The New Age (Portland)

Saturday, December 8, 1906

Portland, Oregon

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THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF KALISPELL KALISPELL, MONTANA D. R. PEELEER, Pres., P. 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. Established in 1850. Transact a General Banking Business. Interest allowed on time deposits. Collections made at all positions. Right Exchange and Telegraphic Transfers sold on New York, Washington, Chicago, St Louis, Denver, Omaha, San Francisco and various points in Oregon, Washington, Haiti, Montana and British Columbia. Exchange sold on London, Paris, Berlin. UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK OF PORTLAND, OREGON. J. C. AINSWORTH, President. W. B. AYER, Vice-President. R. W. SCHMEER, Cashier A. M. WRIGHT, Assistant Cashier. Transacta 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. 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. FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF PORTLAND OREOON FIRST NATIONAL BANK of North Yakima, 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. NKENY, 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. S. 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 8 per cent per Annum, Credited Semi-Annually TACOMA, WASHINGTON ALFRED COOILDGE, Pres. A. F. McCLAINE Vice Pres. AARON KUHN, Vice Pres. CHAS. E. SCRIBER, Cashier. D. C. WOODWARD, Asst. Cashier. 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. Capital, $50,000 E. ARNESON, Prep. G. R. JACOBI Cashier 4 Per Cent Interest Paid on Time Deposits THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF DULUTH, MINNESOTA. CAPITAL $500,000 SURPLUS 725,000 U. S. Government Depositary. GEORGE PALMER President F. L. MEYERS Cashier GEO. L. CLEAVER W. L. BRENHOLTS Asst. Cashier Capital and Surplus, $120,000 DIRECTORS: J. M. Berry, A. B. Conley, F. J. Holmes, F. M. Byrkit, F. L. Meyers, Geo. L. Cleaver, Geo. Palmer. "NOTHING BUT THE BEST" 47 First Street PORTLAND, OREGON PORTLAND FUEL COMPANY 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 Of 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—Grawford Livingston, Kenneth Clark, J. H. Skinner, Louis W. Hill, Geo. H. Erickson, W. B. Parsons, J. M. Hannatord, Charles P. Noyes, Thomas A. Marlow, W. B. Parsons, J. M. Hannatord, Charles P. Noyes. VOL. XI. Portland PORTLAND, OREGON, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1906: SURPLUS 728,000 Depositary. AVER W. L. BRENHOLTS Asst. Cashier Asst. Cashier BANK LA GRANDE OREGON $120,000 F. M. Byrkit, F. L. Meyers, Geo. L. CON COMPANY Flying Engineers ACES et PORTLAND, OREGON COMPANY PHOENIX FUEL CO. 287 E. MORRISON ST. UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY OF SINCE 1850 ten Important Points of President's Communication to Congress The main points brought out by the president in his annual message to congress, delivered December 4, follow: I again recommend a law prohibiting all corporations from contributing to the campaign expenses of any party. Such a bill has already passed one house of congress. Let individuals own corporations, but let them effectively fashion all corporations from making contributions for any political purpose, directly or indirectly. Another bill which has just passed one house of congress and which it is urged to pass, that conferring upon the government the right of appeal in criminal cases on questions of law. This right exists in many of the states; it exists in the District of Columbia by act of the Congress that in any case a verdict for the defendant on the merits should be set aside. A failure to pass it will result in seriously hampering the government against weak individuals or corporations who do wrong; and may also prevent the government from obtaining justice for wage-workers who are not themselves able effectively to contest a case where the argument of an inferior court is stronger. In connection with this matter I would like to call attention to the very unsatisfactory state of our criminal law, resulting in large part from the habit of setting aside the judgments of inferior courts on technical matters solutely unconnected to the merits of the case, and where there is no attempt to show that there has been any failure of substantial justice. In my last message I suggested the enactment of a law in connection with the issuance of injunctions in the attempt to deter the maltreatment by the demand that the right of applying injunctions in labor cases should be wholly abolished, doubtful whether the law will uphold altogether injunctions in such cases would stand the test of the courts; in which case of course the legislation would be ineffective. Moreover, I believe it is the case of injunctions. But so far as possible the abuse of the power should be provided against by some such law as I advocated last year. And when what it feeds upon; and when mobs begin to lynch for rape they speedily extend the sphere of their operations and lynch for many other crimes are not for rape at all; while a considerable proportion of the individuals lynched are innocent of all crime. In my judgment, the crime of rape should be made a crime with murder; assault with intent to commit rape should be made a capital crime, at least in the discretion of the court; and provision should be made that the trial should follow immediately upon the heels of the offense; while the trial should be so conducted that the victim need not be wanted solely while giving testimony, and that the least possible public shall be given the I call your attention to the need of passing the bill limiting the number of hours of employment to 8 a day, as is very moderate one and I can conceive of no serious objection to it. Indeed, so far as it is in our power, it should be our aim steadily increase with as goal the general introduction of an eight-hour day. The horrors incident to the employees of your company or at work anywhere are a blot on our civilization. It is true that each state must ultimately settle the question in its own way, but through our efforts the unions published broadcast, would greatly help toward arousing the public conscience and securing unity of state action in the matter. Congress passed at the last session was an employer's liability law. It was a marked step in advance to get the recognition employers took, looks like the law did not go far enough. In spite of all precautions exercised by employers there are unavoidable accidents and even injuries that the business connected with the mechanic arts. If the entire trade risk is placed upon the employer he will promptly and properly add it to the law. It should place this responsibility appropriately upon the consumers of his commodity. It is therefore clear to my mind that the law should place this responsibility on the federal law nor, as far as I am informed, the state laws dealing with the question of employers' liability are sufficiently thoroughgiven. The federal employees in navyards, arsenals and the like. It is not wise that the nation should alienate its remaining coal lands. I have temporarily drawn a sketch of the geological survey has indicated as containing, or in all probability containing coal. The question, however, which my judgment should provide for the withdrawal of these lands from sale or fromentry, save in certain especial circumstances. In the United States, which should not, however, attempt to work them, but permit them to be worked by private individuals under a royalty or as permit it to see that no excessive price was charged consumers. It would, of course, be as necessary to supervise the rates charged by the coal companies, induct as the rates charged by those who mine it; and the supervision must extend to the conduct of the common carriers, so that they may be charged the expense of another. The withdrawal of these coal lands would constitute a policy analogous to that which has been followed with withdrawal of the coal lands in the management. The coal, like the forests, should be treated as the property of the public, and its disposal should be under conditions in order to ensure to the benefit of the public as a whole. must be left primarily to the several states. effort is to give the governmental assistance in the most effective way; that is, through as many farmers rather than to or through individual farmers, to ordinate its work with the agricultural departments of the several states, and so far as its own work is educational, to co-ordinate it with other educational authorities. Great progress has been made in the farmers by the creation of farmers' institutes, of dairy associations, of breeder's associations, horticultural associations and the like. The department can and will co-operate with all the mountains and the great plains through the mountains and the main areas of irrigation and forest preservation; no government policy for the betterment of our internal conditions has been more fruitful of the mountains and the Southern Appalachian regions should also be preserved; and they can not be unless the people of the states in which they lie, through their representatives in the country, are vigorous action by the national government. I am well aware of how difficult it is to pass a constitutional amendment. Nevertheless, I judge the judgment the national government marriage and marriage should be relegated to the authority of the national congress. At present the wide differences in the laws of the dals and abuses; and surely there is nothing so vitally essential to the welfare of the nation, nothing around which the nation should so closely be concerned, how ever the home life of the average citizen. The change would be good from every standpoint. In pari fect, the power of the congress to confer on the congress the power at once to deal radically and efficiently with polygamy, would be done whether or not marriage and divorce be safe nor proper to leave the question of polygamy to be dealt with by the several states. It would also be conferred on the national government. Let me once again call the attention of the congress to two subjects concerning which I have frequently before communicated with the American shipping. I trust that a law embodying in substance the views, or a major part of the views, expressed in the report on this subject laid before the house at its last session of Congress, will be adopted. Former years objectionable measures have been proposed in reference to the encouragement of American shipping; but it seems to me that the proposed measure is as nearly unobjectionable as the current one. I especially call your attention to the second subject, the condition of our currency laws. The national bank act has ably served the purpose of holding the country in better management of the country, and within ten years there has been an increase in circulation per capita from $21.41 to $33.08. For several years evidence has been accumulating that legislation effectively limits the currency of each crop season emphasizes the defences of the present laws. New Age Alaska's needs have been partially met, but there must be a complete reorganization of the governmental system as well as the governmental system as you expect attention to take. Our fellow citizens who dwell on the shores of Puget sound with characteristic energy are arranging to坐落在 Alaska's oceanic exposition, on the Pacific ocean, to exhibit, only to the people of the Pacific slope, but to the people of the United States at large. Alaska since it was bought has yielded to the government in the form of nearly $300,000,000 in gold, furs and fish. When properly developed it will become in large degree a land of homes. The country has numerous numbers than that of all the countries of Europe; their annual foreign commerce amounts to nearly $100,000,000. If there are more numbers than that of all the countries of Europe; their annual foreign commerce amounts to nearly $100,000,000. If this trade were thoroughly understood and pushed by our manufacturers and producers, the industry not only will be able to all of the countries of our cotton-growing states, would be greatly benefited. Of course, in order to get these benefits, we must treat fairly the countries Especially do we need to remember our duty to the stranger within our gates. It is the sure mark of a student who is abhorred or discriminate against or in any way humiliate such stranger who has come here lawfully and who is conducting himself properly. To remember this is incumbrant to the student and there assumed toward the course peculiarly incumbent on every government official, whether of the nation or of the several states. I am prompted to say this by the attitude of militantism there and assumed toward the Japanese in this country. This hostility is sporadic and is limited to a very few places. Nevertheless, it is most discreditable to us as a student of Japanese history and gravest consequences to the nation. To no other country has there been such an increasing number of visitors from this land to be treated as a foreign student in great numbers. They are welcome, socially and intellectually, in all our colleges and institutions of higher learning, in all our professions of higher education. The mass of our people cherish a lively regard and respect for the people of Japan, and in almost every quarter of the union the stranger he is treated as the stranger from any part of civilized Europe is and deserves to be treated. But here and there is most unfortunate the feeling that has been shown in shutting them out from the common schools in San Francisco, and in muttering against their efficiency as workers. To shut them out from the public schools is a wicked absurdity, when there are no first-class colleges in the University of California, which do not gladly welcome Japanese students and on which Japanese students are treated in the Japanese as I would ask for a fair treatment for Germans or Englishism, Frenchmen, Russians, or Italians. I ask it as due to humanity and civilization. I ask it as due to because we must act upright toward all men. Last August an insurrection broke out in Cuba, and the government was powerless to existing. Cuban government was powerless to rebuild. The United States wishes nothing of Cuba except that it shall possess morally and manfully its rights, and nothing that they shall be able to preserve order among themselves and therefore to preserve their independence. If the elections become a reality, the United States will be confirmed in the island, it is absolutely out of the question that the island should continue independent; and the United States should continue independent. For the civilized world for Cuba's career as a nation, would again have to intervene and to see that the government was managed in such a manner as to secure the safety of life and property. In many parts of South America there has been much misunderstanding of the attitude and purposes of the United States toward the other American states, that our assention of the Monroe doctrine impelled or careled with it an assumption of superiority and of a right to exercise some kind of protectorate over the countries of the world. Nothing could be farther from the truth. Yet that impression continued to be a serious barrier to good understanding, to friendly intercourse, to the introduction of American capital and the extension of American territory, that apparently it could not be reached by any ordinary means. It was part of Secretary Root's mission to dispel this unfounded impression, and there she was. "I have just returned from a trip to Panama and shall report to you at length later on." the whole subject of the Panama canal, demands for seals by pelagic sealing still continues. The regulations have proved plainly inadequate to accomplish the object of protection and preservation of this government has been trying in vain to secure from Great Britain such revision and modification of the regulations as were considered for by the award of the Tribunal of Paris. The process of destruction has been accelerated during recent years by the appearance of new seals by the inadequate limitations paid no attention either to the close season or to the sixty-mile limit imposed upon the Canadians, and have prosecuted their work up to the very islands themselves. It efforts to secure an agreement with Great Britain for adequate protection of the seal herd, and negotiations with Japan for the same purpose are in case we are compelled to abandon the hope of making arrangements with other governmental bodies which will now incident to pelagic sealing, it will be a question for your serious consideration how far we should continue to protect and maintain our seals, and whether it continuing such a practice, and whether it is not better to end the practice by exterminating the herd ourselves in the most humane manner. The United States navy is the surest guardian of peace which this country possesses, is capable of protecting, and the teachings of history in this matter. A strong and wise people will study its own failures no less than its triumphs, for there is wisdom to be learned from the study both, of the mistake as well as of the success. I do not ask that we continue to increase our navy. I ask merely that it be maintained in the same way as it was only if we replace the obsolete and outworn ships by new and good ones, the equals of any afloat in any navy. To ston building ships for one year means the use of a new battleship forward of the old battleship Texas, for instance, would now be of little service in a stand-up fight with a powerful adversary: ry. The old double-turret monitor is a useful useful device if it was a waste of money to build the modern single-turret monitors. All these ships should be replaced by others; and this can be done by a well-settled program of providing for the battlefield of at least one first-class battleship equal in size and speed to any that any nation is at the same time building. Another small revolution has broken out in Ecuador. There will be not tariff revision this session of congress. Dr. Lapponi, physician to the pope, has cancer of the stomach. The Harriman system has decided to build its own refrigerator cars. Great Britain will give France and Spain a free hand to pacify Morocco. Christmas gifts sent to United States soldiers in Cuba will not be subject to duty. The Wells, Fargo Express company will advance the wages of its employees within the next 30 days. A house committee is considering a bill which provides for a rate of 2 cents per mile on all railways of the United States. Russia and Japan are building up their forces and another war is likely when one or both recover from the effects of the recent struggle. The Interstate Commerce commission will this month commence an investigation of the Harriman lines., the board believing the laws have been broken. Senator Cullom wants an amendment to the constitution providing for a six-year term for the president and vice president and that they shall not be eligible for re-election. NO. 33.. 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; Bourse, 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. How wud yu lik tu be the tiperiter gurl? No; gentle reader, the present Duke of Mariborough is not the original Blenheim pup. The men who have organized a rhinoceros trust will at least never be accused of being thin-skinned. “Are there men as brave to-day as were the Spartans?” asks an essayist. Certainly; there are baseball umpires. When a married man has occasion to talk in his sleep he always says things that his wife is unable to understand. Thomas W. Lawson is going to write a novel. It is the only way in which he can bring about the adequate punishment of the villain. The men who claim to be able to fly when they want to should not overlook a solution of the problem of how to light when they want to. The English language has endured for a good many years, and, despite the efforts of reformers, may be expected to be good for a spell longer. No doubt, when he has time to think of it, President Roosevelt will order the names of the naval vessels, navy yards and forts to be simplifiedly spelled. A Wilkesbarre (Pa.) cat that died the other day had a half interest in a fortune of $40,000. The heels will have to wait, however, until it dies eight times more. An antiquary has just discovered that William Cullen Bryant once wrote a poem extolling the mosquito as "that fair insect." Evidently, William never wore peekaboo vests. Mr. Rockefeller has been assured by a theosophist that he will wear a crown. But Mr. Rockefeller is not credulous enough to stand before a mirror trying to imagine how he would look in a crown. When a man goes to the penitentiary to serve out an "indeterminate" sentence on sixteen charges of burglary and is released at the end of a year, is it any wonder he resumes the practice of his profession? Two divers descended to a depth of two hundred and ten feet in a Scotch lake the other day. This is said to be the greatest depth to which divers ever descended in the British Isles. It is farther than most people would care to go beneath the surface of the water. It is Spanish gossip that when Princess, afterward Queen, Victoria complained to her uncle, King Edward, that some ladies of the court in Madrid objected because she proposed to entertain English friends who were not of the royal family, her uncle advised her to "be a sensible girl," and said, "Do not make enemies. Respect people's stupidity when necessary. In time, if you are wise, you will have everything your own way." Whether the King ever said this or not, it is pretty good advice for every one. The man with the figures tells us that in fifty years this country will have 200,000,000 population, and he wants to know what will happen. As we will not be here we are determined not to worry about it. Our ancestors not only killed but ate each other. Possibly in the remote future the old custom will become fashionable. We recall that in early life we met up with one or two people we thought plenty sweet enough to eat. The fact that this hereditary appetite now lies dormant is no sign that it will not break out again at some future time and become quite popular. If any man wishes to immortalize himself let him invent some way to punish wife desertion. This crime has increased in Chicago 100 per cent in three years and Cook County, Illinois, is now supporting 1,000 deserted families. To bring the faithless husbands back, prosecute and punish them would cost just as much as it does to support their families, and it is impossible to prove desertion after they are brought back. They all pretend to have gone off to get employment and to have been unfortunate, and to rebut their stories would cost another pile of money. What is needed is some genius who will invent some cheap way to punish cheap husbands. In reply to the oft-repeated assertion that no girl should begin teaching unless she is to make it a lifelong profession it is sufficient to say that no young woman, however fancy free she may be, is able to say with certainty that she will continue so. However great may be her devotion to the general cause of learning at a given time, before the moon waxes again that broad affection may be particularized and focused upon one weak and unworthy member of the human tribe, and this is a phenomenon against which no human power has yet been found to avail. The best school teacher is the girl who has most of the domestic instinct and is most likely to leave the pedagogic calling and find her natural and proper place as the arbiter of her own home. It is pleasant to find the ory agreeing with good sense, and the test of good sense is its agreement with the fixed and universal laws of mother nature. The idea that the woman school teacher is an emotionless species of humanity is just about as senseless as it is ungallant. There are many indications that the common notion of the farmer must be entirely abandoned. The long whiskered individual who says "by heck," has hayseed in his hair, is interested in gold bricks, and is ready to consider favorable propositions for the transfer of title in the Masonic Temple in Chicago, is a passing type. The last few years have revolutionized life on the farm. No one can estimate how much has been accomplished by the rural free delivery system in changing the situation, but it is the common thing now for the farmer to receive his daily paper and to spend the evening looking over the news as brought to him by the metropolitan sheet from the city perhaps half a thousand miles away. The almanac which once hung in the kitchen, supplementing the Bible and completing the home library, now has to share with the standard magazines, the daily and weekly papers, and the books received from the traveling libraries sent out in several States. The better information makes the farmer less a stranger to the activities of the day. The trolley car possibly passes close by his house. The telephone connects him with his neighbor and with the stores of the village to which he used to resort for news and for supplies. The improved machinery has steadily reduced the tollsomeness of his task. All these forces combined have worked toward his transformation. The farmer of yesterday is not the farmer of to-day. There has always been recognition of the importance of the farming class in the prosperity of the country. The abundant crops and contentment of the rural class have been associated with the health and happiness of the nation. But there has always been, too, a tendency to depreciate the farmer as an individual, and to make him the butt of ridicule. This condition has greatly changed because of the reasons already indicated. When farmers meet in national congress and discuss such live questions as those of postal savings banks, the election of postmasters, the adoption of the parcels post system, the relief of farm labor scarcity by immigration, centralization of schools, centralization of farms, business methods in farming, it is evident that they are alert. Their minds have been prepared for such discussions by wide reading and intelligent thought, and they are ready to reach conclusions of value. The city man reads his daily paper hastily. He learns to form judgments quickly. He trains himself to reach decisions sometimes without that careful reading and thoughtful study which the man of leisure gives to a subject. It is by no means certain, however, that his judgments and decisions necessarily are better than those of the farmer, who reads with more deliberation and thinks more slowly because his life is less affected by the noise and rush. The modern farmer is worth appreciation. He is anything but the being of caricature. CONSUMPTION OF LIQUOR. Norway Is the Least Intemperate of All the Nations. Americans are only moderate drinkers compared with those of other countries. The average citizen of the United States, counting in the women and children (which is not fair, but serves for the moment as a basis to figure upon), consumes in the course of a year liquors which contain one and a third gallons of pure alcohol. But the Frenchman, who, though formerly one of the soberest, has become the worst drunkard in the world, absorbs annually three and a half gallons of alcohol. The Belgian and the Swiss come next, with a consumption of two and four-fifths gallons. Then follow the Spanish with two and a third gallons, the Italian with just a trifle less, the Englishman and German with two and a tenth, and the Austro-Hungarian with about one and three-quarters gallons. On the other hand, the American citizen by no means stands at the top of the list in respect to sobriety. The Swede drinks only one and a sixth gallons of pure alcohol in a year; the Hollander drops considerably below him, with one gallon even; the relatively virtuous Russian, notwithstanding his much advertised addiction to vodka, absorbs only a trifle more than six-tenths of a gallon, and, finally, the Norwegian, who occupies a proud eminence as the most abstemious man in the world, barely exceeds a modest half gallon of the stuff in a twelvemonth's potations. It might be added for the sake of definiteness that the average person in the United States annually drinks one and a third gallons of proof spirits (which are 50 per cent alcohol), one-third of a gallon of wine and sixteen and a quarter gallons of malt liquors, chiefly beer.—Pearson's Magazine. Just Too Lovely. Kilder—The best illustrated paper I've seen in a long while was handed me to day. Jenks—What was it? Jenks- What was it? Kidder-A $50 note.-Philladelphia Ledger. When a girl is called to the telephone she answers as if expecting an invitation, but when the mother is called she wonders in taking down the receiver what company is coming now. When a man has the hot foot it is mighty easy for him to find an excuse to move. THE NEW AGE, PORTLAND, OREGON JAMESTOWN, N. D. H. HENDERS Real Estate OSCAR J. SEILER, Attorney-at-Law President Paid Up Capital and Surplus $35,000 Collections Investments Real Estate Jamestown, North Dakota KING & GILMORE Telephone UNION 4068 Real Estate Dealers Jersey Street ST. JOHNS, OREGON THE BITULITH TULITHIC PAW BEST BY EVERY TEST For Streets, Driveway WARREN CONSTRU 716 Oregonian Build ITS, Driveways and CRA CONSTRUCTION Oregonian Building, Portland, C FIC IRON WOOD NERAL STEEL AND Gages, Upset Rods and Bolts, and all Architectural Iron. Sidew s. All Kinds of Castings. INSIDE STREET BRIDGE, For Streets, Driveways and Crosswalks. 716 Oregonian Building, Portland, Oregon PACIFIC IRON STRUCTURAL ST Steel Bridges, Upset Ro Colums and all Architecture and Lights. All Kinds o EAST END BURNSIDE STREET SPOKANE PACIFIC IRON WORKS. STRUCTURAL STEEL AND IRON Steel Bridges, Upset Rods and Bolts, Cast Iron Columns and all Architectural Iron. Sidewalk Doors and Lights. All Kinds of Castings. EAST END BURNSIDE STREET BRIDGE, PORTLAND, OR First National Bank of Rock Springs ROCK SPRINGS, WYOMING EVERY ATTENTION GIVEN TO BUSINESS ENTRUSTED TO US THE CRESC THE ESCENT THE CRESCENT SPOKANE'S GREATEST STORE The Model Dry Goods Store of the Model Western City VISIT SPOKANE. When you do, visit THE CRESCENT, its model store, and one of the most interesting show places in what Elbert Hubbard has called the model city of America. Visitors will find here a Bureau of Information where reliable information of all kinds regarding the city may be obtained. Also free Parcel Check Rooms, Public Telephones and comfortable waiting rooms with lavatories for women. Spokane Agents for North Star Blankets, the kind used on all Pullman coaches. CHICAGO AND THE EAST When purchasing ticket to Chicago and the East, see that it reads via the Chicago & North-Western Railway. Choice of routes via Omaha or via St. Paul and Minneapolis. It is the route of The Overland Limited and the direct line to Chicago from the Coast. Four fast daily Chicago trains make connection with all transcontinental trains at St. Paul and Minneapolis. The Best of Everything. All agents sell tickets via this line. For further information apply to R. V. HOLDER, Conn'l Agent C. & K. Wry, 153 Third St., PORTLAND, ORE. N.W. 994 Everything in the Best Properties O. E. HEINTZ, Manager. Real Estate 108% Jersey Street, ST. JOHNS, OREGON I have choice Business and Residence Tracts in all parts of the city. Corr spondence solicited from nonresident owners of property or those seeking investments here. ABBETT All Kinds of Galvanized Iron and Tin Work a Specialty ALL WORK GUARANTEED NOT TO LEAK Agent for Quaker Mfg. Co.'s Steel Furnaces 449 Union Ave. North Shop Phone East 6177 Residence Phone East 1868 IC PAVEMENT ays and Crosswalks. UCTION COMPANY ing, Portland, Oregon ON WORKS. STEEL AND IRON Duds and Bolts, Cast Iron General Iron. Sidewalk Doors of Castings. ET BRIDGE, PORTLAND, OR Watson Drug Co. Wholesale and Retail The most complete stock of Drugs and Patent Medicines to be found in the Inland Empire. Prices guaranteed as low as the lowest. Our Prescription Department merits your confidence. 421 Riverside Ave. Mariso Block THE CENT SPOKANE'S GREATEST STORE Phone East 57 GREAT NORTHERN RAILWAY THE COMFORTABLE WAY To Spokane, St. Paul, Minneapolis, Duluth, Chicago, St. Louis and All Points East and South TWO OVERLAND TRAINS DAILY THE ORIENTAL LIMITED The FAST MAIL Via Seattle or Spokane Splendid Service Up-to-date Equipment Courteous Employees Daylight trip across the Cascade and Rocky Mountains. For Tickets, rates, folders and full in- formation call on or address H. DICKSON, C. P. & T. A. 122 Third Street, PORTLAND S. G. YERKES, A. G. P. A. SEATTLE, WASH. MISSOURI PACIFIC RAILWAY A Pleasant Way to Travel The above is the usual verdict of the traveler using the Missouri Pacific Railway between the Pacific Coast and the East, and we believe that the service and accommodations given merit this statement. From Denver, Colorado Springs and Pueblo there are two through trains daily to Kansas City and St. Louis, carrying Pullman's latest standard electric lighted sleeping cars, chair cars and up-to-date dining cars. The same excellent service is operated from Kansas City and St. Louis to Memphis, Little Rock and Hot Springs. If you are going East or South write for rates and full information. W. C. McBRIDE, Gen. Agt., 124 Third St., Portland, Or. to the East On Your Trip to the East TRY THE NORTHERN PACIFIC ST LIMITED LEEPING CARS (18) T SLEEPING CARS (18) CAR-DAY AND NIGHT (ELECTRIC LIGHTS) PULLMAN STANDARD SLEEPING CARS (ELECTRIC LIGHTS) PULLMAN TOURIST SLEEPING CARS (ELECTRIC LIGHTS) DINING CAR-DAY AND NIGHT (ELECTRIC LIGHTS) OBSERVATION CAR (ELECTRIC LIGHTS) ELECTRIC FANS BARBER SHOP BATH LIBRARY HER COMFORTS FREE Continental Trains EAST and is at 255 Morrison St., Third Daily Transcontinental Trains TO THE EAST The Ticket Office at Portland is at 255 Morrison St., Corner Third A. D. CHARLTON Assistant General Passenger Agent PORTLAND, OREGON ```markdown ``` DRAWNER RIO GRANDIFER SCENIC LINE WORLD TERROUGH UTAH AND COLORADO Castle Gate, Cenon of the Grand Black Canon, Marshall and Tenn- nessee Passes, and the World- Famous ROYAL GORGE. For illustrated and descriptive pamph- lets write to W. C. McBRIDE, General Agent 124 Third Street PORTLAND, OREGON Columbia River Scenery REGULATOR R C N LINE REGULATOR LINE The excursion steamer "BAILEY GATZER1" makes round trips to CASCADE LOCKS every Sunday, leaving PORTLAND at 9 a. m., returning arrives 6 p. m. Daily service between Portland and The Dalles, except Sunday, leaving Portland at 7 a. m., arriving about 5 p. m., carrying treight and passengers. Splend d accommodations for outfits and livestock. Dock foot of Alder street Portland; foot of Court street, The Dalles. Telephone Main 914. Portland. Two Straight Passenger Trains Daily WITH THROUGH PARLOR CARS Leaves UNION DEDOT Arrives. Daily 8:00 a. m. For Maygers, Rain- ier, Clata kanie Wilson, Wilmont, Astoria, Warm- ton, Flavel, Gearh Hart Park and Seas- side. Astoria & Seashore Express Daily. Astoria Express Daily. Daily. 11:30 a. m. 7:00 p. m. 9:40 p. m. C. A. STEWART Comm'1 Agt., 248 Alder St. Telephone Main 906. J. C. MAYO, G. F. & P. A. NORTHERN PACIFIC NORTHWEST HALIFA 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 lovely desert. Requires no refrigeration. Guaranteed absolutely pure and costs less than any other cereal. Sold by all grocers. Five package, 25 cents. THE PUGET SOUND FLOURING MILLS CO., 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. 1566 Pacific Ave. 1566 Commerce St. Tacoma, Washington Berlin Building. 113 South 11th St. Telephone, Main 194. TACOMA, . . . WASHINGTON 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 TAGOMA, 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, 11:15 p m. PUYALLUP DIVISION 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. (5:30 a m omitted Sundays) 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 L. R. MANNING, Pres. L. R. MANNING Real Estate Loans and Investments. Coal Lands. First-Class Mort EQUITABLE BUILDING A De BREA D WHEAT-HEART Makes a delightful breakfast lovely desert. Requires l TACOMA THE ANNEX MARTIN ANGEL, Prop. House of Fine Liquors Phone Main 446. Cor. Eleventh and Pacific Avenue THE McDONALD CIGAR CO. Sells the Highest Grades of ...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 Tras. C. H. ROBERSON, Sec'y. EAT T. B. C. BREAD Made by TACOMA BAKING COMPANY Wholesale Manufacturers of Bread, Cakes, Etc. We also make a speciality 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 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 traina. --- Until January 1, 1907, THE NEW AGE will be only $1 per year. A. T. HOSMER, Secy' NING & CO., Inc. Rts. City and Farm Property. Timber and Hortgages and Investment Securities. TACOMA, WASH. Delightful AKFAST Dish ARTS Breakfast dish: with fruit added, a less little time to cook. Alight ex- 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 Cleaning and Pressing Partor 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 Phone Main 6133 409-411 Alder Street PORTLAND OREGON THE BUREAU SALOON FRANK HOFFMAN, Proprietor Choice Imported and Domestic Wines, Liquors and Cigars Telephone Main 5506 Southeast Corner First and Morrison PORTLAND OREGON A. H. Willett & Co. Wholesale and Retail GROCERS Special Prices to Restaurants Prompt Delivery Phone East 283 128 Grand Avenue S. Washington, Prop. L. Wilkinson, Manager Fine Wines, Liquors & Cigars NICELY FURNISHED ROOMS 101 N. Park St., PORTLAND, OREGON A. H. Griswold Successor to GRISWOLD & PHEGLEY TAILOR No Branch Store 131 Sixth St. PORTLAND, OREGON OUR BRAND Horse Collars Farmers, Teamsters and Horsemen, look to your interest. When in need of Horse Collars buy the best one. SHARKEY COLLAR It has 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 flouring Mills Co. OLYMPIC PATENT FAMILY FLOUR PORTLAND, ORE. W.C. NOON BAG CO. PORTLAND, ORE. OLYMPIC. A Flour Whose Is the Fact that the Number of People Who Use It Multiplies Every Year THE WEEKLY HISTORIAN 1622—Surrender of Manheim to Tilly. 1640—Long Parliament began. 1760—Foundation stone laid for Black- friars bridge across the River Thames. 1769—La Salle arrived at mouth of the Miami. 1795—French Directory chosen. 1806—French occupied Hesse...Battle of Strelitz. 1812—French defeated Russians near Wiazma. 1814—Americans abandoned and destroyed Fort Erie. 1837—Constitution of Hanover abrogated by royal ordinance. 1854—Battle of Inkerman. 1856—Visit of Victor Emmanuel of Italy to Queen Victoria. 1861—The Confederate schooner Bermuda, ran the blockade at Savannah... Gen. McClellan succeeded Gen. Scott as commander of armies of the United States. 1862—Gen. Burns succeed Gen. McClellan in command of army of the Potomac. 1864—Confederate ram Albemarle destroyed by Lieut. Cushing.....Nevada admitted to the Union. 1867—Gen. Sherman announced the Indian war at an end. 1871—Eleven women and children killed in panic in negro church in Louisville. 1800—Grand hotel, San Francisco, destroyed by fire....The first Japanese parliament opened. 1801—Maverick National Bank, Boston, failed....President Foneeca proclaimed himself dictator of Brazil. 1892—Celebrations in honor of Luther at Wittenberg. 1894—Nicholas II. proclaimed Emperor of Russia....The new "serum cure" for diphtheria announced by Dr. Roux of Paris. 1895—Two earthquake shocks felt in many of the Western States. 1898—American peace commissioners demanded whole of Philippines from Spain....American naval reservation established at Honolulu....Russia mobilized a strong naval fleet at Port Arthur. 1900—Cuban constitutional convention opened at Havana. 1902—British cable completed around the world....Fifteen killed and seventy injured by explosion of election fireworks in Madison Square, New York. 1903—New Irish land act went into operation....Panama proclaimed its independence. 1904—Liberals victorious in Canadian elections....Russian warships left Vigo, Spain, for the East....Eva Booth appointed commander of the Salvation Army in the United States. 1905—Five thousand Jews reported killed in Odessa during the riots. Status of Churches in Germany. The official order book of church membership in Germany, issued by Pastor Schneider of Elberfeld, as translated and reviewed by the Literary Digest, shows that the number of conversions from the Roman Catholic church to the Protestant is considerably greater than those who have gone from the Protestant ranks into the Roman faith. According to this authority, 75,978 members of the Catholic church in Germany became Protestants between 1800 and 1894, while only 1,054 went from Protestantism to Catholicism. The order book draws attention to the fact that not only in the empire as a whole, but in each and every State the Protestants have been making the greater gains. Relatively these are much greater in France than elsewhere. Vaccination for Germ Diseases. Vaccination for Germ Diseases. Sir Almeroth E. Wright, the noted London physician, who is credited with the discovery of the osopic index, which indicates the power of the blood to destroy diseased germs, is now visiting in this country, and recently delivered an address at the Philadelphia College of Physicians. He said he had reached the conclusion, after much experimentation, that bacteriological inoculation is the best means to fight any disease that owes its inception to germs, not excepting even tuberculosis. The general plan of treatment is the same with that as with other diseases. After the osopic test on the patient's blood the vaccine is introduced into the body until the blood is sufficiently strengthened to throw off its impurities. Morgan's $25,000 Bible. The famous illuminated parchment Bible, produced by the Cluny monks in France over 200 years ago, has just been received by its purchaser, J. P. Morgan of New York, who was required to pay a duty of $4,000, its value being appraised at $25,000. Morgan's brokers protested against the duty, saying that the book should be admitted free, because it is printed matter more than twenty years old. The Bible is about 20x24 inches and 8 inches thick, the cover being of stamped leather. YEGEN BROS. SAVINGS BANK BILLINGS, MONTANA Branch Banks at Butte, Anaconda and Gardiner Transact a General Banking Business Pay interest on Savings Accounts and Time Certificates of Deposit. We start Savings Accounts with a deposit of one dollar or more. SWIFT & COMPANY PREMIUM HAMS, BACON And All Fresh Cuts for Hotels MAIL ORDERS MAIL ORDERS PROMPT ATTENTION THIRD AND COLUMBIA 'PHONE Main 13 BONNY & WATSON CO (SUCCESSORS TO) BONNY & STEWART FUNERAL DIRECTORS AND EMBALMERS Lady Assistant Al- ways in Attendance. Seattle, Wash. GRAYS HARBOR COMMERCIAL CO. COSMOPOLIS, WASH. FLAT HOOPS - IRON DRAW-LUGS FLAT HOOPS-IRON DRAW-LUGS THE SEATTLE T LO FREIGHT OR HOUSEHOLD TO AND THE WRIT Seattle SEAT THE SEATTLE TRANSFER CO. LOW FREIGHT RATES ON HOUSEHOLD GOODS TO AND FROM THE EAST WRITE US Seattle, Wash. MISSOULA MONT H. E. CHANEY, Proprietor. A. A. HOWARD, Manager. Florence Steam Laundry THE GOOD ONE Established 1890. Telephone 115 Work Done On Short Notice 112-114 West Front St. MISSOULA, MONTANA THE GRAND PACIFIC SALOON Missoula, Montana. Fine Wines, Liquors and Cigars. Draught Beer, Fine, 5c. Bottled Beer, 25c. a Quart. All trains Stop 15 Minutes. Opp. N. P. Depot. m. the the ter ter on the ich de- in am THE MUSEUM OF THE ARTS. MISSOULA MERCANTILE CO. MISSOULA, MONTANA THIS modern establishment with its immense and varied stocks merits the patronage of all. Whether it be something to wear, to eat, to furnish your house, or anything else, you can get it here. We want every reader of The New Age within our territory to join the mighty ranks of pleased and prosperous customers already dealing with us. REMEMBER OUR MOTTO—"We Sell Everything and Everything the Very Best." PROMPT ATTENTION SEATTLE WASH When in Seattle visit HANSON & CO'S Billiard Parlors The Finest in the Northwest 621-23 First Avenue SEATTLE WASHINGTON WATER TANKS Fir Spruce and Cedar Lumber BoxShooks Cedar Shingles Grays Harbor Commercial Co Seattle, Wash. TRANSFER CO. TTLE COPYRIGHT Just a Word About Rolls Little Rolls and big Rolls; plain Rolls and fancy Rolls; Rolls for breakfast; Rolls for dinner; Rolls for grow to perfect proportions at the reliable bakery most people in Missouri know about — Hay, Grain, Flour, Fruits, Vegetables Confectionery, Etc., Etc. 131 Higgins Ave. Missoula, Montana Portland New Age Established 1896 A. D. Griffin, Manager Office, Room 317, Commonwealth Building To insure publication all local news must reach us not later than Thursday morning of each week. Subscription price, one year, payable in advance, $2.00. PORTLAND LOCALS Mrs. Shippley is suffering from rheumatism. Isaac Maxwell is on the sick list this week. Mrs. Mahill Davis expects to leave for Tacoma in a few days. Mrs. H. Summers of Seventh and Couch streets, is indisposed. E. Redmond is able to be out again after a severe attack of rheumatism. There are rumors of a 'possum supper to be given in the near future. Mrs. W. L. B. Plummer arrived in the city last Saturday from Seattle and is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Collins of 11th street. Thos. Davis, of Vancouver, Wash., visited Portland this week. Mr. Davis is prospering in our neighbor state and is quite an extensive land owner. Ulysses Thomas, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Thomas is seriously ill and the attending physicians have grave doubts of her recovery. Mrs. H. S. Johnson of 434 Hoyt street is being visited by her mother, Mrs. H. E. Johnson and brother of Kukeokuk, Pa. They will spend the winter in Oregon. On Nov. 30th, Mrs. Hattie LeRoy entertained in honor of Mr. Jerome Harris. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Vincent, Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Oliver, Mrs. D. M. Newman. Chas. W. Stanton of North Yakima, Wash., spent several days in the city, the guest of Mrs. Dora Newman. He left on the 1st for Oakland, Cal., where he expects to spend the winter. New North West Lodge No. 2554 have arranged an excellent program for the celebration of their 22d anniversary on the 18th of December at their hall southeast corner of Second and Yamhill. Their friends are cordially invited to attend. Mr. Harris left last Saturday for Tacoma. Wash., where he has accepted a position at the Tacoma hotel. Mr. Harris has been employed at the Hotel Portland, where he enjoyed the reputation of being one of the best waiters ever employed at that establishment and his employers part with him with much regret. On Sunday night last Mrs. Unnaught state organizer of the W. C. T. U. gave an interesting lecture at the A. M. E. Zion church. In addition Mrs. M. Morgan made a few remarks and Mrs. J. N. Fullilove rendered a beautiful solo and the choir gave several appropriate selections. After the lecture pledge cards were distributed throughout the audience and a meeting called for Wednesday evening for the purpose of reviving the Lucy Thurman Union. On Thanksgiving Mr. and Mrs. Roots entertained with an old fashioned Thanksgiving dinner. At 4 o'clock the guests were seated around the festive board which fairly groaned with its burden of delicacies. Formalities were dispensed with and a couple of pleasant hours were spent in social conversation, repartee and disposing of the excellent repast. Those present were Mesdames Jas. Manley and Geo Kiser, Mr. Roberts, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Ritter and Mr. and Mrs. Wm. P. Roots. CARD OF THANKS. On Monday evening, Nov. 26th, Rev. W. J. Tolliver, pastor of the Bethel A. M. E. church and Mrs. Tolliver were the recipients of a very pleasant surprise party rendered them by members of the church and congregation. The party took the form of a pound or donation party, accompanied by greetings and congratulations occasioned by the marriage of Rev. W. J. Tolliver to Mrs. L. A. Booth, of Victoria, B. C., but lately of Tacoma, Wash. The sweet strains of "There's a stranger at the door" heralded the coming of the visitors who were warmly welcomed by Rev. and Mrs. Tolliver, who wish to express through the columns of The New Age their appreciation and thanks. TACOMA NOTES Emily Ury on the sick list. Mrs. Rice is on the sick list. Master Edgar Hall is on the sick list. Mr. Chester Bird, of Seattle, was in our city Thursday. Don't forget Literary at the church every Friday evening. Miss Dassie Lawhorn returned from her visit to Everett Sunday. Mrs. P. Lawhorn is getting ready to leave for her home in Indianapolis, Indiana, soon. Mrs. L. E. Clarke gave a dinner at her residence Sunday in honor of Miss Ruth Freeman for her fourteenth birthday. The ball which was given by the young girls Thanksgiving was well done for the young girls' first time. The evening was spent nicely. A great surprise was aroused by the people hearing the news. Booth of Ta coma making a high jump. She was married to Rev. Toliver of Portland, Oregon, last Wednesday. Tacoma people send her congratulations. MASONIC STATISTICS. The Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite was first organized in the United States of America by Mr. Jean De Baptist DesSable, a brilliant and distinguished colored mason who came to the city of Chicago from the island of San Domingo on the fourth of July 1779. He had a patent of power and authority to establish and propagate the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite in the United States of America. In the year 1869 the United Supreme Council of Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite among the western masones for the southern and western jurisdiction was organized at Waltham, D.C. in the year 1860. Some of the presen officers are John G. Jones, 33 of Chicago Sovereign Grand Commander; Dr. B. H. Stillyard, 33, Wheeling, W. Va.; Lieut. Grand Commander; Robert J. Fletcher, 33, Sacramento Calif. Grand Prior; C. R. France, 33, Grand Chancellor, Pittsburgh, 33, James E. Todd, 33, Grand Minister of State Earlington Ky.; H. C. Scott, 33, Grand Treasurer General, Washington, D.C. J. C. White, 33, 277 Washington St. Boston, Mass, Grand Secretary General; Rev. H. McChee, 33, Mattery, Ala. Grand Keeper, J. W. Green; 33, Charles E. Morton, 33; R. M. Clark San Francisco, Cal.; E. A. Small, 33; R. J. Fletcher, 33; Frank J. Burles, 33; Sacramento, Cal.; A. D. Griffin, 33; F. D. Thomas, 33, Portland, Ore.; J. C. Brom, 33; J. M. Hunt, 33, Hanna, Wyoming; Scott, 33, Everett, Wash.; Hawkins, 33, Seattle, Wash.; J. E. Shepard, 33, Seattle, Wash.; William T. Garnett, 33, Rinklin, Wash.; William T. Garnett, 33, Rinklin, Wash.; Rev. Wm M. Myles, 33, Orleans La.; Rev. Wm M. Myles, 33, Selma Ala.; Rev. J. H. McChee, 33 Montgomery Ala.; Rev. A. W. Thorne, 33 Antigaville Ala.; H. W. Growe, 33 Antigaville Ala.; Rev. G. W. Hill, 33 Hartburg Ala.; John Carter, 33 Brewton Ala.; Thomas W. Cole, 33; Dr. Van J. Davis, 33 Paducah, Ky.; Georg W. Gough, 33 Anchor Burry, Mich.; John R. Wagner, 33 Gridley, Cal.; Rev. J. P. Thonton, 33 Brooklyn, N. Y.; Rev. J. Holland, 33 Catskill, N. Y.; Joseph W. Exum, 33 West Summerville Mass.; Rev. Owen L. W. Smith, 33 Wilson N. C.; Rev. D. J. Donohoe, 33 Chicago Il. S. H. Prather, Chicago Il. E. H. Morris, 33 F. S. Campbell, 33 E. A. Harper, 33 T. Webster Brown, 33 Oscar Campbell, 3 A. W. Ford, 33 Chicago Ill. G. L. W. Wright, 33 Wheeling, W. Va.; G. L. A. Cabell, 3 Staunton, G. H. Kirk, 3 Pittsburg Pa.; A. L. Harris, 33 Johnstown, Pa.; E. Franklin, 33 Jacksonville Fla.; Newport Henry, 33 Alexander Olechsvy, 3 William H. Johnson, 33 W. I. Herron, 33 Rev. Peter Lucas, 3 John S. Brent, 3 A. Lincoln Alexander of Washington, D.C.; T. W. Ashford, 3 Chunnep, Washington, W. W. Taylor, Salt Lake City, Utah. There are ninety consisters of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite with a membership of 4295, value of property $60,000. OUR CHICAGO LETTER Chicago, Ill., Dec. 1st, 1906. Miss Blanche Wright has been on a short visit and spent her Thanksgiving day in Gifford, Ill. Pitchfork Tillman was engaged to speak in Chicago on the Annexation of Cuba, but no one here has seen where Mr. Tillman ever touched his subject throughout the discussion. He substituted the race question, as usual. Rev. H. C. Martin has succeeded in waking up all the sleeping members of Bethesda Baptist church to a sense of their duty to themselves as Baptists and to the race by creating in them a spirit to buy some new church property. Mr. Theo. W. Jones, the proprietor and manager of a large warehouse and one of the largest teaming and transfer companies in Chicago, sustained a loss by fire to the amount of $72,000, partly covered by insurance. Mr. Jones lost by fire three years ago $22,000. Mr. Oscar DePriest, a colored man, who was elected county commissioner on the county ticket pulled through by a small majority. He was knifed at the polls by a large majority of colored voters because he is very unpopular in this city, and the republican party has got through putting such unpopular people on the ticket. At a meeting held at the Western Star club on Friday, November 30th, at their hall on State street. Lawyer John G. Jones offered a series of resolutions which were adopted thanks Mayor Dunne of Chicago for the position that he took in refusing to preside at a meeting in Chicago where Senator Tillman of South Carolina was to speak. Mayor Dunne's course was highly commended. The Grand Commandery of Knight Templars of the state of Illinois will meet in their annual session next Monday at Chicago, Ill. Sir A. W. Ford, grand recorder of the Grand Commandry of Knight Templars will deliver an excellent address on the occasion. Sir S. H. Prather, 33, deputy grand commander and Sir T. D. McFarland and Sir F. A. Campbell have been appointed a committee for the arrangement of a banquet. Mr. F. L. Barnett, another very unpopular colored man in Chicago, who was one of the candidates for municipal court judge, was defeated by a thousand votes. A large number of prominent colored men worked against him at the polls as well as a large number of white men. It is no doubt that he owes his defeat to the strong and bitter opposition that was made against him at the polls by a large number of prominent colored men in this city. Everett Market, (E. B. L. Peck, Prop.), Choice Meats and Poultry, 413 Everett Street, corner Tenth, Portland, Ore. Phone, Maln 1540. THE NEW AGE, PORTLAND, OREGON BATTLE WITH BIG BABOON. REDUCES FREIGHT RAT Desperate Struggle on Shipboard Railway Charges Always Low Between Animal and Keepers. An exciting story of a baboon's escape from its cage on the Union-Castle liner Comrie Castle was told when the vessel reached Plymouth on the way to London, with a large collection of wild animals on board, including five wolves and eight zebras, the property of Herr Windhorn. Herr Windhorn, who for thirty years has collected wild animals, which he sells to dealers and zoological gardens, said the baboon stood 4 feet 6 inches in height and was very wild. About a week after leaving Cape Town it broke out of its cage, but fortunately the escape was discovered before the animal reached the deck. For two days, however, it was at liberty in the hold, showing fight whenever it was approached. An effort to snare the baboon by the cargo nets was found impracticable on account of the 15-foot leaps which the animal made whenever it was approached. At length Herr Windhorn ventured into the hold with his keeper and endeavored to secure the baboon, the keeper offering it food while the owner tried to come to close quarters. Herr Windhorn's foot caught in a net and he slipped, whereupon the baboon at once made a furious onslaught on him, fastening his teeth in the collector's leg. It was impossible to shake off the powerful beast. In his effort to release himself Herr Windhorn tried to force open the jaws of the baboon with his hands. He was in a measure successful, but the baboon quickly fastened his fangs in Herr Windhorn's right hand, which was injured even more extensively than the leg. The keeper, who hurried to his master's aid, quickly became the subject of attack, the baboon inflicting several bites on him, while the boatswain of the liner was also bitten. The beast afterward refused to be overcome by half a bottle of whisky and a dose of opium powerful enough to poison ten men was also given him in a bottle of lemonade without effect. Eventually a large grating was fixed outside the companion way and then by means of a display of fruit the brute was coaxed near it and as he stretched an arm through the grating to grasp an orange he was secured. Legs and arms were at length tightly lashed, after which the baboon attached to the grating was returned to his cage and then released. He died four days later and Herr Windhorn says he thinks death was due to a broken heart —London Tribune. SCHOOL STUDIES. MAN KIST ALTHO THRO KET RATE DO MUSIC DORG We give a real elevation of Henry Foster, better known as "Hen." Perhaps his name was not Henry Foster in your school, but you had a fellow like him. He was trouble's heir. He took ten lickings where any other lad got one. Unlucky. He was always caught. If a pane of glass was broken, it was Hen who stood with a stone in his hand. If the teacher asked a question it was Hen who always said "Huh." And once, when I asked him if it didn't hurt when he took a whaling, he gave the pathetic answer: "Should say not. Got used to it at home." Well, it helps to know that at least one "Hen" Foster within my knowledge became the head of a great educational movement, and the foe of beating children in order to teach them things.—Cincinnati Post. Teacher—Johnnie, on which side is your heart? Johnnie—On the right side, teacher. Teacher—No, Johnnie; it's on your left side. Johnnie—Yes, ma'am; that's what I said. Teacher—What you said? Johnnie—Yes, teacher; the left side is the right side for the heart—Cleveland Plain Dealer. "Paw, you believe in spelling reform, don't you?" "Yes." "Then you'll have to spell 'sure' shure, won't you?" "My boy, you'll have to pass that up to the President."—Pilladelphia Ledger. It Would Never Do. Mr. Newlywed—Why not make Thursday your "at home day?" Hurry, your at home day? Mrs. Newlywed—Gracious, no! That would never do. People would think then that we have only one girl and that I have to stay in to let her go out. —Philadelphia Press. The average country woman looks at a restaurant bill of fare as if she was trying to pick out something to eat that wouldn't poison her. REDUCES FREIGHT RATES. Railway Charges Always Low Where Navigation is Available. "There are a few things they do better abroad," said Congressman Ransdell in a recent speech on river and harbor improvement, delivered in Portland, "and among these things is the foreign way of handling waterway transport. Other nations, notably Germany, Holland and England are expending annually upon canals and rivers sums by the side of which our expenditures are but trifles. A study of foreign conditions develops a few incontrovertible facts. Among these: Whenever canals, rivers, lakes and other waterways are properly developed, so that navigation is first class, freights are cheap and there is no demand for rate regulation. This demand comes entirely from communities which have no waterways. "Showing the comparative cost on railroad and water transport our own lake traffic is a good illustration. It cost 90c a ton to transport iron ore from Ashtabula to Pittsburgh by rail, a distance of 135 miles. It costs 80c per ton to carry the same ore by water from Duluth to Ashtabula, a distance of 1,000 miles. Imagine, you people of the Northwest, what the development of your own magnificent natural waterways would mean to every farmer, merchant and manufacturer. Each farmer would add to his profit seventents of the sums now paid the railroads for the carrying of his grain and fruit; each merchant would effect a saving in the cost of his merchandise and each manufacturer in the cost of his raw product. I believe, and we can demonstrate it by unassailable statistics, that were the national government to refuse appropriations for rivers and harbors it would be the most profitable of investments for you of the Northwest to bond your magnificent country for any sum, however great, that your unparalleled natural waterways be developed to the highest point of efficiency." Must Appear in St. Louis. St. Louis, Dec. 7.—The clerk of the United States Circuit court today received notification from the United States marshal's office in New York that service had been ordered on John D. Rockefeller and others in the government suit against the Standard Oil company recently filed in St. Louis. In addition to Rockefeller, the following joint defendants with him were served: Henry H. Rogers, William Rockefeller, John P. Archbold, H. M. Flagler and Oliver H. Payne. They will be required to enter an appearance here. Lesson to Free-Traders. London, Dec. 7.—The Daily Mail comments this morning upon the “Tale of American Prosperity” told in Secretary of the Treasury Shaw’s report. It says the striking fact about this dazzling prosperity is that it prevails in a country which British free traders, 15 years ago, predicted would be ruined by protection. The Daily Mail regards Mr. Shaw’s currency proposals as a bold statement, not feasible except for the $60,000,000 duties collected. Ask Cash for Explorers' Monument. Washington, D. C., Dec. 7.—Senator Fulton has introduced a bill appropriating $10,000 for the Lewis & Clark monument at Clatson. M. J. Gill Co., wholesale and retail meat dealers, 512 Mississippi avenue, Portland, Oregon. Phone East 665. J. Wallgreen, dealer in staple and fancy groceries, 634 Thurman street. Telephone Pacific 911. Always ask for the famous General Arthur cigar. Eesberg-Gunst Cigar Co., general agents, Portland, Or. The Anheuser, Henry M. Williams, proprietor, 234 Morrison street, corner Second, Portland, Ore. Telephone Main 2517. C. Anderson, staple and fancy groceries, Twenty-first and Thurman streets. 'Phone Hood 57. Fresh roasted coffee a specialty. Albina Club (George Ross), choice wines, liquors and cigars. 134 Russell street, Portland, Ore. Phone East 4386. Royal Market, Bair & Werth proprietors, fresh and cured meats, fish, poultry and game. 439 Union avenue north, corner Tillamook. Phone East 187. North 16th Street Market, A. Wurtenberger, proprietor, choice poultry, fresh and salt meats, phone Main 1395, 230 North Sixteenth street, Portland, Ore. "THE MILWAUKEE" "The Pioneer Limited" St. Paul to Chicago. "Overland Limited" Omaha to Chicago. "Southwest Limited" Kansas City to Chicago. No trains in the service on any railroad in the world equals in equipment that of the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway. They own and operate their own sleeping and dining cars and give their 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. S. ROWE, General Agent, 134 Third St. Portland. Try the Pacific Laundry Co. for good work and prompt service. Main office First and Arthur streets, Portland, Ore. Telephone 649. C. A. Rhoads, the only place on the Coast repairing rubber goods. Water bags, syringes, atomizers, rubber goods and extra parts for sale. Wringers and carpet sweepers repaired and for sale. Established 15 years ago in San Francisco. 423 Morrison street, 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, Oregon. THE PIONEER PAINT COMPANY. T COMPANY. The pioneer paint establish ment of Portland is of F. E. Beach & Company, of 135 First St., the oldest and most reliable house of its kind in neer paint establish ment of Portland is that of F. E. Beach & Company, of 135 First St., the oldest and most rellable house of its kind in the Northwest. It carries an immense stock of the best things in paints and building materials, together with an unusual list of specialties. Those who need anything in these lines can certainly profit by going to F. E. Beach & Company. Remember the number, 135 First street. J. REITZELE TAILOR 330 Burnside St. Hotel Scott Bldg. Portland, Ore. H. R. LYNES Dealer in STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES Notions and Fruit. Free Delivery. 154 Russell Street Phone East 5640 PORTLAND, OREGON Phone Hood 577 THE OLD HOME F. P. MEEHAN, Prop. Choice Wines, Liquors and Cigars Cor. Seventeenth and Northrup Sts. Portland, Oregon GEO. W. HOCHSTEDLER Dealer in Staple and Fancy Groceries, Fruits, Produce CIGARS AND TOBACCO Phone East 374 460-462 E. Burnside St. PHONE MAIN 1893 Martin-Marks Coffee Co. HIGH GRADE COFFEES TEAS, ETC. The excellence of Monte Cristo Java and Mocha Coffee stands in high favor. 252 Third Street PORTLAND, OREGON Crane Bottle Co. Wholesale Dealers in BOTTLES Carry the large st stock of Bottles on the Pacific Coast. Mail Order ship- ments given prompt attention- Office, 14th and Couch Sts. PORTLAND, OREGON Portland Fluff Rug Co. Transforming of Worn Brussels and Ingrain Carpets Into Rugs Prompt Attention and Good Service Guaranteed Phone 3052 790 Washington St., Portland, Oregon Furniture of Quality We sell Quality goods—Furniture that is made from Natural Wood, that will give satisfaction under hard wear. The same will hold good of our carpets and stoves. That's the kind we sell. : : : : : : : : : COVELL FURNITURE CO. 184-186 FIRST All the Credit You Want --- P. A. TAYLOR Staple and Fancy Groceries Fruits, Confections, Cigars, Tobacco and Fancy 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 508 469 Williams Ave. PORTLAND, OREGON C. S. NELSON Dealer in Staple and Fancy Groceries and Provisions 154 N. Fourteenth St., Cor. Irving John's Meat Market J. D. MERGENS, Prop. Fresh Meats, Beef, Pork, Mutton, Bacon and Hams Corned Beef and Pickled Pork a Specialty Phone Main 1964 431½ N. Sixth Street PORTLAND, OREGON W. R. Williams Al Cleveland FASHION STABLES Hacks, Livery, Boarding Twentieth and Washington Sts. West End Exposition Bldg. Phone Main 45 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 Best in the Market. Patronize Home Indu- dry. PORTLAND, OREGON HALL PHARMACY CO. Telephone East 873 Union Avenue and Tillamook Street PORTLAND OREGON ROBERT A. PRESTON PRESCRIPTION DRUGGIST Cor. 23d and Thurman Sts. Phone Main 1610 PORTLAND, OREGON SCHWIND & BAUER Shoe Repairing Machine and Hand. Only Goodyear Machine in Our City. Shoes made to Order. Shoes Called for and Delivered. Telephone Pacific 2228. 260 Yamhill Street PORTLAND, OREGON FINE SOFT AND STIFF HATS Hats Dyed, Cleaned and Blocked. Our specialty: Panamas Cleaned and Bleached. 249% Alder St. bet. Second and Third. Branch: 422 Washington St. Portland, O. r. OUR WORK IS BUT ONE GRade - THE BEST We make a specialty of laundering Lace Curtains CRESCENT LAUNDRY CO. 549 Morrison Street. We supply the Butcher trade with nice, clean aprons. Buy your aprons and then pay to have them laundered when we will supply them for just what it costs you now to have them laundered. Our wagon will call. M. J. Gardner. Phone Main 1900 M. Gardner. GARDNER BROS. Manufacturers of the Silk Tie Cigars UNION MADE 209% Madison Street PORTLAND, OREGON ARTHUR LAVY Furnisher and Hatter "HE MAKES SHIRTS" 486 Washington 8%, Opposite Heilig's Theater PORTLAND, OREGON RAINIER MARKET C. BLUM, Proprietor Dealer in Fresh. Cured and Smoked Meats, Hams, Bacon, Lard, Sausages, Etc. Also Fish and Clams. FAMILY TRADE A SPECIALTY Cor. Seventeenth and Savier Stk. Phone Main 1632 Portland, Oregon Frank L. Smith Meat Co. 225 Alder St., between 1st and 2d Sta. "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 preservatives and adulterations. Rolled Roast Beef 10c Lean Roast Mutton 8c Mutton for boiling 6c Mutton for stew 5c Loin Mutton Chops 12½c Shoulder Mutton Chops 10c Lean Roast Veal 10c Breast Veal Roast 10c Veal Stew 8c Veal Chops 12½c Hamburg Steak 10c Pork Sausage 10c Frankfort Sausage 10c Bologna Sausage 8c Breakfast Bacon 17½c Pure Lard 12c Fine Shoulder Steak 8c Round Steak 10c Best Pot Roast 8c Fine Bolling Beef 5c Best Beef Stew 5c Plate cuts Beef 5c Brisket Beef 5c Corn Beef 6c It is up to the taxpayers of Portland. Are you going to allow the beef trust to continue robbing you of thousands of dollars annually through the meat supplied to the Port of Portland. --- HENRY WEINHARD'S BREWERY Manufacturers and Bottlers of the 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 OUTL AND 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 An Eastern Oyster Transplanted and grown on our beds at TOKELAND, WASHINGTON "UNEQUALED 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. CHILBURG, President A. V. HAYT Tacoma Office No. 955 Commere DAVID H. BEECHER, SIDNEY 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” “KAISEI 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 Notary Public G. E. WATKINS FRANK E. WATKINS Notary Public 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 Except Sunday between Portland and Astoria And Way Points Leave Portland..... 7:00 A M Arrive Astoria..... 1:30 P M Leave Astoria..... 2:30 P M Arrive Portland..... 9:00 P M MEALS SERVED A LA CARTE Portland Landing, Alder St. Dock. Astoria Landing, Callender Dock. E. B. SCOTT, Agent. Phone Main 565 AMERICAN BANK Savings Department Total Available Assets $7,500,000 GEO. H. TARBELL, Manager N. Cashier 1800 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 RBLUME" "COLUMBIA" AND BOTTLES THE NEW AGE, PORTLAND, OREGON Frogs at School. Twenty froglies went to school Down beside a rush pool— Twenty little coats of green; Twenty vests all white and clean. "We must be in time," said they; "First we study, then we play; That is how we keep the rule When we froglies go to school." Master Bullfrog, grave and stern, Called the classes in their turn; Taught them how to nobly strive, Likewise how to leap and dive; From his seat upon the log, Showed them how to say, "Ker-chog!" Also how to dodge a blow From the sticks that bad boys throw. Twenty froglies grew up fast; Bullfrogs they became at last Not one dune among the lot; Not one lesson they forgot; Polished in a high degree, As each froglie ought to be, Now they sit on other logs, Teaching other little frogs. —Anonymous. English Country Gentlemen Lived Welland and Codgers Custum Well and Had Curious Customs. An account of hospitality in 1629 gives a good idea of the manner in which a country gentleman of the period lived. Dinner and supper were brought in by the servants with their hats on, a custom which is corroborated by Fynes Morryson, who says that being at a knight's house who had many servants to attend him they brought in the meats with their heads covered with blue caps. After washing their hands in a basin they sat down to dinner and Sir James Pringle said grace. The viands seemed to have been plentiful and excellent, "big potriage, long kale, bow of white kale," which is cabbage; "brach soppe," powdered beef, roast and boiled mutton, a venison plen in form of an egg, goose. Then they had cheese, cut and uncut, and apples. But the close of the feast was the most curious thing about it. The table cloth was removed and on the table were put a "towel the whole breadth of the table and half the length of it, a basin and ever to wash, then a green carpet lailad on, then one cup of beer set on the carpet, then a little long lawn servier plaited over the corner of the table and a glass of hot water set down also on the table, then be there three boys to say grace, the first, the thanksgiving; the second, the pater noster; the third, prayer for a blessing of God's church. The good man of the house, his parents, kinkfolk and the whole company then do drink hot water, so at supper, then to bed, the collation which (is) a stoupe of all."—Scottish Review. Cause and Effect. Little Johnny Smith suddenly asked, in a startled voice, says a writer in Everybody's Magazine, "Mamma, is that bay rum in the bottle on your table?" It occasionally occurs to a mean man that when members of a woman's lodge go out of town to "put on the work," it is partly to get out of the work at home. 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 Make Salesmen Of Your Windows After Dark A store may shut its doors at sunset, but if its show windows are Electric Lighted and attractively dressed they are doing as effective soliciting for the next day's business as a corps of sales people. Up-to-date stores nowadays consider window lighting a necessity, whether they remain open after dark or not. Competition forces modern methods. Is your store "SHUT UP" after sunset in the old style or in the new? There is no known illuminant which will light a shop window as effectively, hand-omely and satisfactorily as Electric Light. Fabrics are shown in their true colors and every little detail is brought out in true proportion to its surround d n. If your window is not Electricly lighted you are throwing away chances for increasing your business only measured by the number of people that pass your store after dark. Based on our new scale of Reduced Rates or current on Meter basis, Electric Light is not an expense—it is an ECONOMY. For information call MAIN 6688 PORTLAND GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY 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 to 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, Presi- dent; George H. Hill, Vice President; T. T. Burkhart, Treasurer; John E. Aitchison, Secretary. 240 Washington Street Corner Second PORTLAND OREGON OMAHA NEBRASKA OMAHA NEBRASKA "THE ONLY WAY" 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 OMNIBUS AND CARRIAGE LINE MATTISON & FOYE, Proprietors DEALERS IN ALL KINDS OF BARBERS' FURNITURE AND SUPPLIES FINE CUTLERY RAZOR WORK A SPECIALTY. 142 E. Sixth St., Opp. Ryan Hotel. St. Paul, Minnesota 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. MINNEAPOLIS MINN. NORTH STAR WOOLEN MILL CO. Manufacturers of Blankets, Flannels and Blanketings Minneapolis, Minn. A. Backdahl & Co. DRUGGISTS. Opposite Milwaukee Depot. Prescriptions are fully compounded. 313 Washington avenue South. Minneapolis, Minnesota Wear CYGNUS $3.50 SHOE Manufactured by North Star Shoe Co. MINNEAPOLIS MINNESOTA OMNIBUS AND MATTISON & H 237 Hennepin Ave. MINNEAPOLIS LIVINGSTON UNION MEAT MARKET, A. O. 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 "THE SOLO" 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 red States by transfer Co. So. 14th St. Give 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 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 OYE, Proprietors Nicollet House Block MINNESOTA THE NEW HOTEL 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. Corner Railroad St. and Higgins Ave. MISSOULA, MONT. The Kenyon Don Porter 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. WESTERN RAILWAY 1 --- Salt Lake City's NEW HOTEL The only First-Class American Plan Hotel in Helena. European Plan Lewiston Idaho HOTEL PEDICORD 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., POKANE, 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 MARKET 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 HEFTS WINTNAN COSTA VIEJA 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 THE ESMOND HOTEL OSCAR ANDERSON 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: 100 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. Established 1899. Dewey Palace Hotel Bldg. FRED G. MOCK, President F. J. CONROY, Vice-President C. R. HICKEY, Cashier FRANK JENKINSON, Asst't Cashier J. A. Murray, President, D. W. Standrod, Vice President Wm. A. Anthes, Cashier I. N. Anthes, Asst. Cashier FIRST NATIONAL BANK of Pocatello, Idaho. POCATELLO, - - - IDAHO TUTTLE MERCANTILE 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 HORRORS IN LIFE OF A RUSSIAN COUNTESS. COUNTRY OLGA REZANDER That the lives of Russian women are frequently mixed with tragedy, is shown by the history of the 23-year-old widow of the late Count Romanoff. The countess is the oldest daughter, by a morganatic marriage of Grand Duke Sergius, who was blown to pieces by a bomb over a year ago. She was married to Count Romanoff in February, last year, and when he was murdered a few months later she was forced to stand by and witness the crime. Then she was seized in her St. Petersburg home and made a secret prisoner by the officer in charge of the soldiers. She resisted him and escaped last June and has since been hiding in London. WOMEN AS EXPLORERS One of Them Crosses Northern Labrador with Husband. The arrival of Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Tasker at Fort Kimo on the east coast of the arctic peninsula, adds another to the list of women explorers, says the New York World. As probably the first white woman to cross northern Labrador, she has fairly won her spurs in a field of adventure for which her sex has of recent years shown a rare aptitude. Mrs. Tasker's feat will recall Mrs. Hubbard's venture into Labrador in the track of her husband's ill-fated expedition and the arctic voyage of Mrs. Peary. The return of Mrs. Max Fleischmann from a honeymoon spent in the arctic regions shooting polar bears illustrates new feminine ideals of a wedding journey. The exploits of Miss Mary Kingsley on the lower Niger still challenge comparison with masculine standards. Accompanied only by native attendants, she penetrated for long distances through the bush in the face of frequent dangers. In her writings she showed rare insight and sympathy with the native point of view, which male explorers have not always done. The reputation made by Miss Annie Peck as a mountain climber is world-wide. From the Matterhorn to the Peruvian peaks, what difficult summit has she left unscaled? She was the first woman to climb Orizaba, and she scaled Mount Sorata, in Bolivia, to a height of 20,500 feet, almost exactly that of Mount McKinley, which Dr. Frederick A. Cook has just conquered. In mountain climbing woman now asks no odds of man. Miss J. E. Duncan, whose explorations in Tibet carried her into regions previously unvisited, was the first European woman to cross the Changla pass, which is nearly 18,000 feet above the sea, 1,400 higher than any pass crossed by the British expedition to Lhasa. Mrs. Bullock-Workman has scaled great heights in the Malimaya. In April last Mrs. Laura Fitzgerald, an American, was reported to have left Mogador to explore the great Atlas mountains, among which are summits 14,500 feet high. Mountain climbing being in extreme altitudes a test rather of vital endurance than of muscular strength, women who have cool heads find it not beyond their powers. Fitzgerald camped for months at the base of Aconcagua, unable to get to the top, although there were no insuperable difficulties except the strain on the heart and lungs. There are probably many women who could with training have staggered with his Swiss guide to the summit. He was a seedy looking individual and reminded a casual observer of a man who, with Kipling's "tramp royale," had more than once found "his mate the wind which tramps the world." He wandered into small lunch room not far from Pennsylvania avenue and in a low voice ordered a mug of milk. He slipped the beverage slowly and it was evident that he was trying to make it do for a square meal. Throwing down a dime on the counter, he waited for his change. The spry and observing waiter tossed a nickel out to him, but observing the coin's brilliancy picked it up and looked at the date. "That's a 1906 nickel," he announced to the tramp. The tramp verified his words by looking at the date for himself, then muttered sadly as he started out: "Thank God the mint's still working!"—Washington Star. Held Back. "That big foundry over there can't get ahead very fast." "Why not?" "It's always casting anchors."—Cleveland Plain Dealer. FARMING TRAIL COVICK TRANSFER OF STORAGE MAKES SAVINGS & SUPPLIES HOME STORED 626 720 FARM RD. SAN DIEGO C. O. PICK TRANSFER & STORAGE COMPANY. Safes, Planos, 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, OREG PACIFIC OCEAN LOW SAND SOFT GOOSSE SCIENCE AD CENTRAL PLACE 29 23 24 NEX Copyrighted by George J. Schaefer 1906 STRANGERS! TOURISTS! Go there, where, when the tide is out, "the table riles has not yet been OREGON'S CO Lots in Schaefer's Addition, "CENTRAL," $100 and u GEO. J. SCHAEFER, Owner and 17 Chamber of Commerce COME TO GOD'S AND LOC Sure Crops Increasing Po Values Climbi If you want money, if you want investment, if you have property y if you want a home or a farm, se OOS B NEXT ighted by Schaefer 1906 GERS! TOURISTS! HOMES where, when the tide is out, "the table is set," and when riehes has not yet been tonched. OREGON'S COAST CITY er's Addition, "CENTRAL," $100 and upwards. D. J. SCHAEFER, Owner and Real Estate of Commerce HOME TO GOD'S COUN AND LOCATE Sure Crops Increasing Population Values Climbing you want money, if you want to buy pro- nt, if you have property you desire to d ant a home or a farm, see OOS BAY NEXT! TOURISTS! HOMESEEKER tide is out, "the table is set," and where the wealth chees has not yet been touched. ON'S COAST CITY CENTRAL," $100 and upwards. FFER, Owner and Real Estate Agent PORTLAND, OR GOD'S COUNTRY ND LOCATE Crops using Population Climbing ney, if you want to buy property for have property you desire to dispose of or a farm, see PACIFIC OCEAN LOW SAND SOFT CHANNEL MARSH 600S DANGOR SCHAFFER'S ADDITION CENTRAL PLACE 30 29 28 30 31 32 33 GLANGON MORRIS BEND MILTON SHOP MERCER ST. CRANFORD VINE FALL MARSHFIELD 00S BAY NEXT! Copyrighted by george J. 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. OREGON'S COAST CITY Lots in Schaefer's Addition, "CENTRAL," $100 and upwards. 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 J. WHYTE EVANS BROKER Telephone MAIN 4006 7 Chamber of Commerce Building PORTLAND Albers Bros. M CEREAL MILL rs Bros. Milling CEREAL MILLERS ros. Milling Co REAL MILLERS Manufacturers of High Grade C Wholesale Dealers in Grain, Hay, Flour High Grade Cereals Wholesale Dealers in Brain, Hay, Flour and Feed Grade Cereals Wholesale Dealers in Day, Flour and Feed Wholesale Dealers in Grain, Hay, Flour and Feed Our Leading Brands in Packages Violet Oats Violet Wheat Violet Pearl Barley Violet Pearls of Wheat Violet Buckwheat Columbia Oats Columbia Wheat Lucky Oats Cream Oats Violet Oats Violet Wheat Violet Pearl Barley Buckwheat Columbia Oats Columbia Wheat All First-Class Dealers Handle Out Violet Wheat Violet Pearl Barley Violet Pearl at Columbia Oats Columbia Wheat Lucky Oats Class Dealers Handle Our Brands of Violet Pearl Barley Violet Pearls of Wheat Oats Columbia Wheat Lucky Oats Cream Oats ers Handle Our Brands of Goods PORTLAND, OREGON OMESEEKERS! where the wealth of STATE Agent PORTLAND, OREGON UNTRY property for to dispose of, g Co. Rheumatism Is one of the constitutional diseases. It manifests itself in local aches and pains, inflamed joints and stiff muscles,—but it cannot be cured by local applications. It requires constitutional treatment, and the best is a course of the great blood purifying and tonic medicine In usual liquid form or in chocolated tablets known as *Sarsatabs*, 100 doses *l* Girl—What made you tell on me when I was whispering in school? Boy—Because you weren't whispering loud enough so I could hear what you were talking about. — Detroit Free Press. The Original Porous Plaster. It's Allcock's, first introduced to the people sixty years ago, and today undoubtedly has the largest ale of any external r medy millions beng sold annually throughout the whole civilized world. There have been imiations, to be sure, but never has there been one to even compare with Allcock's—the world's standard external remembrer. For a weak back, cold on he chest or any 1 cal pain the result of taking cold or overstrain, the e's not ng we know of to compare with this famous plaster. The Hungarian House of Representatives is the largest in the world. It has 701 members. TEN YEARS OF PAIN. Unable To Do Even Housework Because of Kidney Troubles. Mrs. Margaret Emmerich, of Clinton St., Napoleon, O., says: "For fifteen years I was a great sufferer from kidney troubles. My back pained me terribly Every turn or move caused sharp shooting pains. My eyesight was poor, dark spots appeared before me, and I had dizzy spells. For ten years I could not do housework, and for two years did not get out of the house. The kidney secretions were irregular, and doctors were not helping me. Doan's Kidney Pills brought me quick relief, and finally cured me. They saved my life." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Ha A Co In most h proper h of chilly heat of y inadequat need not PERFECTION Oil Heater (Equipped with Sm It will heat a roo n in no time and wi ated as easily as a lamp and perfect too high or too low. Gives no with unique smokeless device. Can which cannot be done with an ordi Perfection Oil Heater is superior to heaters and is an ornament to any two finishes—nickel and japan. Brass tifully embossed. Holds four quart nine hours. Every heater warranted dealer's write nearest agency for des THE Rayo Lamp is al lamp. Made of and nickel-plated. Equipped with burner. Every lamp warranted. A room whether library, dining-room room. Write to nearest agency if n STANDARD OIL SHIP US YOUR FRUIT, VEGETABLES SHIP US YOUR FRUIT, VEGETABLES Poultry, eggs, real, dressed pork, etc. Established 7 years. Fine location; large trade; competent salesman; prompt returns. Ship, or write. Reference: Scandinavian American Bank. FERGUSON, KLYCE & CO., Commission Merchants Wholesale Merchants SEATTLE, WASH. BIG MONEY For you in NEVADA Gold and Copper MINES A Few Hundred Slightly Invested cans Riches. write Today. C. A. STOCKTON, Broker 228 Lumber Exchange PORTLAND, OREGON WANTED In this locality (or elsewhere) a hustler to sell our trees, etc. (Experience not necessary for success.) Address OREGON NURSERY COMPANY Salem, Oregon. NO PLATES REQUIRED We remove your bad teeth and broken off old roots absolutely without pain. Examination and estimate Free. Work the Best Price the Lowest. Solid gold Crown.$4. Bridge work, $3.50 per tooth; Gold and Enamel Filling, $1 and up; Best Rubber Hates $8 per set; good set, $4. Painter's Extraction, $0c. Third and Couch Streets, Portland, Oregon. Too Aggravating. A. B. It happened in a railway station. The baby cried and cried and cried. "Perhaps he desires his bottle," suggested a fatherly looking old party. "He has not been raised on the bottle," cuttily replied the handsome young woman who held the infant. The baby's shrieks grew terrific. He made unmistakable signs that he wanted his dinner. "Beg pardon, ma'am," said the elderly party. "but may I suggest that you—permit the child to—er take nourishment?" "This baby belongs to my sister," replied the young lady, blushing furiously, "and she won't be here for half an hour. I'm holding it for her."—Louisville Courier-Journal. Mothers will find Mrs. Winstow's Soothing Syrup the best remedy to use for their children during the teething period. Philologically Logical. Mrs. Gayboy—That's where you are wrong. You don't seem to understand the use of words. If a thing is "round" it can't be any "rounder." Mr. Gayboy—Then there is no such thing as a "rounder." Thanks, dear. You won't call me one again, will you? Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that Contain Mercury as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system when entering it through the mucous surfaces on prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the damages they will do is tenfold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Cataract Cure, man-made, contains no mercury, and is taken internally, setting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Cataract Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken internally, and must be administered, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonial fees. Sold by Druggists, price 75c. per bottle. Hall's Family Pills are the best. Table Mustard. Common, ordinary, every-day table mustard obtained its name in a remarkably curious way. It is said that Philip, Duke of Burgundy, granted to Dijon some armorial bearings on which was the motto, "Moult me tarde." This was later carved in a stone archway of the city, but as the years went by the central word became effaced. A certain firm in the city was engaged in the manufacture of sinapl, which was the former name for mustard, and, wishing to label its products with the city arms, copied the incomplete motto. Thus, ignorant people seeing the name "moult-tarde" on the jars, fell into the custom of calling the contents by that title. In time "moult-tarde" was contracted to moutarde (mustard). ave You old Room? but houses there is a room without heating facilities—to say nothing fully hallways. Even though the if your stoves or furnace should be quate to warm the whole house there not be one cold spot if you have a (Smokeless Device) will keep it warm and cozy. Oper- ectively safe. Wick cannot be turned no smoke or smell because fitted can be carried about, ordinary stove. The or to all other oil any home. Made in brass oil fount bea- arts of oil and burns lated. If not at your descriptive circular. is the safest and best all-round household of brass throughout with latest improved. An ornament to any room, parlor or bed- if not at your dealer's. OIL COMPANY Banking by Mail WE PAY 4% On savings deposits of a dollar or more, compounded twice every year. It is just as easy to open a Savings Account with us by Mail as if you lived next door. Send for our free booklet, "Banking by Mail," and learn full particulars. Address Oregon Trust & Savings Bank Portland, Oregon Sixth and Washington Sts. THE FOOL AND HIS MONEY. Some Schemes of Wildcat Promoters for Parting the Two. The fact that one of the firms of pseudo-bankers infesting lower Broadway has been taking the fools' money for five years is an indication of its success, says Success. Now half a dozen mushroom "banking" houses, with elaborately furnished quarters in New York, and branch offices in all the larger towns in this country and Canada and even abroad, are using this ingenious scheme to sell spurious mining, oil and manufacturing stocks. MUSCULAR AILMENTS The Old-Monk-Cure will straighten out a contracted muscle in a jiffy. The house most successful at the game has forty branch offices here and abroad, besides agents in many smaller towns. It brings out a new company every little while and sells the stock usually by the mail order and agency system. Years of experience have given these parasite promoters an invaluable "sucker list"—little investors all over the country whose financial credulity has not been shaken by repeated losses. These "investors"—wage earners, country merchants, clergymen, teachers and other professional men—are reached through circulars and letters. The first stocks sold by this house paid cash dividends for a while, and the "investors" who were doubling and tripling their savings bank incomes spread the glad tidings among their friends. The cash dividends were followed by script dividends—in some cases by no dividends at all. The stockholders who complained too loudly were offered in exchange for their unsatisfactory stocks other stocks in new companies brought out by the house. A "trust fund" established "for the protection of investors" is made up, supposedly, of sound mining stocks, and when an investor gets tired of one spurious stock he can send it in and exchange it for something else. This, of course, is just as spurious, but it keeps the victim quiet for a while. He is advised to hold the stock until the mine strikes the expected bonanza ore, when the stock will rapidly increase in value. In this manner the house manages to keep its dupes quiet for many months and to sell them more stock besides. JAPAN TO OWN RAILROADS. Nation to Pay Double the Cost of the Private Lines. Now that the Japanese government has undertaken to nationalize seventeen private railways, having a total of 2,887 miles of line, at a cost of 421,500,000 yen ($210,000,000), or about $73,000 a mile, the latest annual report of Ichiji Yamanouchi, director of the imperial bureau of railways of Japan, for the fiscal year ended March 31, 1905, becomes of the highest historical and comparative value. The total mileage open for traffic in 1905 was 4,693, divided as follows: Government railways, 1,461 miles; private railways, 3,232 miles. This showed an increase of nearly 198 miles over 1904. Calculating the Japanese yen at 50 cents (commercially 49.8 cents), the cost of construction of the mileage was: Government rail- ways ..... $ 76,051,649 $52,054 Private railways ..... 120,502,452 37,284 Totals ..... $196,554,101 $41,882 It will be perceived that the Japanese government now pays almost double the original cost of constructing the private railways, and there is no suggestion of graft or excessive valuation in the transaction. The price paid was twenty times the average of the net earnings from operation for 1902, 1903 and 1904, divided by the cost of construction and multiplied by the paid-up capital—Railway Age. SPOILED HIS PLAN. Worm Wrecked Michigan Man's Crop of Railroad Ties. The best laid plans of mice and men go often wrong. Dr. A. H. Sauerman, who lives a few miles east of Union City, Mich., conceived a plan a few years ago where he expected to make a fortune. He planted quite a tract of land of yellow locust trees, setting them close together in rows, the tract containing something like 50,000 thrifty young trees. Their growth was hastened by frequent cultivation, good fertilizing and irrigation and they attained a most thrifty growth until last autumn. Dr. Sauerman's idea was to care for these trees for a few years until they had reached a sufficient growth to be used for railroad ties, when they were to be marketed and the tract of ground replanted again to trees. An investigation showed that a small worm was creating havoc with the trees, boring into the trunks and in some cases weakening the trees so that they fell over in a strong wind. And thus the genial doctor's visions of a fortune have gone a-gillmmering.—Manistee Times. ... WHAT JOY THEY BRING TO EVERY HOME as with joyous hearts and smiling faces they romp and play—when in health—and how conducive to health the games in which they indulge, the outdoor life they enjoy, the cleanly, regular habits they should be taught to form and the wholesome diet of which they should partake. How tenderly their health should be preserved, not by constant medication, but by careful avoidance of every medicine of an injurious or objectionable nature and if at any time a remedial agent is required, to assist nature, only those of known excellence should be used; remedies which are pure and wholesome and truly beneficial in effect, like the pleasant laxative remedy, Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. Syrup of Figs has come into general favor in many millions of well informed families, whose estimate of its quality and excellence is based upon personal knowledge and use. Syrup of Figs has also met with the approval of physicians generally, because they know it is wholesome, simple and gentle in its action. We inform all reputable physicians as to the medicinal principles of Syrup of Figs, obtained, by an original method, from certain plants known to them to act most beneficially and presented in an agreeable syrup in which the wholesome Californian blue figs are used to promote the pleasant taste; therefore it is not a secret remedy and hence we are free to refer to all well informed physicians, who do not approve of patent medicines and never favor indiscriminate self-medication. Please to remember and teach your children also that the genuine Syrup of Figs always has the full name of the Company—California Fig Syrup Co. plainly printed on the front of every package and that it is for sale in bottles of one size only. If any dealer offers any other than the regular Fifty cent size, or having printed thereon the name of any other company, do not accept it. If you fail to get the genuine you will not get its beneficial effects. Every family should always have a bottle on hand, as it is equally beneficial for the parents and the children, whenever a laxative remedy is required. Color more goods brighter and faster colors than any other dye. One 10c package colors silk, wool and cotton equally well and is guaranteed to perform perfectly on all dyes at 10c a package. Write for free booklet how to dye, see color: MONROE DRUG CO., Unionville, Missouri. The Old-Monk-Cure will straighten out a contracted muscle in a liffy. The Old-Monk-Cure will straighten out a contracted muscle in a jiffy. ST. JACOBS OIL Don't play possum with pain, but 'tends strictly to business. Price 25c and 50c WHAT To as with joyous hearts and —and how conducive to life they enjoy, the clear the wholesome diet of w should be preserved, not every medicine of an in remedial agent is requi should be used; remedie in effect, like the pleas the California Fig Syrup many millions of well in excellence is based upon Syrup of Figs has al- cause they know it is wi all reputable physicians a by an original method, fr ally and presented in an blue figs are used to pro- edy and hence we are fry approve of patent medic Please to remember of Figs always has the f —plainly printed on the bottles of one size only. cent size, or having pri accept it. If you fail to Every family should alw for the parents and the c PUTNAM Color more goods brighter and faster colors s guaranteed to give perfect results. Ask dea bleach and mix colors. MONROE DRUG CO Ninety per cent of the wealth of the United States is held by 10 per cent of the people. FITS St. Vitus' Dance and all Nervous Diseases Remainmanly Used by Dr. Kline Great Nurse Remainmanly Send for FREE $3 trial bottle and treatise. Dr. R. H. Kline, Ld. 631 Arch St., Phila., Pa. Uncle Allen. "I suppose there is such a person as the foolkiller," mused Uncle Allen Sparks, "but he has either retired from business or he's hopelessly behind on his orders." PRINTING PLATES AS NEAR PERFECTION AS MODERN FACILITIES CAN PRODUCE HICKS·CHATTEN ENGRAVING CO. SECOND AND WORTHST MAKE EVERY DAY COUNT- no matter how bad the weather. You cannot afford to be without a TOWER'S WATERPROOF OILED SUIT OR SLICKER When you buy look for the SIGN OF THE FISH TOWER'S FISHING A.J. TOWER, CO. BOSTON U.S.A. TOWER CANADA CO. U.S. TORONTO CAN. CLASSIFIEDADVERTISING Portland Trade Directory Names and Addresses in Portland of Representative Business Firms. CREAM SEPARATORS—We guarantee the U.S. Separator to be the best. Write for free catalog Hazelwood Co., Fifth and Oak. Haunting Notes. There was a peculiar sound from the direction of the woods as the member of the Birdlovers' Society sat in the window of her friend's country home one summer afternoon. She quickly took her small "Bird Guide" from her ever-present bag, and rapidly turned the leaves. At last she paused with a smile of satisfaction, and listened, with her finger between two leaves of the little book, till the sound came again. When it was repeated an expression of doubt flitted across her features, but still she was hopeful. "You probably know many of the bird notes, living so near the woods and in such a quiet spot," she said to her friend. "Can you tell me what bird that is?" "That," said her friend, briefly, "is our goat. We shall have to move him farther off." "They say that suburban life is not so bad." "No; I suppose not. We must remember that a great deal of the suburbanite's time is spent in the city."—Pittsburg Post. JOY THEY EVERY H and smiling faces they romp and to health the games in which they only, regular habits they should which they should partake. How by constant medication, but injurious or objectionable nature to assist nature, only thou- ties which are pure and wholesome san laxative remedy, Syrup of Syrup Co. Syrup of Figs has come informed families, whose esti- on personal knowledge and use also met with the approval of pl wholesome, simple and gentle in- as to the medicinal principles of from certain plants known to thou- agreeable syrup in which the more the pleasant taste; therefore free to refer to all well informed cinemas and never favor indiscr er and teach your children also full name of the Company—C ne front of every package and . If any dealer offers any other printed thereon the name of any to get the genuine you will not g ways have a bottle on hand, as children, whenever a laxative r FADELE than any other dye. One 10c package color caler, or we will send post paid at 10c a pa- CO., Unionville, Missouri. GASOLEEN ENGINE 3 to 4 horse- power fully warranted, $125. All sizes and styles at lowest prices. Write for catalog. REIERSON MACHINERY COMPANY Consider the postage stamp; its usefulness lies in its ability to stick to one thing till it gets there. Write for particulars. 528 Lumber Exchange, Portland, Oregon RUBBER STAMPS Best in America We make them We do not take orders and peddle our Rubber Stamps, Seals, Etc. We manufacture our new goods. Our equipment is the newest and best money can buy. Write today for our "Rubber Stamp Catalogue. THE IRWIN-HODSON CO., Portland, Oregon WISE BROS DENTISTS MAIN 2029 FAILING BLOG 7th & WASH- PORTLAND, ORE. PAINLESS EXTRACTION 50 ¢ PLATES$5 We have solved the question of how to make your money pay you 20% PER YEAR Instead of 4 per cent, and allow you to keep it under your own control. Principal guaranteed by Bank Certificate of Deposit. You select the Bank. Write today for particulars. Pacific Coast Securities Co. Portland, Oregon 2. It Quiets the Cough This is one reason why Ayer's Cherry Pectoral is so valuable in consumption. It stops the wear and tear of useless coughing. But it does more—it controls the inflammation, quiets the fever, soothes, and heals. Sold for 60 years. "Ayer's Cherry Pectoral has been a regular life preserver to me. It brought me through a severe attack of pneumonia, and I feel that I owe my life to its wonderful curative properties."—WILLIAM H. TRUFFT, WWW. Made by J. O. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass. Also manufacturers of Ayer's SARSAPARILLA. PILLS. HAIR VIGOR. Hasten recovery by keeping the bowels regular with Ayer's Pills. BRING HOME and play—when in health they indulge, the outdoor be taught to form and now tenderly their health pay careful avoidance of use and if at any time a case of known excellence come and truly beneficial Figs, manufactured by into general favor ininate of its quality and physicians generally, be its action. We inform Syrup of Figs, obtained, them to act most benefici-wholesome Californian use it is not a secret rem-physicians, who do not ininate self-medication. that the genuine Syrup California Fig Syrup Co. that it is for sale in than the regular Fifty other company, do not get its beneficial effects. as it is equally beneficial remedy is required. SS DYES is silk, wool and cotton equally well and lea-rage. Write for free booklet how to dye. GET OUT OF THE RUT I am designer of book, magazine kind catalogue covers, business cards, outer heads, covers, and other items. make the print of your store look entirely different by removing poles, etc., from print. CHARLES SCHRAM 245½ Morrison St. PORTLAND, OREGON W. L. DOUGLAS $3.50 & $3.00 Shoes BEST IN THE WORLD W.L.Douglas $4 Gift Edge line cannot be equalled at any price To Shoe Dealers: W. L. Douglas' Job- bill for the most complete in this country Send for Catalog SHOES ESTABLISHED 1876 CAPITAL $3,000,000 SHOES FOR EVERYBODY AT ALL PRICES. Mons & Shoes® to $20, Shoes® to $30, $00 to $100, Misses® & Children's® Shoes® to $20, Misses® & Children's® Shoes® to $30, Women's® Shoes® to $20, Children's® Shoes®; for style, fit and wear If I could take you into my large factories at Brockton, Mass., and show you how carefully W. L. Douglas shoes are made, you would then understand why they hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater value than any other make. Wherever you live, you can obtain W. L. Douglas shoes. In many markets and on the bottom, which protects you against high prices and inferior shoes. Take no substitute for W. L. Douglas shoes if insist upon having them. Fast Color Egels use; they will not wear brass. Write for illustrated Catalog of Fall Styles. W. L. DUGLAS, Dept. 13, Brockton, Mass. P. N. U. No. 49-06 WHEN writing to advertisers please mention this paper. V