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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (July 15, 1908)
THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, WEDNESDAY EVENING, JULY 15, 1008. ToW Topics TONIGHT'S AMUSpiKXTS. trrio "Th Tldoof Life" Grand Vaudeville iim uaka Concert and "A Night In Venice' W, A. Hessian, proprietor of a livery table at 123 Union avenue, says that at no time haa hla brother, C. D. Hes sian, ever had an Interest In the livery bualneaa on the east aide. Some tlmo aao, however, Mr. Hitlan waa takun alck and C. I). Hessian, the brother, took charge of iho bualneaa, remaining In command for IS months. Injrinjr all of that time, according to W. A. Hea slnn. no accounting was made lo the proprietor. When an accounting was HHki-il for by W. A. HoMHlan. hla broth er countered with a clalim.u $1,0H0 for wapes. It wan estimated that he hu.l taken In $2,4S during hla 13 montlis of management. The matter waa taki'n Into court and N. A. f'cary wna ap pointed as a referee In the caao by Judge O'Uay. Peary decided that C. 1. lleHKlan waa entitled to $447. lie objected to the retiort of the referc and the caae was argued over again before Judge O'Day. who haa taken It under advisement. held up at Hancock and Larrabee streets early Tuesday morning. He waa re lieved of a watch and 13 by hla two as sailants. When William Cornfoot en tered hla machine shop at 2tk Alblna ave nue yesterday he found a number of calipers and other loola mlaalng. The detectives canned the two casta, and are working on a clue of two moo who ara believed to have left the city early yeaterduy. Members of the Portland Ad club are receiving Invitation to pay a "get acquainted'' visit to Albany and Its com mercial club next Tuesday. The Invita tions are the reault of the activity of Hury l. Dnsent. formerly a resident of Portland, still a member of the local ad club and now manager and booster of the Albany Commercial club. If 26 or more will agree to goJ.he sutcpss of the plan will be assured. This number will assure a special car and a special rate. Lewis M. Head, Kred Muller and James M. Reeves, comprising a com mittee of the culm en, are sending out postals to learn how many will make the trip. Leaving Portland at 8:16 a. m., the train will arrive In Albany 88 minutes after noon. The return trip would begin at 8:15 P. m., bringing the excursionists back to Portland shortly before midnight. This will give a long afternoon In which to Bee Albany and to get acquainted. Mayor Ian and members of the city council have been Invited to take a streetcar ride with ..rimata nt i-oruana Hallway, Light A Power com Pny tomorrow ever the atreeta for wnicn me company has aaked permis sion to lay tracks. There are a great many of these atreeta and the company IB dealrOUa of tlllltlnir rlnan llm trarlll before the streets are payed. It Is the Intention of the company to ask for ii blanket franchise for tha atraaim Inter Many of the members of the council have algnlfled their Intention of making the trip. Court Webfoot Nn 4. TTnraatera nf AmerloX, will hold their annual plcnlo next Sunday at Honnovllle. A special train will leave the union denot at S o'clock. Courts from Vancouver and Oregon City will Join their brothers here and swoll the ranks of the pic nickers. Amusements of all kinds and dancing In the evening are promised to mone wno attend. One of the beat bands In the northwest haa been en gaged to furnish mustc for the dance. Sffll FOR COUNTY To urge the deopenlng of the Willam ette river so that vesaols of ordinary draught can make Mllwaukle and Sell wood, Is the object of a meeting of the South End Improvement club whtcli will be held tomorrow evening In Web er's hall. The cost of doing thla will exceed $75,000. The club will also ap point u committee to uuk thu federated cluba of the east Ride to work for tha Improvement of the county rond. This needs oiling to,keop the dual down. County Clerk Fields Urges Creation of State Audit or's OfficeWhole State Bewildered by Methods of peeping Records. Articles lost and found on the street cars In the last few days: Twelve um brellaa, one suit of men's underwear, one waist, one package stockings, one fishing rod, one scenic glass, three satchels, two pair 'shoes, two blue rrtnta, four lunch boxes, one basket, wo small suit cases, three grips, one check, Ave purses, one glove, one pair classes, one veil, one roll music, two handbags, one bottle, one coat, one shawl, one cartridge bolt, one knife, three pair gloves, one lunch basket, one package clothes, one shirt, Ave packaptes. one kev. Call at the lost article of O. W. P. station, cor Alder streets. Be careful that nohod- sells you this automobile aa a bargain. For no matter who Is In It the occupant will bo ar rested and have an unpleasant time tell ing how It happened. The chief of po lice of Oakland, Cat., has notified the Portland police to be on the lookout for a tourist auto bearing California Np. 9975. It Is believed the driver of the machine, which was supposedly stolen, Is trying to make his way to Seattle. room First and A party of civil engineers Inspected the completed bridge of the north bank road across the Columbia river yester day afternoon, under the escort of B. L. Crosby, engineer In charge of con struction. They went down the Wlllam ette river on the steamer John McCrnh en, and stopped at the Portland dry dock, and viewed other projects, the proceeded to the big bridge. Mr. Crosh explained the working of the draw span and gavo the visitors a ride by loco motive and cr part of the way ovr- the bridge. The party also viewed th operation of the Port of Portland dredt? Columbia, which is. tied up opposit the Portland Flouring mills. C. H. Marsh, 88 North Twenty-second, is the latest victim of the room sneak. This burglar, like Williams and Ferfeu aon, the most daring daylight robbers the city ever saw, calmly walks Into u house in the afternoon and helps him self. Between the hours of 2 and 6 yes terday afternoon the house was entered anu mining stock, a grip, a koduk and several other articles taken. A skele ton key waa evidently used. One uniform and general system of bookkeeping, recording and office con duct and one general head to ov.ersee the offices of the county clerks, record ers and auditors of the entire state Is the dream of County Clerk Frank S. Fields of Multnomah county. Led by his experience and his long struggle with archaic methods and uu systematic means of keeping the rec orda of a county which has developed into a perfect and ofUerly office under his administration. Mr. Fields has come to the conclusion that the state nf Drecon aa a whole needs to have a ,11,111111 GIRL III JOUL RACE Miss Olive E. Williams One of Latest to Enter Schol arship Contest. Tpnight at 8 o'clock the Hotel Hey ser Roof Garden will be formally opened. Music will be furnished by the Italian orchestra. From the roof garden a magnificent view of river and city can be had. L.e garden will be lighted by electric Japanese lanterns and very prettily decorated by a pro fusion of flowers and plants. There la no place In tiie city where a more enjoy able evenlig can be spent. Mrs. Sophia PreFtonv gonlnn, died at daughter. Mrs. tenbein avenue, Monday t the rtsjteonc R. C. BojiPsr, a native ore once of he 724 Oan night, folio lng a four months Illness. She was born December 25, 1849 at Seappoose and will be burled there In the family bnrytng ground at 9:30 tomorrow (Thursday) morning. Mrs. Preston was the daughter of John Bpence. who was In the employ of th Hudson Bav company when that company still held sway over Oregon. She Is survived by two daughters. Mrs. Bouser and Miss Averllla Preston, both residents of Port land. Joseph A. Hughes, who served as coroner of Multnomah county from 1892 to 1894, died at his residence. 450 Turn- hill street. Tuesday morning, after long Illness. Mr. Hughes was a native of Dublin, Ireland, CI years of age. and had been n resident of Portland for SO years. In his early life in Portland he served as n letter-carrier, later enter lng the undertaking business. He was a member of the Kntarhts of Columbus and the lodge nf-Klks-' The funeral will be held Friday morning at S o'clock from the Cathedral, Fifteenth and Davis streets. at Sperd your vacation and Sundays the Hotc! Estacada, summer resort or the unper Clackamas river; 12 per day $10 pr-r week: Sunday dinner 50 cents Good trout fishing. Rnllway fare, week diva $1.35; week-end, good from Satur day noon until Monday morning, $1 round trip. Sunday excursions, 75 cents round trip. Tickets must be obtained In order to receive benefit of reduced rates. On tale In waiting room. First and AHor streets. Trains leave 7:15, 9:15. 11:15 a, m.; 1:16, S:45, 6:15. 7:25 p. m. Job Gilpin and Louis Kohlhagen of Roseburg, indicted by th last federal grand Jury on a charge of having filed on land which had already bcn proved upon as mining claims, filed demur rers to the indictments In the United States district court this morning on tho grounds that the evidence is not sufficient. They ask that the Indict ments be dismissed. Both men nr. out on bond. Their trials will not he heard until the fall term of the fed eral court. Dr. C. B. Brown and wife have sold, through the agency of Devlin & Flr baugh, their Interest in the Barton ho tel at Thirteenth and Alder streets, to . M. oewara. an experienced hotI rnan, who will spend several thousand dollars remodelling and refurnishing it. Consideration, $6,000. John P. Shillock, a well-known at torney of the city who for the past three years has been connected with John Logan In the Mohawk building In the practice of law, has separated from Mr. Logan and established an offlco alone in the Gerlinger building. Mr. Shillock Is well known as a lawyer In the city, standing high in the esteem of his associates of the bar. The big fill on East Stark street caved In last night again for a dis tance of 60 feet from Grand avenue. The cavein did not. undermine the new car tracks but the edges of the elide extended to the rails. The work was almost ready to be turned over to the city when the cavein took place. A balance of $85,784 Is shown to be on hand by the eighth semi-annual re port of Martin Winch, executor of tha estate of Amanda W. Keed. During the last six monins me receipts amounted to $280,670, while the disbursements ag gregated J231.142T The previous balance waa $36,236 on January 1. . Water through hose for sprinkling yards or sidewalks or washing porches or windows must be paid for In advance and used only between the hours of 5 and 8 a. m. and 6 and 9 p. m. it must not be used for sprinkling streets. If used contrary to these rules or waste fully It will be shut off. A horseshoe pin containing 19 dla- i monds, worth $450, was stolen from the Golden West hotel. Seventh and Everett, Monday night, and Manager Allen, the owner of the pin, has reported his loss to the police. Chautauqua. Trains direct to Glad stone Park, 25 cents round trip. Take Oregon City cars, leave First and Alder streets every 80 minutes, on the hour nd half hour. Tickets must be cur- chased on sale In waiting room. Steamer Jesse Harktns. for fs. Camas, Washousal and way landings, dallv ex. cept Sunday. Leaves Washington street dock at 2 p. m. Advertising school tonlKht from f to 9v Monroe Advertising Company, 43 Hamilton building. definite system of keeping Its reooras and transacting Its office business for the eood of the state. In accordance with this Idea he believes that the of fice of state auditor should be created and that the official should be given the taBlr of Installing a definite system of office-keeping throughout the state. One system of record -keeping, one sort of books and records and strict compli ance with the rules of the new office would do wonders In adding to the ef fectiveness of the public service ac cording to the experience of Mr. Fields. Too Mahy Systems. At the present time there are Just about as many systems of keeping county records and maintaining puDilo offices In Oregon as there are counties In the state. Beginning with the crea tion of the different counties each first administration set up a policy or office procedure in accordance with its own Ideas. As a result nearly every county has a different system of keeping the flies of Its documents of record, each set of county books Is different and out of It all there is a vast and unsolvable tangle. An official of one county, an attorney or a citizen seeking Information of the officials of another county, is at a loss how to proceed unless tie Knows tne system of keeping the records of that county. In many instances efforts to find documents or Importance have been almost futile in some of the counties, it being necessary to paw through a basement or an attic fuU of old records before the information could be dis covered because of the lack ofc filing systems, of Indexing and of fcenoral care. The same chaotic condition ex ists In regard to other branches of county work here and there over tho state. Confusion Results. This cpnditlon results In much con fusion In the transaction of business between the different counties of the state and is detrimental tq economical and efficleni. administration of tho pub lic business. It is to do away with this condition that Mr. Fieida is considering the drafting of a bill to be presented before the next legislature providing for one uniform method of transacting countv business throughout the state. In general outline Mr Fields would have the office of state auditor created, whioh nfrielal would have the eeneral oversight of all countv offices. This official would put into force one uniform system of office record-keeping and of-1 nee procedure. Official documents, in struments and forms of all kind would be made uniform, the system of filing, recording and Indexing' would be the same, the books In use would be the same and. In effect, every clerk's, re corder's or auditor's office in the state would transact its business In the same manner. Duties of Auditor. It would be tho duty of the state auditor to Inspect the offices through out the different counties and see to It that they followed the law; that the re ports made by them were correct, their accounts straight and everything throughout the state in shipshape con dition at all times. Mr. Fields Is making a study of the subject preparatory to drafting a bill for submission to the next legislature and expects to have It ready by the time that body convenes. He will work for Its passage and hopes that the leg islature will agree with him in the necessity for such a piece of legislation. Miss Olive E. Williams of Monmouth, a pretty and bright contestant will prove ' a formidable on for other workers in Tha Journal's third annual scholarship contest. Although he didn't begin at the beginning she tood eighth on te list when the last ballot was taken. Miss Williams was born In 1886 on a farm not far from Monmouth, and lived there with her parents and brothers and sisters un 111 me death nf her fmhur in lani men the family mnvl tn Tn1inanln or where Olive attended the publlo bkuui, wuiiB ner mumer supported in lamuy. .nut it seems that the young wna io do aeprivea or mat great i treasure, a moiner s love, for three years ago Mrs. Williams died, leaving Ivn hrtua ui.i , n . -., i - i daughter. Then Olive was thrown upon the world to mako her own way. This uu naa aone very euccessfully In he genus mua way. she supported he ?e,JL ""Independence and attended the mgri ecnooi mere until she finished two years ago. That summer she lived Monmouth and attended the Oregon Btate uiiooj, preparing ror tne ex aminations In August which she passed successfully and obtained her third grade certificate. She taught school it Ballston that winter and the following summer took up work In Illustrating Wl fn f n A Tnt-ArtAlAto! . " . ""niinuuum iorresponaence SOllOOl. MISS Ollva la sirv ,ts such work and has received commenda tions irom me airector of that Innll tute and others. Miss Williams carried On Jier Work With that ahnnl .v,r doing other work for her expenses. Last wimoi na BKain taugnt scool at Ball iuii, ur. ana mis summer has again v-i.il uu Bueuitu worn, ror a rew weeks at the O. S. N. 8., preparing for the onuiiiiuons in August, ror rirst grade certificate. Olive has shown her ability as a contestant bv aettlnir to wnrlc right away. She haa gone out on tho rurai routes rrom Monmouth, Alrllc Suver, Falls City and so has let all ner irienas ana relatives In that se CURES' RHEUMATISM Holden's Rheumatic Cure Per bottle. per bottle. us rsTTxajTAi. bsmxst ros. RHEUMATISM n xts wtAwr pobks. frt rift Sciatica Neuralgia Nervousness Sleeplessness Nervous Headaches Neuralglo Headache Nervus Dyspepsia Nervous Affections TRADE SUPPLIED BT A.W.AHcn&Co. Wholesale and Retail Druggists. 16th & Marshall Sts., Portland, Or. PACIFIC COAST AGENTS. lion know that she Is In The Journal's educational contest Olive will have a hard time to go to school and canvaas too, but she la a worker and one that will not oult for any little thing. Hhs Is In the con- iesi to win a scholarship and she. will work hard and It won t be her fault If she does not win. Mr. Itutler, the theasurer of the O 8. N. B. has promised Mlas Williams to help her and success meets this young lady on every hand. Miss Williams has friends and rel atives all over the Willamette valley and her sweet and winning ways will secure her friends and votes wherever she goes. PICKED OUT RIGHT 8F0T FOR BUILDING J. 8. Hlekey of Nampa, Idaho, who promoted the railroad which was built into Dolse years ago. Is at the lloto) Portland, having Just come from Sea- viow. Wash., where he haa a summer cottage. Mr. Hlekey U now retired. having mining Interests In Montana and othef properties In the northwest Mr lrinkev waa formerly superintend ent of the Oregon Short Line, being with the road XI years, l-ater n wn who Marcus Daly In the Anaconda mining It was while with the railroad that Mr. lllckey conceived the Idea of build ing a branch line from Nampa to Ilolsn Hh organised a private company, and the line waa completed In 1S87. It wm operated two years successfully, and then was sold to the Oregon Short Lin officials. In the early days when there wain t nvrhlnv but a water tank at Nampa. Mr. Hlekey took up a homestead. His property Is now almost in the center of the city, and one of the flrmat tracts in Nampa, a town of nearly 6,000 Inhab itants. Kngland owns ! per cent of the mileage of submarine cables, the United States oomlng next with 18 per cent. and France next with per cent. i . i J LilJ . V i-.JJU Marquam Thtntrt Phona Mala . A-101O, TONIGHT AT I II O'CLOCK. T. DABTXBI. mWUT Supported by . JUrXUrE MAT AMD POX.X.AES IN THE SPOILERS THE GRAND VaadevUle de Lnxt TRX This Week KITA-UMOV natrn The Famous European Novelty Aorobata IOII1I ft BUM, 0XI.BIHI ft omowxax, AJfOZXO TOVM, AVTA 1UOI1M, ALBXAltDBB ft SJCOTT. reap BApm, amAXDAioorB. 44V4444 4)4444444) j MH SI TT STfe. .rV s. a. fSMM tUX IKO FAINLC& DENTAL PARLORS WASHINGTON STREET, CORNER FIFTH NO PAIN Mo More Fear of the Dental Chair NO PAIN "NOR A HIGH DENTAL BILL" Special Rates All This Month Full set, that fit... $5.00 Gold Crowns. 22k. 83.50 Bridge Teeth, 22k.S3.50 tjoia i-unngs jpx.wv Silver Fillings 50f T WHY PAY MORE? If you are nervous or have heart trouble, the Electro Painless System will do the work when others fail. All Work Warranted Ten L.YRIP TMEATRQ Both Phonos ICala 468fl Home, 1094k TV ek Commencing- Monday, J air 13, Seventh week of the famous Bloakalu Atwood stock Company in the sensa tional mwlodrama, "IHB TIDE or un," One of the Season's Bis; Eventa, Mattnees i uesiiav. Thursday. Ratu. day, Sunday; prices 10c. 30o and 10c; uvri y ovcuiiiK a i o.ou, prica iuo ana iugl Next Week "The Player." JNICRELUDIOIN 130 8XXTX. Change ILvcry Day Alt GOOD UBXBOTS. T33K Bank Reference Open Evenings and Sundays Years Lady Attendant ELECTRO DENTAL PARLORS Corner Fifth and Washington, Across From Perkins Hotel I 444444444)44444444 ROOF GARDEN f OF THE J HOTEL, HEYSER EAST THIRD AND BURNSIDE $ C. M. Bennett, Manager J Formally opened tonight at 8 o'clock. Music by the Italian or- $ chestra. .Splendid view of river and city. An appropriate place to spend an enjoyable evening. Take any north and south car and ' transfer to East Burnside. 444444V444444444r444)444 - Tonight and Every Night This Weak la the Bummer Alrdome tha Beautiful Musical Fantasy. "A HXOKT DT TBHXGH." Musical Novelties Under tha Dtrevtto of William G. Stellman. "MI COWBOY tiADT" "O'SAN" "BUMMER TIMET "WILLY UM WIL80N" Dancina- Rlnk. Glrl. And the Curtis Cool Skatina- In Bathing Classes In Pavilion. Los Angeles vs. Portland BECXBATIOIT VASX, CO AVOSBJ ABTO 84TX STS. CTTXY 14, IS, 16, 17, 18, It. Games begin week day at 3:30 p. m.. bunday, 2:30 p. m. Admission fe Bleachers. children, bleachers, 10c: grandstand, Uo. XtASEES' SAT nUSAY. Boys under 13 fro to bleacher Wednesday. ANDREWS ache PLUGS top toothache Instantly, also obrlate It dj filling the cavttiM, xdudlnf rood. etc.. wnleh accumulates, deoom- potwt, rorms aa aoia ana iacinuitee a car. Ther temporarily FIIX and PRld 6 EB VIC the teeth prior to the insert ka of permanent filling. Can be tnearted with toothpick and removed whan de al red, due unjiae so-oauea tocmaon g-umfl and waxes, they do not melts come out, mix with the food and opeeo etornoch. Huperior m a toothache rerne- drno burn.no blistw. About Mr-pi ng-r" In a bottle. 10c atdrovtfiataorhymail. , 444444)4)4)44444444 1243-Danf PLACE CHICAGO, III. to T. P. Wise, dentist, removed to S?H Washington street, cor. Sixth. Main 8069 Woman's Exchange. 133 Tenth street. unch 11:30 to 2; business men's lunch. D. Chambers A Son. opticians. Morrison street, corner of Sixth. 321 W. A. TT' I - - n .a - ! t 1 . . i. , , ton Rim n . n . inirr, uuiujbh dentists. Third and Washington. Berger, signs, show cards. 384 Yamhill. Journal want nds. lo a word. CONCERT TONIGHT H0LLADAY PARK Salem Chrrr Fair xrhrht Trains Portland Yia Oregon Electric The widely advertised cherry fair takes place at Salem on Thursday, Fri day and Saturday of this week and the Oregon Electric railway has ar ranged for a special night train to leave Salem at 10:80 p. m. on each, of these (Jays, running through to Portland and stoDning at all between stations. Re (lured rate tickets will be good on these trains. Schilling's Best is sold in packages only, never in bulk. Your grocer returns roar money if yoo don't like it: we par him. STR0NC SULPHURIC ACIDS I Fumlng-Monohydrate66 Deg. Be. I Nitric and Hydrochloric Acids T Xtlivred in tank our, dmpiu or carboys. ! Peyton Chemical Comp'y I I MXLLS BtXILDlZTO SAW YBANCISOO. ! t TEETH Money A Perfumed Luxury for tha Ba& As tavigoreting at s Sea Bath, At Softeni Hard water. 23 Baths 25 cents. BATHASWEET RICE POWDER Vegetable and AnUwptlcallr Pare. Stratara ud OihAbs. Soitft Babr Povda HlllUI W udFuenwdcr. wnita or pine Two men combined robhery of a ma chine ehop with hlahwav robbery Mon day night, and both have, apparently miwe ffooo tneir escape trom tho clt tv tnpether with their plunder. H. li Ornves. IlvInK at the Alblna hotel, was Slgnor DeCaprlo's band will play at olladay park this evening, (he concert to begin the Trail program lit There is a cake of Ivory S$ap in your bath room; or, at all events, there ought to be. But if you use it only for the bath, you are not getting all the good out of it you should. Use it for the toilet as well as for the bathj and for fine t laundry pur poses, too. , Ivory Soap 99 J Per Cent. Pure at 8 p. In full: arch "Trailing , Bpauldlng Overture "Tanrredl" Hosslni Waltz "The Flower of Italy" De Stefanl Selection 'The Sho Gun" Iauders Reverie "The Roaes' Honeymoon"... Bratton Intermission. Pelectlnn "i. O. V " J-hnion I.a Palonte Vradio "Serpents' Panee" Buocalar: Pararhrase "Masaa s in the Cold. Cold Qround" Clappe March "Pixie Belles" Seymour A. De Caprlo. Director. Grand Concert y the Great Soloist FRED BUTLER Assisted by Mlas Lawler, Miss Shea Mr. Belcher and Mr. Coursen, The While Temple Twelfth and Taylor Streets, nn ;i Friday Night, Joly 17Ih TICKETS FIFTY CENTS 95c for men's 31.60 canvas shoen. leather soles, all sties, "dc fnr women's 31.60 canvas oxfnrls, all sixes. Sample Shoe Store company, corner First and Madison. Also on Morrison between Front and First. Reserved seats on sale at Sherman Clay'i corner Sixth and Morrlaon. STEVENS UXAFRAID OF LIBEL THREATS Edmund Burke, a Los Anreles attor ney mentioned In "Looters of the Pub lic remain." In connection with other i Callfornlena as being mixed up in cer- tain land deals. nd who was altered to j have acted as tne briber of Blnger I Hermann, has threatened to see Horace i Ptevena of Portland for criminal libel. Stevena collaborated In writing the book with 8 A. IV Puter. one of the land fraud defendants wbo was con victed. Mr. Stevenssavs he Is not worried In the lenst. He mvi be has the "dor." and knowp whereof he write. Mr. 8t en. wired to a Los Angle aewspaper Uet evening that if a warrant for his arreet Is Issued he will waive all right to relt extradition and proceed j0 ixxt Angeles at once to stand trial. Great ta Watcfas. iSe lvertisvirter.t of Btandarl Jew elry, atorw ea 3ag rival F. W. Bastes and Company invite yonr inquiries for PRINTING r Ktln 16 I Home 1 16 1163 First and Oak ft Com and have free examination. WE EXTRACT TEETH FREfi: SIL. VER FILLINGS, S8o UP; GOLD FILL INGS, 75c UP; BET OF TEETH. 14.00: SPLENDID SET, SAOO; GOLD CROWNS. .B0 TO 18.00. All work guaranteed for ten years. Lady attendant alwavs t resent. An work don absolutely without pala by specialists of from 11 ta SO rure ax. perlenc. Boston Dentists Bos Fhone A-3030. . Fhon Hats 803a 891 H Morrison BU Oxm. rertofflMi Hemlock Salve Remedy from nature. A quick a&4 permanent f(EI::iB The prcx!uct of skilled range-workers, embodying throughout the best of ma terial and Buperior construction the range that appeals both to the artistic eye and to experienced common sense; to the first through its severely correct lines and elegant finish, and to the sec ond by its easily demonstrated practical perfection- The MALLEABLE possesses such tensile strength as to ren- jier it unbreakable, and it is impossible for it to crack or warp. We recom mend and guarantee the MALLEABLE as the range of satisfaction, durabil- ity, economy the range that will last a lifetime and we offer to place it in any home on easy-payment terms. CURE OF PILES Just Cures Plies, Nothing; Mora, OW MX! AT Skldmor Drag; store, 181 TMjrd. Woodard. Clark A Co. Watts aV Mattheiu. corner WUllama and Russell. And other leading drug atorM. Diamond Roof Staios ILL IIASSI UADB FROM CREOSOTB -,: 5 Gal. Lots 75c Per Qql. Portland Sash & Door Co. S30 roar&un. 01 COAL Kemmerer Coal th Port- Wyoming Coal land Ms Tha Best arket. cxnmcxuT sbos. (nra.) Bunkers ISth an. Marshall. Pboaasl Main IL A-tlli. jlMacfclaerysSeife. I! u a. n bhi viorvnsLituise Moved A Stored DRAYAGE STORAGE TRACKAGE CLAY S, MORSE ZSU, 4th & OAvis WMS;. i3 tion coastt ka crura BvyAim ca. i wtaa' SDAfaa mmu vtk u mv salty. W repair and rvaranie an mwipc macaw, no rottr wnat.inake. or tow ba-o. we ao ax v kind of rpetr in 101 work and cleaning at I ble rate. Blcrcl and stove rvp'rir c. I lock work anJ key ftttinc W c;j tor. , deliver and faarante all worn, an-1 hav th only raaollit nrtB ei jrt mi I th Pacific roast. Pno Et Jill. l East iomoa t. poruaal. Or. Fnm'tare Upholstering Repairing tnd UJJgj 3 IBB; O!fflrE-H005B-FURIflSHERS3 Refrigerators and G&s Cisges ta the Biser.cnt $chwab printing CoS. ttrr i tTAKK m T n 1 0