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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1911)
THE ,ORECON .SUNDAY JOURNAL PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, MAY- 21, 1911. INVENTOR WHO SPURNS FORTUNE, Admirable Though JCnnsual Example Set by Major George Owen Squler, U. S, A, Who Ilaa Dedicated Ills Discovery of "Wired Wlreleas'' to the riblio Good Renouncing IUches la interest of Ilia Fellow Med. Major' Oecrre Own quia. ... Major doors Owen-Squler o th United Stmt signal corps was born In Dryden, Mich., Maroh IU 1865. Ha entered tht United States Mili tary academy when It yearn of age, and waa graduated with blah honors in 1887 He studied phys ics, while at Wast Point, but later at the dlreotlon of the war depart-. ment, added Jo his scientific knowl edge by a course at Johns Hopkins mlverelty, being made a fellow at that-Institution In 1893. ' He acted as hlef signal officer of the Third army eorpa . durlnv the Spanish-' American war. , He waa intruateji; with the work of laying cabita Cr tween various Islands In the Phil ippines, the work being undertaken. at treat no owing to tne hostil ity at the natives. Ha returned to the United States later to-flnd trt: what ha bad studied at Johns Hop kins aa a theory bad beoome a prao- Ileal device. He studied Aeronaut ics for soma time, but It waa while at ' work ia tbs laboratory of the signal corps at Washington "thai he discovered "wired wireless.", whtoh Includes . multiple telephony, wire less telephony, long dlstaao tele phony and practical telephony; all Of which became possible at a slg jnal stroke through' Major . Hauler's discovery. Then the major patent ad his Invention and presented It to the public, Ia bis chereoterta tloally modest way. - Major Squler denies having made an Invention, f but saye- ha baa simply patented a method Of using' wireless eurrenta for telephony along .the Una of a wlra. ; '.' By Xdwac Marshall. Copyright, 1111, by C J. Mar, Publish. X never saw his Ilka before, the real .. altruist,' the genuinely unselfish man, , eirelett by m world which' tails 1U ad tnl ration freely, . but which does not aopy hinv.,', i "... Hera is 'the) man who had millions in tla grasp and did not take them . be came be thought 'the people had '' a greater right to the fruits of his gen ius, because ha waa unwilling to be re sponsible for the establishment of what easily might become the greatest of the great monopolies "of communication. Permit , ma to present to you that in venter, .gallant soldier,; wholesome thinker; unusual philosopher,, delightful gentleman. Major Squlers of tha United States amy, Inventor of the duplex wireless telephone, who took his patent out in the name of the whole people, so that private enterprises should never have a chance to monopolise tha child of his alert and brilliant brain. My talk with him, at first beneath tha khaki canvas of his tent in tha maneuver' camp at San . Antonio,, and later in my room at tha hotel, dealt only partly with his invention for two reasons. One is that Its wonders have " already been extensively described,: the other is that Major Squler Is quite as "modest as be la brilliant,- and. having brought the effort of his Ingenlus brain to perfection, feels now that touch talk of It would be egotistical. , ' ,. But he talked about soma of tha big things of this life, and voloed some new ideas, especially Squleresque. For exam. pie, when I asked him what ha thought is really the matter with us ha replied: ."We am forgetting in these days the real necessity for taking time to think, forgetting tha advantages of contempts uon. We do not !get tha best out of our selves, and thus tha world does not get the best oat of us. Bach personality of worm, it seems to me, has certain pos sibilities is a potentiality. ' That any should not develop, or, developing, should be wasted, is tragic, and yet it is -quite safe to aay.that nlna tenths or our personalities, speaking now of individuals,-are wasted, and that nine tenths of tha personality, speaking of tha quality, of those Individuals who are not entirely wasted, goes for naught We hurry and do not do things, welt Washington was an American who em phatically did things well. . He would spend a morning In the writing of one letter, but when that letter was com pleted It waa wonderful, He, did not waste time he used it" , "But have we leisure for such care for. detaU in . these days V.zr. ir :r r,.i - - '.. ' '' T .Pljf s.v. Tha major smiled at me a little qu Major Oeorg Owen Squler, TJ. 87 A. shall need to build another art to ie re garded from another angle. Architecture will be very, materially influenced, and so will many other things, which. Just now, ws think have reached their perma nent and ultimate development . The airship, will result in tha elimi nation of frontiers between tha nations of the earth, it will profoundly Influence the law, and last but not. least. It will have a mighty influenoe upon the art of war, comparable only with tha Influence of gunpowder's invention. For instance, up- to the present the eejectlve has al ways been the enemy's army. Now, for tha first time la history, this may be changed, and that possibility is some thing pretty serious. Tha consumma tion of the military art may bs de scribed as the maneuvering of tha en emy into untenable positions, with the minimum loss of human Ufa. The man who, could enforce his foe Into unten able position without killing anyone would be the perfect general up to the present war has been confined, in time and place, to tha plane, so that it has bean possible to prevent tha capture ot tha country er Its resources, by an army moving on that plans and properly disposed, whioh army had to ba subdued before Invasion could proceed. This has resulted in tremendous and in needless slaughtertremendous, as we know, needless because no ons has aver had a grudge against the soldier. The whole world loves tha soldier. Even the op posing general loves the common sol diers of the f oeman whom he fights. Tha killing of such men baa been the pity of ail pities., , . . . War Absolutely Metamorphosed. "Now for the first time In the history of war, the tlmt is close at hand when it will be possible 1 to pass over the massed armies, tha best blood of the nations, mads up or the world's most splendid types of manhood, and strike straight at the capitals." Thus the in dividuals who really are responsible for war, will, at last, be themselves en dangered by the horror Which they ruth lessly create The kings and parliaments and legislatures will not longer be lra mune from tha destruction which they have In days gone by mercilessly direct ed while they sat In perfect safety In the capitals. From, now on they will be In personal danger and that will make for the new days a very different war fare from the warfare of the past Beautiful, large armies will not be all sufficient any longer. Tho attack ing party, mounted on a clattering, me chanical substitute, for a winged steed. safely out of r range because of his tremendous1 .altitude or his stupendous "Speed, will go after tha powder and beings not ot this alone but of the gen- aratlnna vat tn noma. . ' Oenlua Comments TTpon Oenlua, "We are debtors, all of us, to un known geniuses,' unknown donors, or in- telephony. In the past down to com- naratlvaly short, distances.' By tha pew method the wire Is a mere guide to ao- urately direct the waves traveling in 1 ether which surrounds it !'lt Is wired wireless wireless dlrect- 1 by a wire. ' The wire Is copper and oe energy required to send a message through the ether which surrounds it be tween the distant points whioh I have mentioned Nome and 'Rio would , be trifling." f "And what will be the net result of all your work and of your presentation ventors for everything which. w enjoy i of Its fruits te the wide world, free?" most , for almost, every detail of our homes, for Instanoa. The man who in vented corrugated iron did . humanity a mighty servloe. We do not even know his name, .And there la glass. That la the most remarkable, perhaps, of all ."My dream is that it may help to make communication so inexpensive that the whole world will, be neighbors. I have not put it ' well., but 1 have eon- veyed the general Idea, ,. If it were as easy for ms to talk to friend in South substances, an addition to the comfort I America as to talk to one In the next of the world entirely Incalculable. We I block, would not the world become much do not know who thought of glass for I Smaller, would not k the world become the first time.": , i . ; . more friendly, and would- not -these . He was sidestepping the Question I things make the world better, by helping had. asked him, but, I, was psrslstent widely separated peoplea to an undsr- IV seems quite natural to me." hel"lmuna ox QM anotnerr . cream or said at length, tired of tny badgering. I ln um WMB "I0" caa communicate 1 wished to do that thing whioh would!.""" V"TT"" " give the greatest satlsfacUon to myself 00t d I tmna inat aream is cer and te my trlendsvand be of greatest f f0"1 tp,u- There Is no one thing which conduces more to progress than facility Of, communication.. Tour enemy is the man you do .not . know. When-you come to know, him-you gen erally find he is a decent sort of ohap. use -; to ethers. . rve scarcely . thought aoout it since." . .., :.. . ,-:: . He spoke with utmost frankness and With absolutely no assumption. . . Inn- Mil tha.taalr alra Mini" IfNot long la actual -work. The tele-1 lC-f .Xacllityof communication- was nfwinA ' Mn,Hm,nti. mm .ii iin.. wwi uuwu wua utu war. ' we uian t between September 1 and the begin- knew each ether, didn't understand each ning . or . my journey homeward for I o mum mmm mo Csristmaa dinner." . i . I la Aiamcaumu au naa noma, ana "Exactly , what does your Invention 1 Tlc versa. , , "Zt permits the transmission Of sev-1 "Not so manv vaara ara dlnlomatlc era! entirely Independent telephonic communication between nations was con eonveraatlons simultaneously , along the I ducted by sending individuals abroad same wire circuit. TDM, of course, mul-1 sending Individuals who could be trust Uplles a wire's utility. And no two per-1 ed, or whom it was believed eould be. sons taaang with each ether by means I We thus sent Franklin . and trusted or mis wire an possibly know what I things to him comDlstalv. , Wa knew any other two conversing by the same I so little in thoss days about happenings wire at ta aame time are saying, nor J elsewhere than . at home, that battles (Ma wy conversation interrupt any otn- were rought in wars after peace had er conversation. .The memoir fully gor Ibsen declared by the principals ofytha Ing into It has not yet been . published. combatant parties. The men who fought it is now in tne possession of the war I the battles at a distance fro m tha pun I department : It will be read for theltal city eould not then, be notlfed of EUROPEAN FRUIT. DUD ENDLESS America, 'yesterday purchased the Bates orchards near this city, paying 176.000, Mr. Egan will reside on the tract' John D. 01 well of thie city made' the deal. Interesting Mr. Egaa in tha Rogue River valley while east last falL Tha orchard Is ons of the show places la the valley. which are planted la appUe and pi a. It adjolna the famoua IlUloreat orcLaia Eleven Scandinavia na now hold seats In congress, two being senators. Ton of them are Republicans aad all of them er allied with tha .progressive" lit consists of lit acres, 10 acres el.erlng of their party. 1 opment of the airship will even change our architecture. We shall have to form orand new mental attitude toward many things of every day. We shall see new things and know new thlnga Wat. V a aA Va- 1 11. ILa la j' have looked ud reverVth TowwlH l JUM at th meetln f e what was going on except afier a long nave looxea up-at everything, now wa; American Inatitut at FWtrii-,i frni.lina t . M. ii .1- . "2 a. a.( 1 w wa, MMIVt .., lUn VUS UiyiVMMl VSVI OkV" neera, at the Carnegie building, New tlon of every nation of Importance Is Tork city. i discussed ever nixht bv all the nations x uw Mmeiauir or ine interest tne 1 of th world. Tha mi iJm, tn m wuu BBieiiuxig woriq nas taaen in tnia 1 uise a country is to cover It with matter;.! nave had a hint of some of I network of wires. Tha t.Wronh and the contents of the memoir. When it I cable both contributed Immensely to the e given to the publio there will be pacification of the Philippines. They talk! . I multiDlled the value nf our llttla arm The Sanies Telephone, I many times, and this has been true else- Now, here is a aueer thins. Tha con-1 where. In our northwest the telegraph tents of the next two paragraphs I wrung went f lr"t then railroads and then towns rrom aisrior Bamar tv mun, f mn. w Stent questioning, and although bis an swers were very far from boastful, con sisting of as. plain a statement of bars facts as he could make and state the case, he blushed, frowned, shook his He suddenly began to laugh. Tou've got me to thinking of the thing again,' said he. "I've not thought of It for months. My part of It Is finished. don't you seeT" V . "It's a great thing to be able to slde- " . vmM I.. T LUUT UTBT.1.1 It . ... . . . . Tt.F h. .v i i - ... u. -"P. wonl on. -1 nave neon, or late, s rwEi.T: :;.tJ"ir, k. cer with n my mv:'. - w" ... y. been nothing but an army off! cer tor months. A magazine wrote to me asking me to have a photograph poseo in civilian clothes made for twem I can't do It for I brought with me no civilian cloth- I have nothing but my necessary uniforms. Until you brought sieally. "Washlnston accoirmiiahed m supply depots, the railroad centers, the good deal, ha antlv murmured. -Par- bridges and the tunnels, as well aa the haps he did sa much, Indeed, as the ay- "eats or government, war has become erags man of these days who finds him-1 now tnina; 01 urea, aa two, aimen- aeie.aa ver rraativwonftiinid ...vt tha slons. and the entrance of the third dl waa never Omsy.' ton see. ha did hot Biension Into necessary 'calculations waste his mental motions. Sometime, cnangea tn wnoie probienv if jrou have time,-''read Professor James "T mor I think about tha air the paper on The energies of Man.'" I more . wonuenui it seems to me. wnat 'Then yon think we are deterlorat- a privilege and wnat an opportunity are Ingr - v J given to this generation; Think of the "Oh. no: above all thlnrs I am an on-1 navigation or the universal ocean which timist It seema to toe that I see wbere I taowf teo.land'.or; as,t vv we mat have been at, fault, that's alj. r. In .Santiago, had we had tha outfit But we are learning, and In the future I which we brought to thW maneuver shan be greater, than the giants of the I camp at nan Antonio, too aeroplanes in past. ' We do not yet know how to take I u minutes wouia nave toia earn peon advantage of ourselves, v We're molne to I all about Cerv era's fleet : See what discover that Some ceoola. even now. I H years have done! The contents of have partly learned how to make the I that harbor Which for so long baffled best of what they have, but not many I us wenia nave been po. mystery at au. or us, and those), who learn too often 1 1M wnoie matter, wouia nave been corn have to learn through some great shock I pletcly simplified. If Napoleon had had some terrible calamity and the suc-i Parmalee at Waterloo the history of seeding calamity. We do not do our Europe would nave been a very differ best when we remain contented." . lent record from that which we now. find "AnA tha fa i mr aiu .in-. MtwMn Ult oovara or aur nanlra. Tha .9 ' . V D, MW.,M, TT V I . 'bright, alert Americans.' We eat too mneh, we sleep too muehwe loaf too navigation of the air la certainly the most Important and far-reaching single muoh, we do not think up to one thou-jsclentiflo subject of thla century." sahdth part of our capacity, we don't get mora, than a- small portion-of the real tun ; or life, which Island : it. IS nothing els"-acbevement The major paused. to make c oa balletic sign upon some paper brought in by an orderly,, and X went back to town. I had secured - a prophecy and an expression -T'he opportunities which human ha-1 from an actual entity, one of the or- t ingr have neglected i have been more I iglnal Investigators, one of those , whoi aiMk u.u .uc... ,uv,c j 1 yfiuvn v uipy ' iit V W I ' taken advantaga Take air. We have, In alt; the centuries, learned very little of 11, ye it is- ny rar tne most essentia of all things to us. It Is only now, in the twentieth of our Christian centuries, that we have begun t study it lntelll gently. When . forced at a sufficient pressure it wUi cut Jike a ateel knife. Tbtnk or what cyclones have donei Vaaodera Potnt ef Tlew.-;'-' That -evening, ; In the overworked and gasping hotel in San Antonio, X switched the conversation : into other lines. Here was a man who had ignored his opportunity to make a fortune; he had given his great thought freely tot the nation. .His must be, I thought a high Ideal of cltlsenshlp. Ha did not know, V ,T, T m. 1 avva vs. viusviibiii MV U1U UVl sVXlv VT.' They have raged eiUes aad wiped prime-1 when I discussed -this with him, that li Tiu ivnnu ivum uioir mm. cui qid mis 1 was "getting "copy" for the printer same air with en orchestra, breathe It 1 Had h known I am quite sure he would gently into flutef and clarinets, and thsl hav anokan- far leak fraaiv j J result is music, soft sweet ' perhaps "Why in the world." I asked' "dlt as dainty as the , soughing of other yoi giv your idea of the wireless-du-r Btuiw uhuium. VI ilUH aaim air I nlM.KInnhnna tn ih. natlnn wfhni, through the myriad whispering needles J payment? It seems Quixotlo td a lot of some ancient pine. Liquify that air, I of us " - i 'Seems Quixotior be exclaimed. T don't see why It ahould. - . "I am an army officer." he went on. a and therefore have no local eitlsenshio. ' t look. ,af Hhi Important matter Of re- ward, f or ff or In thla way! The very C put It in a pall, thrust Into it. a rubber tube, and instantly, the rubber is like K - s-Inaa In hrlttlanaaa laara tn natrle-ata It 2nd. presto I every Inland town becomes : a seaport Indianapolis, s once , we have mastered navlaation of tha -air. is a -. ff , TiilZ 1. ' ,a nl" own consciousness of having con-V , . , .aaw -avir, i . ,. I trlDUten Bometnins? tn tna anm or i r We' have, at last begun to learn these I isatlon.,' Mr, Carnegie .contributes , lib tnuigs, ana iuuw, years from snow the I raris, : other people give according to nocking xacuiues. oz. tnese Inland eea-l their , Ustas and their resources. The . porta will be among the serious prob-j man who can contribute most is eer-i raa 01 in uawatsngw will ins i mia-1 winijr,, i tninit, ,the most fortunate Of iana paopio. w ui s generauon pe nest men, anu tnus it seemed to me that the a hi a wharva .tha rnvrtan ihtna vhlAh t mA.f .miiiUn- ...i.,..,tM v. . will be outs to sail to them upon the i from mv discover would com from .ocean which we now are but beginning J giving itfree tooths whOlepubHo.fQ.i -"Wltn-TTeat-TtimidttjrVand cTudappIl-taonr you seelt rare ma a fin. ! for boasting." Therefore I say now that there was not the slightest boasting. I have never met as man less likely to be boastful. These are the facts I drew from him: The patent covering his invention is what is known as a "group patent" In-1 It all back to me I had really f ort-otten. eluding four individual patents. It Is for , the time, all about the matter of aeaioated to the - American people, the I telephony. publio of the United States, under a law I 80 ra tn talk of the one man I know passed In 1883, but seldom used. Malor of, who, having a fortune in his grasp. Squler did not say so, but I have fr,ut of his own brain, and rightly his. learned that only one similar, case hasn8 offered It as a free gift to the peo ple; a man wno, in his early manhood has contributed tremendously to the comfort and progression of mankind. and yet is so modest that be does not think himself a genrus, a philanthropist or in any way extraordinary, admitting oniy mat no is industrious and fortun- ever been recorded. The patent papers were prepared by the technical staff of the patent office; he would ndt even have his personal attorney connected with the case, for reasons which, to him. seemed obvious. He wished to make the patent absolutely governroen-1 . ..1 ""V . -. . ... I i. uw.. in, ncuuuirj i war euj&ea mo sec. retarr of the interior to furnish an at torney, and to him Major Squler and his associates supplied a working model. which la not now required by law. Hi object, waa to make it wholly clear, un questionable. He oould himself have used his own attorney, seoured the pat ents and then turned them over to the people, but It seemed best to him to have It all done by the government It made n qmi impossioie mat any aouot couia fBredal DliMtek Th. jrn.i t ever rest upon the situation. It made Hood River, Or., May 30. The first his gin, bis great self-abnegation, abso-l strawberries of the season are besin lutely certain, clear, undoubted and un-1 ning to arrive in the city markets and talntable. . . ' I find a ready sale at 80 cents per pound As I wormed these various facts from box. The cold weather and rain of him be talked of Hhera quite oasually, I th Past few days are causing the ber- RRST STRAWBERRIES -ON HOOD RIVER MARKET too briefly.- . The -mere transfer .to the people of ' this country of a fortune which' would have : been: . beyond, the dreams of avarice if he had" kept the patents and had shrewdly .exploited them as others always have done, or have tried to do. In days gone by did not seem to him a very notable thing. He is proud, of his invention, but of the other matter why, all his experiments were made while he was an eirfploye of gov ernmentof all the people while he was a soldier o -why don't you of course it certainly , ,'1 am free to state that Major Squlei's mental attitude "gets" me. And that Itself, is proof that real ideals lived up to are rare things in this old world. Xls patents Are the People's, 'Anybody, now, can use those pat- rlea to ripen very slowly, but are mak lng the fruit much larger In else than would otherwise be the caae. The crop will be very large this year aad price will undoubtedly .ba ln advance -ef last year. Pickers are beginning to arrive and in a few weeks an army of several thousand strangers wlN be found throughout the valley. i I II 9 8 RAYMOND CHILDREN HELD FOR DELINQUENCY South Bend, Wash., May to, Durln the past week eight girls, none of them more than IS years old and soma of them barely 13, were brought from Ray mond to this city and arraigned before the superior court on charges of. de- Four men were also brought Medford Doctor, Just Home, Says Third. Rate Apples yt': v Zi ' .''rt , i. ., iSt'-i " s"." -vV 4 ," 'BclI Plsaateb to The iee-aaU , " t Megrorfl, or, Mayv Jto-Tbat lurope is, dub receiving a small-per cent ef the applesr and - pears grown In .' tbs northwest; which it wIIJ eventually de mano, ana ,tnat the talk of over-production Is a mistake. la th baliaf o r- J. r. Reddy of this, city, whe has Just r.iuniea irem an extended tour of Euro pean countries, where he studied market conditions in regard to green fruit. Dr. Reddy says the demand-far exceeds the supply In Europe and found Oregon fruit Is in such demand that for what h """J :' W!J paR agJllgil aa to cents each. , . "Europe today, is receiving compara tively none of our apples." states Dr. P.eddy, "in comparison with' the pum per it ouia use if they were exported. When foreigners use all the fresh fruit snipped , them from the northwestsrn stats at. prices ranging from 10 to 10 iWrnCDBEPD':''' DOUBLED INCOME '-.-1. t i Experience of fa -if Port I a n d $ pormer r;0 Drinking Mari Business Man Relates Happy r Sequel to a Three "' Days' Treatment at Neal Institute ,-', There's far, from g Portland merchant not "The Sauare" who can cents each, it means that hundred ef I rove that the Neal Treatment for T5 ' eeid there and die- tha Drtajc Hafcit, which he took over ' mnnflia i,n ia tha h Invest aaavua; v e-e-e "My bosinesi was going to ruin,"! he syi. i wat losing account alter account. iv Customers - who hud been longtime tandbyi . stopped coming into-the store Because 1 naa reached that, state in the excettlve . drinker's must change, however, as all the fruit i saw on - the other- aide of tha nond was badly bruised. Th boxes ef fruit r reosiy nanaiea," . WidoVs' Award to Be Appealed. Snaiial PlaDifrS la V. k Medford. Or., ilaw 10. Attornar for tha DnilfU . U- u paring . papers for an' appeal from 'the W8ht ' whee ' 1 wa ' 1wy mre Or veraiet ror 'Myrtle Gardiner. In which I less unaer tne innuence oi liquor. fH! 1T"i.fcW!.r!5a l75" of Co'ntintiipg , the V recital of experl lXnT' rRlffi en5erdurirtg the period which i. now court, yesterday. after a. li minute ss-1 only memory S nightmare, he laid: sion awarded Mra Gardiner- the fuulIn those old. davs my. wife and chil- mun po.sioie unaer tne Jaw. Bev- Mr.n Vnrw 'when nr'in' what eral prominent physicians of Portland I Zn-Au;n va t,rtm'. T were summoned sa wltnsssea. condition i d reach tome. I wasn t very tar irora tne jampmg-ott piaee $75,000 Rogue Orchard Sells. I when I taw myself ai I really wat (SDrii niiDirrti tn Th jnnra. la business man who was trading mv lr.jj . . . . I . w - jucuiuru, ur, ajar in. n. unanaier i ....,.... r, "- 1 ojvs -aisaui xysvia Va 'Cascarcts' End All the Miserable Days K A my own health for the . stuff that would land me on my back dead broke, friendless, blear-eyed and whiskey-ioaked. Say, maybe that mental picture of my finish didn t make me do a little iklnLin! J'A .Vn... .1.. . . , I iuiuiuuk I, U IIM1U BUUUL VI1C TfJll c-rC .irSStJrL Uerful Neal Drink Cure, at the Neal U1V& LiWMUiVf VUIUUU1C1I, VVI1 stipation or Sad Stomach for a Long Time. Primitive men did not need Caacarata. Tbey lived outdoors, ats plenty of fruit and all of their food was coarse. We modern people are different We ex ercise too little, eat little fruit and our food Is too fine, too rich. We can't have the bowels clogred up and keep well. It means that the food retained there decays. The decay creates poisons. And thoss poisons are sucked Into the blood through the very ducts Intended to suck In the nutriment Bo we must make our choice. We must liva. tA an axtant ltlr. tha n-tmtttw I. man,- else we must eat cascarets. Caacarets do what tha light food would do, what plenty of sxerclss does. The effect is aa natural from one as the other. The question is one of con venience If you choose Cascarets, take them as you take food, nor in large doses rarely, but a tablet at a timet That Is tha way to keep well. Get a 10 cent box now. -; "T I 4 a i 'V PORTLAND NEAL INSTITUTE Institute, and I decided to take the' Treatment 1 was treated like guest, and left there three days after I arrived with all desire for liquor gone. The money I used to spend for booze now goes to greater comfort' for the wife and children. , Feel like drinking again? Say, I'd just at lief tackle soft soap at any alcoholic ttuff. I'm through for good." V -i - Scores of men just like thit Port land merchant learned to ting the new "battle cry of freedom" after three short days spent at the Neal Institute It has been demonstrated' that per sistent, gnawing desire ' and craving appetite for liquor are doe to the ac cumulation of alcoholic poison in the .. system of the regular drinker. ; More drink affords only temporary relief. The Neal Treatment will,. in three, short davs. eradicate every trace of alcoholic poison from the tyetem of the most excessive drinker, leaving the pajient in the tame physical and mental condition he was in beforevhe started to drink, to far at the effects . of alcohol are concerned. The Neal Three-Day Liquor Treat ment consists Of the administration by a regular physician, always in at tendance, of a perfectly harmless veg-: etable medicine taken ' internally, -There are no hypodermic mjectiont. " ; At the Portland Institute the guests enjoy all the privileges and comforts of home, club or hotel. Names ofYa- tients are never divulged, i Satisfacv Hon is guaranteed or no money paid, "ome Vestment can be given to those who prefer ft ' . If you hare a frie4 who ought to free himself yfrora the v bondage of drink, don't delay a day: call, write or phone Neal Institute, 354 Hall tt, Portland, Or, for further information 1 and free booklet The New Way." Phone Marshall 2400. To reach the Neal Institute, take Sixteenth ttreet ear get off at Hall street, walk two blocks west. ' , vt Morphine and drug habit success fully treated f V H- Tttitnta nnen nleht and day. tPiefffee i .... rae w, tt lr,i Indicating- liquors and Tney were given Unequivocally to the I -.k,H,. untrihnH.. v.,- publler.they were not assigned to gov- :" ,a. .rnnt.vorwytblng of that tod. rl, a"re ta 0 VheherVfC .,T Wo on. can bttlld a monopoly of them. J awaiting trial before the Jury term of The preamble of the paper says, after it I Mrt which Mnn in r.,n m.. has dedicated them to the public, that shertff and prosecuting attorney are they ,maiy he used by the government determined. If possible, to rid ttie.eoun or any citlseh without the payment of tr of that class of men. and. if nar.nt. any Ye of any sort whatever." do not take proper care of their 'youna 'And the Invention accomplishes'" dausrhtera. the authorities will trv t "It. makes long-distance telephony on do it for them. land practically limitless. String a wire 1 1 rom Noma to Rio and then talk to Ar- - Mr. Carnegie newards Heroine. geiUha rora far AUskailt 1 very fjttsbvirg, May JO--Because sh was Simple, .., Tou i see, the electric current is 0 anxious to hear Andrew Carnegie not , forced -through the-were,.. vTt '.haa tutir... that h ma hMn4 r..i. been ' that ; method which has made It the staaa Mra Andrew Garni ho necessary to overcome th wire'e-re- sent Miss Annie Moore, i a Janltress at Sistance to the eurrenf which has held Jthe Carnegie institute. 1100. ' 1 ICQ " l wm-.i. .. J II . ... , i' . ieifefe Consult our Vdvertisea1 prices Carefully then come to us and you will find that wo do exactly as we advertise. Better still, bring this "ad" with you, get the work '"47 c "'.'' w 'Hi i S Instantly . A Blue-jay plaster 15 applied in a jiffy, i: and then you forret the corn. The pain ends -instantly. In 48 hoars the bit of red B & B wax so loosens the corn that yon lift it ont Vv : . - That sounds too good to be true. Bat five million corns are removed every year by Blue-jay. Ask almost - anybody.' Most people aow get rid of corns in this easy -way. No soreness, so pain, no inconvenience. TVbea you know Blue-jay yon will laugh at corns. i r' ,Seo the Picturd ; ' A ! the haiaJa. rad B a B wax wkica looatna Uia aoia., . 'k B ti ft ttt to proMt the ear . aad fcp the wj from ipraail j as, O- ft thesomftirtable aarmt bead hlh sow aroaad tb to. , P Mbh-T adbadfa. Ui " ae Btaawr aa. , , . . BIuejay Corn Plasters, 'ih-kM All DrugguU-15c and 25e'per Package ''A-', ,V; , Sample Mailed Free. Also Blae-jay Bunion. Plasters Baawei BUck. CUea New Vera, MaWcf Statical Oreaatasa, eta.1 22arat GOLD CROWNS PORCELAIN CROWNS BRIDGE WORK, per toStK 1 performed, then pay us the adver j Used prices. . We fill. crown. ' treat, j 1 bridge, regulate or extract teeth with- EXAMINATION 76x.T.R ACT! O N When platea or -brldjea are .. . oruerecu CLEANING' TEETH ; '. Whan other work ia ordered. 1 :,ik.t !f?: f! r .:, ,a J 'if A.: :! SILVER FILLING S iSimple 50c, Compound $U ' v G 0 L D FILLING S -Accordinp; to size, $.00 up. ' ; ; ' l .), M .: - !. ."..''. I'-,"' . : KILLING NERVES AND TREATING TEETH$1.00 to 251.50 extra. ' $5-r$7.f0"$10 According to Quality Of the Work Desired ALL WORK GUARANTEED FOR nFTEEtf. YEARS , Mfl S AJL, ' !. . .:.. , ... . , mm v ,lslss ' - - ..... i- .- ' " S : RELIABLE PAINLESS DENTISTS I onor s a, ic. TQ i 7. tt, trsTDAT t to x. r. at. rxovza kajuoxaxj sie. -N.-W Corner-Second and Morrison - Upstairs Ent.'r? Cc r: ances, to venture, ou upoar The -devel4 ef having don a little, for mv; fellow-k ' .-,' ' '. ,- - --!.- I : '