The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, January 02, 1904, Page 18, Image 18

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    THE OREGON DAIIT ' JO URN AL PORTLAND, SATURDAY EVENING, JANUAR V 2, 1004.
18
BITC1U1 HAKES ;
FULL STATEMENT
xrx.ijrs Btrsnrsss bxiatzoks
; WITS TOBBITSCH MUOB TO COM
i MEjrCESCEST OP DtSBAJUTXHT
; fkocebdihos ci.is jronmro
; WAS XMLECKTLAB XV DEAXJUTOS.
? For the first time since the charges
were filed against him with the griev
ance committee of the Oregon Bar as
sociation, .John Dltchburn. the 'well
known attorney, consented to make a
full j statement today as to his re
latione with John M. A. Forbusch. his
former client and accuser. Mr. Ditch
burn is now preparing his. answer . to
' the charges of Forbusch. He said:
: "Some time in June. 1898, John M. A.
Forbusch, or John M. A. Fabri, Jr., as he
generally styled himself, called upon
me in company with Columbus McDonald ;
of Vancouver, Wash,, In regard to a
claim that Paul Deady had against him
for legal services, and regarding ' his
deposit in the defunct Portland Sav
ings bank and his business relations
with A. Petros. of Vancouver, Wash., i
and employed me as an attorney.
"August S, 18J8, he received a divi
dend of $234.38, and shortly thereafter
negotiated, a loan of $160 through C.
W. Fallett, leaving with him as collat
eral security the certificate of deposit,
together with his not December 20,
J 898, Forbusch sent me $10 instructing
me to pay It to C W. Pallett for a re
newal of the Joan for one month, which
1 did.
"December 27. 1898. a dividend Of 4
per cent, amounting to $187.41, was paid
by the bank, and was collected - by C,
W. Pallett, with which the note. was
.taken up and the balance turned over
' to Forbusch. This borrowed money was
used in a business transaction with A.
Petros, for whom . Forbusch was then
working, at Vancouver, Wash,
Wanted Purchaser.
."During the interval between Decem
ber, 1198, and June 12. 1891, Forbusch
Instructed me. If possible, to find htm a
purchaser for the certificate of deposit,
which I was unable to do. owing to the
uncertain condition of the bank's affairs.
June 13, 1899, Forbusch endorsed over to
me the said certificate of deposit, and
gave me his power of attorney to re
ceive, transfer and assign his interest
1n it. with the understanding , that I
should forward it to him in Austria, the
purchase price or the subsequent divi
dends which might he declared after
deducting $25 which he then owed me
for services. -
"June . 17. 1899, Forbusch Intended to
leave for Austria, A. Petros, his em
ployer, having promised to pay him
$254 due him from Petros, ; Petros, how
ever, failed to make this payment, and
. I was unable to collect it. June II.
.1899, Forbusch wrote requesting - me
to inquire where he could again bor
row some money on this certificate of
(deposit, naming the. sum of $100; this
request was repeated 'in a letter to
me June 21. I replied to these letters
saying that it was impossible for me
, to procure the loan other than 'through
a broker, to whom brokerage would
have to be paid, and asking him whether
he wished me to negotiate the loan in
this way. ; He replied saying, that he
thought he could get the money at a
cheaper rate In Vancouver, and I forth'
with mailed the certificate of deposit to
him there, but-June SO, 1899, he returned
it to me. asking me to get the money lit
the manner above mentioned,
. Sorrowed for Sinety Bays.
July 6. 1899. I borrowed through C
W. Pallett from B. C. Matthews, Jr.,
$129 for- 80 days, giving my personal
note for the amount, togethrr with the
certificate of- deposit as collateral se
curity. 1 paid Mr. Pallett $15 for mak
ing the loan. On' the following morn
ing. July t, I went to Vancouver, Wash.,
and paid the money received from Mr.
Pallett to Forbusch, At that time A,
Petros had agreed to pay Forbusch $50
or $60 out of which he had agreed to
pay me $30, but Petros failed to raise
the money, but Agreed to pay me $5 a
month for Forbusch. July 7. Forbusch
came to Portland,, and the next morn
ing. July 8, instructed me to borrow a
further $50 for him, which I did, giving
my personal note for the amount and
receiving $42.75. repayable at the same
time as the first note. Of the latter
amount I gave Forbusch $15, retaining
the balance of $27.75 In payment or my
services and expenses.
Divides Was Xfot raid. ; 4
"At this time we had been led to be-
Heve through statements of Receiver
Richard Nixon, personally, and through
the press, that a dividend of not less
than 5 per cent would be paid not later
than the beginning of September, 1899,
but this did not materialise. The notes
to B. C. Matthews, Jr., became due
October 6, 1899, at which time Forbusch
was in Austria, and A. Petros had not
paid to me the $6 Installments esteh
month as agreed. I then made arrange
ments wtth. Mr. Pallett for renewal of
the loan for another 90 days, and Jan
uary C, 1900; I gave him my note for
$25.50 in payment of the three months'
earned brokerage, and thereafter con
tinued to pay the brokerage until Oc
tober 4, 1900,' when a 2 per cent divi
dend was declared, amounting to $93.70.
This sum Mr. Pallett drew from the
bank, leaving a balance of $78.30 due
on the loan. Ac this time I could not
keep up any. more brokerage payments
receiving no money from A. Petros.
Took Xt OfT His Hands.
"At this Juncture I made efforts to
dispose of the equity in the collateral
certificate, but could not do so. I then
persuaded Columbus McDonald (who
has since died)', and who was a friend
of Forbusch, to take the entire matter
Oft my hands, which he did, keeping up
the brokerage payments until .May 8,
1901, which amounted to $59.50. At
this time a dividend of 4 per cent,
amounting to$U7.41r, was collected by
Mr. Pallett, and May 7 I called on Mr.
Pallett and settled up the notes, receiv
ing $9. This I gave Mr. McDonald. This
was done at McDonald's request About
October 10, 1901, J went to the receiv
er's office with Mr. McDonald and signed
a receipt for the dividend, amounting to
$140.26. that McDonald Informed me
he made $48 and some cants out of the
transaction and gave me $20. I wrote
three letters to Forbusch and informed
him of all these matters.
"He called , at my office October 12,
1903. I was busy in the circuit court,
and on the 13th I- explained all of the
matters to him and asked him if . he
understood them and told htm If he did
not he should see Judge Munley, to whom
he had written. He said he understood
it all and next day called at my office
and requested me to loan htm f 10, prom
lslng to repay It in a short time. I loaned
him the money, and next day received
a letter from Richard Nixon, demand
Ing $208.36 and questioning my word.
I answered htm and told him that if he
would call I would explain, . i. ,
"That I called at the district attor
ney's office and there met Kicnard Nixon
and Forbusch. I showed them the let
ters and receipts and explained what I
had done. - Forbusch admitted , that all
I said was true, except that he had re
celved but one letter from me."
: WOMEN'S CLUBS
(Continued from Page Seventeen.)
arrange - their work a year ahead and
their meetings are quite as mucn or tne
year's program as that of .the general
club day. , - ' '
The Grants Pass club holds Its gen
eral meeting but once a month and each
of their four departments, literature,
music, art and parliamentary law meet
once a month, none of the dates con
fllctlna.' Browning Is the subject of this
year's work for the literary class and
some very line programs have. Deen ar
ranged. The musical department takes
up many phases of the subject from the
most classical to patriotic, ballads and
folk aongs. . i
The art department will deal principal
ly with modern art and artists, while the
parliamentary class will study along
lines usually laid down by instructors on
the subject The topics ror me general
club days keen closely in touch with
departmental and committee work. i
The club has six standing committees,
vis.: Literary, entertainment, beautlfy,-
Ing, cemetery,. Ie wis and Ciarit, legisla
tive and resolutions. We regret there is
no club- list for It would certainly be
gratifying to know how many women it
wouiri take to carry to success such
beautifully planned work, and it is a well
known fact that what the urants rass,
women undertake they accomplish.
The club motto s: "The chief want
in life is somebody who shall make us
do . the best we can." Club sisters
throughout the state all think they found
the "somebody" when they got Airs,
Young, their most capable and accom
plished president, to take the helm.
,XSBBXW TIOHHTOAIi CXOOXiS.
In industrial training there la no 'sect
or class who so fully appreciate Us ad
vantages as the Jewish women. In our
own city we have the finest example of
this in the excellent work that was re
ported In this department a few weeks
ago. It it done quietly, unostentatiously,
but with enormous results. What the
Council of Jewish Women and other Jew
ish organisations are doing for Portland
In the way of making good self-supporting
citizens, the Jewish women in other
cities are dotn to greater or less ex
tent for their town. ; ..
Taking for example the following re
port from the Hebrew Technical school
for girls Of New lora. its tnnuence lor
good, and the uplifting force of such an
Institution Is too far-reaching and too
enormous to be calculated.
This school, which is located at 267
Henry street, is doing excellent work
in training girls on the East Hiae in com
mercial courses, sewing and dressmak
ing and millinery. ' It has 404 gradu
ates now at work, earning an average
of $$.12 each. Many are receiving much
larger salaries. Three graduates of the
school are assistant teachers at the Man
hattan Trade School for Girls; one is
teaching in the public schools, three are
employed In their own school, at the Uni
versity settlement, and three are at the
Educational alliance. ' -
So successful has the school proved,
and so constant has the demand for ad
mission been, that last fall over 400 girls
were turned away for lack of room to
receive them. The society Will begin
work in the spring on a large, modern
building on Second avenue and Fifteenth
street, facing Stuyvesant square. Here
700 girls will be accommodated. The
building fund Is already large, lacking
only about $150,000 of completion. The
girls receive a most thorough and prac
Meal training, as the exhibition of their
work proved. Considering that they are
all children of very poor parents, living.
many of them. In squalid homes, their
progress is remarkable. When ' they
come to the school they know nothing
of sewing or needlework, and have, rudimentary-
Ideas of,, personal Cleanliness.
Within a year they are transformed into
neat, deft-handed, skilful, craftswomen.
Although the majority are Jews, - the
school is non-sectarian, and there are
always Italian and Russian girls In the
classes,
t t
VEBSOVA&,
Mrs. J. K. Hosmer. wife of Dr. Hos-
mer, editor of the Lewis and Clark Jour
nal, is taking a deep interest in the
Statue aaoctatlon, and in every way. giv
ing it assistance in Minnesota.
At the last meeting of the Lyle Musi
cal club of La Grande they celebrated
the eighth anniversary of the club's or
ganisation. The program was in change
of Mrs. Clara T. Lyle, the founder and
organizer of the cluba '.
Mrs. Byron Miller, who has been
spending a part of the holidays in Seat
tle, returned to Portland Tuesday. -.
Mar.'. M. A, Dalton spent Christmas
in Vancouver, the guest of her sister.
Mrs, Murry.
K It H
Reuben Gold Thwaltes of the State
Historical society of Wisconsin is lec
turing at Madison In that state on Lewis
and Clark and was also one of the speak
ers at the New Orleans celebration,
where he presented an important address
on the effects of the journey of the
great explorers to the Pacific. In all his
lectures Dr. Thwaltes makes a special
point of the services of Sacajawea and
mentions the effort the Oregon women
are making to build a statue to her honor
to be unveiled at the 1905 exposition.
Everywhere among scholars and histo
rians he is interesting thousands in the
romantic story,
AFGHAN SUSPECTS
TAKEN TO SEATTLE
Terroza Khan nd O. Barbushal the
Afghans arrested In Portland Thursday
for the Seattle authorities, were taken
back to the sound city for trial last
night Deputy Sheriffs J. H. Williams
and James Lambert of King county
Came here for the prisoners and left
on last night's train.
The foreigners are accused of the,
murder of , Merele, whose right name
was Amir Alt Aden Khel, a native of
the Punjab, India. It is claimed that
Khan advanced Merele sufficient money
to come to this country, but that be
refused to pay It back. The three men
left Seattle together in March, 1902, and
Merele was never seen alive again. His
body was found ' in Lake Washington
three weeks later with a bullet wound
in the back. v
The suspects were held responsible
by a coroner's Jury,- hut. they were fin
ally released for lack of evidence. How
ever, the case has since been followed
up by Alfred Hadle, Persian consul in
Seattle.
SKULL FRACTURED
BY FALL FROM SHIP
By falling from the British ship East
African yesterday and striking the log
placed between the. ship and the dock,
Charles Johnson, a sailor, sustained a
fractured" skull and other injuries which
were at first thought to be fatal. John
son was taken to Good Samaritan hospl
tal where his condition was reported
much improved this morning. Johnson
was working near the side rail and in
reaching out to catch a rope .lost his
balance and fell overboard.
PHEASANT BILL :
: A DEAD LETTER
TBO VOS BIOBTD ST TXB OOTSB-
BOB PAU.ED TO BECKYS BUP
rXCXSVT VOTES XV TKB BOUSE
AXJTS OOHSEQUBWTLT XS BO &AW
oovebbob's orarxOHr
m
Governor Chamberlain stated ' today
on the discovery Just : made at Salem,
by the committee whfch is checking and
correcting the house Journal, that the
bill prohibiting the killing of Chinese
pheasants until 1906 received too few
votes for its passage by the house. . The
bill was recorded as passed, was en
grossed and the governor signed it. It
is now on file in the. secretary of state's
office, having gone through all the sub
sequent steps required to make it a law.
The governor thinks the bill la a dead
letter. He said:
"When a bill goes through the legis
lature and is brought to me officially by
the cierK or secretary of the house or
senate, in the regular way,' there is no
ground, for question that It has not
passed and nothing to show in the bill.
or In connection with it. that it may
not have passed. I signed It tin - the
same manner that , I sign other - bills
that pass the legislature. I don't know
anything about the pheasant bill being
short of the necessary number of votes
except what I have read in the news
papers, but if - the facts ara as pub
lished the bill seems pot to be a law.
Our supreme court has decided ' that
where the Journal of either branch, of
the legislature shows that a bill has not
passed affirmatively it is not a valid
law, though approved by the governor
and filed with the secretary of state."
The governor cited the following deci
sions of the supreme court: '
"Currie vs. Southern Paclflo Railway
company, 21st Oregon reports, page 666.
"Enactment of laws errors shown by
Journals where a bill has been regular
ly enrolled, signed by the presiding offi
cers of the two houses of the legislative
assembly, approved by the governor, and
filed by the secretary of state, it will
be held a valid law unless the Journal
of one of the houses affirmatively shows
that some condition Imposed by the con
stltutlon on the enactment . of laws has
not been observed."
Governor Chamberlain expressed him
self as not coinciding with this decision.
On this point he said; 7
"The supreme court of the United
States has decided that where a bill has
been Signed by all. the required officers
Of both houses of congress, by the pre
siding officers, of both houses and by
the president, It becomes a valid law.
This decision prevents the defeat of a
measure by manipulation of clerks or
other persons and Is a Just decision."
Journal friends and readers when
traveling on trains , to and from Port
land should aak news agents for The
Journal and insist upon being supplied
with this paper, reporting all failures in
obtaining It to the office of publication,
addressing The Journal. Portland, Or.
Eoisirg
en
V5im j
Your Nerves
Furnish the motive power of the entire
body. Dr. Miles' Nervine will keep the
nerves strong and healthy or -restore
their strength if weakened.
Sold on guarsntee. Write for free book on
nerTouft dlwaH. . ,
DR. MILES MEDICAL CO.. Elkhart lad.
Pr. Davis' original treatment for VARICOCELE cures by restoring to life
the diseased and weakened veins, not by destroying them with the Knife or
other destructive methods. Those who are suffering with Varicocele, Vrethal
Obstructions, Rupture, etc, do not want to be maimed or mutilated by ejurgery.
Dr. Davis' treatment cures these troubles without surgery.
References: The best banks and leading business men In this city. '
WE ALSO CURE TO STAY CURED
Nervous devllity, private diseases of any nature, stricture, hydrocele, rupture,
acquired blood poison, kidney and urinary diseases, eta, and all other complica
tions and associated diseases and weaknesses of men. To these maladies alone
we have earneetly devoted the best years of our lives. We make no charge for
private counsel, and give to each patient a legal contract to hold for our prom
ises.' Is It not worth your while to Investigate a cure that has made life anew
to multitudes of menf
Correspondence Many cases can be treated successfully' at Jiome. If it is
Impossible or inconvenient for you to call at our office, writ a full and unre
served history of your case, plainly stating your symptoms, and you will re
ceive In plain envelope a scientific and honest opinion of your case, free o(
charge.. -.:
Consultation Free
Office Hours: 9 to 12, and 1:30 to 5 and 7 to I p; m. Sunday and holidays, 10 to 12,
The Leading Specialists in the Northwest Established 1888.
Dr. W. Norton Davis & Co.
Xortlaad, Cttttgofi. ' X45H SUUI St, Cor. of Alder.
MEN
DON'T DELAY ANOTHER MOMENT TIME IS VALUABLE. CONSULT A
PHYSICIAN WHO HAS MADE A CLOSE STUDY OF ALL DISEASES WHICH AF
FLICT THE PRESENT GENERATION AND WHO STANDS TODAY AS A MEDICAL
SPECIALIST WITHOUT A PEER ON THE PACIFIC COAST. I WILL FORFEIT
$1,000 FOR ANY CASE THAT I TAKE AND DON'T CURE.
Extract from a Newspaper
The following clipping is published for the purpose of showing the public the esteem
with which Dr. Kessler is held by the press and public throughout the entire Northwest:
"Dr. Kessler hag Just returned from an extended .tour throughout the United
States, and during his absence the Doctor has visited most of the large hospitals and
world-renowned specialists in search of any information that might be of value In the
practice of bis profession. Dr. Kessler is a physician from choice, nature having Intended
him for no other calling, and. although he has been in active practice for the past 30
years, 20 years In Portland, he studies harder and more diligently at the present time
than most medical students. In addition to the immense fund, of knowledge culled by
the Doctor from the writings of men of world-wide reputation, Dr. Kessler has made
a number of original discoveries that stamp him as one of the foremost' medical men of
the present century. He possesses the faculty of almost reading a patient's feelings, and
is invariably correct in his diagnosis of the most complicated cases. It is remarkable
the number of seemingly hopeless invalids that are treated and cured by this scientific
physician, who goes to the root, of every trouble, discovers the cause and eradicates it.
Dr. Kessler is in love with his profession and during a leisure moment, something not
often enjoyed by the Doctor, he talked entertainingly and modestly of his many dis
coveries and the immense strides made in medicine during the past quarter of a century."
All Letters Answered
- .
. When you are unable to visit my office in person write at once and I will forward
you a symptom blank. By this means I will be able to make a correct diagnosis of your
case. All letters receive prompt attention and I am the only person allowed to read its
contents. No person need ever know that you are receiving treatment at my hands, as
my corrspondence will be conducted with plain envelopes. Don't hesitate about writing;
it may be the means of saving your life. I have cured hundreds of people in all parts of
the Northwest that I have never seen, and my practice has been so extensive that wher
ever I go I am always greeted by friends, some "of whom know me only by reputation.
in Juk 'w JISII
t
DR. J. HENRI KESSLER
Address with 10 2-Cent Stamps 230 Yamhill Street, Portland, Or
WOMEN
t HAVE CURED THOUSANDS OF WOMEN WHO HAD ALMOST GIVEN UP
HOPE AND RESTORED THEM TO HEALTH AND HAPPINES8. WHAT I HAVE
DONE FOR THEM I CAN DO FOR YOU. I FULLY UNDERSTAND YOUR DELICATE
AND. SENSITIVE ORGANISM, AND IN CURING YOU WILL BRING 8UNSHINE TO
HOME8 NOW ALMOST WRECKED BY YOUR INFIRMITIES.
When Other Doctors Fail
.- Don't become discouraged and imaglnehat there Is no help for you. Your phys
ielan may be a well-meaning man, who did all that he could to help you, but he probably
lacks the thorough knowledge of your case that constant practice and constant research
imparts. It matters not how difficult the ease may be, I can cure you If a cure is pos
sible. If your case is incurable I will tell you so, but don't be discouraged; there are
very few cases that cannot be cured. When other doctors fail and tell you that there is
no longer any hope for you, don't believe it. Come at once and see old Dr. Kessler, who
nasmade thousands of people sound and well who were given up by other physicians. Dr.
Kessler has been the leading specialist in Portland for the past 20 years. Other doctors
have come and gone, but the old Doctor still remains, healing the sick and doing good to
his fellow man. If this reaches your eye and you are suffering from any affliction call or
write; the help that you have longed for is at hand. I will tell you exactly what the
trouble is, and apply the remedy that will cure you. ' It is a shame the number of lives
that are ruined and the homes rendered desolate through the inability of some so-called
doctors to reach the seat of trouble. Thousands of men take up the profession of medi
cine that never were adapted for such a calling, who might have made a success in some
other profession. The born physicians are few and far between, and that Is the reason
why so few succeed.
Home Treatment
It is a boon to thousands of people living at a distance to know that their ailments,
no matter what the nature of the disease, can be treated successfully from this office
without the patient being compelled to make a tedious and expensive trip to the city.
Tou are also saved the trouble and expense of having prescriptions filled, as I supply all
of the medicine without extra expense to the patient. The fee that you pay me for pro.
fesslonat services also includes medicine, which is prepared in my own private laboratory,
You can write down your symptoms Just as easily as you can tell them, and you can feel
assured that no mistake will be made by me in locating and curing permanently the
disease from which you suffer.
Stop! Young Man
It is not difficult to tell wnat Is the
matter with I you. If you continue
your present course, you will event
ually become an inmate of a lunatic
asylum. You are ashamed of yourself.
You blueh when brought into the pres
ence of the opposite eex. - You are
gradually losing confidence, and your ,
strength Is being sapped by unnatural
practices. : Perhaps you are ashamed
to tell a doctor your troubles, but an
experienced physician can discover
your trouble at a glance. I have saved
hundreds of young men who came to
me as a last reiori, and some of thent
are now the heads' of happy families.
You must have treatment from a doc
tor who has made such (-.anon a special
tudy. I delight in showing boys the
proper path to pursue, as it is always
ad to see a young man ruining hlm-r)t.-
If you come to me I will treat
you as If you were my own boy, and
make a man of you in a abort spaco
of time. Then you won't be afraid
ia look your fellow-man squarely lu
khe eye, the flush of health will again
Appear in your face and you will be
rl)U to take your proper place in so
viety. , - u , - ,- ..':.,'( ' -v -
Weak Men
How many men- there are who ara
broken down at a comparatively
young age. . You have no confidence
In yourself.'and It Is little wonder be
cause you have abused your sexual
strength and are now reaping the har
vest. You have almost lost your man
hood. Just think for a moment what
it means. I treat hundreds of such
cases, and have never made a failure.
I will restore you to your full vigor
or forfeit $1,000. Most men, when af
flicted in this, way, become despondent
and they worry because they know
that they are no longer as men should
be. I have seen middle-aged and elder
ly men cry with delight when they
felt assured that my treatment was
restoring them once more to a vigor
ous manhood. Every case of this kind
that I cure, and I cure all that I un
dertake, la the best argument that I
can cure you. Remember, consulta
tion is free,, and you need not spend ,
one cent unless you are satisfied that
I can do everything that I claim, -
Venereal Diseases
This head covers a number of different
forms of disease, including syphilis,
f onorrhoea, stricture, gleet and others,
hat it is needless to mention. Thou
sands of men, and especially youn
men, are wrecking their lives from
having contracted some one., of the
numerous venereal diseases. What a
pitiable object a human being presents
slowly dying by Inches, lust from lack
of proper treatment. If It was only
known the number of deaths that are
directly due to this loathsome disease,
the country would stand appalled.
Win your vitality sapped, your blood
poisoned and your body perhaps cov
ered with a mass of sores, you are in
deed ah obiect for sympathy Very
few physicians know how to handle
such cases so that the patient Is re
stored to his normal condition. My
treatment of venereal diseases Is al
ways successful, nd the patient is
-not obliged to neglect his business. I
treat so many patients for this trouble
and have cured no many thousands
that it matters not how sorely you
are afflicted. I can effect a speedy and
lasting cure. No other man in the
United States has treated hs many
cases of this nature as I have. Ex
perience Is the best of all teachers. -
Consul tal ion Free
Treatment bi Hall
Medicine Free
Absolute Privacy
Separate Rooms for
Men and Women
Positive Guarantee
With Every Case
No Lingering
We Cure Quickly v
Come Today
Delay Is Dangerous
Female Diseases
What a woman suffers only a woman
knows. There are so many compli
cations 'In the numerous ills to which
woman Is heir that it requires the
greatest skill on the part of the physi
cian to secure the desired results. I
have made a special study of this
branch of my'profession. wlththe re
sult that In nearly every case I am
able to effect a permanent cure. I
have made so many original discov
eries along this line that my treat
ment will be found different from
most doctors, having discarded long
ago the methods that most of thm
now practice, having Other remedies
that cure, positively cure, while they
usually only aim to alleviate pain.' My
success In such cases is the crowning
triumph of a career devoted to the
healing of the sick. I cure all of my
canes without the use of the knife. It
is a shame the manner in which some
women are mutilated by surgeons. At
this office you will always secure kind,
considerate treatment, and, best of
all, you will be made a healthy wo
man, the grandest work of the Cre
ator. ' - . :-.'-. : ,Y ,-
- Dr. Kessler
Has been fn active practice for more
than 30 years 20 years in Portland,
Or. He is full of the milk of human
kindness, and Is never so happy as
when he is doing good to his fellow
men. It Is not considered ethical for a
physician to advertise, and on this
point the doctor differed with a num-1
ber of his profession, believing that al
physician has the same right .to tell
the people whathe can do, provided he
tells the truth, as any-other profes
sional or business man. This view,
taken by the doctor a number of years
ago, has sown good seed, and today
some of the best men in all profes
sions make announcements to the pub
lic. If Pr. Kessler had made claims
that he was unable to fulfill, the ad
vertising would have acted as a boom
erang, and the doctor would have
been compelled to seek other fields.
Dr. Kessler has more than fulfilled
every promise made to the public, and
today enjoys a practice unenualed by
any physician on the Pacific Coast.
To thinking people this will be suffi
cient guarantee that the doctor keeps
faith with the public, and that today
he stands without a peer in healing
the sick and doing good to humanity.
Every Trouble
That is curable I will cure. There ate
so many diseases that It is impossible
to enumerate one-hundredth, part of
them. No. matter what your trouble,
come and see me. I will tell you ex
actly what Is the matter, and that will
be a comfort to know. I find people'
every day who Imagine that they are,
suffering from a certain disease when
it Is something, entirely different.
When. you place your case in myhands
there will be no uncertainty, and you
will notice improvement as the treat
ment progresses. Varicose veins, can
cer, ulcers, fever sores, ruptures, varo
cocele, nervous debility, plies, syphilis
and all diseases to which man la heir
' Will be scientifically and permanently
1 cured if you trust me with your case.
I would rather get(your case before It
has made any inroads Jn your consti
tution, as it will take a shorter time
to cure It. Don't go somewhere elae
and waste a lot of money experiment
ing. when eventually you will be com
pelled to give me your case If you
wish to cure. Remember,-1 can help
you, so don't despair;, while there M
life there Js hope. . ; ' -.7
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