The New Age (Portland)
Saturday, March 23, 1907
Portland, Oregon
Page text (machine-generated)
Portland New Age
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF KALISPELL KALISPELL, MONTANA
D. R. PEELER, Pres. F. J. LEBERT, V. Pres. R. E. WEBSTER, Cash. W. D. LAWSON, A. Cash. Transacts a general banking business. Draits issued, available in all cities of the United States and Europe, Hong Kong and Manila. Collections made on favorable terms. LADD & TILTON, Bankers Portland, Oregon
LADD & HYTON, Banking Portland, Oregon
Established in 1859. Transact a General Banking Business. Interest allowed on time deposits. Collections made at all points on favorable terms. Letters of Credit issued available in Europe and the Eastern States. Sight Exchange and favorable terms. Souls, Denver, Omaha, San Francisco and various points in Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana and British Columbia. Exchange sold on London, Paris, Berlin, Frankfurt and Hong Kong.
UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK
J. C. AINSWORTH, President. W. B. AYER, Vice-President. R. W. SCHMEER, Cashier
A. M. WRIGHT, Assistant Cashier.
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.
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.
Deposits $7,58,000
Accruals Pacific Banks solicited upon terms which will grant them the most liberal accommodations on-interest with their balances and responsibilities. Wm. M. Ladd, President; N. H. Lattimer, Manager; M. W. Peterson, Cashier. Seattle, Washington.
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF TOWNSHIP
N.Y.
Surplus, $1,000,000 Deposits, $13,000,000 FIRST NATIONAL BANK of NorthYakima, Wash.
W. M. LADD President CHAS. CARPENTER W. L. STEINWEG, A. B. CLINE Vice President Cashier Assistant Cashier
OFFICERS—Chester Thorne, President: Arthur Albertson, Vice President and Cashier Frederick A. Rice, Assistant Cashier; Delbert A. Young, Assistant Cashier.
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 COOLDGE, Pres. A. F. McCLAINE Vice Pres AARON KUHN, Vice Pres
CHAS. E. SCRIBER, Cashier. D. C. WOODWARD, Asst. Cashier.
THE COLFAX NATIONAL BANK of Golfax Wash-
Capital, $120,000.00
Transect a general banking business. Special facilities for handling Eastern Washington and Idaho items.
VANCOUVER NATIONAL BANK Vancouver, Wash.
Leading Financial Institution in Southwestern Washington
UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY
CAPITAL, $50,000 SURPLUS, $50,000 ASSETS, $1,000,000
LEVI ANKENY President: E.G. CRAWFORD, Vice President: W.P. CONNAWAY, Cashier
LEG Ankney, Harry Ladd Corbett, W. Crawford, E.G. Crawford, W. W. McCreed
JOHN LAMB, DAVID ASKEGAARD, LEW A. HUNTOON, ARTHUR H. COSTAIN, President Vice President Cashier Anst. 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, Pres. G. R. JACOBI Cashier
4 Per Cent Interest Paid on Time Deposits
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF DULUTH, MINNESOTA.
DIRECTORS: J. M. Berry, A. B. Conley, F. J. Holmes, F. M. Bykit, F. L. Meyers, Geo. L. Cleaver, Geo. Palmer.
The Merchants National Bank
Of St. Paul, Minnesota
UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY
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—Crawford Livingston, Kenneth Clark, J. H. Skinner, Louis W. Hill, Geo. H. Prince, C. H. Bigelow, R.D. Noyes, V. M. Watkins, L. P. Ordway, F. B. Kellogg, E. N. Saunders, Thomas A. Marlow, W. B. Parsons, J. M. Hannaford, Charles P. Noyes.
WILLAMETTE
IRON & STEEL WORKS
FOUNDERS • MACHINISTS • ENGINEERS
PORTLAND—OREGON—U.S.A.
Our new plant on Front St., between Seventeenth and Nineteenth Sts., is the most modern Engineering Plant on the Pacific Coast. Work placed with us will be executed with efficiency and despatch.
VOL. XI.
THE FIRST NATION
D. R. PEELER, Pres., F. J. LEED
Transacts a general bank in
States and Europe, Hong Kong.
LADD & TILTOR
Established in 1850, Trans-
posits. Collections made at all
Europe and the Eastern States.
Washington, Chicago, A. L. Louis
Washington, Idaho, Montana and
Frankfort and Hong Kong.
UNITED STATES
O. J. C. AINSWORTH, President.
Transacts a general bank in
States and Europe, Hong Kong.
NORTHWEST
THE PENIN
Capital, fully paid up, $1,000.
Com.
OFFICERS: J. W. FORDNEY, P.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS: W. Thos. Cochran, M. L. Holbret
Oldest:
DEXTER
Capital $200,000.
Deposits $7,589,000.
Accounts of Northwest
most liberal accommodations in
Ladd, President; N. H. Latimer.
THE FIRST NATION
Established in 1850.
FIRST NATION
W. M. LADD
President
FIRST NATION
Walla Walla, V.
Transacts a
CAS.
LEVI ANKENY, President.
THE NATION
Capital $200.
OFFICERS—Chester Thorner,
Frederick R. A. Rice, Assistant Co-
JNO. C. AINSWORTH, Pres.
A. G. PRICHARD, Cas.
THE FIDELITY
General Banking
SAVINGS DEPARTMENT; Inter-
T.
ALFRED COOLIDGE, Pres.
CHAS. E. SCRIBE.
THE COLFAX N.
Transacts a general bank in
Washington and Idaho item.
VANCOUVER
Leading Financial
UNIT
CAPITAL, $50,000.
LEVI ANKENY President;
Levi Ankeny, Harry Ladd C.
THE FIRST
Mo.
JOHN LAMB, DAVID AS
President
Interest
FIRST NATION
Farm Loans Negotiated
Capital, $30,000.
4 Per Cent
THE FIRST
OF 1
CAPITAL $500,000
U. S. C.
GEORGE PALMER
President
La Grande
Capital
DIRECTORS: J. M. Berry
Cleaver, Geo. Palmer.
The Merc
UNITED
Capital, $1,000
Capital, $500,000
PORTLAND, OREGON, SATURDAY, MARCH 23, 1907.
Suit for Kingston Insurance.
Kingston, March 20. The first suit against the insurance companies to recover for losses sustained in the earthquake was filed yesterday. The Yorkshire company is the defendant. Other companies will soon be sued.
BUSINESS LOCALS
J. Wallgreen, dealer in staple and fancy groceries, 634 Thurman street, Telephone Pacific 911.
A good place to get your soft or stiff hats renovated is 249½ Alder street, between Second and Third.
M. J. Gill Co., wholesale and retail meat dealers, 512 Mississippi avenue, Portland, Oregon. Phone East 665.
Always ask for the famous General Arthur cigar. M. A. Gunst & Co., general agents, Portland, Or.
The Anheuser, Henry M. Williams, proprietor, 234 Morrison street, corner Second, Portland, Ore. Telephone Main 2517.
Ryan & John, dealers in choice groceries, meat, fish and poultry, phone Main 522, 61 North Park street, corner Davis.
Everett Market, (E. L. Peck, Prop.), Choice Meats and Poultry, 413 Everett Street, corner Tenth, Portland, Ore. Phone Main 1540.
C. Anderson, staple and fancy groceries, Twenty-first and Thurman streets. Phone Hood 57. Fresh roasted coffee a specialty.
Try the Pacific Laundry Co. for good work and prompt service. Main office First and Arthur streets, Portland, Ore. Telephone 649.
John Schaid, dealer in hardware, tinker, sheet iron, work, guttering, spouting and roofing. General jobbing a specialty. 149 Russell street.
Royal Market, Bair & Werth proprietors, fresh and cured meats, fish, poultry and game. 439 Union avenue north, corner Tillamook. Phone East 167.
North 16th Street Market, A. Wurtenberger, proprietor, choice poultry, fresh and salt meats, phone Main 1395, 230 North Sixteenth street, Portland, Ore.
L. N. Nees, boot and shoemaker. Fine repairing a specialty. Give him a call when you need anything in this line, 322½ Williams av., Portland, Oregon.
The Oak Cafe. Choicest line of wines, liquors and cigars. P. W. Pick, proprietor. Oregon Phone Pacific 2118, corner Fourth and Oak streets, Portland, Ore.
Dyeing and cleaning of all kinds of ladies' and gents' clothing, crepe shawls, silk, velvet and lace dyeed equal to new; lace curtains and bankets cleaned by a new process; mourning garments dyed in 48 hours. All work done at very moderate prices. 104 North Third street.
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.
Depot Loan Office, Joe Bernhardt, proprietor; fine watch repairing, old gold and silver bought; business strictly confidential; bargains in unredeemed pledges; money to loan on diamonds, watches, jewelry, guns, pistols, bicycles, musical instruments and all articles of value 124 N. Sixth St., Portland, Ore.
THE PIONEER PAINT COMPANY.
The pioneer paint establishment of Portland is that of E. E. Beach & Company, of 135 First St., the oldest and most reliable house of its kind in
TRADE MARK
F E & B
PORTLAND C0
CLEMSON
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.
A NEW DEPARTURE.
The Cost of Interments Has Been Greatly Reduced by the Holman Undertaking Company.
Heretofore it has been the custom of funeral directors to make charges for all incidentals connected with a funeral. The Edward Holman Undertaking Company, the leading funeral directors of Portland, beginning July 2, will depart from this old custom. When the casket is furnished by us, its cost will include all charges, such as conveying the remains to our chapel, outside box, embalming, hearse to cemetery and all services which may be required of us except clothing, cemetery and carriages, thus effecting a saving of $25 of all funeral costs. THE EDWARD HOLMAN UNDER
THIRD
TAKING COMPANY
224. Third Street, cor Salmon.
NEWS OF THE WEEK
In a Condensed Form for Our Busy Readers.
HAPPENINGS OF TWO CONTINENTS
A Resume of the Less Important but Not Less Interesting Event of the Past Week.
The Transvaal will abolish Chinese labor.
Roumanian peasants are renewing the rioting.
Seven alienists have declared Thaw permanently insane.
S. A. D. Puter is proving a strong witness against Hermann.
Nicatragua claims a decisive victory over Honduras and Salvador.
American marines and sailors have been landed to guard Honduras ports.
There seems to be good prospects for land law reform by the next congress.
The San Francisco grand jury is learning more about the bribery by the Pacific States Telephone company.
Senator Cullom, of Illinois, says Harriman deserves to go to jail, and Governor Deneen is believed to contemplate prosecution.
Under the name of United Churches, the Congregational, United Brethren and Methodist Protestant churches in 14 states will form one large organization. Some of the Southern states have refused to join.
Rockefeller says railroads are overcapitalized.
Stockmen are to be prosecuted if they trespass on forest reserves.
The government continues to pile up evidence against Hermann.
A strike of longshoremen at Hamburg, Germany, has tied up all shipping.
Roosevelt will propose check on overcapitalization of railroads and will soon declare his policy.
Roumanian peasants have begun a crusade against Jews and are driving them into Austria.
The Colorado legislature has passed a railway commission law. Reciprocal demurrage is also provided for.
Premier Stolypin, of Russia, will propose many concessions of liberty to the douma, including free speech and press, but that body was warned not to go to extremes or it will be dissolved.
Trainmen on all roads west of Chicago have voted to strike if not given the increase in wages asked. Most of the roads will, it is believed, refuse to grant the advance and trouble is looked for.
Salvador has joined Honduras against Nicaragua.
Harriman has bought the Salt Lake railroad from the Clark syndicate.
A New Mexico grand jury has indicted six corporation employees for land fraud.
President Ripley, of the Santa Fe., says Roosevelt is to blame for the anti-railroad agitation.
The fisheries agreement between the United States and Great Britain is being discussed by the house of commons. Germany and Austria are said to have changed front and now favor discussion of disarmament at The Hague peace conference.
There are signs that Roosevelt and the railroad presidents will reach an understanding on the new laws, the latter showing a stronger desire to obey.
The Nebraska land thieves who have been on trial for some time have been found guilty and sentence to pay a fine of $1,500 each and remain in jail a year.
Sylvester R. Rush, of Nebraska, has been appointed a special assistant to the United States attorney general. He has a reputation of being as ruthless a prosecutor as Heney.
Thaw is almost certain to go to the asylum whether acquitted or convicted.
An Illinois woman will organize an army of drunkards' wives to carry local option.
President Roosevelt is said to be back of a move to start a boom for Taft for president.
President Roosevelt has appointed a commission on the improvement of waterways.
Attorney General Thompson, of Nebraska, says the new 2-cent passenger rate law is constitutional.
Germany and Austria have combined to oppose consideration of disarmament at The Hague peace conference.
Governor Johnson, of Minnesota, proposes a conference of government and state officials on railroad laws.
FARMS UNDER WATER.
Sacramento River Never Known to Be So High Before.
Sacramento, Cal., March 22.—From all down-river points come alarming news that the Sacramento river is higher than ever known, and that the situation all along the levees is appalling. There is already suffering and every able-bodied man is assisting in the fight against the water that is pouring into the breaches and inundating thousands of acres of the finest farming land in the state.
Special dispatches to the Union from Freeport, Courtland, Walnut Grove and Franklin state that the river has reached the highest stage ever recorded, and it is predicted that the terrible scenes witnessed during the tremendous floods of 1904 will be surpassed.
Standing on the levee near Courtland one may see for 60 miles to the southeast across an unbroken sea of water which extends clear to Stockton.
Thousands of cattle are being sheltered on top of the levees, as there is no other place for them, and if the water does not fall soon an indescribable condition of disaster is considered inevitable.
This morning the blockade on the Southern Pacific lines was made complete, when the line to the East was made helpless by a washout of 200 feet of track at Applegate, but during the afternoon the situation changed for the better when, with the report that the Applegate washout had been repaired, came another stating that it was expected the track would soon be open through to Stockton.
A trestle was placed in the gap at the Applegate washout this afternoon and more trains were dispatched East. One of these, a Portland train, will be sent to Utah and via the Oregon Short Line. The Placeville line is in full commission again, but no trains are operated on the Marysville branch further than Wheatland.
On the Portland line no trains are running beyond Redding, the tracks being out at Keswick, Campbell and Kennett, and it is not expected that travel can be resumed beyond Redding for at least ten days.
ADDITIONAL TRAIN SERVICE.
Canadian Pacific to Enter Portland on O. R. & N. Tracks
Portland, March 22.—Canadian Pacific trains will be running into Portland May 1.
Contracts were signed up here yesterday by traffic officials of the Canadian road with R. B. Miller, general freight agent for the Oregon Railroad & Navigation company, allowing the use of the tracks from Spokane to Portland. The Canadian Pacific now reaches Spokane by the Spokane International railway from the C. P. R.'s main line at the Canadian boundary.
Freight service from Portland to all points in Canada, as well as to the Atlantic subboard, will be started May 1 by the new traffic arrangement. Passenger trains will be put on at a later date. Through passenger service is promised from Portland to St. Paul.
The use of the O. R. & N. tracks by Canadian Pacific equipment was arranged for recently at a conference between President G. M. Bosworth, of the Canadian line and Traffic Director J. C. Stubbs, of the Harriman system.
This meeting was held in Chicago a short time ago.
Historic Fort Swept Away
San Francisco, March 22. It is reported here that all reclamation districts in Sutter county have been flooded. Near Meridian the water is in the second stories of the houses. Many families are said to be in want. Efforts will be made to send them relief. Probably all the stock in these districts has been drowned. The people of Yuba county district, above Marysville, are reported safe. Near Tudor a break has occurred close to an Indian mound which was situated near the old iron fort brought from the East in sections by General John A. Sutter in the days before gold was discovered. The fort is reported to have been swept away.
More Steel Men Strike at Hammond
more Steel Men strike at Hammond Hammond, Ind., March 22. — The strike situation at East Chicago was intensified today when 3,500 men employed by the Inland Steel company, walked out. The reason for the walkout was the demand of the laborers for an increase of 250 per day. Six hundred men struck yesterday at the Interstate Steel company and 1,200 at the Republic Iron & Steel company, and the walkout today brings the total number of strikers up to more than 5,000 men. Some rioting occurred today and one of the strikers was beaten.
Giving Away Sage Money
New York, March 22.—Announcement was made today that Mrs. Russell Sage has donated $150,000 to the American Seamen's Friend society, to be used by that body in the erection of a proposed sailors' home and institute. Mrs. Sage has also given $75,000 to the Syrian Protestant college, of Beirut, Syria.
NO. 48.
SCOPE IS WIDENING
Millionaire Wall Street Magnates Implicated With Ruef.
INDICTMENTS ISSUE IN SHEAVES
Heney and Burns Assert That They Have Only Begun—Ruef Expected to Confess.
San Francisco, March 21.—Sixty-five indictments were filed by the grand jury today against Abe Ruef and 10 against T. V. Halsey, of the Pacific States Telephone company. They all charge bribery. Assistant District Attorney Heney and Federal Agent Burns assert that it is only a beginning. The total amount represented in the indictments is $218,500. When to this is added the amount which went to Ruef and Schmitz, the total will reach $1,000,000 in five deals exposed today. There, are more deals of which the public has small conception. They include not only local magnates, but men who have mansions in New York, who have trafficked for special private gains in San Francisco for their corporations. It is understood that a power in Wall street who recently testified before the Interstate Commerce commission will be given an opportunity to defend himself. Tonight Ruef and Schmitz are abject and forlorn. The entire board of supervisors has confessed. Schmitz is ready to do the same. Ruef is awakening rapidly. By the end of next week the indictments which will confront him will be mountain high. By that time it is expected that Ruef will offer to confess.
PUTER TELLS STORY.
Admits of Deals With Hermann to Steal Land.
Washington, March 21.—Oregon convicts occupied the limelight in the trial of Binger Hermann today, while men under indictment played minor roles. S. A. D. Puter, the government's heavyweight witness, was put on the stand this afternoon and began the narration of his relations with Hermann in connection with land operations that have subsequently turned out to be fraudulent.
Puter was preceded by Dan W. Tarpley, who told in considerable detail the manner in which he, Horace G. McKinley and F. P. Mays attempted to "get rich quick" through the absorption of land in the Blue mountain forest reserve.
The stories told by Puter and Tarpley did not throw any new light on either the Blue mountain or the 11-7 land fraud cases, which were threshed out in Portland. But the stories of both men were retold today to show their relations with Hermann and to aid the government in its efforts to show Hermann's motive for destroying the fateful letterpress copybooks.
STREETS ARE FLOODED.
All Business in Stockton Suspended by High Water.
Stockton, Cal., March 21. — Water is running through the streets of this city like a millrace. In some places it is six feet deep, while in others it varies from one to three feet, the latter being the mean average. All business is suspended, as most of the business houses are flooded and the people in many parts of the city are afraid to leave their homes.
No portion of the town escaped. Main, the principal business street of the city, is the high point, and even here the water averages nearly a foot in depth. All the cellars and many of the first floors of the business houses were submerged and the loss in the city alone will run into hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Roadbed Torn Up by Slide.
Ashland, Or., March 21.—The continued rains of the past four days have badly demoralized the main Portland-San Francisco line of the Southern Pacific for a distance of 50 miles through the upper Sacramento canyon region in Northern California. The country most severely affected lies between Sisson on the north and Redding on the south. In this section the Sacramento river has played havoc with the railroad roadbed at various points, while at other places slides of serious proportions have added to the difficulties.
State Will Pay Their Fare.
Concord, N. H., March 21.—A bill forbidding state officers to use or solicit free passes on the railroads passed both houses of the legislature today under suspension of the rules, following a report from the judiciary committee. By the bill the governor is authorized to contract for railroad transportation for members of the legislature and house cf congress as needed.
Topics of the Times
If a woman is homely she always knows it; but it's different with a man.
Health and goodness are contagious and epidemic, as well as disease and crime.
Counterfeit $5 bills in circulation are said to be rather short. The good ones, however, are not long with us.
Perhaps, after all, Governor Swettenham merely wanted to advertise the superior quality of Jamaica ginger.
That thief who stole $2,000 worth of diamonds from the Queen of Greece must have been a slippery customer.
Time was when the anti-pass bill was the best joke of the legislative season. Are the American people losing their sense of humor?
Having been greeted by the President as "fellow citizens," the Porto Ricans may now feel at liberty to think of Speaker Cannon as Uncle Joe.
Ethical passion is an excellent thing, the Christian Register is willing to admit, but ethical action is a better one, and by the latter the former is tested.
It no longer seems to be good form for a prominent business man in any of the States to receive an indictment with less than a hundred counts attached.
A man is reported to have discovered $5,000 under an old carpet. But stories like this always get into circulation just before the carpet-beating season opens.
If the Swedish investigator has really succeeded in overcoming gravitation, then flying machines should only be a matter of buckling on a pair of 10-cent wings.
There is an old song which says a boy's best friend is his mother. "This pretty hard to make the boy whose mother is approaching with a spoonful of medicine believe it.
Since it has been asserted that neither Shakspeare nor Bacon wrote the famous plays credited to the former, the man who discovered the fact may as well admit that he wrote them himself.
Cesare Lombroso gives it as his opinion that Harry Thaw is a degenerate because his nose is crooked. Cesare neglects to explain whether the degeneracy causes the crookedness or results from it.
The man who sought an interview with the mayor of Philadelphia on the subject of building a railroad from that city to heaven was insane, of course. Travel in that direction is not heavy enough to warrant the investment.
With three hundred million board feet of merchantable timber waiting the ax on the forest reserves, lumber alarmists are minus a vocation. This reserve timber, now ready to be harvested, alone would supply the lumber needs of America for ten years. Its conservation and foresting means a tremendous wealth for years to come.
Every year the statistician of a Chicago newspaper adds up all gifts and bequests to charity in this country for the preceding twelve months. Only sums of a thousand dollars or more are counted, and only those gifts that have been announced in the newspapers. The total for 1906 was a hundred and six million dollars. This is the highest since 1901, when the total was a hundred and twenty-three millions. In these big figures no reckoning is made of the humbler gifts which those who are not rich have been privileged to make.
Although he is described as being thoroughly contemptuous of his American father-in-law, the Duke of Marlborough, it seems, has reconciled himself to accept $100,000 per year of that person's vulgar, plebeian money. Evidently his grace has no patience with the theory that money can be "tainted." Like a certain British sovereign who took toll of an unsavory calling, he believes that "there is no smell to a shilling." In this as in other thrifty characteristics the master of Blenheim shows himself to be a true descendant of John Churchill, than whom no thrifter Englishman ever lived.
The great heart of the American people throbs with sympathy for the oppressed in Kissla and they have been gladdened by evidences of the coming of a better day for that long-afflicted country. But our people know that the killing of a czar would not kill czarism. Czars have been murdered in the past, but czarism has lived on. Two wrongs, no matter how great they may be, can not be so put together as to make one right. Murder is not and can not be a remedy for governmental sins. If the lower strata of the population in Russia can get on top is there any reason to believe the situation will be improved by the change? Time will bring about a wholesome compromise between the extremes, but assassination will not be promotive of that happy consummation.
Thirty-one years ago the country was made almost speechless with horror by a railroad wreck on the Lake
Shore & Michigan Southern Railroad at Ashtabula, Ohio. A train went through a bridge and a large number of fatalities resulted. P. P. Bliss, the noted wangelist, being among the victims. This was about the first experience Americans had with great railroad catastrophes. It happened before the development of the speed manla, and, for that matter, before the development of the railroad business into anything like the important industry it is to day. Naturally, the "Ashtabula disaster" became almost a classic of the news. It was read and talked about for months as one of the most frightful events in the world's history. But how is it now? A few days ago, we read without deep concern of a frightful wreck in the Middle West, followed a day or two afterward by another disaster of equal extent and horror. Outside the immediate vicinity in which these accidents happened, reports of them were read almost with indifference. Twenty-five years ago they would have filled the newspapers for days. It is not that human suffering is more indifferently regarded nowadays, but that through familiarity with frightful railroad accidents we have come to look upon them almost as a matter of course. We are expecting them just about so often. If we ourselves escape, we think we are lucky, and beyond that there is only passing sympathy for the victims unless we are personally connected with them. We were horrified when the San Francisco earthquake occurred, considerably interested when Valparaiso was shaken to the ground, and not particularly concerned, comparatively, over the fate of Kingston. Possibly in this rushing age it will not be long ere we shall look on the downfall of nations and the obliteration of entire peoples with equanimity.
The days have passed when every woman had her knitting-work. Our grandmothers picked up the stocking when a neighbor dropped in, when the twilight fell, when the oven needed watching—and there is a New England tradition of one industrious woman who took up her knitting while the people were gathering for a family funeral. The complicated operations of "wildening," "narrowing," "setting the heel" and "toeing off" were so familiar to feminine fingers that they could all be accomplished by firelight. Every family discussion was conducted to the accompaniment of the clicking needles. Mary's course at the academy, John's journey to Boston to find a market for mother's cheeses, the purchase of the wood-lot and the building of the new ell to the house were all worked into the fabric of the gray stockings and the white stockings as they grew under skilful fingers. All the plans were laid with a greater deliberation than to-day, when the woman's part in the conversation is often taken by snatches, as she runs the sewing machine, looks after the separator, or wields the carpet-sweeper. Grandmother thought her way to many a wise conclusion over her knitting. It was a tonic for depression and a sedative for nervous irritability. It was the earliest diversion for the convalescent, and the last work which feeble fingers and falling eyes could do before the final rest. How many a daughter treasures with loving care "the last pair of stockings mother knit!" The pleasant, quieting, housewifely occupation need not go out of fashion because machinery makes stockings more cheaply than hands can make them. There is still call for the product of the needles. For example, the missions for seamen are always in want of warm knitted mufflers and hoods, with which sailors may brave their winter voyages. Hospitals are glad of shoulder shawls for patients, and bed-socks may help many a poor old woman to sleep warm. The knitting which the family can spare may now be turned into the great channels of charity, and so make the knitter the happler, and the world the warmer both in body and in heart.
To Harness the Monsoon.
This is not the only country which has large water-power engineering plans on hand. There is a project under way in Bombay which literally aims at harnessing the Indian monsoon and utilizing the resultant energy in running the cotton mills of Bombay and other factories in the adjacent districts.
The Western Ghauts, or mountains, forty-three miles from Bombay, are among the rainiest districts of the world; even during the famine years 1896-7, when thousands of people were perishing elsewhere because of the lack of rain, the inhabitants of the Ghauts district were nearly ruined by a rainfall of from twenty-two to twenty-six feet for the wet season, June to October.
This speedily drains off to the sea. Hence it is proposed to build three great dams, thus utilizing three of the many valleys as reservoirs, an undertaking made all the easier by the stony formation, which does away with the necessity of artificial floors in the proposed reservoirs. How steep the approach is appears from the fact that there will be a descent of 1,734 feet in less than two and one-half miles. At the base of the mountains will be a great power station, from which the electricity generated will be transmitted to Bombay and other points. The largest dam will be ninety-five feet high and 8,000 feet long; the second will have a length of 4,500 feet and the third of 2,640 feet.—New York Evening Post.
Expert Opinion.
Madge. -She told me all the things
asked her about.-Smart Set.
PORTLAND NEW AGE
Collar Button Among the Articles Found in Ancient Tombs. Every now and then it is discovered that some extremely "modern" invention is in reality exceedingly old. For example, the safety pin, far from being a novelty or even of recent origin, is decidedly andent—a fact made certain by the finding of a great many such plins, fashioned exactly like those of today, in old Roman and Etruscan tombs, dating back to a period a good deal earlier than the birth of Christ.
The safety pln in truth was an article of common use in Italy long before the Roman empire attained the height of its glory. Some of them were exactly like those of to-day, utilizing the familiar principle of coiled spring and catch, but the material of which they were made seems always to have been bronze. They took on a development, however, far more remarkable than our modern safety plus, many of them being quite large affairs, ten inches or so in length and hollow, as if designed to be attached to the gown in front and possibly to contain something or other—concevably flowers. Not infrequently they were ornamented with gems.
Another ancient invention was the collar stud. It is true that the ancient Romans did not use buttons to fasten their garments, but for this very reason safety pins were more urgently required, and the latter seem to have been supplemented by studs of bronze, which were in shape exactly like those of today. Of course, people in those times wore no collars, but the little contrivance in question was utilized in other ways. Probably—and indeed the assumption is not a rash one—it had in that early epoch the same habit as now of rolling under a piece of furniture on slight provocation for the purpose of eluding observation and pursuit, with the usual perversity of inanimate objects.—Scientific American.
In 1883 the Prince of Wales was much interested in the creation and organization of the College of Music in London. He caused it to be intimated to the late Sir Henry Irving that it would show the interest of another and allied branch of art in the undertaking if the dramatic artists wo ld give a benefit for the new college. The prince even suggested that "Robert Macalre" would do excellently for the occasion, with an all-star cast. Of course Irving was delighted to help, and the result was a splendid performance, at which the Prince and Princess of Wales attended, and a sum of more than one thousand pounds was turned over to the college—the entire receipts. Irving himself, says Mr. Bram Stoker in his "Personal Reminiscences of Henry Irving" paid all the expenses.
In the first year of its working, when the class for dramatic study was organized, Irving was asked by the directorate to examine it, which he did cheerfully, and in due time made his report. Soon afterward he received a letter of thanks for his services.
Although quite formal, it was a most genial and kindly letter, and to the signature was appended "chairman." In acknowledging it to Sir George Grove, the director of the college, Irving said what a pleasure it had been to him to be an examiner, and assured Sir George that he would gladly hold his services at the disposal of the college. He added to his letter this postscript:
"By the way, who is our genial friend, Mr. Edward, chairman? I do not think I have met him."
He got a horrified letter sent by messenger from Sir George, explaining that the signature was that of "Albert Edward"—then Prince of Wales, now his majesty, Edward VII.
In the Surface Car.
A fat Irishwoman, bearing a number of bundles, entered a crowded street car. The only semblance of a seat she could find was a small space at the right of a smartly dressed youth. Into this space, sufficient only for an individual of ordinary size, the fleshy Irishwoman squeezed herself, much to the annoyance of the youth.
After a moment or so the Irishwoman produced a cheese sandwich, which she proceeded to devour with every evidence of relish.
At this the youth gave her a look of ineffable disgust and drew the skirts of his frock coat closer to hm.
"I suppose, me lad," good-naturedly said the woman, "that ye'd prayfer-r to have a gintleman sittin' nix to ye."
"I certainly would," snapped the youngster.
"So would I," calmly responded the fat person.—Exchange.
"Deprived of His See."
As an example of the ability of the juvenile scholar to evolve an unexpected meaning from his text, a correspondent relates that the following question was put to a history class: "What misfortune then happened to Bishop Odo?" The reply came quite readily, "He went blind." An explanation was demanded, and the genius brought up the text book. "There, sir," triumphantly, "the book says so." The sentence indicated by an ink stained digit read, "Odo was deprived of his see."—London Spectator.
First Insurance Company, 1699. The Society of Assurance for Windows and Orphans was the first known life insurance company and was established in London in 1699.
Education is a great thing, no doubt, but the best housekeepers didn't get their knowledge out of book.
HALL PHARMACY CO.
Telephone East 873
Union Avenue and Tillamook Street
PORTLAND OREGON
Nob Hill Pharmacy
DR. J. J. FISHER. Prop.
Drugs and Toilet Articles.
Prescriptions Accurately Compounded
680 Glisan Street Tel. Main 845
ELEGANT FLORAL PIECES
and Cut Flowers. Garden Plants and
House Plants. Very reasonable.
GUSTAVE J. BURKHARDT, Florist
112 Twween-third St. Phone Main 603, Portland, Ore.
A. CORRIGAN
Barton, Or., Clackamas River
Best Fishing and Hunting Grounds
in the Northwest
LOUIS SCHUMACHER
FURRIER
Furs Remodeled into Latest Style.
Boag, S oles, Ties, for less than at
any other place.
185 Madison Street
W. R. Williams Al Cleveland
FASHION STABLES
Hacks, Livery, Boarding
Twentieth and Washington Sts.
West End Exposition Bldg.
Phone Main 45 PORTLAND, OREGON
SCHWIND & BAUER
Shoe Repairing
Machine and Hand. Only Goodyear Machine
in Our City. Shoes made to Order.
Telephone for and Delivered.
Telephone Pacific 2228.
269 Yamhill Street PORTLAND, OREGON
The Portland Hat Works
Manufacturers of
FINE SOFT AND STIFF HATS
Hats Dyed, Cleaned and Blocked. Our spec-
sity: Panama Cleaned and Bleached.
249% Alder St., bet, Second and Third.
Branch: 422 Washington St. Portland, Or.
ARTHUR LAVY
Furnisher and Hatter
"HE MAKES SHIRTS"
486 Washington St., Opposite Hellig's Theater
PORTLAND, OREGON
THE HOUSE THAT GIVES YOU A SQUARE DEAL
A. R. ZELLAP N. L. MUELLER
Zellar & Mueller
FURNITURE
A Full Line of Stoves & Ranges
SEE US, WE HAVE WHAT YOU WANT
Phone East 4457
535 Williams Ave., Portland, Ore
PICTURES FRAMED PHONE EAST 3549
FURNITURE REPAIRED RES. PHONE EAST 2312
H. C. SCHROEDER
The Albina
HOUSE FURNISHER
HOUSES FURNISHED COMPLETE
CASH OR INSTALLMENTS
UNDERTAKING AND EMBALMING
244, 246, 248 Russell St., PORTLAND
COURTNEY MUSIC CO.
Band Instruments
Stringed Instruments
Phonographs
Cheap for Cash or Easy Payments.
Latest Popular Songs and Music
25c, Five for $1, postpaid.
88 North Third St., Portland, Or.
MALL & VON BORSTEL
RESIDENT AGENTS
REAL ESTATE and FINANCIAL AGENTS
GERMAN ALLiance INSURANCE ASSOCIATION
Of New York. Capital $1,900,000
CONFILAGRATION PROOF—All S. F. losses
paid in full. Statement after payment of S.
F. losses. Book #185,766; Surplus to policy
bidders over $7,600,000
AGENTS—Holladay Park Second Addition;
Manning's Addition; York Addition; Sullivan's Addition; W. W. McGuire's Addition; Nicholson Addition.
104 Second St., Lumber Exchange Bldg,
Phone Main 1436
392 East Burnside St.,
Phone East 159
THE
Continental Casualty Co.
of Chicago, Illinois.
Pald-up Capital $300,000
Northwestern Department
503-4 Lumber Exchange Bldg.,
PORTLAND, OREGON
The largest company in the world doing a strictly health and accident business. Over $5,000,000 paid on claims to R. R. men alone. Writes all classes of policies on all the different occupations including the popular $1 a month policy. Call at the office or phone us and we will be glad to explain the different plans.- Phone Main 4398.
PORTLAND COFFEE & SPICE CO.
Importers and Manufacturers
Tca, Coffee, Spices, Extracts
and Baking Powder
24 ann 26 Front Street
PORTLAND, OREGON
Lewis & Clark Cigar Co.
CIGAR MANUFACTURERS
Ask for the Celebrated
Lewis & Clark Cigar - 12 1/2 c
Sacajawea - 10c
UNION MADE
Phone Pacific 2263 PORTLAND
KING & GILMORE
Telephone UNION 4068
Everything in the Best Properties
Jersey Street
ST. JOHNS, OREGON
H. HENDERSON
108½ Jersey Street, ST. JOHNS, OREGON
I have choice Business and Residence
Tracts in all parts of the city.
Corr spondence solicited from non-
resident owners of property or those
seeking investments here.
NORTHERN BREWERY CO.
Brewers and Bottlers of
HOP GOLD
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
JAMESTOWN, N. D.
OSCAR J. SEILER, Attorney-at-Law President
Paid Up Capital and Surplus $35,000
Collections
Columbia River Scenery
REGULATOR LINE
The excursion steamer "BAILEY GATZER!" 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 freight and passengers. Splendid accommodations for outfits and livestock.
Dock foot of Alder street Portland; foot of Court street. The Dalles. Telephone Main 914. Portland.
ASTORIA & COLUMBIA
RIVER RAILROAD CO.
Two Straight Passenger Trains Daily
WITH
THROUGH PARLOR CARS
BETWEEN
Portland, Astoria AND
Seaside
Leaves
UNION DEPOs
Arrives.
Daily
For Maygers, Rain-
ter, Clatakanie
Daily.
Tele
For Fine Wines and Liquors, call at
THE WEST
O. BURRIS, Prop.
Fine wines, Liquors and Cigars
Phone Pacific 1906
235 N. Fourteenth St. PORTLAND, ORE.
NEW ALBINA CAFE
PATTERSON & MCDOUGALL, Props.
Fine Wines & Liquors
The Old Corner
Cor. Russell Av. & Albina St.
Phone East 4386 Portland, Ore.
LODELL'S PLACE
A. E. LODELL, Proprietor
Fine Wines, Liquors and Cigars
WEINHARD'S BEER
Telephone Pacific 1984
414 North Nineteenth St. PORTLAND, OR.
Pioneer Soda Works
GUNDEL BROS. & CO.
Manufacturers of
SODA WATER, EXTRACTS, SYRUPS, ETC.
Factory, 416 Water Street
Telephone, Main 2366
PORTLAND OREGON
Crane Bottle Co.
BOTTLES
Carry the large st stock of Bottles on the Pacific Coast. Mail Order shipments given prompt attention-
Office, 14th and Couch Sts.
PORTLAND, OREGON
STAR BREWERY
PORTLAND OFFICE:
Corner East Third and Burnside Streets
"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
WESTERN BAKING COMPANY
PORLAND, OREGON
REGISTERED TRADE MARK. A WESTERN SUNHOSE
Ask your grocer for them and 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 PointOysters
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.
DEVERS
GOLDEN
WEST
SPICES,
COFFEE, TEA,
BAKING POWDER,
FLAVORING EXTRACTS
Absolute Purity, Fineest Flavor,
Greatest Strength, Reasonable Prices.
CLOSSET & DEVERS
PORTLAND, OREGON.
Real Estate Dealers
Real Estate
Co.
Jamestown, North Dakota BY RAIL AND WATER
<i, WATER TANKS
Pha espace Cede amber
eran ToC BoxShooks
a Cedar Shingles
ag Grays Harbor Commercial Go
ic woassmancasosclsee y Seattle, Wash.
‘¢ TR
row Dy
7 pron ape .
Arne casr
= Romer >
QI Thy
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. :
i
SWIFT & COMPANY So. Omaha, Nebraska
PREMIUM HAMS, BACON
And All Fresh Cuts for Hotels
MAIL ORDERS PROMPT ATTENTION
oe sl
i GREAT FALLS”
iii Ga:
THoelAUB
Cloths Man, Woman, Boy—in
Modern Up-to-Date Fashionable
‘Clothing—at Popular Prices.
Visit Often the Popular Priced
Store for Men and Women.
Great Falls, - - = Montana.
BA REINA GBUSET, Vice President.
BOER rte oe
qe
AMERICAN BREWING
& MALTING COMPANY
Brewers and Bottlers of extra
Sea Nee Ter acpi
Office: 109 Central Avenue.
P.O. Box 86.
Great Falls, - = = Montana,
‘Tara axp Coveasia ‘Puowe Main 18
BONNY & WATSON CO
(wvccesaons 70)
BONNY & STEWART
YONERAL DIRECTORS AMD EMBALMERS
Lady, Aonietendute, Seattle, Wash.
pieseerterer eters |
|
3 MISSOULA MONT 3
Sc cscdebsetsonsasceseceet
HB, CHANEY, ‘A.A. HOWARD,
Proprietor. Sacer,
Florence Steam Laundry
THE GOOD ONE
Eetabitehed 10, Telephone 115
Work Done On Short Notice
112-114 West Front St.
MISSOULA, MONTANA
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.
YRANK HOFFMAN, Proprietor 7
Cholcest imported and Domestic
Wines, Liquors and Cigars
Telephone Main S08
southeast Corner First and Morrison
PORTLAND OREGON
Breese eee
PHONE EAST 9073
SCULPTORS
AND CARVERS
In Marble, Stone, Granite and Wood.
Architectural, Plaster and Staff Orna-
ments. Monuments, Statues, Busts,
Toribstones. Postal orders promptly
attended to. Sculpture Work a spe-
cialty, Office and Studio. Union Ave.,
cor. Irving.
| PORTLAND, OREGON
NATIONAL WINE CO.
Pure Wine & Liquors
WE SELL DIRECT TO
THE FAMILIES.
Fifth and Stark Streets
Phone Main 6499 PORTLAND, ORE.
proverereeressscsevveeeees
3 SEATTLE WASH
= & CoO’s
| mae Parlors
CC Oe.
HA +
mh OCR
« C We ee
i OR 2-3
1 ae Ee
—
Just a Word About Rolls
Hitle Rotlsana big Rollx; plain Rolls and
Han elie fer gupper-ell gucd sorts ot Rall
E5USry mbet peopte in Misnouls Know about =
TEVIS & CRAWSHAW
GROCERS AND BAKERS
Hay, Grain, Flour, Fruits, Vegetables
Confectionery, Etc., Etc.
131 Higgins Ave.
Missoula, Montana
PORTLAND NEW AGE
“SELLING CHILDREN IN STARVING RUSSIA.
ee
Se | Pe poem
reas Sieg. > a
eee i oe eee
Presson. seer oe Biase
ane ee ea
caw Seay tas
ek be Pees ee a a
conan tls ana, %
Te
fees Baer 1 ee
Pay ee ea gee PES) ee a
een gs OR ea : fee be. be
era ee &
Hi ONES, AG AO ae ig
Pag tac te
a. oe i a eS
aA oe or Ve we eo
as es es ee ao
ene ~ we, =~ eet es — %
DAUGHTER SOLD FOR BREAD.
So severe Is the pinch of famine In the Vologda district in Russia that
peasants are selling their children in order to buy bread. These sales are of
Geplorable frequency and the starved peasants aver that anything 1s better
than hunger. Some of the scenes ‘at these sales are heartrending in thelr
poignancy, but mothers say they prefer to see their children sold rather than
tion, Terrible stories of hunger and deprivation are told by some of the peo-
ple of this district and there are no present Indications that the distress Is to
| be relieved. Fallure of crops has been one of the contributing causes to the
present situation, and the fact that the peasants are usually much reduced
‘m circumstances has left them this year at the mercy of cold and hunger.
Many parents assert that no matter what experiences may befall their chil-
dren. they will be no worse off than in the huts they now call home, where
there are no fires to warm them and no food to keep life within their ema-
elated bodies,
I
i a or early in May, The San . Francisc
ik Y| cents ott en i 0
bbe SCIENCE |) secre scratches
i) a Bee AND dent David Starr Jordan and other
eos 2 9 whether there was any causal conne
- ven 10 tion between the two phenomena. TI
weight of opinion appears to be thé
i a ah there was not such a connection.
A new deposit of manganese whieh
promises to be an important source of
supply, Is being opened up In Mysare
State, India, It is situated twenty
iotles northwest of Shimoga station, on
the Southern Mabratta railway, 40
miles from Mormugoa.
‘To detect hidden cracks opening from
the surface of metals, the surface 1s
first nlolstened with kerosene, and ts
then dried of with a cloth, It Is then
coated with chalk, After a little while
the ofl works qut of the little cracks
and stains the chalk. A sort of dla-
gram of the hidden fissures and defects
fg thus produced.
‘The majority of the highroads in Bel-
glum are now planted with trees along
the way, to the great pleasure of trav-
elers and to the advantage of the coun-
try. In a total distanced of about 4,775
miles there are no less than 800,000 of
these roadside trees, Among them are
Included 300,000 elms, 170,000 oaks, 79,
000 evergreens, 76,000 ash-trees and 41,
000 maples.
‘A process of plating aluminum with
copper by welding methods bas been
Invented in Germany by Herr Watch
nitz, ‘This is regarded as important
because one of the obstacles to a wider
use of aluminum has been its compara.
tive lack of resistance to the action of
many flulds and its failure to fold
paint, These qbjections are removed
when it {s covered with a thin plating
of copper, while Its weight 1s not ma
terlally increased.
‘A London syndicate will have 100,006
tons of Egyptian papyrus plant reads
to ship to Its paper mills within the
next six months, This revives an In
dustry which has been extinct for ove
1,000 years, A long search finally lo
cated a few plants In Palestine whic}
were transplanted into Egypt and cul
|| tivated. The twentieth century seem
‘| to find frequent occasions to learn fron
|| the vast treasure house of knowleds
“| of that remarkable people.
Contrary to a widespread belief tha
.| hardwoods give more heat In burnin,
)/than soft varieties, the scientists a
Washington are contending that th
greatest heating power is possessed b;
the wood of the linden tree, which |
very soft. Fir stands next to Inder
‘and almost equal to It, Then come
* pine, hardly Infertor to fir and linden
= while hard oak possesses 8 per cen
C Jess heating capacity than linden, an
red beech 10 per cent less.
-| About the tlme of the San Francisc
earthquake last April a new island wa
| thrust up from the bottom of the se
nearly forty miles northwest of Unt
= laska, It rose hot and steaming out o
{deep water, and attained a Height ¢
@ several hundred feet. In the {mm
diate neighborhood there are two athe
similar tslands, both of which hay
risen from the sea within historic time
one of them no longer than 1883. Th
exact date of the first appearance <
the new Island of last April ts _n
known, but It must have risen som
5 time in the latter nart of that mont
or early in May, The San . Franciseq
earthquake occurred on April 18th. The
question has been discussed by Presi-
dent David Starr Jordan and others
whether there was any causal connec-
tion between the two phenomena. ‘The
weight of opinion appears to be that
there was not such a connection.
il ha ecard aati
Several months ago the Hon. Thomas
Alexander Smith, recently defeated for
re-election to Congress in the First Dis-
trict of Maryland by the Hon. W. H.
Jackson, was standing In front of the
White House talking to secret service
men when a boy came dashing out of
the executive mansion.
“Who's that?” queried the Congress-
man.
“That's Archibald Roosevelt,” he
was informed,
A moment later another youngster
appeared through the same door, and
Mr. Smith repeated his question.
“hat's Kermit,” sald one of the
guards.
Just then a third boy came swirling
along on roller skates.
“I guess that’s another one of the
Roosevelt boys,” suggested the Mary.
lund statesman.
“Yes,” was the answer, “that’s Quen
tin”
‘By gun,” ruminated Mr. smith
“they've all got names Ike sleeping
cars, I feel just as If I were standing
on the platform at home, watching the
limited express shoot by.”"—New Or
leans Picayune.
STEAMSHIP PLAYS SEE-SAW.
oe \
ot
a
\
8
Then
SS ai
SS \ ee bl
Boome
Sioa
——_———
| Her bow tilted high in the arr, her
stern afloat, the steamship Carrington
has been playing see-saw with the rise
and fall of the tlde—and has escaped
injury. She went aground on the
treacherous rocks of Ushant, off the
voast of Brittany, France, and assumed
the position shown above. It was a
marvel that the vessel did not break
jae tans
| “The defendant in @ murder trial
goes through a terrible ordeal, doesn’t
her”
| “I suppose s0,” sald the ex-Juror
|| wearly, “but he bas one advantage over
us He's presumed to be innocent un-
‘| til proved guilty.” — Philadelphia
| Ledger.
| It's almost as difficult for a detective
| to catch a criminal as it Is for a prose
Jeuting attorney to hold him.
J
A Juror’s View.
LR. MANNING, Pres. A. 'T. HOSMER, Seoy*
L.R. MANNING & CO., Inc.
Real Estate Loane and Investments. City and Farm Property. Timber and
‘Coal Lands. First-Class Mortgages and Investment Securities.
EQUITABLE BUILDING TAC MA, WASH.
a
THE SCANDINAVIAN AMERICAN BANK
Commercial Banking Savings Department
Capital $5,000,000 Surplus $350,000 Total Available Assets $7,500,000
‘A. CHILBERG, President GEO. H. TARBELL, Manager
A. V. HAYDEN, Cashier
‘Tacoma Office No. 955 Commerce 8t., N. E. Cor. South 11th St.
A Delightful
BREAKFAST
Dish
WHEAT-HEARTS
Maikec a delightial breakfast, dish: with fruit aadod, «
Makes delete ites tic Wine To took a Night oa
ana cee cae es
Pca tection orate
THE PUGET SOUND FLOURING MILLS CO., TACOMA, WASH.
- 2
TACOMA
OOO OOOO:
pute Pactric LiqUOR AND WINE HOUSE.
X. REUTER, Proprietor.
The best of Wines, Liquors and Clear.
fay Wado © Spectaty.
‘Te. ed 7,
ues pacite Ave,
WS ace ATs, Tecoma, Washington
yos?'s tuner srone
berlin Balding. 113 south 11th
Telephone, Baia 1%.
TACOMA, < + WAsmINaTOX
The Best is None Too Good for
You. Get It at
Saloon & Cafe
RUSSELL ORMSBY, Proprietor
113 S. 12th St., Tacoma, Wash.
Wvory Wood Fibre Plaster
Wvory Cement Plaster
F. T. CROWE & CO.
1105 A Street TACOMA, WASHINGTON
STYLES RIGHT PRICES RIGHT
Menzies & Stevens
ones
HATS, MEN'S FURNISHINGS AND
CLOTHING SPECIALTIES
913 Pacific Avenue
Provident Bldg. TACOMA, WASH.
Puget Sound Electric Railway
: Interurban
Leave Tacoma—6 :00, 7:10, 8:10, 9:15
(Ltd., no stops) 10:10, 11 210 a m, 12:10,
140, 2:10, 3:10, 4:15 (Ltd., no ‘stops),
5:10, 6:10, 7:10, 8:10, 9:10, 11:15 p m.
Leave Seattle—6 :30, 8:00, 9:00 (Ltd.,
no mop): 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, 9:09, 10:00, 11:15 pm.
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.
‘Leave 9th and Commerce Sts.—5:40,
7:00, 8:00, 10:00, 12:00 a m, 1:00, 2:00
$:00,4:00, 5:00, 6:15, 7:15, 8:15, 11:
m
/P™- (5:30 8 m omitted Sundays)
(SS ice
=
APRS
a
“I
Tacoma Trunk Factory
‘A good Trunk is always a good
bargain. You can’t judge from
mere appearances. We sell
Tranke that not only look well
| but wear well. Suit Cases and
Bags of all sizes, styles and prices
Repairing done. Phone Red 2772
: C Street TACOMA, WASH.
ao ae ean ee
E ____TACOMA 7
Sessocssned
THE ABBEY
meee
‘Wines, Liquors & Cigars
oe
TACOMA ‘WASHINGTON
a
THE ANNEX
House of Fine Liquors
aaa
Cor. Eleventh and Pacific Avenue
[oe Sees
THE MoDONALD CIGAR CO.
ea a eis ose
wCIGARS...
UPRERSLY Be Toa 7
Imported Cigars, Cigarettes and
Smokers’ Articles
Tel. Main 765. 956 Pacific Avenue
THE DAMFINO
Ir icoLors, Pero
coc
estaBusizo BEFORE THE WAR
Imported and Domestic Wines,
Liquors and Cigars
et ee pve oo Foes
TACOMA WASHINGTON
Pere eee
a ee
EAT T. B. C. BREAD
xy
TACONIA BAKING COMPANY
eee canes es es
Ete, We, also make a specialty of GOOD
RE at
943 Tacoma Ave., Tacoma, Wash,
Phone Main 748 Paving Plant 15th and Dock
The Barber Asphalt Paving Co.
ASPHALT
For Roofing, Street Paving and Reser-
voir Lining
CONTRACTORS
Street Paving, Driveways, Floors and
Sidewalks
203-4-5 Providence Bldg.
TACOMA ‘WASH.
ge erecta
iy aa opie ot
FINE POULTRY
ive Gar trode Soll
Commercial Market
tamer HARA Pes
Retail Dealer in
Fresh and Salt Meats
1114 C Street
|Tetertone Main 292 TACOMA
Tacoma Carriage and Baggage
Transfer Company
OFFICE 10$ TENTH ST.
Carriages and Baggage Wagons at All Hours
_ Private Ambulance Perfoct in
e Every Detall
FIRST CLASS LIVERY
chet, Swit ale coe
TACOMA, WASH,
Entered at the postoffice at Portland, Oregon,
as second-class matter.
SUBSCRIPTION.
One Year, payable in advance.....$ 2.00
Our Candidate for President
JOSEPH BENSON FORAKER
Of Ohio
WINNING COLORED MEN.
Prof. Booker T. Washington, in his "Up From Slavery," and in his lectures and frequent addresses and teachings generally, has advocated and emphasized the importance and need of manual and mechanical rather than literary, scientific or professional, training of the colored people, yet would not altogether neglect the latter, as he perceives that the taste and talents of colored people differ the same as of other people. It is quite true that industrial training is more important and industrial knowledge more useful than an academical or college education gained from books, but that a negro may attain great excellence and rise high in purely intellectual or artistic pursuits has been illustrated many times, perhaps scarcely ever more notably than in the case of Mr. W. Burghardt Du Bois, author of "The Soul of Black Folk." This is acknowledged by caucasian critics to be one of the most remarkable books ever written by an American, from a standpoint of pure, meritorious literature. A member of the negro race is acknowledged to be one of the country's and indeed of the world's greatest painters; a negro recently died who attained international fame as a poet; there are many negro educators, preachers and lawyers of undisputed ability of a high order; and now it is a negro who has written a book that is considered one of the masterpieces of American literature.
Another instance that is attracting attention is that Alain Le Roy Locker, who last week, among many Caucasian competitors, won the Pennsylvania scholarship under the Cecil Rhodes will, and is therefore entitled to pursue his studies with all expenses paid in one of the leading celebrated English universities. Mr. Locke is the son of a man who was a successful lawyer and a woman who is a successful teacher. He is twenty-one, has already won four important fellowships in his own university, which is Harvard, from which he graduates next June. In the Rhodes will provision was made for two African scholarships which may be competed for by any colored man in the states or territories. It is probable that Mr. Rhodes or his administrators recognized the American antagonism which might be felt in black competing with white on equal grounds; there is no such antagonism in England. But Mr. Locke—a significant name with which to conjure at Oxford is merely the Pennsylvania contestant on an equal footing with any other Pennsylvania student. He carried the honor easily in scholarship. But after that it must be remembered that the applicants must come before a committee where manhood, inherent qualities, are considered in the final award. This is what makes the Locke appointment more significant. Then for three years this Harvard man will be an Oxford man.
Of course, it is the very exceptional colored youth who could win such a prize and position, but it is also only the exceptional, white young man who could do the same. This instance, nor a good many like it, do not prove that higher education is best for the mass of colored people, nor is it best either for most white people; but such cases do prove that colored people are capable of high attainments and success along educational and intellectual lines, and exposes the folly and injustice of the assertions of the negrophobists
that the black man's race and color render him an altogether and utterly different being from the Caucasian.
ANOTHER STRIKE FAILURE.
The strike of the lumber mill employees has failed, as it ought to have failed, not because the men do not earn more wages than they receive taking the mill owners' profits into consideration, but because the strike was worked up by a few non-resident busybodies and mischief makers, whose only work is making trouble for other people. That the mill hands were not ready and willing and anxious to strike, and did not consider that they had both cause to strike and a chance to win, is certain, else they would have been threatening a strike, or petitioning for or demanding higher wages before these disturbers came along. But the men had done nothing of this kind, and were led into the strike thoughtlessly and in the case of most of them against their better judgment by the emissaries of chronic discontent and unreason.
It might be easy to show that the millowners could afford to pay and ought to pay higher wages. Their net earnings or profits during the past few years and especially the past year or two are said to have been enormous, amounting in the aggregate to millions of dollars, and under such circumstances they ought to pay higher wages or sell their products to local consumers at lower prices; but if they refuse to pay higher wages there is no use or sense in striking unless a strike can be made to win. There was no chance for this strike to win, unless there was a sympathetic strike of mechanics and other unions, and this could not be brought about because all these unions belong to the A. F. of L., while the mill workers were induced to enlist under the banner of the I. W. W., a rival and antagonistic organization. Which is the better makes no difference; one set of workingmen cannot successfully strike against employers with millions of surplus profits unless they can have the united sympathetic support of all other classes of workingmen.
We would think is were time, after successive failures and discomfitures, for workingmen to turn the cold shoulder to these traveling burders and mischief makers, who live and grow fat off the contributions of workingmen, and go running about the country trying to set employers and employes by the ears. The next ones that come along should be run out of town with but scant notice that room here is preferable to their company. The only result of their latest visit to Portland has been loss and trouble for everybody, and no benefit to anybody. But the ones most injured by these foreign organizers are the workingmen themselves. They not only lose their wages for a while, and some of them their jobs, but they find it more difficult after every such faux pas as this to gain the higher wages that they ought to have.
THE GOVERNOR'S VETOES.
By apparently losing his temper during the session of the legislature the governor lost whatever slight chance he might otherwise have had of beating the Republican nominee, whoever he may be, for senator next year. Without saying that the governor does not prefer to do the right and best thing, whenever doing so, will not injure him politically, everybody knows that at least some of his vetoes he was playing politics rather than serving the people. In this, however, he went rather too far, and some of his actions and words, too, will return to plague him if he asks for the people's suffrages again.
The governor vetowed a good many bills on the score of economy, among them bills appropriating only a few thousand dollars in the aggregate for several district fairs, but he failed to veto the utterly needless $100,000 appropriation for the Oregon National Guard. The boys of the O. N. G. think the governor is a good fellow, no doubt, and he might win a few votes among them by approving this big appropriation, but he will lose the votes of a good many more taxpayers on that account. They
don't believe in being taxed $50,000 a year just to let a lot of young fellows strut around and take a vacation playing soldier. They are mostly nice, pleasant, worthy young men, of course, but the hardhanded and hardheaded taxpayers know that Oregon has no more use for a $50,000 a year National Guard than it has for a warship up on the Long Tom river. very objectionable a good many prom say so if they had a press their real sen deal has been said a leaders, and much o but would not the have done better woe less expense to the been "run" by a bo while attaining his
The governor's action on the normal school question will not be approved either. The legislature passed a reasonable bill eliminating two of the schools, which the governor had urged should be done, b because this bill imposed upon him a share of the responsibility for deciding which schools were to be cut out, he vetoed the bill; and later, in vetoting the bill giving Monmouth and Drain appropriations he lost his usually urbane temper entirely, and scolded and fairly raved in a manner not at all comportable with his position. Why should he not take on himself a little of the responsibility for deciding as between the normal schools? Because he is ambitious to go to the senate is he to dodge all responsibility that might lose him a few votes?
The governor is very brave when there is no chance of danger to himself, but as soon as duty involves the possible slump of votes he dodges it. But we think he overdid the vote-getting net, and will suffer some accordingly if he should conclude to run for senator next year.
The President is admittedly a great all-around man, and has done a good many notably good things, but with all due deference we must say that in some matters he has shown poor judgment and in others has been badly mistaken, and that he has shown personal favors and gratified personal grudges, which detract much from his worth and fame and are not in consonance with the dignity of his great office.
The last instance of this kind was the snubbing of Senator Foraker by appointing a federal judge in Ohio without consulting the Ohio senator or his colleague. This undoubtedly was in revenge for Senator Foraker's attitude on the question of the Brownsville affair. The President in his impulsive, headlong way discharged three companies of colored soldiers on expert testimony, without giving them a trial or any chance to defend themselves, because they were accused of "shooting up the town" and the rest of the soldiers would not accuse the few who, if any of them, were guilty. Senator Foraker introduced a resolution for an investigation into all the facts, which is now being had, and took the position that the President exceeded his authority and did the soldiers an injustice.
Besides, Senator Foraker chose to vote against the railroad regulation bill, a pet measure of the President's, as he had a perfect right to do, and as it was his duty to do if he believed the bill was a bad one. Whether Senator Foraker was right or wrong on these propositions, in the estimation of the President, is not pertinent, is not to be considered. He has a right to his opinions, and his course of action on public questions is a matter for his own intellect and conscience, not the President's, to determine, and to punish or snub Senator Foraker in this manner is rather a small piece of personal spitework for the President of the United States to engage in.
Senator Foraker has been elected governor of Ohio. He has been sent repeatedly to the senate from Ohio. In his youth he was a soldier in the Civil war from Ohio, and rose to a high position in the army. The people of Ohio know, honor and trust him, and when a federal judge was to be appointed for a new district created by a bill which Foraker had passed, it would have been only common, decent official courtesy for the President to have consulted Senator Foraker, according to custom.
There are some good things, perhaps, about the primary and direct nomination law, but there are some
A SMALL REVENGE.
THE PRIMARY SYSTEM.
very objectionable features, too, and a good many prominent men would say so if they had the courage to express their real sentiments. A great deal has been said against bosses and leaders, and much of it was deserved, but would not the last legislature have done better work, at a good deal less expense to the people, if it had been "run" by a boss or leader who, while attaining his own ambitious objects to some extent, would have been careful not to get the people down on him, but rather to cause his legislative puppets to do them good service? Where there is no strong leadership there is confusion, chaos, and inevitably bad or at best but doubtful results. Nobody knows what he is going to do, or why, or how, or what he is there for. A bad organization is a bad thing, of course, but if not utterly unconscionable and corrupt it is better than no organization at all.
Then as to running for office, an occasion for doing which is now before the people, the best and fittest men for the respective offices, except in rare cases, will not enter the lists, because they do not wish to put themselves in the position of seeking an office, and because, besides, to get a nomination involves a good deal of expense and a great amount of disagreeable labor. It is only occasionally a good man who will run about begging voters to nominate him, and this leaves the field open in many instances to audacious, thick-skinned and perhaps in some cases unscrupulous men who are willing to do this. We have now in mind one man who is making a fight for the Republican nomination for an important office, and being supplied with unlimited "gall" is likely to get a plurality of votes, who isn't fit to be dog catcher in Scappose.
The old convention system had its bad features, and it deserved its fate, but if a convention system could be properly carried on, and "slates" prohibited, it would be far preferable to the new system. It is not likely that the people will change back for a while, if ever, but they are learning pretty fast that they are about as deep in the chaotic primary mire as they used to be in the boss manufactured mud.
Political Announcements
Robert A. Preston
Candidate for Republican
Nomination for
Councilman, First Ward
For improvement of the First ward
and a square deal for the laborer
Primary election May 4, 1907
O. P. Miller
Candidate for the
REPUBLICAN
Nomination for
CITY AUDITOR
Primary election May 4
Henry A. Belding
Candidate for the REPUBLICAN Nomination for
J. E. Werlein
Candidate for the
REPUBLICAN
Nomination for
CITY TREASURER
Primary election May 4, 1907
JACK'S PLACE CHAS. H. JACKSON PLA
The Modern Cafe
Open Day and Night
Private Rooms for Parties
Phone Pacific 2832
PORTLAND FUEL COMPANY
Successors to PIONEER, C. R. DAVIS and PHOENIX FUEL CO.
PHONE EAST 26 287 E. MORRISON ST.
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.
U. S. GOVERNMENT INSPECTED MEATS
Columbia Brand
HAMS
BACON
LARD
Union Meat Company
11 Dining Cars and First Class Hotels and Restaurants use the Union Meat Company's Fresh and Cured Meats. The Best in the Market. Patronize Home Industry.
FURNITURE TRANSFER
EDUCA TRANSFER
SALES, PRICES & FURNITURE MOVED STORED
RE BACKED FOR SHIPPING
C. O. PICK TRANSFER & STORAGE COMPANY. Safes, Pianos, Furniture moved, stored or packed for shipping. Commodious brick warehouse, with separate iron rooms, Front and Clay. Express and Baggage hauled.
Koessel & Frey
Dealers in
Fresh and Cured Meats,
Oysters, Fish and Poultry
Phone Main 1979
640 First Street Cor. Sheridan PORTLAND
A. H. Willett & Co.
GROCERS
Special Prices to Restaurants
Prompt Delivery
Phone East 283 128 Grand Avenue
A THOUGHT
That the season suggests is a new Spring
Suit
Is a Good Thing
to keep in mind that it pays to dress well
FOR ANY MAN
Who wants success and get value for his
money will go to the CHICAGO CLOTH-
ING COMPANY, 69-71 Third Street
PACIFIC COOPERAGE
FRANK PFLUGER, Prop.
Round and Oval Tanks and Casks
Beer Kegs, Barrels, Etc.
Repairing of All Kinds to order.
Twentieth and York Streets
PORTLAND, OREGON
Frederick A. Kribs
Correspondence Solicited
328-330 CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
PORTLAND FUN
Successors to PIONEER, C. R. DA
PHONE EAST 26
COAL—Rock Springs, Diamond
tle, New Castle Nut, Franklin, Carb
WOOD—4-Foot Fir, 4-Foot C
PASTEURIZED DAIRY COMPANY, Inc.
Pasteurized Milk, Cream; Butter, Eggs,
Cottage Cheese, Cheese; Butter Milk.
QUALITY ICE CREAM
Milk 4 per cent guaranteed
Phone East 5302
300 Russell Street
PORTLAND, OREGON
Michigan T Company
H. CRAW, Proprietor
Phone East 2806
154 Grand Avenue
CENTRAL MARKET & GROCERY
J. J. BLUM
Headquarters for
"GOOD THINGS TO EAT"
Groceries, Meats, Fish, Poultry
ALWAYS THE BEST
School Supplies, Shoes, Gloves, Notions
Phone Main 2794
522-524 N. Twenty-Fourth Street
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
J. A. EASTES
Staple & Fancy Groceries
Choice Teas, Coffees & Spices
Dry Goods and Notions
ALL THE LEADING BRANDS OF FLOUR
GOODS DELIVERED PROMPTLY
432, 434, 436, Union Avenue North
Corner of Tillamook St. Phone East 660
Dealer in Washington, Idaho & Oregon
TIMBER & MINERAL LANDS
Portland, Oregon
UEL COMPANY
R. DAVIS and PHOENIX FUEL CO.
287 E. MORRISON ST.
mond, Richmond, Roslyn, New Cas-
Carbon Hill, Coke.
Pot Oak, 4-Foot Ash, Sawed Oak,
Knots.
T INSPECTED MEATS
Columbia Brand
HAMS
BACON
LARD
at Company
us Hotels and Restaurants use the
Company's
Cured Meats.
Market. Patronize Home Industry.
PORTLAND, OREGON
& STORAGE COMPANY.
ed or packed for shipping. Com-
rate iron rooms, Front and Clay.
PORTLAND, OREGON
THE W. G. M’PHERSON COMPANY
Heating, Ventilating and Drying Engineers
- WARM AIR FURNACES
“NOTHING BUT THE BEST” 47 First Street PORTLAND, a
|
DRIFTED SNOW
FLOUR
“The Purest of Pure Foods”
Tacoma Warehouse and Sperry Mills
TACOMA, U. S. A.
THE BITULITHIC PAVEMENT
BEST BY EVERY TEST
For Streets, Driveways and Crosswalks.
WARREN CONSTRUCTION COMPANY
314 Lumber Exchange Building, Portland, Oregon
HENRY WEINHARD’S BREWERY
Manufacturers and Bottlers of the
Well Known Brands of Lager Beer
“ EXPORT ”
“ KAISERBLUME ”
“ COLUMBIA”
IN KEGS AND BOTTLES
Trade and Families Supplied
. Brewery and Office BURNSIDE & 13th STS.
©. E. HEINTZ, Manager. Phone East 57
STRUCTURAL STEEL, AND IRON
Steel Bridges, Upset Rods and Bolts, Cast Iron
Colums-and all Architectural Iron. Sidewalk Doors
and Lights. All Kinds of Castings.
EAST END ‘BURNSIDE STREET BRIDGE, PORTLAND, OR
Or SCENT ee|
| (REATEST
eg EEN US
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
at ‘and comfortable waiting rooms with lava-
Spokane Agents for North Star Blankets, the kind used or
all Pullman coaches.
Union National Bank
a Incorporated 1890
CAPITAL $100,000
Pays Interest on Time Deposits
THE OLD BANK CORNER
Grand Forks,
NORTH DAKOTA
Bees ime
He Ae
aie ; i :
Bee tone al
ee ead
ce cael
sete eae
“That friend of yours, Skiliven, is
certainly one of the most charitable
| om Lever met,” remarked the passen-
er with the fur-lined overcoat.
“{ haven't noticed him giving away
anything,” sald the passenger with the
leatherine sultease, folding his news-
paper and pocketing It. “What hap-
pened to touch his heart?”
“[ don't mean that exaetly,” sald the
passenger In the fur-lined overcoat. “I
don’t know whether he’s easy or tight,
but I know he takes charitable views.”
“That's easy,” commented the man
with the leatherine suitcase. “Fils
{eas may be Hberal, but he lsn't—not
to speak of. Borrowed his wheelbar-
row last spring and I happened to
break one of the handles, At least, I
Aldn't break It; It was broken already,
or splintered. Well, I offered to pay to
have it repalred, of course, and darned
if he didu’t take me up on It!”
“That was pretty small,” agreed the
man with the furlined overcoat. “I
don't wonder you're sore on him.”
“1 don't know that I’m sore, particu
larly. It was only 25 cents, but
didn't seem to me very neighborly
Kind of a cranky disposition, too.”
“Well, of course, I don't know any
thing about that, but I was talkin
with him about old Brackenbury. Tall
about a crank, Brackenburk 1s one fo
your whiskers. He's got a groucl
against humanity. Hanged if I eve
knew such a mean old rooster. I wa
telling this Skilliven about the way b
acted up all the time in bis office.
guess there Isn't one of his clerks wh
Wouldn't polson bim If he got a goo
chance. Skilliven, it seems, knew bin
“AT believe all that Is greatly exas
gerated,’ he says. ‘Of course, he's
little Irritable at times, but he's sui
fered with dyspepala—a good deal ¢
my certain knowledge. We must mak
allowances, He's a pretty nice old mat
hen you know him,’
| st know him pretty well by rep
tation,’ I sald. ‘He's got the reputatio
lor being the meanest old skinflint the
“Friswines
A process for making rubber from
wheat has been Invented. a
‘There were 1,234,278 Odd Fellows In
the United States January 1.
‘The total number of immigrants to
the United States, 1908, was 1,100,785.
Earl Gray, Governor-General of Can-
ada, recelyes a salary of $50,000 @
year.
‘The lower peninsula of Michigan ts
sald to be entirely underiald with rock
salt.
| ‘The churches are ths Portuguese
polling places and votes in Portugal
are cast nowhere else.
‘There are 363 stock and 234 mutual
fire insurance companies In the United
States Jannary 1, 1907.
Workmen in one of the streets of
Madrid dug up an old walnut-wood
chest containing 300 gold doubloons.
Medals of honor for distinguished
gallantry in war In which the United
States was engaged are held by 458
Americans.
‘The result of the first six months
working of the Simplon tunnel have
been tabulated, and show that an aver-
age of 8,000 passengers were carried &
day.
If not absolutely the oldest, the Stora
Kopparberget In Sweden 1s the oldes
copper mine of which there are any of
ficial figures. It has been worked con
tinuously for nearly 800 years
|| Phe dreaded nun butterfly Is appear
|ing everywhere In Bohemla, threaten
[ing the devastation of the forests. Th
neighboring woods of Saxony and SI
esta are also threatened, The Minis
try of Agriculture has named a com
mission to Investigate.
Andrew Carnegie’s “hero fund” wa
established In 1904 with $5,000,000 2
=|its disposal. The commission ha
awarded sixty-three medals up to Jar
1, 1007, and disbursed about $40,00
aside from about $65,000 given Sa
Franelsco and other sufferers from di
asters.
Perhaps for concentrated Inaccurac
of statement nothing can surpass th
following sentence, which occurred !
/ |an account of a burglary given a sho
time back in a paper: “After a fru!
less search all the money was reco
ered, except one pair of boots.”—T!
Bits.
One of the princesses of the Bu
mese court, @ young woman not yet 2
1s sald to be the possessor of the cost
est dress in.the world. It Is a cou
p, {costume and worn only on rare occ
Fy Jsions. It is studded with jewels |
in | puted to be worth in the aggregate »
Jess than one million four hundr
thousand dollars—Leslte’s Weekly.
Several New York postmen, acco
ing to the World, have made fortus
jof more than $200,000. ‘These men, |
though Independently wealthy, throu
extra effort during lelsure hours, 6
trudge from house to house dally W:
on| mailbag and whistle, content to |
jcept a salary of $1,000 a year wh!
ever. pared cheese with a razor. They
tel! me he won't have his shoes pol-
ished because the friction might wear
them out and that he's had the barber
save the hair he cuts off him for the
last thirty years to stuff a mattress.”
“That's nonsense,’ he says. ‘The
poor old gentleman has been bald for
the last thirty years. He's frugal, I
know, but don't consider that a vice.’
“Well, then I mentioned the old rat's
love of money and he excused that by
saying that most old men were more or
less avaricious.
“'Not to the extent of dishonesty,’ I
says. ‘I've heard of things he’s done
that ought to have landed him In the
penitentiary.’
““Well,’ says Skilllven, ‘we're all bu-
man and we've got our little faults. If
it isn't one thing {t's another, and we
don’t want to be too hard on people
especially old people. I don't suppose
Mr. Brackenbury has a great many
more years to live, and I'm sorry for
that, because he really is, when you get
to know him, a very nice old gentle
man, He has some excellent qualitie
and my family thinks the world o
him,’ Now, I don't care wh..t you say
when a man can talk that way abou
a hoary old scoundrel like W. D. Brack
enbury, he’s mighty charitable.”
“Huh!” ejaculated the man with th
leatherine suitcase contemptuously. “
don't suppose he told you that bis wif
| is Brack’s next of kin and that the:
|| expect to come in for the bulk of hi
money when he dies. Oh, he’s a chart
’} able duck, all right, and when It come
||to wheelbarrows with broken har
| ales—"
| “Well, that wasn't the only thing,
.| sald the man with the fur-lined ove
| coat. “We talked about other peop!
,| too—you among them—and he spok
»| pretty well of you.”
,| “£ don't see any particular reaso
why he shouldn't,” sald tbe man wit
-|the leatherine suitcase, “I never bilke
| bim out of 25 cents."—Chleago Dail
t | News.
Uncle Sam provides for his postmen.
In every case the fortunes were made
through shrewd investments in real es-
tate.
London now bas six underground
electric rallways (tubes) In operation,
and five more are under construction
or projected. ‘The railways of London,
underground and surface, carry more
‘than 600,000,000 persons each year, of
which underground Ines. accommodate
258,000,000. ‘There are nearly 600 rail-
way stations In Greater London, and
Into the trunk line stations alone there
pour annually more than 300,000 pas-
‘sengers.
A dip Into an official return showed
that there ar® 1,204 London cabmen
between the ages of 60 and 70, 249 be-
tween the ages of 70 and 80, while 7
return thelr age between 80 and 90.
One: almost suspects these seven old
patriarchs of having carried sedan
chairs in the pregrowler days. At all
events, they are a living advertisement
of London as a health resort, with beef-
steak, overcoat and muftier—London
Chronicle.
The name “Polly,” applied to the
parrot, Is said to have been brought
to the North in an early day by flat-
boatmen, who took grain and provis
fons down the.Ohlo and Mississipp!
rivers to New Orleans. Parrots weré
in cages at the doors of many French
shops and the Westerners heard thé
French say to the bird, “Parlez, par
lez,” pronounced parley, and meaning
“peak! speak!” This word, as they
brought it back, came to be polly.
DUCKS 1,200 MILES AT SEA.
Birds Circle Around Steamship, Take
ing It for an Inland.
The Oceanic Steamship Company's
liner Mariposa, Captain Lawless, ar-
rived from Tahiti with twenty-three
passengers and a cargo of tropical
products, Among the passengers was
W. F. Doty, former American consul
‘at Papeete 2nd recently promoted to
represent Uncle Sam In Persia as Unit-
ed States consul.
‘The Interests of America in Persia
have been represented hitherto by the
secretary of the British legation at Te-
heran, who acted as United States vice
consul whenever necessity arose. This
government, however, recently appoint:
ed three consuls for Persia, among
them Mr. Doty, whose post will be at
Fabriz. This Is in the same latitude as
San Francisco and is one of the most
inaccessible consular posts in the world
In journeying to his new station Con
sal Doty will have to travel came
back for 1,500 miles.
On the afternoon of Nov. 9 Captal
Lawless was surprised to see twelv
black and white ducks flying overhead
‘They came from the eastward. After
circling around the Mariposa a num
ber of times, as {f they were wonderl:,
what kind of an Island the liner was
the ducks whesled into line and re
samed thelr flight, beading due west
‘The ducks were 1,800 miles ‘from Sai
Francisco and 1,200 miles from Ha
| wali, the nearest land.—San Francise
Call.
O11 Painting of Ancient Days.
fl painting was an art thoroughly
understood by the ancients, but was
Jost sight of and only revived about the
end of the thirteenth century, A.D
“THE ONLY WAY”
| Have your Baggage checked from hotel and Residences over
any railroad to any place in United States by
Omaha Transfer Co.
Office 208 Sv. 14th St.
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
~ Hennepin Ave. Nicollet House Block
MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA
0900900900000 0000>
$ eS
: ST. PAUL MINN. 3
000060000000006000 00000008
Alfred J. Krank
(Succonor to SCHNELL & KRANK,)
ceed aa esee <2
BARBERS’ FURNITURE
AND SUPPLIES
FINE CUTLERY
RAZOR WORK A SPECIALTY.
142 8. sixth St, Opp. Ryan Hote.
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
sabia 182 Insorprated 0
nig, COOPER & CO.
Manufacturers, Importers
and Wholesale Groeero
242-264 East Third Street
ST. PAUL MINN.
Freer
13 OMAHA NEBRASKA 3
tering a Gian
MINNEAPOLIS MINN. 3
Seiceasccesesenereeceses
NORTH STAR
WOOLEN
MILL CO.
eee ot
and Blanketings
Minneapolis, Minn.
Bees a
ae
CYGNUS $3.50 SHOE
Manufactured by
: North Star Shoe Co.
| MINNEAPOLIS --MINNESOT!
Sere
{LIVINGSTON 3
g _LWINGSTON
UNION MEAT MARKET,
A O-HABELER, raw
FRESH AND SALT MEATS
eee
F. B. TOLHURST
Taxidermist
for the Tourist
OPPOSITE DEPOT,
Livingston, Montana.
GEO. W. HUSTED
Prescriptions, Drugs,
Patent Medicines, Ci-
gars, Toilet Articles,
Finest Soda Fountain
on the N. P. Railway.
OPpposITE THE DEPOT
This card entitles you to a trip through the
‘National Park, providing you patronize
“ S ”
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
8. Washington, Prop. L, Wilkinson, Manager
The Alpha.
Fine Wines, Liquors & Cigars
WICELY FURKISHED ROOMS
Headquarters for Railroad and All Pro-
fessional People.
Phone Pacific 151
101 N. Park St., PORTLAND, OREGON
pers
COUNCIL BLUFFS 3
Sseseasssacsebrcrseevest
S. T. McATEE
Fancy Groceries, Bakery
Goods and Meats #
Supplies for Dining and Private
Cars Given Special Attention #
230-32 Main St. 229-31 Peal St.
Telephone 195
Council Bluffs lowa
For Medicinal Purposes
Black Buffalo
Pure Rye Whiskey
Unexcelled in
Quality and Excellence
The Pederson Mercantile Co.
weno haceaet
Whee ie eres
Moorehead, Minnesota
Xortoepten agent ahengey buss Pe.
Arrears Heanor
HOTEL PORTLAND.
H. C. BOWERS, Manager.
American Plan, $3 Per Day and Upward.
DULUTH MINN.
HENRY FOLZ
TOURISTS
AVELERS.
HEADQUARTERS FOR TOURISTS AND COMMERCIAL TRAVELERS.
Portland, Oregon.
Telephone 96-B P. O. Box 553
fic Hotel proprietor. DULUTH, MINN.
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 Grandon
Class Ho-
CAPITAL STOCK $50,000.00
Established 1899. Dewey Palace Hotel Bld'g.
Rates from $3 to $5
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
Idaho POCATELLO, - - - IDAHO
D. W. Church Earle C. White C. C. Chilson CHURCH & WHITE CO.
The Spalding
Enlarged and Improved American Plan, $2.50 and Up European Plan $1.00 and Up Finest Cafe in Northwest DULUTH, MINN
Northwest
NN
Pocatello - Idaho
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A.
The only First-Class American Plan Hotel in Helena.
THE HOTEL
Leading Hotel of the LAKE SUPERIOR REGION
HOTEL
PEDICORD
T. J. PEDICORC
Proprietor
Rates 50c, 75c, $1, $1.50
Rooms with Private Baths
Both American and European
Private Telephones in Rooms
First-Class Grill
in Connection
209-219 Riverside Ave.,
SPOKANE, WASH.
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
Leading grocery and market. We serve the traveling public at reasonable prices. 114 and 116 West Superior street.
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.
FRED G. MOCK, President
F. J. CONROY, Vice-President
C. R. HICKEY, Cashier
FRANK JENKINSON, Asst. Cashier
IDAHO
J. A. Murray,
President,
D. W. Standrod,
Vice President
Wm. A. Anthes,
Cashier
I. N. Anthes,
Asst. Cashier
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK of Pocatello, Idaho.
TUTTLE MERCANTILE CO., LTD.
GOODWIN MINING CANDLES
Judson Powder, Fuse and Caps
AGENTS FOR THE
CELEBRATED OLYMPIA BEER
Nampa, Idaho
Real Estate And Insurance
PORTLAND NEW AGE
THE BARNYARD HEN HE
CUT
CUT (OUTCUT THE PRICE)
CUTCUT
ANGOUT
CUT!
CUT!
CUT!
CUT!!
CUT!!!
CUTCUT!
MORE!
CUT!
—Chicago Tribune.
SAHARA DESERT.
A Sun-Baked Region of Desolation and Ever Shifting Sands.
In the event that it becomes necessary for France to intervene in the affairs of Morocco, in the interests of international order, the scene of her first operations will be in the desert region where the French colony of Algiers and the country of the Moors join. French troops are now posted in that region and a more dismal setting for military operations it would be difficult to find. Under the name of the Algerian Sahara the great desert of Sahara extends into Algeria, along the southern base of the Atlas mountains and closely approaches the Mediterranean west of the Gulf of Cabes. The immensity of this great barren region can scarcely be realized. The Sahara desert embraces some 3,200,000 square miles and presents an alternation of
es
10
z
A
SAND WAVES OF A DESERT SEA.
immense burning wastes of loose and moving sand, with tracts of barren rock, stony plains of gravel and elevated and rocky plateaus rising into mountains, with extensive valleys and expanses of sand between. Some of the valleys are depressed below the level of the ocean. Under the influences of meteorological conditions operating for centuries the particles composing the sandstone and other rocks are disintegrated and these particles carried away by the mighty wind that sweeps the soil, wander afar until they come to a standstill in the hollows. Such is the origin of the extensive sandy tracts of which the accompanying illustration gives a good idea. In these belts or strips the sand halting against the smallest obstacles accumulates around them and generally the downs thus created assume the form of the waves of the sea, their fall and motion being with the direction of the prevailing wind.
Rain is utterly unknown except in the oases and on the mountains, where it sometimes falls with such violence as to produce torrents that suddenly
A CONTRAST OF TWO CIVILIZA
OF TWO CIVILIZATIONS IN THE DES
A CONTRAST OF TWO CIVILIZATIONS IN THE DESERT
pour down into the valleys and almost as suddenly disappear beneath the sands. These rains fall at long intervals, 9, 12 and even 20 years intervening between them. Notwithstanding the obstacles of the desert, it is constantly crossed on various routes by caravans of traders and many nomadic Arabs make it their home. The camel
```markdown
```
HEARS OF THE "EGG TRUST."
CUT OUT!
CUT NOT!
CUT OUT!
CUT OUT!
CUT OUT!
CUT OUT!
PAUL HALLER
is the chief beast of burden and were it not for this "ship of the desert" the burning wastes would be impassable for man.
Along these caravan routes oases are found in places where underground sources of water exist. Vegetation flourishes in these restricted areas and date palms, affording a grateful shade, thrive. Of late strange sights to the natives have been seen along some of these caravan routes. Modernism has invaded them. Daring tourists have run their automobiles, to the consternation of the Arabs, into the oases which never before witnessed other means of locomotion except that furnished by the camels. A strange contrast indeed it must be to see the motor car of civilization whirling along routes where for centuries the four-legged "ship of the desert" stood without a comper. But so it is. Civilization is forcing its way into every nook of the world. But
...
while it may thus lend a picturesque aspect to desert locomotion, it will never change the essentials of the great waste, whose shifting sands are forever in motion like the billows of the troubled sea.
Odd Habits of Pheasants
There is some curiosity as to how many English pheasants will be raised in Kansas this year. The average number of birds raised by each pair of parent birds is sixty. With 2,000 in the State this would mean about 7,000,000 birds in two years. The woods and fields would be overrun with them at this rate. However, there are many foes of the birds and they are killed every year in great numbers. The sleet storms are particularly hard on them, as the water freezes on their long plumage and they are unable either to fly or run fast. When in this condition they are easy prey to dogs and wolves. One of the queerest habits the birds have is to migrate in the late winter thirty-five miles. It is claimed that the birds always migrate exactly thirty-five miles and always to the south. The
ZATIONS IN THE DESERT.
young never stay where they were hatched, but make this move as soon as they are large enough. Naturalists have never been able to explain this. The only theory advanced is that the birds know if they stay where they were hatched the country would soon be overstocked with them.—Kansas City Journal.
Chote Wines, Liquors and Cigars, Family garden in connection. Transient rooms, Union bar, Wm. Beil, Prop. Phone Main 2298, Cor. 223 and Thurman Sts., Portland, Oregon.
Choice Wines, Liquors and Cigars
Cor. Seventeenth and Northrup Sts.
Portland, Oregon
ELDERBRAU GROTTO
ERICKSON & BEKG, Props.
Fine Wines, Liquors and Cigars
54 Sixth Street
MAIN 4402 PORTLAND, ORE.
Fine Wines & Liquors
Cor. 23d and Washington
PORTLAND, OR.
SERING & HILL
Fine Wines & Liquors
Family Trade a Specialty
340 Williams Ave. Portland, Ore.
Phone Pacific 2369 Work Done On Short Notice
The Never Regret
Cleaning and Pressing Parlor
Cleaning, Pressing, Dyeing and Repairing.
Steam and French Dry Cleaning a Specialty.
Suits Pressed While You Wait.
132 N. Sixth Street, PORTLAND, OREGON
C. H. COBB
Estimates Given on All Classes of
Plumbing and Heating Work
Phone East 2327 Residence East 2040
247 Holiday Ave. PORTLAND, ORE
M. J. Gardner. Phone Main 1900 M. Gardner
GARDNER BROS.
Manufacturers of the
Silk Tie Cigars
UNION MADE
209½ Madison Street PORTLAND, OREGON
WEEKS GRANITE CO.
For First Class Work and
LOWEST PRICES
in Portland
Cor. Fourth and Columbia Streets
One Block South of City Hall
DRUGS, STATIONERY
IMPORTED & DOMESTIC
• PERFUMES
Prescriptions, Family Recipes. Phone
your orders East 5169.
W. C. CHURCH, Pharmacist
677 Williams Ave., Cor. Fargo
ESTABLISHED 1885
Multnomah Trunk & Bag
COMPANY
Manufacturers of
SUIT CASES
STRAPS
TRUNKS
TELESCOPES
BAGS
Mail Orders Promptly Attended To
Telephone East 24
121-131 E. Water St. PORTLAND, ORE
AMBLER & WATTERS
The Real Estate Brokers
Corvallis, Oregon
Fine Farms, Stock Ranches and City Property for Sale or Rent
Independent Phone 225. Send for List
DRINK
Crystal High-Class
Carbonated Beverages
CRYSTAL BOTTLING CO.
Telephone Main 7178
Ginger Ale in Syphons a Specialty
Family Trade Supplied.
249 Madison St. Portland, Oregon
THE AVENUE CLUB
AND
The Avenue Oyster House
P. F. HALL, Prop.
Fresh Oysters open daily. Pints, quarts, gallons. Delivered any place.
The Best of Wines, Liquors and Cigars
The best of Meats, Fish, Oysters and Game.
Open Day and Night
563 Williams Avenue 564 Williams Avenue
Phone East 4619
PORTLAND OREGON
Phone Main 6133 409-011 Alder Street
PORTLAND OREGON
Rupert's Pharmacy
PHONE MAIN 6421
Everything New, Fresh and Up-
To-Date. We solct your trade.
Purity pre-eminent. Pure Drugs
an important matter. Prescriptions
precisely prepared. We never sub-
stitute. Perfumes of the highest
character. We want your confidence
460 Jefferson St.
Corner Thirteenth St.
Opp. Bullivant's Grocery
Portland, Or.
WESTERN SODA WORKS
JUCHEMICH & CRAMER, Props.
Manufacturers of Carbonated Beverages, Svrups, Extract, Mineral Water and Champagne Cider. Sole distributors of Sedaville Mineral Water.
Phone Pacific 1793.
Office and Factory, 204 Mill Street
PORTLAND, OREGON
OUR BRAND
Horse Collars
Farmers, Teamsters and Horsemen, look to your interest. When in need of Horse Collars, buy the best — the SHARKEY COLLAR It has stood the test of wear and tear and climate for twenty years. Ask your dealer for them and insist on having the "Sharkey." P. SHARKEY & SON Portland, Oregon
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.
184-166 FIRST
All the Credit You Want
The SAVINGS BANK of the
Title Guarantee & Trust Company
PAYS 4 Per Cent Yearly Interest On Savings Accounts
Interest Compounded Semi-Annually We Also Pay 4 Per Cent Interest on Certificates of Deposit And 3 Per Cent on Daily Balances of Check Accounts
Save a Dollar Today and It Will Work for You Tomorrow
A Bank Account is the first step toward happiness, prosperity and comfort
Banking Hours, 9 a. m. to 4 p. m.; Saturdays, 9 a. m. to 1 p. m.; Saturday evenings, 5. p. m. to 8 p. m.
DIRECTORS — Wm. M. Ladd, J. Thorburn Ross, T. T. Burkhart, Frank M. Warren, George H. Hill.
OFFICERS—J. Thorburn Ross, President; George H. Hill, Vice President; T. T. Burkhart, Treasurer; John E. Aitchison, Secretary.
240 Washington Street
Corner Second
PORTLAND OREGON
---
CONTAGIOUS BLOOD POISON NO LIMIT TO ITS POWERS FOR EVIL
Contagious Blood Poison has brought more suffering, misery and humiliation into the world than all other diseases combined; there is hardly any limit to its powers for evil. It is the blackest and vilest of all disorders, wrecking the lives of those unfortunate enough to contract it and often being transmitted to innocent offspring, a blighting legacy of suffering and shame. So highly contagious is the trouble that innocent persons may contract it by using the same table ware, toilet articles or clothing of one in whose blood the treacherous virus has taken root. Not only is it a powerful poison but a very deceptive one. Only those who have learned by bitter experience know by the littl` sore or ulcer, which usually makes its appearance first, of the suffering which is to follow. It comes in the form of ulcerated mouth and throat, unsightly copper colored spots, swollen glands in the groin, falling hair, offensive sores and ulcers on the body, and in severe cases the finger nails drop off, the bones become diseased, the nervous system is shattered and the sufferer becomes an object of pity to his fellow man. Especially is the treacherous nature of Contagious Blood Poison, shown when the infected person endeavors to combat the poison with mercury and potash. These minerals will drive away all outward symptoms of the troubles for a while, and the victim is deceived into the belief that he is cured. When, however, the treatment is left off he finds that the poison has only been driven deeper into the blood and the disease reappears, and usually in worse form because these strong minerals have not only failed to remove the virus from the blood but have weakened the entire system because of their destructive action. S. S. S. is she only real and certain cure for Contagious Blood Poison. It is made of a combination of healing blood-purifying roots, herbs and barks, the best in Nature's great laboratory of forest and field. We offer a reward of $1,000 for proof that S. S. S. contains a particle of mineral
Write for our special book on Contagious Blood Poison, which fully explains the different stages of the trouble, and outlines a complete home treatment for all sufferers of this trouble. No charge is made for this book, and if you wish special medical advice about case or any of its symptoms, our physicians will be glad to furnish that, too, without harge.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA.
PE-RU-NA
FOR
CATARRH
OF THE
HEAD
THROAT,
LUNGS,
STOMACH
KIDNEYS
BLADDER
AND
FEMALE ORGANS.
W. A. Mitchell, dealer in general merchandise, Martin, Ga., writes: "My wife lost in weight from 130 to 80 pounds. We saw she could not live long. She was a skeleton, so we consulted an old physician. He told her to try Peruna. "She gradually commenced improving and getting a little strength. She now weighs 106 pounds. She is gaining every day, and does her own housework and cooking."
Dubious.
Stippler—Did Miss Kutts admire your paintings? Dobber — I don't know. Stippler—What did she say about them? Dobber—That she could feel that I put a great deal of myself into my work. Stippler — Well, that's praise. Dobber—Is it? The picture I showed her was "Calves in a Meadow."
FADED TO A SHADOW.
Worn Down by Five Years of Suffering from Kidney Complaint.
Mrs. Remethe Myers, of 180 South Tenth St., Ironton, O., says: "I have worked hard in my time and have been exposed again and again to changes of weather. It is no wonder my kidneys gave out and I went all to pieces at last. For five years I was fading
worked hard in my time and have been exposed again and again to changes of weather. It is no wonder my kidneys gave out and I went all to pieces at last. For five years I was fading away and finally so weak that for six months I could not get out of the house. I was nervous, restless and sleepless at night, and lame and sore in the morning. Sometimes every thing would whirl and blur before me. I bloated so badly I could not wear tight clothing, and had to put on shoes two sizes larger than usual. The urine was dislcered and passages were dreadfully frequent. I got help from the first box of Doan's Kidney Pills, however, and by the time I had taken four boxes the pain and bloating was gone. I have been in good health ever since."
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box
Foster-Milburn C., Buffalo, N. Y.
CONTAGIOUS NO LIMIT TO ITS BROTHER
Contagious Blood Poison has brought into the world than all other limit to its powers for evil. It is the wrecking of the lives of those unfortunate transmitted to innocent offspring, a bible. So highly contagious is the trouble by using the same table ware, toilet blood the treacherous virus has taken but a very deceptive one. Only those know by the littl' sore or ulcer, which the suffering which is to follow. It and throat, unsightly copper colored falling hair, offensive sores and ulcer finger nails drop off, the bones beomered and the sufferer becomes an objectly is the treacherous nature of Connely infected person endeavors to combat. These minerals will drive away all of a while, and the victim is deceived in however the treatment is left off he deeper into the blood and the disease because these strong minerals have rised the blood but have weakened the enaction. S. S. S. is she only real and son. It is made of a combination of and barks, the best in Nature's gro offer a reward of $1,000 for proof that
S.S.S.
PURELY VEGETABLE
Write for our special book on Compains the different stages of the treatment for all sufferers of this trouble, if you wish special medical advice of physicians will be glad to furnish
THE SWIN
The Hub-code
Here are the teachers the Huguenots by Chicago public school pupils:
"The Hugenots are people in France that are followers of, Victor Hugo. Their leader is a man named Jean Valjean that was a thief, but got converted and turned out well. The Hugenots are very good people. A lady named Evangeline wrote a long poem about them, but it don't rhyme."
"The Hugenots is the name of a big thing like a steam roller that the mogul used in India to run over people. It squashed them to death and was very terrible. It had eyes painted on it like a dragon and snorted steam when it was running. They are no hugenots enny more."
Finexse.
"Senator, everybody is commending that speech you made the other day on the subject of the trusts."
"I think myself it was a pretty fair effort."
"Unfortunately, I didn't hear it. What position did you take?"
"Bless you, I didn't take any. I managed, however, to assure each party to the controversy that its position was the only correct and logical one."
Time to Run.
Gunner—There was a bad, bold burglar up in the girls' college the other day.
Guyer—You don't say. And did the girls yell?
Gunner—I should say so. They gave the college yell and the burglar hasn't stopped running yet.
But the Other Side Objected.
Attorney (for the defense)—Do you know anything about the merits of this case?
Venireman—I should say not. It hasn't any merits.
Attorney—We'll take this man, your honor.
No Diagram with This.
"Smythe, you called on that Boston girl, did you? Was she at home?"
"Yes, she was at home, but you see—"
"Yes?"
"She was at home, but you see——"
"Well?"
"She was at home, but you see——"
"Go on."
"As I said, she was at home, but you see——"
"Yes, yes; she was at home, but I see——"
"Well, that's the answer."
EITS
St. Vitus' Dance and all Nervous Diseases permanently cured by the Great Great Disease. See the FUNE $23 trial battle and treaties, Dr. R. H. Killen, LL, 891 Arch St., Phila, Pa.
Same Old Feeling.
Gladys—I feel sure he has never loved before. Pencelo—Oh, I felt the same way, dear, when he used to make love to me!—New York Press.
There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many cars doctor pronounced that catarrh was the most serious, and by eventually failing to care with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proved catarrh to be a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheeney & Co., is available on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucus surfaces of the system, offering one offer for curatives for the system it takes. Send for curatives and testimonials.
Address: F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O
Sold by Drugues, 70c
Ancient Instance.
Moses was numbering the children of Israel.
"What are you doing that for?" somebody asked him.
"They wouldn't stand for a-referendum," explained Moses, "and I had to turn it into a census."
Not even his worst enemies, however, accused Moses of doing it for political purposes.
Cynical.
"Permit me to ask you, madam," said the lawyer, who was a friend of the family, "your real reason for wanting a divorce from your husband."
"He isn't the man I thought I was marrying," explained the fair caller.
"My dear madam," rejoined the lawyer, "the application of that principle would break up every home in the country."
S BLOOD POISON
S POWERS FOR EVIL
brought more suffering, misery and humila-
ter diseases combined; there is hardly any
is the blackest and vilest of all disorders,
tunate enough to contract it and often be-
tained to a blighting legacy of suffering and shame.
able that innocent persons may contract it
toilet articles or clothing of one in whose
kaken root. Not only is it a powerful poison
those who have learned by bitter experience
which usually makes its appearance first, of
It comes in the form of ulcerated mouth
blored spots, swollen glands in the groin,
ulcers on the body, and in severe cases the
come diseased, the nervous system is shat-
object of pity to his fellow man. Especi-
Contagious Blood Poison, shown when the
bat the poison with mercury and potash.
all outward symptoms of the troubles for
dried up the belief that he is cured. When,
the finds that the poison has only been driven
sease reappears, and usually in worse form
not only failed to remove the virus from
the entire system because of their destructive
and certain cure for Contagious Blood Poison of healing blood-purifying roots, herbs
is great laboratory of forest and field. We
that S. S. contains a particle of mineral
in any form. S. S. S. goes down to the very bottom of the trouble and by cleansing the blood of every particle of the virus and adding rich, healthful qualities to this vital fluid, forever cures this powerful disorder. So thoroughly does S. S. S. cleanse the circulation that no signs of the disease are ever seen again, and offspring is protected. Contagious Blood Poison, which fully extrouble, and outlines a complete home treatable. No charge is made for this book, and vice about case or any of its symptoms, our nish that, too, without harge. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA.
PORTLAND NEW AGE
A CUP OF TEA.
Hospitality So Long Practiced Had Become a Habit.
"It isn't what one does with, it's the spirit in which one does," Miss Thirza Tackley was wont to say as she presided over her squatty silver teapot in the old Tackley homestead, "That, at least, is what I have been taught, and as long as my friends feel the same, I have no regrets. There is little left of the family fortune, but only I am left of the family."
There was, indeed, so little left that Miss Thirza's economies were of the closest and her hospitality limited to her teapot. Yet even before the day of the gale people felt that she maintained worthily the traditions of the hospitable Tackleys.
A mighty elm blew down that day, and in its fall wrecked the Tackley homestead, and left only the kitchen ell unharmed. As the news spread, the townfolk flocked to the scene to view the disaster and console with Miss Thirza, whom they expected to find overwhelmed with grief.
She was not. They found her in in the kitchen, the door set invitingly wide open, her best tea-service displayed, and the kettle singing cheerily on the fire. Every visitor was received and thanked for his sympathy, directed how best to see the ruins, told the story of the downfall, and refreshed before departing with a cup of perfect tea. Nor did Miss Thirza forget who took cream and who lemon, or how many lumps of sugar went to whose cup. She succeeded in transforming the occasion of her own irreparable misfortune into a friendly tea-party for all the neighbors.
A few silly young people found it funny; but the first whisper of ridicule was sternly suppressed.
"Funny! It's fine!" declared old Judge Creaton. "Miss Thirza is the best, as she is the last, of all the Tackleys. She'll find herself the heroine of the town to-morrow, you'll see."
He was right; but Miss Thirza never understood.
"It was quite natural," she protested, in gentle bewilderment. "I only gave my friends a cup of tea."
That was all. But there are some women so deeply hospitable that they have, as Sydney Smith expressed it, a teapot in their soul.—Youth's Companion.
MEMORIES OF THE FARM.
T. M. BROWN
There is another farm job that is shown in the picture, and that has sent a few millions of boys from the farms to overcrowd the cities and work in stores at $10 per. If I was going to make the bad place worse, I'd put all the slinners up against a wood pile, and let them chop dry beech, elm and chestnut chunks in stovewood. Knots! Why the cussedness of all creation is bound up in the material that is set before some of these farm lads. Words fail me as the memories of those unhappy days come to the surface.—Bushnell, in Cinchnati Post.
Stage Readiness.
The London Echo gives the following anecdote from a foreign contemporary: Gobert, the French actor, whose specialty was the impersonation of Napoleon I., was troubled with an infirmity of memory, in consequence of which all letters handed to him to be read on the stage had really to contain the words he was to deliver. In some military piece or other the Emperor had to receive a letter from his adjutant and read it aloud to his assembled officers. A certain Gautier, the wag of the theater, acted the adjutant, and one evening, instead of giving Gobert the written letter, he handed him a blank sheet of paper. The actor took it, and, perceiving the trick that had been played him, returned the missive to Gautier, saying with perfect gravity: "Read it yourself, General." Gautier, who did not know a word of the part and was too much taken aback to extemporize, could not extricate himself from the position before the audience had discovered his discomfiture. Gobert's readiness was, indeed, almost as remarkable as that of a less celebrated actor, whose forte was the part of Richard III. At the approach of one of his best points, a hostile clique induced the supers to accost the tragédian with: "My lord, we've taken Buckingham and cut his head off." "Tis well," replied he; "had it not been so, I should have said 'Off with his head; so much for Buckingham.'" thus getting in his great effect after all.
Didn't Favor the Cut.
"You can get shaved at the Eclipse tonsorial parlor to-day for 10 cents." "I'd be afraid to accept the barber's cut rates."—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Many a woman marries without improving her condition; but every woman who marries, thinks she is doing better than she has been doing at home.
How He Knew.
A witness was being examined as to the sanity of one of the inmates of the asylum. "You hold that this inmate is insane, do you?" a lawyer asked. "I do," was the firm response. "Why are you so sure?" "The man," the witness said, "goes about asserting that he is Santa Claus." "And," said the lawyer, "you hold, do you, that when a man goes about asserting that he is Santa Claus it's a clear proof of his insanity?" "I do," "Why?" "Because," said the witness, in a loud, indignant voice, "I happen to be Santa Claus myself."
Limits.
The train was called the limited, but what was limited about it? It ran at an unlimited speed, the inclivity of the conductor and the brakemen was unlimited, as was the rapacity of the porter.
"It's a mystery!" exclaimed the little party of foreigners.
But in a moment they entered the drawing room car and their wonder vanished.
"Of course, it's the good taste of the decorations!" they whispered, and, remembering their manners, pretended not to notice.—Puck.
PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS.
PAZO OINTMENT is guaranteed to cure any case of iching, bleeding or protruding piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50u.
Unappreciative
Mrs. Homer (reading)—An ordinary piano contains about a mile of wire.
Homer—Huh! The one next door sounds like it contained a wagon load of tinware.
Mothers will find Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup the best remedy to use for their children during the teething period.
Rubbing It In.
Miss Redepp—You are better, are you not, Mr. Feathertop. You were not looking at all well the last time I saw you. Mr. Feathertop—Why, when did you see me last? Miss Redepp—At the Swellham reception. You were waltzing, I think, with Miss Flutterby.
Shake Into Your Shoes
Allen's Foot-Ease. A powder. It makes tights or new shoes less sore. It also provides a cure for foot burns and a hot cure for blisters. Sold by Allen Draftsglugs. Price 25c. Triack pack. LeRoy, New York. Address Allen S. Olmsted, leRoy, New York.
The Humorist.
Mr. Depew threw aside the paper in which he had just read that as a Senator he was a joke.
"In that case," he said with decision, "I will not resign. I wouldn't spoil a joke for anybody."—Philadelphia Ledger.
Worth Knowing About
If you need a first- class laxative, there is nothing better nor safer than that old family remedy, Brandreth's ill. Each pill contain is one grain of solid extract of saraparilla, with other valuable products, make it a blood purifier of excellent character. If you are troubled with cystication, one pill at night will afford great relief. Brandreth's pills are the same fine laxative tonic pill your grandpa nests used. They have been in use for over a century and are sold in every drug and medicine store, either pl in or sugar coated.
A Memento.
A gentleman was calling upon the widow of a valued friend, says Le Figaro. During the visit he said:
"I was a good friend of your late husband. Is there not perhaps something which was his and which I could have as a memento of him?"
Tearful widow: "How would I do?"
Only One "BROMO QUININE"
That is LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine. Simi-
larly named remedies sometimes deceive
The first and original Cold Tablet is a WHITE
tincture, astringent, and healing, and
bears the signature of E. W. GROVE, 22.
Out in the Cold.
"Old Fullerplunks, who died a month or two ago, didn't leave you anything, hey? I thought he was a near relative of yours."
"Near? He was closer than the shrunk-en jacket on a sixteen-inch gun!"
Mica Axle Grease
Best lubricant for axles in the world—long wearing and very adhesive.
Makes a heavy load draw like a light one. Saves half the wear on wagon and team, and increases the earning capacity of your outfit.
Ask your dealer for Mica Axle Grease.
Grease.
STANDARD
OIL CO.
Incorporated
MIGA
LE GREASE
There is no satisfaction keener than being dry and comfortable when out in the hardest storm.
YOU ARE SURE OF THIS IF YOU WEAD TOWER'S FISH BRAND WATERPROOF OILED CLOTHING BLACK OR YELLOW ON SALE EVERWHERE.
A.J. TOWER CO. BOSTON, MASS. U.S.A.
TOWER CANADIAN CO. LIMITED, TORONTO, CAN.
The Finest Gardens
Are always reported when Portland Seed Co.'s "Diamond Brand" Seeds are planted. Why? Because we sell you the kinds that grow best on this Coast. Our handsomely illustrated and descriptive Annual tells all about our Seeds, Plants, Roses, Spray Pumps, Fertilizers, Incubators, Brooders, Poultry and Bee Supplies.
Ask for Book No. 260. We also have a special catalog of Trees, Shrubs, Inc. Book No. 261 free on request.
PORTLAND SEED CO.
Portland, Oregon
Spokane, Wash.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
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 give perfect color to any dealer, or we will send post paid at 10c a package. Write for free booklet how to dye.
MONODE DRUG
MONODE DRUG
Limits.
A Memento.
Does Your Heart Beat
Yes. 100,000 times each day. Does it send out good blood or bad blood? You know, for good blood is good health; bad blood, bad health. And you know precisely what to take for bad blood—Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Doctors have endorsed it for 60 years.
One frequent cause of bad blood is a singletight liver. The substances are then absorbed into the blood, instead of being removed from the body daily as nature intended. Keep the bowels open with Ayer's Pills liver pills. All vegetable.
Made by J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass. Also manufacturers of Ayer's HAIR VIGOR. AGUE CURSE. CHERRY PECTORAL.
FRUIT TREES, VINES, PLANTS
BERKSHIRE SWINE, (Registered)
SHORTHORN CATTLE, (Registered)
BARRED AND WHITE ROCKS
PACIFIC NURSERY CO
WISE DENTISTS
MAIN 2029
FAILING BLDG
11TH & WASH-
PORTLAND, ORE.
PAINLESS
EXTRACTION
50 &
PLATES$5
AUSTIN WELL DRILLS
Made in all styles and all sizes. Get water and oil
anywhere in Art Drilling Tools made. Get cala-
logs and prices.
BEAUL & CO.
321 Hawthorne Ave. Portland, Ore.
Hicks—Miss Flatty sang with much feeling at the concert last night."
Wicks—Ah?
Hicks—Yes. She most of the time feeling for the right note.—Somerville Journal.
CAST
The Kind You Have Always a
ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, a
personal supervision for ove
to deceive you in this. C
"Just-as-good" are but Expe
health of Children—Experi
What is Castoria?
Castoria is a harmless sub-
goric, Drops and Soothing,
contains neither Opium, M
substance. Its age is its gue
and allays Feverishness. It
Colic. It relieves Teething
and Flatulency. It assimilis
Stomach and Bowels, giving
The Children's Panacea—Th
The Kind You Have
Bears the
CASTORIA
The Kind You Have Always Bought has borne the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his personal supervision for over 30 years. Allow no one to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-good" are but Experiments, and endanger the health of Children-Experience against Experiment.
What is CASTORIA
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paragoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea-The Mother's Friend.
Chas H. Fletcher
In Use For Over 30 Years.
THE CENTAUR COMPANY, 77 MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY.
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3.00 AND $3.50 SHOES BEST IN THE WORLD
W. L. DOUGLAS $4.00 GIIT EDGE SHOES CANNOT BE EQUALLED AT ANY PRICE.
SHOES FOR EVERYBODY AT ALL PRICES:
W. L. DOUGLAS $5 to $1.50. Boys' Shoes $ to $1.25. Women's
Shoes $ to $1.25. W. L. Douglas shoes are recognized by expert judges of footwear
to be the best in style, fit and wear produced in this country. Each
part of the shoe and every detail of the making is looked after
and watched over by skilled shoemakers, without regard to
time or cost. If I could take you into my large factories at
Brookton, Mass., and show you how carefully W. L. Douglas
shoes are made, you would then understand why they hold their
wear longer, and are of greater value than any other makes.
W. L. Douglas name and price is stamped on the bottom, which protects the wearer.
Shoes, $4 to $1.50. Misses' & Children's Shoes, $2.25 to $1.00. W. L. Douglas shoes are recognized by expert judges of footwear to be the best in style, fit and wear produced in this country. Each part of the shoe and every detail of the making is looked after by skilled shoesman. You will receive a pair of shoes at time or cost. If I could take you into my large fancy shoes 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 makes. W. L. Douglas name and price is stamped on the bottom, which protects the wearer against high temperatures. Fast Color Eyeglasses are exclusively. Catalog mailed free. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton MA.
The Finest Gardens
Are always reported when Portland Seed Co.'s "Diamond Brand" Seeds are planted. Why? Because we sell you the kinds that grow best on this Coast. Our handsomely illustrated and descriptive Annual tells all about our Seeds, Plants, Roses, Spray Pumps, Fertilizers, Incubators, Brooders, Poultry and Bee Supplies.
Ask for Book No. 260 We also have a special catalog of Trees, Shrubs, Eccl. Book No. 261 free on request.
PORTLAND SEED CO.
Portland, Oregon
Spokane, Wash.
PAINLESS DENTISTRY
See Us Before You Go Elsewhere
EXAMINATIONS FREE
Gold Crown, $8; Bridge Work, per
tooth, $8; SIlver Filling, $
60; Dale Filling, $
YALE DENTISTS
167% First Street PORTLAND, OREGON
ENGRAVING Write Us
PLATES
FOR PRINTING
HICKS-CHATTEN
Portland Oregon
20
MULE-TEAM BORAX
With 32-page illustrated Maclet, sparing 1,000 uses for Borax in the Home, Farm and Dairy, and a Souvenir Picture, 7x14 in., 10 colors free for 5c and your dealer's name. Address Pacific Coast Borax Co., Oakland, Cal.
Ferry Seeds are an excellent experiment, but with proper cultivation, they assure success from the start. Users have no doubts at planting, nor disappointments at harvest. Get FERRY'S SEEDS
for biggest, surest, best crops--at all dealers. Famous for over 50 years, 1007 Seed Annual free on request.
D. M. FERRY & CO., Detroit, Mich.
This wonderful Chinese Doctor is called great man and always without operation that are, gven up in those wonderful Chinese herbs, root and vegetable that are entirely unknown to medical practitioners through the use of these harmless remedies. This famous doctor knows the action of overcoming difficulties, which in the case of a different disease guarantees to cure catarrh, asthma, lunc, throat infection, etc. has hundreds of testimonials. Charges moderate. Call and see him. Patients out of the city write for blank and circular. Send stamp, CONTACT FORM FREE. Address
The C. Gee Wo Chinese Medicine Co.
1621¹ First S., S. E. Corr. Morrison
Mention paper
Portland, Oregon
WHEN writing to advertisers please mention this paper.
ORIA
Bought has borne the signa-
and has been made under his
over 30 years. Allow no one
counterfeits, Imitations and
experiments, and endanger the
force against Experiment.
ASTORIA
Institute for Castor Oil, Pare-
syrups. It is Pleasant. It
arphine nor other Narcotic
granace. It destroys Worms
cures Diarrhoea and Wind
Cronbles, cures Constipation
the Food, regulates the
healthy and natural sleep.
Mother's Friend.
Live Always Bought
Signature of
Flitcher.
bottom, which protects the wearer against high
te. Sold by the best shop dealers everywhere.
w. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Maa
The Finest Gardens
Portland Seed Co.'s "Diamond Brand"
Because we sell you the kinds that grow
handsomely illustrated and descriptive
or Seeds, Plants, Roses, Spray Pumps,
Brooders, Poultry and Bee Supplies.
260 We also have a special catalog
Stc. Book No. 261 free on request.
ND SEED CO.
Spokane, Wash.
No.12-07
r shape, fit better