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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 9, 1908)
I THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL. PORTLAND. SUNDAY MORNING. AUGUST 0. 1908. GOLD WILL NOT OPEN JAIL DOORS AGAIN J. Williams, Alleged Smuggler with Various Aliases, Will Forfeit Snug Little Sum He Gave to Insure" His Appearance in Federal Court. J. Williams. Just plain J. William fictitious, allaa J. Rawlins and a lot of other Canadian nanv mtxod In. with those of the Americana, who was ar rested, for smuggling opium Into Port land several montha ago, and who put up bond and smuggrlod himself out again. ha been arrested at Spokane for mnuffKllnff and will probably be brought here to stand trial for the offonse from which he ran away. J. Williams fictitious Is a smuggler a professional smuggler. He- plies his trade mostly In the opium line, wnen he was arretted In Portland J. Williams had about 600 worth of opium In his posHexHlon. And on this opium the fluty demanded by Uncle Bam had not ncen pn id. J. Williams fictitious Is a little, in slrnifloftnt. unsophisticated. Innocent looking fellow, and he put up the great- eft hluff over when lie was arrested. He couldn't Imagine what In the world tho customs official had nabbed him foi an v way. J. Williams fictitious, It is said, kind of takes a little opium himself when there Is no one around and when he can roll a pill to his heart's content. That is what the governmont agents in Port land think, anyway. Very Muoh Perplexed. When J. Williams fictitious was taken before a United States commissioner here he war bound over to await the action of the federal grand Jury. The amount of ball was placed at $1,600. Mr. Williams was taken Into the mar shal's office. lie was much perplexed, apparently, as to whether he could raise enough to get out. J. Williams fictitious said he didn't have a frlrmd in the world. Everyone felt sorry for him. And money well, ha hadn't thought about that; said after about an hour that If a deputy would accompany him he might be able to get some real cash. So a deputy and Mr. Williams flotltlous left the mar shal's office. . Mr. Williams fictitious hiked straight for a safety deposit department In one of the banks. Ho gave the password and got his box. It was full of gold ohock full, mind you. Williams had found his friend. Part of the gold was forthcoming and $1,600 turned over to the clerk of the United States court Mr. Williams was released. Kissed the 01okly Grin. Then several weeks afterward the grand Jury met. One of the lndlotments returned was against J. Williams, alias J. Rawlins. Deputies began looking Xot the little, innocent-looking man wiin me pale face and the sicKiy grin. ui j. Williams fictitious was nowhere to be found. I TitAti TTiwiA Nam nt dust eisewneic. The government agents knew that J. Williams would soon be back'at his old trade again. And so they found him up In Washington, trying to" get through with a big bundle of the stuff which makes some so happy. Bo in all probability J. wiwiams rio- tltlous will arrive In Portland within a few days. He will be thrown in Jail to await a hearing. He will not be al lowed his liberty, no matter how much gold he may offer to put up. And he will lose the $1,500 that ho forfeited when he ran away after the indictment which charges him with being an opium smuggler. J. Williams' pipe, too, will De laaen away from him in the jau, ana nis opium operations of the past will be hut a memory. And there will be no pills to roll and smoke to sooths his troubled orow. "I NEVER REST," SAYS DEBS, CANDIDATE OF SOCIALISTS If THE "FIGHTING CHANCES" IN SOUTHERN OREGON Rich Farming Soil, Now Covered With Timber Growth, Awaits the Man With the Ax and the Nerve Many Are Taking Up Claims There. W r - VJ V X-k I ' I 4 I . i'-1 H V ' - . v v , ' (.'''' 7 ' & V if 'SJ V, '. 1 v , - ? toil p.:-. s - swV f TV 5' AKf '' 1 I S. P. LOCKM III IlEi'J POSITION fl. P. Lockwood, for many years gen eral agent for Oregon and parts of Washington and Idulio of the North- v.it.fn Mutual f.tf I . , i . . , . M.i.ic iv. v.. I ghost answers the telephones, which the eld ollhottse had Deen covered up for over 0 years and the icicles, which wars forinsd then, hsd kept in the per fectly air-tight coiifpartinent until the men aug the sand away. Ghost Answer Plionc. Philadelphia Corr. Chlrawo Tribune. Old Bt. Paul's church, neadguartera Of the Protestant Kplsoopal city mis sion, has a ghoul. It is an ecoentric shads which whisks up stairways and disappear into nothingness, hut it also Is up to date. When the office force has departed and the quaint old build ing on Third street is secure sgalnst Intruders with stout locks and bulls the ot Is so utterly foreign to tne , Lr, J ' ., Jf w , Plular ooncepthm of ghosts' abilities T"' c"m.1'"Y,v,0,,KIurtUl,1' Mr hit It has dumbfoundeS Rev. H. Cres- 7q .W,HhHtwe.fK.rme.r COn!" " McHenry and his assistants, pany since 1899 and during his steward- 0n two occasions the strange visitor rh,?hrJtTMVan)r P"Cea 0V" 4'000'00 h- aw.red"hi phon whenhe of il. ;i f . , l. . . mco force was absent and the bulldlnn kr,rv!l,.hiJ f iwlJl.,.! 0c,two,o,,.,,o i locked. Its answers, altliough briofly the Columbia Ufe several changes In the ,,,. kv inriin.t,i ih.t th hn.t u administration of the Northwestern's ...- i...... .v.- m .v..,.. ... t j . ... . . . . ,VT-I1UIUI . .lv. . l Vi "0"8','" tho staff. The shale Informed a friend leMfT. !,!! M"T'1' theM'; Mr McHenry that he "hud Junt left the division of the Portland aitenev into .i.- . ,i.w,r- three fields H. K. Albee being In charge .r,ri wfe of on. of Mr. McHenry's as at Portland and -H N. Co.krrllne in Btnts, It imparted the Information southern Oregon. The manager of toe tnat hfir huband "would be home to Idaho field has not yet been announced. uD.r. Both oersons who conversed 1 nlin th a nnlrnnnrn ncr 1 1 ni n t n t thai mli- OLD ICICLES. slon dUre that Its volo waa nodif la ted to the softest lonaa. Mr. McHenry vlslsd the ehur.-h to open his mall A. he was unlocking tha Iron gates at the entrance to the ohurchyard he glanced up at one ot the windows and was astonished to sea what ap peared to ln a man standing on the stairway lnslilu the building. Tho stairway leads from ths offices of the city mission In the basement to the church auditorium. As Mr. M"c Henry opened the gate the figure glided rapidly up the stairway. dlsappearThg from view. The mlnlt.r mar.j .. church, locked the door behind htm to prevent the escane of the liitrurto. mnA searched tha entire church from cellar to roof. He failed to find any trace of me vimiur. r-vrry uoor nnit wlndO'.T was locked securely and the desks untouched. g K never wears the same suit twice. This is an exagrreration. The king exchanges his attire about three times a day and consequently would need more than 1.000 new . milts a year, costing something like $50,000, 'f such a story were true. As a matter of fact, ha orders about 30 now suits every year, and at Harking. ham pnlnce, Windsor castle and 8anu rlngham he keeps a stock of about 200. ' - -..'..! Odd Dlaooverr Made I'ndor the Sands of a Delaware Ilearh. Rehoboth Eech Correrondenco Balti more American. i Claiming to have found Icicles that i have been preserved for over fiO years, i Harry K. ElUott is backed by four com- ! S onions who were with him when the lsoovery was made. -Over 60 year n.i an old oilhouse where the fluid was kept for use in the Cape Henlopen light- i house, was suddenly covered up by the shifting sands or Rehoboth beach. No effort was made to uncover It, and the sand remained there until many hud ' forgotten that a house had ever been on the spot L&st weeK wnen iiarry c. tinon a well 'known merchant, and four other i r-nnmanloni were walking down the beach near one of the sand dunes they ; noticed the peaK or a small nouse enow-InH- forth and orocuring shovels started to dlir the sand away, until finally the i door of the little place appeared. Hurst- i Ing open the door from Its rusted htngos tne men suaaeniy puingea mm r vn fehle icehouse and were astonished to find Icloles hanging from the roof. Tha Ice was broken off, but In a few mo menta melted away. Upon Investigation It was Touna inut I Cure Men Aud My Cures Are Thorough and Lifelong: Eugene V. Debs, Socialist Candidate for President of the United States. OftAS icjif. rt I Ji v it HWH Hi'i'f IF-st. 'II If w ?VV v to -v. 4esa.J .Att wV wA( , " ITonio of J. L. Porter, on Rice Creek, In Douglas County Typical Pion eer Homestead of Southern Oregon. This may cost from Roseburg. Or.. Aug. 8. As the trav eler K cs through the more primitive sections of southern Oregon it beconus ovHent thnt the i4i neering days of the state arc by no moans over. Pcatterci through these mild trr.cts are many lit tle cabins where settlers have taken up homesteads or purchased tracts of cheap land and are establishing for them selves permnnent residences, clearing the rough land and converting It Into tillable farms and good stock ranges. In the rougher part of Coos county, at the foot of tho coast range, and In the more unsettled part of Douglas county this Is particularly true. Some manage to get little places near settle ments and others are a long distance from towns and neighbors. The opportunities for pioneering In southern Oregon are many. There is room for thousands who want to live In the country, who do not mind a lit tle Isolation and who are willing to wait and work. There are several ways In which this can be done: Homesteads can he taken up there are hundreds loft if one will hunt for themnd tracts In the forest reserve can be filed on. A settler can also -purchase a relinquishment of a homestea'd. ir0 up. The life might not appeal to the man who is In a hurry to get rich, but if one has a big family to take care of and no money with which to buy a culti vated farm, he will probably do better in such a place than if he worked for wages by the day In any of the citjes. Many men are making a good living In this way. They get all the fuel they need, construct their farm buildings from farm timber, clear the land, plant a garden and turn out some livestock. Year by year the settler can make lm- firovements and Increase the amount of and under cultivation; In the end he will have a good farm to leave to his children and will have made a comfort able living. Tes. of course It Is hard work; but tho pioneer Is Independent and the life Is not so bad. The climate Is excellent, the country attractive, tho soil will grow most anything, the streams abound In fish, the woods In game and with all, It Is an easy-going, comforta ble life. Men from the east, who came to the Pacific coast with but few assets but their willingness to work and many of the so-called native ' people have dona this very thing now own highly culti vated farms In the thickly populated districts. Walla Walla's Latest Nature Fake By Davidson. Terre Haute, lnd.. Aug 8. Eugene Victor Debs, the Socialist nominee for the Dresldency. will begin his active campaign August 30. a tour of the west betng his first venture. Throughout this territory he will speak from the rear platform of a special car, which has many thousand miles of Journey laid out. Mr. Debs is closing up his business affairs in Terre Haute, his native cltv. and his present home, pre paratory to the arduous work of vote getting. Asked today if he were rent ing preparatory to the trip, he said: "I never rest." And he doesn't. Debs is the person ification of. activity, a bundle of energy that is never still. On tha street, in his office, on the streetcar which he uses in preference to a carriage, in his library, or on hla lawn, he is always at work, for work with him means the ad vancement of his Ideas concerning his chosen party and he never lets pass an opportunity to Impress upon an ear wining to listen to the glories of his creed. His Ufe's History. Mr. Debs declares he is getting on In half century milestone. He was horn In Terre Haute. November 6. 18!i5, a son of Jean Daniel and Marie Bettrich Debs. June 9. 1SS5. he was married to Mls Katherlne Metier of Pittsburg. daughter of August and Katherlne Met- ser. No cniiuren nave oeen oorn io them. His life has centered about Terre Haute, although It has ramified until its Influence has been felt in almost every nooK ana corner or tne i nitea Stetes. In Terre Haute he is familiarly known as "Qene'1 Debs, his friends and neighbors, and everybody here is his friend, and have only the kindest word for the great leader With a ralnt brush 'Oiene Debs got his start, and such a humble start It was! As an apprentice In the shops of the Terre Haute & Indianapolis railway, now known as the Vandalia rnllway. His rise oame through the humble avo cation of a railroad fireman, through the medium of the Brotherhood of Railway Firemen, then in insignificant organization. 4lebs fired a yard en gine, but inter left that work to take up commercial lines, having applied his great mind to a commercial education course. He was "vaccinated" for a bookkeeper, but It didn't "take." He didn't like the work with a local whole sale house hecause his sympathies had been so deeply connected with tho rail way organizations. He was made as sistant secretary of the grand lodge of the Firemen's Brotherhood and when the secretary left the position he was given cherge of the position and as sumed editorial management of the pf ftclal magazine. It was then that his abilltv as a writer and his ability as a Platform speaner wran i" enow J3.B00 a year as secretary and treas urer and editor of tho magazine for tho Brotherhood of T-ocomotlve Firemen and took the leadership In the American Hallway union at a salary of 75 a month. When this great union of labor ing men for the railways became a failure the organization hud obligations which tctaled more than $40,000. This mAn Debs, Instead of doing as many, yea, as the average person might have done, took It on himself to square up the accounts of the defunct organiza tion. He was ably assisted, but it is true that for 10 years or perhaps longer, a great part of his income work, re ceived from platform work and editor ial work, wils devoted toward paying off the debts he hod contracted in behalf of the American Hallway union. He la square with the world today on this score, and this is an accomplishment which serves more strongly to Indicate tne character of the man. Debs twice served as clerk of the city of Terre Haute, having been elected on the Democratic ticket, and later he represented Vigo county In the legisla ture. Aside from this he has never held public office, although In 1904 he was named to lead tho Socialist party as head of the national ticket, and was ritraln named for that honor this year. He is not an office seeker, and desired to avoid the distinction this year, but his heart and soul are wrapped up in the cause of the Socialists, and he is more than willing to make any sacrl ;ice. His active campaign this vear will begin August SO, and will continue until the election is over. The Social ist campaign committee is now .map ping out his route and dates, and In the meantime Mr. Debs Is busy In lecturing work, having spent the past week in New York and other eastern cities. Debs is a busy man. So busy is he that he has little time to spend nt home, lie has an office here In the Whltcnmb Ailen block and this Is in charge, of his brother. Theodore Debs, who looks after all the business effalrs. especially concerning the Peb Chautauuua work, and he has had this in charro for voars. ' Eugene Debs does not Intend to do Chautauqua work this vear. but will de- I vote his time to fostering the campaign work and giving occasional lectures. CGeeWo Tha Well-Known Reliable m I LI I I II w CHINESE Root and Herb DOCTOR Has made a life study of roots and herbs and In that study discovered and la giving to the world his wonderful remedies. Wo Mercury, Poisons or Drags Used ji varei wiiaoat operation ot Without tlie Aid of a Knife. He guarantees to cure Catarrh. Asth ma, Lung, Throat, Rheumatism, Ner vousness. Nervous Debility, Stomach, Liver, Kidney Troubles; also Lost Man hood, Female Weakness and all Private Diseases. A SURE CANCER CURE Just Received from Pekln, China Safe, sure ana ttellaule. IF YOU ARE AFFLICTED DON'T DE LAY DELAYS ARE DANQEROU8 If you cannot call, write for svmDtom blank and circular. Inclose 4 cents in stamps. CONSULTATION FREE Ths O. Gee Wo Chine Medicine Oo ioz f irst St., uor. Morrison, i'oruanu. I Oregon. Please Mention This Paper. I have been treating men, and men only, for over !5 years. I have an established reputa tion In Portland which I hold as a priceless asset. I undertake only curable oases, and when I promise a cure I guarantee It, and my busi ness standing and bank references assure the Fatlent that my guarantee Is absolutely binding, do not think I can show better faith In my ability and methods than my unqualified offer to patlenta .nany a youtn ot splendid promise naa ranea because of some weakness, the nature of which made him delay seeking medical aid until It had bocoma ssrlous, and greatly Injured his life's opportunities. I have seen thousands of these esses, and have heard the etory of their suf tjfiirtng. Usually there Is also a history of ln- I rV t HI.nl I, nil hilar) V a rv 1 ! w rtf.trtr. n.ta.J telnes. electrie belt nd untirlncirjled medi- " AXijfJt tal institutes and so-called "specialists." Tie beading Specialist. RESULTS ARE THE ONLY TEST I make definite claims for my methods of treating Men's Diseases. I claim originality, distinctiveness, sclanttflo correctness and unap proached success. Every one of these claims Is backed by substantial proof. The best evidences of superiority are the cutes themselves. My treatment ourea permanently those cases that no other treatment can cure. This test has been made ovor and over agttin, and a majority of my patltnts are men who have failed to obtain lasting benefit elsewhere. W.1WH iff J CURED CHICHESTER'S PILLS &.f.il AtKyear Chi-cJm.ter'a !! J'llls In U Md Dos, Mled with ther. Bur 91 roar v pranlrt. Ask for C lli-t Ifts-TEB'' DIAMOND BRAND PILLS, for Sfii yon known ts ltest, SifMt, Always Rellbl SAID BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE At i vrugiat for a od rndA m Millie Bis Rlbtwi. VX to yew-it wwe k u m j...- - fx - ; t. - " M-r, - - ? ' t 4, it V - ' - I The Hippo ta to. OtfwetkJ natrk ! Ike JwraL) - TTaJU Watla. Wash.. Aug. I This perfect rpectmen of the blpootato. found by Chief of Police) Mike Paris' tiny tad in his garden, wee brought b vrrta Walla oolice director to hie offtc. where It ss placed In the eurw rsMrv-t emtil the rtty pr mmmlsiloa is resdy to place it la the aco. began to Itself and the general pu bli sit up and take notice. An Organizer. But when Debs organised the Ameri can Ri mv union, wmcn comprised "railway workers of all branches, he was In the public eye with pyrotech nic trimmings. The great A. R. V. strlko. with Its uproar and trouble, notablv In the Pullman Instance at Chi cago Tn 1894. brought forth federal In trfprnce and with the backing of President Cleveland tho interests of the rallwsv men were squelched and Dehs. one of the founders or tne orrsnlr.n tlon, and who had personnllv directed Ihe cnmnelsn of the railway men In their fight for better wages and less hours of work, wns In the limelight as the arch conspirator, to use the phrase most often arplled to him at that time. He was the most enjoined man In the country, and partly because of this fa-t the term, "government by Inlunctlnn" became a ral campaign le ft: e. Ifls nsme. to the high and mlshtv. signified anarrhv, riot and hlnnshed. and the man Debs ws th typlficatlnn of all thnt was evil To the labor classes, the men who toll, he was the two-edred sword of light and hie leader ship was unquestioned. Deb faced the callows In "4. He. according to the federalists, was th high rrlest of anarchr. and acrnrdlnr to their desires, hmild have ended his career at the rore's end. They rekond without their oppo nent's ioit. however, and f"r known fbe r( of th " c TUlnoia and the United States arslnst Furene V. Debs t el. Is st'M pni!l'- final hr- r.r Tne l-rs oerns ry sni ittnr- j rvs, was hl t" outline a cse which I showd clesrlr that the striking mn "rre rot instlrstors of the blnn'- riots fhst rs'lwsr hsrdw r uc-?t1Me nf . s!nw fhrrA Tlfh ron'r-'rsT In tie . "ir.stter: the demand fr nffic!al reports J j of the prorvdincs fr the meettrsrs of if j rsllwev minrr-sll d a tndo-y J to thrw a -sre Into the rrks of tk I oppoeittlen. Then Jurvmn rrt s-lt i snl to i: now4r h Is fin s! thurht fT some time aftrward rpat1 efforts wrr made ti hsre the matter srs'n tski up la the ctwrts for flcel dlwlltfn Dwt,s e;u!t a poeitioa that paid cha t ' Special Rates East. On August 21 and ?2 the Canadian Pacific will again sell round trip ex cursion tickets to eastern points at very low rates. Meke your sleeping car rnservation now. For rats and de scriptive matter apply at local office, 142 Third street. , Good Word. From tho Philadelphia Press. "The climate here Is salubrious. Isn't It?" remarked the tourist. "Say, friend," replied the native, "lest write thst there word dnwn for me, will ycr? I git tired o' swtarln' at this climate In the same old way. That's new one." Of all nrietlea pcrmintntlT cured In few diri without rurgicai operation or detention from busineM. No par will be accepted until the patient it completely Mtiined. Fidelity Rupture Cure 214 S wetland Bldf., Portland, Oregon. MEN AND WOMEN. Cm Big J for nnnstnral diachsrgM.iBflemmstioD, Irritations er nloarstioas of mucosa membrane. PainliM. and cot aatria .THE EVUS CwUHCalO. fen t or aoi.onooa. ClCllllUTit.rr:3 olel by TrmcTtsta, "7a Ter aont la slain wrtippsr, S3-J by azprwa, prepaid, for JfTl 1 .00. or botilaa tl.Tt. 4? aod other drug habits are positively cured by HABITINA, For hypodermic orlnternal use, Sample sent to any drug habitueaby tTwawi taaiL Regular prVe $2.00 per bottle s ruuraruggist or cymnu m plain wrapper, Ch - Si. Uola. 1o, las sale y SkktsMse Orm Oe, Ut Tklaa u. roniaaa. ui PAY WHEN riY FEE for a Cure Is Only IN ANY SIMPLE AILMENT Can any reasonable man desire a more fair test of my methods than to let me oure him first and pay ths bill when be Is well? No man could be fairer than that. I take aJl the risk. You take none what ever. Tou have everything to gain and absolutely nothing to lose. Why Pay More toothers of Less Experience and Skill? WSAX2TXSS. I have a treatment for men s weakness which Is entirely out of the line of the stimulants and tonlos which for a long time was the only help that physicians had to offer for such conditions. Being all the treatment known to tha ordinary physician and all that was mentioned In medical text books from which such disorders were studied, its frequent failure to give help caused many honest and well - meaning physicians to admit that there was nothing to help a man whose virile power was declining. But my exhaus tive studies tn the specialties of Men's Weakness proved conqlu slvely to mo that this class of dis order In about nine cases out of ten Is due to an affection of the nerves of the prostate gland, or to a disturbance of the blood sup ply to this Important organ. Treatments must be given to the affected part. It must be local and direct. Tt must be the right treatment, and the action of the medication must be minutely understood. Then the result Is never in doubt for a minute, and the cure is as permanent as It Is absolute. SFECinO BLOOD POISOXf. I cure this leprous disease com cletely. The system Is thoroughly cleansed and every poisonous taint removed. The last sympton van ishes to appear no more, and all is accomplished hy the use of harm less, blood-cleansing remedies. TABJCOOBI.B. By Varicocele we understand a twisted, hardened and knotted con dition of tho veins carrying the blood from the appendages. This U a very common complaint and i produced by various causes. It seldom causes any rapid deoline, but undermines Insidiously ana weakens the sufferer In both mind and body. The stagnant blood In the affected veins seriously inter rupts theblood supply of the or gans, and often In the cause of reflex symptoms which are not easily recognized. The ordinary physician advises an operation for varicocele, and knows of no other treatment. The sufferer must pay a good fee. besides the loss of time and the extra hospital bills. By my improved methods I use no knife, canss no pain, nor loss of time from business. My treatment is scientific, thorough, permanent and never falls. It will pay every man suffering from Varicocele to Investigate before considering oth er treatments. BTHiCTtma Burgry Is not only harsh, pain ful and dangerous, but Is entirely unneocessary in tho treatment of stricture. I employ a painless method by which the obstructing tissue Is dissolved and all the mem branes of the organs Involved thoroughly cleansed and restored to a healthy state. I Also Cure Hydrocele, Stricture, Contracted Diseases, Etc. ' COHSTJT,TATTOir A5S SXAOHOBIB rKEa MT HONEST AND CANDID ADVICE COSTS TOU NOTHING. I cheerfully give you the very best opinion, guided by years of success ful practice. Men out of town, (n trouble, write If you cannot call, as many casos yield readily to proper borne treatment and cure. Moors a. m. to p. nu Sundays, It to 1 only. The Dr. TAYLOR Go. a oomjnm ktooxs aud kobszbos streets, postivaks, osxaov Private Tatranoe 834V. Morrison Street, 1 WE CUM MEM INo Experiments INo -Failures Whes yon ned tht .enricM of a doctor con sult one of wide experieac. OUR FEE Any Single I'nccmplicated Case Our entire time and practice is devoted to the cure of BLOOD POISON, VARICOCELE. STRICTURE. LOST VITALITY. HY DROCELE. PILES. FISTULA, DISEASES OF THE KIDNEYS, BLADDER AND PROSTATE GLAND, CONTRACTED DIS ORDERS, WEAKNESS AND ALL DISEASES COMMON TO MEN 'e want every man who Is suffering from aay special disease or rondMW n In come end hare a talk with as. No man whree weaken! system Is rrylns out for haip through disease, or who has been guilty of early Indiscretions or late 'ceesea. la safe la life until such time as tils errors have bn corrected. CONSULTATION AND ADVICE FREE. If yt- eeaatot eaU wrtt fee M f-exatalr etloa Elsaa. Maay mure at sssia. Kg are a. as. te p. am. rnaaay t te la. ST.LOUIS "K1 DISPENSARY ooun neon An Tammj. arum, pobtuutd. omaoos. edJoJ'oHJ' i OUR FEE Any Single Uncomplicated Case We cure Varicocele, Hydrocele, Rupture, Nervous Debility, Blood Poison, Skin Diseases, Contracted Ailments, Gleet, Stricture, Vital Weakness, Kidney and Bladder Troubles, and all diseases common to men. Cures Guaranteed Consultation and Examination free No Better ' Treatment In The World - We Lead All Others follow We hive added to our office equipment, for the benefit ef MEN ONLY, a FREE MUSEUM of Anatomy and fallcry of scientific wen. derm. Man. know thyself. Life-size models illustrating the mysteries of man, showing the body in health and disease, and many natural subjects. Men make o mistake whoa thaw come to aa We aire yno tK r eolta of Ion experience. hnt, eon er I ration a work, end ' o a te that mon ay ce bay. Jr you are aillrf consult l:di li,s far oishot In eur private laboratory fni II. to ti I a .ur- If Tenrvet rail, write for aelf-wsaalaatloa fclsoit. Hours din I I p. a AaUjr. Sundays I W II swiy. tllH JffT--a at. . l U4 t fot -at 1, I r. OREGON MEDICAL INST.