The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, December 12, 1909, SECTION FIVE, Page 9, Image 59

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE SUNDAY OUEGOXIAX, PORTLAND, DECEMBER 12, 10OD.
HAS THE UNIVERSITY
If Its Work la for the Public Uplift, It Will Gain
tThe follnwlnn ppr was read recently
"by F. C4. Toung- bafora the ITnl-var-aity of
oVea-on Assembly:)
PROGRESS through concerted and
consciously directed efforts Is the
. faith and hope of the age, and very
body expects to take a hanrl in "running
thirss." Democracy is in the ascendant.
Only business enterprises and the busl
np.i side or Institutions in general have
any trace of the monarchlal left. Universi
ties have in their essential life become
probably most deeply and in a most peculiar-
way Imbued wHh this spirit of the
times. The activities of the undergrad
uate . are dominant. As a body and in
groups they have learned to control and
to consummate many things: creditable
and even necessary, too, these interest
are. Their college spirit centers upon
these student affiilrs. These absorb the
best portion of their vitality. Only the
residues are left for the laboratory, the
lecture room and the library.
Thle expansion and deflection of the tide
; of university life is quite In keeping with
the tendencies of the age. Nevertheless, a
problem of deepest significance results
' from the situation. For at the tame time
: that the more serious side of university
life -was being weakened the outside
world was moving on. The organiza
tion of noctcty was becoming exceedlng-
, ly complex. Inventions and discoveries
i were greatly, advanced. Necessarily then
j for efficiency and achievement In this
I new age the power to think closely, com
I Tirehensivety and deeply is demanded as
f 1t never was required before. But the
I majors taken in these .student activities
vield readiness and practical experience
white the world'", affairs demand a se
verer and more definite discipline. The
affairs of the outside world are affected
bv an almnst unlimited past, by a com
plex of force, and bv a complication
' of processes to which those of the
1 puny realm of student affairs bear no
comparison. The wielding of influence
In one will not suffice for leadership
the other. A largest possible range
of faculties must be quickened to
suffice for the wider world, and they
must he strengthened as only sys
tematic, definite and long-continued
study can.
Not only is there this widening dis
parity between what the university
now gives and what the world needs,
but the university is becoming more
and more exclusively the Institution
upon which the outside world must
re)y to develop professionals In ef
ficiency and achievement. Through the
very progress made In the sciences
and the arts the keys of destiny are
being placed In the hands of the unl
verst ties. Any suggestion for the de
velopment of adequate power, skill and
spirit by the university to play this
role surely is justified.
How can the university maintain the
part of the lending agency through which
the. promise of American life will be
fulfilled?- . For this. I believe, three futi
. .Inroental requisites must be realized In
the university:
1. Nothing less than the discovery
aiid utilization of that process of imt-vt-rslty
education through which the in
herent possibilities of the university, as
an institution, will be fully realized
must be provided'.
1. All the forces at the command of
the university must be unified and
brought to bear most effectively upon
the main purpose of the university
the training for efficiency and achieve
ment In the actual conditions of the out
side world.
i. The university must espouse Its
true mission that of social salvation,
the realization of the democratic Ideal.
Recent discussions ot university prob
lems reveal a dawning appreciation of
the fact that the Inherent possibilities
of the university will be realized only as
regard Is had to Its associated life. The
real vitality of the university Is conceded
to reside In the nature of the Interplay
of mind and purpose among 's member
ship. The character and stamp of the
university are determined by what it Is
as a living association. President
lowell. ot Harvard, opened his Inaug
ural address with a reference to the dic
tum of Aristotle that man. by nature.
is a
that
as a
social animal, and went on to say
"'it is In order to develop his powers
social being that the American col
exists. The Idea that the well-
lege
spring of the service of the university
must be developed in its associated life
more than In the Individual achievements
..f its elite, is especially emphasized by
Woodrow Wileon in his paper on "What
3s a College For?" In the November
Seribner. "Education," he says, "does
not consist in courses of study. It con
sists in vital assimilation, of knowledge,
and mode of life, for the college, as for
the individuals is nine parts of digestion."
Only that influence and activity of the
university that permeates to the inner
life, counts. Only life can touch life in
the higher realms of Inspiration, invlg
oratlon and saving purpose. In Its life
then, as a social unit of a unique order,
is the efficiency of the university to be
sought.
Only some ten days ago at the In
stallation exercises of President Shank
lln. of "Wesleyan University, a similar
conception of the essential character of
the university was Indicated by two of
the speakers. President Shanklin char
acterized the German university as
standing for scholarship, the English for
culture, and the unconscious spirit of
the American, ho thought, was expressed
by the word "service." Senator Ellhu
Root la also reported as saying that "the
pendulum had swung too far In the way
of Instructing men to do one thing for
themselves Instead of educating them to
do great things for the world by being
great men. "
The -university process, then, is a social
process that does not stop short ot trans
forming men. To achieve such tvrofound
results It must utilise the principle of all
. for each and each for all directed to the
highest ends of life. Its organization
must evoke the most intimate interplay
of thought and purpose, it must amount
to a life process fully socialized.
What makes it doubly sure that this
new conception of the essential life of
the university is to be counted with Is
the fact that both Presidents IxWell and
Wilson do not so much set It up as a
theory to prove as they are led to it In
their diagnoses of the cause of the low
ebb of Intellectual ideals in the univer
sity of today.
In the college of the old type, with its
classical culture, there was perfect Intel
lectual contact and solidarity. With . a
common mental pabulum, the daily asso
elation of young men with minds alert
would bring about a vital assimilation of
the matters brought before them In their
common courses of study, with the in
troduction of election In studies, there
was a divergence In courses pursued by
the Individual students and an Intellec
tual Isolation. The old solidarity In dis
tinctively educational " Interests waa
broken down. This Is far from intimating
that there should be a return to the old
classical culture.
We arc in . another world, greater,
grander, mere enlightened and nobler far
than that ot the Greeks and Romans. At
any rate, we have drifted so far away
from that world that there is no possibil
ity of leaping over into il: and. more
than-that, it falls to the university ' to be
mentor and guide for communities and
states, with their present mme of instl
tutlons, interests and activities, that man
may -not lose his foothold or his course
In his. precipitous ascent to unknown
heights of civilization. '
Referring to this situation of vanished
Intellectual cohesion. President Lowell
says: "We must construct a new solidar
ity to replace that which is gone. The
task before us is to frame a system
which, without sacrificing individual va
riation too much, or neglecting the pur
suit of different scholarly interests, shall
produce an intellectual and social cohe
sion, at least among large groups of stu
dents, and points of contact among all.
This task is not confined to any one col
lege, although more urgent in the case
of those that have grown the largest a,nd
have been moving most rapidly. A num
ber of colleges are feeling their way to
ward a more definite structure, and,
since the problem before them Is in many
cases the same, it Is fortunate that they
are assisting one another by approaching
it from somewhat different directions."
The process of university education at
its best should realize a spontaneous and
ardent interplay of mind on the highest
plans. The university has the picked rep.
resentatlves of its community and they
are plastic and growing and just attain
ing the maturity of their mental strength.
These select spirits also have as their uni
versity responsibilities large liberalizing
and humanzing problems challenging their
mettle. The university constituted as It
thus, is should be competent to arrive at
a community of interests in which mental
contact, association and interstimulation
most salutary would be realized, and a
vital assimilation of most substantial
knowledge secured. At any rate the re
naissance of a solidarity of. intellectual
Interests must e realized to bring the
university tip to the high-water mark ot
efficiency.
Passing on to another requisite for se
curing to the university its normal high
estate of social service: the re-enthronement
of university study a the major in
terest of the students, or to use the met.
aphor of President Wilson of Princeton
to secure again the leading attractions for
the main tent of the circus. Referring to
the fraternities, athletic activities, glee
clubs and other organizations and inter
ests, he says: "The sideshows are so nu
merous and. so diverting so important. If
you' will that they have swallowed up
the circus, and those who perform in the
main tent must often whistle for their
audiences, discouraged and humiliated.
VProbably the best procedure for getting
at the salient features of this problem will
be that of tracing the development of it.
With the displacement of the large dor
mitories and the abandonment of the col
lege refectories of "commons." the stu
dents were under the . necessity of shift
ing' for themselves. It was the opportu
nity of the college fraternity, and that
Institution has made the most of it. Most
vigorous organizations have grown up and
assumed the home needs of the under
graduate, and naturally a large part of
his intellectual and social Interests are
there centered. And, further, the Initia
tive and energy and competitive spirit of
the undergraduate blossomed out in many
other lines of activity that are most salu
tary as diversions, but questionable as
the more serious and major Interests. The
versatile undergraduates were left to or
ganize their own lives cast adrift as they
were, they had to organize and that life
and not the deeper interests of the univer
sity has come to dominate their thoughts,
their imaginations and their favorite pur
poses." President Wilson would recover the
position of dignity and pre-eminence
for the distinctively university, -work
and relegate "the side shows," without
discrediting them, to their natural
place as diversions, by means of uni
versity reorganization. His sugges
tion is as follows: "The fundamental
thing to be accomplished in the new
organization Is, that. Instead of the
heterogeneous corfgerles of petty or
ganizations It now Is, Instead of being
allowed to go to pieces In a score of
fractions free to cast off from the
whole as they please. It should be
drawn together again to a single uni
versity family of which the teachers
shall be as natural and as intimate
members as the undergraduates. The
life" of the college should not be sep
arated from its chief purposes'and most
essential objects, should not be con
trasted with Its duties and In rivalry
with them. The two should be but
two sides of one and the same thing:
the association of men. young and old,
for serious mental endeavor, and also,
in the Intervals of work, for every
wholesome sport and diversion. Under
graduate life should not be in rivalry
and contrast with undergraduate du
ties: undergraduates should not be
merely In attendance upon the college.
How I Restore Nerve Force
Every organ of your body Is governed by a network
of ,nere wires. These nerves convey the power which
runs the human machine. This power is called .nerve
force. Nerve force Is nothing but electricity. The rea
son any organ becomes weak is because the nerves which
control It lack electricity, or nerve force, the motive power
of your body. This lack of nerve force is shown by
weakness of any kind, -whether in the stomach, liver, kid
neys, heart or other organs.
If your memory is poor,
confidence and nerve all
Cone; sleep restless: it
you suffer frequent head
aches and your eyes are
dull and heavy, it shows
that your supply of nerve
force Is depleted.
So many men try to
build up nerve force by
doping their stomachs with
drug s. It is Impossible.
What the nerves require is
nourishment nerve food. If
there was any nourishment
in drugs, they might do
some good, but 'you know
there is' not. Drugs are
drugs, stimulants, narcot
ics, antidotes, poisons, not
food electricity is nerve
food nerve life. It soaks
Into your nerves and is
taken up by them just as
a sponge absorbs water. It
nourishes and vitalizes the
parts which drugs cannot
reach.
'Every dose of drugs that you put into your stomach
weaken your nerves. Every time you kill a. pain or an
ache by stupefying the nerves with poisonous drugs
you are hurting them, and any one can see that in time,
by steady dosing, your nervous system will be completely
broken down.
Electro-Vigor i a relief from the old system of' drug
ging. It does, by natural means, what you cannot expect
drugs to do by unnatural means. It gives back to the
nerves and organs the power they have lost, which Is
their life.
Eloctro-Vigor is not an electric belt. It Is a-dry-cell
body battery, and makes its own power. It is easily.
A SOUL?
a- Soul. '
but parts of Its life, very conscious
and active parts. They should con
sciously live its whole life not under
masters, as in school, and yet associat
ed In some Intimate daily fashion with
their masters in learning: so that
learning. may not seem one thing and
life another. The organizations whose
objects lie outside study should be but
parts of the whole, not set against it,
but included In It. All this can be ac
complished by a comparatively simple
change of organization which will
make master and pupil members of the
same free, self-governed family, upon
natural terms of intimacy."
This suggestion for university re
form is surely startling in its thor
oughness: the method advocated is
heroic. It reveals a glowing- sense of
the importance that the college should
not fail of its purpose. And yet such
a university family with its multitudi
nous membership and necessarily arti
ficial regimen would hardly realize his
hope. Study and life might under an
-i
rnoKKsso" npprrES wnosK
VELT'S DOtTBIXE.
V
Scott ? - tIbh.
NEW YORK, Dec. 11. (Spe
cial.) In the absence of ex
President Roosevelt. Professor
Scott Nearing. of Philadelphia,
has assailed his doctrine. Professor
Nearing says the rearing of big
lamilles increases the cost of liv
ing. He says woman was not
Intended for the rearing of large
families but for the rearing of a
smaller number of children In the
elements of i "d citizenship.
environment thus created be identi
fied, but would the life thus experi
enced have the desired approximation
to the conditions of the life outside for
which it was inten-ded to prepare?
The problem of kindling life in uni
versity work is a problem of having life
seen and felt through the university
studies normal. Inspiring and achieving
life. This realized, there will be no need
to escape the distracting influences of
the fraternities and other competing In
terests of the undergraduates, for all will
come to the support of the then leading
interest "and there would be unity and
subordination to the higher. This vision
ot life no doubt could be caught from the
teachers in the intimate association ad
vocated by President Wilson in so far as
the teachers themselves under such con
ditions possessed vision of life. But why
not get direct contact? This vitalizing
life can best be touched and felt through
the studies by bringing them up close to
the actual world's needs.
m a
Referring particularly to state univer
sities, why not have them set about to
accomplish the purpose for which they
were established? They were created to
renew the life of the people of the state.
Let them gtve: vocational training, but
have it charged with the deepest sense
of obligation to the work of social bet
terment. It was the consciousness of
this peculiar relation of a state univer
sity to its people that constrained a
bishop to bespeak a. few weeks ago from
the university platform for the state
institutions the sway of the future. ,
An institution that would frankly and
fully espouse this mission would have all
things added unto It. Intellectual sol
idarity and recognized pre-eminence of
Its work over all other interests would
"Fort Slmcoe,
J?
a
be won and those who would not, such
a spirit animating an institution, respond
to the fullest measure of their powers
would not, of course, be university stu
dents. Moreover, such an institution
would not have to pack its membership
together, as President Wilson suggests,
to keep them inoculated with the proper
spirit and interest. Its higher purpose
would draw all Into a living and effective
unity. The life of the state at large im
pressed by Its example and influenced by
its prestige would be won to the same
spirit and endeavor.
Such a practical ideal of service
would liberalize rather than narrow its
scholarship and culture. For with Its
better vision it would view the every
day interests and the heritages of its
people as Tennyson did the "flower in
the crannied wall." and as Carlyle did
the humble Scotch kirk in the vale.
In losing itself tn the work of public
uplift the university would gain a soul.
Each department would be at work
upon some line of social heritage, some
legacy of Institutions that it might
vitalize and to renew that element in
our civilization. A most Important in
terest for each department would he
the raising of the efficiency of the
schools that are sending on Install
ments of the youth to us.
Of course the efforts of the State
University are not to be confined to
the interests of our commonwealth.
We are a unit as a Nation. The Na
tional organization has in charge in
terests fraught with the weal or woe
of us all. The BallUisrer-Pinehot con
troversy Is representative, too, of an
Irrepressible conflict. In It are involved
issues affecting our National destiny
even-more profoundly than did those of
the sixties. We need not expect war,
but war does not settle deeper Issues.
This controversy designated by the
names of two men is not a personal af
fair. Jt would not fade if Plnchot
should leave the forestry service. His
cause carries with it the destinies of
democracy. Exploitation has been our
National watchword. We so far have
slid along in our National course.
From now on it must be a climb if our
Nation Is to hold Its position among
the nations of the earth. It means
conservation and betterment, not mere
ly of our natural resources but also of
our racial and also of opportunity to
the lowliest. This must be our Nation
al passion from henceforth, for it spells
righteousness, and the universities
must be its prophets.
NOVEL PLEA SETTLES CASE
Impersonator of rimkrn Man De
clares He Is Sober Off Stage.
PARIS. Dec. 10. (Special.) The law has
just been interpreted in a curious way in
favor of a variety actor. He is known
on the Paris stage as a successful come
dian, and his specialty is the imperson
ation of drunkards. It happened that his
lodgings were destroyed by a fire, which
he attributed to the negligence ' of a
plumber. Vhose employer he sued for
damage!?. The plumber, in defense, al
leged that the actor had no doubt upset
the stove when in the state in which he
was usually seen on the stage.
Counsel for the plaintiff made short
work of the weak defense, and explained
that it was notorious that comedians
who were exuberantly gay on the stage
were exceedingly grave in private life;
and. vice versa,- that tragedians were
usually the most amusing of people when
oft stage. The court apparently indorsed
this1 view by giving its decision in favor
of the actor. It concluded -that the "pro
fessional tippler" on the stage was prob
ably the soberest of men In his own home.
WOMEN B00SJF0R STATE
Club or Fair Portlanders Will Do AH
It Can to Advertise Section.
The Business Women's Club of Port
Kind has for Its object the distribution
and circulation of Oregon literature.
The organization is composed of busi
ness women who have united with the
central idea fo helpfulness and educa
tion along all lines of business.
Special attention is given by the club
to the work of federation with similar
organizations throughout the state, and
to the educational entertainment pro
grammes to be prepared for club meet
ings. The officers of the Business Wom
en's Club of .Portland are: President,
Mrs. L. B. Bartlett; vice-president, Mrs.
L. Bronson-Salmon ; recording Secre
tary, Miss Frances E. Gottshall; treas
urer. Miss H. F. Tinny; corresponding
secretary. Miss LInna Richardson;
press correspondent, Mrs. Julia La
Barre. Oregon literature at club head
quarters, room 2. Selling-Hirsch Build
ing. In the Collecting Une.
London Globe.
The Repertoire General des Collec
tionneurs furnishes some interesting
comfortably worn next to the body during the night and
gives out a continuous stream of that strength-building,
nerve-feeding force which is the basis of all health.
"I am glad to say with a willing heart that I am
cured, and that Electro-Vigor did the work. I will rec
ommend It to any one whenever I get an opportunity.
yours truly,
Wash."
"APIS GOUDT..
"Replying to your in
quiry will say that I am
getting along nicely with
Electro-Vigor, I have used
it tor one month and all
pains have left my knees
and shoulders and I feel
like a new man.
"Yours truly,
"JOHN MORROW.
"R. F. D. No.- 2, Box 31,
Halsey,- Oregon."
"Since using your Elec-tro-.Vigor
I am feeling Hke
a new man, and whenever
I have the opportunity I
recommend It to others.
"Tours with thanks.
"H. D. FITCH.'"
"Willola. Idaho."
I GIVE IT FREE
Get my 100 - page book
describing Electro - Vigor,
.. illustrated with photos of
fully developed men and
Women, showing how it Is
applied. This book tells in
plain language many
tilings you want to know and gives a lot pf -good, whole
some advice for men. -
I'll send this book, prepaid, free, if you will mail me
"this coupon.
Office Ho lira - A. 'm. to S:SO 1. M. Tuesdays and
Saturrtsra Till P. M. Sundays 10 to 1.
DR. S- G. HALL CO.
1211 Second Ave, Seattle, Vaah.
Please send me, prepaid, your free, 100-page illus
trated book. . 12-12-09
Name ,..'..,. . .,
Address .
A PLAIN TALK ON MEN'S
Exhausted,
Nerve -Tired
Are yon losing- your ambition ?
Have you dull headaches or pain
at the bas of the brain?
Are you very nervous and irri
table, with a feeling you want to
be alone?
Are you restless and sleepless?
Are you gloomy, with a fear of
dread from no apparent cause?
Have you palpitation of the heart,
is your circulation poor? '
Do you have hot flashes?
Do you feel you are not the man
you once were?
If so, you don't want to remain
in this condition. Tou need special
treatment to act direct on the seat
of this trouble. Gome and have a
friendly talk with me.
Come today to the SUCCESS
FUL Specialist, who will cure you
quickly and permanently,, and at a
price within your means.
I NEVER DISAPPOINT MY
PATIENTS AND MY CURES ARE
KlDVEl AMI BLADDER DISK ASKS
With these diseases ' you may
have more complications than an
presented bjr any othfr diseased or
gans. By my searching: Illumina
tion of tne bladder I determine ac
curately the disease and by micros
copical examination and urinalysis
I make doubly sure the condition of
the kidneys, thus laying; founda
tions for scieniflc treatment.
SERVOIS DGCLI.VB. '
' Cerebro. where ths mental force
are Impaired. Polnal. where the
spinal centers are- involved. Vital,
where the sympathetic nervous sys
tem is deranged by reflex effects
of disease. I treat these) conditions
and all ailments induced by nervous
complications and excesses and put
you on the right traok, restoring
the conditions essential to your
future life and happiness.
Consultation, Examination and Expert Diagnosis Free
MY PRESENT FEES WITHIN ANY MAN'S REACH. CONSULT ME (FREE)
Don't Let Money Matters or Modesty Keep You From Being Cured. Call.
Patch Up." I Cure to Stay Cured. Do Not Delay. Call or Write Today. I Diagnose by Exclu-
I do not
sion. No Mistakes Made.
FREE
MUSEUM
HEALTH
Medicines furnished from our own laboratory for the convenience and privacy of our patients; from
$1.50 to $6.50 a course.
CONSULTATION AND ADVICE FREE. TERMS reasonable and made to suit the convenience of the
patient. Our services are within the reach of everyone. If you cannot CALL, write for self-examination
Wank and free literature. Many cases can be. cured at home. "OFFICE HOURS, 9 A.- M. to 8 P. M. daily;
Sundays, 10 to J2 M. only.
OREGON MEDICAL INST.
particulars of those whose pastime is
collecting various objects. This De
Gotha of collectors contains 10,500
names and addresses, and they are thus
classified: Autographs, manuscripts,
303; collections of pocketbooks, ancient
and modern. 143: possessors of libra
AILMENT
My Practice Is Largest Because
I Invariably Fulfill My Promises
There is a popular impVession that specialists' fees are exorbitant. If such
be true, we wish to state that it is not applicable to us. On the contrary, our
very large practice and unusual facilities for treating1 men enable us to offei th
very best treatment inexpensively.
A physician is not entitled to his fee in advance. "We are the only specialists
in the West who conduct business on these principles.
Not a Dollar Asked for Until a
Cure Is Effected
This is not limited in time or conditional in character.
Why Old Methods Fail and Why My Methods Cure
The old-fashioned methods of treating men's ailments failed because they were -wrong aud unscientific.
My own original forms of treatment cure because they are so thoroughly riglit as to meet every requirement.
But it will be well to enter into details somewhat, and tell you wherein the old is wrong and the new is right.
First, the measures-commonly employed are wrong because based upon vague ideas as to the nature of the
ailments they are intended .to cure. Second, because they are relics of an era in medical csience that dealth
harshly with disease and failed to recognize the fact that Nature's own laws govern in sickness as well as in
health. Fill a well person's system with harsh, drastic and irritating drugs and you disorder to some extent
every bodily function. The same violence to the sick is even more harmful. The physicians of a few genera
tions ago did not realize this. They regarded all disorder as something to be dealt -severely with, and they
indulged in violent dosing, cutting, bleeding and burning.
My methods of treating men's ailments cure because they have been developed in the light of accurate
knowledge, and because they do no more than gently assist Nature in removing disorder aud establishing health.
I have no need for the knife or poisonous dosing, or for harsh and painful treatment of any sort. The magni
tude of my practice, which is many times that of any other specialist in the West in treating men's ailments,
stands as monumental testimony. to the success of my treatment. Men afflicted with ailments may come to me
fearing neither pain nor failure, for all my methods are mild and harmless, and I will not accept a case unless
1 know that a permanent enre will follow.- .
Seek Expert Medical Aid Now-
contracted AILMENTS
Every contracted ailment I treat
is thoroughly cured: my patients
havR no relapses. When I pro
nounce a case cured there is not a
particle of inflammation remain
ing and there is not the slightest
danger that the disorder will re
turn in its original form or work
its way into the general system.
No ailment is so trivial as to
warrant uncertain methods of
treatment, and I especially solicit
those cases that other doctors
have been unable to cure.
OBSTRUC TIONS My treat
ment is absolutely painless, a.nd
perfect results can be depended
un.,n in every Instance. I do no
cutting or dilating whatever.
To those in doubt as to their true condition who wish to avoid the serious results that mav follow neglect I
offer free consultation and advice, either at my office or through correspondence. If vour case Is one of the few
that Iirs reached an incurable stage I will not accept it for treatment, nor will I urge my services upon any one
I treat curable cases only; and cure all cases I treat. My offices are open all day from 9 A. M. to 9 F. M. and Sun
days from 10 to 1 only.
JheDR. TAYLOR Co,
23H4 MORRISOX STREET, CORNER- SKCO.ND, PORTLAND, ORKGO.V.
How to Get Well
and Keep So
NOTHING TO PAY
UNLESS CURED
A AM FOR MEN
Not a DollorNeedBePaid
Until You Are Satisfied
My Fees Va for Short Time
QUICK, SURE
BBR11A (Rl'PTfRE).
Disregard of existing- hernia
has cost many lives. The small
est hernias are the most danger
ous to life because of the In
creased liability to stra.ngula
tion. I cure rupture in selected
cases with perfect safety and
entail no suffering-, and do not
detain- you from business, under
guarantee. Many cases cured in
one treatment.
PILES AKD FISTl'LA.
The sequelae of these afflic
tions are distressing nervous re
flexes and painful conditions. I
cure Itles without evttlaig. I
cure you withoit pain or deten
tion from business under guar-
Expert Medical Examination Free, Whether You Take Treatment or Not.
TOR MEN ONLY IT SHOWS PLAINLY
AND DISEASE NO MINORS ALLOWED.
2911
ries, 4055: lovers of-books (books of
the virtuoso), 486; artistic china, 839;
drawings, etchings, engravings, 1745;
heraldic book plates, 374; historic mili
tary costumes. 422; natural history in
all its branches (botanical, entomologi
cal, etc.). 1452: miniatures, shells. 352:
FREE MUSEUM
. Dr. Taylor's $i0,000
Museum of Anatomy
Every man is invited to visit this
wonderful educational exhibit, show
ing the human, body iti wax repro
ductions. m
FREE TO MEN
My colored chart, ahoirlnic the' male
anntoinr and affording? an Intcrcatiaic;
study In men'a ailments, free at office.
OF
Free Consultation
AILMENTS
EXPERIENCE COUNTS
IN CURING AILMENTS
I concentrate my families on a
single line of diseases. J treat Va
ricoses. Hernia, Nervous Decline,
Kidney and Bladder Ailments,
Skin Diseases and ALLIED AIL
MENTS OF MEN. I am certainly
prepared to cure by experience and
equipment, which are the key
stones to success. I have the best
equipped medical office in the city.
Contact with many patients has
riven me practical knowledge. I
ave records to show that I have
treated more rases in my specialty
than any other specialist in
America.
A fw hours or days under my
tre-atment may add years and
health to your life. If yon are suf
fering from disease I will examine
you, if necessary to make a micro
scopical and chemical analysis of
secretions to detect pathological
and bacteriological condition. Ev
ery gentleman should take this
opportunity to learn his true con
dition. .
AND LASTING
VARICOSES HVDROCELR
Impaired vitality. ,1 daily demon
strate that Varicoses and Hydrocele
can be cured, in nearly all cases, by
one treatment, . tn such a satisfac
tory way that the diseased parts
are preserved and strengthened,
pain ceases, swelling subsides, a
healthy circulation is rapidly re
established, and Instead of the de
pressing conditions I guarantee you
a cure or refund the money.
BLOOD mSKASF..
Scientific treatment only shoulrt
ba used in combating this loathsome
condition. I cure Rlood Disease by
Nueleii-Atoxyi Specific. I introduce
it Into the blood, which it reorgan
ises, neutralizing and expelling dis
ease. My treatment drives the taint
out Instead of locking it In. Don't
welt until too late. Be cured la
time.
FREE
- 2 Morrison St, Bet Fourth and Fifth
PORTLAND, OREGON
music and musical instruments, 123;
numismatists, 294; objects of art ot all
kinds, 2001; objects of art and of great
curiosity to archaeloglsts. 1168: pic
tures, sculptures. 1366: fiscal stamps
and postage stamps (Important collec
tions). 190; hunting, fencing, sport. 244.
DR. TAYI.OIt,
The Leading Sprclallx.
VARICOSE VEINS
I. cure varicose veins in one week
and the patient need not be detained
from his business a single day. if you
have sought a cure elsewhere and been
disappointed, or if you fear the harsh
methods that most physicians employ
In treating this ailment come to me
and I will cure you soundly and per
manently by a ftentle and painless
method. Don't delay. Varicose veins
have dangers and bring disastrous re
sults. If you call I will be pleased to
explain my method of curing.
SPECIFIC BLOOD POISON
Xo dangrerous mlneralfe to drive the
virus to tne interior, out harm Ipp j.
blood-cleansing remedies that remove
the last poisonous taint.
MEN
": i -