' ' :: tTTn ADunnxf nnv TmiOM at DnOTT AMT TfTTTCHAV T?.VP!NTNfr. NOVEMBER 10. , 1908. ' C. E. S. Wood Criticises Do-Nothing Policy of ' JjJ Harriman in a Witty Speech at the Hill Banquet Mr, President of the Chamber or Com merce? Mr. Hill, Mr. Elliott Mr. Louts Hill. Mr. HArrU and all the rest of you railroad,, president and magnate from the frosen north If I had any sense or taot I would ear welcome and lake my seat. - But you ask any promi nent cltlsen and he will tell you'f liave neither, so I am olna; to Uve up to my reputation, and at this our of .the rooming; when all the food tMngs town been said and the bottlea are empty, I ' - am going- to Inflict speech, ttponOu, , not -only a speech, but a lecture, . f r I hate to loeo. this chance to be ad vertised y. ' the company I keep. . I know I ought to shut jup. but what man. after preparing , a , Speech, lying .awake over It, tossing over It. wffer . Ing over it. ever had the self-denial to refuse to utter ItT Not one. Not in the history of man. 'There la a fatality about . it. I know you want to p home. I know it is an unseasonable hour. I know the long list of -enter; talnlng addresses we have listened to. I know I ought to ait down, but I am not going to do It I cannot help It. 1 am possessed of a devil and I must be delivered. , : ' . , . , . . . v. 2.. it la not always deoirable to have the last Word, bub I jtake Borae eonso. latton from the facta-that I am invar; lably the last on these after-dinner pro arrams. For in that wider sphere where - Mr. Hill has told us he will be looking down upon us while ha solves new prob-, leras in a new method ot transportation, sportln about on red and white wings, with no need of ever sitting down and nothing- to sit on. -la that happier and luster world the last Shall be first and there as I g to take my place at the - head I shall wave ta-ta to Mr. Hill and the rest of you. who have outclassed . me here. Wanderers from Boreal BL Paul I bid - you welcome to ; arboreal Portland and I am sorry from my soul that for your sins yoa must hurry back , to your, religious town. -j. - . - , ..v''', --;- Weloome to Oregon, . ' I am sorry that It Is not'ypur good fortune to live In some one of the. de lightful climates of Oregon, which rsuuro from the almond orchards and tig groves -of Bogus River to the apple orchards of Hood Kiver.'from the rain loss skies of Malheur and Harney coun ties, where the silver threading ditches are making the desert to blossom as the rose, to the gentle mists of Astoria, where the salmon leaping -into the air does not know he U out of the rlver;i In Oregon we have bargain-counter ell mates for every tme, " Vlrgtt Jitmself - -would be at home lying under the wide spreading oak trees of southern Oregon, watching the . vine -dressers among the -vineyard, - lletenln g to the hum, of the bees gathering pollen In the willows and looking, afar to , our, .mountains where the; rains and 'the snows hide away at the root of the solemn firs and tufted pines td bless ua perennially In waterfalls and rivers. . It Is good to have you with us now, awitlamn. In these golden days, but I wish yon had come to us In our hpll iiavr vnii nnhKDDT wise men of the ieast, wner of .railways, called,, It - a panic. - But- with lis It was "one Ion gr hOliaay Dana TMJuaay. - M nwre -wna nothing to be done and we did It Oc casionally I would see a- olttaea oomkig out of a bank and as I looked upon his fiollday face I was reminded of Byron's Ines to the dying gladiator: "Butchered to make a Roman holiday." ys Sympathy, for Railroads. , Tithes' have been hard on all of us, but we know from Mr. Harrlman's statements that the hard times didn't hit anybody as they did the poor rail road men. and that Is confirmed here tonight by Mr. Cotton-t-We know how they've had to skin along without any-' thing but bare necessities and-we who are so fortunate us not to own a rail road ought to thank our great ruler (I i will not mention hip first name- until after the fourth of March) that what ever troubles we may have had we have been spared railroads. - After hearing these tales of -woe, my heart goes out to the poor railroad magnates. - v Let us sympathize with them and , pity them and help them. Let us re- . member that possibly It is not our own virtues which have kept us -from own- - ing railroads. Let us not In our pride look down on these wretched railroad kings, but remember that It might have' happened that we would1 have been as bid as they. I hate--to-see the fellow1 - who is down being kicked, especially a s-ood fellow like Jim Hill, and so I think I can speak for all present when I Bay to you, Mr. HilL and your friends but particularly to you as a hard- working, deserving man that if you .want to come out to Oregon and be happy we'll help you to do It, and damn the interstate commerce commission. . . Boine atsn'a uok. Gentlemen, have yott ever reflected on the astonishing -part - which luck plays in every man's career? One man may be sober and industrious as I honestly believe Mr. Hill is and yet a railroad will fall on him. You can't ay why he should be thus afflicted. As far as you . can see, he is an honest, hard-working citizen (as I believe Mr. Hill Is), de serving a happy life, and yet he falls - upon a railroad. It's one of the Inscrutable acts of a mysterious Providence. Another man may be a miserable sinner, deserving a Just retribution tor his wicked life and mere are many nere tonight 1 oould nameand he will be spared that mis ery. As I look around me I am im pressed with the fact that yon cannot beat a fool for luck. But let me not dwell on the misery of our guests. Let us try m uu vnra icrgei li. But try to forget it as he mav at this festal hoard, under our balmy skies, . and fascinated by the wiles and caresses , of two governors and the chamber of .commerce, ever before Mr. Hill's Inner vision is the damning fact that sooner or later he must return to St Paut St. mui was naxnea I or a, gooa man. He meant well. He was probably, until Theodore Roosevelt assumed the throne, the readiest letter-writer of epistles to ioi neamen wnicn me worm naa seen; - but he was Ignorant of human nature. He- prohibited women-to wear their heads covered in church, and if you wJU go to church next Easter Sunday you wui ee won women ininK ox St, PauL He frowned upon marriage and It has been on the Increase ever sin pa ' He was a cold man. and St. Paul la a Don't Worry About Piles Pyramid Pile Cure Will Quickly ' Remove All the Pain, Suffer ( ing and Discomfort. ' ' prlaj . Package. By KalL Tt. - Many people suffer the torture - of pile necause tney nave ucue xaitn in an ultimate relier or cure. This condition Is-part of the terrible maiaay caiiea plies. . euon an ariiicnon 1rfin the nerves pf men and women (o n to the lowest depths and gives to mankind .a feeling of despair, l.Kn't permit yourself to become victim or this melancholy. ' Pyramid Pile Cure is sold every where, by all druggists. It does re lieve piles and does this work quiokly, r-Hlnlesjily and without apparent effort v have thousands - of testimonial provinir Us merits. - Go to your druggist today and buy -a package, or If you feel any timidity or iiinilesijf about the matter send us fifty cnts. the price of Pyramid Pile Cure, and we will rend you a package , by utMil in plain wrapper.---: --i . ir,e or two apiaications will prove your ai not hopeTesa, and to give this 1 of o you send us your name and .!iir and we wlil send you - a trial i n- k f I'v mull in i lum wrarrr free. j M-r Pj-T.inld Drue; Co, i$a Pyra . 1 1- iT. .Marhall..Mlch. cold town. It Is not as -dry as some of me iowns in uregon, . but it is coiaer. There they sell fish by - the . eord, milk by the chunk and whiskey in bricks, and (he favorite way to take them home Is in the hat We who live in Portland cannot imagine the fearful chill of 8t Paul. A tierson cannot ro to the North ern Pacific ,or Great Northern railway offices . In St Paul without being clothed in Arctle overshoes, - a buffalo overcoat --and a ceonskln . cap. Icicles would - hang from his - beard and his breath would fall In snowballs. ' How different it is here in Portland. Here, if we visit our genial friends O'Brien,. Cotton A Co., In the lightest cioming in midwinter we snau prooaoiy sweat before we leave. I tell, you, gen tlemen, there is nothing like hot air. ' - Bast Soad in the World. Now that. .the North; Bank road Is completed and we are in direct touch with all parts of the globe, by what I am told Is the best planned and con structed road in the world, perhaps the climate will ' become more and more gracious. No more cold days or feet in Portland. Good-bye forever to cold weather. For It will only be a cold day when Jim Hill gets' left I understand they- are going to change the name St Paul to St James or 6t. Jim. If they do, you can bet it will be a hot town. Mr. Hill . why do you want to hurry awayT While you are here you don't have to melt the gaa, , thaw out the elsctrlo.fluld or make the furnace fire. It may be pretty hard on you gentlemen to have to live In a car. I know what that is myself. The woman In front of you asks you to hold the baby while she hunts for her rubbers. The tall man with chin whiskers knocks your hat over your head while he is reaching for his parcel. The fellow behind you has his knees in your back and the bur ly farmer walks over your corns as if he thought it was an agricultural feat, and Just as you are dropping to sleep, tired out, the conductor punches' you and your ticket and you begin all over again. Dodges Building the Tire. -I Am sorry for you gold plated hobos who have to live in a car. But there la one bright spot in all this discomfort, while you are away from homj you don't have to make the furnace fires. That's right, Mr. Hill, laugh, I know you-feel good over it It makes you feel good -to think that this morning you won't. have to roll out of your bed Into the -ley air and slip into your trousers and slippers and go down into the cel lar with your suspenders hanging down behind and shake down the furnace, to the accompaniment of your own teeth. I confidently believe that these are. the hours spoken of by Uie poet when ha wrote:- :!W "Let tne forget those icy hours When she I loved shared not my fate. Without her smile, how poor the powers. The, -pomp and splendor of the great.'' .' Icy hours Is all right I never oould sea any pomp or splendor In a furnace- ?rate, but I guess it would be cont orting In those icy hours when a man is shaking down to have her he loves sitting beside him clothed In her smiles. . You come out here, Mr. HilL and get rid of that furnace Job. Ashes to ashes and dust to dust Leave the ashes in the. pit and shake the snow of Bt. Paul from your fnet Tou and Mr. Elliott and the rest of you come out to Oregon. We don't care anything about your past We live here by the Golden Rule and ask no man about his record. Great kind, motherly, forgiving Ore gon has already given an asylum at Felt can Bay to one undesirable cltlien and she is ready to welcome the rest of you, all of you. Do not think that Pelican Bay is the only spot in this great and ' sheltering state where the wicked cease from troubling and the weary are at ret- I know a lovely wilderness In the do main of my friend over there. Bill Han ley, that smooth-faced man, who re sembles our - leader of the late Demo crats party. I know a virgin wilder ness in central Oregon where, Mr. HilL you can hide from him who wandereth up and down the earth seeking whom he may devour. (Again I shall not men tion names.) Where the railroad magnate is as good as the cowboy and there is a soothing solitude, you may forget that there is such a thing on the -globe as a ? resident, a railroad, or a bank. I go here myself. The only banks are those of the murmurous little river. They are starred with purple wild asters and yellow primrose. They are fringed with soft willows, which lean toward each other, and year unto year whisper peace. Xiver Sinks la Desert. Between these the sparkling river dances on Its way to sink In the desert scattering life in its course and in its death making; a great marsh, where the wateriowi una a casus or strength ana the blackbirds oling to the spears of the giant tule and whistle blithely to the sunrise and the sunset careless who is eleoted president and who .lives or dies. ' (. The bare mountains which guard the "desert" and send into it the waters of life are beautifully scarred with si lent canyons where there is no sound but the rustle of the aspens clustered about a spring and the sighing of the stone pines and Junipers rooted sure among the rocks. In the shade of these lie the red deer and the antelope and there is none to oppress them or make them afraid. The morning and the evening come robed in flame and purple and the skies ars as wide as the whole world by day and as the limitless uni verse by night They spread their ban ners of cloud by day and their starry jewelry by night and you shall be under them and listen to the great silence. Around you for hundreds of miles will lie an empire Into which you may drop the wheat regions of the Palouse and the Walla Walla and they will be lost There, veiled la the sagebrush, and trodden only by the coyote and the wild steer. Is an empire ready to support millions, but there you may watch the hawks and the magpies against the glittering sky and be se cure, Mr. HilL that you will never, nev4 hear the shriek of the locomo tives or the rumble of the iron wheels upon the ralL It Is Mr. Harrlman's territory. Mr. Cotton says he has been there and in 40 miles saw only -two lonely sheep herders. And he will see no more until the Harriman system realizes more truly its' duty to this state. X have seen 60 bushels of wheat raised there without irrigation and SO bushels of barley to the acre. But the railroad is the. highway of today and until It comes, land which will raise wheat, oats, barley, apples, onions and sugar beets, must of necessity be left to tne steer and tee lonely sheep herder. Bottled TTp by Earrimaa. What is to redeem this land from the cowboy and the sheeoherder. but the modern highway, the railroad. And those who take from a territory to build elsewhere and leave it undevel oped majMe highwaymen but not rail road men as I view the question. I have listened here tonight to Mr. Cotton's-Impression of central Oreeon. I have hunted Indians 'there and in the Falouso country and the V ena tehee and I sav the difference between eastern Oregon and eastern Washington Is only, one ox transportation laciuues. I have seen both regions as the sage brush wilderness. - Z see Oregon the Same today, Whyt- 1 have been told y a Harriman official that .the coun try was only fit to raise things with hoofs to walk out on; that the Union Pacific had it bottled up end would develop it when It got ready and not While 11 was xignung i"r competitive territory that is. fighting Jim Hill. That is not my idea of the duty of. the public highway, to the society from which It draws enormous revenue. Ore gon is notindea . on ao norm oy tne Harriman system, on the east by the Harriman system, nd oh the west, by the Parifle nee an. It will thus be sien that It Is between the, devil and the deep Ba. " .-!-----'-rr.- --r - The highway Is the. artery of social life and the avenue of social progress, and the railroad Is the, highway of imtiif. -Without hle-hwavs any country. any section, is rude, primitive, back- warn ana unavreiuinu, . vui nff trnm ill that Interchange of thought and commerce which make society and hlch mark progress. - lou ao . not need me- to tell you that If Horn. munlty lives on one side 01. an. im pairahle mountain, range and another community, oa ine oiuw siue. tney are as far removed as Jf they lived on opposite sides of the planet. Even In the days of Rome all civilisation, thought, culture, commerce, lay on one side of the Alps and barbarism on the otner side. Annihilation of Space. It is not actual space which separates men; it Is the difficulties of overcom ing space. ' London is nearer to Port land today than Boston was to Charles ton 100 years ago. When George Wash ington at Mount Vernon stepped into his ooaoh for the journey to Philadel phia, where this nation was born, he started on a four or five days' Journey. Today you go from New York to Wash ington in four or five hours. This is what the railroad has done. It has lengthened life and shortened space, those two great limitations upon our existence time and space. Space has been cut down by steam and our lives have been relatively lengthened. It stands to reason, therefore, that for economic reasons and soclologlo rea sons and vital reasons the railroad is the prime necessity of intercommuni cation between modern men. It has superseded all other land highways and is to our life the only highway. I will aBk you to remember this fact If we consider man as a problem, we find that he is a gregarious animaL That Is, everywhere he has been found in flocks or tribes. He will not live isolated. And to this fact Is greatly due the evolution of man, his rise, and nrnrrefifl. Had ha lived alone, his as pirations, his struggles, his knowledge. WUUiU MVS U1CU W1UI liiiii, mui. handed his aspirations and his knowl edge from man to man and from gen eration to generation until today he dares to speculate upon the origin uf that very life and intellect which en ables him to speculate. Society and Highways. He has gathered between his palms the lightning and he weighs the Stars. w have this structure: The progress of man resting upon society. Society ; resting upon intercourse ana exenangs, and intercourse resting upon highways. It is, therefore, not too much to say that highways control man's life and development The first rude trails be tween tribes was a beginning of civi lization. Consider that-great civilisation which was the dawn toward which we still look In breathless admiration Greece. It was a small country. It has no navigable rivers, but In the most re markable way it is indented by the sea. so that even from the heart of the country, among the hills, the sea is easily and quickly reached in some di rection. This best of all highways, the great throbbing unmonopotlzed and pub lic sea was ine nignway or ureece. Communication was easy, and the civi lization of Greece became the civiliza tion of a greup of -wealthy seaports, sending argosies 'to all parts of the known world, competing with those greatest of - navigators and traders, the Phoenicians; sending out " wealth and bringing back wealth. Bending- out knowledge and bringing back knowledge. Until upon this traffic over the beau tiful sapphire highway of the sea arose that brilliant civilization of Athens, Syracuse, Rhodes, which gave us ' in science and philosophy Aesculapius, Pythagoras Epicurus, Socrates, Plato. ArtBtotie. - In the drama, Sophocles and Euripides,- In poetry the majestic odes of Pindar, the rose-crowned odes of An aoreon, the pulsing songs of Sapho and the idyls of Theocritus, Blon and Mos chus, where still we may see the happy shepherds of happy Greece, watching their goats and beguilltig themselves with rural songs chanted to the low soft musio of the panpipes and the flute. And that great harp of Homer in whose Bound we eaten the clash oi the gods, waging battle, and -the sobs of Andromache, as human as the sorrow which we all alas must know. Anil In art Phidias and Praxiteles, whose dreams in marble have resisted the en vious tooth of time and stand today in our halls and homes to gladden us with their beauty and teach us that a thing ox beauty Is a lor forever. This was the world's greatest creative civilization ana it would nave been im possible without the free intercommun ication ny sea. Borne Built Highways. And then came the world's creat run. structlve civilization, Rome, and Rome never conquered a city or a province but that she built to it a road bo straight, so smooth that there waa no competing against It. and so deep-founded that the 'old Roman roads exist to this day as our highways, not only all through Italy but reaching up to r ranee ana uermany ana in England. The Romans were a nation of rnnjirnn it ers, and If you have followed me, that means weaitnmaicers and civilisation makers. When Julius Caeaar was fle-httnr in farther Gaul he got news of plotting Btgainst him in the Roman senate, and in three days, he stood among them and the conspirators were as much fright ened by his miraculous appearance aa cowed by that master spirit which put the world beneath his feet It is said no man could have done this but Caesar, but Caesar could not have done it with out that wonderful artery leading from the heart of Rome to the very frontier he waa fighting for. Over these roads went not only the legions of conquest, but the wagons and caravans of commerce. The Roman civ ilization was the civilization of one great dominant city founded upon com merce and conquest and. this founded upon her highways, ana all roads led to Aome. -me wona is still governed by that code of Roman laws known as equity. Season por Her Greatness. Commerce still uses her letters of credit and bills of exchange, and to Rome must be attributed the origin of invse ociopi, ine corporation and the trust. And so I could point to you that England's greatness, as 'that of Greece, rests urjon the hlirhwnv nf tv, ' and France and Germany, like that of n.ome. upon me nignway Dy land; and Russia, the barbarian trlant. ha. mb to the fact that roads are the very arteries of life. It Is good roads which xnocK aown mountain ranges and abolish distance. But gentlemen, the roads upon which human society hag rested uptil now have had one fundamental and vital distinction from the railroad. They have been open to all men; to all competition. The seas and the rivers are any man's highway. They belong to .the poorest as well as to the wealth iest; and so, indeed, in a lesser degree, the king's highway, the turnpikes and the toll-roads. They were open to any body and everybody, upon the same terms and conditions. But the steam highway, from the very necessity of the case, must be under one management and control and In that sense must be monopolistic. But in fact the steam highway ought not to be and cannot be any more monopo listic, personal or discriminating than the river, the sea, or the open king's highway. It Is true men have put their private funds Into the construc tion of the railroad, but It la also true that thev have been given authority by society to condemn and take prop erty, j Zn Trust for the People. - They have been granted perpetual franchises because as supplanting the river and the king's highway it is un derstood they become public highways, to be operated in trust for the people, as completely and fairly as the river and the turnpike which they supplant But even if private men with thalr private . runas were to nuy every foot of the right of way and terminals; if they owned and operated the road as a partnership, the same conditions would obtain from the necessities of the case. Society would never permit a highway whkh made the hlghwftv of th rlvor and of the road useless and out- otA date wnicn mereuy put society com pletely in its power, to be owned and oDerated wholly in , private interests and by an arbitrary private will. All property ngnts are aetermined by the will of Boeiety. Even the right to live is determined-by society. " One hundred and fifty years ago in England they , would hang a man for what is today Only petty larceny. They would hanar the burglar who broke a. ! window, or the highwayman who robbed a coach. Thus you may say we only i live bv leave of socletv. ' So that In 1 the last analysis, when this stupid thins; we CSU society (and I tblnk it is very tunlri and verr slow to '-move) ffnallv I asserts Itself,, all else must yield, and it is my Judgment that unless the rail roads -honestly and in good faith rec ognize that thev have merely taken the rlaoe of the people's highways, the sea, he rivers and the turnpike; . unless they - cease to combine and cease to make non-competitive rates, unless rates are based - only on a fair return for the services performed considering cost; unless they give absolutely qual and impartial treatment in all respects to the humblest as to the most power ful shipper: unlesa thev give over this effort at making towns or unmaking towns and making men or unmaking men, society will eventually condemn their properties and take them out of their hands. . Forced by BaHroads. Does any on here believe that any such thing as this malformed and half abortive Interstate commerce commis sion would have been In exlatenoe ex cept that the railroads forced it to exist T Does any one here believe that there would have been rate legislation except as the railroads invited, ItT L for one, am anti-Socialistic I am the purest individualist 1 am -"Opposed to government intermeddling in tne affairs of individuals or in the commerce of the country. I look with regret and with fear at our elective republic tak ing over the actual ownership and management of the railroad. But It is sure to come. (And the' time of the coming is not .important What is time in the evolution of man? as that tomorrow will follow tonight unless the railroads recognise that they are -a common highway, to give the public, without discrimination, passage for goods and persons at the lowest practicable rates based upon cost of service. They -must recognise that they are open to competition, the com petition of society, and when society suspects that the railroads are taking advantage of the naturally monopolistic position they are in, society will exert, its competition ana tans ueranroaaB into its own bands. , Things Move Slowly. , j I think we are too aot to think the ' world will end with us; too, apt to measure time by a political administra tion. We forget the millions of aeona it has taken to make a man. The tens of. thousands of years civilisation has been crawling upward since written language began. I think we are apt to use that animal instinct of self preser vation; to grab right and left whatever we can, rorgetiui or uie iact mat arti ficial social condition has given to some men great power and opportunity and to others none. Too apt to forget that every power vested in one man or a few men over the welfare of another, or of society, has been the ruin of the powerful unless it has been exerclsd witli exact Justice. Mr. Cotton has asked shall not the railroad values increase as city lot values have? Shall the railroads not get a fair return on those values as buildings bring increased rent? I Bay no. There are vital distinctions. The building is selling spaoe for occupancy the railroad is offering to haul goods from place to place. The measure for rents Is the value of the space. The measure - for the transportation rate is the cost of service into wbloh the ar bitrary addition of increased values of right of way or real estate ought not to enter. The railroad gets its increased profit from the growth of society in the increased Volume of business. Servants ef Society. But which I wish to emphasise la that highways are essentially the ser vants of society not soolety the serfs and tribute payers to highways. That the railroad is the only possible econo mic highway in modern land trafflq aha no interior region can hope to mar ket products unless it has such nigh way. That railroad owners are trustees for society and there is a -moral duty for every railroad to expand into and develon the country which It has at tached itself to and from which it uraws its revenues. If the railroads do not recognize- that they exist to serve society, not soolety to serve them, society will soon wake up to that truth and no man can pre dict the results. I wish to say that I believe our eldest guest has been wise enough to recognize this truth. I once tried to sell him an Oregon land ?xant He replied: "It is out of my erritory, far out of it and J owe all mv energies and all my money to de velop the territory dependent on my lines and on which they are dependent'" Mr. Hill has nought .to make money for his stockholders. He has been moved by motives of self Interest as we ail are, hut I believe he has been wise enougn, as x nave -said, to see that his larger self interest and moral duty were one and the same in requir ing him to develop often at a loss for aome years the .territory bound to him ana to wnicn ne was bouna. to this constructive faculty and sense of jus tice and duty I attribute - his ' success as the empire builder of our time. I do not believe society wlahea to own or Derate railroads and if It aver does come it will be from a feeling of aelf preservation ana oeoause-ine rauroaas by their blind and arbitrary position as overlords and tax gatherers and tribute takers, have forced it On their heads be it. 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No alcohol, harmful, or habit-forminff drntr is to be found In tha list or its ingredients printed -on eerh bottle-wranper and attested under oath. , In any condition of the female system, Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription can do only good never barm. Its whole effect is to strengthen. Invigorate and regulate the whole female system and especially toe peine organs, vvnen inese are de ranged in function or affected by disease, the stomach and other organs of digestion become sympathetically deranged, the nerves are weakened, and a long list of bad, unpleasant symptoms follow. Too much must not be expected ef this "Fa vorite Prescription." It will not perform sniraclee; wijl not euro tumors no med icine will. It tctU often prevent them, if taken In time, and tons the operating table and the surgeon's kqlfe may be avoided. Women suffering from diseases of long standing, am invited to consult Doctor Pierce by letter, free, All correspondence Is held as strictly private and sacredly confidential. Address Dr; E. V, Pierce, Buffalo... Y. Dr. Pierce's Medical Adviser fl00 pages) Is sent free on receipt of 21 one-cent Stamp for -inppr-covered. or 31 stamps for clot M Address as above. Be Beautiful Tan. Freckles, Voles, Moths, .Super nuoas uair SS1IOVTD AT T&iruxct COST. Thin Shoulders xnade plumy, lean face made Mrs, P. CBatcbelier 601 Swetlaad Bldg oor. Fifth sad Wash. Phone aialn 6336. istjli r exram nn sum a long - . . . . a nrt -hnmftr.ls- rp.rnrd 7TT rlircs In SUrlT ra.ji a Iir. Fi,.rfft'g Favorite PrescrTt? t on-- .ISO rr.rdicina has such a strong r v By Sample Shies are Superior Shcs, Ibey are the Tick ana Creara c! the Sbse ITerll Poativ FOR WOMEN A PAIR Portland's Busiest Shoe Shop These Open Dally 8 A.M. I06P.U. 6th Floor Oregonian Building Booms' 60001 !rt! HERE IS AlllJil We have two cargoes of coal now en route to Portland, and to make room we must dispose of what we have on hand quickly, so offer RICHMOND (AUSTRALIAN COAL) at $ (0 KB Grasp this opportunity of laying in your winter's coal supply at a saving. PACIFIC COAST COAL CO. 249 WASHINGTON STREET MAIN 229 A 2293 II Quality Counts f6r Anything, Thtn Butter-Nut Bread I the Kind to Use Don't be deceived by being told some other kind is just as food. See that this label is on the loaf. fmm "Yoa are entitled o the beat." We in Butter-Nut Bread. Butter-Nut Bread Company SECOND AND COLUMBIA COAL $ For Range Washed and Screened V - ' F. B. JONES & CO. EAST 7 both The Journal Little Waut Ads razA Ojtlt uKwai bhozs Shoes are Regolar $3,50 lb $6.09 o l,- 525? I tin susTAYoai ,.-v YOUR- CHANCE are Still inserting Silver Thimbles Try and obtain one. ' or Furnace No Soot No Dirt phonhs B 1771 Always Bring: Best Results PER Per fori , FOR ME1N Never Pay More Than These Prices Values Open 'Saturdays 8 A. II. to II P. II. 6th Floor Oregonian- Building Boons 601-Ctl TO SAVE TOW ! DELIVERED No Cocaine, No Gas Our aueeesa la du to uniform hlsb-frads work at reasonable, prloea. NERVOUS PEOPLE And thoss afflicted with hsartweak dmi can now tiava their tsth -extracted filled and bridrework ap plied without the least pain or dan cer. PArm.E88 EXTH ACTION .. .60 SI-KARAT CROWNS B.00 BRIDGE WORK 5.00 OUB BEST PLAIN PLATE. .. 8.00 ALL LINED PLATE ,15'.0O TEETH Examination and Oonaultatie Tree. Wo ettend to sll a special Invita tion to call at our office and have their teeth examined free of charge. Wo own and control the larrssl ana best equipped dentsl establish ment In the world, bavins IS offices all told. - Wo 1vo a wtttten ru a ran tee with all work for 10 years. Lady attend ant. ... . Open evenings till 7. Sundar S to 1. Union Painless Dentists ' B81H Btorrtsta Sft-, Corner First. Flemlshatid Oak.Finish 81.40 PER r GALLON " Liquid Wood Filler - : S1.25 PER GALLON ; . Portland Sash & Door Co'. BS9 rmOHT BT. . rOBTXAsTD, OBV CI