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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (July 28, 1910)
THE MORXTXG OREGOXIAN. THURSDAY, JULY 28, lblU. THOUSANDS ATTEND ARMY MANEUVERS General Maus Reviews Sol diers Gathered at Military Tournament. 1ST INFANTRY WINS DRILL Colored Troops Fail In Effort to Outdo Men From Vancouver in Butt's Manual Bis Evolutions Will Begin on Monday. TACOMA, July 27. Twenty-one thou sand spectators partially filled the Ta coma school stadium toniKht at the sec ond spectacle of the United States mil itary tournament- Brigadier-General Marlon P. Maus, commanding the De partment of the Columbia, arrived from Vancouver Barracks during the day to assume command of the concentration camp forming at Cosgrove, 14 miles south of Tacoma, In preparation for the biennial Army maneuvers that begin Monday morning. He reviewed the tournament troops at the opening of tonight's programme. The first battalion of the 25th United States Infantry (colored) failed In a spirited effort to outdo the first bat talion of the First United States In fantry from Vancouver In presenting Butts' manual the musical gymnastic drill of the Army. The First Infantry battalion, which drilled last night, was awarded the decision by ' unanimous vote of the five judges. 57,000 Persons Pass Gates. The attendance at the tournament to date Is far ahead of every expecta tion. Fifty-seven thousand persons passed the gates at the two night per formances and the sacred concerts Sun day afternoon. The stadium has not been completely filled at any perform ance. "Ming a small black mule belonging to the machine sun platoon of the First Infantry, established a world's record In the maneuvers today by advancing a ma chine gun 50 yards from scratch and re turning to scratch with It after the fir ing of one shot in 27 seconds, "Maud." another mule belonging to the ime platoon, almost lowered the world's record Monday night by advancing a gun 50 yards from scretch. The First In fantry hag thus far carried off practi cally every tournament event in the in fantry class. Cavalryman Knocked Senseless. One woman fainted tonight during the military drill, during which 20 rounds were fired from four-Inch mountain guns. The stadium was filled with a blinding nd suffocating smoke following the can nonade. Serareant George Urban!, of Troop G, First United States' Cavalry, was thrown during a cavalry monkey drill and knocked unconscious. It was thought tor a few minutes that he was severaly injured, but he revived and persisted in returning to his troop and finished out the drill. The feature of the afternoon was the basehall games. Sound District defeat ed the Provisional Company C, of the Columbia River District, by a -score of 9 to 1. The second game wasv a 10-inning affair, the First Infantry team defeating Iho First Cavalry team by a score of S to t. -CASHON ASTANDSTILLER MCRDOCK SAYS HE OPPOSED A Mi PIIOGKESSIVE MEASURES. Lllley's Case Sliowed Power of Can non to Punish Enemies and Forced Fight. OTTAWA. Kan., July 27. Congressman Victor Murdoek. In a speech here to night, said Speaker Joseph G. Cannon had been a standpatter ever since he had been in Congress. "Don't let anybody fool you about this man Cannon," Murdork said. "He was against the- resumption of specie pay ment, a thing we nad forgotten a long time. He was opposed to any regulation of railroads: he opposed the Hepburn bill; he fought the pure-food law. Can non is not only a standpatter, but Is a "standstiller." He is opposed to going in either direction. His friends and ills as sociates are those who have waxed fat off special interests, and Cannon believes in letting well enough alone." Mr. M unlock told his hearers his at tention was first directed to the Cannon organization because of its power to fin ish its enemies. "It was the cose of Lilly, of Connecti cut." he said. "One day I was walking down the street with Congressman Lilly and he said: '1 wonder if the people will !ver get onto this crowd.' "That was the first intimation I had over heard that anything was wrong in Congress. I had hoped I would not be forced into this fight, but they brought Joseph O. Cannon ' to Kansas and Can non attacked a cause near to my heart. He was brought here to abusa insur gents of the House, and I propose to tell the people of Kansas what the insur gents are lighting for. "This question Is yours to settle. It is a question as. to whether Kansas shall have representative government or whether it shall have a Representative in Congress that takes orders from a cor rupt and greedy system." MAGNATE'S SON DEAD HERO Chicago Man Loses Lire Trying to Save Laborer From Fire. CHICAGO. July 27. Frank Biegler. Jr., was burned to death here yester day in attempting to rescue F. M. Kempt, a laborer, from a fire that de stroyed the factory of the Biegler Tar Roofing Company. The dead youth was a son of the president of the roof ing company and was working in the offices at the plant when the fire oc curred. Kempt was probably fatally burned. Mrs. Anton Armbruster and Mrs. Annie Dltter were severely burned, while try ing to aid young Biegler. Captain Charles Potter, of the fire department, was also Injured. HEAT IN NEW YORK FATAL Seven Persons lie When Mercury Goes to 8 6 in Gotham. NEW YORK. July .27. Although' even deaths attributed to the beat were reported, measurable relief for heat-stricken New Yorkers came today after a night which was one of the season's hottest, its discomforts tem pered only by occasional fitful breezes. At S o'clock the official thermometer stood at 80 degrees, one degree higher than yesterday at that hour, but the air was much dryer, with a humidity of only 54 per cen. A small Spring breeze of 22 miles velocity was blow ing. The maximum temperature of the day was 86. Residents of the crowded sections, enervated by the persistent torridlty, were in poor shape, however, to stand even the moderated conditions- of the day, and as the day advanced heat prostration cases were frequently re ported. Infant mortality during the heated period has been high, but health offi cials were quoted today as believing that the worst is over for the babies. The death rate among them shows . a. decrease despite the hotter weather. Those who weathered the previous prolonged heated periods will be pretty well able to survive this one. Dr. Gil fery. statistician of the health depart ment, thinks. FIRE FOUGHT ALL NIGHT EUKXIXG FORESTS GET BEYOND CONTROL IN" MONTANA. Militia May Be Called Out to Aid in Struggle With Flames Life and Property in Grave Peril. MISSOULA, Mont.. . July 27. The all night struggle against the rush of the flames' into the more valuable timber on Iron Mountain has been unavailing and yesterday the fire, entirely beyond control, threatened to become the most destructive of the season in this part of Montana. The situation at Libby is still report ed as critical and the Forestry officials have advices that both life and piP erty there are endangered. It has been suggested that the Governor be ap pealed to detain tho state militia, now at Libby on its way to Tacoma. to help with the fire-fighting. The third serious fire now in thiB district is that on the slopes of the Bitter Root Mountains. Already a large area has been devastated. ITvery available man has been enlisted in the fight against the fire. EDITOR HAYNES TALKS Spokane Man Defends Self in Past Deals. SPOKANE. "Wash.. - July 27. (Spe cial.) "When I reached Seattle on December 30, 1907. I had Just $51 in cash and knew only one man west of the Rocky Mountains. Passing over the period of the development of the Opportunity magazine and the Inland Observer, on November 5 last, I began the creation of a daily newspaper. "On the promise of two men to con tribute $1000 each, in three months and three days the new enterprise was financed, a large plant purchased and assembled, 175 experienced newspaper men and women brought together and organized, a large circulation obtained and the beginning of an advertising patronage secured. And on February S the first issue of the Inland Herald appeared under the most unusual con ditions that have ever witnessed the birth of a newspaper in this country. Business Said to Be iiig. "The semi-annual statement of the company of July 1 shows that the total amount of business done up to that time, including the establishment ofi the enterprise, was $310,000." Thus does Edgar Allen Poe Haynes, publisher of the Inland Herald, con clude his epitome of more than 2000 words published in that paper review ing alleged misdeeds at St. Louis. He charges malice in Spokane as the cause of exposure. Quotations from the long- reply of Haynes follow: "I have lived in Spokane almost two years. There are hundreds of men in this community whom I have met face tp face and transacted business with almost every day. No man can be a liar o a rogue and keep up the pre tense every hour of the day for years at a time. "People of this community with whom it has been my privilege to be come acquainted know In their own hearts whether I am an honest man. "About one-half of the article credited to the Post-Dispatch of St. Louis consists of the supposed statements of Robert Rutledge. a real estate man in that city. But immediately following these alleged interviews is a statement from Mr. Rut ledge reading as follows: 'Robert Rut ledge, the real estate man. denied that he was a victim of Haynes in the man ner described by an afternoon paper." Who Is Back or Deal Asked. "A telegram received at this office this morning from Mr. Rutledge reads as follows: "'St. Louis, Mo., July 26, 1910. Unable to learn who Is pushing your matter. Robert Rutledge.' "The method of returning indictments by grand juries is well known. Only one side is heard and when it is exceedingly desirable to injure a man, any sort of evidence can be trumped up as the basis of charges. In this case transactions more than three years old have been used as the basis of an indictment against me in St. Louis which can have only one real purpose, and that is the Injury of The Herald.' "I left St. Louis in June, 1907, going to New York, my address at all times being known by everybody, returned to St. Louis in September and then went to I hlcago. where I lived for three months then to Seattle and In October. 190sj nearly two years ago. came to this city. There has never been an hour of the past three years when my whereabouts have not been known to evervone in St. Louis who knew me or had any in terest in my affairs. Insurance Wotk Heavy. "I went to St. Louis in 1894 as the general agent of the Aetna Life Insur ance Company. During the 12 years that followed 1 built up one of the largest life insurance agencies in the United States. In 1902 I undertook to develop a large amount of new territory in Arkansas, Oklahoma and Indian Territory. "I must confess that in the enthusiasm of doing a large business I ran into debt. Almost before I realized what had hap pened I found myself involved to the extent of nearly $SO.00O to St. Louis banks and individuals." RODGERS TO HUNT FOR SON Kear-Admiral Retires and Goes to Alaska to Find Lost Boy. WASHINGTON. July 27. Rear-Admiral John A. Rodgers. Commandant of the Bremerton Navy-yard at Pugct Sound. WMh, retired today at the statutory age limit of S2 and will go to Alaska to take up the hunt for his eon; who was lost in the wilderness there a year ago. Captain Vincent L. Oottman, who has been captain of the Bremerton yard, has been appointed command- MAI.ZnI.ITn CAMP S FIRST PRIZE Fresno County Cal., Woodmen Again Display Ability in Annual Drill. PORTLAND CAMP GETS CUP Pacific Northwest Cities Represented in Tournament. Witnessed by Over lOOO Persons Seattle Takes Second Place. Sustaining the record it has made all over the United States. Manzanita Camp, Fresno County, Cal.. No. 160, won first prize at the Armory Wednes day night for competitive drills. Ten teams were entered from different parts of the Pacific Coast, each team being affiliated with some lodge of the Pacific -Coast jurisdiction of the Wood men of the World. With the first prize goes the head camp silver trophy and a purse of $250. The second prize, consisting of $150, B. M. Carr, of Denver, General Attorney of Head Camp, Wood, men of the World. was won by Home Camp, Seattle, No. 288; the third prize. $100 in cash, was won by Boise Camp, No. 150. Portland Camp, No. 107, captured the Reidt trophy for the best local team. The cups were presented on the floor of the Armory Immediately following the announcement of the results by H. L. Day, chairman of the local enter tainment committee. Checks for the cash prizes will be delivered today at the Oregon Hotel. Over 1000 Witness Work. Nearly 1000 persons were present in the Armory when the drills began shortly after 8 o'clock. By far the greater number stayed till the con clusion, well after midnight. The winning teams ran 'each other remarkably close. They went through a large part of the regular military manual, using the symbolic ax of tho order in place of the Army carbine. In addition to the manual they went through, special drills, such as forming the initial letters W. O. W., and march ing in the wedge formation represented by the ax. It was solely in these last formations the losing teams fell down. In the trick formations such as the wedge, the cross and the letters W. O. W., lack of experience lost them the prize. Portland Camp Gets Cnp. Manzanita made a really remarkable showing, obtaining from the three judges. Captains R. O. Scott, L. E. Crouch and Kollock, all of the Oregon National Guard, the percentage of 94. S. Seattle was close behind, with 93.5; Boise had 92. Portland Camp, No. 107, although falling for the coast trophies, won the Reidt cup. Following are the percentages the various camps made: Prospect, Portland. No. 140, 74.3; Home Camp, Seattle. No. 286, 92; Boise. No. 150. 90.6: Golden Gate, San Fran. Cisco. No. 64, 87. ; Webfoot Camp, Portland. No. 65, 90; Oregon City, No. 148, 74; Seattle. No. 169, 84; Portland, No. 107, 91; Arleta, No. 805, 67; Man zanita, No. 160, 94.7. The drill teams varied from a cap tain and 12- men to a captain, lieu tenant, sergeant and 20 men. HUMOR A LA JAPANESE Flashes of Wit From a Woman of Old Nippon. Charles Johnston, in Harper's Weekly. Japan contributes to the mirth of the world one of the rarest of all things, a lady humorist. I know not where we might And another, unless it be the charming 'and nimble-witted writer of the Rubaiyat of Bridge, and even then I suspect the Japanese lady of incarnat ing anew in New Jersey. Be this as it may, the authoress of the Pillow Sketches, who bears the imposing name or set nonagon, has a humprous charm that is all her own. and there is something essentially modern in the best sense in everything she wrote, though nine long centuries have passed since she graced the Mikado's court at Kyoto. One of the charming things about her is the way she jests with the august per sonage, half ruler and half demigod, who stood at the summit of Japanese life. What, for example, could be more win ning than nais cat-and-dog story, as she Indites it? "The aufrust Cat-in-Waiting on the Mikado, she tells us, "wava very de lightful animal, and a . gffat favorite with His Majesty, who conferred on her the fifth rank of nobility and the title of chief superintendent of the ladies-in waiting of the palace. One day the Cat- ln- aiting had gone out on the bridge between two or tne buildings of the pal ace, when the nurse in charge of her called out, 'How indecorous! Come in at once!' But the Cat-in-Waiting paid no attention, but basked sleepily in the nunshine. So in order to frighten her. the nurse cried, 'Where is Okinamaro? Come, Okinamaro! Bite the chief super intendent!' The foolish dog. thinking ehe was in earnest, flew at the cat, who, in her fright and consternation, took refuge behind the screen of the breakfast room where His Majesty then was. The Mikado was greatly shocked. He took WN jf. A I . f vv J the cat into his august bosom and, sum moning the lord chamberlain, gave orders that Okinamaro should have a good thrashing and be banished to Dog isiana at once. Alas poor dog! How he used to swagger at his ease! When he was led long with a willow 'wreath upon his bead, and adorned with flowers or peach and cherry, did he ever think it would come to this?" The good lady of the Pillow Sketches is full of shrewd observation and grace ful expression. For instance, she makes a list of detestable things. People who ride in a creaking carriage, she says, are very detestable, and must be deaf as welL When you ride in such a car riage yourself, it is the owner who is detestable. Again, people who interrupt your stories to show oft their own clev erness are detestable. All interrupters. young er old, are very detestable. Peo ple who, when you are telling a story, break in with, "Oh. I know." and eive quite a different version from your own, are detestable. There is even more salt In this: Very detestable is the snoring of a man whom you are trying to con ceal and" who has gone to sleep in a place where he has no business. And the universal voice of humanity will bear out Sei Shonagon, when she says that fleas are detestable, especially when they get under your clothing and jump about. -ana there Is a certain fine satiric note in the saying that people who mumble a prayer when they sneeze are detestable, with the added nota bene, loud sneezing is detestable, except in the case of the gentlemen of the house. One sees that. like the more modern author of the "Mikado," the lady of the Pillow Sketches "has got a little list!" And on that list she puts the preacher, thus: "A preacher ought to be a good looking man. It is then easier to keep your eyes fixed on his face, without which it is Impossible to benefit by the sermon. Otherwise your eyes wander and you for get to listen. Ugly preachers have, there fore, a grave' responsibility. But no more of this!" Then, as an afterthought, "If preachers were of a more suitable age I should have pleasure in giving a more favorable Judgment. As matters actually stand, their sins are too fearful to think of." The peculiar delicacy of touch, which is everywhere in Japanese art. comes out in every line of the Pillow Sketches. They are, indeed, of the land of pink cherry blossom. There is a racier note in some of the proverbs of the Japanese, as, for instance, in the saying, "Spank ing him with a pie," of someone who does a real kindness in a truculent way. In somewhat the same spirit is the say ing. -To spank a cat with a sledge ham mer," where, instead of the cat, our own proverb puts a walnut. Wittily irreverent is the saw, "We call on the gods" when we are in a fix; and there is the same touch of irony in the saying. "Pray In faith even to a sardine, and your prayer will be granted:-" Somewhat in the spirit of a Jap anese water color is the quaint little proverb. "While the tears are still wet, a bee stings you;" the equivalent for the saying that troubles never come singly. Again, there is the parallel of our "Too many cooks" in the declaration that "Too many sailors make the ship go up the mountain." And even In these lat ter days of plutocracy. I do not remem mer to have seen anything so daring as the Japanese saw; "Money makes you comfortable, even In hell." "He "that praises himself is a kind of fool," is sound wisdom as well as wit; and there is a flash of fancy in the say ing that an obsequious flunky "dusts the whiskers" of the great man he is flat tering. Very sententious is this advice to children, from a book more than 1000 years old, 'The mouth is the gate of misfortune; the tongue is the root of misfortune: if the mouth were like the nose, a man would have no trouble till the end of his days." And one might offer to Loid Rosebery, as a clinching argument forthe peers, this saying from the same antique book: "No man is worthy of honor by reason of his birth alone. It is the garnering of knowledge that bringeth wisdom and virtue." EXPLOSION KILLS ELEVEN Man Opens Can of Powder With Ax, Tunnel Is Blown Up. QUEBEC, July 27. Eleven men -were killed at LaTuque yesterday. One of the men was opening a can of. powder with an ax when an explosion followed, which set fire to a train of powder leading to a tunnel in which 15 men were working. The accident occurred on the new transcontinental railway line. HAWAII WILL REMAIN WET Prohibition Beaten in Islands by More Than 3 to 1. HONOLULU, July 27. A light vote was cast at the Prohibition election here yesterday. Incomplete returns from all the islands last night gave the "wets" 7215 votes and 2140 for thedrys. The "wets" won in Honolulu yester day by a vote of 2833 to 915. The material destroyed by rats for build in? nests costs Denmark $3. 000,000 annually; France, S40.000.OO0; Germany, :V0. 0O0.O00: Great Britain. $7.'t.O0O.0On, and the United States at least $100,000,000. of which $15. OOO.OoO Is from fires. The theaters of London will seat 60.932 people and 64,851 also can get into the mu sic halls. ' "2 HOURS OR LESS TO PORTLAND BAY CITY ONLY POSSIBLE T0WSSHE ON TILLAMOOK. BAY TERMINUS UNITED RAILWAYS (Hill's Eleetrte Line.) ON NEW P. R.SN.RY. COMMERCIAL CENTER AND METROPOLIS of TILLAMC0K. THE GREAT TIMBER AND DAIRY COUNTRY BAY CITY LAND CO. 319 Lumber Exchange, Second and Stark. A ft.pr Anir & 7(11-9 KnalrliTiir Hldir PTinnea "M lllfi A VftOt W MT. SCOTT PEOPLE DEMAND WATER At Big Mass Meeting Residents Say City Must Lay Larger Mains. REFUSE TO BE IGNORED Resolutions Also Adopted Condemn ing Woodmere Company, Which, Citizens Declare, Can Have Its Franchise Forfeited. ' Pour hundred persons, representing all portions of the Mount Scott district, gathered In Cunningham's Hall, at Myr tle Park, last night, under the auspices of the Citizens' League, and by unani mous vote decided to demand that Port land install water mains of sufficient size to furnish an adequate supply of Bull Run Water. A strong resolution, declaring that the Woodmere Water Company has failed to comply with its franchise to supply enough water to the people and that its franchise was there fore subject to forfeiture, was also adopt ed. The resolutions adopted follow: Whereas, The said Woodmere Water Company has wholly failed Jn Its obliga tions to tho people, as enumerated in its said franchise grant; therefore, be it Resolved. That we, the people of the said Mount Scott district in mass meeting assembled, do hereby authorize, empower and. request the Citizens' League of this district to take any and all steps necessary to secure a revocation of the aforesaid fran chise granted to the aforesaid Woodmere Water Company by the said County Court of the State of Oregon, and further, to se cure the appointment of a competent per son as receiver of the business of the afore said Woodmere Water Company until such time as a final adjudication of the matter may be had at the hands of the said County Court of the State of Oregon. The meeting decided to send a commit tee to the meeting of the water commit tee next Monday afternoon and unite with other portions of the South East Side in the general demand for a system of water mains. Rev. W. H. Meyer pre sided. Nearly 100 new members were obtained for the league. TRAINWRECK ATTEMPTED Grand Trunk Engineer Is Warned and He Slows Down. TORONTO, Ont.. July 27. An attempt was made yesterday to derail a Grand Trunk local passenger train near Brockville, but the engineer received warning and slowed down in time to pass safely over the spot where spikes had been pulled and rails . loosened. Troops have been sent to Brockville to replace the militia there. Superintendent Brownlee said today the company would be prepared to ac cept any amount of freight tomorrow. On all divisions there was a good move ment of freight yesterday. President Garretson, of the Order of Railway Conductors, arrived here yes terday from Cedar Rapids, la., and Pres ident Lee. of the Trainmen, from Cleve land. Both declared they are not here to draw up any new programme and that the fight against the Grand Trunk was now on to a finish. BIBLE READING REVIVED Suburb of Detroit Votes for Practice in Public Schools. DETROIT, July 27. The Bible has made its reappearance in the public schools of Michigan by way of High land Park, a suburb of Detroit. In de ciding by an overwhelming majority that hereafter the Bible shall be read and the Lord's Prayer said at the open ing of the morning sessions in the vil lage schools, ihe voters of Highland Park: took action which probably will cause much controversy in this and other states. Both the reading of the Scriptures and the prayer are to be without com ment. The School Board was empowered to appoint a committee of villagers to compile a set of readings from the Bible for use in the schools. rtiif ij fcr. . Kit. -" 99 OPINION OF JNO. T. STEVENS President United Railways. James J. Hill has secured termi nal grounds for his electric line at Bay City. The new P. B. & N. Rail road's tracks are already laid through the city. These two rail roads mark a new era for Bay City, the only possible townsite on Tillamook Bay. LOTS 565 UP Subject to advance without notice. Bay City cannot help being: an important industrial and commer cial city. The Panama Canal will be a potent factor in the city's fu ture. The 35 billions of feet of timber tributary to the bay will find a market not only to big; cen ters hundreds of miles inland from one end of the Atlantic to the other, but to foreigTi countries through the new Golden Gate of the North west, viz., Tillamook Bay. Write for particulars of free transportation and expenses to Bay City and KCXurn. nsr The "TH0R" Wonder Working Electric Laundry for the Home - Learn How to Save Money, Time, Toil The operator is now washing and wrbisr inar clothes at the same time. This is only possible with our 3 -roll electric wringer. Come and see the "Thor" in operation the washer that does the entire laundry work for family of 6 in SO minutes at a cost of S cents for electricity. It will open your eyes to possibilities of household economy you never dreamed of. The "Thor" solves the servant problem. Saves toil saves time saves the clothes. Guaranteed to wash dainty bees and lace curtains beautifully clean without injury. Some day it will be in every home put it in yoon now. Operated from any electric light fixture. Made in different filiea ad&pLcd for any house or apactment. Electa8 Alder Street at Seventh weakness and disease of the feminine organism. It is n on-score t, non-alcoholic and Asc Youa Neighbors. ' They probably know of some of its many cures. If you want a book that tells all about woman's diseases, and how to cure them at home, send 21 one-cent stamps to Dr. Pierce to pay cost of mailing tnly, and he will send you a five copy of his great thousand-page illustrated Common Sense Medical Adviser revised, up-to date edition, in paper covers. In handsome cloth-binding, 31 stamps. Address Dr. R.V. Pierce, Buffalo, N.Y. SCMMEK ayocean Tent City SEASON 1910 Bayocean tent city is a canvas covered hotel, American plan. Rates $?.50 and $3 per day, $15 and $17.50 per week. Electric lighted, heited, purest water; sewer system, gravel walks. Further information mailed you on request. will be T. B. Potter Realty Co. 514 Corbett Building, Portland, Or. Kansas City, 208 R. A. Long Bdg. San Francisco, 802 Monadnock Building. ' SEASON OFKNfcU JULY t. FOK KE8 KKVATIONS SEE 1JOK8EY B. SMITH. STK ST. THOSE MARSHALL. 1979. Spnd your vacation at ELK GREEK HOTEL ON CANNON BEACH the scenic beach of Oregon. Take train to Seaside, thence by conveyance. Good fishing and hunting:. Sea foods served at all times." W. D. Torrey, proprietor. Sea Croft SEA VIEW. WASHING TON . Mn. W. E- Hatfhlnwn, Manager. A Beavhore bouce, iiaJ. quaint and com fortable, with the ocean right in front; a bic fireplace, always blazing and the bet of home-cooked meals. Oh Lid re a love the place an'1 grown-up find the atep from tb dreaa-lng-Tvxnia to the avrf mua ramisMrlabia, ic 5iwe Despair and Despondency No one but a woman can tell the story of the suffering, the despair, and the despondency endured by women who carry a daily burden of ill-health and pain because of disorders and derangements of the delicate and important organs that are distinctly feminine. The tortures so bravely endured com pletely upset the nerves if long continued. Dr. Pierce's Favorite .Prescription is a positive cure far IT MAKES WEAK WOflEN STRONG, SICK WOMEN WELL. It allays inflammation, heals ulceration and soothes pain. It tones and builds up the nerves. It fits for wifehood and motherhood. Honest medicine dealers sell it, and have nothing to urge upon von as ' inst as good." has a record of forrv Tears of cures. BKfiOKTS. HOTEL Offers special 1 n d, ucements to the Sum- At Columbia Beach keTls located on an elevation overlooking- the ocean. Boating, bathing:, canoeing, clam dlgrging, hunting and fishing;. Cuisine the finest. Rates on application. TENTS Fully equip'd witn Deeding and complete ma iiiaj nnu tx. x. f j.uu per weeH.. Located on the banks of Neacoxie Creek, in the Nob Hill section, close to Idlewild Park. For par ticulars inquire Columbia Trust Company BOARD OF TRADES BUILDING. THE SHELBURNE SEA VIEW, WASH. T. J. HOARE, Prop. Large, shady playgrounds and yard for children; hammocks, benches, swings and croquet lawn. Large, sunny rooms. ' We raise our own poultry and vegetables. Spe cial rates on table board and for families. MAKE V I II It KSKHVATIOV5 BY MAIL. HO, FOR CASCADIA Best mountain resort on Coast: best medicinal water, scenery, hunting and fishing; Nature's own conservatory of health. Auto from Albany, stage from Brownsville and Lebanon. "Write or phone to G. M. GEISENDOHFER, Cascadla. Oregon. The Hackney Cottage is now open. Rave enlarged their dining-room capacity and electrified their house. Beautiful surroundings and most pleasant spot on e beach. Unsurpassed surf bathing, home com forts, excellent table board. Special rates by the week. Reservations by mall or wire. Address. Sea View. Wash. North Beach Inn NEWTOVS STATIO.V. Mrs. X. M- Dewey, Manager. All Trains Stop at Grounds of HoteL Directly Facing the Ocean. Large, Shady Grounds. Superior Accommoda tions. Postofflce- and Telegraph Ad dress, LO.VG BEACH, WASH.