Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 6, 1907)
. THE ' OREGON DAILY JOURNAL? PORTLAND, C TUESDAY EVENING,: AUGUST 6, V 1007 2 MAYOR LANE VETOED "JOKER" IN ORDINANCE wirmisr buys DESERTED Mill ffl Son IT M 1 Governor Chamberlain, With State and Interior Depart ment Officials, Will Inves tigate Scheme Now Under Way in Deschutes Country Eider at End of Baker Ord inance Made It Possible to Open Up Slaughter-House on Washington or Any Other City Street. Governor Thumb, rlaln. 8tate Engineer Lewi and Oswald West, representing the state. Htid Thomas B. Neuhausen, special Inspector of the interior depart ment, and John T. Whistler, of the United States hydrographlc office, will leave Saturday for the Deschutes coun try to examine Into the condition of the Irrigation scheme which has been under way for some time. Engineer Lewis will examine Into the ' amount of water which can be furnished to Irrigate the land and will make a re port to Mr. Neuhausen who will for ward a report to Secretary Gartleld of the department of the Interior. Gov ernor Chamberlain will examine Into I the manner In which the Deschutes Ir rigation company has conducted Its af , fairs since obtaining; permission from the state to irrigate the land for would-be settlers. Six years ago when the Oregon leg islature adopted the Care act, the fed eral government turned over to the state 1,000,000 acres of lsnd to be used by the state for reclamation purposes. Of this acreage the state turned over to the Irrigation company about 800, 000 acres for the purpose of establish ing the Irrigation project to make the land Mt for agricultural purposes. The company does not own the land and cannot deed It to settlers, but after preparing It for settlement allows the settlers occupancy upon the property at price ranging from 12.60 to $40 an acre and charges (0 cents an acre a year for water rights. If the state Is satisfied (hat the company has pre pared the land In a proper manner for settlement, and secured the settler In has water rights. It can Issue a deed to the settler when the land la finally "It shall be unlawful for any person or persons to slaughter any animal or animals for human food within the lim its of the city of Portland except by permission of the board of health." oroinance itnuiv u,i,- Ing regulating powers to the board did not look to bo good no the mayor, and after due consld Riding modestly and Innocently nt ths end of ths Baker ordinance govern ing sanitation In preparing food for hu man consumption, passed by the city council, ths above clause, which would permit a slaughterhouse to exist on Washington or any other street of the city, could not escape the attention of Mayor Lane and he promptly vetoed the measure. Whether or not this clause was a n.-Ti u in imu , . .... ... whlrh are proved up. " The lrrl Droflt br nreDarlnc the lan ths selling price and on water rentals. Tat" less than ONLY INTENSIFIES (Continued from Page One.) statement of Jacob Bchaf f ner, a friend of the deceased, who declared a day after the disappearance that he believed . Leu nad ended nis lire, most significant. Schaffner, who is connected with the dairy near Rlvervlew cemetery, where t Leu was employed, was one of those who estaDusnea me aiiDi or tne suspect, According to bis statement to the po lice, on the night of Huber s murder Leu was at the ranch at all times and about 11 o'clock was visited by two friends of the men he had arrested for the assault In Oruetli's saloon, these men edeavored to have Leu drop the prosecution of the five dairymen, who - nad beaten him and offered him $60 and physician's expenses to do so. Leu refused and two days later disappeared. Improbable Hypotheses. Three highly improbable hypotheses have been advanced as to the reason for Leu's suicide. Some hold that he was so humiliated over the beating received in tne saioon, owing to nis reputation as a fighter, that he hastened off Into the woods and killed himself. Others point out the fact that Leu was up braided by the Swiss residents of the city for notoriety given his country men by his prosecution of his assail ants ana tnis censure comoinea wun the suspicion of the police that he was a murderer caused him to end his life. The third theory, which Is not supported at an by tne tacts, is that the blow Leu received on the head with an iron cuspidor during the fight caused a men tal disorder and he wandered off and committed suicide while mentally un balanced. ICurder Still Uxsolred. Detectives Hellyer and Baty are agreed that the suicide of Leu does not solve the Huber murder, and still main tain that the assassin Is still at largo. "It does not seem reasonable," said Ser- geant Baty this morning, "that the alibi 1 established by Leu was false. All of the men who testified that he was at the dairy on the night of the murder are certainly not lying. Why he ended his life Is a mystery as deep to me as Huber's murder." Detective Hellyer also does not be lieve that Leu killed Huber. "I think that the fact that he was called to ac count by the better class of Swiss res idents for the police court proceedings against those who beat him up and that when he wanted to accept the money to get out of town they would not give it to mm, caused Leu to end his life. At any rate, whatever his motive for suicide I do not think that he murdered Huber." Leu disappeared July II, and from some slaughter-house proprietor. Is not clear. However, It is very evident, ac cording to the officials, that Its Intent was not fully established when It was dlscuased In the council, else It might not have gone through at one session. Other Defects Votloed. There are also other defects In the ordinance to which the mayor objects Amona- these are Its Inadequacy In pro tecting the public from Impure candles sold from street carts; exposing of meat, fish, lard and other food In open doors or windows; covering of garbage; keeping hot and cold water; covering prepared foods, such as cooked meats, sauerkraut, honey, olives, pickles, mincemeat, bread, butter; having water convenient for washing the hands; rais ing all provisions at least two feet above the floor, and protecting berries from flics. Not one of these requirements has been covered in the ordinance, the offl claJa say, and without them any ordi nance Is Incomplete. Originally the ordinance was prepared by Dr. C. H. Wheeler and presented to the health board. At that time, some six months ago. the proposed ordinance was Judged to be Insufficient and was laid on the table. Two months ago Councilman Ba ker presented an ordinance in the coun cil meeting with a request that It be passed at once. It looked much like the previous ordinance to Mayor Lane and he thought it better to go over for a week to see If all requirements were covered. Baker explained to the coun cil that the measure bad been drawn up by Dr. Wheeler and it passed at the next meeting without a dissenting vote. Kept Sharp Lookout. About a week ago the ordinance came to the moyor for approval. The order ing of the Zimmerman Packing plant on the Macadam road closed 1M Satur day by Market Inspector Evans and the arrest of Zimmerman caused the mayor to keep a sharp lookout for Jokers In the ordinance before turn, i ne ,V villcy to deration he vetoed the Haker ordinance Message Goes Bsok. With the ordinance the mayor Is calling attention to several matters in the ordinance. The message follows: While most all of the provisolns of f. thH ordinance are gooa, n in plete as a wmltary measure, Inasmuch as through oversight It falls to provide r,r KufcKiiards ror me care ui j .i eria I'fLtirilen. etc.. i tnr unit which may and no doubt manv times do, carry dlseaae and death to children and otbers who con sume them. A provision should also be made in the measure which would re uulre that all food stuffs, where exposed for sale, should be kept at least two feet above the ground or floor surface, out Manufacturers of Lumber From All Over Northwest to Get Together for Pur pose of Forcing Railroads to lietain Present Kates. of reach of dogs. "Section eight mlts the of thli establishment ordinance per- of slaughter houses within the city limits and grant the board of health the authority to issue such Dermlts. With ali due re- snert to the board of health, I do not lumber manufacturers from every section of the Pacific northwest will ssemble tomorrow morning at Tacoma for the purpoae of discussing the pro posed move on the part of the railroads to advance freight rates on lumber to points east of Denver next October. Portland and Oregon will be repre sented by the committee appointed at the meeting held Saturday by the Ore gon at Washington Lumber Manufac turers' association, and composed of A. ;. Dixon, F. C. Knapp, Oeorge Oerllnger, 8. H. Cobb, B. C. Miles and Philip Beuh ner, the latter ex-offlclo member by virtue of his position as president of the association. Fist, the lumber Interest will lay the matter before the railroads as plainly as possible to show that the proposed advanae Is not only unjust, but that it will practically mean tne ruination of if i i . ,Vn T .,i.4 .tin wiaiv win pracucauy mean me ruination oi HVlve Tself at lh cower ToTheci '' the eastern business enjoyed on thh to deprive iteeir or tne power to l i ih nt ik, nki.. t,. .m .nn..i ,h. !;... f .nrh iMrmlta In the event ?,u vl 1 ,B fww, l ney win appeal that the public good mlaitt demand It. If any such authority to Iseue permits la to be vested in tne Doarci or neann, such permits, it seems to me, should be subject to the consent of your honor able body, after due and careful con slderstlon of their merits upon your part, for with a corrupt board of health great harm might ensue to this com munity from Improper use of such au thority, exclusive rights to slaughter be ing possessed of great value. "I do not think the council Intended to thus delegate its sovereign power In this respect, and I hereby call your at tention to the matter, that you may fur ther consider the same before Its terms become fixed." In addition to regulatln- the sanitary condition within or surrounding mar kets, shops, creameries, grocery and pro vision stores of every character, the Baker ordinance also prohibits the em ployment of anv person suffering from tuberculosis or anv other communicable disease around or In the preparation of any food prepared for human consump tion. It also made the use of dele terious chemicals unlawful In preserv ing food. for a maintenance of the existing rates which It is claimed are sufficiently rofltable to tha. railroads, and then If profl their prayers are not heard, one of the greatest rights or the century between two powerful factions will begin. The lumbermen say It will be a fight to the finish, for titer are In the right, and It means their life or death. The local organisation raised approxi mately 130,000 Saturday afternoon for the purpoae of taking up the fight with the railroads, should this become neces aary, and hundreds on thousands of dol lars have already been subscribed by the wasningion miurnen. Fascinated by the Romantic Story of Beaumont, Chi cagoan Buys City. (Jonrnil Special Service.) Los Angeles', Aug. C. Fascinated by the romantic story of Beaumont, a RIv erslde county desert dream town Xf twenty years agtf, told him on the train by a chance fellow traveler. C. B. Eyer of Chicago, took one look' at the platfe and then liaHtoned to nan Francisco and bought it. He paid the German Savings and Loan society about 1250,000 for the townslto, hotel, water rights and 1,000 acres surrounding It. ror over two decades the San Francisco Banking corporation, whleh owned It, bad held it Inactive. f Beaumont Is a beautiful hamlet at the summit of the San Mateo canyon, the highest point between this city and Kl Paso on the Southern Pacific. In 1886, Rev. 11. C. Slgler, then preaching In this city, planned a modern Utopia at the base of the San Jacinto mountains. and Beaumont was the result. He laid out 600 acres In lots built a hotel cost ing 175,000, spent $200,000 of borrowed money In other ways of Improvements, and then the boom broke and his dream faded away, the banlkng company tak ing over the property. Slgler died of a broken heart The town went to sleep. One hundred lots had been sold, but the owners, unable to make a living, gradually disappeared. The bank declined to sell unless the en tire place be taken. And so It has stood Idle for twenty years. Trees planted along miles of streets hare grown tall, but not a house Is seen. MRS. FISH EVENS UP HUSBAND'S FREEZE-OUT USES HER HATPIN TO FIGHT ASSAILANT PASSENGERS COMMENTED ON SLIGHTLY IMPROVED SERVICE Pansengers and others Interested In the movements of railway trains com mented upon the improved service be tween San Francisco and Portland today when the train from the Bay City ar rived at the Union depot only four hours late instead of from six to ten, as has been its custom for the past several months. The O. R. A J4, overland east ern train was only forty Minutes late, while travelers from Spokane and the Inland Empire were astonished to roll (Jearaal Special Berries.) New Tork, Aug. I. Adelaide Wlldrer, a nurse. Is the latest victim of the wave of 'crime. She was attacked on the street this morning by an Italian, who knocked her down, choked her and dragged her to a stoop, where she fought him with a hat pin. The assail ant has been placed under arrest. MINEOWNERS ENFORCE NEW NON-UNION RULE 'Jonnul Special Service.) Colorado Springs, Aug. . The Mine owners' association has decided to en force the card system against the Fed eration or Miners. Herearter every workman employed by the association must carry a card showing he Is free Into the depot on time at 8 o'clock this morning. The Northern Pacific Railway Com pany's north coast limited, due at 7 o'clock this morning, arrived at 12:10. T- V. XTa.V.am Uti . 1 fl . Kilt HttlA mall from the eaat to Portland, and ! from unlon Influence. the company generally runs a "stub" j train from Seattle to Portland every morning, which handles the local traf fic between the two cities that would oome on the north coast limited. in stub" arrives on the north coast Urn Ited's schedule time when that train is delayed. the condition of the body It Is thought that he killed himself a day later. The remains were found late Sunday nigtit by Frank McArthur, while searching for a lost cow. The comse was hang lng to a limb of a tree by a piece of telephone wire stolen from the front of thr, McArthur home. Only 11.15 and letter were found in the pockets or Leu's clothes. Identity Established. The epistle was from Mrs. Anna Wollenvelder of Butte. Montana, and notified him of the death of her hus band. Through this communication tne Identification of the dead man was es tablished. Coroner Holman took charge of the remains and after an injuest burled the body Immediately owing to the advanced state of decomposition. CaDtaln of Detectives Bruin declares that Leu's suicide definitely proves that he killed Huber but notwithstanding the theory of their superior. Detectives Baty and Hellyer Intend to continue the nvestlgation. BOMBARD TOWN (Continued from Page One.) lEEiaSZXZIIEKIXHKXSXM S Have Trouble 5 B S with Your Food? S SI Try g Grape-Nuts f u Perfectly Cooked, M Ready to Serve, M Abdul Aziz found himself condemned by the rules of Moorish etiquette to splen did Isolation. No Moor, says tradition, can hold any converse with the sultan save on affairs of state. The sultan's mother, even, is not allowed to dine with her son, so practically the boy Abdul Azjx was excluded from all so ciety. The result of this pernicious custom Is that the sultans of Morocco have had no companions but the women of the harem, and have become ener vatsd in body and mind. Today Abdul Aziz, at the age of 26, Is a curious caricature of the gilded London youth. He Is an all round sportsman, a really fine billiard player, an enthusiastic photographer, and, gen erally speaking, a good fellow, but ig norant to a decree of the world and a tool In the hands of the unscrupulous. Abdul Aziz married In 1894 his second cousin, a daughter of his father's uncle, and It is rumored that his harem con tains 800 fair Inmates. By the Moham medan religion he, like all Moslems. Is restricted to four wives, but up to now wheat." which last year yielded 60,000, 000 bushels In this country on lands that were not good for the ordinary wheat Likewise a scientist sent by him to Siberia to find a potato suitable fo fuel production, haa brought a large potato, which will, he predicts, solv the fuel problem for Interior section that are far from wood and coal. "We send more scientific parties the Pacific coast than to any other si states In the union. More of them hav been going to California than to Ore gon or Washington. But wnenever ure gon or Washington want help In any thin we will see that they get it." Mr. Wilson said many things complimentary to Oregon s climate, people ana re sources. Talking seriously of the fu ture he said this coast Is up against the problem of doing tne ousiness or tne Pacific "The Philippines are not going to be arlven ud. They may laiK as tney win but the United States will hold and civilise the Philippine Islands. We can teach the Filipino self-government, nnd we will do it. The task has to be done bv some nation. We can do it as well as any other. It Is one of the white man's burdens. The Pacific coast o the United States must face the work of handling the rapidly developing com merce of the Paclflc. There will be manv lane cities here. Portland will he a eltv of a million people almost be fore you know It. Each city must be alert and push forward. If a city ne gleets Its opportunity another Will grasp Secretary Wilson will leave tonight for California, wnere ne goes to invesci gate the conditions attending the fruit growing ana wine maaing. GOOD POSITIONS (Continued from Page One.) Irln.. ,A U..IM.A.I S he has not availed himself of this prlv as i ijege, so the army of beautiful women naanis or some sort or "The ordinary breakfast cereal cooked a few minutes in a half-hearted way will in time weaken the stomach of anything short of an ox. "Any preparation of wheat or oats put into water that Is below the boiling point and cooked as mush is usually served, remains a pasty. Indigestible mass. The cells are tough and un opened. In addition, the stomach of a person sensitively constituted refuses to do anything with the pasty mass. It Is sent Into the second stomach, the : Duodendum, where in consequence of the long time of the first process of dl- ( sMuuTi, is xermentea and soured. As an eminent medical man pertinently states, the stomachs of half the people . going about the atreets are about In the condition of an old vinegar barrel. Intestinal dyspepsia is the direct consequence of such feeding." Knowledge of these facts and a wide . experience in the preparation and use of cereals brought out the product .known as Grape-Nuts,- manufactured t with special reference to having the nl- are malnlv atte other that oriental him to maintain. etiquette compels FUEL AS A CROP (Continued from Page One.) ests of this coast are good for nothing else but growing trees. We are try ing to determine upon the best meth ods of reforestation. Talked to Committee. In one of his characteristic genial moods, the veteran agriculturalist talked to a committee composed of Tom Rich ardson, W. B. Olafke, J. C. Ainsworth and H. M. Williamson, at the Portland hotel parlors. He told of the work of the department of agriculture along various lines that tend to enlarge and Improve the farming Industry In the dif ferent states, climates and soils with which the American farmer has to deal. Wheat clovers and forage plants have been brouaht from Africa. Siberia and other countries of the earth, wherever 25 to 45 years of age are wanted for the positions in tnis department, mat of Datrolmen. Thirty hosemen, truck men and drivers are needed to equip the new fire companies recently Insti tuted. The pay Is from 180 to 190 per month and the age limit Is from 21 to 36 years. In the city engineer's department there is a pressing need for men over 21 years of age, five computers at 180 to 1110 per montn, nve inspectors oi concrete ror streets ana sewers ai sal aries of from $0 to I1J5 per month, two building Inspectors at 1125 per month, four stenographic clerks at $65 per month, five engineers of lire en gines at f 110 per month. No residence is required for any of these positions ana in any case an that applicant has to do is to present himself at the office of the civil ser vice commission in the city hall and take out an application blank. CITIZENS OF MILWAUKEE 'Continued from Par One.) irogenous ana starcny parts of the , found adaptable to soil and climatic grains, oi wnicn ine iood is composed, i conditions in the west and south. . perfectly and scientifically cooked at! me intiuij, ioiuj iur immediate use ' im inereiure jiul udibci in run man uiations oi any cook, gooa or Dad. ff The starch of the grains, changed to grape-sugar, can be seen glistening on ' ths little granules, and gives forth a delicate sweetish taste, very palatable. Children and adults obtain fine re sults from the use of Grape-Nuts food. .It la so perfectly adapted to the wants VI 111 V flUllUUl WW V7 DUUJ Ul- of nursing babe a being fed very suc ' cessf iflly on IL - 'There' a Reason." Made at the pure food factories of , tha Post urn Co., Battle Creek, Mich. , Jiead ,rX4 Boe4 to WsllTlUa,". la pka. Vast and varied are the fnvpRtldiHnTifl that are carried on by the department, embracing methods ot destroying pests, watering and Improving the soli, caring for the forests, introducing new crops and improving old-time grains and grasses. A few years ago on a Tislt to Oregon and Washington to pro mots the sugar beet Industry Secretary vvuson made a careful examination of . L. f. conditions here. Partially as ?JfSSiiiV Increased from 40,000 tons annually to 410,000 tons. talk ?hr8ult of Secretary Wilson's w.n. lv- !i gr0UD of farmers at Walla ?SS4JkWfl",t brought back a, variety of wheat known as "maoajetU said one DroDerty holder today. "There haa been no street Improvements. There is no town In the state where the streets are more poorly kept, even in ths face of the revenue Drought In from the club. ''The reason there have been no ar rest is because the city officials have winked at lawlessness and passed it by, not because 'of the benign Influence of the Mtlwaukle club." The citizens of the town are rapidly drawing together ana win combat any effort made to maintain or operate the gambling resort, and It is certain that the greater number of solid citizens will go on record publicly as being bitterly opposed to anything other than the strict compliance with the law. Metzger A Co., opticians, 342 Wash. ASTORIA IS MECCA (Continued from Page One.) ernment. In fact, the city auditor In making up his yearly estimates of ex penses counted In tne gambling taxes as a part of the Income which could be expended. An organized effort will be made by the clergymen of the city to close down not only the gambling resorts, but all other dens of vice which have flourished for years without the slightest restric tions having been placed upon them. The movement to make a tight town of Astoria Is causing the greatest ap prehension in the ranks of the gambling fraternity. It is believed that the effort has enough strength back of It to prove successful, although those who have monev Invested In aambllnsr resorts and gambling devices here will fight the move to a finish. Metzger' s spectacles, SI. S42 Wash. MILLMEN AT SPOKANE FIGHTING RATE RAISE (Special Dispatch to The Jonrnil.) Spokane. Wash. Aug. 6. To resist the advance from 40 cents to 45 cents per 1.000 feet on lumber proposed bv the railroads of the northwest, mlllmen of Oregon, Washington. Montana and Idaho are In session here today. 1 is the ob ject of the meeting to devise means to thwart the railways In a move which It is predicted must result in the clos ing of many mills and the throwing of thousands of men out of employment. (Josnul Special Serrtre.) Newport, R. I., Aug. 6. Mrs. Stuyve- sant Fish is planning to take a society revenge on Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbtlt and the latter's sister, lVs. Ogden Goe let, because the Vanderbllt faction stood with Harriman when the railroad mag nate froze Fish from the presidency of tne Illinois central. Mrs. vanderbllt and Mrs. Goelet have been denied the privilege of partaking In tha entertain ment of Crown Prince William of Swe den, which Mrs. Fish haa planned for the titled foreigner during his five days' visit here. The snub Is considered an "even-up" for the treatment accorded Mrs. Fish's husband in ths recent rail road fight. HEAVY STOCK LOSSES RESULT IN SUICIDE (Jonrnil Special Service.) New- York, Aug. 6 William S. Alley. despondent over his heavy loFses In all street and his recent suspension from the Stock exchange, shot him self last night In the crowded Larch- mont Yacht club. V Metzger Co.. Jewelers. 841 Wash. wet ntsv aits wos.nr when your child has a severe cold. Tou need not fear pneumonia or other pul monary diseases. Keep supplied with Ballard's Horehound Syrup a positive cure for colds, coughs, whooping cough and bronchitis. Mrs. , Hall of Sioux Falls, 6. D., writes: "I have used your wonderful Ballard's Horehound Syrup on my children for five years. Its re sults have been wonderful. Sold by all druggists. See the Red Tags A San Francisco Emergency A Quick Decisive Piano Sacrifice See Our Windows and Lose Not a Day's Delay "his mastch's vqick TRUE TO NATURE The New Vleter Talking Machine with tapering arm, brings every kind of musle and song to your home. It brings there to etay the talent that 11,000.000 could not secure for even one plght Magnificent hand selections, beautiful vocal solos, comic recitations and stirring melo dies. WHEN YOU BUY A VICTOR Talking MachinJ iou win nave tne wortn or wnat you pay over and over gain In REAL PLEASURE and satisfaction. Other talking machines cost less than the Victor, but there Is no econ omy in the purchase of such, because there is ne satis faction. The Victor Is not merely a talking machine, it is a musical instrument or tne mgneai oraer. u aoes not imi tate It reproduces the human voice or tone of any Instru rnrnt exactly precisely without the screeching, scratching;, grating noises alwaya present with "cheap" machines. We sell absolutely new Victors as low in price as $10, $17 and $22. Larger machines from $30, $40, $90 up to $100. Easy term payments if desired. -THE HOUSE OF QUALITY" SRerman Sixth and Morrison ',Hav& Co. taw j sts.. opposite Postoffice SMITH'S DAILY ROUND-UP Edited by the Traak X Smith Meat Oe StS-tM Alder ft., Bet. 1st aad tad tie. Fiai-mrsa tub beep trust" VOLI. NO. 12. PORTLAND. OR.. AUG. 6,1807. PRICE TOUR PATRONAGE. The House of Highest Qualify 353 Washington Corner of Park Smith's Is the Only Mar ket in Town That Can Give You Fresh Meats During This Warm Weather. Choice Porterhouse Steak. . .15 Small Porterhouse Steak 12 Choice Sirloin Steak 12 Choice Tenderloin Steak. .12 Choice Center Cut Round Steak 10 Fine Roast Beef from 6 to 10 Beef Stew, Soup Meat, Boiling Beef.... 2f to 4$ Boiling Beef, no bone 5 Shoulder Roast Lamb 10 Leg Lamb 154 Rct Pnrlr Chrn 1 KJk raent without having any right Best roric unops. to ,t ha8 now Btolen the mott0i '-union Rt Tjitnh Chnna lKk BhP- without having any oonneotlon liest LmD Vnops yft XO wnh honorable unionism. THE BEEF TRUST'S "UNION SHOPS" Jf you keep your eyes peeled you will see some meat shops the city who nave appropriated the title "Union Shop." Every member of the Federated Trades and every member's family knows that this is another Beef Trust fake and a travesty on honorable union methods, but for the benefit of the public at large we want to show the deceit and treachery of the Trust. When the Beef Trust came to the city there came from the eaat a law yer who was "next" to the Trust's methods. When the Beef Trust found that Smith was going to be a stum bling block in Its way this lawyer ar ranged for the boycotting of Smith by the retail butchers of Portland. It was then that Smith went to the public an' I sold meat for less than the Trust's wholesale prices. Now comes the self same lawyer organizing the workmen of me eeer irust markets into a secret society with a secret purpose. The Beef Trust who has so vauntlnalv and maliciously floated the sign U. S. Govern- Diseases of Women I AH1PQ FEMALE WEAKNESS, GENERAL DEBIL IwfA YJ I Li J ITY, NERVOUS TROUBLES, UNHEALTHY DISCHARGES, PAINFUL OR IRREGULAR MONTHLY SICK NESS, safely and speedily relieved. If in trouble call or write. DELAYS ARE DANGEROUS. Medicine sent everywhere by or express in plain wrapper, free from exposure. Dr. T. J. Pierce 181 FIRST ST., COR. YAMHILL, PORTLAND, OR. S0Z0D0NT CLEANSES AND v BEAUTIFIES TEETH Going EAST This Summer? Rates but Little More Than 12 for the Round 6n the Trip? Oo 1P n . Two More Sale Periods Only Aug. 8, 9, 10, Sept. 11, 12, 13 PORTLAND to CHICAGO and Return $71.50 ST. LOUIS and Return 67.50 KANSAS CITY and Return 60.00 ST. PAUL and Return 63.15 To all other points In the east and middle west and from all other points la the northwest, correspondingly low rates. M BATS VOB TD BOUITO TJU. Stopovers within limit w HEN you take a trip across the continent you, of course, want the finest scenery, the best and fastest trains, with through cars and most luxurious accommodations. Then buy your tickets at the City Ticket Office of the O. R. & N. Third and Washington Streets C. W. STINGER, City Ticket Agent WM. McMURRAY, GenT Passenger Agent