The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, June 07, 1908, Page 48, Image 48

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    ' THE OREGON SUNDAY jOuxiNAJL, h0ku.tO. SjJNDAV .' IvlOKmrtG, j UN 7,- ma.
V
WELSH SOLDIER OF
. FORTUNE IN AMERICA
Captain Owen VatigMn Tell s of Some of His Early Expe-
riences as a Cowboy in the West Says It
V ' : . Isn't Natural. ; w '
' '"From Staff Correspondent.
, London. May SO. Captain Owen
Vaughan. ths Welah soldier of fortune,
who aftar maklns reputation aa ,a
noVallat under the difficult nam of
Owen Rhoscomyl. baa begun another un
der hi own nama with "Vronlna has
had a career, that la almoat aa crowded
with : excitement aa that of Major s.
R. Burnharo, tho " American scout,; al
though Ilka tbs famous major. ha Is
yet a young man. But no one ever
succeeded In getting an Interview out
of hlra until the present writer ap
proached him. It waa. the word Amer
"Amerlra was mT home." (till DI,
"almoat aa long aa any other "country
under the sun. Some or my 'tnoH
hiiiitiiii tnamnrlna are of scenes and
incidents in . America from Boston- to
Frlaco. ' Some of my truest frlenda are
there still. You think you'ro a pretty
good American, no doubt, but I'll lay
you what you like that I've filled more
billets in American Ufa than you nave.
from tramp to, stock owner.
Bona Away Vrom atoms.
"My earliest recollections are all of
running away, first from home In Wales,
aa soon aa I could toddle, and next from
school, as soon as X was blar enough to
be aent away to onej Up to that time
my only remembrances or, aaventures
are of being twice pulled ' out of the
water and brought to life by artificial
respiration, once being trampled badly
hv a horu. smd ones worried by a at raj
Aa eacn scnoot expeuoa ron ut
do.
running away, or Insubordination, or
something; it waa alwaya a change to
go to another school, meet a new lot
oC boya, have to go through, a new
course of flghta to aettle my standing,
and learn a new neighborhood by run
ning away and tramping It. Time and
, again I've been caught with soma camp
of gipsies, and, of course, there was
my regular procedure of hoarding my
pocket money, storing crusts and then
looting the kitchen carving knlfa and
maklpg daah for Liverpool or Lon-
. don, or some other place of ships, where
a fellow would have a chance of be
coming a pirate straight off. That's
how r stowed away at last In a little
old brig bound for Rio,
Through Bouthwesters.
"Heaven knowa how many days we
were threshing through sou'westers and
nor'westers, till the crew got mutinous
and I thought the 'western ocean' was
the dirtiest piece of water In the world.
Aa a matter of fact, we had to put
In to aome little port at the foot of
high mountalna in one of the western
Islands and there the crew flatly went
ashore, got drunk and refused to come
aboard again. The skipper got 'em all
tried and sentenced to Jail, if they didn't
return at once. The fellows just
trooped out to the Jail. The Jailer
wanted a commitment order or some
thing. They told him to go to-r-the
other place' and get one if he wanted
it They'd been sentenced, and they
were going in, and Where's those keys
and be damn lively now, too. He
went round cad got the order, I sup
pose. At any rate, he came round that
afternoon and told us that If Ve went
out to .walk round the square that eve
ning, as the people did, we'd find the
key under the step up till 8 o'clock.
If We didn't come home before 9 o'clock,
he'd lock us out, becanse ha always
went, to bed at 9 o'clock, and he wasn't
going to get out of bed after that, not
to let Bt. reter in.
Jail Was Rao.
"Rut bar havlnar to set home ao ear
ly, that Jail was fine, and all the people
of the place came round and lived there
wun us. inj nnraaiu inoir i wuu
drink and whacked ft out with us. I
only remember the fruit and the fish
and the wine out of skin baga, and
the women and tne girls. Tou see. I
was a boy, all eyes and limbs and one
comprehensive smile for this rlppln'
old world, so I got on Immensely.
"The skipper came round the second
day and saw what waa up. -f I still
think I never heard a man swear aa he
swore. He didn't awear loud- and
ramping like a roaring stallion. He
Just looked and looked, and then ha sat
down on a corner atone and began to
awear like a man saying his prayers.
and I swam, ashore In the night on. a
pair of oars, close to Wilmington, Dela
ware, and that reminded me, I suppoae,
held up before we rot to New Orleans.
The 'crew' never got his pay-that'a
what; ha waa so loud about. , ., ,
: Pi-yTSM Swam Ashore. iyity;f:
"They took us in between the Capes,
that the Indiana and the buffalo were
still waiting zor me out west. Anynow,
that'a when I started for the west I
remember I had a nickel and J centa
for traveling expenses. As a matter of
fact I dldn t go weat mat winter at an.
In evarv town I struck there waa el-
wavs something to delay me. Some
body would offer me a Job, or of t ei to
adopt me, and It waa so hard to break
away, that I go to Mew York instead of
a wn
I It was soring a vain
I first saw the loveliness of Faesalc as
Cheyenne, and
I started for the weat, via the ties of
ih Ola ranroao.
"Tour're an American. Did you ever
tramp from Passaio to the Susque
hanna? NO! xet yeu aont mina do
ing Europe on the off chance of see
ing scenery that I'd forget a thous
and times before I'd forget that stretch
of country as I saw it then. Ah, well,
and that'a when I did my spell as a
tramp, a spell , that ended, after ad
ventures enough to fill a book, out on
the prairies in western Kansas, In a
fie-ht between a sheriffs Dosse. com
ing up 'on two locomotives, and the
gang of 40 or SO tramps who had
chased away the trainmen from the
freight train wa were all on, and had
then fallen to on the provisions with
which the train waa loaded. Old ryq
whlakey, tinned peaches, and kega of
lgs feet are tne things rememoer
hey went for most
. Watched the Tight.
"I walked away from them and
watched the fight Some of the tramps
arot away la the dark, aome got bagged.
aome got killed. I walked to the next
station, wnicn , na a moon, ana,
therefore- waa called something city.
and next morning hired myaelf out to
a. nMMful rancher, who waa half full
of good old rya whlakey, and who put
me on a nui no mnu im u vui
for TO mllaa: 70 aolid miles for a first
day's ride In a stock-saddle: miles that
lasted long after dark, lasted, in fact,
aa long as the whiskey lasted, and then
we camped, aupperless, on the banks
of a drv creek.
"When -he woke next morning he
Mmait considerably astonished to find
me there, and while I did my best to
explain he was hard at it, thinking
things over. All he said was. "WelC
kid, you re nere, ana so we u nave to
make the beat of it. We'd better be
saddling and going; though If the sher
iffs faat to a crowd of hoodlums like
that we'll, be pretty safe for a day
or two."
"We .wera safe, aa it proved, for
exactly seven daya at the end of which
time a gang of armed men found ma
herding horses oh the banks of a dry
lake, a couple of hundred yards from
the dugout in the low mud and rock
bluffs, at the west end of the lakebed,
where my boss and the reat of his
'hands' were sleeping.
Thought of Xorse Thieves.
"I only thought that here was a
f ang of horse thieves, possibly the no
ortous gang I had heard so much of,
which had Its stamping ground some
where In that very part of the coun-
xna order to drive the horses out
minions.' i That memory includes the
first appearance of barb VI re, and the
last appearance of the buffalo aa a, mer
chantable article how many of you
know that he was finally wiped out as
'butcher's meat' In 'S2, up In tne Mussel
shell country of Montana? It includes
the first acuta phase of the long feud
between 'sheepmen' and "cowmen'; in
cludes "cattle wars' and 'Indian trou
bles'; hunting and trapping when both
were still paying Industries. It also In
cludes "riding mall "stag driving,'
prospecting ana - mining, tie chopping
and tie driving also, while the long trail
from Texas to the British Una was still
In Its glory of ; hard work and hard
rations, as " tone softly remembers.
"Roundups' of cattle wera Interspersed
with 'roundups' of outlaws. Outlawry,
in fact, was ao easy to come by that U
was a rigid rule among cowboys never
to ask the name or business of any
stranger who dismounted in camp for
hospitality, neither to Inquire Into
whence the stranger came, or why, or
whither" he was bound. Sufficient that
tbs stranger was courteous, and was
entitled to courtesy in return. ' No one
knew whose turn ft would be next, and
one can remember being outlaw and
deputy sheriff in the earns year la the
same territory.
"Seven- years of such a life, oven with
intervals for outside expeditions, nat
urally crowds one's memory with In
finite hair-breadth 'scapes, ' most -- of
which modesty forbids retelling (except
as fiction at so much per thousand)
and many others only come to memory
at odd times when soma incident some
scent or riower or chance word, or even
Yet because It waa one's earliest ae
ries of adventures, one remember more
aeas. Kevolu
out of faahlon. Oun
DOCTOR TO HAVE
ESKIMO PATIENTS
English Physician to Prac
tice in the Shadow of J
the North Pole, .
of It than of what happened In aftar
a
deal with Belgians, The vigorous ad-
years In other lands an
lions are coins; out ol
running now - belongs to. people who
try.
of that hollow, and up onto the fla.
backed as It was by a Winchester rifle
peering down
Some of the fellows offered him drinks,
and aptne offered cigara and tobacco.
,TOne offered htm a banana, and they
all fell to kissing and cuddling the
women for him to eee, till he got up
and shook his head and went Only
when he'd got round the corner he came
back and lAoked his finger at me.
'Here, you!' he said. 'You've no right
In there! Tou weren't sentenced. ou
don't belong to the crew. You're only
a stowaway! Coma out o' that. Get
down .to ship at once, you young etc,
eta, ate' t
draw Didn't Hear.
"But the crew wouldn't hear of It
They told him that if they let me go
he'd be putting to sea without them, and
be dividing ma Into watchea, and mus
tering me at eight bells, and having me
'all hands on deck' and no dog watch,
and how'd ha manage to have me as
lookout on the fos'aTe head .and taking
the wheel on the poop at the same time.
And especially very especially they
desired to be informed If he Intended
to make me draw full storm allowance
from the
if
bluff at my
ministration of the foreign enlistment
act has killed 'foreign legions, and
lastly 'King Edward the diplomat,' has
meshed, so much of the world Into trea
ties of peace and amity that one does
not know which way to turn, for a de
cent Job of the old sort. I well re
member coming home from - the South
African affair with the names of BOO
picked Irregulara and officers' full com
plement. Intending to bargain with eith
er the Chilian or Argentine minister In
London, Argentina being then on the
verge of war. Alack! The first cour
teous ambessador condoled with me to
the hilt but Tour king! King Edward,
Is Just settling the trouble without war.
It Is peace I
"And peace It seems to be. But peace
rankle In one's mind at last till one
fanls at times one must take ship some
where for somewhere, and see if some
thing won't happen to somebody, Just
to break the deadly grind of civilization.
Peace may be profitable but Is it nat
ural r
(Ipeeit! Dispatch to The Journal.)
New Westminster, B. C' June -The
first white medical man to go into the
far North with the idea of creating a
permanent practice among- the Eskimo
and Indians of those regions left Ed
monton Thursday for Fort Good Hope,
MOO miles north of the Mackenzie river.
The hardy doctor entering upon this
trip Is Dr. James F. Rymer, an English
surgeon who has practloed his profes
sion in England, the United States and
Canada for many years past - He does
not intend to return to rlvlllutloiv for
at least three yeors, and then only 'for
a orior visit.
Dr. Rymer will be the first resident
medical man In the far north, and will
have only semlsavacea for Datlenti
people who observe neither the laws of
hygiene nor health. He will practice
much further north than the limits
where treaty money is paid to the abo
rigines, making his headqaarters at Fort
Oood Hope and Fort McPherson, on tho
innge 01 tne Arctic ocean, where several
virulent forms of diseaaa and fevers
have broken out of recent years among
me natives, many or wnom gave aiea
because of the lack of proper medical
help.
Only five white people live at Fort
uooa nope, tnese including a Koman
Catholic missionary, a Hudson Bay
sioreaeeper ana nia wire, and two trap
pers and buyers for the Hlslon Nagle
Fur Tradlna- Company. Of these five
only two speak English, French being
the language in common use among the
Indians at mis point, ur. Kymer mas
tered rrtnen many years ago, ana ex
sects to become axsaualnted with the
several Indian dialects within the next
lew montns. Mo is taking with him
sufficient medicine In a concentrated
form o last about a year, and has ar-
r&ngea ror a rurtner shinment to r
forwarded to him next Anrll.
Dr. Rymer comes of an old English
meaicai ramuy. nis great grandfather,
then a surgeon in the English
caving aiacoverea a cure lor Scurvy
navy,
nearly 100 years ago. His father ana
Krandfrfther wera also medical men of
some sA ending. .
pr. Rymer is 4t years of age, and a
bachelor. He makes a hobby of pho
tography, and is also an author, of some
note, contributing to a number of Lon
don periodicals. -. - ,
Tbs married man lives 'scientifically;
he never pays a bill twice or thrice
over because he- baa loat the receipt
The bachelor, lives unscientifically. . He
ia robbed right and left; he la the prey
of every footpad that lurks behind-the
counters. . ., ;
K id n eyCu re
eOc BottleT7s3Q' Bottles
TOT JsBTBXCXBrjL
and other drug habits are positively cured bf
HAB1TINA. For ftrpodermie or Internal use.
Bampieseni to an:
ny drug habitneAy , Pixia
mail, uegular pr 12.00 per bottle
fj.rr arngrist pt by mall In plain wrappes,
alia Cham leal cw St. Xouta. Um
kMatats Brag Oe W Shirt
Vat sals to
jreruead.
"Nf IaEHAKDmI
r rXUnJMX I Use Big for ai
I tolte4m dlaeoarcMolaJB
ImMml VI trrttatioas er all
J mitiiw ( aaaeeas smi
LIBRARY VOTING CONTEST
A 1800 library given away absolutely free. An elegant library of 00
volumes and handsome golden oak eases will be given to the lodge, school,
church, club or society in Portland seeurlng the largest number of votea
Votes will be issued with paid-in-advance subscriptions to The Journal aa fol
lows: One year, 17.19. 75 a votes, six months, I8.7S, 300 votes- three
months, $1.6, IK votes; one month, 66 cents, 40 votea and
every merchant listed below will give with each 10-cent purchase one vote.
At the close of the oontest tho lodge, school, church, club or society receiv
ing the largest number of rote will be awarded the library complete, with
eases. Currant accounts when promptly paid are entitled to votea. The library
Is on exhibition In the window of the east aide office. ISO East Morrison street
Ballot boxes are located at Holaman a lewelrv store. 14 Third .-.., . wvi,.
Front drug store. 111 Grand avenue; Watts-Matthieu drug atore. 75 'Russell
vimi, wnfli mil Tom buvumi mw uvilu. inai WllQ
cnants ana get ousy wun tne votes:
the following mer-
elbow. gave me my chance of doing
something hterolc. If I were to stam
pede those Horses to the other side of
the dry bed under the feather bluffs,
that would srlve mv boss and his saven
men a chance of getting out by their
cnimair, onto tne xiat, ana to Dlow
these horse thieves to plecea So my
answer to the order was to Jam -In botn
spurs, whoop like the devil, shoot Hke
a cowDoy painting a town red, and
stanf the horses away like mad. '
"T heard some of them shooting and
shouting. "Kid! you damn fool you!'
but the bullets went over my head, and
I got my herd well up on the other
aide to meet rifles and gray faces
there, too. The whole lakebed was sur
rounded, In fact, and in 10 minutes'
tlma such of my late companions a
were still breathing were being hanged
over the low cliffs close to the dug
out, while the "leader of the attack,
none other than the sheriff, was re
quiring me to explain how the eternal,
etc., I came to be a member of the
moat notorious gang of horse thieves
between the Smoky Hill river and the
Platte. - My unmistakable British ac
cent saved me.
"It was too palpably fresh from "the
old country,' so my tale was believed.
'But, kid,' said the sheriff solemnly, 'I
sure enough did get so mad when you
made that dum fool move to get away
Instead of puttln your hands up I waa
pretty near shoo tin' at your carcass In
stead of over jour fool head, as we all
did. when we found you wouldn't throw
up.
Wild, and Woolly.
"That was a fair Introduction to the
wild and woolly weet, which Is bounded
In my memory on the south by "Wet
Horses,' meaning horses run across the
Rio Oranda from Mexico, and on the
north by horses similarly, obtained and
run across the border into 'British do
ll CO- dry goods.
elothtng and shoes.410 to SS4 East Mor
rison street.
& KOUncAJT. Jnweler. li Third
street Main S1SC.
O. X. KOPSTSATOm. Ohotosrapher.
16 Third street Pacific 1710.
XABSBJaXT VULmtiTVM fj ITOl-
AOS CO, offlos and warehouse 111-111
North Sixth street Mala Ida, A-141S.
B. X. BBAAlU OO. SDortlag
goods, lit Qrand avenue. East til.
CO XX ft ICS OO. office
111 Pine street Home A-llla, Main
TTOOAJr COAX CO., office 111 Born
side street Main 17T6, A'1T7V
BUSCa: ft OrrSB. merchant tailors,
til Stark street Psoitis 100.
? MOOS' nwi OO, cigars and news.
Sixth street
W. St run, plumbing and gas fit
ting, to? Williams avenue. East 4115.
K. A. WXUOsTV WXZTB TmOaTT
DBVO ROKI, lit arand eve. E. .
A. - M. WXXrXtZTT, grocer, lit Oread
avenue. B-1K1, East lit.
TU MOSEZi BABBBB SHOP, flnaat
shop in the city. 1 tsuttt street
MA8OVI0 TBMPXJi QBOOEBT. ISO
TamhiU. corner Park. Main till.
A-1717.
CXXOAOO KABKBT, meats. 1IT Third
street Main 411.
KOBBntB BZiBOTBZOAX CO, 111
Bast Morrison street Bast Ilia, B-Kll.
WATTS-XATTXZEU OO, druggists,
ITS Russell street East Ma,
SB. B. B. WaXOHT, dentist 1H
Washington, cornor Seventh. Main till.
AUCB BXVEB, fine millinery, 4
Washington street
ft PAaVB. wood dealers.
yard East Eighth and Main streets. East
115.
BUl"l'M-m BBBAB OO, corner
Second and Columbia streets; retail 141
Third street
HOOBB BBOB, eaat side news deal
era and confectionery, Williams avenue
and Russell street East 4701.
E-,A. KoASAXS, bicycles and sport
ing goods, Williams avenue and Knott
street East 2481.
WTT.T.TMT AYX. tTXlSILLA VAO
TOXT. umbrellas snd leather goods, (44
WUllsms- ave. C-1004
'AtXOB ft STAXT03T, piumblng and
gas fitting. ,101 Pine street
, kUBEBT. meats and fish,
110 Orsnd avenua B-ll8. Bast 411.
.eirsr8.?8."00"' tn Ru-
W-aagtot -t rrilTl1. 4"
sr. Ml. SATO.
ave.
l n n cm
- imiATi,iJ
VB.S.. y
ssaataral
dlaeoarcMjolaJamatloaa,
r auoeraiMW
mmbnut.
hlalML and boa aairlna
ltuHitrtrcLU, gest or aouoa
r "1 ,B47lratlB
. f"e saat ta alala wraapsa,
r I ' by aareaa, rBld, (at
jt ti Je. or i bottiM-ei.rt.
r a ciroalar seat aa jusssV
CMltfwdy. Vr: jSewJSjrSi
btbvbB xmwa ts faii.
Tarnnt's Xzwae sf Oabebs asd
Tee tail iImh ae aad aoeaHyaesjielat
uaorrheea.sl ttwhrtea, f Kay
te take, eoefanlea e carry, til
nan saeessahU se PtieefLa)
Rows A Martln'au lkt ' W!..
lngion su Portland, Or.! or by mall from
The Tarrant Co, 44 Hudson CT Nsw
Tork, , y. , ,-.
JWWfftJSBssssajl
W frvl' tS'- March 14, 10.
imm,,h:5l nme Dear filr: My wife
?iUA uslntea bol.
C.GeeI7o
The Well-Known
7 Reliable
CHINESE
' Root and Herb
DOCTOR
&&rt "KW.y Cure Tea" she la
PraaMent itr a .
r ; ... . : im mi., says:
, ..- .uiierea ror a long time with
ktanay trouble, nothing doing me any
good. . Three bottles of Mr. Wn TiZ
V" l cured me ao completely that I
feted"'with'Wr;act'' W " "
W. J. Van Damme
- . 1U Korrlsoa at.
Next to; Pap's Coffee House.
CHICHESTER'S PILLS
msimi lilrm -lilj.
bftm, mmmS with Sm
Take m M. B,r JSS
1 ' rimlia fch-i iiTnr
.W BY DRUGGISTS EVEmBFRE
Has made a Ufa stcdv of roots and
herbs and in that study discovered and
is giving to the world his wonderful
remedies.
Xo VCercnry, poisons or Brags Used
Xe Cures WlUiout Operation or
Without the Aid of a Knife.
He guarantees to cure Catarrh, Asth
ma, JUing, Throat Rheumatism, Mar
vousness, Nervous Debility. Stomach,
Liver, Kidney Troubles; also Lost Man
hood, Female Weakness and all Private
Dlaeasea ?, . ... i , .
A SURE. CANCER CURE
Just Received from Pekln, China Safe,
Bura and Reliable.
IF TOTJ ARE AFFLICTED DO NT DE
LAY DELAT6 ARE DANGEROUS
If you cannot call, write for symptom
blank and circular. . Inclose 4 'cents in
stamps. .- v? , :-:
CONSULTATION FREE
The a Oee wo Ohlaess KeeUolne Co,
12 la First St. Cor. Morrison, Portland,
Oresorv
Please Mention This Paper.
f OB WOMEN ONLV
Dr. Sanderson's Compound
Savin and Cotton Root Pills.
The beat and only reliable
remedy for DELATED PEH-
IDS. Cure the mnmt nhalln-
ate cases in I to 10 daya Price II per
box or three boxes IS. 00. Sold by drug-
flsts everywhere. DR. PIERCE. 181
Irst st. Portland. Phone Main liB.
barber. 141 Williams
r-KJlJnT?? wall paper and
paints. 40S Morrison st Main 1171.
AXL 115?Kt lorlst 1(0 Fifth st,
opp. Mel.r a Frank Main Till.
WOBXB, 189 arand ave. East 5S1
8VXXTEZSB PTJEZi CO Lonar or
ahort wood. B-1611; Eaa I0S1. Office
and yard Thlrtv-alxtr anH "T
vi. n. uaiABUX, .nsmltL. 26 Urand
avenue. F-.st 6C0I.
BAXXX, optician. Dr. B. J. MUls, as.
Blatant Main 1174. Ill (th st
XOBTXWI8T OUX OO, sportina
gooda 111 Id st Main 10o "w",n"
OOXAKAX XABOWABB OO, hard
ti'mi Ma-inV001 cuU,, w
. BUBSXA OABXZAOB WOBJCS, Mf ga
and repairers of carriages and w axons.
113 Burnslda Pacific 2047.
WOODLAWK UvTXBBT OO-Rough
$?7. URA, ,iahea Wort Woodlawn
1118. 417 Dekum ave.
JO XX aCXarmDX.A Cleaning and
drains: oulck work. SSU sth it
OOXiUVBXA PUS OCW Fish, craters, .
poultry, butter, eggs, eta Maitr Sf'i
A-66H. Third an! Ankenv st"
P. X. 0OXXBL& ft OO, meats. Wood
lawn 8; C-1888. 714 Union ave. north.
POBTXiAXB TEXT ft AWXIXO OO,
tents and awnings, window awnings and
porch curtains a specialty. It N. Front
X. B. XBE Real estate and Invest
ments. Room til Corbett bldg. Mai)
(860.
of rum and drink It all myaelf such
JKht-i
his
poor little Well-brought-up little boy
like me, that Knew his prayers and
aould even rattle off parts of the cate-
a chlsm, they shouldn't wonder. It waa the
rum that was their grievance. He'd
never aerved out a drop since they d
dropped out of Liverpool.
"There was more' of that, till at last
the skipper appealed to me as a good
boy, who'd been well brought up, to
come out of that evil crowd, but one of
the women caught bold - of me and they
an. Dundiea me out or stgnt in one cor
. net. and the skipper went away.
"There were some dava of that -and
then the skipper got the vice-consul' on
tne jod, ana iney got an oraer, ana
- some soldiers cropped tip from some
where, and wa were all turned out and
marched down to the brig and bundled
, mbpafa, the captain having te show the
rum puncneon 1 nrst ana nana tne Key
of it over to the first mate, with a prom
ise that he must use It at proper times
ana seasons. ; .- Kut in . vinn-ftnnaiii
'wouldn't let me go. He sent me home
In the first ship that called, so I had
.to stow away again. -1-
, . Xevea Missed Ohanoe.
"Please remember that I'd never
missed a chance of inquiring after pi
rates, and where they, were still to be
found. So when at last I could no
longer burke the sorrowful fact that
'pirates were Wf barring, it might be,
some pig-tailed Chinaman -up God-forgotten
creeks of Asia why I had to
give ' up the sea. I . had no time to
waste on a sea that had no pirates,
though even In my ahort experience I'd
seen a mutiny break out and seen It
stamped out .There was still the sec
ond string of ror. desires. There was
etlll America, where one could 'hunt
buffalo and kill Indiana' That's how
I went to America.
"First thing I did In America, though,
was to take to running with the 'dock
-raja' in Boston, and when one of them
Atnlalnjkri that r1a lllirlA In Na OrlMn.
had A fine business there, and would
give us A good Job If we got there
well, we borrowed'i a cat-rigged boat
and started for New Orleana. .We could
easily send the boat back by the next
summer. I was 'captain' and the other
fellow was "owner." -,..;
"It waa in the fall, Indian summer,
and we looked over all the cat-rigs in
the harbor before deciding which we'd
take. v. Of course we chose the one that
was Too big for us. but we balanced
that by shipping another boy at wages
to be paid by .the other' fellow's uncle
In New Orleans.. I suppose4 you know
what - Hatteras ' is tn bad weather T
That's' where we were found,- double-
feefed, 'and blood on every knot- baling
Ike biases, and mad aa hatters at being
WE CURE MEN
. Our Cures Are Thorough and Permanent
ME
NO EXPERIMENTS! NO FAILURES
OUR GUARANTEE NO PAY UNLESS CURED
NWhen Yon Need the Services of a Doctor, Con
sult One of Wide ExDerience.
Wit ARE Just now completing our TWENTIETH year as specialists In
MEN'S DISEASES. If we accept your case for treatment a curs la but, mat
ter of reasonable time. Each and every patient receives skillful, scientific and
xpert treatment and he sees and knows from the beginning of treatment that
"he Is getting the BEST medical attention Obtainable,
,' Our entire time and practice Is devoted to the cure of BLOOD POISON,
VARICOCELE. ' STRICTURE, LOST VITALITY. HYDROCELE, PILES, FIS
TULA, DISEASES OF THE KIDNEYS, BLADDER AND PROSTATE GLAND,
CONTRACTED DISORDERS, WEAKNESS AND ALL DISEASES COMMON TO
MEN, ' T . - t ' t
OUR METHODS are up-to-date, and are Indorsed by the highest medical au
thorities of Europe and America. Hence, our success In the treatment of men's
diseases, '
The mailable Specialists.
Our Physicians Are All li
censed to Praetloe Kedielne
la the State of Oregon.
us winvouo fwVthavouaT&S Tf"1 7"" kn" trl ,B
you ouid eveX hes?tata il tithY r.Jir" wii,?.t2? treublesj jroud tell to your closest friend or that
JeenWwJth mueiUh.dior ISifiS SSigSSP 1 J ?lfAtB ad CONFIDENTIAL as they, have
make money.
COVSULTATTON AND ADVIPE wnicm e-. u . . a. .... .
awav With , Kmh tkt v,.- K.t Cir. ..X.Vi! " . v wmivai fvi ia our oirico. von run
t te?ty lfyouVt7nnKo?kcihlh convenient of the pa-
es cured at noma Meai
II.S0 a coursa, OFFICE
nr It all AananAm imnn h ii,.ii. i.T. r I - " e caroiui m selecting a oootor to treat you,
i?irKivnrf9m..JKl'Jv''V to to Aether you get the euro you seek- WE FULFILL ALL
OUR PROMISES and never hold out false hop. Tou need, health and atrana-th' rir. t- tiilrt:
tlJnY it youVt2nno? CALt'rftl1 t ,eOUR TERMS are reasonable and made fo ault hi
" lit".: CALU write for self-examination blank and free book. Many cases
I HOCRB- 9 ad Vn" i0'0 'or Prl7cr.' PatlentsT f ronT iU6Qtirili
ORE60W5I12EBICAL
kr tsrVaa
m& Morrison Stn Bet. Fourth & Fifth
PORTL.AIND, ' OREGON '
. t : . .
MY
years
diseases,
. SPECIALTY
MEN'S DISEASES
There Js no ailment peculiar to men that I cannot cure. For twenty-five jfSTT..
s I have devoted mv entire time and enM-cv tn th fratm.n t .M, r
My methods have been perfected by actual experience, with a thoroughly
theoretical knowledge, as a basis. I am the only physician thoroughly and
permanently curing those functional derangements commonly classed as
"Weakness," and my success in overcoming such cases has placed me fore
most among specialists treating men's diseases, and has brought me the
largest practice of its kind in the west.
7 f
My Fee for a Thorough sod Lasting
Core of Any Aliment Is Only . .
10
In Any
Uncomplicated
Cast
Dm. TATIOI,
The Tioartlng- SjpedaUst
I Never Disappoint or Mislead My Patients, and
My Cures are Permanent
i
I have treated hundreds of men who have long suffered a gradual decline of nhyelcal and mental an era- as a ra.
This success is due to several things.
or tne cnier aisoraer. juy success in curing difficult cases of lone- stanrfina- h. m.. n-.
It is due to the original, distinctive and thoroughly
treating: men's diseases.
scientific methods of treatment I employ.
To those in doubt as to their true conditio
lect. I offer free consultation and
few that have reached an incurable
one. i treat curable casea only,
their true condition, and who wieh to avoid the serious results that may follow
nC, Y,C ?th,r, at m7 ofr'ce or through correspondence. If your oaae Is one o
"i,-1!!-11 no$ i00?1 11 for tmnt, nor wlU I urge my services upon
, and ours au cases I treat.
Scientific Treatment for Weakness"
neg-
ot the
upon any
Dosing the system with Dowerful stimulants and tonics In
an effort to restore functional vigor can have but one
final result, the condition ia rendered worse than before.
Few doctors know of any other method than stomach drug
ging, and when this does no good, they say: "There is no
cure for Weakness." I have often made strong statements
to the effect that the ailment must be thoroughly under
stood before it could be remedied. I have proved It be
yond dispute that so-called "Weakness" is merely an Indi
cation of the existence of a low form of inflammation in
the Prostate Gland, which Is usually aggravated and made
worse br stimulating medicine, alectrlcltr or mr other
agent mat excires temporary activity, ine prostata is a
nerve center and therefore very sensitive to treatment
the right kind quickly helps, while the wrong kind oaa
cause great harm and sometimes irreparable damage.
I employ the only scientific and .full effective treatment
for "Weakness." which is almost entirely local, by which
I mean that the medication la applied directly to parts.
Medicines containing poisons are entirely excluded. I ob
tain the most desirable results in every case undertaken,
and the ours is permanent and complete.
THE DR. TAYLOR CO.
Varicocele
I euro any case that I aeeept in on week's tlma My
treatment Is a palnJsaa one, and In most Instincts the
patient need not be detained a slngls day from bual
nees. There Is no doubt or guesswork, but absolute
certainty of a thorough and lasting oure, with complete
return to that degree of health and vigor that existed
before the disease began.
Contracted Disorders
Every case of Contracted Disease X treat Is cured thor
oughly. My patients have no relapsea When I pro
nounce a case cured there Is not a particle of Infection
or inflammation remaining and there Isn't the slightest
danger that the disease will return in Its original form
r work its way into the general system. Boms con
tracted direases are leas serious than others, but none
are too trivial to warrant uncertain methods of treat
ment. I especially solicit those cases that other doc
tors have been unable to cure. f
MT OFFICES ABB OPEN EVERT DAT FROM t
A. M. TO P. M. SUNDAYS, 10 TO J ONLT,
Cor. Smcomd and. Morrison St. '
Prlvato Entrance 33 1 1-2 Morrison St
Portland, Oregon
aBg8ggggaaagamgggggggaHa8MKBna1g
vn ir iTt irhnn a r iprn
NO y, UNLESS CURED
sax xsiawulfftnns re n cxstaiv to bs to otto
IF CSSI!l!rt-2 JCJILC.3?. no standing professionally. BOW OAJT TOW XX-
" nor TO a cvaxpi This instlrottoa has fenll up its splendid praetloe more toy the .
TO
rree-advertlBlng given n vy Its. PEBPSOT1.T lATIgrtSS fATXXVTS. who have leoetved
the sanaflt of its modern, sdeatino and logltlmata methods, than la aay other way. If yon
are not a perfect soaa oms to aa lant It worth the little time It will take when you are
OZBTAXH that you t benefit of XOXTE8T, tVUTCXUsB physicians t A eonsaltsx
tloa sosts you nothing SXOSPT your own time. t
Our
Fee
$145.00
BstahUshed 8 Tears In Fortlaael
Consultation Free
We Will Treat Any Simple TTnoom-
plloatea aiuneni lor mojoo. ,
X know the disease and Weaknesses of men like an open book. I have been curinr them for yeara v hava alvan
my life to It, and thousands upon thousands of men, restored to VIGOROUS VITAUTT, are) today living nionTS
, ucv5t. x B8vr nuia out iai mi. i uwTr ibh a case l cannot cure
1 ihvf?,0th5TOvJltlJJ1'll,of aU th diseases of men of VARICOCELE, 8TRICTTJRE, TONTAaiOUS
BLOOD POISON, HTDROCELE, NERVOUS DEBILITY. GENERAL WEAKNESS, LOSS OF VITALITY and havo
cured so many cases that If there Is a cure for YOUR disease you will find It here. When I take a eaio there la
no such thing as fallura I CHARGE NOTHING FOR CONSULTATION, and my knowledge, skill and iexoerienoe '
?hr: Vnr.T. issnW HOW and 1 CAX CURIi YOU
Strictnre TL-Wj "affinW ruSi:
mSZJSftm all'tlms'tt o'rna! r ,0U,," My Ur " 'imPl" "Ur" nd rmnmt- J aU obstrotor!J
BlOOd POlSOa ? 1!??? tha system
Tu'Sow aTerVlureln'aTSag0 V n 'hJtl-B. Plns In tK
VariCOCale ?.C??.y.t,c,1 ,1u,cklyi wlt.h? "p ntlon front bustnesa MT METHOD
wtvvwwq ja the safest as' well as the most certain and satisfactory. . .,
T havs cured thousands of cases of Lost Vitality, Physical Debility, Dear
. . r ... v . w u. MMuii jt . ,,, . 1 rat r . ,,,,
development, tux iiu,rHQD makes a oulck. permanent and radical cure, without dlannmfnrt
and sores tn the
chronlo ulcers or
tehee
legs.
I euro all diseases of a private nature) about which moat peopi, dislike to consult thslr
family doctor, such as discharges, drains, eruptions and all contracted troublea I
ia ,
If
nave curea woiisaiia. w caaaa or iost vitality, ITiysioal "Debility, Despondency,
Pimplea. Lose of Energy. Failing Memory, Palpitation of the Heart anT Stunted
mjaksaat si mi lr lr nArmsinAnt mnA raarif r I onvsa Mtlfk... ai.ai..t ji . . .
v.. , -w r w . vwi utuvuiu.vrfc ur ufjianLioii irom
Private Diseases
curs them quickly.
PrOStatlC TrOIlbleS . 4 ,Bo?B 2f n,otabl accesses ot my professional eai-eer havs been In the rrt.
iT T , . . -c caJ cur of enlarged and Inflamed oondltlona cf the Prostate Gland. Mv trent-
meht acts directly, reducing Inflammation and Irritation; Jt-heats the gland, remove thobstrucUon ami as 'ah
Uahes free passage of tha natural secretions, without pain or discomforiT. u
" Writs If yotr cannot calL -J An correspondence sacredly; confidential. & fcTv- .
. HOUR a. m. to S p.m.; sv'enlngs, 1 to t:30; Sundays,1 a. m. to If noon. .
: - V coinei co ajto taxxxu bTbegtb, rosrun. onxaox.
' 4 - ' a ' - , - . -.
! I
, i
fi
'v- '