Portland new age. (Portland, Or.) 1905-1907, July 21, 1906, Image 7

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THE NEW AGE, PORTLAND, OREGON
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LEADING HOTELS U LEADING HOTELS !
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HOTEL
OMTT $1,999,909.
The Portland
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OOMMOtOIAl ntAVBLEKS.
PortlmnmJ, Ormmoiu
Telephone 90-11
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The Grand Pacific Hotel
CHAB. A. HCUHAOE, 1'roprlotor.
Handsomely Appointed and First
Class In Every Particular.
Corner Railroad St. and Hlggiit Ave.
MISSOULA, MONT.
The Grandon
The only first-Class
American Plan Ho
tel in Helena.
Rates from $3 to $5
BOLLINGER
HOTEL
European Plan
Lewi at on Idaho
Bast Hotal in
Northern Idaho
The Victoria Hotel
SPOKANE, WASH.
First-Class in All Its Depart
iTients. Headquarters for
Tourists and Commercial
Travelers
When in Spokane Don't Fail
to Stop at the Victoria
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THE VICTORIA HOTEL
PORTLAND.
Beet furnished house in Southern Oregon
New Depot Hotel
A. H. PRAOIIT, Proprietor.
All Trains stop 30 Minutes
For Meals,
ASHLAND, OREQON
The New Bannock Hotel
NOHMAN & AIIM8TK0N0, Prop,.
Headquarters for Commercial Men
American Plan. Rooms with Ruth,
Hot and Cold Running Water and
Telephone in Each Room.
RATES $2.00 to $4.00 PER DAY
Rocutttllo
Idaho
The Spalding
Leading Hotel of the
LAKE SUPERIOR REGION
Enlarged and Improved
American Plan, t2.fi0aml Up
European Plun f 1.00 and Up
Finest Cafe In Northwest
DULUTH, MINN
HOTEL WHITMAN
UNDEK NEW MANAGEMENT
A Home for the Traveling Men
Strictly first Class.
American Plan
Electric lighted. Steam heated. Good
Sample Booms in Connection,
J. C MOWN, Maaacar.
COLTAX. WASHINGTON
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From Algiers tho tourist nails for
Palermo, with Its beautiful gulf, "Tho
Roldon Shell," encircled by lofty moun
tains. Tho city lies In it blossoming
plnln, was fought for, llko all Sicilian
cltlcM, by Greeks, Carthaginians, Ho
mans, Saracens and Normans, and, nl
though Btlll fairy-like of environment,
retains few traces of Its origin. When
tho last of tho winter snows has melted
away, tho orango and Judas trees
bloom marvclously, and every land
breezo brings tho city a sprlngtlmo
freight of tho rarest fragrance. Nature
offers man an Eden here, but he, poor
mortal that bo Is, hungers and thirsts
pitifully, starving physically In thin
paradtio of beauty.
Poverty Is general In Palermo, yet It
has Us treasured sights the university,
the public libraries, tho many famous
churches, clubs and palaces, and courts
of justice. In, some of these edl flees
are mosaics which are like old tapes
tries, silken In appearance, but more
enduring than tapestry handiwork
being made of cubes of agate, of Jasper,
lapis laxull, and other rare and brill
iant stones.
The people are given to many church
feast days, but the poorer workers are
gulte Industrious. The cobblers work
necessarily to make the money where
with to buy their dally macaroni, The
tailors with, extraordinary skill patch
old clothes, which look at the begin
lag as If they never.-renld be worn
again. .The sellers of poultry carry
their wares tied together by tho leg,
nd hung suspended from their necks.
Tho hucksters sell cauliflowers pink,
purple, green or yellow. The fountains
are the centers for gossiping woman
and Idlo maids. Families often have
their luncheons In open doorways.
They sit on tho earthen floor with tho
hallow platter of charcoal, whereon
their meal Is heated, placed between
them. There Is a certain friendliness
about tho Mutiny city, notwithstanding
Its poverty. Tho (lowers thnt grow
charm Irresistibly, and tho human em
inent seems only Incidental.
Naples never looks more beautiful
tliatiMvhcn the morning sun reveals tho
;lty In a negligee of rainbow colors,
with Oaprl and Sorrento 'n night, and
Mount Vesuvius, dlstlngutahed-looklng
In the tall, white plume It wears.
The Museum of Naplei ' a treasure
house of artistic and archawloglcal
gems, its mosaics and frescoes are
famous, and Its pictures Include
"Scenes from the Story of Hercules,"
"Achillea Delivering Hrlsr In to the Her
aids of Agamemnon," and other classi
cal subject. Here, too, Is found the
celebrated Farnese Hercules, and a
cabinet of medals and tlw small bronzes
Equipped with nothing hut their skill
nnd endurance, u few ponies, a gun or
two, and provision enough to last them
for tho day, tho early mountaineers
of tho West hot out to make their way
through n vast wilderness that hold all
the terrors of tho unknown. William
T. Hamilton, a type of these self-reliant
men, spent his whole life on tho plains,
and In "Sixty Years on tho Plains" ho
tells, among other things, of tho foods
In use by the Cheyennes, with whom
the plainsmen often camo In contact.
Tho Cheyenne were nnd aro to-day
a proud and brave people. Meat Is
their principal food, ulthough berried
of different kinds arc collected In seu
son, as well hs various roots. Tho
kettle Is ou the tripod night and day.
Most tribes of plain Indians dry
their meat by cutting It Into thin flakes
and spreading It ou racks and poles In
the suu. Pcinmlcun Is manufactured In
tho following manner:
Tho choicest cuts of meat nro select
ed and cut Into flakes and dried. Then
all tho marrow Is collected ami the
best of tho tallow, and both tallow uud
marrow are dissolved together over a
slow Are. Many tribes use berries In
their pemmlcau. Mountaineers always
do unless they bare sugar.
The meat Is now pulverized to the
consistency of mlnce-meat, tho squaw
gcuerally doing this on a flat rock,
using a pestle. A layer of meat Is
spread, about two Inches thick, the
squaws using a wooden dipper, a buf
falo horn or a claw for this work, On
this meat Is spread a certain amount
of the melted marrow aud tallow, the
proportion depending on the taste.
This same process Is repeated until the
desired amount la secured. One pound
of pemmlcan Is equal In nourishment
to five pounds of fresh meat
Another Important article of food,
the equal of which Is not to bo bad
except from the buffalo, Is "depuyer,"
depouille. It Is a fat substance that
Ilea along the backbone next to the
bide, running from tho shoulder-blade
to the last rib, and about as thick as
one's hand or finger. It will weigh
from five ta eleven pounds, according
to the size or condition of the animal.
It will keep Indefinitely, and Is used
as a substitute for bread, hut Is su
perior to any bread that was ever
eaten.
When going on the warpath the In
dians would take some dried meat and
some "depuyer" to live on, and nothing
else, not even If they were to be gone
for months.
Women Invariably apeak of an un
tarried minister as talented
PEMMICAN AND "DEPUYO.")
unearthed In Pompeii. It is an Inter
esting cxperlenco to vlow tho Neapoli
tans under tho stress of excitement,
such as is witnessed when nr. eruption
of Vesuvius Is apprehended.
All night tho streets aro thronged
with people who wntcli ,vlth supersti
tious nwe the column of tiro that rises
fully 1,000 feet In height nnd the great
masses of molten lava that leap up In
the air anil fall heavily to earth again,
carrying destruction with them. The
fact which excites tho peoplo most,
however, Is that tho mountain Is
"sweating fire" to uso an expression
of on Italian scientist that Is, opening
up now craters which discharge burn
ing streams of lava that surround and
ruin neighboring villages on the moun
tain's slope.
They realize the appropriateness of
Goethe s words, "Vesuvius Is peak of
he'll rising out of paradise.? For all
of the volcano's lower slopes are fertile
vineyards, where Is grown thnt famous
wine of ashes, the Lncrlma Obrlstl. And
Just above are hardened lavs streams,
contorted like Itxards and crocodiles In
agony.
From Naples, by a brief dr've, Pom
pell, otty of the dead, Is reached. Bo
deeply was this place covered by Vesu
vius, that during the mtddlo ages the
site became a historic mysttry. It la
a sombre, lonely spot. The various
houses shown to tourists have been
given .riawies in accordance with the
treasures discovered In them when they
were disentombed.
There is the "House of tne Wounded
Adonis," "the House of the labyrinth"
so called because a moslac of Theseus
and the Minotaur was f"und In It;
there nro tho "Homo of the Little
Fountain," "Tho House of the Faun,"
"Tho Houe of the Tragic Poet." There
are temple, too, tho theater, upon the
hill, nnd the niinoun forum, never fin
ished, where one can pot the finest
views from Pompeii of the mighty
mountain which ever, iron In compara
tively peaceful mood, flames Its do
flu nee at the sun and btnrs of heaven.
This. 'burled city la the best sourei
from which to learn what the domes
tic life of tho Romans really was. Ori
ginally settled by the Ottlnns, and thor
oughly Imbued with the civilisation of
classic Greece later, In ttt II. O. It fell
Into Roman hands and became so Rom
anized by Its conquerors that by the
time of Its final destruction, lit 03 A. D.,
It had been rebuilt In Roman Hyle, The
final catastrophe, wherein the city was
burled under successive layers of ash
es, red hot pumice, and ashes again,
did not take place until August, 70
A. D,
PLIGHT OP AN INDIAN CHIEF.
A cod Hannibal Forced to dell Tomb
tone of Ilia Ancestor.
Nearly blind aud helpless, Chief Sun
nlhnt of the Alnxku Haldahs arrived in
the city on tho steamer Al-KI, en routo
to Los Angeles, Cal., to securo treat
ment. In order to obtain treatment for
his eyes tho Indian chief has sold tho
tombstones to the graves of his ances
tors, tho house In which ho lived In
Alaska, many curios which he has col
lected from tho members of his tribe, and
will go on exhibition himself at Itedon-
do, the Huntington summer resort, near
Los Angeles
Chief Suunlhat and tho collection of
Indian curios, Including three totem
poles, ono of which Is tho largest ever
sent out of Alaska, aro In charge of
W. L. Bunard and Walter Weymouth.
Tho house, totem jwles and other curios
weigh a total of about 200 tons and
will bo transferred to threo different
boats beforo reaching tho destination.
The largest of tho threo totem polee
Is fifty feet In length aud four feet four
Inches In clrcumferenco at tho butt
Tho house was torn to pieces at Kns
saan, Prluco of Wales Island, nnd
shipped In that manner to be erected
again at Redondo.
At Itedondo Chief Suunlhat will live
In his own house, surrounded by tho
totem poles and the other curios which
form tho collection. He will bo one of
tho features of tho summer reaort and
will remain as long as his eyes are In
need of treatment. He Is about 70
years of ago and has been chief of the
Haldahs since he was 14.
The house of the Indian chief Is the
first bouse to be sold out of Alaaka.
When this house was hullt Chief Bun
nlhat gave a btg pot latch to the mem
bers of his tribe, at which be gave away
about 8,000 blankets.
The big totem pole was shipped In
section on the Al-KI, and Immediately
after tho arrival of the Alaska steamer
In port was transferred to the Umatilla
for San Francisco and will be trans
ferred again on arrival at that port for
southern California. Seattle Post In
telligencer The Wrontt Wjr.
They wero drinking soda In the Gen
tlewoman's Club.
"I wish," said the fat one with gray
hair, "that you could break my daugh
ter Nell of bridge."
The young one In pink smiled faintly.
"I did. break her last night," she said.
New York Press.
None fur liar.
"MIh Flutters sat all the evening
In that thin dress, and I know she was
cold!"
'Yes, but she says when women go
around with little woolen shawls on
their shoulders It's a sign of age,"
Detroit Free Press.
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Cloths Man, Woman, Boy in
Modern Up-to-Dnto Fashionable
Clothing at Popular Prices.
Visit Often the Popular Priced
Store for Men and Women.
Great Falls,
Montana.
E. A.ltKtClIKI, President.
W. F. 8KNOIIU80II, Vice President.
II. W. UKUN WALDT, Bee. A Treai
THE
AMERICAN BREWING
& MALTING COMPANY
Brewers nnd Bottlers of extra
quality lager beer. "American
Family" bottled beer a specialty.
Office: 109 Central Avenue.
P. O. Box 80.
Qreat Falls,
Montana.
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RICHARDS
HOTEL AND RESTAURANT
rtione Exchange 25
360.362 Alder St.
Cor. Park
PORTLAND, ORE.
THI2 OSMOND HOTEL
OHCAK ANDKK80N Manager
listen: Kurorcau I'Un
roe, fc, 11.00, II.M), U00 per dny
Free Dm lo ami (rum all Tralm
Front ami Morrlion Btrceti
1'OHTLAKI) OUK0OH
The Northwest
KPW. O. l'ATTKKKON. Prop.
CHAH. II. HATTl.NdKIt, Mur.
Steam Heat in Every .Room
Private and Public Baths
Electric Light
RATES $2 PER DAY AND UP
Bismarck, N. D.
RIVERSIDE HOTEL
K1LBURY KILBURY, Froptklo.i
EUROPEAN PLAN
New IIouho, 100 Hooiiih. Klegautly
furnished. Firat-CliiHH in nil appoint
muntH. Hot uud cold water in all
roouiH. Steniu Heat. Freo Ilaths.
Klectric I.iulit. Hates Mo to (2 nor
day. Cnfo inenls 25c. A in cur to. I'rto
line.
212-220 Riverside Avenue
SPOKANE, WASH.
The Kenyon
Don Portar
Salt Lake City's
NEW HOTEL
Salt Lake City
Utah
1H.J,J9"4
The Tacoma
W. B. BLACKWELL, Prop.
One of the best hotels
on the Pacific Coast.
American Plan $3.00
per Day and Upwards
TACOMA,
WASH.
HOTEL
PEDICORD
T. J. PEDJCOUI),
J'rojirlBlor
Rates 50c, 75c, $1, $1.50
Raasw tth Private Baths
Both Aawrkaa and European
Privats Tekohoac la Rooms
First-Class Grid
in Connection
209-219 RtveraMe Ave.,
SPOKANE, WASH.
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vvilliolt Springs Mineral Water
r. W. MtlCRAN, Sole Bottler and Proprietor
Cute, Dy.pep.U, Stomach, Liver, Kidney
and Bladder trouble! alto Jaundice,
Gravel, Rheumatism, Nervousness and
Stricture. Wilhoit Mineral Water Salts
it the water in condensed form for trav
eler' use. Water bottled at the springs
with its own gat; no recharging.
Office and Laboratory:
Wilhoit, Clackamas Co., Oregon
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: JAMESTOWN, N. D. !
The Seiler Co.
OSCAR J. SEILER, Attorney-at-Law
President
Paid Up Capital and Surplus $35,000
Collections
Investments
Real Estate
Jamestown, North Dakota
DULUTH MINN. :
HENRY FOLZ
J -ending grocery nnd mar
ket. Wo servo tho traveling
ptrhlic at reasonable priocs.
114 end 110 West Superior
street.
DULUTH,
MINN.
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IDAHO ADVERTISING!
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Tboff. Myth, Tro Lyman Karf o, Vice Vnn
The Blyth & Pargo Co.
T'oratelto, Idaho
General Merchandise
8TOUKB AT
Evanston, Wyo. Pocatetto, Idaho
BANK0FNAMPA,Ltd.
CAPITAL STOCK $50,000.00,
Kilalillihcd im. Dewey I'alace Hotel Illd'a..
PltKI) O. MOCK, l're.Ment
V. J. CONItOY, Vlro-l,rcl.lent
C. It. II1CKKY, Caihler
FIIANK JKNKINHON, Ax't t'a.liler
NAMPA,
IDAHO
J, A. Murray.
I'rctidcnt.
D. W. StaadiiKl,
Vice Hrtaldcnt
Win. A. Anthrt,
Caihler
I.N. Aalhea,
Atl, Caihler
THIS
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
of RouaitwIIOf lUliho.
POCATGLLO,
IDAHO
TUTTLE MERCANTILE CO., LTD.
Wholesale Grocers
GOODWIN MININO CANDLES
Jutlson. Powder, Fuse and Caps
AOKNTH YOV. TIIK
CELEBRATED OLYMPIA BEER
Nampu, Idaho
I). W, Church Karle O. White C. O. t'hlltou
CHURCH & WHITE CO.
Real Estate
And Insurance
Pocutello
Icluho
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