with a deficit. If It can be made up, well enough. The California clubs will, with out doubt, take more money from us than they gave us as our share when we vis ited them. "Before the season opened. It looked as If the Coast teams in this league might tire of Helena and Butte. Now. It ap- ' pears as if we should some day find that j they are a burden not worth carrying. il wbuiu dc win wnue u means couiu be devised to draw In the boundaries of the league say to Portland, at any rate before another expensive trip to Cali fornia threatens the whole caboodle with destruction and bankruptcy." The Greengages continue to get their bumps. Charley Rellly's Loo Loos are driving them down the toboggan. Grim, like the Brown manager. Is working his excuse department overtime. "Don't worry about McCloskey not hav ing a team." said Joe Marshall yester day, who has Deen under his manage ment four years. "He will have one. McCloskey ic the biggest hustler in the business. He can get men when all other managers fall. Last year at Butte we were lower down the ladder than we are now, but McCloskey got out and signed a few new men, and the team rounded to and won the pennant. I won't say that ho will win It this year, but you can bet that San Francisco will finish right up close to the top. McCloskey is the best man I ever played for. He pays good salaries, feeds his team well, and there Is nothing he will not do for them. When they are In a game he expects them to give the best they have, and If thoy don't they can look for a 'roasting.' But Mc Closkey is never unreasonable. He may be sharp with you In a game, but five minutes afterward he forgets it," Marshall stated that the leagues made a great mistake In allowing Umpire Jack McCarthy to go East. He said he had the respect of the players in the North west last season and displayed good Judg ment. Manager McCloskey Is an admirer of Tim Hurst, and thlnk3 him one of the wittiest Judge of the diamond. The for mer was watching a game in the Na tional League some years ago which Tim was umpiring, and In the course of it a lino drive went along the foul line out to the field. Brodle, who was minding that garden, saw the bail hit foul, and after Tim called It fair yelled over: "Hey, HOW THE PRESIDENT'S PARADE WILL BE FORMED , : mi "IT ggff : r ' 1 , ONC' c 7' " I U if A ' i .o.o.r. - - . ii s v x v Te Co.An ! , ;. Jg-c. -1 sffi' -W - JL ?- fill wziJKK fJterfy u,s. V SCrcc.C fat DIAGRAM ILLUSTRATING POSITION THE RESPECTIVE ORGANIZATIONS "WILL TAKE come here, look at the line and see where It hit." "Oh," replied Hurst with a tired air, "bring the line over here; I have no time." Flannery. of the Helenas, says In the Seattle Post-Intelligencer: "We have been playing to splendid business in California. The people down there admit that we are playing better ball' than the California League." Evidently Flannery's' veracity department needs repairing. Manager McCloskey has secured the re lease of Elscy from the Spokane club to play first base. Elsey has had some trouble with Spokane, and he is anxious to get away, and McCloskey is just as anxious to have him. First base has been a weak spot on the San Francisco team all the season, but Elsey, who Is an accom: pUshed artist, should strengthen it. If Mc Closkey signs a few more Elseys and Wlggses the railroad will be liable to charge him excess freight when he trans ports him team. Elsey Is another six- footer, and is built from the ground. Ha is more than a giant, he Is an athlste. In the winter time he teaches boxing, and has brought out several fighters of note. "I'lggy" Ward admits having played ball 17 years, but insists that La Roque has been playing 23 years. Butte ought to have a few more old-timers like them. Bill Hurley has been playing such a sensational third base that Manager Dug dale, calls him the Jimmy Collins of the Pacific National League. Oldtlme baseball fans who recall how big Ed Williamson played short for , Chicago now see the same style of play adopted by a member of the younger generation. Williamson came in after the ball with a rush and scooping it up with practically no loss of motion shot it to first sometimes the ball went so fast that old Pop Anson would mako caustic remarks to the big fellow about trying to knock him (Anson) off the base. The next time Williamson got a chance he would put on extra speed and then the big chief would howl. Hurley is not so large a man by several Inches in all directions, but ho has got William son's work down pretty well already and Is improving all the time. His handling of ground balls close to the bag the meanest kind of Infield hits has Improved to per cent during the past two weeks. Dugdale made a great pick-up when he landedv giant Freeman, his new first base" man. The big fellow la putting the polish on his work and fast rounding Into form as a slugger. During the past week he has been getting all his weight behind the ball, and, wow, how it does sing Into right. Umpires are having lots of troubles with balls and strikes. Colgan of the Pacific National and McDonald of the Coast League have both been off considerable In this particular. The following Is from the Examiner: The ballplayers who represent Butte and Helena worked their clubs, at National Park as steadily as the honest miner works his pick. It was a slugging bee from the start and the Beauties were there with the endurance. The rivalrj- between these clubs is as fierce as that engendered yearly between the girls who are looking for the Goddess of Liberty situation on the Fourth. "This feeling." explained the Butte man ager, "originated in the earl sixties, when Helena was a town of seven board shanties" "And Butte was a goat farm," inter rupted Mr. Flannery, of Helena. "And" it's still about the same," added Mr. Flan nery. sotto voce. "Some wall-eyed galoot from Helena," continued the Butte man. "rode over to Butte and picked up a horse." "It was a Jackass," interrupted Flan nery, "who was acting mayor of the place." "Then there was the matter of a dog fight, the first sporting event of the state," went on the Butte leader. "Yes," acquiesced Flannery, "Helena backed a yellow bull purp against the Sheriff of Butte, and our dog won." "We have it on Helena in all depart ments of sport. In prize fighting" "Little .Brlseno," Flannery butted In, "can solar plexus any three men on the Butte team, with Piggy Ward and La Roque chucked in." "Helena is a cemetery "0 miles from Butte," observed the Butte manager. "Butte Is the Montana state prison," re plied Flannery- Both managers glanced toward a pile of bats. It looked as though there would be a switch from repartee to something more substantial. But baseball Is stronger than the desire to malm or bruise. Grant Thatcher, the young giant wfto is Strlcklett's running mate. Is one of the very best men In the business. He is strong as a horse, and can go in the box every dn". H necessary, and would do it. too, if Reilly would let him. In appear ance he reminds one of Rube Waddell, and maxes good use of his great strength when at the bat. Week before last he slammed a home run clear to the left field fence. IT IS NOT TOO LATE TO GREET OUR PRESIDENT PROPERLY ATTIRED If you place your order at once with We can dress you better and at less cost than anybody. , All the latest novelties known to the weaver's art to select from. Satisfaction guaranteed In all cases. Garments to order in a day If required. Samples mailed. Garments expressed. Cloth sold by the yard. 1 FULL DRESS AND TUXEDO SUITS A SPECIALTY. J lOS THIRD Last year he pitched for Illon in the New York. State League, and won 24 out of 33 games. His fielding average was Bplendld, being .373. and his percentage at the bat was .113. QUAKER COLLEGE WINS. Defeats Dallas Athletes In Dnal Meet. NEWBERG. Or., May 16. (Special.) Pa cific College won over Dallas College In a field and track meet held here this afternoon, the score being 54 to 51. The rains of the morning made the track heavy, and good records were Impossi ble. However, the meet was hotly con tested, and some very pretty events were pulled off. The events resulted as fol lows: 50-yard dash Poling (D.) first. Green (D.) second. Van Orsdel (D.) third; time, &A seconds. Shot put Kramlen (P. C.) first, Moore (P. a) second. D. Coulson (P. C.) third; distance, 33 feet-Half-mile run Kramlen (P. C.) first, Launer (D.) second, Wilson (D.) third; time, 2:30. 100-yard dash Green (D.) first. Poling (D.) second. Maris (P. C.) third; time, 11 seconds. Pole vault Dally (P. C.) first. Kramlen (P. C.) second. Ford (D.) third. 120-yard hurdle D. Coulson (P. C.) first, Teats (D.) second, Gates (D.) third; time, 194 seconds. Quarter mile Pemberton (P. C.) first, "Van Orsdel (D.) second, Williams (D.) third; time, 59 seconds. High Jump Kramlen (P. C) and Poling (D.) tied for first; Maris CP. C.) and Coad (D.) tied for second. 220-yard hurdle D. Coulson (P. C.) first, W. Coulson (P. C.) second. Ford (D.) third; time, 32 seconds. 220-yard dash Williams (D.) first. Marls (P. C.) second. Van Orsdel CD.) third; time, 27 seconds. t Hammer throw Kramlen (P. C.) first. Poling (D.) second, D. Coulson (P. C.) third; distance, S4 feet 5 inches. Mile run Wilson (D.) first. Teats (D.) second, W. Coulson (P. C.) third; time, 5:50. Broad Jump Kramlen CP. C.) first. Poling (D.) second, D. Coulson (P. C) third. TURNERS TO GIVE. EXHIBITION". Annual Gymnastic Contest "Will Be . Held Frldny Night. J An excellent programme will be ren- schools. Including the battalion from the State Agricultural College at Corvallls and uniformed civic societies. Music for the parade win be furnished by eight of the best bands in the state. A special feature will be the "human flag," composed of 300 school children, under the supervision of Professor Krohn, director of physical culture of the city schools. This will Join the column at the corner of Yamhill and Sixth streets. The President will review the column from his carriage at the corner of West Park and Madison streets, after which the parade will disband and the President and party, with Invited guests in carriages and his personal escort, wlli proceed to City Park to participate In the ceremonies of laying the cornerstone of the Lewis and Clark monument. After the exercises at the park the official party will repair to the Portland Hotel at 6:30, and the banquet will be served In the new dining-room, which will be used for the first time on this occasion. STREET. dered at Turn Hall gymnasium next Friday night by Professor Krohn's Turn Vereln pupils. Drills, dances, marches and game by the juniors. Interspersed with lively music by De Caprlo's Orches tra and alternating with gymnastic feats on the apparatus by the seniors and ad vanced Juniors will give the public an ex ceedingly enjoyable evening's entertain ment. This is the closing exhibition and will give parents and friends an opportunity to see what advancement has been made during the year. The feature of the en tertainment will no doubt be the march ing contest for the silk banner, between selected pupils from the boys' and blrls' classes respectively. The girls won the honors last year and the boys arc working hard to recover the flag. The public is Invited and the gym nasium will be taxed to its fullest ca pacity. However, seats for all will bo available. Cornell Wins From Pennsylvania. ITHACA N. Y., May 16. Tho dual meet held here today in Percy Field between Cornell and Pennsylvania, resulted in a victory for Cornell. The final score was 66 to 50. Michigan Defeats Chicago. ANN ARBOR. Mich., May 16. By the score of S3 to 42 points, the University of Michigan track team, on Ferry Field, defeated the University of Chicago in their annual dual meet- Famons Gold Mine Sold. EL PASO. Tex.. May 16. It is reported here that the famous Dolores gold mine of Chihuahua has been bought by the Ven ture syndicate and the Guggenheim Ex ploration Company for J1,750,000. John Hays Hammond, the gold mining expert, is in Mexico City, it Is said, for the purpose of acquiring a number of rich gold properties for the Guggen helms. who already practically control Mexico's silver production. Lnred to Death, by Woman. KOKOMO. Ind., May 16. In the Yeager murder Inquest today the location of the crime was fixed beyond a doubt. The Wil ing was done six miles south of Hemlock, the home of Miss Finley. The tragedy took place at 2 o'clock Monday morning, four hours after Yeager had left his be trothed. The testimony bringing a strange woman Into the case was confirmed by additional witnesses, who told of seeing a woman (not Miss Finley) in the buggy ? i OUR CURES PERMANENT Dr. W. Norton Davis To thorqughly and permanently cure a patient Is the greatest pos sible satisfaction to us. We would rather treat a patient at a positive loss of money and time than to dis miss him uncured. It Is and has been our policy to accept no case unless we have entire confidence in our ability to cure, and do posi tively cure every case that wo ac cept. Because we have acquired a thorough knowledge of man's ail ments and have devised original and absolutely scientific methods of treating them, we can and do cure cases that others have failed to cure. Therefore, those who have been disappointed in their efforts to obtain a cure should not hesitate to consult us. Our practice has grown because we have treated every patient with the utmost con sideration and "regard foe his inter ests. MEN'S DISEASES ONLY "Weakness" To produce temporary activity of the functions In cases of so-called "weakness" Is a simple matter, but to permanently restore strength and vigor is a problem that but few physicians have solved. We never treat fpr temp'orary effects. Under our system of treatment every bit of improvement 13 a part of a per manent cure. Though other physi cians have,. through our success in effecting permanent cures, been convinced of the fact that prema turenesij, loss of power, etc., are but symptoms resulting from chronic inflammation or congestion in the prostate gland, none have as yet been able to duplicate our cures. Our system of combined local treatment is the only effective means yet known for restoring the prostate gland to its normal state, which always results in full and complete return of strength and vigor. Such a cure is absolutely permanent, because the condition responsible for the functional dis order is entirely removed. It is tho only kind of a cure a patient de sires, and Is the only kind of a cure we treat for. Specific Blood Poison We cure this leprous disease com pletely. The system is thoroughly cleansed, and every poisonous taint removed. The last symptom van ishes to appear no more, and all is accomplished by the use of harm less blood-cleansing remedies. Contracted Disorders We have reduced the time re quired for curing contracted disor ders about one-half. This Is an important achievement. It replaces danger with safety. It forestalls chronic complications. It removes the infection and Inflammation De fore that vital center, the prostate gland, can become Involved. Very frequently it means the difference between perfect health and a life time of misery and functional weakness. Our method is ours alone, and our treatment is orig inal; in some features it resembles the ordinary; In its chief essentials it is different. In results it is en tirely different- It is safe, prompt and thorough. Operations Some deformities and disorders render circumcision advisable, and in all such cases we offer a service not to be had elsewhere. Our method of performing this opera tion Is absolutely painless, and the patient need not be detained from his business a single day, nor is there necessity for further calls for having the wound dressed. So care fully and neatly is the work dona that a single dressing Is sufficient. We invite all Interested In circum cision to consult us. PILES Quick Cures. Certain Cures. We cure the worst case of PILES permanently without the use of ointments, without pain, cutting or detention from business, in from two to three treatments. Our treatment is entirely new and pe culiar to ourselves. Remember, no matter who has failed before In your case, we will cure you with mild methods and without danger or else make no charge whatever for our services. Should you live at a distance we can treat you successfully at home. WE ARE ALWAYS WILL ING TO WAIT FOR OUR FEE UNTIL A CURE IS EFFECTED. CONSULTATION AND ADVICE EITHER AT OFFICE OR BY "VT ATT. IS ENTIRELY FREE. WE CAN TREAT MOST CASES SUC CESSFULLY AT HOME. BUT PREFER ONE PERSONAL EX AMINATION WHERE PRACTICA BLE. UPON REQUEST WE SEND BY MAIL SECURELY SEALED, IN A PLAIN WRAPPER, OUR BOOK DESCRIBING- THE MALE ANATOMY AND OUR METHOD OF TREATMENT. HOURS: 9 to 5 and 7 to 8; Sundays, 10 to 12. DOCTOR W. Norton Davis &CO. 14 5K Sixth St., Cor. Alder Portland, Or. with Yeager a few minutes before the shot was heard that ended the, yountr man's life. , It is the belief of the dead man's friends-that this tnystcrious strange woman lured him to his death, and wag introduced to him. through hie enemies..