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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 26, 1910)
THE 3IORMXG OREGOXIAX. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1910. CONVENTION WILL BE SCENE OF FIGHT Roosevelt Forces Have Hope of Winning in Committee. No GRISCOM SURE OF VICTORY 'Progressive Leaders' Estimates of Majority Vary end Woodruff Ad mits Content Close. Barnes and Grlscom Bandy Words. SARATOGA. X. T.. Spt. If the pro gressives under the leadership of Theo dore Roosevelt win their light against tne oM guard for control of the Republican ate convention, which opens on Tues day. It will be after a tttl on the con vention floor. It I understood that an attempt will be made to rejioll the mate committee on the Koosrvelt-Bnerman chairmanship controversy at its meeting on Mondav ntsht. This la the situation a outlined 'by Preeident L. C. (irlrom. of the New York County Republican committee, here tonight. It Indicate that the progres sive doubt their ah!I!?y to control the state committee and that they prefer to take no chance on havlnc the committee relect Mr. Roosevelt a second time, think lnr It safer to l.ave the solution of the problem to the convention Itself, of wlilco they claim control by a lare majority The minimum Roosevelt vote rlaced by Mr. Orlscom at 5T0, whtls Cornelius V. Collins, of this city, who Is lining up the Roosevelt forces, places the figures at 5SJ. Chairman Woodruff tonlKht declared there was little change in the situation and that the contest would be close. Mr. Jrlscom re-told tonttcht the cir cumstances leading up to the presenta tion of colonel Roosevelt's name at the State Committee Meeting on Auitust is. He had been shown an editorial In Mr. Rarnrs' Albany paper. In which ap peared this statement: "The argument advanced by Mr. Orlscom that the members of the State Committee who voted for Mr. Shermnn were deceived Is simply a politician" lle." The Nw Tork chairman reiterated h!s former statement that deception had been practiced In regard to Mr. Taft's position on the temporary chair manship by the old guard leaders, but further than this he made no comment. MAN QUIETS THE BABY Afier Mother's Efforts Fall. Trou ble Is Quickly Located. Chicago News. "Sly." s.ild the streetcar conductor. "I saw something the other day that convinced me It ain't always the women that know the most about babies. A man was the hero In this case, and a pretty old man. too. The way he went about the hero bu.lnss showed us all that he was a wise one. He made a lot of women look pretty foolish. I can tell you. "It all happened in my car." the con ductor ej.talned. "You see. a baby was crying no. not crying soualllng. It was Hie healthiest yell I ever heird and I got a couple myself that oln't shy on that kind, of exercise. Tt'e wo man and tne kid got on at Clark and Monroe, and the haby began to scream the minute tliey gut a seat. "The mother tried everything to oolite it. the rocked It and Jumped It up and down and cradled It In her arm and gave It one of those rubber things to put In Its mouth. Kind, sympathlxin' women passengers tried, too. They offered suggestion after sug gestion. Still the kill yelled louder than ever. I was thinkln' I'd have to offer my services when the doctor stepped in. " Let me have that baby a minute, mauam. will youT says an old party who had been settin' close to the mother and k'.d and watching them sort of careful. I had noticed. And he, didn't wait for no answer, either. He just reached over and took the baby out cf Its mother's lan and went on to his own seat with It. Did the pas sengers get Interested? Well. I should say they did. And what do you sup pose that old fellow did? "Why. he Just took the kid on his knee and began to undress it. He peeled off garment after garment until the baby was almost as naked ns when It was born. Did he find It? Sure. It mas a big whopper of a safety pin stlckln" in the poor little kid's side. "Well. say. you ought to have seen that mother and the other women." boys through their admiration for tha pioneer heroes of our earlier days, but the difference between the Knglish system and our own Is so slight that tha process of amalgamation as to form and purpose seems to be going on with little difficulty. What we are concerned with at this moment is the renewed evidence that the world Is realizing that It must turn back to the outdoors, and a sane, normal, health-giving outdoors, if It Is to find sanity and health. To spend two weeks at a farmhouse or a Sum mer hotel once a year will not do. One must develop the instinct for the open, the self-reliance, courage and strength of body that the open de mands. Too long have we been piling up th? vicious cumulation of an artificial world, and children, educated to fit It. demanding still more artificiality. The greatest world of all Is the world of Nature, and the sterling test of a morn's underlying Qualities Is his abil ity to adaot' himself to this world. It is a tun that must be undertaken In no light mood. A man's strength and a man s will are demanded. Merely to turn the boys loose In the country will not do the trick. They must be prepared to give what the country and the wilderness demand If thev are to get that which the coun try and the wilderness have to give. It Is a grand movement, and Is re freshing to note that it has brains and real Influence behind It. . IMITATION APPLE- PIE Scientist Soys Tliat Ileal Article Is About Due. RAILROAD CHIEF'S SON SHOOTS SELF Police Break Into Office and Find Donald Stubbs' Prop erty in Disorder. Baltimore News. On of the rain fill "things of life Is the shattering of an Ideal, the finding that. after nlL the feet of the Idol you wor shiped were dull, dun-colored clay. Ir. Wiley, of the Department 01 Agri culture, was Interviewed by Leonore Cal vert, of the News, and gave a most enter taining and Instructive dissertation on what he denominated a good meal. His ideas on oysters and soup, the roast and the salad, were worthy of indorse ment, but when he came to the dessert, to the apple pie. we shuddered as we read It. Listen again to what he said: We are." announced Dr. Wiley, go ng to hai-e an apple pie. with the pastry ice and d.licate. till'-d to tne Drim-wua apples, that grew on trees "fresh rrom the vine. We are going to Know mai those ai pies were stewed in the kitchen while the pastry was waiting to be filled. and it's going to be a nice little pie." Stewed apples! What would a bona fide native of the New tngland plo belt say were such a pie put before him? What would Aunt Delia, who bakes the Presidential masterpieces at Mlllbury. say If she were asked her opinion of a "stewed" apple pie We hesitate to write the m-ords of malediction. There is only one way one right way tu make an apple pie. A moa- rately deep pie plate should be lined with such delicious crust as "mother sed to make." then the crust-lined Ish. which, of course, has not yet been ut In the oven, should be filled heap- ng full of sliced morsels of Baldwin pples. hard and firm, and Just as full f Juice as the best Baldwins are. Then on the apples should be scattered few bits of butter, and over apples nd butter should be scattered om granulated sugar and Just a bit powdered cinnamon. And then th over! Vancy pies with lattice-wor overlngs or pics "in the altogether' with no covering at all are not to th manner made. The upper crust should of the same material as the undo rust except that Just before it Is pti ver the apples it should have the thin est coating of butter and. folded ouble. should have a series jif four o five holes rut along Its folded edge h-n over the apples It goes, to be inched along the eilge where It join he under crust. With a light dredging flour it Is ready for the oven rowned and steaming it Issues a lit later, the choicest product of cull nry art. its filling now reduced to a ellclous combination of thoroughly ooked apple, whicli. while retaining he shape of Its slices. Is thoroughly softened and surrounded by Its own Juices. Then to eat It while it Is stll hot. with a bit of cheese to sharpen the tongue and keen the taste, and Mr. lley s stewed abomination Is forgot ten in the pleasure of a real apple pie. WIFE CANNOT BE LOCATED General Agent of Union Pacific Road at Cleveland, Newly Arrived, May Die at Hospital Father Can not Account for Deed. CLEVELAND. Sept. 23. Donald P. Stubbs. general agent of the Union Pacific Railroad hare, was taken from the Union Tacinc offices last night with a probably fatal bullet wound over his heart. At the hospital, where he was taken, Mr. Stubbs declared his wound was the result of an accident. He was alone at the time, i The night elevator boy found Stubbs leaning against the wall in the .cor ridor outside his office. The wounded man, holding one hand over his heart, gasped "I am shot; I shot myself accidentally. I need help. Stubbs was hurriedly removed to a hospital, where It was found that a revolver bullet had penetrated his breast Just above the heart. To the doctors he made a brief state ment to the effect that he had ben ex amining a new revolver which he had purchased earlier In the day and had accidentally discharged it. On account of the extreme gravity of his condition. Mr. Stubbs was not per mitted to see anyone. The police later broke Into Mr. Slubbs office and found the room In great disorder. Papers and clothes were Uttered about the room and the furniture was disar ranged. On a table there was a new box of cartridges from which one shell had been taken. Mr. Stubbs lived with his wife and mother-ln-law In a fashionable apartment house. Every effort tonight failed to reach either of the women and no answer could be obtained at the apartment door. The wounded man has not long been In Cleveland, having come here about six months ago to take the position of gen eral agent, which had been newly cre- tetl. BILLION MARK IS PASSED Country's Imports and Fxports Are Swept by Boom Ilolh Ways. WASHINGTON. Sept. SV A boom in both directions, swept both the im ports, and exports qf tne country across he billion dollar mark, during the eight months ending with August. The imports were $1,053,100,000, and exports $1,027,400,000. against $947, 0.0ni. and I'-'SD. 100.00. respectively, for August 1909. Though the imports of most manu factured materials Increased, silk, wool and fibers fell back a little, on account of the exceptionally heavy Imports of ine preceding years. In exports, unmanufactured, cotton decreased by $1,300,000 to $192,500,000. and automobile exports Increased from $5,100,000 to $3,300,000. Lumber, leather. manufactures of Iron, and steel, sewing machines, type writers, scientific Instruments, electri cal machinery, furniture, also in creased, while foodstuffs, wheat flour and meats decreased. T. R. NO SENSATION SEEKER Colonel Hints Aeroplane Flight Would Tut Him in That Class. JEFFERSON CITY. Mo.. Sept. 23. Oovernor Hadlcy received a letter today from Theodore Roosevelt. In which the Colonel wrote he did not deem It advis able to go up in an aeroplane while In St. Louis. October II. There Is to be an Invitation meet .In St. I-ouls on that date. The promoters Invited Mr. Roosevelt to accompany one of the aviators on a flight. In the letter Mr. Roosevelt hints that for him to make a flight might be re garded as seeking sensation. MetaN That Cilve Off Fire. Youth's Companion. The famous Inventor of the Wels bach gss mantle discovered that the metals of rare earths, of which Incan descent mantles are composed, when slightly alloyed with Iron, have power of Igniting of their own accord, intense sparks are given off on contact with an iron tool. A self -Igniting gas burner la now obtained by connecting witn tne t:p or an ordinary Incan descent burner a device for producing sparks on a fragment of such alloy as the gas cock Is opened. An alloy of 60 per cent cerium, 10 per cent rare earth and 30 per cent Iron Is an ex cellent spark producer, and will fur nish hundreds of Ignitions at an In significant cost. Or lights for stree home and public buildings can be profitably supplied with them, to the great convenience of all users. NEW CITIZENS OF FUTURE Coy Scouts Another Fvidcncc "Back to the Soil" Cry. of Outing. There is nothing but praise for the boy scout movement. Three hundred thousand youngsters are enlisted In ii'and alone, and the colonies and various foreign countries can count lAO.noo more. In the United States Thompson Seton and Dan Peard have done yeoman service in arousing Inter est through the former's Birch Bark Roll and' the Sons of Daniel Boone, originated by the latter. The watchword of the movement under whatever, name It marches ap pear to be Discipline and Sc!f-Suffl-clency. To be sure. Mr. Seton aimed at the development of woodcraft pri marily and Mr. Beard appealed to the Cultivating Sou Fishes. Youth's Companion. The practicability of cultivating the food fishes ofstlie open sea is in dicated by the experience of G. T. At kinson, who a year or two ago brought some living plaice from the Barents Sea. where these Its h aro slow of growth, ard after marking liberated them in the North Sea. near Dogger Bank. A year later he recaptured many of these fish In the North Sea. and found that they had not only grown much more rapidly than In their native habitat but that their condition had also greatly Improved. Mr. Atkin son thinks that halibut might similarly be transplanted Into the North Sea. to the great advantage of the fishing Industry. Hoy Invents Flectrlc Device. Indianapolis News. A possibly Important Invention, on which he pus at least been granted a patent. Is that of lS-year-old Fdward B. Tustln. Jr.. of Bloomsburg, Pa for wireless electric lighting. The Invention provides a novel means for lighting a series of lamps about the same time without requiring them to be in the same circuit, or electrically connected by wire. The invention Is said to be of special advantage In rural districts, or. sparsely settled sections, or wherever a number of widely-separated lights are required and It Is not practicable to include th.m in the same circuit. FATHER CAX SHED XO LIGHT Southern Pacific Itoad Chief Offers Xo Explanation for 'Shooting. CHICAOO. Sept. 25. J. C. Stubbs. traf fic director of the Southern Pacific Rail road and father of Donald P. Stubbs. could offer no explanation for the shoot ing of his son. When seen at his Chi cago residence, he said : "This is the first that I have heard of the matter. I can hardly believe that it is true. I know of no business Just at this time that mould take Donald to his office at night. I can shed no light upon the reported wounding of my son. I can. It never has been done before, but I am sure I can do It. Give me a little time." Six months later Mr. Alien came back with detailed draw ings. He laid them upon the presi dent's desk. "There you are." he said. At once a special appropriation was secured from the directors to build the first machine, and patents were taken out. This first machine, however, was a delicate, complicated affair which did not do half the surprising things that the one Just. Installed accomplishes. The new one is much simpler In con struction and far more comprehensive In Its results. WAR OF CHINESE TONGS How It Began and Was Ended by a ' Xew York Judge. Robert Wells Ritchie in Harper's Weekly. Gambling was the genesis of the first fight between the tongs, and gambling continues today, complicated as the orig inal Issue has been by side feuds and unequal scores of revenge, the proper cause of sudden death In Mott and Pell streets. None of these games is heavy. In fact, there are few games In China town that are half as steep as the daily Rfternoon bridge game of the brokers at a certain uptown hotel. A laundryman may come In from Elizabethport, N. J-. with 75 cents In his blouse pocket besides a return ticket, and he will have a Sat urday night at the Smiling Spring Sun shine Club that will lift his spirits through all the ensuing steamy week. Yet there used to be many sleek young Chimimen who bucked the tiger and wore diamonds; professional gamblers and, constitutional toughs they were. Their day has passed, however, when the Hip Sings and On longs fought each other to a standstill to settle the control of the gambling privilege, and the Interests which were the gage of battle waned as a result. By a strange freak of elrcumfitanco the first farming of the gambling privilege In New York was done by a once holy band of crusaders, the Chee Kung Tong. A slant-eyed genius of fate willed It In a capricious moment that the descendants of some outraged Confucian monks of the Middle Kingdom, sworn to wreak a strictly Chinese vengeance upon the rulers of China, should come to this far country and sow the seeds that were to bear bullets In a quick harvest. The war between the On Ieongs and the Hip Sings came to an end In a rare opera bouffe tableau, which was enacted In the chambers of Judge Warren V, Foster, of the Supreme Court. Judge Foster, who had sat In the criminal branch over several of the cases arising from the bloody struggle In Chinatown, persuaded the various white lawyers re tained by the fighting tongs to herd the respective head men. of their client or ganizations before him one day, and he read them a lecture on the advantages of peace and the stern vengefulness of American law once violated. Then, with due pomp and solemnity, the Judge pro duced elaborate articles of peace, duly engrossed and sealed, and ordered the plenipotentiaries of the On Leongs and Hip Sings to sign them. Very gravely the names were affixed; those of Tom I.ee and Jim Gum, his lieutenant; Mock Duck. Wong Git. and Wong Sam. the wicked secessionists. A very formal Joint banquet of the tongs In honor of Judge Foster and the members of the District Attorney's staff followed and clinched the peare proceedings.. Since that time. though assassinations have occasionally disturbed the peace of Chinatown, at each Chinese New Year celebration Judge Foster and representatives of the Dis- rlct Attorney have been Invited to listen. over the planked dried ducks and the rice wine on a festal board, to solemn assur ances of the permanency of that peace. JOE DAY AGGUSED Woman in Brawl in Saloon Says Detective Struck Her. WARRANT, WILL BE ISSUED Attempting: Role of Peacemaker Day Is Struck by Woman and In Re taliating Injures Her, She Says Many See Affray. AUTOMATIC BANK STAFF Wonderful Machine Saves Time and Labor and Is Errorless. New York Press. There is a savings bank in New York where a man comes in to deposit money, the receiving teller slips the passbook open at the proper page, into a machine. He touches the starting key, pulls a lever and for an instant plays on a keyboard four tlmee as large as that of a typewriter. A second later he hands the passbook hack to the depositor. Properly printed there, with the date and the amount, is the record of what has been received. Meantime by the same operntlon and simultaneously similar figures have been registered on a tape, the record including also the number of the passbook. A further mechanical movement and there also appears In plain view on the teller's record the total amount that has been received that day. and. If It is wished the accumulated total of all that has come Into the bank since its doors were opened. All this is done In the fraction of a minute and by one of the most inter esting machines that has yet been de vised. By its use the teller knows at any given moment the exact amount he has taken In that day up to the very latest deposit. There are no long additions or calculations necessary. Automatically and with an exactness that 1s perfection such as no merely huoian handwork could possibly attain, this machine dooa the work. Not only does It represent a tremendous saving of time to the clerical force, but It scientifically eliminates all chance of errors and also puts out of the ques tion any false entry. The record in the passbook and on the tape must be pre cisely the same. Thl new and wonderful machine is In the Union Dime Savings Bank, at Sixth avenue and Fortieth street. It is the only machine of the kind In exist ence and has been installed but four weeks, after having taken six months to build. It cost $1500. and Is the out growth of many years" experimenting nd practical trial. It adds two differ ent totals simultaneously, and the cost of running It I much less than that of the older adding machines that were tts predecessors. From what It actually accomplishes by simple manipulation after the elec tricity has been turned on by the mere pressing of a button, this machine might be called an automatic staff of clerk. It does precisely what a num ber of ns'sletants would do. and with unerring exactitude. As soon as the business of the day Is over the teller Immediately has before him the records of everything that has . been done. These are absolutely correct, and his caah must correspond to them. The machine has performed half his duties. He has simply to count his money over to see that It agrees In amount. Equipped with this machine a teller does not have to enter his cash by terns after the business of the day Is through. All .this has been done for him. The idea of a mechanism of this sort that should replace human calculating oil and should be far In advance of nythlng thus fir devised originated with Charles E. Sprague, president of he bank and one of the most expert mathematicians In business life. Mr. Sprague Is also the professor of ac countancy In the New York University. He had the general Idea of what he wanted to accomplish in his mind, a machine that should make possible positive mechanical accuracy, together with economy of time, and the first step was taken In 1894. when he called Leicester Allen Into consultation. "Can you build such a machine?" he asked ' Mr. Allen. The expert thought hard for a moment. I Yes. Mr. Sprsgue," he said, "I think PROFIT IN DECORATIONS Gain by Russian Chancery in Giv ing Honors. New York Sun. A eruspieion prevails among Russians that the chancery of the Imperial court does a prosperous business In conferring the order and decorations which the Czar showers with special profusion on favored subjects at the Orthodox Eaoter fieason just closed. Recently the St. Petersburg Official Gazette printed the names of 4226 persons entitled to wear new stars and ribbons or a higher class of the decoration they already possesoed. Since a yea:- ago the Order of St. Andrew, the highest In the 'empire, hae been conferred on only eight persons. Including, the Mikado's cousin. Prince Fushlmi of Japan; 59 dignitaries received the order of Alexander Nevskl. 44 the order ef the White Eagle, 5 the first class of the Vladimir Order, M the sec ond class and 527 the third and 04 the fourth class. It Is more particularly a military decoration. There were 175 re cipients of the first class of the Order of St. Anne, 1904 of the second class and inns of the third class. In the first class of the Stanislaus Order there were 12U appointments, in the second 2547 and In the third 4M2 persons. Ir. the high up decorations in Russia, which, as Lord George Bentinck said of the Order of the Garter, have "no non sense about merit connected wtm mem.'- there Is no suspicion of any pecuniary considerationci, but In the subordinate classes of St. Anne. an.d especially . of St. Stanislaus, the secretary of the chan cery. Court Chamberlain K. M. Slobin, desires to clear the air. It .Is irue that the . regalia to be worn by the holder of the decoration is not furnished at cost price, but the difference Is very small, he says. The cost price of the second class of Stanislaus Ordtr Is $1125 and It is sold to the . recipient for Jlu. The difference. otherwise the profit to the chancery for the stars and ribbons must all be paid for bv the wearer to the chancery s furnlnhlng department goes to beneficent Institutions. The star and ribbon of St. Andrew cost the wearer lion, l ne cnancery makes an annual profit of about imOflO on material tor ine oroers. -uosuy it is 3igned to the committt-es for Invalid and wounded soldiers; !X0 goes to the synod for the spread of Orthodox Chrlt- tlanlty. Acting in the unwonted role of peace maker In a dispute over the ownership of a saloon," Saturday night. Detective Sergeant Joe Day is said to have used such violent measures to quiet Mrs. Mary Schillberg, proprietress of the Germanla Saloon, at Fourth and Tay lor streets, that she received Injuries from which she had to take to her bed. The woman asserts that Day brutally beat her, and to substantiate her con tentions she displays a discolored eye and several finger marks about her throat. She says she will swear out a warrant against the detective, charg ing him with assault and battery. The fracas between Day and the wo man was the sequel of a business trans action between Mrs. Schillberg and Fischer & Pregen, liquor men, to whom she recently sold her saloon. The deal between the contracting parties was made yesterday, and Mrs. Schillberg issued a bill of sale and turned it over to the new proprietors. The transfer of the liquor license held by a brew ing company, was held in abeyance. Soon after the polls closed at 7 o'clock, the new owners of the saloon opened It for business. When .Mrs. Schillberg, who lives up stairs, learned of this action of the pur chasers, she hastened downstairs and protested, asserting that she still owned the saloon and would continue to do so until the brewing concern turned over the liquor license. A wordy argument, with the angry woman taking a lead ing part, followed. Finally one of the men telephoned to police headquarters and requested that an officer be sent to the saloon and decide the argument. Patrolman Montgomery was pacifying the warring parties when Detective Day, accompanied by C. D. Elder, sec retary of a local liquor dealers' asso elation, entered. Day ordered Mrs. Schillberg to leave the premises. She refused. When Day en deavored to interpret the bill of sale she had mde out, the woman flew into a rage. uraDoing tne document Irom hi hand, Mrs. Schillberg tore it into shreds and followed up her advantage by land ing a stiff right on the surphi9ed de tectlve's nose. Day, it is said, retal lated by striking her such a stunning blow under tho left eye that It swelled shut. Before the wltnespes, one of whom was Mrs. Sehillber's eged mother, could Interfere, the detective Is said to have throttled the woman and hurled her into a corner. She was removed to her bedroom up stairs and restoratives and liniments weer administered. When aeked about the affair later. Day ....1,1 - T -,... 1. . 1. ........... CS! , 1.11 1 1 1 . 4 1.., x Oil UkA .11. ., 4111. 1111. OIIt I called me vile names. I had to defend myself. She struck me first." H. C. Elder, of the Liquor Dealers' A sociatlon. who witnessed the trouble, said: "I understood there was trouble In the place, so I summoned Joe Day. He's a pretty good fellow and a friend of mine. We both went to the saloon. The Schill berg woman was abusive to us both and slapped Joe. Then he defended himself. Mrs. Schillberg will be unable to leave her apartments for several days. FOR MEN LATEST STYLES ALL LEATHERS POPULAR PRICES COMFORT. SERVICE VALUE GUARANTEED ASK YOUR DEALER MADE. I BROCKTON RETAILS EVERYWHERE AT $3.50, $4.00, WHOLESALE ONLY PRINCE SHOE CO. PORTLAND, OR. $5.00 EDUCATIONAL Cleanliness and Godliness. Atchison Globe. Lots of people become dirty without en tering politics. A CONSERVATIVE CUSTODIAN HIBERNIA SAVINGS BANK .DOES A General Banking Business Pays Interest on Savings and Time Deposits' Cor. Second and Washington Sts. Portland, Oregon . . "New York's Pa Latest Hotel Mar TU rm Northern On 57th Street, West 1, ' Two minutes from Central rsxK V u An Abode of Luxury Quiet Elegant Moderately Priced On one oi New York's finest, most central thoroughfare s a few doors east of Carnegie Hall is located the Grent Northern ahotel ofiering the best that New York has to give. All that the most extravagant hostelries afiord in cuisine, in service, in surroundings and more. Decorations of the periods of Louis XVI., Heraldic, Elizabethan, Marie Antoinette and Gothic. Buffet and Grill Rooms finished in Egyptian combined with Art Nouveau. One minute walk frcm surface and electric railroads. Fifth Avenue Motor Busses pant tho door cn route to Riverside Drive. Single Rooms Wl'h Private Bath $2.00 a dcy and up. Write for Booklet. Special Introductory Rates to Westerners TAXTCAB SERVICE FREE To gurnl of Great Xnrthrrn Unlet from frrru, railrvc4 rind erramfihip depots, ififrinQ- hntrl?4 Ito.tt in etflreinrr. Address : 1 18 West 57th Streci. N. Y. M.E.BVRKE ' I.D.IV1S0N Associate Manager New Home wE are now located in our new home, Fourth and Yamhill streets. Everything strictly up to date. Perfect light and ventilation. Business men as teachers, BUSINESS COLLEGE Portland, Oregon I. M. WALKER, President-Principal. o. a: bosserman, Secretary-Manager. f$n5S (GRADUATES CAN BE POU1 HA tyj 1 THIS SCHOOL AS THE BEASON 4- 1 OUVD EVERYWHERE POlVTfVGTO FOB THKiRREKVKKABlE SIJLCtSSI Best Equipment Best Light and Ventilation Best Teachers Thorough and Efficient Instruction Up-To-Date Methods Tenth and Washington Sts. A 2554, Main 513. T)fl?rnflN SECURED FOR STUDENTS WHEN fe riWlIJUlW COMPETENT WITHOUT CnAKGE mmm WJ E . 1 i-cy MP A "AY and .IliiUiH. NIGHT Schools DAY SCHOOL OPEN NOW. MGHT SCHOOL OPENS SEPT. 20, 1910. A School Not Hun to Make Money, bu! for the Good of the Students. Six Clax Months Advertising ' It Gives Your Skin A Cool, . Refreshing Tinglai TO BATHE WITH SAPOLJO Hot weather is robbed of much of its discomfort by this fine, invigorating, skin-cleansing soap. All Grocers and Druggist stirntn In Orpffnn. WHf for Una. ?l HJJitC trafnU circular. Hr-'nr luxtitiitn. irtt - 71 . 11th Xm ForOxind. Oreeon Alsebra 8.00 Assavuijr 17.50 Architectural drafting: 12.50 Automobile Blhle study Kookkecplfij? Boys' school Bricklaying Business correspondence KuH'ness law Carpentry and woodturnlng hemlstry Civil service (see director) fookins. hotel and restaurant... L.lectriclty and electrical ma chinery Electrical wiring EnsrMsh for foreign men English, grammar and reading.. Freehand drawing French Forestry and lumbering Geometry Oerman . Heating and ventilation ; Latin Machine design Mechanical drafting .Mechanic and applied mathe matics ; Penmanship Pharmacy 1 Phvuiral and Com. seogranhy . . . I Phvsics 12.00 Piano tuning and repairing 40.00 I Plan reading and estimating 15.00 Plumbing shop practice 25.00 Poultry raising, lecture -course , Public speaking 10.00 i Reinforced concrete construction 2h.no Rhetoric Salesmanship. Spanlfih Pneet metal drafting Shorthand Surveying and mapping Show card writing Telegraphy and dlspatchlrg Trigonometry Typewriting. Vocal music NIGHT GROUP COURSES Men's Knglish Boys" English Commercial .' Shorthand. DAY scnooi Commercial day 45.00 College preparatory 36.00 Boys' school 15.00 C all or Send for Free Illustrated Catnlogne. Similar Schools Seattle, Spokane, Taroma. 10.00 5.00 20.00 2.50 2.50 20.00 17.50 17.50 "5.V0 5.00 10.00 S.00 15.00 8.00 8.00 13.00 8.00 12.50 12.50 12.50 3.50 17.50 8.00 5.00 S.00 15.00 10.00 15.00 20.00 20.00 8.00 10.00 5.00 12.00 7.00 15.00 15.00 BUSINESS COLLEGE TILF0R0 BUILDING, TENTH AND MORRISON A. P. ARMSTRONG. LL. B.. PRINCIPAL Our in admittedly the hiffh-Btandard commercial school of the Northwest- Teachers having both business and professional experience qualify stu dents for success by individual instruction If desired, in a short time and at small expense. Position for each as soon as competent. Open all the year. Catalogue, business forms and pen work free. Call, telephone (Main 564), or writ. For Girls, eondnrted by the 8ITFR8 OF THE HOLY 0FJESUS AffD MARY Grade. Academic and CoUvtinUt Courses Miuio, Art, K locution and Commercial Jieyts. IUsiuEit a iil Dar Student Beflned. Monti and Intellectual Training Write for Announcement Addretti Sism Htpfbxqb, St. Mary Acaderay.loRTL-iKD LAW DEPARTMENT University of Oregon . POKTLAJO, UKGGOM. . Kali term opens September 13, 1910. Course, three years ot ulna month i each, covering- twenty brancnes ot th law. Evening classes. Graduates are especially prepared tot the state bar examination. For catalogue giving; Information ad dress WALTER H. EVANS (ill COltBUTT BLOG, FOUTLASD, Or.