THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL', PORTL AND, SUNDAY MORNING. , NOVEMBER : 17, 1907. V 8 f - mains ia being studied, by ths snglnssrs of ths Portland Railway,; Light and Power company, according to Vlos Preatdent Fuller. Ks says th city 1 partly to blame tor ths damag to water mains snd contends If th company CHAMP CLARK'S shallow, causing the oar to mak mors nols than uaual, but was doubtful If MACHINES ther was a practical rsmsdjr, It Is In Los said ths rails wers condemned Angeles and war purchased at ths time of ths Williams svenus Improvement by ths Portland Railway company. Th flange of th wheel rides In ths groove canting Unnecessary noise. Electrolysis and its effects on water , t OUST PRETTY GIRLS wars allowed to ao ss ic wisnea in in 1 1 k t v ..- . . . . r . l un t a, mains fiAulit hA nr.v.nt.j1 PENINSULAR CITIZENS CLAMOR FOR MORE CARS Northeast Side Improvement Association Wants Better Service Between Business District and SuburbsSay TALKING WHISKER THEORY Stenographers in Departments of Government Super seded bv firaphophoncs Tliat Talk "Dictation" to TjjKMvritists When Button Is Tressed. (vTmV. .tL,n liurrao of Ths Jonrn.t.) v.(,l,:r!(-n 1 1 Nov. 1 "Is tenoKr.i.f.y .t.c..vl-- Tl.l question often Is nhkrd no am l.tye, and some urt afflrti iino winner. That ithund wrltere In in the Immediate .mil the rcaaun Is r t : 10 grathophone i ..'lie men dictate il calling at the rice V lelghlon, giving til ileinuuJ for ' certain to dlnn.'; future, la '"' 1 : ' the Introducing' Into which moJ. i ii tl.clr literary null" The oil, ir day, ' In -ii-iu ol toe In. I "limit division ol hydrufcruW '. cons ...mix engineer of the Inland coinnilMMon, and di recting the v;k it in. my ifuvrrnment oilclala. Iwkldr 1 ' inn " engineer ol a IJlUllK l lU 'U el rill. III III .ir jnrrj, was found tniKiii" Inu u graphophone, dictating cotrespoi.ijwx c ut a rapid rata. Walling for b few momenta as Mr. Lelglitun completed the "hatch" or ' dictation on which m a Just then en gaged, I saw that, noon a lie had fin ished he put the reproducer on the ma chine and It waa mWf to talk hack to him the mntter he hmJ just UMKifii. to uiira himself he hnJ made no errors I asked him If that was nm a alower method than dictating In the old man Mr to a shorthand writer. "Kavee three-fourths of my time.' waa hla laconic answer "Saves the government lnrge portion of the ex pense heretofore paid to stenogra phers." . Going 'to ths matter. Mr Lelghton , explained why the new method waa an Improvement. "in all departments of the govern ment," he said, "1t hag been customary to maintain a corps of stenographers. These are needed at several desks, often at the same time. Hence, frequently, one must wait until one of the stenog rapher has finished work In which he or she la Just then engsse d, before an swering the call to nno'her official. "By the graphophene method one al ways ha at his elhnw an absolutely ac curate and ever-ready substitute for the Shorthand writer. I can dictate a letter or any other matter at any moment In th day. If I come to my office In the even In-, as frequently I must do, I cannot have a stenographer here They have been dismissed for the day. But, with the graphophone at hand, I may reel off dictation by the yard, and the .following morning the typewriters may take the records, reproduce ttwm tn their graphnphonee and thus do constant work. Instead of bavin; to devote more than half of their time In taking dic tation. Ideal Method. " It 1 the Ideal method, and the use of ahorthand people certainly will de crease as tbla device come more and more into ue." Trails the awe br Mr. LelirTiton was by no means the first Instance "which had come under my observation. It was the flrat time I had gone Into the real meaning of the movement for this substitution. For several year the official report ly by the reporters of the supreme court In New York, and It Is rapidly be ing Introduced In that "'. ao 11 eem to be curtain that soon It will be universal. However, In such use of the grspho phone. the necessity Is present first to lake the report In shorthand In direct talking Into the grapho pbone. the use of shorthand Is entirely done amy with, und the machine be comes a subMtltut for the shorthand wilier, and, to the extent that ll I used In that niannor, shorthand become hii absolutely useless ci-uuhhmmi". Seed Hot Know Shorthand. The typewriter who reproduce the records from the griiphopnone neea know nothing of shorthand, lie need be only an export operator on me iyp- w i iter, and, l.ence. the question: "Is shorthand doomedT' Presume the buaines man appropriate the l.leo, u Indeed many In the east already hnve done; he cornea to hla of fice In the morning, open 111 mall, a he nads a letter, If be baa th answer ready in bis mind, h merely louche a button, the machine tart, th mechan ism records the dictation on composi tion roll, such a have been ramtliar ror veara to graphophone audience, and he ha no boiler with Inaccurate short hand employe. It might be objected that typewriters under this system, must be extra good spellers and possess unusual knowledge to enable them to write accurately from spoken dictation, when the original dictator la not present to explain or In struct Thl, however, 1 not true, for the dictator may Interject explanations a to phraseology, or otherwise, and th. ivnxwrltuta. keeplna a few words behind the reproduction of the machine are given accurate knowledge of what the dictator desires to have written To obtain really accurate shorthand employes has been on of th difficul ties which public men of all sorts have experienced. Hundreda--of so-called stenographers have been turned out by the chool. but of these few re really dependable. This reads rather like se vere stricture on the race of shorthand people ol this shorthand age. let everyone who has had experlencS knows that It Is the truth. ' The graphophone. then seems bound to force out of us to a large extent the shorthand method, which, up to the very recent past, has been presumed to be the ultimate stage In the evolution of correspondence In every corner or tne national capital these machines are grinding out their work, and every week sees some other official adopting It In place of the shorthand employe. Will Call for Records. Although It has not vet been extended In the following manner, nevertheless It It certain that before long th custom will be for a public man to keep In his office s graphophone dictate Into It and then a typewrlflst will call for the rec ords snd write the matter out for num bers of men Instead of devoting all her time to one offlcs ...... Perhaps some will object to that evo lutionary process which dooms the pret ty shorthand gin to me aruusrry ui Stiff-Bearded Man Pugna cious lie Says, Soft Bearded Man Slave. (pedal Dlepatra to To Jonrnsl.) Washington. Nov. 16. ("lump Clark, congressman from Plk county. Mis souri, Is among those who have arrived In town for th coming session of con gress. Borne fallow hereabout recently made th statement that be knew a iiiun who had a beard seven feet long "That's no beard at all." said Mr. C lark, and he wrote a letter to The Washington I'ost telling about anian In Tike ouniy who bad a beard as Is a beard. The public Company Has Palmed Off Old Stock on East Side not being fully satisfied, the congress- j company has man from I'lke has come on to Wash ington two weeks earlier than be In tended, to see about It. lie gav out an Interview on the aub Ject today.' and If any on further nuta tions that Missouri produces the great est whiskers In the world, the matter Besides having ths poorest bridge ' connection with ths west slds, the , property-owners of that portlo of the east side north of ths tel brldg and 1 Holladay avenu bellev they have the poorest streetcar servlc tn th city, i The Northeast 8lde Improvement ao- , elation regards the Improvement of the streetcar service nxt In Importance to tne construction or-a high bring across the river below the present slteSof th 1 steel bridge. It l contended that th streetcar placed Its oldest and uoor- c.n equipment on the Mississippi ave nue, Williams avenue, Ilussell-ghaver and lrvlngton lines, und maintain but an Indifferent service on all theae di visions. It was aaserted at th meet Iiik of the Northeastern aseoclatlon Fri day nlk'lit that the cltlien of that auc tion of the city had been Imposed upon by the management of the street rail will be brought up I nmngirs and a way company because they had not been organirea Lails from organised seo- rs of the senate and house have used ' listening to the loud speaking grapho- sueclal Investigation aisked lor. "Judg Elijah Gates, said Mr Clark. 'lias a beard H feet long my county. Just a lew mil houae. and 1 know him very well Hut his whiskers are not any special curi osity, gecauae there ia a man a tew milea farther down the road who ha a beard im feet long Tils mans nam la Valentine Tapley. I know turn very well. "A curious thing about these fellows, and that makes me think a man s char acter can be told by his whiskers. Now, Elijah Gates Is a pugnacious kind of a fellow, not a scrapper or a brawler, you understand, but of a stubborn type of man. Hla whiskers are right stiff. 1ke a horse s mane. Dut Va.entlne Tapley s are soft as suit, and Tapiey la mild man nered and thoroughly agreeable one of those unanimous sort of fellows. Of courts, thef fellows do not wear their beard down all the time. They couldn't do It without tying a knot In them like a horse's ta.IL Hut they weai em Inside their vests In silk bags. Old tlons of th city have had their effect. Me liven in , and the peninsula accepted what was norn hi j i!ii aiior otner sections or ths east side had made their demands upon the com pany. Tlie St. man Tapley takes his out once or wlce I or the benefit of his neighbor. man Elijah Gate takes' hi out. , the graphophon A corps of men work In fifteen-minute shifts, on taking notes for that long, and then giving way to another and going to his room to talk hi matter Into the grapho phone, the records being then turned over to the typewriters, who produce the final "copy for the Concessional Record. This system Is used excluslve- nhnim However, anvone who nas oo- served the development of the system the east knows full veii inai me shorthand girls arty nas come In pretty rinse at hand, when she must give way to the march of improvement. Possibly, then domestic troubles will be lessened and Jealous wives have les concern for their peace of mind. JilPilll HAS no FOR Sakuyi Takahashi Declares . Philippines Don't Look Good to Mikado. (United Press Leased Wire.) San Francisco, Nov. 16. Dr. Sakuyi Takahashi, a famous Japanese author ' Ity on International law, and professor on that subject in the Toklo university, who Is In the city, en route to New Tork to have a book on International law published, said today that Japan does not want the Philippines. "W hav Islands enough," the profes sor said. The Philippines are lnban- - ilea tty too many savage irnies mai who buy nothing from a highly civilized nation., such as Japan is today. We , frav bo raw materlals.for sale; in fact we would rather Import the raw prou . ucts and manufacture them into per - fee ted articles and then sell them to i the world. "Tour country, with Its enormous stretches of land and comparatively few people, can afford to sell raw products ' such as wheat and cotton, to the Phil lpplnes, but Japan needs land even to feed her own people properly. "''' "It Is not wise for a nation to be too much spread out, which would be the case If Japan had the Philippines. When the mainland It is different. An island nation means a preat navy even for elf-protection, and Japan has enough , Islands. See the United States with so much land defended by so few ships compared with your square miles and your Inhabitants. "No," he added with a smile, "the United States has a problem that Japan does not want. We are busy with what we have, nno an mat japan wants is peace with all the nations, bo that we may trade with them." One of Many. Atchjson i'Kas.) Globe. An Atchlsun woman stfirted out to buy her fall hat First she visited the Hm.n 1 n erU n n A r n A 1. ..1 i ni. . v'"b fciu ivMjaivu miiu MiuKru l lien am took a rriena and went around f the millinery stores and "tried on" , again, saying,' of course, that her "hair , : looked perfectly terrible." Then she went home and thought, and thouent. and, linany, went back to the stores and "tiiBd on" once more; and thought ' ' and thought, and then boupht a hat . which 1b so grotesque and hideous that , her relatives and friends blush with j , shame every time they Bee her wear it V and strangers stare at her, wondering . what kind of courage It takes to wear such- a -looking bat. But she did the " pes eha could. NEW BOOKS FOR THE LIBRARY , BIOGRAPHT. HaeckA Life and Work of Haeckel: by William Boelache, 1906. Mnrle Antoinette. Oueen of Francs The Flight of Marls Antoinette; by Q. Lenotre, 1806. Sherman The Life of Roger Sher man; bv L. H. Boutell. 1896. DESCRIPTION AND TRAVEL. Benlamln Relse In Den Nordwestg- genden Nord-Amerlka's, 1862. Del Mar India of Today, 10B. Pobbs Reply to Captain Mlddleton's Answer to the Remarks on Ills Vin dication of His Conduct, 1745. Engel Memolres et Observations Geographlques et Critiques Bur la Situ ation Des Pays Beptentrlonaux. 1766. Mlddleton Reply to the Remarks of Arthur Dobbs, on Captain Mlddleton's Vindication of His Conduct on Board His Majesty's Ship, the Furnace- 1744. Peary Nearest the Pole; a Narra tive of the Polar Expedition of tho Penry Arctic Club In the S. S. Roose velt, 1905-1906. 1907. Williams Granada; Memories, Ad ventures, Studies and Impressions. 1 906. ENGINEERING. Goodell Waterworks for Small Cit ies and Towns. 1899. Hnrstmann 4 Tousley Electrical Wiring and Construction Tables. 1907. Spangler & Others Elements of Steam Engineering Ed. 2. rev. 190(5. FINE ARTS. Claremont The Gem-Cutter's Craft. 1906. Cornelle The Theory and Practice of Musical Form, for Instruction In Com position, Both In Private and In Classes. 1904. Curtis Velasquez and Murlllo; a de scriptive and historical catalogue of their works, with names of the present and former owners. 1S83. Stevens Lettering for Printers and j Designers. 1906. HISTORY. j Bradbv The Great Days of Ver-1 sallies; studies from court life In the later years of Louis. XIV. 1506. Greenlnge A History of Rome Dur ing the Later Republic and Early Prln clpate. v. 1. 1905. LANGUAGE. Johnson Dictionary of the English Language, Ed. 2. 2 v; 1755-1766. LITERATURE. Browning Shorter Poems; ed. by F. T. Baker, Ed. 4. rev and enl.. 1907. Hale's ed. Ballads and Ballad Poetry, 19l2. Hale's ed.-i-Longer Narrative Poems. 1902. Homer The Odyssey; tr. by G. H.' Palmer 1 8S. Mnrttno Droll Dialogues and Laugh-abl- Hei-ltatioris, 1870. I'ancoast. comp. Standard English Pnoms; Spenser to Tennvson, 1906. MI.'NM'IPAL AND STATE REPORTS Montana Legislative Assembly. House .Journal of the Tenth Session, Jan., Mar., 1907. 1907. Montana Legislative Assembly, Sen- a year Old too. but only to comb It. He has on of these sugar-tree combs mads for It, and he combs It with that." Mr. Clark has no suggestion of a hir sute adornment on hla clasaic face. No one Is, therefore, able to read his char acter from hla beard. If he had one, though. It would probably not be soft and silken like Valentine Tapley's. for Mr. Clark Is not unanimous. In tddltlon to this whiskers matter upon which he la engaged, he Is pre paring himself for a fight against th California congressmen who have been trying for several years to put out of business the greatest winery In the world, which Is Plk county. Missouri. They propose to do It by having all wine In tne making of which sugar Is used termed adulterated win or art I' flclnl wine. "This Is because out In California there la a grape, the only one In the world, which has enough natural sugnr In It to make wine without any addi tional sugar. For several successive years they have been trvlns all aorta of schemes to declare that th only pure wlno. "I went over to e Dr. Wiley about this thing several years ago, before we had any pure food law, when he was about to declare the wine mad with sugar adulterated, under an old statute which declared that there should be cer tain fixed stsndards of things, like yard sticks, gallon measures and so forth. "They Introduced a bill In eonrress next. i amen that and now they going to Introduce another, and have to fight that." So It Is wine snd whiskers which bring Champ Clark back to Washing ton, two things which he Is usually thought to have no Interest In at all. Johns service has been lm- lately so that the Alblna resl bellov It Is no longer necessary to glvs the St Johns through trslns th right of way. A relief promised by Manager Fuller Is to establish station on Williams avenue where St. John cars will stop, At present outgoing cars stop nowher on Wllllsms svenue except at Russell street. In this same connection the people of lrvlngton ob ject to the frequent practice of eom pellltr loaded car to go back to passing switch to permit an empty car lo go by. Mr. Fuller has promised to relieve this aggravation by having or ders Issued to glv outbound cars the right of way In th evening and the loaded Inbound car the right of way during the busy hours of th morning A committee representing the North east Side Improvement association wsltd upnsk Manager Fuller Friday and had an Interview over two hour long, during which h promised what he could do at one and what would have to b put off. He offered little hope to the lrvlngton people until the re pairs to the Ilurnsld bridge are com pleted. This lln Is not a paving line. The general manager told the com mittee that 1600,000 worth of rolling stock had been ordered from eastern factories last w4nter only n nut of which had been delivered. At nresent he said every car the company possessed was In service. H Scknowledred that the rrwitm In tne ran on Wllllsms avenue war too PANIC HAS STRUCK OUR RABBITVILLE FRIENDS are I'll ate Journal of th Tenth Session, Jan., Mar.. 1907, 1907. PHILOSOPHT. Fletcher Light For New Tfms: a Book For Catholic Girl. 1906. Waldateln The Subconscious Self and Its Relation to Education and Health. 1606. SCIENCE. Classen Quantitative Analysis. 1902. Gelkle The Founders of Geology. Ed. 2. 190i. Proctor The Borderland of Science; a Series of Familiar Dissertations. 1873. newer haa a blew chin Smithsonian Institution Annual Re-' "'e now have stacks of em. and red and port oi me uoara oi uegenis for the i ""c' uuinmun as com A, Bennett In The Dalles Optimist Well, the Pannlck has struck Rsbblr vyie good and hard, and we dont Jest no weather w aro a fuel or ahorae back or in swimmln, for the blow was suddin snd onexpocted. It happened imt Satterday nice, when a feller corns In from Cactus 4 Corners and went to work kwletly and gathered In every cent there was In town. His credit was good snd he borrered what he cood, and he had some check and he got cash for them, and be put the hull boodle In a gripsack and hiked for home, but then we recalllxod that we had been Beat tied, and Beattled by a Jay! It I to wcap! It 1 to hedd tear of wo! To think that we ahood go brok by a troks or fowl play like that! But when he had got away we took a account of tock and found that be had left in the town the um of leven dol lar and 40 five cent, not counting two plugged nlchols and a led ten cents thst has been reposing- for sum time In th till at the city drug : tore, but when we was at the end of our string, as w Supposed, that exeat flnarrseer, 81m Dlpp. came to the rescue and organized s clearing house, of wlch he Is ths mannager. and at onct things went along in the even tennor of their weigh. In the first plsce the 1146 wss turned over to 81m. end against that he Issued aertlfflcatea. but not having enny print ing press to print em. he went to Major Fnlrplay and got all of his poker chips and then he Issued them agin the cap Ifrtle deposited with him But we found In a few mlnnlts that we reely dlddent have enny more money than before, ao we. the miniWi i v, clearing house resolved that we were in me mrowa or a grate rinanclal cry sis and that desprlt measures was neces sary to preserve the credit it of the com munity, and as all of our avsilnhla ... sets had been deposited with the mana Jar, and still the strain was not re lieved, that we would Issue munney agin such collateral as enny of us mite havs, 61m to take charge of the Bald collateral and Issue his fyat munney agin it. So we took our collateral to Sim and turned It In, sum taking a cook stove, sum tlnwear, sum their Sunday cloeths. sum their wife's false teeth, sum hair switches, sum .ne thing snd sum annother. Just so It was collat eral, and In a a day the crysus was over and the pannlck was ended, snd we had more munney than we had before ws waa Sea tt led. I newer had so mutch munney, for ws manajers of the clearing house did not have the time to bring In our col lateral, so we give Sim o notes and Sim Issued right to us to onct their qulvalent In fyat munney. 8o the town is riooded with munney. Men who newer had a blew chip before In their city drug stor. that Is w mean th perscrlptlon counter, Is lined with cus tomers. Feller who never took a per- cription berore in their life are now taking of em reglar, and feller what always bought (-cant perscrlptlon are now planking down a pink chip for Pa-lousers. I HAVE A LITTLE MpNEY WHAT SHALL I DO WITH IT? Shall I hoard it away in a safety-deposit box, invest it in real estate, loan it out on mortgage, or put it back in the savings bank? THAT IS THE, CRYING QUESTION of The HOUR For those who have but small amounts- ranging, say, from $100 to $200 if they will call at the Denny Dulin Mining; Co.'s office, 303 Wells-Fargo building, examine the well known mining engineers' reports on the com pany's property, inspect the rich ore just re ceived from the mine, look over the names of the stockholders and directors, they may be convinced that no better chance is offered on the market today than to make an investment with that company at the present low prioe which they are offering their stock viz., 10 cents per share, fully paid and non-assessable. YOUR MEY icar 1904. the School- mon. The only trubble Is we may run out of chips, but Sim has sent down to The Dalles and over to Dufur for enny oui poker chips that alnt working, and we will have lots of em In a day or 2. But there Is no shortage yet. and blzl ness Is booming, evverybody having plenty of cash, fyat ash. emergency munney. and we dont care If the Pan nlck lasts a year. The ar down at the 1906. SOCIOLOGY. Barry The Hygiene of room. fcd. 2. 1S04 Dawson The Unearned Increment; or. Reaping Without Sowing. Ed. 2. n. d. Educational Activities for Boys. 1907. Finch Ed. Federal Anti-Trust De cisions; Cases Arising In United States SZTtl iL.SodeVve ttot71:Tru8t Act ot GERMAN-AMERICAN Howard The German Empire. 1906. King Life and Correspondence; Ed. by C. R King., 6 V. 1894-1900. Overland A Manual of Statutory Corporation Law; Classified Corpora tion laws of All the States. 1907. Pierce The Tariff and the Trusts. 1907. United States. Continental Con gress. Journals. V, 9. 1907. USEFUL ARTS. Rail Sherrlf A Plumbing Cafe- t 11:45, when all the riders were taken ehlsrn; or, The Theory and Practice of from the track and the freshest and Plumbing Design, In Question and An-I ppeediest men of each pair prepared for BICYCLISTS WIN (Cnlted Press Leased Wire.) Boston. Nov. 16. Krebs and McLean, the German-American team, won first money In the six-day bicycle race which closed at 11 o'clock tonight In the Park Square rink Four tearns were tied at 1.147 miles, and one lap, and four -more had an even 1,147 miles to their credit swer. 1906. Collin; The new Agriculture; a Pop ular Outline of the "Changes Which Are Revolutionizing the Methods of Farming uml the Habits of Farm Life, litflfi. Cromle Health by Muscular Gym nastics. With Hints on Right Living. 1 ;t 0 7. Fletcher Soils; How to Handle and Improve, Tthem. 1 907. I .each Food Inspection and Analysis. 1907. Munxnn The Art of Phonography. New edition. 1004. Rldeal Sewage and the Bacterial Purification of Sewage. Ed. 2. 1901. Torrey Instruction In Practical Shorthand. 1907. Trotter The Geography of Com merce. 1906. Wilcox Farm Animals. 1906. FICTION. Coleridge The Lady on the Drawing Room Floor. Lefevre Sampson Rock of Wall Street Murger The Latin Quarer. Porter The Trimmed Iamo and Other Stories of the Four Million; by O. Henry (pseud.) Warde lietty wales. Junior; a Story the final mile sprint. If You Put It in Bayocean Park There is a logical reason for Bayocean Park, and nothing can hold it back. , Our workmen are going right ahead with the construction of this great Summer Resort, and they will continue to do so. We are selling lots every single day. The average number sold for this last week, with all the uncertainties in financial cen ters, has been four and two thirds lots per day. Invest your money where it will be absolutely safe and will surely give you big returns. Make that investment Monday morning and be rid of the horrid nightmare, "What shall I do with my money ?" Potter-Chapin Realty Company 402 COUCH BUILDING, 109 FOURTH STREET. A Place of Safety and Profit for Your Money Is Being M t. Scott Bargains y 9l,3dO 5 rooms, modern, 1 lot, y2 block from station ; $200 cash kv . '".balance easy monthly payments. Would take note for half of first payment. ; l,0004-room cozy cottage, lot 40x111; $300 cash and $10 per 8tewart' Station, Mt Scott Line. Open Sundays. O. N. FORD for elrls. Woodrow The Bird of ' Time Conversation With Egeria. GERMAN FICTION. Brackel Ntcht wle Alle Anflern. Ed. 8. Brackel Die Tochte Des Kqnstrelt- ers. Ed. Z4. Rauter Llselotte von Reckling. Ed. 6 Vosse Die Neue Circe. Wlnckler-Messerer Ie Walsen; Fine Geschichte A us Den Bergen. Ed. 6. BOOKS FOR CHILDREN. Brooks The Golden Goose Book. Caldecott Kleiy on the Glory of Her Sex; Mrs Mary Braize. Caldecott The Fdx Jumps Over the Parson's Gate. Caldecott Ths Great Panjandrum Himself. Caldecott The House that Jack Built. Caldecott The Milkmaid. Caldecott Picture Book. 2 v. Church Stories from English His tory. 3 v. Spenser Stories from Faerie Queeha; by Mary Macleod. . . ... -. : Vi'::.-, ' -. ' ' Maegly Junction rvrjrmim . . . , 1 jipttji ; Are you looking for a good investment and a good, safe place to deposit your money, where it is liable to return to you with a ten-fold profit on your investment? We all will admit that the best and most profitable time to buy realty in' a townsite is when it first starts. This is just what w,e are offering to the public now. A new business center is just being created in the city of Portland, Oregon, and this center is Maegly Junction. The largest manufactur ing institutions on the Pacific coast are now locating at Maegly Junction, and the four new transcontinental rail road lines form a junction and make a union station here. Also docks and sawmills, proposed carshops, and many other things that go to make a complete city. Study the picture and see how centrally located Maegly Junction is. It is a sure winner. Call and let us show you why everybody fhinks so. We are exclusive agents, and have plenty of help to go out any time and show you oyer the whole situation. Call at once and get the choicest of 'locations. 41 2 Svvetland Building 3H