The New Age (Portland)
Saturday, November 17, 1906
Portland, Oregon
Page text (machine-generated)
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF KALISPELL KALISPELL, MONTANA
D. R. PEELER, Pres., F. J. LEBERT, V. Pres., R. E. WEBSTER, Cash., W. D. LAWSON, A. Cash. Transacts a general banking business. Drafts issued, available in all cities of the United States and Europe, Hong Kong and Manila. Collections made on favorable terms.
LADD & TILTON, Bankers Portland, Oregon
UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK
OF PORTLAND, OREGON.
J. C. AINSWORTH, President, W. B. AYER, Vice-President, R. W. SCHMEER, Cashier
The United States a general banking business. Drafts issued, available in all cities of the
States and Europe, Hong Kong and Manila. Collections made on favorable terms.
NORTHWEST CORNER THIRD AND OAK STREETS.
THE PENINSULA BANK ST. JOHNS, ORE
Capital, fully paid up, $25,000.00. Surplus and undivided profits, $3,000.00.
Commenced Business June 5, 1905.
OFFICERS: J. W. FORDNEY, President; R. T. PLATT, Vice President; C. A. WOOD, Cashier.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS: J. W. Fordney, R. T. Platt, F. C. Knapp, W. A. Brewer, H. L. Powers.
Thos. Cochran, M. L. Holbrook, C. A. Wood.
"Oldest Bank in the State of Washington."
DEXTER, HORTON & CO.
BANKERS
Capital $200,000
Deposits $7,583,000
Surplus and undivided
profits, $425,000
Accounts of Northwest Pacific Banks solicited upon terms which will grant to them the most liberal accommodations consistent with their salaries and responsibilities. Wm. M.
Ladd, President; N. H. Latimer, Manager; M. W. Peerson, Cashier, Seattle, Washington.
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF PORT TOWNSEND
Established 1882. Collections promptly made and remitted.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF PORTLAND OREGON
Surplus, $1,000,000 Deposits, $13,000,000
FIRST NATIONAL BANK of NorthYakima, Wash.
W. M. LADD President CHAS. CARPENTER Vice President W. L. STEINWEG, Cashier A. B. CLINE Assistant Cashier
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
Walla Walla, Washington. (First National Bank in the State.)
Transacts a General Banking Business.
CAPITAL $100,000. SURPLUS $100,000.
LEVI ANKENY, President. A. H. REYNOLDS, Vice President. A. R. BURFORD, Cashier
THE NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE
TACOMA, WASH.
UNITED STATES DEPOSITARY
Capital $200,000
Surplus $200,000
SAVINGS DEPARTMENT
OFFICERS - Chester Thorne, President: Arthur Albertson, Vice President and Cashier;
Frederick A. Rice, Assistant Cashier; Delbert A. Young, Assistant Cashier.
JNO. C. AINSWORTH, Pres. JNO. C. BAKER, Vice Pres. P. C. KAUFFMAN, 2d Vice Pres.
A. G. PRICHARD, Cashier. F. P. HASKELL, JR., Assistant Cashier.
THE FIDELITY TRUST COMPANY BANK
General Banking CAPITAL AND SURPLUS, $390,000 Safe Deposit Vaults
SAVINGS DEPARTMENT: Interest at the Rate of 3 per cent per Annum, Credited Semi-Annually
TACOMA, WASHINGTON
ALFRED COOLEDGE, Pres. A. F. McCLAINE Vice Pres. AARON KUHN, Vice Pres
CHAS. E. SCRIBER, Cashier. D. C. WOODWARD, Asst. Cashier.
THE COLFAX NATIONALBANK of Colfax Wash.
Capital, $120,000.00
Transacts a general banking business. Special facilities for handling Eastern Washington and Idaho items.
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK ESTABLISHED 1881
JOHN LAMB, DAVID ASKEGAARD, LEW A. HUNTOON, ARTHUR H. COSTAIN, President Vice President Cashier Asst. Cashier Interest Paid on Time Deposits
FIRST NATIONAL BANK of East Grand Forks, Minn.
Farm Loans Negotiated. Fire and Cyclone Insurance Written. Does a General Banking Business.
Capit1, $50,000 E. ARNESON, Pres. G. R. JACOBI Cashier
4 Per Cent Interest Paid on Time Deposits
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF DULUTH, MINNESOTA.
U. S. Government Depositary.
DIRECTORS: J. M. Berry, A. B. Conley, F. J. Holmes, F. M. Byrkit, F. L. Meyers, Geo. L. Cleaver, Geo. Falmer.
THE W. G. M'PHERSON COMPANY
"NOTHING BUT THE BEST" 47 First Street PORTLAND, OREGON
COAL—Rock Springs, Diamond, Richmond, Roslyn, New Castle, New Castle Nut, Franklin, Carbon Hill, Coke.
WOOD—4-Foot Fir, 4-Foot Oak, 4-Foot Ash, Sawed Oak, Sawed Fir, Sawed Ask, Sawed Knots.
The Merchants National Bank
Ost St. Paul, Minnesota
Capital, $1,000,000.00 Surplus, $500,000.00
Transacts a general banking business. Correspondence invited
OFFICERS-KENNETH CLARK, President; GEO. H. PRINCE, Vice President; H. W. PARKER, Cashier; H. VAN VLECK, Assistant Cashier.
DIRECTORS-Cawford Livingston, Kenneth Clark, J. H. Skinner, Louis W. Hill, Geo. H. Prince, C. H. Bigelow, R.D. Noye, W. V. Walker, K. Kellogg, E.N. Saunders, Thomas A. Marlow, W. B. Parsons, J. M. Hannaford, Charles P. Noves.
VOL. XI.
Portland
Capital, $500,000
STATE OF OREGON
1859
RTLAND, OREGON, SATURDAY
NEWS OF THE WEEK
PORTLAND, OREGON, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17. 1906.
In a Condensed Form for Our Busy Readers.
HAPPENINGS OF TWO CONTINENTS
A Resume of the Less Important but Not Less Interesting Event of the Past Week.
The government has begun a suit to dissolve the Standard Oil company. A San Francisco grand jury has indicted Ruef and Schmitz for extortion.
Both pacties in Colorado are resolved to work for the repeal of woman suffrage.
The Southern Pacific will add a third through train between Portland and San Francisco.
The high water wrecked the warehouse of the Western Idaho Sugar company at Nampa.
Two were killed and two others are dying as a result of a battle with robbers in San Francisco.
Japanl has just launched a battleship of 19,000 tons. It is equal and perhaps superior to anything afloat.
Three Americans and six Mexicans were killed by a premature explosion of dynamite at Douglas, Arizona.
Finland authorities have seized about 5,000 rifles and 118,000 cartridges intended for Russian revolutionists.
All railroads in the United States are ready to give employees a raise of 10 per cent in order to prevent trouble at the present time.
President Roosevelt has nearly reached Panama.
Witte has returned to Russia and will visit the czar.
Attorney General Moody has ordered a rigid enforcement of the eight-nour law.
It is probable a force of 1,000 marines will be kept in Cuba for some time.
Philadelphia Jews will honor the late John Hay by placing a memorial window in their synagogue.
The Chicago city attorney accuses the Pullman company of bripping judges, congressmen and other officials.
A desperate battle with knives between soldiers at Cheyenne to settle an old fued placed five men in the hospital.
The fortiest annual session of the National Grange, held at Denver, declared for parcels post and national good roads.
A desperate negro at Asheville, N.C., shot and killed four men in a successful attempt to escape arrest. Armed men are searching for him.
Secretary Metcalf has expressed the opinion that the treaty between the United States and Japan guarantees education to Japanese children in our public schools without discrimination.
Cuban liberals are divided on account of friendship with America.
A new plague has caused 12 deaths in a small Texas town, and doctors are unable to control it.
It is reported that King Alfonso of Spain has been assassinated, but the report cannot be verified.
Wireless messages state that the presidential party is off the Florida coast and enjoying fine weather.
The wrecking of the Milwaukee Avenue bank of Chicago was re enacted on the stage in Chicago and nearly caused a riot.
Scientists have made arrangements with the Italian government to complete the excavation of the ancient Roman city of Herculaneum.
The Forestry bureau of the United States has failed in its efforts to compel the railroads to use oil for fuel on engines passing through forest reserves.
It now develops that the Standard Oil company, aided by the railroads, did their best to defeat Hoch for governor Hoch received a majority of over 2,000
The boiler of a Southern Pacific passenger enginie exploded at Sarvea, a small station in Southern California, killing two persons and wrecking the depot and four cars.
Hearst may get the mayoralty of New York.
Idaho land fraud trials will begin soon at Moscow.
An American consul has been opened at Mukden.
Cuban liberals are making trouble for Governor Magoon.
All the provincial governors of the republic of Panama will meet Roosevelt.
MUCH DAMAGE REPORTED.
Floods in Oregon and Washington Destroy Homes and Bridges.
Castle Rock, Wash., Nov. 16. — The Cowlitz river has become a raging torrent, carrying houses, barns, logs and other drift down in the flood. Many families are homeless and have saved but few belongings from their ruined homes and are temporarily quartered with friends on higher ground. The Northern Pacific bridge across the Cowlitz at Olequa is washed out.
The town of Castle Rock is in a state of chaos. Electric lights are out because of the flood. The town marshal has closed the saloons to add to the public safety. The people are meeting the situation in a philosophic way and are not becoming panic stricken.
North Yakima, Wash., Nov. 16. — After falling slightly the Yakima and Naches rivers are again rising and the damage to property of all kinds is growing worse. All communication with the outside by rail is cut off. Every county bridge in the valley is under water and the city is isolated from the surrounding country.
The fears of the people are that the Naches river may change its course and come down the old river bed to the west of the city. If this happens the damage will be inestimable, as the best fruit orchards and some of the finest homes in the valley lie direct in its course.
Wenatchee, Wash., Nov. 16.—The flood still rages unabated. Added to the destruction by the rain and water, the wind is blowing. The damage done by the flood between Cashmere and Wenatchee, in the Wenatchee valley, cannot be estimated at the present time, but it will be heavy. The Wenatchee and the Columbia rivers are higher than they have ever been before. The former is eight inches higher than its former record.
Portland, Nov. 16.—Streams throughout the state which have been swollen by the recent rain storms and the Chinook wind in the mountains are thought to have reached their highest point. Some have commenced to fall and the Williamette was stationary last night. It is probable that the river at Portland will commence to fall today. Except along the lower Columbia, the danger from high water is thought to be over in Oregon.
Money Sent Mayor Schmitz Is Not Accounted For.
San Francisco, Nov. 16.—The Chronicle says today:
A new investigation is progressing in the course of developments in the local graft scandal. It now appears that many sums of money, large and small, that were sent from different states to Sam Francisco for the relief of the sufferers from the calamity never reached the relief committee. Some of these amounts, which aggregated a large sum, were mailed to the care of Mayor Schmitz. F. J. Heney, Detective William Burns and about 100 government agents have been making an investigation. President Roosevelt is the moving spirit behind the inquiry, and he declares that no man guilty of diverting the relief funds shall escape justice.
The cases come within the jurisdiction of the Federal authorities because of the interstate character of the postal service, which, it is alleged, was criminally tampered with.
A considerable sum of money was also sent through the express companies and Wells-Fargo, which companies are now investigating the disappearance of $10,580 sent in one package from the citizens of Searchlight, Nev., which the relief committee says it never received, and which the company says was delivered to the representative of the committee to whom it was addressed. The crime of forgery is said to be included in the offense of the raiders of the relief contributions. It is said that in the aggregate the stealings will amount to $1,000,000.
Ottawa, Ont., Nov. 16.—The Canadian commission reports that substantial preferences are given to Canadian goods over those of the United States in the new tariff adopted by New Zealand. On many classes the tariff on United States goods will be 20 or 30 per cent above that on Canadian goods. On bicycles, gas and oil engines, gum boots, printing paper, railways and tramways, sail cloth, canvas, surgical and dental instruments United States products will be taxed a duty of 20 per cent while the Canadian products will enter free.
Total Wealth of United States.
Washington, Nov. 16.—The total wealth of the country in 1904 was $106,881,415,000, according to figures issued by the census bureau today. In 1890 the total wealth was $65,037,091.—197; in 1800, $88,528,348,798.
RELIEF FUND IS LOOTED.
New Zealand Favors Canada.
White, Stuck and Green Rivers Drive Farmers From Homes.
SMALLER TOWNS UNDER WATER
Northern Pacific and Great Northern
Railroads Tied Up—Three
Lives Are Lost
Seattle, Nov. 15.—Floods in the White, Stuck and Green rivers, which began Tuesday night, have swept away miles of railroad trackage, inundated all the valley towns, rendered hundreds of farmers homeless and cost three lives up to date. Until the Western Union last night succeeded in getting a wire to Portland, Seattle was entirely cut off from the outside world by either railroad or telegraph lines. The telephone company kept up two lines, but this was the only means of communication Seattle has had.
The three men lost in the floods were drowned while fighting to break up log jams that threatened railroad and county bridges.
It will be two weeks before the Northern Pacific is able to resume regular train operations. The Great Northern is tied up for a shorter period, for trouble on that road is due to an avalanche of mud that swept out a portion of track.
Auburn, Kent, O'Brien, Renton, Oriellia and half a dozen smaller towns in the valleys of three rivers are under water. Residents of O'Brien were compelled to abandon their homes and flee to the hills. At Kent a raging torrent is running through the town and Auburn will suffer extensive damages unless the waters recede immediately.
The 50 employees of the Denny Renton Clay works plant at Renton were cut off by the flood and had to remain cooped up in the warehouse until they could be rescued by boats.
FOR RIVERS AND HARBORS.
A national congress of American commercial bodies interested in the development of internal waterways and harbor improvements will meet in Washington on the sixth and seventh of December. Oregon will be represented by a delegation from the Portland chamber of commerce.
The purpose of the congress is mainly to prevail upon the United States authorities to pass a measure calling for an appropriation of fifty millions annually for river and harbor improvement. Even should such a measure pass it would still be but a fraction of what other great nations are expending annually upon their waterways. The movement is a national expression of the knowledge that water competition is the one great cheapener of railroad freight rates—railways that compete with rivers for traffic do not pay extravagant dividends upon watered stock.
In those sections of the country wherein the railroads are compelled to carry freight in competition with river craft the rates are from one-third to one-sixth of those ruling where water competition is not a factor. It is told of a cotton section in Texas that the canalizing of a very insignificant stream so as to be available for flat bottomed canal boats, lowered the freight rates so radically as to make a saving to a small community of three million dollars annually. As a matter of fact the canalized stream carried but a small percentage of the traffic upon which this large saving was effected, but the fact that the stream was available for traffic compelled the railways to meet the water competition.
The Rivers and Harbors congress will discuss the improvement of the Oregon and Washington waterways and the removal of obstructing bars at the entrances of the harbors and will seek to impress upon the congress of the nation the importance of these improvements to the farming and mercantile population.
Commend Teaching System.
New York, Nov. 15.—After two days' inspection, the English teachers who came here to study United States methods of education have discovered several good ideas which they intend to suggest to the authorities in England. They like our system of medical inspection, our law which requires children between the ages of 14 and 15 years to attend evening schools if they work in the daytime, our discipline, which they all describe as "easy," and certain features of our kindergarten work. More teachers will arrive this week.
General William G. Elv.
Norwich, Conn., Nov. 15.—General William G. Ely died suddenly at his home here last night of heart trouble. He commanded the Eighteenth Connecticut volunteers in the Civil war, and was brevetted brigadier general at its close.
THE REASON WHY
Bourne Should Not
Be Elected U.
S. Senator
The New Age has said before and it now says again that it does not believe that the next legislature will elect J. Bourne, Jr., to the United States senate. It has been said that our opposition to Mr. Bourne is inspired by prejudice, and that we can give no good reason for opposing him since he was regularly named by the republican voters for the office.
We opposed Mr. Bourne during the primaries for the reason that we knew him to be unfit for the high office to which he aspired.
First—That he is not a loyal and consistent republican.
Second—That he is a traitor and political black-leg.
Third—That he could not be depended upon to support Roosevelt.
If he had been a loyal and consistent republican he would not have deserted his party in the hour of its dire distress, when the blight of Bryanism and populism overshadowed the country in 1906. But as a true and loyal republican would have put self aside and rendered whatever service he could for his party and his republican friends. If Bourne's will had prevailed and Bryan had been elected who can say that there would have been today a strong, invincible republican party in Oregon to honor him for his perfidy.
The legislative session of 1895 was the most spectacular in the history of Oregon and the King Pin of that session was J. Bourne Jr., whose malodorous record is even yet a stench in the nostrils of decent people. With a goodly supply of money and other corrupting influences the trick of thwarting the will of the people and debauching the honor of the citizenry was the special mission of this political montebank, who, now, ten short years afterward, has the brazen affrontery to seek this high and honorable position at the hands of the party, whose murder he conspired to bring about.
In the light of the past record of Mr. Bourne, who is so unsuspecting as to trust him in the future? Does anyone who knows him, save his hired henchmen, think for a minute that he can be depended upon to stand up for republican principles and policies in the United States senate, and to uphold the hands of life-long, true and tried republican leaders in that body, and to "stand pat" with the party's matchless leader, mose profound stateman, patriot and humanitarian since the days of Lincoln—Theodore Roosevelt.
L. R. MANNING, Pres.
L. R. MANNING & CO., Inc.
Real Estate Loans and Investments. City and Farm Property. Timber and Coal Lands. First-Class Mortgages and Investment Securities.
EQUITABLE BUILDING TACCOMA, WASH.
WHEAT-HEARTS
Makes a delightful breakfast dish: with fruit added, a lime juice and a hint of almond pence for fuel. Is guaranteed absolutely pure acre costs less than any other cereal. Sold by all grocers. Five pound package, 25 cents.
THE PUGET SOUND FLOURING MILLS GO., TAGOMA, WASH.
TACOMA
THE PACIFIC LIQUOR AND WINE HOUSE.
N. REUTER, Proprietor.
The best of Wines, Liquors and Cigars.
Family Trade a Specialty.
Tel. Red 1731.
1506 Pacific Ave.
1505 Commerce St. Tacoma, Washington
MONTY'S THIRST STORE
Perlin Building. 113 South 11th St.
Telephone, Main 194.
THE ABBEY
F. J. MOONEY. Proprietor
Telephone James 2121
Wines, Liquors & Cigars
Rooms in Connection
TACOMA WASHINGTON
Ivory Wood Fibre Plaster Ivory Cement Plaster
F. T. CROWE & CO.
1105 A Street TACOMA, WASHINGTON
Menzies & Stevens
Latest Styles in
HATS, MEN'S FURNISHINGS AND
CLOTHING SPECIALTIES
913 Pacific Avenue
Provident Bldg. TACOMA, WASH.
Kentucky Liquor Co.
Incorporated. Phone Main 113.
WHOLESALE DEALERS IN
Wines, Liquors and Cigars
1130 Pacific Avenue
1131 Commerce Street
Tacoma, Washington
Puget Sound Electric Railway Interurban
Leave Tacoma—6:00, 7:10, 8:10, 9:15
(Ltd., no stops) 10:10, 11:10 a.m, 12:10,
1:10, 2:10, 3:10, 4:15 (Ltd., no stops),
5:10, 6:10, 7:10, 8:10, 9:15, 11:15 p.m.
Leave Seattle—6:30, 8:00, 9:00 (Ltd.,
no stops), 10:00, 11:00 a.m, 12 m, 1:00,
2:00, 3:00, 4:00 (Ltd., no stops), 5:00,
6:00, 7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:15 p.m.
Leave Puyallup—5:30, 7:00, 8:00, 9:00,
11:00 a m, 1:00, 2:00, 3:00, 4:00, 5:00,
6:15, 7:15, 8:15, 9:15 p m.
Leave 9th and Commerce Sts—5:40,
7:00, 8:00, 10:00, 12:00 a m, 1:00, 2:00,
3:00, 4:00, 5:00, 6:15, 7:15, 8:15, 11:15
p m.
THE TRUCK
Tacoma Trunk Factory
A good Trunk is always a good bargain. You can't judge from mere appearances. We sell Trunks that not only look well but wear well. Suit Cases and Bags of all sizes, styles and prices Repairing done. Phone Red 2772
C Street TACOMA, WASH
931 C Street TACOMA, WASH
L. R. MANNING, Pres.
L. R. MANNING
Real Estate Loans and Investments.
Coal Lands. First-Class Mortg
EQUITABLE BUILDING
A Del
BREA
Di
WHEAT-HEARTS
Makes a delightful breakfast
lovely desert. Requires lit
House of Fine Liquors
Phone Main 446.
Cor. Eleventh and Pacific Avenue
...CIGARS...
Manufactured by the best factories of New
York and Tampa. Also a complete line of
Imported Cigars, Cigarettes and
Smokers' Articles
Tel. Main 765. 956 Pacific Avenue
THE DAMFINO
P. T. McGLOIN, Proprietor
Telephone Main 164
ESTABLISHED BEFORE THE WAR
Imported and Domestic Wines,
Liquors and Cigars
1502 Jefferson Avenue, Corner Pacific
TACOMA WASHINGTON
The Best is None Too Good for
You. Get It at
The Trail
Saloon & Cafe
113 S. 12th St., Tacoma, Wash.
L. L. ROBERSON.
Pres. and Treas.
C. H. ROBERSON.
Sec'y.
EAT T. B. C. BREAD
Made by
TACOMA BAKING COMPANY
Wholesale Manufacturers of Bread, Cakes,
Ete. We also make a specialty of GOOD
BREAD. Tel. James 261.
943 Tacoma Ave., Tacoma, Wash.
The Barber Asphalt Paving Co.
ASPHALT
For Roofing, Street Paving and Reservoir Lining
CONTRACTORS
Street Paving, Driveways, Floors and Sidewalks
203-4-5 Providence Bldg.
TACOMA WASH.
We make a Specialty of
FINE POULTRY
Private Car Trade Solicited
Commercial Market
HARRY HASH, Prop.
Retail Dealer in
Fresh and Salt Meats
1114 C Street
Telephone Main 292 TACOMA
J, B. TERNES, Pres. and Mgr. Tel. 48
Tacoma Carriage and Baggage Transfer Company
OFFICE 101 TENTH ST.
Carriages and Baggage Wagons at All Hours
Private Ambulance Perfect in
Every Detail
FIRST CLASS LIVERY
Hand your Checks for Baggage to our Messengers, who will meet you on all incoming trains.
Until January 1, 1907,
THE NEW AGE will be
only $1 per year.
A. T. HOSMER, Secy'
NG & CO., Inc.
City and Farm Property. Timber and
Images and Investment Securities.
TACCMA, WASH.
THE NEW AGE, PORTLAND, OREGON
PASTEURIZED DAIRY COMPANY, Inc.
Pasteurized Milk, Cream; Butter, Eggs,
Cottage Cheese, Cheese, Butter Milk.
QUALITY ICE CREAM
Milk 4 per cent guaranteed
Phone East 3362
800 Russell Street PORTLAND, OREGON
The Never Regret Cleaning and Pressing Parlor
Cleaning, Pressing, Dyeing and Repairing
Steam and French Dry Cleaning a Specialty.
Suits Pressed While You Wait.
132 N. Sixth Street, PORTLAND, OREGON
Michigan T Company
H. CRAW, Proprietor
Phone East 2806 154 Grand Avenue
Ericson Undertaking Co.
Incorporated
Funeral Directors and Embalmers
LADY ASSISTANT
Phone Main 6133 409-411 Alder Street
PORTLAND OREGON
THE BUREAU SALOON
FRANK HOFFMAN, Proprietor
Choiceest Imported and Domestic
Telephone Main 5506
Southeast Corner First and Morrison
PORTLAND OREGON
A. H. Willett & Co.
Wholesale and Retail
Special Prices to Restaurants
Prompt Delivery
Phone East 283 128 Grand Avenue
S. Washington, Prop. L. Wilkinson, Manager
The Alpha
Fine Wines, Liquors & Cigars
NICELY FURNISHED ROOMS
Headquarters for Railroad and All Professional People.
Phone Pacific 151
101 N. Park St., PORTLAND, OREGON
A. H. Griswold
Successor to GRISWOLD & PHEGLEY
TAILOR
No Branch Store
131 Sixth St. PORTLAND, OREGON
OUR BRAND
Farmers, Teamsters and Horsemen, look to your interest. When in need of Horse Collars, by the bottom of the SHARKEY COLLAR It has stood the test of wear and tear and climate for twenty years. Ask your dealer for them and insist on having the "Sharkey." P. SHARKEY & SON Portland, Oregon
The Portland Flowering Mills Co.
OLYMPIC
PATENT
FAMILY
FLOUR
NOW
PORTLAND, ORE.
W.C. MOON BARCO, PORTLAND, ORE.
OLYMPIC.
A Flour Whose
Best Endorsement
Is the Fact that the
Number of People Who
Use It
Multiplies Every Year
Popular Science
Modelling in breadcrumbs, which are soaked in liquids of various colors and are made elastic and almost unbreakable by a special process, is the curious new art of Suzanne Meyer, a French woman.
The human breath has been found to be a fair conductor of electricity, a spark from a Wimshurst machine being longer in breathed than in pure air. Investigating further, Dufour has concluded that the lung and skin exhalations sensibly increase the leakage from an electrically charged body, and it is suggested that the vapors rising above a flock of sheep or cattle may explain the tendency of lightning to strike the huddled animals.
A novel charge is brought against the common bedbug (Climex lectularius) by Dr. W. J. Goodhue, medical superintendent of the Molokai leper settlement, who regards it as a chief agent in spreading leprosy. It is believed to have greater influence than the gnat, for it comes noiselessly, and during the patient's sleep, and bedding among lepers is too little disinfected. After long research Dr. Goodhue has demonstrated the presence of the bacillus of leprosy in the mosquito (Culex pungens) as well as in the bedbug.
An ingenious apparatus for drawing the profile of a river bottom is used by Italian engineers. It consists of a wheel affixed to the bottom of a graduated rod, which is fastened vertically at the side of a boat in such a manner that as the boat advances up or down or across stream, the wheel at the end of the rod runs continually upon the bottom, the rod rising and falling with variations of level. By noting the depth at chosen intervals of time, the elements are obtained for tracing an accurate representation of all the sinuosities of the bottom of the river, and the variations of depth. In the saving of time this simple apparatus possesses an enormous advantage over the ordinary method of soundings.
Germany has for some time possessed a dozen factories for the liquefaction of carbonic acid gas issuing from the earth in the neighborhood of extinct volcanoes. Last summer a large factory of the same kind was opened near the Puy de Dome, a famous extinct volcano in central France. The liquid obtained by the condensation of these volcanic gases is said to be purer than that produced by solely chemical processes. From an excavation at Algeperse, near the Puy de Dome, the quantity of gas given forth every day is reckoned at about half a million liters. The place is known as the "poison fountain," and the bones of many animals have been found in the excavation, including those of a horse, a bison and a mammoth.
According to Cosmos, the employment of circular disks of iron, turning with great velocity, but possessing no teeth on the edge, for sawing metal, has become common in many workshops. Among other places where such saws without teeth are used is the celebrated Krupp gun works, where armor plate is sometimes cut in this manner. The process is not a newly discovered one. As long ago as 1824 Darrier and Colladon, at Genova, experimented with swiftly rotating disks of iron. They found that when a disk about seven inches in diameter turned with a peripheral velocity of ten meters per second, it could be cut with a steel tool pressed against it, but that when the velocity was increased to twenty-one meters per second the iron was unaffected, but the steel tool was damaged. At a velocity of sixty meters per second the iron disk even cut quartz and agate.
IN GREAT OCEAN DEPTHS.
Some Ravines and Plateaus of the See, Have Been Explored.
Sen Have Been Explored.
The greatest ocean depths are not in the Atlantic, as the veritable abysses are to be found on the other side of the globe. Close to New Zealand the water attains a depth of five and one-half miles in the Kermadec and Tonga ravines, which in themselves attain a depth of 29,530 feet, while they are separated from each other by a chain of mountains 9,850 feet in height. There is also the Aleutian ravine, which reaches a depth of 23,000 feet.
Mostly subaqueous scenery is monotonous; there are no abrupt declivities or precipices; except in the vicinity of the coasts or near islands of volcanic formation, everything being rounded off and smoothed down by the action of the water. Close to the land there is somewhat more varieley. The European plateau slopes gradually away down into the depths and a fair view can be obtained here, provided a maximum depth at 1,300 feet be not exceeded.
At first abundant vegetation and animal life are met with, but below the depth mentioned the scene changes; first the light grows dimmer and dimmer and the deeper we descend the lower does the thermometer fall, except in the case of the Mediterranean, where the temperature is, relatively speaking, high, as this sea is contained in what is practically a closed basin. In the Atlantic the temperature of the water was taken for a depth of 19,686 feet. The surface temperature of 68 degrees fell to 38 degrees at a depth of 6,562 feet. After 6,562 feet the temperature falls, but slowly as greater depths are attained, the cold being practically uniform and not subject to any changes of season.—Scientific American.
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ANOTHER VOICE AGAINST BOURNE.
The Woodburn Independent, a Republican paper, commenting on the increasing opposition among the people to the election of Jonathan Bourne to the senate, and thus carrying out the too common plan of selling the office to the highest bidder, says: "We are confident that the greater portion of the Republican voters of Oregon would applaud the act of a representative who bravely asserted his faith in the constitution of the United States and declared his intention of voting in accordance with the wishes of the majority of the Republican voters of the state. He would be cheered by the majority, who voted against Bourne. He would be praised by all loyal Republicans, who would consider as a blow at the grand old party the election of a man who not long ago deserted that party and McKinley for free silver and Bryan, and who now not only alms to gain a seat in the United States Senate, but seeks also to seat in that body from Oregon another Bryan free silver advocate, W. S. U'Ren. Isn't it time to halt and ponder, and not be so dazzled by the lavish display of gold as to forget for the nonce the vital interests of the Republican party of Oregon?"
There is a good deal of good, sober sense in this. The plea is made that it is settled that Bourne is the "choice of the people," of the republican voters of the state, but how many members of the Legislature believe this? How many of them believe that as between him and any one of half a dozen other men that might be named, neither using any money to influence votes, Bourne could get a majority? The proposition is absurd, and legislators know it.
But, it is said, they are bound by the result of the primaries and election last spring. Let them be honest and ask themselves, though they may have signed Statement No. 1, if they would have voted for Senator Gearin if he had beaten Bourne at the polls last June? No, they would not; they would easily have found an excuse; they would have said that they had a mental reservation in subscribing to that statement, and meant to confine their votes to a Republican. Yet they could not have done so and kept the strict letter of their promise, if such it was. And they might well have had another mental reservation, that they would vote for the Republican receiving the highest number of votes last April, provided he was a fit man and got the nomination in a fair and square contest with other candidates. This would have been only a fair, proper, sensible mental modification of their pledge, for surely the people do not want to elect an unfit man or one who bought the office. It would be far better to depart from a foolish promise made in the excitement of a campaign, than to keep it by electing such a man. And there is no doubt that a majority of the people would not only forgive a member for using his honest judgment next winter and acting in their interest, but would fully approve such an act.
The responsibility finally falls upon the members of the Legislature to do what is best for the people, and they know that this is not likely to be done by electing Bourne, who after all received but a small fraction of the total vote of the state. The law gotten up by Mr. U'Ren did not abrogate the constitution of the United States and of Oregon, and the Legislature is still free to do its duty and bound to do it in the interest of the people, regardless of Mr. U'Ren's law. If a test vote could be taken now throughout the state, on the question whether the senator should be Bourne or some other man, the best one the Legislature could decide on, there
can be no doubt that Bourne, spending no money in the contest, would be overwhelmingly defeated. This being the case, it certainly is not the bounded duty of the Legislature to elect him. The people did not really decide last April. It was not a square deal, because Bourne's money was poured out like water to offset the result.
It is a principle of law that all contracts tainted with fraud are void, and if it was Bourne's money and not his merits that secured his plurality, the choice was in a sense fraudulent; it was not fair and even, and nobody is bound by it.
THE RACE PROBLEM.
There is a good deal of foolish talk on the part of Southern statesmen or otherwise prominent men about the solution of what they call the Negro or race problem. Much of it is suggestive of the expatriation of the colored people. Some express a hope that they will mostly move up North after awhile—impelled thereto, we suppose the thought is, by unbearable prescription and persecution. Another brilliant suggestion is that they be sent down to dig the Panama canal as though they could be forced to go to Panama against their will any more than white people—and then if they did go, what would they do after the canal was finished? And how could they all or a large proportion of them be maintained there? But in some way or another they are to be gotten rid of, if possible, for it seems to be conceded that to exterminate them would be too big a job.
There are more sensible Southerners, however, who perceive the folly of such schemes and ideas, and also know that the South needs the labor of the Negroes and could not well do without it, even if a good many of them don't work much. The fact is that the colored people have a perfect right to live in the South, or in any other part of the country, the same as white people have, and to the same rights and liberties under the law, and protection by the law, because they are full legal citizens. A good many people who discuss "the Negro problem" seem to assume that the Negro is a creature to be considered as one entirely apart from membership in the human family, as a part of the brute creation or some pestilential plague not to be considered at all except in connection with some means of getting rid of them. People who entertain this sort of idea cannot discuss the matter intelligently. The Negroes must be accepted as a part of the citizenry of the country and treated accordingly. If they violate the laws punish them. Encourage them by all possible means to work, to be industrious and honest and to become independent. But they are not to be exterminated nor expatriated. There is no need of full social equality, and it is not or should not be desired on one side more than on the other. There is no social equality among white people either and no great fuss is made about it. But colored people ought to be accorded their political rights, and encouraged to prize American citizenship by political recognition. Their labor is needed in many ways, and a large proportion of them are capable and willing workers. If both races would behave themselves better and work more and talk less, and each attend to its own business, and recognize others' rights, the "race problem" would soon dwindle into insignificance.
PROBABLY NO FRAUD HERE.
It maybe that some of the Pendleton men suspected of land-grabbing have secured possession of some pasture lands in such a way that a government agent out for that purpose can find some flaws or fault with them, but it does not appear that Col. Raley or W. J. Furnish or the others have done anything that reasonable men would object to. Nearly, if not quite all, the land that they have acquired, and this only as it seems by lease for ten years, is precipitous, rocky and almost worthless mountain land, good for nothing but pasture and good for but little for that. It is well enough for the government to be watchful to prevent frauds in taking up agricultural lands, though it did not begin to exercise its vigilance till the lands were
THE NEW AGE. PORTLAND. OREGON
about all gone, but it does not follow that prominent men should be accused of land frauds for furnishing poor settlers with the money necessary to buy these scrub lands, and their renting them for pasture. In this transaction the government was benefited, for it got all the lands were worth, and no body was harmed. Mr. Raley says he will be out of pocket on his leasing speculation, which by the way was not a secret transaction at all, as he informed the department of what he was about and it made no objection, and as to Mr. Furnish, he says he only purchased the amount allowed by law to each individual and complied fully with the law in obtaining title. There has been a good deal of fault found lately with the management of affairs on the Umatilla reservation, and the agent and his favorites in Pendleton have been the objects of considerable criticism, and this attack on Raley and Furnish looks a good deal like revenge and spitework. They are men of too much wealth and too high character to try to acquire lands by fraud, and are men of too good business sense to do so, even if they were so disposed when they knew the government was watching the land business very closely, and when the lands in question were scarcely worth fencing anyway
RUCTION AT THE DALLES.
The motives and reasons for the resignation of M. T. Nolan, register of the land office at The Dalles, do not all appear on the surface as yet but Hon. M. A. Moody, on whose recommendation Nolan was appointed, has hinted at some of the reasons in a general way and can doubtless go more into detail if he desires. Nolan owed the office entirely to Mr. Moody, but after he was fairly installed in it became, as is intimated, overbearing and disagreeable to the patrons of the office, and it may be surmised showed ingratitude to his benefactor. Mr. Moody stood very high with the administration when he was a member of Congress, as in fact he has done ever since, probably having far more influence at Washington than Williamson ever did even before the indictment, and it may be through Moody's suggestion that Nolan was ordered to make a report concerning certain transactions. He sought to avoid making the report, but on an imperative order from Washington did so, and sent his resignation along with it, the presumption naturally being that he knew the report would involve his dismissal if he did not resign
Mention of these matters invites the reflection that it was a great mistake as the New Age said at the time, for the people of this district to defeat Moody and nominate Williamson. Moody had served two terms in Congress and had become influential, and was especially liked by the President, and if kept in Congress till now could have been a great power for Oregon's good; but what has Williamson done? Everybody knows the history of his brief congressional career, and for the last two years or so Oregon has had no representation in the house. The people of this district were never served as ably and well in the house as when Mr. Moody was a member, and are not likely to be served so well for a long time to come.
THE STATE PRINTING PLANT.
State Printer-elect Duniway is to be congratulated and commended for his determination to buy a complete printing plant for the state house, rather than submit to F. C. Baker's exactions in relation to the plant which he owns and which other state printers have been obliged to use on Baker's terms. The state ought to own its printing plant, and if Mr. Duniway provides one it would be well for the state to take it off his hands if it is what the state needs and Mr. Duniway wishes to sell it. State printers, elected for only four years, providing they are restricted to a fair salary or reasonable amoluments, ought not to be obliged to buy a plant or to rent one owned by a former printer at whatever prise he may choose to charge. The state should provide the plant and then pay the printer a good salary and shut off all grafting. Mr. Duniway knows about, if not quite all, there is to be known about the printing business, and if he gets a plant it will be a good one and he will do nothing but
good work. As to the old plant left over from Baker's regime, nobody will shed any tears if he couldn't get enough for it to pay him for hauling it away. He made enough out of the office to satisfy any reasonable man without holding up every state printer as long as he lives and obliging him to pay the price of a new plant, more or less, for the use of Baker's old outfit.
President Roosevelt always means right and generally does right, but he is impulsive and sometimes does people an injustice unintentionally, and this was the case when he discharged a whole regiment of colored soldiers for the improper acts of a few of them, and which were no worse than white soldiers often indulge in, and were doubtless much exaggerated by Southern Negrophobists.
Labor unions will gain nothing by going into politics, unless they organize to support solidly the candidates that suit them best of the two principal parties. If they try to have a party of their own and put up separate candidates, they will only aid the stronger of these two great parties, as Prohibitionists and Socialists do, and accomplish nothing.
For the first time in the history of the United States a President is beyond the confines of the country, but President Roosevelt is a law unto himself and is no great respector of precedents. He will find out all that a man can during the time he stays about the big ditch, and there is likely to be more doing in that quarter hereafter than heretofore.
It is reported that Jack Matthews is figuring on trying his hand again at being political boss, especially at Salem next winter, but he doesn't find it very easy to get his hand in again. Times are different from what they used to be.
Marlon county as well as Multnomah always claims and nearly always gets one of the presiding officers of the Legislature. But there are other Willamette Valley counties and Southern and Eastern Oregon.
In anything like a close election the colored voters hold the balance of power in several states. Yet some people think they are politically good for nothing except to vote the straight Republican ticket.
Frank Davey of Marion county seems to be in the lead for speaker of the House, but this is a case where appearances may be deceptive. The Multnomah members are to be consulted.
If the state is going to buy any printing plant it should get a new, good one, and reject all overtures to buy the old outfit of Frank Baker's, that he would like to unload. Hasn't he made enough off the state?
It is pretty well known that Harriman is about the biggest fraudulent land grabber in the country, or that roads at which he is the head have been, but there is no danger of his being indicted and convicted.
There are not over 20 state senators who have more or less hopes of being elected president. It will be something strange if Multnomah county gets neither that office nor the speakership.
President Roosevelt has again declared that he would not run for President in 1908. The next best man is sight, in the people's estimation is Taft.
Any Republican member will be easily forgiven for ignoring Statement No.1 to the extent of voting for some fit man instead of Bourne for Senator.
Nobody is going to worry much about who will be nominated for mayor until after the holidays. Then
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Cards are out announcing the formal
opening of The Alpha, Saturday evening
lov. 19.
Mrs. Hedspith is confined to the
house this week with a severe cold.
Mrs. Clara Bettis is still at the hos-
pital.
‘Mr. Peter Lee died in this city Friday
m rning at8:30. The New Age extends
its sympathies to the family of the de-
ceased.
Mrs. Wickliffe 1s still improving.
but ,unable to leave her home as yet.
The Tuesday evening socials at Mt.
Olivet Baptist church are interesting
and well attended.
Mr. Peter Lee who for a number of
years has been in the employ of Bd-
wards & Co, as teamster, is critically
ill at his residence, Park and Jackson,
Hig attending physician holds out very
little encouragement to his many
friends for his recovery.
At the last meeting of Household of
Ruth No, 844, G. U. 0. of 0. F., a
novel scheme was adopted to raise
money to secure new regalias for the
order. All member obligated them-
selves to raise one dollar each by
February and at a public. entertain-
ment to be given thelr friends, relate
in poetry how they procured the dol-
lar—more anon.
Mrs. Susie Ford Bailey of Vancou-
ver, B, C,, is in the city, having come
to care for Mrs. E. Butler of West
Montgomery street, who is quite ill.
Mrs, Bailey was a former resident of
Portland, having resided here for a
period of ten years. She was an ac-
tive worker in the churches and
former member of the A. M. E. Zion
choir of this city.
‘On Monday evening a reception was
tendered to Rev. George E. Jackson,
who was reappointed pastor of the A.
M. B. Zion church and to Mrs. D, New.
man, who went as a delegate to the
annual conference. A large number of
the members and friends of the church
were in attendance. Mr. Ed, Can:
nady acted as master of ceremonies.
‘A welcome address was made by Mr.
Jas. N. Fullilove. ‘The choir rendered
Several selections. A paper was pre-
sented by Mr. C. A. Ritter after which
Rev. Jackson and Mrs. D. Newman
made short addresses, following which
the congtegation repaired to the ves
try and a pleasant social hour was
spent and refreshments served by the
ladies of the church.
‘Tuesday evening, Nov. 13th, the
Household of Ruth No. 844, while
holding a regular mecting was sud-
denly interrupted by loud and repeated
alarms on the outer door. Upon in
vestigation it was found that the mem
bers of New Northwest Lodge No.
2554 G. U. O. of O. F. had arrived to
help the members of the Household
to celebrate their 13th anniversary.
The business of the meeting was
quickly concluded and the brothers
Admitted. They quickly made ar
rangements and spread a bountifu
repast, seated the sisters around th¢
festive board and no urging was need
€d for ample justice to be done to the
Gelicious viands After all had done
ample justice, speechmaking was the
order and after many humorous and
interesting remarks and a time spen
in social Intercourse, all voted that i
was good to have been there and de
parted for thelr several homes look
ing forward longingly to a repetition
of the affair.
‘The Colored Taxpayers’ League will
meet Thursday night, Nov. 22d, 1906,
at 8:30 o'clock at the Bethel A. M. E.
church. A full attendance is desired
by order of
G. W. KUNEY, President.
DR. J. A. NEWMAN, Secretary.
Mrs. Lizzie Williams is on the sick
list.
Mr. Bradshaw is up and around
again,
‘The college concert which was given
last Friday night was a success.
Mrs. Chase's sister is visiting her
from the East.
Look out for the Thanksgiving bal
to be given by the young girls of
Tacoma.
‘Miss Rebecca Jones entertained last
Monday afternoon Mrs. John Nelson,
Mrs. Cole and Mrs. Williams.
Mr. Harry Frazier, who has been in
‘Tacoma for the past summer, left for
his home in Portland last Friday.
Miss Willie Lee, Mr. Clifford Hand
cock and Mr. Grays-of Seattle were
the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Asbury.
‘Mr. William Smart, who has been in
our city for the past two months lef
last Thursday for his hume in Kansas
ae
L OUR CHICAGO LETTER j
Chicago, Ill, Noy. 5th, 1906.
‘There are now 68,000 colored people
in Chicago.
Mr. Thos. G. Taylor secured a di-
yorce from his’ wife last week.
Mr. Robert H. Jones, Jr., was in the
city last week.
It is reported that Col. John R. Mar.
shail of the Eighth Regiment will soon
be asked to resign.
St. Mary's A. M. E. church under
the pastorship of Rev. W. H. Sanders
is doing splendid.
Mr. and Mrs. H. Randall entertained
‘a number of their friends at a lunch-
‘eon last Monday.
| Mrs. William Emanuel gave a mus-
teale at her residence last Tuesday
evening and a most enjoyable program
was rendered.
Pe ces glint iscay heng ahaa
have Mrs. Alberta M. Smith removed
‘from office as a Probation Officer of
the Juvenile court.
| Miss Blanch Wright entertained a
few friends at cards and music on last
‘Thursday evening. A most. enjoyable
time was had by all present.
| ‘A Theatrical Association among the
colored people of this city has been
organized. Mr. J. E. Green has been
elected president. Mr, Phil Miller,
manager.
Police Officer John Fletcher was
shot last Saturday while attempting to
arrest a burglar. He finally captured
the burglar. The officer is not dan-
gerously wounded.
Mr, 8. H. Prather, 33,of No. 6120
Ada street, and a prominent colored
Mason, has been appointed deputy for
the State of Illinois of the Ancient
Scottish Rite and the Mystic Shrine
among the colored masons of this
state.
| Parkwood Cemetery Association has
been organized among the colored
people in Chicago. Some of the prom-
inent colored men connected with it
are Dr. E. 8. Mill, Rev. J. F. Thomas,
|Rev. B. J. Fisher, Major R. R. Jack
json and several ofners,
A meeting will be soon called by the
Western Star Club for the purpose of
taking some definite action to protest
against any plan or arrangement by
ithe election of Rev. A. J. Cary who is
the candidate for one of the general
officers of the A. M. E. church, at the
net general conference.
Rev. Jesse Woods, the prominent
pastor of the St. John’s A. M. E.
jchureh is, being prominently mention-
ed for one of the general officers to
|be elected at the general conference
of the A. M. E. church. Rev, Jesse
{Woods is a Christian minister and has
a clean record. He will make a good
man for the piace.
Several prominent colored men in
Chicago have instituted a new order
which is called the Royal Order of
Honor. ‘The object and purpose of the
jorder is to confer a degree of honor
|free and without cost upon the leading
and distinguished colored men ard
women, who have accomplished some-
thing of a meritorious character, in
their day and time. The officers of
| Will consist of a president, vice pres-
|ident, secretary and treasurer, and the
headquarters of it will be permanently
located in Chicago.
| at the tnst election held in Chicago,
Nov. 6th, Lawyer F. L. Barnett, a
colored lawyer of Chicago, was elect-
‘ed judge of the Municipal court and
Doctor Alexander Lane, a prominent
colored doctor of this city was elect-
ed a member of the Legislature of the
State of Illinois, ‘The unpopularity of
Oscar DePriest, a colored man who
was a candidate for one of the county
{commissioners almost caused the de-
|feat of Mr. Barnett for judge, of the
Municipal court of Chicago. Mr, De-
Priest was running on the same ticket
and the people knifed him all over the
jcity. “It is not determined as. yet
whether or not this man Oscar De-
Priest is elected. It is to be hoped
that he is beaten,
DISHONORABLY DISCHARGED
SOLDIERS.
| Upon the recommendation of Brig-
adier General E. A. Darlington, Inspec-
tor General of the Army, President
Roosevelt has ordered the dishonor-
able discharge of every man of Com-
panies B, C, D of the 25th Infantry,
for alleged complicity in the Browns:
‘ville fracas of August 13, in which one
pas man was killed and several in-
jured. It is not alleged that all the
|'men of this battalion were concerned
‘in the fracas, but it Is alleged that
‘they refused fo give such information
whatever concerning the affair as
would lead to the apprehension of the
alleged guilty parties.
This action of the President 1s con-
sidered extraordinary by army men
and civilians. It is carrying into the
Federal Government the demand of
the Southern white devils that inno-
cent and law-abiding black men shall
help the legal authorities spy out and
|deliver practically to the mob black
men alleged to have committed one
|sort of crime. ‘The principle involved
is not only vicious and contrary to
the spirit of our Constitution, but 1s
jan outrage upon the rights of citizens
|who are entitled in civil life to trial
by jury and in military life by trial by
courtmartial.
‘Any black man in any part of the
United Btates who offers to enlist in
|the United States army to fill. the
places of these innocent but, dishon:
jorably discharged men should be hated
and spurned by all the members of the
army in the 25th Infantry and by the
Afro-American people at large: and
|any member of the 25th Infantry
whose term expires should not re
enlist in the service, which has so lit
tle regard for him that it gives him
jno rromotion in the army, however
meritorious his service, and no pro
tection in his civilian rights when a
|mob of hoodlums in a Southern town
seeks to do him bodily injury and he
Tetaliates, as he should, and as all
‘Afro-Americans should, under the cir.
cumstances. If we cannot have a
change of policy in the War Depart
ment toward Afro-American troops in
all directions, The Age earnestly ad.
vises the members of the three re
Mmaining black regiments not to re
enlist when their term expires and
that Afro-Americans everywhere re
fuse to enter the army unless con
scripted to do so. If we cannot get
justice in the army, we are not com:
\pelled to enter it—The New York
lage.
| North 16th Street Market, A. Wur
tenberger, proprietor, choice poultry,
fresh and salt meats, phone Main 1395,
280 North Sixteenth street, Portland
THE NEW AGE, PORTLAND, OREGON
two umbrellas in the crowd. And
CLEEEEK03999939979% J Mollie had her inspiration:
“ “Drive Into our barn.” she be
oe As, Dp ¢ “We can all have supper there.
E e promise you very much,”—dim
prettlly— “Just bot biscuits and b
: a or @ but It will be better than losing
i our day,” and after a little h
’ s tion, the others accepted her offe
2333987 At four Mrs. Bennett say the lo
| poutetoaenie dilve ints the pard.
. The Corn Song.
Heap high the farmer's wintry hoard!
"Heap high the golden corn!
No richer gift has autumn poured
| From oat her lavigh ora
Tet other lands, exulting, glean
“The apple from the pine,
The orange from its glossy gree"
‘The cluster from the vine.
We better love the hardy gift
Our rugged vales bestow,
To cheer us when the storm shall drift
| ‘Our harvest fields with snow.
Through vales of grass and meads of flow-
one
| Our plows their furrows made,
While on the hills the sun and showers
Of changeful April played.
We dropped the seed o'er hill and plain
Beneath the sun of May,
And frightened from our sprouting gralt
The robber crows away.
AN through the long, bright days of June
| Its leaves grew green and fair,
And waved in hot midsummer’s noon
Its soft and yellow hair.
And now with autumn’s moonlit eves
Tts harvest time has come,
We pluck away the frosted leaves
And bear the treasure home.
There, when the snows about us drift,
And winter winds are cold,
Fair hands the broken grain shall sift,
‘And knead its meal of gold.
Let earth withhold her goodly root,
Let mildew blight the rye,
Give to the worm the orchard’s frult,
‘The wheat field to the fly.
But let the good old crop adorn
‘The hills our fathers trod;
Still let us, for his golden corm,
Send up our thanks to God.
—John G. Whittier.
‘The Brookside.
I wandered by the brookside,
T wandered by the mill,
I could not hear the brook flow,
‘The noisy wheel was still;
‘There was no burr of grasshopper,
No chirp of any bird,
But the beating of my own heart
Was all the sound I heard.
I sat beside the elm tree,
I watched the long, long shade,
And as it grew still longer,
I did not feel afraid;
For I listened for a footfall,
I listened for a word,
But the beating of my own heart
Was all the sound I heard.
He came not—no, he came @ot—
The night came on alone—
‘The little stars eat one by one,
Each on his golden throne;
‘The evening air passed by my cheek,
‘The leaves above were stirr'd,
But the beating of my own heart
‘Was all the sound I heard.
Fast silent tears were flowing,
|, When something stood behind —
A hand was on my shoulder,
I knew its touch was kind;
It drew me nearer—nearer—
We did not speak one word,
For the beating of our own hearts
Was all the sound we heard
—Lord Houghton.
TWO SIDES OF IT.
‘Mother Was Tired, but She Did It
AML for Daughter's Sake.
For the whole week before the
Grantley’s plone Molly was on tiptoe
with delight. ‘The Grantleys were such
Hovely people, and she had longed to
know them. Mollle’s mother, watching
the girl's happy face, thought proudly
that Stella Grantley was not a bit
sweeter or prettier than Mollie. She
guessed folks would see It If they were
not blind.
| Mollie, dancing Into the kitchen
Tuesday’ afternoon, found ber mother
Ironing a white shirt walst sult.
| “0 mother,” she said, reproachfully,
“I was going to do that!”
| “I thought mebbe you wouldn't get
back in time,” her mother answered.
| “It was ever so good of you,” Mol-
ve returned, absently. “Mother, F've
[Just thought—don't you suppose T could
make some of those little spice cakes
before breakfast? I know nobody else
| would have anything lke those.”
| “Why, T guess you could,” her moth-
er answered.
| “And stuffed eggs and chicken sand-
wiches and olives,” Mollie counted off
trlumphantly. “I'm not expected to
carry #0 much, but I wanted people to
know what things my mother could
make. Besides, T do 80 want them to
ask me again.
| “1 sha’n't think much of therh tf they
don't,” her mother declared.
| “That's ‘cause you're mother,” Mol-
He laughed, kissing her. “Then I'll
make the cakes before breakfast.”
‘When she came down to breakfast,
however, the cakes were all ready.
Mollie did not seem greatly surprised ;
‘abe was, In fact, already dressed in her
white sult, At nine the buckboard
came, and mother at the back door
| watched her ride away. ‘There was not
any girl so pretty as Mollie.
| The Of was fas eae Toe
Ne; she was quick end adaptable and
added much to the fun, and her sand-
coos and spice cakes were voted un-
surpassable. ‘That was In the morning.
In the afternoon the sky darkened sud-
denly, and the horses were burrlediy
put into the buckboard; there was an
eight-mile ride before them, and but
two umbrellas In the crowd. And then
Mollie had her inspiration:
*““Drlye into our barn.” she begged.
“We can all have supper there. I won't
promise you very much,”—dimpling
prettlly— “Just hot biscults and honey,
but It will be better than losing half
our day,” and after a little hesita-
tion, the others accepted her offer.
At four Mrs. Bennett say the load of
young people drive Into the yard. Five
minutes later the house was overrun
with girls, whom Mollie was arraying
in dry clothes, while Mrs. Bennett was
hurrying about the kitchen, making bis-
cuit and salad.
“I knew you wouldn't mind,” Mollie
whispered.
That night in a dozen different homes
the talk was of Mollie —how thoughtful
she was, and how unselfish, and what
a lovely hostess. In Molile’s own home
a tired woman, washing the last of
the supper dishes, was thinking with
dismay of the dresses that would be
In next week's wash.
“But girls will be girls,” she sald,
tenderly.—Youth's Companton.
SMALLPOX IN PHILIPPINES.
Dixease Almost Entirely Eradicated
by Vaccination.
The records of the bureau of health
at Manila show that within the last
twelve months 213,000 people have been
vyacelnated by officials and many more
by private physicians. “When It ts re-
membered that Mantia’s population ts
not more than 200,000, It ean be under-
stood why, in the year ended Dee. 31,
1904, there were only twenty-seven
deaths from smallpox. Ten of the
twenty-seven were Europeans or Amer-
feans who had neglected or avoided
vacelnation, says the New York Trib-
une.
During the Spanish regime a law ex-
isted making vaccination compulsory,
but the chief good which resulted from
the law was that the people became ac-
customed to its existence on the statute
books and did not greatly object to It
or strenously resist its application at
the hands of the Americans. In a few
provinces difficulties were met. In
these enses vaccinators were at once
withdrawn and the pueblos left to
themselves. Within six months the con-
trast between the vaccinated and un-
vaccinated pueblos was so marked that
the ehfef men of the objecting municl-
palities requested the vaccinators to
return.
As smallpox ts epldemte and pan-
demle In the Philippines, the necessity
for a division of vaccination In the
board of bealth 1s very great. The or-
iginal plan was to organize a corps of
350 yacclnators, That number was con-
sidered necessary In order to vaceinate
the Inhabitants of the Islands within
three years. Owing to the depleted. con-
dition of the Insular treasury, the com-
mission has been unable to authorize
the employment of so large a number,
‘and with the small number of men
available the question arises whether
vaccination will not have to be prac-
tleed continuously for many years In or-
der to immunize the 6,000,000 Inbablt-
ants who are now In those islands and
their offspring as it arrives.
Smallpox in the Philippines occupted,
prior to the advent of the Americans,
about the same position In regard to {ts
frequency, its mortality and Its preva-
lence that It did in Europe prior to the
Aiscovery of vaccination, and as was
the case In Europe, so In the Philip-
pines, It seems to be almost a disease
of childhood. The explanation of this
is that all natives who have reached
adult age were exposed to smallpox in
childhood, and those who did not con-
tract the disease may be considered {m-
mune. Smallpox in Manila Is no longer
to be feared, according to the annual re-
port of the bureau of health for the
Philippine islands, and not so many
cases occur In proportion to Its inhab-
itants as in the citles of Washington
and Baltimore.
Cause of Fright.
She was a delightfully fresh faved
Jassle and clearly from the country dis-
tricts, and as she walked up State
‘street more than one man turned to
‘Took at her, expressing the pleasure she
‘gave to him by a frank stare of admiz-
ation. Presently the happy look In her
eyes changed, of a sudden, to one of
sheer horror. With a gasp of alarm
she caught her companion by the acm
and stood rooted in the middle of the
tram. ‘To have seen her face at that
‘moment one would easily have Imagin-
ed that she was looking at nothing less
horrible than a cold blooded murder.
And yet when one spectator who had
caught the transformation on her face
turned to see what had occasioned tts
‘expression of shock and terror, a!l he
‘saw was the familiar spectacle in a
Chicago street of the wheels of one
wagon striking another. |
Philosophie.
“I see that a colored man came out
victor In that great prize fight.”
“Yes,” answered Col. Stillwell. “And
perhaps it Is Just as well. It prevents
another story fram being started to
the effect that a colored man has been
terrorized and coerced.”—Washington
Star.
Briana,
: “There's no bridge over the Helles-
pont,” mused Hero, “and where there's
no bridge there's no society In the true
sense, so I'll just stay on this side.”
And that was why Leander had to
swim for it—Puck.
‘There ts a lot of trouble In store for
the woman who has so littlo to do that
she finds time to prove to herself that
her husband’s love is Growing Cold.
Every time we walk up the street we
see some man who arouses our curl-
osity as to how he makes a living.
M. J. Gill Co., wholesale and retail]
meat dealers, 512 Mississippi avenue,
Portland, Oregon. Phone East 665.
Jost Bros. Saloon, 340 Williams ave: j
nue, fine wines, liquors and clgars.|
Family trade a specialty. os
A good place to get your soft or stiff
hats renovated is 249% Alder street
between Second and Third. 2 |
| J. Wallgreen, dealer in staple and
fancy groceries, 634 Thurman street.
Telephone Pacific 911. =
Always ask for the famous General
Arthur cigar. Esberg-Gunst_Cigar
Ge, general agents, Portland, Or. *
‘The Anheuser, Henry M. Williams,
‘proprietor, 234 Morrison street, corner
Second, Portland, Ore. Telephone
Main 2517. |
Ryan & John, dealers In choice gro-
ceries, meat, fish and poultry, phone
Main 522, 61 North Park street, cor
ner Davis. .
©. Anderson, staple and fancy gro-
ceries, Twenty-first and Thurman
streets. ‘Phone Hood 67. Fresh
roasted coffee a specialty.
Albina Club (George Ross), choice
wines, liquors and cigars, 134 Russell
street, Portland, Ore. Phgne Hast
ae
Try the Pacific Laundry Co. for
good work and prompt service. Main
office First and Arthur streets, Port
land, Ore. Telephone 649.
Royal Market, Bair & Werth propri-
etors, fresh and cured meats, fish,
poultry and game. 439 Union avenue
orth, corner Tillamook. Phone East
‘The Oak Cafe. Choicest line of
‘wines, liquors and cigars. P. W. Pick,
proprietor. Oregon Phone Pacific
2118, corner Fourth and Oak streets,
Portiand, Ore. i
Dyeing and cleaning of all kinds of
ladies’ and gents’ clothing, crepe
shawls, silk, velvet and lace dyed
equal ‘to new; lace curtains and
bankets cleaned by a new process;
mourning garments dyed in 48 hours.
‘All work done at very moderate prices.
104 North Third street.
©. A. Rhoads, the only place on the
Coast repairing rubber goods. Water
bags, syringes, atomizers, rubber
|goods and extra parts for sale. Wring-
ferg and carpet sweepers repaired and
for sale. Established 15 years ago in
San Francisco. 423 Morrison strect,
Portland. Phone Pacific 1882.
Vulcan Coal Company, wholesale
and retail dealers in house, steam and
blacksmith coal. Foundry and smelter
coke. Puget Sound steam coal in car
lots, $3.50 per ton and up. We handle
all the best grades of domestic and
foreign house coals. Phone Main 2776.
Office 329 Burnside St,, Portland, Ore
gon. *
THE ILLINOIS CENTRAL
‘maintains unexcelled service from the
west to the east and south. Making
close connections with trains of all
transcontinental lines, passengers aro
given their choice of routes to Chicago,
Lonieville, Memphis and New Orleane,
and through these pointe to the far
east.
Prospective travelers desiring infor-
mation as to the ‘lowest rates and best
routes are invited to correspondence
with the following representatives:
B, H. Trumball, Commercial Agent,
142 Third 8t., Portiand, Or.
J.C. Lindsey, Trav. Passenger Agent,
142 Third 8t., Portland, Or.
Paul B. Thompson, Passenger Agent,
* Colman Building, Seattle, Wash.
“THE MILWAUKEE”
“The Pioneer Limited” St. Paul to
Chicago.
“Overland Limited” Omaha to Chi-
cago.
“Southwest Limited” Kansas City
te Chicago.
No trains in the service on any
railroad in the world equals in equip-
ment that of the :
Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul
Railway.
‘They own and operate thelr own
sleeping and dining cars and give
thelr patrons an excellence of service
not obtainable elsewhere. Berths on
their sleepers are longer, higher and
wider than in similar cars on any
other line. They protect their trains
by the Block system. Connections
made with all transcontinental lines
in Union depots.
H. 8. ROWE, General Agent,
° 134 Third St, Portland.
Frank L. Smith Meat Co.
228 Adder St., between Ist and 2d Sts
“FIGHTING THE BEEF TRUST”
We are Portland's only independent
slaughterers and jobbers. The only
ones not controlled by the trust. The
only ones who do not use preserva-
thyvas and aduilterations.
Rolled Roast Beef .............--10¢
Lean Roast Mutton ............ 8¢
‘Mutton for boiling .........-.++++ 6¢
Mutton for stew ..0...e.eeeeeeee. Be
‘Loin Mutton Chops ...........12%e
Shoulder Mutton Chops ..........10¢
[Lean Roast Veal .........-.-++++-106
Breast Veal Roast ..............-10¢
Vaal Glew assure cosssseoeseesesc 88
Veal Chops .......2cecceeeeee A2%MC
Hamburg Steak ........00.000+-100
Pork Sausage .........-00000ee 0-100
Frankfort Sausage ........-.-----10e
Bologna Sausage ..........-0++2. 8¢
Breakfast Bacon .......-...-.17%¢
Pure Latd .......--.-2-0+--0000+ 420
Fine Shoulder Steak ......1.1.... 8¢
Round Steak .........ssseeeeeeeeMO0
Best Pot Roast ...........;00006+ 8@
Fine Bolling Beef ........00..000 BC
Best Beef Stew ..--.--..0eeeeeeee BC
Plate cuts Beef ......-.00eeeeeo+ BC
Brisket Beef .....0...cceeeseeeeee Be
Corn Beet ......2.-0-o0crensnnese OC
It 1s up to the taxpayers of Port-
land. Are you going to allow the beef
trust to continue robbing you of thou-
sands of dollars annually through the
meat supplied to the Port of Portland.
| Byerett Market, (E. L. Peck, Prop.),
Choice Meats and Poultry, 413 Everett
Street, corner Tenth, Portland, Ore.
Phone’ Main 1540.
L. N. Nees, boot and shoemaker.
Fine repairing a specialty. Give him
a call when you need anything in
this line, 322% Williams av., Portland,
Oregon. .
; Meredith sells good butter, 1106
Commercial street, Tacoma, Wash.
Free—one car ticket with each $1.00
Purchase ‘of teas, coffees, canned oF
package goods. .
THE PIONEER PAINT COMPANY.
The pio-
ae — pe oo
LIPO tablish ment
ths yA F BACON, of Portland te
Sa a
_ Beach &
a pay Company, of
ea Ce Piss First st,
Cea *: cet
ONG 328 mort re
Sw Mable house
of its kind im
the Northwest. It carries an immense
|stock of the best things in paints and
eating materials, together with an
unusual list of specialties. Those who
need ling: in these lines can cer
tainly proft by going to F. B. Beach
& Company. Remember the number,
135 First street.
P. A. TAYLOR
Staple and Fancy Groceries
Fraits, Confections, Cigars, Tobuecos and Fant
‘ey Coffees, Teas and Spices at Lowest Prices
447 Union Ave. Free Delivery Phone East 440
AUGUST STORZ
Dealer in
Staple and Fancy Groceries
‘Vegetables, Fruits and Dairy Produce
Phone East 503 :
400 Wittiams Ave. PORTLAND, OREGON
c. S. NELSON
Dealer in
Staple and Fancy Groceries
and Provisions
154 N. Fourteenth St. Cor. Irving
John’s Meat Market
7. D. MERGENS, Prop.
Fresh Meats, Beef, Pork, Mutton, Bacon
and Hams
Corned Beet and Pickled Pork a Spectalty
Phone Main 154,
aes PORTLAND, OREGON
The Union Meat Co.
All Dining Cars and First Class Hotels and
Restaurants buy the
UNION MEAT COMPANY'S
FRESH AND CURED MEATS
‘The Rest in the Market. Patronize Home In-
dustry. PORTLAND, OREGON
[
‘HALL PHARMACY CO.
Telephone East 873
Union Avenue and Tillamook Street
— ‘OREGON
ROBERT A. PRESTON
PRESCRIPTION DRUGGIST
Cor, 294 and Thurman Sts
Phone Main 1610 PORTLAND, OREGON
SCHWIND & BAUER
Shoe Repairing
Machine and Hand. Only Goodyear Machine
in dur Clg” Shoes mate to Order
Shoes Caited forand Delivered:
"Felephone Pacitie 225
209 Yamhill Street PORTLAND, OREGON
The Portland Hat Works a
enrufecturers o
FINE SOFT AND STIFF HATS
Hate Dyed, Cleaned and Blocked. Our spe-
cfalty: Panumas Cleaned and Bleached,
Hee Alder bat Second aid Third
OUR WORK IS BUT ONE GRADE — THE BEST
We make 3 specalty of laundering Lace Cartains
CRESCENT LAUNDRY CO.
549 Morrison Street.
aprons. Why buy your aprons and then pay 10:
: ine Bejeun whee i cou you wae to Reve
them laundered."“Our wagod will call.
W.R, Williams Al Clevelana
FASHION STABLES
Hacks, Livery, Boarding
Darin anameraae:
Phone Main 45 PORTLAND, OREGON
ARTHUR LAVY
Foraisher and Hotter
“HE MAKES SHIRTS”
486 Washington £., Opposite Heilig's Theater
PORTLAND, OREGON
H.R. LYNES
Dealer in
STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES
Notions and Fruit. Free Delivery.
154 Russell Street
Phone East 5640 PORTLAND, OREGON
RAINIER MARKET
A, ae
Dealer in Fresh. Cured and Smoked Meats,
Hams, Bacon, Lard, Sausages, Ete,
Also Fish and Clams.
PAMILY TRADE A SPECIALTY
ch: tila onl Dov te,
Phone Main 1682 Portiand, Oregon
HENRY WEINHARD'S BREWERY
Well Known Brands of Lager Beer "EXPORT"
R. C. WALWORTH
Staple and Fancy Groceries
Phone EAST_3407.
136 Russell St. PORTLAND, OR.
Pioneer Soda Works
GUNDEL BROS. & CO.
Manufacturers of
SODA WATER, EXTRACTS, SYRUPS, ETC.
Factory, 416 Water Street
Telephone, Main 2366
PORTLAND OREGON
STAR BREWERY
NORTHERN BREWERY CO.
Brewers and Bottlers of
HOP GOLD
PORTLAND OFFICE:
Corner East Third and Burnside Streets
WESTERN BAKING COMPANY
PORTLAND, OREGON
REGISTERED TRADE MARK. A WESTERN SUNRISE!
A Western Cracker Made
for Western People
'Ask your Grocer for
Western Crackers and Cakes
Take no other kind if you want the best
THE TOKE POINT OYSTER CO.
29 Second St., Portland, Or.
Telephone MAIN 693
Sole Growers of the Celebrated
Toke Point Oysters
TOKELAND, WASHINGTON
"UNEQUALLED IN FLAVOR
AND FRESHNESS"
Cannery at South Bend, Wash.
Wholesale Dealers in All Varieties
of Native Oysters.
THE SCANDINAVIAN
Commercial Banking
Capital $5,000,000 Surplus $350,000
A. CHILBERG, President
A. V. HAYT
Tacoma Office No. 955 Commere
DAVID H. BEECHER, SDNEY CLARK,
President. Cashier.
Union National Bank
Incorporated 1890
CAPITAL $100,000
Pays Interest on Time Deposits
THE OLD BANK CORNER
Grand Forks,
NORTH DAKOTA
DALLES
DIAMOND FLOUR
Has never failed to please. It has always been the standard for family use
R. H. Guthrie
Portland Representative
212 Abington Bldg. Phone Pacific 2251
HENRY WEINHA
Manufacturers a
Well Known Bran
“EXPORT”
“KAISER
IN KEGS A
Trade and Families Supplied
LODELL'S PLACE
A. E. LODELL, Proprietor
Fine Wines, Liquors and Cigars
WEINHARD'S_BEER
L. M. PARRISH FRANK E. WATKINS
Notary Public Notary Public
G. E. WATKINS
Parrish, Watkins & Co.
Established 1872
Real Estate
Insurance, Rental
and Loan Agents
250 Alder St., Portland, Oregon
Rometsch Exchange
JOHN ROMETSCH, Prop.
Fine Wines,
Liquors and Cigars
Telephone Main 1200
253 Morrison St., Portland, Ore.
"The Judge Demands the Best"
LA TOCO
Key West Cigar
EL PATERNO
Ten-Cent Leader
SIGHT DRAFT
King of Five-Cent Cigars
W. S. Conrad
Minneapolis
St. Paul
Distributor
STEAMER
TELEGRAPH
FASTEST ON THE RIVER
The only steamboat making a round trip
DAILY
AMERICAN BANK Savings Department
Total Available Assets $7,500,000
GEO. H. TARBELL, Manager
GEN, Cashier
Se St., N. E. Cor. South 11th St.
Ask Your Grocer for
DALLES
DIAMOND
FLOUR
MFD BY
THE
DIAMOND ROLLER MILLS
THE DALLES.ORE.
The Original Diamond Brand
ARD'S BREWERY
and Bottlers of the
lands of Lager Beer
"BLUME"
"COLUMBIA"
AND BOTTLES
THE NEW AGE, PORTLAND, OREGON
THE FAMILY DOCTOR
ELDERBRAU GROTTE
ERICKSON & BERG, Props.
Fine Wines, Liquors and C
54 Sixth Street
MAIN 4402
PORTLAND
WESTERN SODA. WO
JUCHEMICH & CRAMER, Props.
Manufacturers of Carbonated
This common affection of childhood—pertussis, the doctors call it—is usually regarded as one of the things a child has to have, and it is supposed that the only thing to do is to put up with it, as with all unavoidable lills, the best one can. The philosophy of this state of mind of mothers is good, but the indifference it sometimes engenders is distinctly bad, so far as it causes the parents to neglect treatment. Whooping cough is often a trivial affair, but it is sometimes fatal; and even when not so, it may pave the way for serious ills by weakening the resisting power of the child to other germ diseases, such as scarlet fever, measles, and especially pneumonia; or the strain of the cough and of the forced holding of the breath may cause a blood vessel in the brain or in the eye to break, with resulting paralysis or blindness, or it may produce a rupture.
Fortunately these troubles are rare, but the possibility of their occurrence should be borne in mind.
Wooping-cough is a dangerous disease, occurring with greatest frequency in the winter and spring. No age is exempt from its attacks, but about half of the sufferers are babies under two years of age. One attack usually insures safety against any subsequent ones. Owing to its great contagiousness, a child with whooping-cough should be kept away from other children, and should never be carried out in street cars and other crowded places to give the disease to every susceptible child or even adult in its vicinity.
The patient must be well wrapped up when outdoors or when getting air by an open window, and the living room should be warm, although well ventilated. The diet should be simple, and food should be given frequently but in small quantities.
During the entire course of the disease, even in the mildest cases, the child should be under the constant supervision of the doctor, for the disease may take a bad turn when least expected, and the best way to prevent an evil outcome is to be always on the watch for it.
Children with whooping-cough often go through it with but few signs of illness, but care should not be relaxed for this reason, and the mother, nurse, or some adult should be present always to do what little can be done to ease the paroxysms. -Youth's Companion.
Making a Machinist.
"There is, perhaps, no other trade, and very few professions," writes Wm Haddow in the Technical World Magazine, "that require the high order of intelligence, the study, the application, the real hard-headed common-sense, the surgeon's delicacy of touch—for instance, in fitting of fine work—that the machinist's trade demands to give the excellent work and the interchangeability of parts found in the modern rifle or sewing machine. The range of his work is from a needle to a battleship; from automatic machinery that would talk French had it one more movement' to measuring machines guaranteed not to vary more than the fifty-thousandth part of an inch from the absolute. This precision will perhaps be better appreciated when it is remembered that 150 times this limit of variation is only equal to the diameter of the average human hair. Standard plug and ring gauges, to take a specific example, are so accurately fitted to each other that the expansion due to the warmth of the hand, if the plug be held in it for a few moments, will make it impossible to insert the plug in the ring; while, if the ring be expanded in the same way, the plug will drop clear through it.
When the machinist has become skillful enough to fulfill the above requirements, he may receive from $2.50 per day up to whatever he can make himself worth and prove it."
How John Hay Regarded Critics.
John Hay was chatting about his literary experiences with an intimate friend, when the latter asked:
"John, what feature or phase of this writing business has impressed you the most?
"Well," was the reply, and the speaker's eyes twinkled mischievously, "so far as I am concerned, it's the things that the critics fish out of a fellow's printed stuff that he never put there. But I suppose that critics, like the rest of us, have to show excuses for living."
—Success Magazine.
Yes, Alonzo, foul weather sometimes boosts the price of eggs.
ELDERBRAU GROTTO
ERICKSON & BERG, Props.
Fine Wines, Liquors and Cigars
54 Sixth Street
MAIN 4402 PORTLAND, ORE.
WESTERN SODA,WORKS
JUCHEMICH & CRAMER, Props.
Manufacturers of Carbonated Beverages, Syrups, Extracts, Mineral Waters and Champagne Cider. Sole distributors of Sedaville Mineral Water.
Phone Pacific 1793.
Office and Factory, 204 Mill Street
PORTLAND, OREGON
Electric Flatiron FREE
On receipt of Coupon we will deliver an Electric Flatiron to any address, free of charge, for 30 days' trial.
You are under no obligation to purchase the Iron—we want you to see what it will do in the saving of Labor, Time and Expense.
All equipment delivered with each Iron, which may be attached to any Electric Lamp socket.
Fill in and mail Coupon to us AT ONCE.
CUT OUT COUPON
Portland General Electric Company,
First and Alder Sts., Portland, Oregon,
Gentlemen: You may deliver to me one
Electric Plattform which I agree to try and
if unsatisfactory to return to you within 30
days from date of delivery. If I do not
return it at that time you may charge same
to my account at $4.00. It is understood
that no charge will be made for the iron if
I return it within 30 days.
NAME
Dept. N. A. ADDRESS
Portland General Electric Co.
Telephone MAIN 6680
FIRST AND ALDER STREETS
The SAVINGS BANK of the
Title Guarantee & Trust Company
PAYS
4 Per Cent
Yearly Interest
On Savings Accounts
Interest Compounded Semi-Annually We Also Pay 4 Per Cent Interest on Certificates of Deposit And 3 Per Cent on Daily Balances of Check Accounts
Save a Dollar Today and It Will Work for You Tomorrow
A Bank Account is the first step toward happiness, prosperity and comfort
Banking Hours, 9 a. m. to 4 p. m.; Saturdays, 9 a. m. to 1 p. m.; Saturday evenings, 5. p. m. to 8 p. m.
DIRECTORS — Wm. M. Ladd, J. Thorburn Ross, T. T. Burkhart, Frank M. Warren, George H. Hill.
OFFICERS—J. Thorburn Ross, President; George H. Hill, Vice President; T. T. Burkhart, Treasurer; John E. Aitchison, Secretary.
240 Washington Street
Corner Second
PORTLAND OREGON
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DEALERS IN ALL KINDS OF BARBERS' FURNITURE AND SUPPLIES FINE CUTLERY RAZOR WORK A SPECIALTY.
Aguilas and Seal of Minnesota Cigars ARE SOLD ON ALL TRAINS Kubles & Stock Co. MAKERS ST. PAUL MINNESOTA
EL FIRMA and
DUKE OF PARMA
CIGARS
You Will Like Them
HART & MURPHY, Makers
ST. PAUL
Established 1882 Incorporated 1900
GRIGGS, COOPER & CO.
Manufacturers, Importers and Wholesale Grocero
242-264 East Third Street
ST. PAUL MINN.
OMAHA NEBRASKA
"THE ONLY WAY"
Have your Baggage checked any railroad to any place in Unit
Omaha Tr
Office 208
When Coming into Omaha g agents on trains or at depot and New cabs to all parts of city.
Have your Baggage checked from hotel and Residences over any railroad to any place in United States by
When Coming into 'Omaha give your checks to our uniformed agents on trains or at depot and receive cheapest and best service New cabs to all parts of city.
MINNEAPOLIS MINN.
NORTH STAR
WOOLEN
MILL CO.
Manufacturers of
Blankets, Flannels
and Blanketings
Minneapolis, Minn.
A. BACKDAHL
C. A. BACKDAHL
A. Backdahl & Co.
DRUGGISTS.
Opposite Milwaukee Depot. Prescriptions
are fully compounded. 313 Washington avenue South.
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Wear
CYGNUS $3.50 SHOE
North Star Shoe Co.
101-103 Fourteenth
Phone Pacific
MINNEAPOLIS MINNESOTA
Corner Flanders P
MINNEAPOLIS
OMNIBUS AND CARRIAGE
MATTISON & FOYE, Proprietors
237 Hennepin Ave.
MINNEAPOLIS
LIVINGSTON
UNION MEAT MARKET,
A. G. HASELER, Prop.
CHOICEST
FRESH AND SALT MEATS
Game and Fish in Season.
Livingston, - - - - Montana.
F.B.TOLHURST
Taxidermist for the Tourist
OPPOSITE DEPOT,
Livingston, Montana.
GEO. W. HUSTED
Prescriptions, Drugs
Patent Medicines, Cigars, Toilet Articles, Finest Soda Fountain on the N. P. Railway.
OPPOSITE THE DEPOT
This card entitles you to a trip through the National Park, providing you patronize
And can make satisfactory arrangements with the transportation companies.
The only first-class place of the kind in Livingston. Bottle Goods a specialty
FRANK BLISS, Proprietor
117 W. Park St. LIVINGSTON, Mont.
OMAHA NEBRASKA
from hotel and Residences over
ed States by
transfer Co.
So. 14th St.
ive your checks to our uniformed
receive cheapest and best service
COUNCIL BLUFFS
S. T. McATEE
Fancy Groceries, Bakery
Goods and Meats
Supplies for Dining and Private
Cars Given Special Attention
230-32 Main St. 229-31 Pearl St.
Telephone 191
Council Bluffs Iowa
For Medicinal Purposes
We recommend our
Black Buffalo
Pure Rye Whiskey
Unexcelled in
Quality and Excellence
The Pederson Mercantile Co.
Wholesale Liquor Importers and
Wholesale Liquor Dealers
Moorehead, Minnesota
Northwestern Agents Anheuser-Busch Brewing Association's Celebrated "Budweiser" Beer
SKELLY & LITTLEHALES
Dealers in
Groceries, Flour, Feed,
Hay, Grain, Coal, Wood and Build-
ing Materials
101-103 Fourteenth St. North
Phone Pacific 611
Corner Flanders Portland, Oregon
APOLIS
CARRIAGE LINE
Nicollet House Block
MINNESOTA
HOTEL PORTLAND.
American Plan, $3 Per Day and Upward.
HEADQUARTERS FOR TOURISTS AND COMMERCIAL TRAVELERS.
Portland, Oregon.
Telephone 96-B P. O.-Box 551
The Grand Pacific Hotel
CHAS. A. SCHRAGE, Proprietor.
Handsomely Appointed and First
Class in Every Particular.
Higgins Ave.
NT.
Pocatello - Idaho
Corner Railroad St. and Higgins Ave.
MISSOULA, MONT.
Salt Lake City Utah
The Grandon
Rates from $3 to $5
BOLLINGER
HOTEL
Best Hotel in Northern Idaho
The Northwest
EDW. G. PATTerson, Prop.
CHAS. H. RATTINGER, Mgr.
Steam Heat in Every Room
Private and Public Baths
Electric Light
RATES $2 PER DAY AND UP
Bismarck, N. D.
HOTEL PRODUCER
---
The Kenyon Don Porter
Salt Lake City's NEW HOTEL
The only First-Class American Plan Hotel in Helena.
European Plan
Lewiston Idaho
HOTEL
PEDICORD
T. J. PEDICORC
Proprietor
Rates 50c, 75c, $1, $1.50
Rooms with Private Baths
Both American and European
Private Telephones in Rooms
First-Class Grill
in Connection
209-219 Riverside Ave.,
SPOKANE, WASH.
RICHARDS
HOTEL AND RESTAURANT
Phone Exchange 25
360-362 Alder St.
Cor. Park
PORTLAND, ORE.
Best furnished house in Southern Oregon
New Depot Hotel
A. H. PRACHT, Proprietor.
All Trains stop 30 Minutes
For Meals.
ASHLAND, OREGON
The New Bannock Hotel
NORMAN & ARMSTRONG, Props.
Headquarters for Commercial Men
American Plan. Rooms with Bath,
Hot and Cold Running Water and
Telephone in Each Room.
RATES $2.00 to $4.00 PER DAY
THE HOTEL
The Spalding
Leading Hotel of the LAKE SUPERIOR REGION Enlarged and Improved American Plan, $2.50 and Up European Plan $1.00 and Up Finest Cafe in Northwest DULUTH, MINN
HOTEL WYNDHAM
COLEAK WASH
A Home for the Traveling Men
Strictly First Class.
American Plan
Electric lighted. Steam heated. Good
Sample Rooms in Connection.
J. C. BROWN, Manager.
COLFAX, WASHINGTON
THE NEW AGE, PORTLAND, OREGON
LEADING HOTELS
THE ESMOND HOTEL
OSCAR ANDEKSON Manager
Rates: European Plan
50c, 75c, $1.00, $1.50, $2.00 per day
Free Bus to and from all Trains
Front and Morrison Streets
PORTLAND OREGON
DULUTH MINN.
HENRY FOLZ
Leading grocery and market. We serve the traveling public at reasonable prices.
114 and 116 West Superior street.
DULUTH, MINN.
GREAT FALLS
THE HUB
Cloths Man, Woman, Boy—in
Modern Up-to-Date Fashionable
Clothing—at Popular Prices.
Visit Often the Popular Priced Store for Men and Women.
E. A. REICHEL, President.
W. F. SENGBUSCH, Vice President.
H. W. GRUNWALDT, Sec. & Treas
THE
AMERICAN BREWING
& MALTING COMPANY
Brewers and Bottlers of extra quality lager beer. "American Family" bottled beer a specialty.
Office: 109 Central Avenue.
P. O. Box 86.
Great Falls, - - - Montana.
IDAHO ADVERTISING
Thos. Blyth, Pre Lyman Fargo, Vice Pres
The Blyth & Fargo Co.
Pocatello, Idaho
General Merchandise
STORES AT
Evanston, Wyo. Pocatello, Idaho
BANK OF NAMPA, Ltd.
CAPITAL STOCK $50,000.00
Established 1899. Dewey Palace Hotel Bld'd.
FRED G. MOCK, President
F. J. CONROY, Vice-President
C. R. HICKEY, Cashier
FRANK JENKINSON, Ass't Cashier
J. A. Murray,
President,
D. W. Standrod,
Vice President
Wm. A. Anthes,
Cashier
I. N. Anthes,
Asst. Cashier
THE
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
of Pocatello, Idaho.
POCATELLO, - - - IDAHO
TUTTLE MERGANTILE CO., LTD.
Wholesale Grocers
GOODWIN MINING CANDLES
Judson Powder, Fuse and Caps
AGENTS FOR THE
CELEBRATED OLYMPIA BEER
Nampa, Idaho
D. W. Church Earle C. White C. C. Chilson
CHURCH & WHITE CO.
Real Estate
And Insurance
Pocatello - Idaho
THE WEEKLY
HISTORIAN
1642—First commencement held at Harvard college.
1702—Battle of Vigo.
1760—City of Berlin taken by combined Russian and Austrian forces.
1777—Kingston, N. Y., burned by the British.
1781—Americans attacked Yorktown.
1797—Battle of Camperdown.
1800—Attempted assassination of Bonaparte.
1806—Battle of Saalfeld, Saxony; Prussians defeated by French.
1815—Napoleon Bonaparte landed at St. Helena to begin his exile.
1822—Brazil proclaimed independence.
1831—Anderson, an English vocalist, driven from the stage of the Park theater, New York, for disrespectful remarks concerning the United States.
1848—Martial law proclaimed in Cape Town.
1861—Confederate steamer Theodore escaped from Charleston, S. C., with Mason and Slidell on board.
1862—Confederate cavalry under Gen. Stuart entered Chambersburg, Pa.
1863—Wheeler's famous Confederate cavalry met with defeat at Farmington, Tenn.
1868—Beginning of Cuban struggle for independence.
1871—President Grant summoned Kukux-Klan of South Carolina to disband....The great Chicago fire continued to rage and destroy.
1872—William H. Seward, American statesman, died....Archbishop Bailey installed as Primate of the Catholic church in the United States.
1873—Ex-Senator Pomeroy shot by ex-Congressman Conway in Washington.
1881—Arrest of Charles Stewart Parnell.
1884—Adoption of the Meridian of Greenwich....Parliament building in Quebec wrecked by dynamite.
1893—Dean Richmond foundered in Lake
Erie; 18 lives lost.
1899—Transvaal war began....Public reception in Boston in honor of Admiral Dewey.
1902—President Roosevelt appointed a commission to settle anthracite coal strike.
1904—Frederick Augustus III. ascended the throne of Saxony....United States battleship Georgia launched at Bath.
1905—President Roosevelt conferred with leaders in college athletics with a view to improving standards....Sir Henry Irving died.
A Self-Governing School.
An experiment in pupil self-government has been in progress in a village school in Macon county, Mo. In the main room, where the older pupils assemble, the self-governing class gathered about the table and elected its own officers, and the principal used a phonograph to dictate problems, so that the pupils should be relieved entirely of the supervision of the teacher. As the machine was set in motion the pupils copied the problems and discussed or worked out the answers, which were then tabulated by the teacher and turned over to the principal. Not one pupil was returned to the regular classes from failure to keep up with the studies. This year the experiment is to be extended to a number of other districts.
New York Hotel for Boys.
Under the management of Miss Mary Laidlaw Proudfoot, niece of the late Mrs. Laidlaw, who devoted much money to the helping of poor boys, the first real hotel for homeless boys has just been opened at 835 West Twenty-seventh street, New York City. At the outset there were eight patrons, self-supporting office boys or messengers, and for the remaining six vacancies many applications were on file. The establishment is not to be regarded as a charity. Each boy pays according to his means, and this entitles him to a room of his own. The public, however, is invited to contribute toward the expense fund and larger quarters will probably be secured.
An Eleven-Year-Old Freshman. Norbert Weiner, at the age of 11, has entered the freshman class of Tuft college, and is said to be the youngest collegian in the country. He is the son of Leo Weiner, assistant professor of Slavonic languages at Harvard. The boy knew how to read at 3 and was reading Darwin and Huxley at 8.
Medical Inspection for Students. According to the School Journal it is estimated that the expense of operating the new inspection law in Massachusetts public schools is about $25 per 1,000 inhabitants, in the larger cities, but that in smaller places where the doctor comes only when sent for the expense is $11 per 1,000. The law authorized the school board of each city or town to appoint a school physician or physicians, and that the sight and hearing shall be tested annually by the teachers. The expense is to be borne by a local appropriation.
FURNITURE
COPICA TRANSFER & STORAGE CO.
MAYS, PAROIS & FURNITURE MOVED STORED
DE MACHED FOR SHIPPING.
P.O. Box 12111
12111 WEST 2ND STREET
C. O. PICK TRANSFER & STORAGE COMPANY.
Safes, Pianos, Furniture moved, stored or packed for shipping. Commodious brick warehouse, with separate iron rooms, Front and Clay. Express and Baggage hauled.
Office Phone, 596; Stable, Black 1972 PORTLAND, OREGON
PACIFIC OCEAN
LOW SAND SOFT
CENTRAL
MARSH
DANGOR
SCHAFFER'S
ADDITION
20....CENTRAL
PLACE
26
MARSHFIELD
25
005 BAY
NEXT!
Copyrighted by
I Schaefer 1906
STRANGERS! TOURISTS! HOMESEEKERS!
Go there, where, when the tide is out, "the table is set," and where the wealth of riches has not yet been touched.
GEO. J. SCHAEFER, Owner and Real Estate Agent
317 Chamber of Commerce PORTLAND, OREGON
COME TO GOD'S COUNTRY AND LOCATE
Sure Crops Increasing Population Values Climbing
If you want money, if you want to buy property for investment, if you have property you desire to dispose of, if you want a home or a farm, see
Violet Oats Violet Wheat Violet Pearl Barley Violet Pearls of Wheat Violet Buckwheat Columbia Oats Columbia Wheat Lucky Oats Cream Oats All First-Class Dealers Handle Our Brands of Goods
Copyrighted by George J. Schaefer 1906
STRANGERS! TO
Go there, where, when the tide
riches
OREGON
Lots in Schaefer's Addition, "CENTR
GEO. J. SCHAEFER
317 Chamber of Commerce
COME TO O
AN
Sure Cr
Increasi
Values
If you want money
investment, if you have
if you want a home or
J. WHY
Telephone MAIN 4006
7
7 Chamber of Commerce Building PORTLAND