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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 9, 1908)
THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, AUGUST 9, 1908. 8 SUFFRAGE CAUSE NOT WEAKENED SHIP TERRORIZED TALLEST YELLOW FIR TREE IN CLATSOP COUNTY MEN PECIALI x BY INSANE MAN ST There is no ailment peculiar to men that I cannot cure. For twenty-five years I have devoted my entire time and energy to the treatment of men's diseases. My methods have been perfected by actual experience, with a thorouofy theoretical knowledge as a basis. I am the only physician thoroughly and permanently curing those functional derangements commonly classed as "Weakness," and my success in overcoming such cases has placed me fore most among specialists treating men's diseases, and has brought me the largest practice of its kind in the TVest. My Fee for a Thorough and Last- tT t A In AnyUncom- Julia Ward Howe Answers At tack Made by Mrs. Hum phrey Ward. Portlander on Homer Almost Throws Passengers Into State of Panic. SAYS SISTER IS IN ERROR GIVES SIX MEN STRUGGLE Imagines Vessel Is Being: Attacked by Airship, Dut is finally Secured and Made Prisoner. SAN FRANCISCO. Aug. 8 E. E. 'Beach, a telegraph operator who was a i passenger on the steamer Homer, which j arrived from Portland, went suddenly ' Insane on the trip and Is now In the detention ward In the Central e-mer- gency Hospital. Beach imagined that , the vessel was being attacked by an alrshlD and became so violent that ha terrorized the entire ship before be was secured and bound. It took six strong men to subdue him. He is said to be a resident of Portland. E. E. Beach was formerly In the em ploy of the Northern Pacific Terminal Company, of Portland, as a telegrapher. Prior to that time he was a dispatcher for the O. R. A N. Company. He left the employ of the Terminal Company ' several months ago and since that time has not been regularly employed. He has a wife, but her wheerabouts is not known at oresent. Beach is reported to be a heavy drinker. He formerly resided at 72 West Park, street, Portland. MONTHLY CUSTOMS REPORT Business of local Office for July Big: for That Month. Collector of Customs Malcolm has com pletetd the monthly statement of busi ness of the office for July. The report ' shops a steady gain In the business of the port. July is one of the slowest months in the year, but the average held up well. There was a large shipment of gunnies received, which added greatly to the amount of moneys received for du ties. The detailed statement follows: Vessels entered from foreign ports. 1; vessels cleared for foreign ports, 9; ves- els entered from domestic ports, 62; ves- sels cleared for domestic ports. 47; en ' tries of merchandise for duty. 126; entries : of merchandise free of duty. IS: entries ' for warehouse. 7; entries for export to adjacent British provinces. 2: entries from warehouse for consumption, 28; entries for Immediate transportation without appraisement. IS; total number 'of entries of merchandise. 191; entries for consumption liquidated. 144; entries 1 for warehouse liquidated, 8; certificates of registry granted, 1: certificates of en 'rollment granted. 8; licenses for coasting trade granted. 8; total number of docu ments to vessels Issued. 7. Value of ex ports, domestic. 419.128. Receipts from all sources Duties on Imports, $107,975.78; duties on Imports. Philippine Island. $8.95; fines, penalties and forfeitures, $70.05: miscellaneous cus toms receipts, $100: storage, labor and cartage. $115: official fees. $49.60; total. $108,319.28; amount of refunds and draw backs paid $512.89. am:aij survey to be made Pilots Will Leave Down Today to i Make Soundings of River. '. Members of the Columbia River Pilot's Association, together with representa ', tlves of the Port of Portland and ths United States Engineers, will leave for '.Astoria tomorrow morning on the steamer O. H. Mendell. The pilots and 'Government officials will make tha an nual soundings of the river between l Portland and Astoria. The trip will oc ' cupy about ten days. I For many seasons the pilots have mads 'a survey of the river. The engineers ' furnish a steamer and an engineer and ! tha remainder of the crew is furnished I by the pilots' association and the Port of Portland, both organizations being . greatly interested in the deepening of . the channel. ( On the present trip all tribntarlea to . the Columbia will be surveyed. The lumber Interests have made many new landings on the lower river which have never been sounded. Skamokawa slough. Prescotfa. the slough behind ; Tenasilihee and other places will bs ; placed on the map of the lower river, with soundings, for the benefit of navi F gators. Captain Harry Emken, of the ; Pilots' Association, will command tha expedition. State of California Takes Big- Crowd The steamship State of California sailed from Portland for San Francisco yester day morning with 396 passengers. Every berth on the craft was taken and steer age passengers were turned away. There ' was a demand for cabin bertha which could not be supplied. Many Eastern tourtsta who had failed to make reserva- ; tlons In advance were left on the dock. The south business is very heavy at this season of the year. k Captain Jebsen Visits Portland. . Captain Jebsen. of the steamship firm of Jebsen & Ostrander spent yesterday in Portland. Captain Jebsen was out for business for his company. It has been operating steamships in oposltlon to those ' of the old established lines and Captain : Jebsen says that steamers operating the : house flag of his company will not be affected by the action of the railroads tln discontinuing the handling of through freight after November 1. Took Cargo at Astoria. ASTORIA, Or, Aug. 8. (Special.) The Norwegian steamship Sark, which ' sailed yesterday for Melbourne, Aus , tralla, loaded 60.000 pickets, 87,495 lath ' and 1,095,830 feet, of lumber at tha ; Hammond Lumber Company's mill In this city. Marine Xotes. The steamship Alliance sailed for Coos Bay last evening with a large passenger list and a quantity of freight. The steamship F. S. Loop ' will leave down for Prescotts this morning. She will take a deck load of lumber. The steamship Breakwater Is due to arrive this evening from Coos Bay. Shs has been undergoing repairs at San Fran I clsco. Harry M. Montgomery, deputy collector of customs, is spending a two weeks' . Taction In Seattle, the guest of his cousin, i Dr. Montgomery Russell. Dangerous to Sea Commerce. Captain KoDonaia, of the JLmarleaa Means- a. Portar resorts- to tha Braacb nr $fid C -;' . i v h i i svi 1 -V r - j f Mi ; - j : ' A "1" ' J 5 3 11 . ::M.:. U . ,r y " , Copyright, 1008, by Klser Fhoto Co. George H. HImes, of the Oregon Historical Society; Superintendent Gorman, of the Forestry Building, and F. H. Klser, photographer, re turned a week ago from a trip through Clatsop County, where Mr." Klser secured a photograph of what Is believed to be the tallest yel low fir tree In the country. It Is In a densely wooded section 80 miles southeast of Astoria. The tree measures 12 feet 7 Inches in diameter four feet above the ground. The lowest limb is 100 feet above the ground. Mr. HImes discovered the tree eight years ago on a trip which he made by wagon from Portland to Astoria. At that time the tree measured 18 feet 6 inches In diameter, a large section of bark hav ing since been chopped away. The tree stands alone In a partially cleared tract, and Its great height immediately attracts, the traveler's attention. While Mr. HImes Is thoroughly familiar with most of the Oregon forests, he declares that the fir trees of Clatsop County are theflnest specimens to be found anywhere. 4rorphle office that at 8:40 A. M.. August s, 1908, he puaod a larse log, 60 feet long, covered with grass, in latitude 41:48 North, longltud. 12:47 West. JOHN JTNULTl, u. a. a. Marine Xotes of Taconia. TACOMA. Aug. 8. Bringing 1450 tons AAnnA nro frrtm thA Nihlack mines. di.. , wbU. TaiAnri thA harBre Hay- den Brown arrived In tow of the tug Sea I4on. Carrying about 850,000 feet or lum- k.r tv. .team arbooner Shoshone left out for San Francisco this morning. American steamer Arizona proceeaea . cottla th1. Tnnmfnflr after loAdlnsr 1000 tons of general cargo here for the Hawaiian Islands. British Katanga proceeded to Seattle North China, after a stay of a month STEAMER CfTEIXIGENCK. Iffame Dae to Arrive. From. Data. ArfLhla. HonEkonx Aug 0 Breakwater. .Cooa Bay Aug. Rosa City. ...San Francisco. Aug. II Roanoke Los Angelea. .. Aug. 11 Alliance Coos Bay. . . ... Aug. 13 G.o. W. ElderSan Pedro Aug. IS Btate of Cal.San Francisco. .Aug. 18 Aleala Hongkong Aug. 20 Numantla... .Hongkong Bepu 10 Scheduled to Depart. Name. For. Data. Breakwater.. Coos Bay Aug. 11 Roanoke Los Angeles. .. Aug. 13 Rosa City... San Franctaco. Aug. 15 Alliance Coos Bay Aug. 15 Arabia Hongkong..... Aug. 15 Geo. W. ElderSan Pedro Aug. 20 State of Cal.San Francisco. Aug. 22 Alaala Hongkong Aug. 27 Numantla. ...Hongkong Sept 20 Cleared Saturday. Alliance, Am. steamahtp (Olson), with general cargo, for Coos Bay. her. Steamer Northland completed discharging Niblack ore, and after tak ing on outward freight lef tfor Ketch ikan via Seattle. Steamer Elthu Thomas, of Tacoma, arrived at St. Michael Thursday and Is expected to leave o the return Monday. Arrivals and Departures. PORTLAND. Aug. 8. Sailed Steamship Btate of California, for Ban Francisco; steam ship Alliance, for Cooa Bay porta Astoria, Asa. cwxutwo, oc to ti 8 P. M., amooth; wind, northwest, 28 miles; weather, cloudy. Arrived down at 3:80 P. M. and sailed at 5:30 P. M. Steamer State of California, for San Francisco. Arrived at 4:55 P. M. Steamer Arabia, from Yoko hama and way ports. Outside five miles west A four-masted barkentlns. Ban Francisco. Aug. 8. Arrived it 11. M. Steamer Homer, from Portland. Sailed at 11 A. M. Steamer Asuncion, for Portland. Sailed at .noon Steamer Rose City, for Port land. Sailed at 1:80 P. M. Steamer Roa noke, for Portland. Sailed at 8 P. M. Steamer J. Msjhoffer. for Portland. Tides at Astoria Sunday. High. Low. 11:10 A. M 6.8 feet4:38 A. M O.S foot 10:28 P. M 88 feet4:80 P. M S.T feet TITLE FOR MISS MILLS? Millionaire Brings Earl of Granard Home as Guest. NEW YORK, Aug. 8. Among the pas sengers Who arrived from abroad on the Cunarder Mauretanla were Mr. and Mrs. Ogden Mills. Miss Beatrice Mills, Miss Jeannette Mills and Mrs. Maturin Living ston, mother of Mrs. Mills. They are teturnlng from a Summer spent In Eng land and on the continent. Mr. and Mrs. Mills bring to America as their guest the' Eari of Graxard, a soldierly young man of distinguished appearance, who is trav eling aa Colonel Forbes, his family name. It Is declared that an engagement be tween the earl and Miss Beatrice may be expected at any time. Mr. Mills when asked if his daughter was engaged to the Earl of Granard smiled and said that there was no truth In such a report. The earl, he said, was here as his guest. He added ihat "Colonel Forbes" was a friend of the family and would spend a few weeks In this country. The Earl of Granard owns an estate of 21,300 acres, and his country seat is Castle Forbes, in Longford County, Ireland. The earl saw active service in the South African war. where he won the Queen's medal. He Is Viscount Granard and Baron Lanebough. He Is lord In waiting to the king and master of the horse. Miss Beatrice Mills Is one of the twin daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Mills. She is a handsome girl, fond of out-of-door sports and very English In appearance and manners. She and her twin sister, Gladys now Mrs. Henry Carnegie Phlpps, came out In society Ave years ago. They have passed their Summers In London and later in .Newport. Sea Rosenthal's window, shoe, pvgalnsyi Letter Written oy English Xovellst Shows Deplorable Lack of Ac curate Information Regarding Movement in America. WARREN, O., Aug. 7. Mrs. Julia Ward Howe, president of the New England Woman Suffrage Associatlo, today Issued the following reply to Mrs. Humphrey Ward's comment on the woman suffrage movement in America, printed in The Oregnolan recently: "Mrs. Humphrey Ward has lately pub lished a letter on the woman suffrage movement in America. Mrs. Ward's state ments show that she has been seriously misinformed. She is reported as saying. In substance, that. In the second third of the 19th century, the woman suffrage movement In this country was active and strong, but that it is now almost extinct, owing to the organized opposition of women. Nothing could be further from the facts. "In the second third of the 19th cen tury, as I well remember, the movement was small and unpopular, and was the object of unlimited ridicule. It has grown steadily in numbers and in strength ever since. The change of sentiment in its favor among women has been especially marked. "The organized opposition among wom en is very .small compared with the or ganizations of women in favor. The wom en's anti-suffrage movement in America maintains only one small four-page quar terly as its mouthpiece; the woman suf frage movement maintains one weekly paper and seven monthlies. The organ of the antl-suffragists in Its issue for January, 1908, publishes a list of the anti suffrage associations in tho United States. From this it appears that state anti-suffrage associations exist in only two out of the 46 states of the Union (New York and Massachusetts), and small anti-suffrage committees In six more. On tha other hand, woman suffrage associations exist in 33 states and several territories. No Petitions Against It. "At the time of the recent Constitu tional Convention in Michigan the MichL gan suffragists collected 175,000 signatures to their petitions In a few months. No anti-suffrage petitions were reported. "At the time of the last Constitu tional Convention in New York the suf fragists secured more than 300,000 sig natures to their petitions; the anti suffragists only 15,000. ' "When Chicago was lately consider ing the adoption of a new city charter 97 organizations, with an aggregate membership of more than 10,000 wo men, petitioned for the insertion In the charter of a clause giving women the ballot, while only one small or ganization of women petitioned against t . "In Maine, Iowa, Kansas, in short wherever women have sent to the Leg islature petitions for suffrage and re monstrances against it the petitioners have always outnumbered the remon strants, and have generally outnum bered them 60 or 100 to 1. "Mrs. Ward ascribes all the defeats of women suffrage bills in the United States to the organized opposition of women. In most of the states where such defeats have taken place there was no anti-suffrage organization of women. In the few cases where such organizations existed there is no reason to believe that their influence turned the scale. In America the great obstacle to woman suffrage is the Inertia of conservatism among both men and women, added to the strenuous opposition of the liquor Interests and all the vicious elements. In Case of Washington. "Mrs. Ward says: "The State of Washington? where woman suffrage ex isted while It was still a -territory, re fused to grant It when It became a state. Women voted for the first time In Washington in 1884, and the woman suffrage law was set aside as unconsti tutional by the Territorial Supreme Court In 1887. When the decision of the Supreme Court was announced the liquor sellers and gamblers lit bonfires and rang bells. "Every Governor of Wyoming for the past 89 years has declared the re sults of woman suffrage to be good, and the Legislature has twice passed resolutions to the same effect by a unanimous vote. For 20 years the suf fragists have had a standing challenge. Inviting the opponents to find In all Wyoming two respectable men who will assert over their names and ad dresses that It has had any bad results The opponents have thus far failed to respond. ' "A resolution testifying to the good results of woman suffrage has been passed by the Colorado Legislature. Sev eral years ago a published statement to rha aamA AfTAft Wfla alirned DV the GOV- ernor of Colorado, the Governor-elect, two ex-Governors, tne jniei jusuce, au mo Justices of the State Supreme Court, the Denver District Court and the Court of Appeals, the tresiaeni or me iaie um a long list of distinguished citizens. In cluding prominent clergymen of different denominations and the Presidents of 13 of ' the ' principal woman associations of Denver. The anti-suffraglsts have not ing Cure of Any Ailment Is Only $ 1 U pi Heated Case DR. TAYLOR, The Leading; Speclallat. I NEVER DISSAPOINT OR MISLEAD MY PATIENTS, AND MY CURES ARE PERMANENT dl Varicocele i cure any case mat i accept in one wees: s time. My treatment Is a painless one, and In most Instances the patient need not be detained a single day from business. There Is no doubt or guesswork, but abso lute certainty of a thorough and lasting cure, with ui uruiLii twin iivur Istinctive and thoroughly scientific methods of treatment I employ. rr.. Kaa In v. r, o tViAlr tfi.A .nnriltlnn And whn wish tn avoid tYifi neglect, I offer free consultation and advice, either at my office or through correspondence. If your one of the few that have reached an incurable stage, I will not accept It for treatment, nor will I services upon any one. I treat curable cases only, and oure all cases I treat. ScientificTreatmentforwWeakness" Dosing the system with powerful stimulants and tonics in an effort to restore funotional vigor can have but one final result, the condition Is rendered worse than before. Few doctors know of any other method than stomach drugging, and when this does no good, they say: "There Is no cure for Weakness. I have often made strong statements to the effect that the ailment must be thoroughly understood be fore it could be remedied. I have proved it beyond dispute that so-called "Weakness" is merely an indi cation of tne existence of a low form of Inflammation in the Prostate Gland, which is usually aggravated and made worse bv stimulating medicine, electricity or anv other agent that excites temporary activity. The Prostate is a nerve center and therefore very sensi tive to treatment the right kind quickly helps, while the wrong kind can cause great harm and sometimes Irreparable damage. I employ the only scientific and full effective treat ment for "Weakness," which is" almost entirely local, by which I mean that the medication Is applied direct ly to parts. Medicines containing poisons are entirely excluded. I obtain the most desirable results In every case undertaken, and the cure Is permanent and complete. that existed before the disease began. Contracted Disorders Every case of Contracted Disease I treat is cured thoroughly. My patients have no relapses. When I pronounce a case cured there is not a particle of infection or Inflammation remaining and there Isn't the slightest danger that the disease will return in its original form or work Its way into the general system. Some contracted diseases are less serious than others, but none are too trivial to warrant un certain methods of treatment. I especially solicit those cases that other dootors have been unable to cure. MY OFFICES ARE OPEN EVERT DAT FROM t A. M. TO 9 P. M. SUNDAYS, 10 TO 1 ONLY. the DR. TAYLOR co. CORNER SEfOSD AND MORRISON STS. PRIVATE EXTRASTH 2344 MORRISON ST, PORTLAND, OREGON. women who oppose woman suffrage. Without calling in question their good in tentions we can hardly praise the good sense of women who not only oppose the granting of the full franchise to women, but who also fight with equal or even greater vehemence every proposal to grant them municipal suffrage or to give women who are taxpayers a vote upon questions of local taxation. Mrs. Ward refers with regret to the defeat in New York in 1899 of a bill requiring that one third of the members of school boards should be women. The Albany Assocla tien opposed to the further extension of suffrage to women published a letter protesting against this bill on the ground that It 'threatens the home, threatens the sacredness of the marriage tie, threatens the church and undermines the founda tion of our great Republic." Good Outlook for Cause. . "The New York association opposed to the further extension of suffrage to women In its official report for the year taw .. Tvr-r.nrtiv? "When the agitation for woman suffrage first began to com mand attention the outlook for its ulti mate success was far less a matter for apprehension than It Is today.' . "The National American Woman Suf frage Association is growing in numbers every year, and its annual Income has rteen from J2544 In 1892 to 25,662 in 1907. "We shall all agree that comparisons between the personnel of the two parties is to bo avoided. Yet I must say that In the experience of many years I have al ways found the advocates of woman suf frage occupying higher moral grounds than that held by their opponents. On the one side I see the logic of Justice car ried to Its inevitable conclusion. On tbe other I find a deep-down distrust of hu man nature, which, so far as it Is em bodied In the ordinances of society, must always restrict Its progress and deny its highest ideals. I am happy in believing that woman suffrage, in so far as it al ready prevails In the United States, has come to stay. I feel assured that its domain will extend itself with the preva lence, of true principles of government, and with the growing application of these to the issues of life." WILLIAM SCHMIDT ENJOYS ONLY WEEK'S LIBERTY. SURVEYORS AT WORK AGAIN Presence in Mllwaukie Revives Talk About Bridge Across Willamette. Surveyors for the Southern Pacific RaUway Company have been at work running lines through Milwaukle again Several years ago a crew spent lx months running lines though Milwau kle and felchard Scott's farm on the north side of the town, but the owners of prop erty were not approached about rights of way. The new surveys follow closel the first surveys, but not exactly. The lines run extend from the northeast corner of the town through to the south west and terminate south of Rock Island, where the railroad bridge will v. - wn Tha north end of the proDaoiy " - nnl. surveyed lines extends nearly to Wills- Appeals, the tresiaeni or me iaie um- i mrs ium .. " -- - - . versity, .the State Superintendent of Pub- Wlllsburg ana '''" "Mj . . . ,-. a l tK.nrr. nm nf these surveyors at All no instruction, ma Auuracy-jjrenci r. A n th.u siirvevors at juu- rrest3ui,c ' . waukle lends color to the Impression that the proposition to do away with the Fourth-street line and bring trains of the West Side division into x-urLiduu u, way of a bridge across tne muamcin of Denver. The anti-suffraglsts nave not way ol . .t sll1. found ln.au Colorado a dozen re.pectab.e Klvar near Oswego , and the Eastf Side. men who will say tne contrary over meir i , ' , ty,. .,r)hn own names. roaa pnog. v 'mv Ward namnllments the 'common I on the mgo ' " 1 . ,v . . - -East Side, which is said to be Intended for the Oswego bridge. . mih i. Brkivit' nr rnpne American 5 CURES ooQ)o MALARIA Malaria is due to impurities in the blood which destroy the rich, Healtnlul qualities oi tne circulation, uu 1 -j - The body is then deprived of it3 necessary nourishment and strength, and is unable to resist tne counuess ui&uiucm mat. ui4i a-- j -r- suffers in consequence. The appetite fails, digestion is weakened, chills and slight fever are frequent, while the sufferer loses energy and ambition. Boils, skin eruptions, and some times sores and ulcers follow when the blood becomes deeply polluted with the malarial germs. Both a tonic and blood purifier are needed to cure Malaria, and S. S. S. is best fitted for this work It is the most perfect of all blood purifiers and at the same time an invigorating, healthful tonic. S. S. S. goes down into the circulation, and removes every trace of impurity or poison, and gives to the blood the health-sustaining qualities it needs. It cures Malaria thoroughly and per manently because it removes from the blood the germs and poisons which produce the disease, and while doing this tones up and strengthens every part of the system. Book with information about Malaria and any medical advice furnished free to all who write. THE SWUT SPECIFIC CO., ATLAHTA, GA, After Pronouncing Sentence, Judge Wolverton Adjourns Federal Court Until October. William Schmidt, confessed forger of two $35 Postoffice money orders, was yesterday sentenced by United States Judge Wolverton to serve two years at McNeills Island. Schmidt was released from tho Government Prison at McNeills Island only last week, after completing another sen tence for a similar offense, and walked out of the penitentiary, only to be ar rested by a Deputy United States Mar shal on an Indictment that was re turned by the Federal grand jury in this state about a year ago. The money orders were forged in 1908. Having sentenced Schmidt, Judge Wolverton will hear argument on a demurrer to the Indictment in tha case of Henry Meldrum and others who are charged with a conspiracy to defraud the Government by means of forged applications for survey. The demurrer has been filed In behalf of Rufus S. Moore, one of the defendants, but the effect of the ruling on tho motion will also extend to the other defendants. This demurrer and other minor pro cedings relating to the so-called land fraud cases, will be all disposed of prior to Monday, October 12, when the prosecution of these cases will be resumed by Tracy C. Becker, special assistant to the Attorney-General. Tha first case to be taken up Is that against the Paclflo Furniture & Lum ber Company, including 12 defendants, who are charged with a conspiracy to defraud the Government ont of title to about 6000 acres of timberland in Curry County. Tomorrow, Monday, will positively bs the last day for discount on West Side gas bills. Portland ras L-ompany. sJfc 4 WTt: rAT I your attention to our wonderful Wt LALL Success, which 1 duo to the fact VT that we reaiiy nave hu cumuou , our staff is complete and is composed of America s most distinguished specialists, each of whom is well known to the profession, hospitals and the community as a man whose life has been spent in curing men. DON'T BE A WEAK MAN Tn A rtnilT that you are but HALF A MAN causes more MKNTAI. TO ADM11 ii-mrrntvo and worry THAN ANV OTHfc-R AILMENT. NO suit MA TTT D what form of trouble or "weakness" you may AT 1 fc. K it ruHTAii.v Is to your advantage to con- , , 1 1 nxnm anH thoroughly fectly equ1ppedor the eatment of AI DISEASES common to men. OUR FEE $10 IN ANY SIMPLE CASE yg Positively Guarantee to Core Every Case We Undertake AND YOU PAY WHEN CURED nw arroiINT OF OUR EXTENSIVE PRACTICE! ANDRECENT IwvMTIAtFoM WB.SjB AWIHCT .THE SKILL TO MAKE) CtHES WHICH SBKM jivirwoiDua v """"" TAKE NOTICE We positively aruarantee to core Arnto ps- MENTS are the .tumbling blocks of the Pro"""'"a n "daV" treated for yearn without succe-a. We make cure, in day, vrblt h averaae phynictan. eon.ider ImpoMiDle. WE CURE WEAKNESS, lOST VIGOR, SPERMATOR- HOEA. SPECIFIC BLUUU STAfiKS. VARICOCELE, HtUK!Pl tl;r.. " TR ACTED DISORDERS, RUPTURE, OR AM OF lHh COMMON TO ME3i. if tm cannot call write for Serf-Examination Blank. Many ca.ea .. t.m. Hour. 9 A. M. to 8 P. l. Sunday, u--- CORNER SECOND AND TAMH1XL STREETS, PORTLAND. OREGON. ST. LOUIS DISPENSARY Twenty Years of Success In the treatment of chronic diseases, such as liver, kldnev and stomach disorders, constipation, diarrhoea, dropsical swellings. Brighfs disease, etc. KIDNEY AND URINARY Complaints, painful, difficult, too frequent, milky sr bloody urine, unnatural discharges speedily cured. DISEASES OF THE RECTUM 1 t A.-.-. A 1 . . - ..l.r,.nt(rn TV Manila II nil r Such a plies, liaiuia,, naui:, uiccmv.., ' . SrhlUar rfWharo-fta currH without the knife, pain or vr confinement. DISEASES OF MEN o-la- atrlntnra 1inn&.tUr&.l lOSSS. lW. Ayti! i V 1 '.t. JJIOUU pviovia, 6'cvi., " ' ' potency thoroughly Tared. No failure. Cure guaranteed. . vnrvr hib-v troubled with nigni emissions, arcsim. .. basn?u"eM.M.rson to .octet deprive you of your manhood, nmnn Axn KIN DISEASES, Syphilis, Gonorrhoea painful bloody nrine, DRUGS. Catarrh and rheumatism CURED. ' rr walker's methods are regular and scientific. He uses no patent nos trums oT ready-mad. preparations, but cures the disease by thorough medical H?i"flt r ?ii. New Pamphlet on Private Diseases sent free to all men who treatment - His New mpn .on rrivai. Terms reasonable. All let- feersCrinswered Ynplain enelo?" Consultation free and sacredly confidential, fall on or address DR. WALKER181 First Street, Cor. Yamhill, Portland, Or.