1Q THE SUNDAY OREGONIAX, PORTLAND, JULY 23, '1923 PflfiT10l5W FOR BUYERS' WEEK 2000 Merchants From All of Northwest Expected. MANY INVITATIONS SENT Large Xuiubers of Entertainments Are Planned for Visitors Who Will Have Busy Time. Frank A. Spencer, chairman of the executive committee of buyers' week, has announced that practical ly all the details are ready for one of the most liberal entertainments ever arranged, in honor of the vis itors of the Buyers' week, the tenth annual Buyers' week and the larg est gathering: of its character on the Pacific coast. Reports coming in from the sales men representing the various job bers and manufacturing Institutions participating in Buyers' week, indi cate that from all points of Port land's trade territory there will be a registration of 2000 visiting buy ers, or possibly more. Buyers' week is an institution where, the merchants from Port land's trade territory and the West ern Pacific states gather for the .purpose of becoming acquainted with the executives of Portland's commercial interest. Jobbers Send Invitational. In no other Buyers' week event has entertainment been provided so lavishly as that by the executive committee of Buyers' week, which is held under the auspices of the Portland Chamber of Commerce. The following jobbers and manufac turers have extended invitations to all the- merchants in the Pacific Northwest and the states west of the Bockies: Acme Flavoring company, Adrian Neckwear company, Albatross Metal Furniture company, Allien & Lewis, Alli gator Clothing; company, Ames, Harris, Neville company, E. C. Atkins Sc. Co., Baby's Boudoir, W. J. Ball Waist com pany, Ballou & Wright, Beaver Cloak & Suit Manufacturing company, Bell & Co., Theo. Bergmann Shoe Manufacturing company, Blake-McFall company, Blu-mauer-Frank Drug company, Blumaur & Hoch, Breneman-Sommers company, Breyman Leather company, Bridge & Leach Manufacturing company, Browns ville Woolen mills, Carman Manufactur ing company, Celro Kola company, John Clark Saddlery company, Woodward- Clarke Drug company, Clossett & Devers, Coast Commercial company, Coast Cul vert and Flume companyTolumbla Mills, Inc., Conner & Co., Crescent Paper com pany, Cribben & Sexton company, P. J. Cronin company, Doernbecher Manufac turing company, Dwight-Edwards com pany, Eastern Novelty Manufacturing company, Eloesser Heynemann company, Endicott Paper company, J. C. English company. Failing McCalman company. Fairbanks, Morse & Co., Flthian-Barker Shoe company, Fleischner, Mayer & Co., Freeland Furniture company, W. P. Ful ler & Co., The J. K. Gill company. Globe .' Hat & Cap Manufacturing company, Goodman Bros. Shoe company, Goodyear Rubber company, Great Northern Casket company, F. S. Harmon & Co., Healy Bros., Hexter & Co., Heywood-Wakefield company, Hirsch-Weis Manufacturing company, Honeyman Hardware company, Huntington Rubber mills, Independent Cracker company, Irwin-Hodson com pany, Jacobs Hat and Cap works, Jaeob-sen-Munro company, Jantzen Knitting ' mills, T. W. Jenkins & Co., Kerr, Gifford & Co., King Fisher Mattress company. The M. L. Kline company. Knight Pack ing company, Krausse Brothers, Lang & Co., Lang, Jones & Co.. The Geo. CITY OF SHERIDAN PLANS NEW FIREPROOF BUILDINGS Town Faces Third Disaster in Nine Years With Courage, and Expects to Profit by Recent Conflagration. . 4 i&& tfrvea 99 sit "T izmn isSSsM FOLLIES DANGER SAYS LOVE DIES Evan Fontaine Determines to Make Bitter7 Fight. MUTE FAREWELL STAGED Defeat of Yale Crew in Race Is Believed to Be Due to Fact Whitney Saw Girl There. (Continued From First Page.) Top Two-story concrete and tile store and apartment rapidly taking shape. Wlere this building is rising the lone snrvrrlns; building of the flood stood. A cement retaining: wall has been put In to guard against future nigh water. Lower Wreckage cleared and wall of new garage rising. " SHERIDAN, Or., July 17. (Spe cial) From the ashes of Sheri dan's latest fire are rising mod ern fireproof buildings. Others are being: planned, and still another will be a definite project when title to the property is cleared. When all are completed they -will blend with and machine shop, 60x100 feet in size to cost ?500A.x J. J. Thomson, whose business house it was that survived the flood only to be destroyed by fire, has a two-story"" combination store and apartment building of tile and ce ment construction well along. The business portion of the building will the other modern business blocks be occupied by a confectionery and restaurant. in cost ox una uunyi rence company, Levy, Jules & Bro., Inc., Harry E. Lewis, Lipschueta & Katz, A. G. Long, Lutke Manufacturing company, Marshall-Wells Hardware company. Ma son, Bhrman & Co., May Hardware com pany, Menzine & Fulop, Metropolitan Hat & Cap Manufacturing company, Miller, Calhoun, Johnson company, Monroe & CrlsselL Montag Stove works, Mt.. Hood Soap company, Multnomah Trunk & Bag company, Mutual Creamery com pany, Neustadter Brothers, National Broom company. Noon Bag company, Northern Flour Mills company, North west Auto company. Northwestern Hard ware & Steel company, Oregon Casket company, Oregon City Woolen mills. Ore gon Ellers Music house, Oregon News company, Oregon Worsted company. Pa cific Coast Biscuit company, Pacifio Coast Syrup company. Peerless Pacific oompany, Pendleton Woolen mills, Port land Chemical oompany, Portland Furni ture Manufacturing company, Portland Seed company, Porter Scarpelll Macaroni company, Basmussen & Co., Rosenfeld Hat company, Henry Ross & Sons. The Savtaar company. Inc., M. Seller & Co The Simmons company, Sprouse-Reltz oompany, Inc., Stubbs Electric company, Bwift & Co... Thanhauser Hat company. Tru-Blu Biscuit company, United States """"f company, universal Body corpo ration. The Vinton company, Valvollne Oil company Vogan Candy company, Wadhams & Co., Wadhams & Kerr Bros Walworth company of Oregon, Water proof Garment company, Webster Chair company, Welnsteln Brothers N & S Weinsteln West-Made Desk company; Western Waxed Paper company, Weyen barg Shoe Manufacturing company, Zan Brothers, Inc., Zellerbach Paper com pany. Big Ball Is Planned. The entertainment is under the chairmanship of Paul DeHaas. The committee in charge of Buyer"' week Is composed of leading busi ness men in their respective lines, and are known to every merchant throughout .Portland's trade terri tory Portland's Buyers' week has warned a wonderful reputation throughout the country, and In quiries as to attendance has reached Buyers' week headquarters from as far east as the Mississippi river Some of the big features of enter tainment will be that of the grand ball and reception, utilizing the en tire mezzanine floor of the Multno mah hotel the night of August 7 The night of August 8, the Buy ers week visitors will be guests at an old-time mining village to be known as ."Roaring Camp," when the basement of the auditorium will , rT replica of the days An .- , .... uuc-au luncneon win oe given by the Portland Ad club to the buyers at Laurelhurst park when 2000 will be seated for lunch! jinny otner features of enterta.'- ment have been provided which will ep me visitors on the go from th moment tney register at Buyers' week headquarters until the hour of uitir aepanure. QUINCY BLOCK IS BOUGHT Marcus Cohn Pays $35,000 for Hotel and Store Property. The Quincy block, a three-story brick building at the southwest corner of First and Market streets, was purchased yesterday by Marcus Cohn from the Reed institute. The price was said to have been in the neighborhood of $35,000. Mr. Cohn announced that he had made the purchase as an investment. The building covers a ground floor space of 100 by 100 feet and has a basement. It now houses the St. James hotel and five stores on the ground floor. Mr. Cohn is also owner of the Stock Exchange building. He re cently sold the Broadway Court, at East Flint and East Broadway. in witness to the monumental cour se and Indomitable spirit of this little city, which has suffered- two disastrous fires and a flood within the space of nine years, with dam age approximating three-quarters of a million dollars, and each . time come up smiling. The first fire was in July, 1913. That conflagration wiped out prac tically the entire business district. Literally before the ashes were through smoking the council had fixed fire limits, and the business men were laying foundations for new homes. Sheridan optimistically called the fire a "blessing" in that it had "cleaned out" all the frame buildings on the south side of the river, and set thriftily to work to overcome the effects of the disaster. River Sweeps City. In December of last year the Tamhill river repeated history of more than a decade ago by going on a rampage. This time it was the nSrth side of town that suffered. All the buildings on the south side of Main street wesf of the bridge save one were swept away in the vortex of the flood. Sheridan called that a good bath and set to work to clean up the debris. It takes a good fighter to keep coming up for more after taking two such husky wallops as that, but Sheridan was on its feet, perhaps a bit groggy but nevertheless dog gedly determined, when along came that steel-gauntleted fist of dis aster with a third blow. That was the fire of only a few weeks ago, which razed all the business houses on the north side' of Main street both east and west of the bridge, and the lone business house that was saved from the flood. City Is Undaunted. That should have been a knock out blow according to all rules of the game, but it wasn't and it i3 on the site of these ruins that the new construction is under way. Immediately after this last fire the city council met again and ex tended the fire limits. Following that JR. C. Heiney began work on a modern concrete and tile garage, ing is estimated at S50O0. The Sheridan-WUlamina ' Tele phone company, which now has a temporary exchange in the city hall since its own home was reduced to ashes, will build next year. The new exchange will be a one-story brick building. 1 , Opera House Burned. The largest loss in the last fire was in the destruction of the opera house, a two-story brick building. Sheridan now Is without, an audi torium, except that supplied by the high school. The opportunity has been visioned by a local lodge, which was reported to be negotiat ing for the site where the former opera house stood. Some litigation may be necessary before clear title can be obtained to this property, but once that has been accomplish ed, it Is understood the lodge stands ready to build. The new structure will be the equal if not the superior of the old one, Another proposed building Is for a store, pool hall and undertaking parlors. When this construction is com plete, all the razed buildings will practically have been replaced. Fur thermore it will leave only five buildings on the south side of Main street, east of the bridge, of the old Sheridan. This handful of frame structures alone are left of the "old town." The question Sheridan now asks is this, "Do they invite the fourth disaster?" Station Extension Under Way. Extensions to the Union station now under way, that will provide space for the Spokane, Portland & Seattle railway trains on the Sea side' run, are expected to be com pleted by November, according to engineers In. charge of the work. "With completion of this work, it is expected all trains, with the ex ception pf Oregon Electric lines, will be handled in and out. of the Union terminal. Two new tracks are being run on the east side of the depot and . umbrella sheds to keep off the rain in the winter months are being built. Concrete walks are being laid alongside.' the Tale crew swung into posi-Uck Few people were about. The big interest of the day had been, in the varsity race, which was over. Tale Crew Is Beaten. . ''Sonny was looking for n& When he saw me this secondt time nis head went down over his oars ana he staved In that position until the starting pistot-was fired. Somehow he respondea to tne signal ana rowed. "But the Tale crew waa very badly beaten. ' 'I think it was the emotions or. that day which finally cured me. I have been able to dismiss bonny from my mind since." Agreat deal more" of the family drama whicth played obligato to the Whitney-Fontaine romance was learned today. When Evan's mother, Mrs. Flor ence Burrows-Fontaine, became cer tain two years ago that her daugh ter's affair with Sonny had become serious she summoned to New Tork her father, Judge Burrows, and Mrs. Burrows. The elderly southerner, dnce he was In possession of Evan's story, resolved on a characteristically Vir ginian course of action. He brought out an old civil war pistol end de manded to know where he oould meet "the young man." Women Avert Killing;. In his mind, hatred of the youth who had captured his granddaugh ter's affections, was entangled with a treneral hatred of all Yankees. It took the women the whole of one sleepless night to turn the judge's mind from ideas of putting in force the "unwritten law." The young oriental dancer's relations with Sterling JU Adair,-young sailor to whom she was married before she met Whitney at a Vanderbilt ball, was cleared by facts J.earned today. According to Evan, the romance was of the sudden war variety. Toung Adair had met Mrs. Burrows- Fontaine on a train between Texas and Chicago. When the mother in vited the sailor to dine with her in a Chicago hotel Evan met him for the first time. Twenty-four hours later- they were married, with mother helping in the frenzied prep arations for the sudden wedding. Evan entertains no grudge against her former husband, because he un concernedly admitted two days later that he had another wife "some where in the south." She took her first disillusionment philosophically. The litigation which dissolved this union was - still in progress when she met Witney and fell in love with him. Many months later, when sonny went to his father with the story of his relations with the beautiful dancer, he told the story of her unlucky marriage. And this was the first fact which was seized on by the Whitney lawyers when the Whitney heir's troubles became a problem for legal ingenuity to solve. STAMINA DECLARED LACKING Dancer Regrets Sweetheart Too Weak, But Training Is Blamed. BY EDWARD DOHERTT. (By Chicago Tribune Leased Wire.) LOS ANGELES, Cal., July 22. No matter - what may happen Evan Burrowes Fontaine, the oriental dancer, doesn't believe she will ever marry Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney. Once love is dead, she said today in her suite at the Alexandria hotel, it can be resurrected only by a miracle and she believes the love she once gave the young son of ocean until he took our bait and then we did follow him. He pulled us for miles until he sot tired. It was wonderful. "I wish I had stayed over there a little longer," she says, wistfully., "Then the reporters wouldn't have ' found me. I had my mail forwarded to a friend, and I told this friend he was to say I might have gone to Mexico. - But it did not work." She laughs a little, and talks about her boy. "He looks a good deal .like his grandfather, Harry Payne Whitney," she said. "But he has my mouth. He's a darling. I'm going to make a prize-fighter out of him. You ought to see the way he doubles up his fiats and how hard he hits. "And "he can swim. We put him in the hath tub and taught him the stroke. He's a regular frog. And mother's teaching him the alphabet. He can pick out A, B and C even in a telegram. Nineteen months, and he will pass for three years. He has nice light b,air and, tan eyes, changeable eyes. No, he does not take after my side of the family a bit, but as I say, he has my mouth." Miss Fontaine has just spoken with friends In New York. "They tell me," she says, "that the newspaper men have come and pitched tents on mamma's lawn. And brought provisions for a siege. They even swiped the, milk bottle from the back porch. And mamma and the baby are staying inside." Miss Fontaine declines to discuss the law suits. She says she doesn't know anything about them. She is willing to abide by the advice of her lawyer, Edward Brackett." Woman's Lawyer Quits. SARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y., July 22. Edgar T. Brackett, formerly state senator, has withdrawn as at torney for the case of Miss Evan Burrowes Fontaine against Cor nelius Vanderbilt Whitney, it was stated today at his office. The in formation also was given that no complaint had been filed in the case, but that summonses were served here last summer. READY FOR JOT $3,000,000 RESERVE SET UP AGAINST RYAN LOANS. New York Trust Company Issues Statement on Failure of Ricb Financier. NEW YORK, July 22. The Guar anty Trust company today issued a statement in connection with the voluntary bankruptcy petition filed yesterday by Allan A. Ryan, assert ing that reserves of $3,000,000. had been set up in the last year against $4,000,000 owed the company by the proker and Allan A. Ryan & Co. The statement, calling attention to statements that Mr. Ryan's indebt edness to the trust company was $8,500,000 and upwards, added: "The facts are that Allan A. Ryan and Allan A. Ryan & Co. owe the Guaranty Trust company of New York, for Its own account, a princi pal amount of approximately $4, 000,000, against which pledge col lateral applies. Cognizance has been taken of this situation for more than a year and in anticipation thereof reserves have been set up against tnis account agregating S3.000.000, "While there are loans standing in the name of the Guaranty Trust company of New York in excess of the figures given above, all such loans are held by the Guaranty Trust company in its capacity as trustee and for - the account of others." Smith's Great July Sale of Newest PAPER A Chance for Every Home to Be Beautified at a Very Small Expense Buy Now! 50c For the downstairs room, values up to 65c, OF -now at, roll. . . . . hdtJKs Wonderful assortment of 75c papers at ....... Regular $1 and $1.25 Tapestries now, r7P roll .... ...... I t)L Choice of the $1.50 line at, the roll All $2 and $2.25 Tapes- Ss..:...$1.49 Our entire line of Import ed Papers at.. OFF The best Varnish Tiles at, the roll ... Ceiling Papers Entire Line REDUCED. One lot 25c Bedroom 1 A Papers at, roll . . . -L U C 22V2C $2.19 $115 OUT-OF-TOWN BUYERS Those pretty Harmon ellasat, rp; the bolt tJtH WALL FELT for house lining, roll of 50 sq. yds . . BEST GRADE KALSO MINEat, Q the pound U V 35c grade SIZING GLUE at, the OK. pound imiJ, If you don't want to spend the time to come to Portland, write for one of our free sample books and order by mail. We ship all over the Northwest. PAINT .35 Gallon For balance of this month we are making this special price on our high-grade wear-well house paints white or color. Smith's Wall P SEATTLE STORE 1621 4TH AVE. aper House 108-110 Second St. STRIKE BRINGS TENSE DAYS UPON OFFICIAL WASHINGTON Capital Throbs With Activity Suggesting Late War Industrial Lobbies Invade City's Hotels. Copyright, 1922. by The Oreponian.) WASHINGTON, D. C. July 22. Washington is throbbing with activity that suggests some ot the tense days of the war. Lights gleam late from the White House windows, and cabinet officers run about with impressive haste and seemingly resolute purpose. One wing of the capltol is closed. for the house members are enjoy ing a much-desired vacation, but at the other ena of the big build ing on the hill the. senate sits try ing to focus its attention on a very dry tariff bill, while the senators themselves gather in the cloak room and diBCUss nothing but the indus trial crisis through which the na tion is passing. . - x . It seems as if everything under the sun can happen to delay action on the tariff. Now it is the coal and railroad strike. It is awfully difficult to talk about the ad valQrem on cotton goods when the folks back home are demanding to know what is. going to happen to the railroads and the coal bins. Senator Get Orders. These men at home have heard that coal is to be rationed and they want to get their share of the rations. Hence the hasty charge of senators upon the front steps of the White House. As in the days of war, the execu tive branch of government once more has taken the center of the stage, and congress is in danger of total, even though temporary, eclipse. The railroad and coal strikes are very intimate things to the people of the nation. The tariff is decidedly abstract, if not abstruse, and has an immediate and monetary interest to comparatively few. ASTORIA MERCHANT DIES Richard E. Carruthers Succumbs to Stomach Trouble. ASTORIA, Or., July 22. (Special.) Richard E. Carruthers, one of As toria's leading business men and a member of the Astoria Hardware company, died about 7:30 o'clock to night following a few hours' illness with acute stomach trouble. He was about 47 years old and had resided in Astoria practically all his life. He is survived by a widow and two sons, as well as two brothers and two sisters. The later are R. R. Carruthers, Astoria; A. R. Car ruthers, Seaside; Mrs. C. B. Allen, Astoria, and Mrs. W. W. Ridehalgh, Portland. COURT PUTS BAIL HIGH MAN FACING XON-SUPPOKT CHARGES STIMj IN JAIIi. husband had left her and their four-year-old daughter, Betty Jane, for the company of another woman. She found the pair together in the Sargent hotel, she said. Cheetham was arrested last Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney Secretary Denby at Shanghai. of New York, has withered ana decayed, become but dust. I may love again," she said, fl resntatives to Washington much as they did in the days of the war. The hotel lobbies, deserted a few weeks ago, have taken on the bustle of war-time capitals. Pennsylvania avenue, often deserted in midsum mer, is choked at times with vehicu lar traffic. The White House and all the government departments having even a remote association with the big twin strikes are be sieged. The miners have opened headquar ters in one of the leading hotels and the coal operators have in creased their permanent' staff in the capital to cope with the new situa tion. "While the railroad strike is being conducted from Chicago, the headquarters of the American Fed eration of Labor in Washington is a center of strike news and interest. Here in Washington are the central offices of the Association of Rail way Executives. - - Capital Industrial Center. " In short, Washington has become once more the great industrial clear ing house of the nation, and it is believed that here the decisions must be reached or the" block fall which will write a new chapter in the industrial relations of the American republic. N President Harding, at a time when he should be expected to be rough ing it and enjoying life in Alaska, finds himself confronted by perhaps the most serious domestic situation with which an American executive ever has had to deal. He has given up all thought of a vacation at any time in the near future. The presi dent could have played hookey from congress for a while congress seems to be insistent on emulating the babbling brook but the strike sltu- hope I do soon. : But it will prob ably be an older man than 'Sonny' Whitney I shall Jove. A woman demands much in a man stamina for instance. A man doesn't demand stamina in a woman, but a woman must have it in a man. " 'Sonny,' poor 'Sonny.' That's the thing he lacks. Well, I guess he was brought" up wrong. 'Mamma's angel child,' you- know. He can't (all his soul his own. He's weak, wishy-washy, ah, if he had been different " Miss Fontaine said she knew nothing about the two suits that had been started in New York in volving young Whitney's promise to marry her, and the paternity of her 19-month's-old boy whom she calls Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney Jr., and "Sonny." Miss Fontaine, direct descendant of Patrick Henry and of Dr; Lansing Burrowes of Virginia, one of the celebrated leaders of the Episcopal church in America, is 23 years old. She 1st tall and lissome. Her eyes arte large, dark brown, round. Her hair is black-brown. She has just returned from Cata lina, and her forearms are sun burned. .''' "I've been having the grandest time," she said. "We . caught a swordfish weighing 300 pounds, and a lot of albacore. Went out in a motor launch, you know, and trolled. We saw the swordflsh's fins and followed him all over the SHANGHAI, July 22. (By the As sociated Press.) Edwin Denby, sec retary of the navy of the United States, arrived here today from Pekin. He will sail for Manila next Wednesday. Judge Deich Wants to Make Sure H. J. Cheetham Will Be Present When Grand Jury Acts. Fifty dollars' bail was asked by the' attorney for H. J. Cheetham, bound over to the grand jury yes terday on a non-support charge, when he appeared before District Judge Deich. Miss Lida M. O'Bryon, deputy district attorney, recom mended that the bail be fixed at $250. "I'll not accept either recom mendation," said Judge Deich. "This appears to the court to be a flag rant case and there is a possibility that the man will leave tne juris diction of local authorities if the bail is too low. His bail will be J1000." Cheetham went to jail in lieu of, the bail. ! Mrs. Stella Cheetham testified in the preliminary hearing that her ; Landax Sawmill Changes Hands. EUGENE, Or., July 22. (Special.) David Burnett of Seattle, Wash., has purchased the sawmill of the Landax Lumber company at Landax, 30 miles above Eugene, on the upper Willamette river and will make a number of extensive improvements. He Is negotiating for the purchase of a tract of government timber nearby. The mill has a capacity of 20,000 feet. It is located on the Na tron extension of the Southern Pa cific railway. School Tax Levy Certified. ALBANY, Or ; July 22. (Special.) A special levy of 200 for the Munkers school district, which was voted at the annual school meeting held on June 19. has been certified by R. M. Russell, county clerk. J. I. Shelton, chairman of the district, and B. A. Holten, clerk, have signed the paper and filed it with ths budpret for the coming year. Foot Relief Week Baa mC i m . . tfcuun iias ciiugui ine uresiaent in The senate wants to do something , ... , J ... , ' " ' about the strike, but it is impotent, .oonn.Bivnu,, (. T, th. r, toi,w t,,u Sreat responsibility is full upon him. it will pass a resolution of some kind. Congress hates to pass a law with teeth in it. Nobody knows whom they might bite. If the house were in session it would be even more restless than the senate, and the president's list of daily callers would be increased many fold. There are compensations even in a semi congress adjournment. Lobbies Invade Capital. The various industrial agencies of th country are lending their rep- He realizes that the industrial crisis has brought a crisis in his own political career. His future largely is dependent upon the out-, come of his handling of the two great strikes. A lover of the regu lar order, a great believer in con ference and conciliation, the pres ident still hopes his administration will be spared the use of force. Mr. Harding is loath to buckle on the sword of commander-in-chief of the army, but if that become bis duty he will not ehirk it. . HOTSTREAM HEATERS 25-ft. double cop per coil SPECIAL 188 FOURTH ST. 29 lip29 i line 3u.y bi B Li 5 1 rHi'H H 1 fW1&WSJ 1 Ml X-Ray Foot-0-Scope Examination If you have ankles that lean inward or outward, fallen arches, painful j callquses or foot troubles of any kind, , you are invited to see Dr., Ingalls, the man who knows feet and shoes. Come meet him any day during our Foot Relief Week. , ' Special Free Demonstration of "RACURA" Knight Shoe Co. ' Morrison St., Neat Broadway B etter entistry You cannot get anywhere than you will receive at these offices though you may be charged twice our price by some other dentists. Making a living nowadays is simply a matter of business system. You may call yourself an artist, a lawyer, doctor, dentist, merchant, broker, or what not; but if you pay your bills, live comfortably, and lay by a dollar for a rainy day, you are, FIRST OF ALL, A BUSINESS MAN. I. have overcome extravagance in my office because I have applied BUSINESS EFFICIENCY TO EVERY DEPARTMENT, and that is WHY I CAN AND DO GIVE THE PUBLIC BETTER DENTISTRY FOR LESS MONEY. Superior Dentistry at Modest Fees DR. E. G. AISPLUXD, MGR. My Practice Is Limited to High-Class Dentistry Only. Flesh-Colored Plates Warranted to fit so you can chew corn off the cob $10 and up 22k Gold Crowns ..$5 and up 22k Gold Bridge... $5 and up OPEN NIGHTS 15-Year Guarantee I I Electro Painless Dentists IN THE TWO-STORY BUILDING Corner Sixth and Washington Sts., Portland, Oregon