FLAMES IN FORESTS. SWEEPING FIRES THAT LEAVE WILD WASTES EEHIND. Extraordinary Pecuniary Losses In flicted by tlie Unfettered Element that Holla Oil-ward, In a Mad Torrent of Bnnacioim Billows and Denes Man. A forest denuded by Are presents a woeful sight. The trees are not entirely consumed. The burned trunks of all larger ones staud straight and tall, dead, but not destroyed. Sometimes forest fires rage over such vast areas that their smoke Is visible from any point In a State. Dr. J. T. Rothrock, Commissioner of Forestry for Pennsyl vania, shows that the potential loss of 1 A nUHXKD FOIiEST. the commonwealth from each tire or each series of fires that devastate the ' timber-producing areas In Pennsyl vania is $30,000,000. The fires occur chiefly from two causes. Hallroad com panies burn their old ties along the right of way. without taking any pre caution to prevent the tire spreading to the woods, and the small farmers in clearing wood-lots for farming pur poses burn the brush and fallen timber, without caring whether the fire spreads or not. The Illustrations are significant as allowing the desert condition which a Are, or series of fires, produces. In many parts of the United States one may see such tracts, over which fires have swept almost every year, destroy ing the young forest growth and ren dering the soil, after each succeeding lllil fill I U9SSSH? t3fjf tLsMimd III r 1 l li i mm - i T art! . I 1 ST1UC1CT IN PHILLIPS BEFOHK AND A FT E It THE FIHE. conflagration more and more barren. The deterioration In the picturesque ness of the country, or the loss In mou- j ey 10 uie person or persons who may own these districts for lumbering pur poses, may more easily be Imagined .than told. Wlint' could be more dreary than the country shown In the two photographs? The year 1S04 will long bo remember ed In Wisconsin and Minnesota for the terrible calamities which occurred In July and August of that year. Intense heat and little ralu had made the for ests almost like a kiln. All through the Bummer fire had been feared and look ed for, and by the end of July it was said that not less than $3,000 worth of pine had been destroyed. The lire ex tended over n stretch of nearly fifty miles wide, and all that experience gained by woodsmen and lumbermen In dealing with forest tires availed nothing against the sweeping flames, which were driven like an overwhelm ing flood by a strong wind, leaving death and destruction In their path. In the photographs presented herewith, which show a Wisconsin town named Phillips before and after the fire, one may see how completely the forest lire lleaid docs his work. Phillips wag burn ed July 27, nud the loss of life would have been severe had not the Inhabit- nuKxan fqhkst after twkstt ybabs. nuts escaped by taking trains to places of safety. In October, 1S71, one of the most tor rlblo fires lu America on record broke out at Peshtlgo, Wis., and more than TOO persons were burned to death. But probably the saddest fire w that which occurred In 1S04 one glimpse of which, at Phillips, has already been had. The unfortunate place was Hinckley, Minn., and the calamity oc curred on Sept. 1 of that year. Owing to the long-protracted drought, as is pointed out In the report of the State commission for the relief of the forest fire sufferers, the fires had prevailed in different localities for several weeks, but on that day the wind became a tor nado, and' a small fire then burning spread with frightful rapidity, and was carried on the wings of the tornadi over a district covering nearly 400 square miles. A furnace blast swept over the fated district, and left behind It complete devastation. Every build ing In Hinckley was destroyed. So sud den was the onset of the flames that the people could only run from their houses and seek a place of refuge, without even an effort to save their household effects. Four hundred and eighteen persons, about one-sixth of the population of the district, are known to have perished by a most frightful death In the flames. TAMED A WAR-HORSE. Feat of Alexander the Great in the I) ivg of His ISoyhood, One of the stories told by Alexander the Great Is that of how, when a boy of 12, he tamed the war-horse Bucepha lus. The following Is the account giv en by Plutarch In his life of Alexander: "Philonlcus of Thessaly had offered to sell Philip his horse Bucephalus for thirteen talents. So they all went down Into the plain to try the animal. He proved, however, to be balky and ut terly useless. He would let no one mount him, and none of the attendants of Philip could make him hear to him, but he violently resisted them all. Philip, in his disgust, ordered the horse led away as being utterly wild and un trained. Whereat, Alexander, who was present, said: 'That Is too good a horse for those men to spoil that way, simply because they haven't the skill or the grit to handle him right.' At first riilllp paid no attention to him, but as he kept Insisting on being heard and seemed greatly, disturbed about the matter, bis. father said to him: 'What do you moan by criticising your HI TAMINQ OP BUCEPHALUS. elders, as If you were wiser than they, or kuew so much more about handling a horse thnu they do?' 'Well, this horse, anyway, I would handle better than any one else, It they would give mo a chance.' 'In case you don't suc ceed,' rejoined his father, 'what penal ty are you willing to pay for your fresh ness?' 'I'll pay, by Jove, the price of the horse!' Laughter greeted this an swer, but after some bantering with his father about the money arrange ments, ho went straight to the horse, took him by the bridle, aud turned him around toward the sun. This he did on the theory that tho horse's fright was due to seeing his own shadow dance up and down on the ground be fore him. He then ran along by his side awhile, patting and coaxing him, until, after awhile, seeing he was full of fire and spirit and impatient to go, he quietly threw off his coat, aud swinging himself up, sat securely astride the horse. Then he guided him about for a while with the reins, with' out striking him or Jerking at the bit When now he saw that the horse was getting over his nervousness, and was eager to gallop ahead, he let him go, driving him on with a sterner voice and with kicks of his foot. In the group of onlookers about riilllp, there pre vailed, from the first, the silence of In tensely anxious concern. But when the boy turned the horse and came gal loping up to them with pride and joy In his face, they all burst out Into a ch(Hr. His father, they say, shed tears for very Joy, aud, as he dismounted, kissed him on the head, and said; 'My mil waW)Mw son, seek thee a kingdom suited to thy powers; Macedonia Is too straight foi. thee." Bucephalus became from this time the property and the Inseparable com panion of Alexander. He accompanied him on his campaigns "sharing many toils nud dangers witn him," and was generally the horse ridden by him In battle. No one else was ever allowed to mount him, as .rrlnn says, "because he deemed all other riders unworthy." lie Is reported to have been a magnifi cent black charger of extraordinary size, and to have been marked with a white spot on the forehead. CAPTURED .CAT DEAD. Famous Feline Rescued from the Span ish. Battleship Cristobal Colon. The famous Spanish cat, Cristobal Colon, captured from the Spanish bat tleship on July 3, died at the United 2 i... ft lift W IV s y "vs k aw SKNOB CRISTOBAL COLON. States government station at Benton Harbor, Mich. This cait was In the cat show In Chicago and was awarded a special medal. Senor Cristobal Colon was a mascot on the Spanish man-of-war of that name. Early Writers on ! molting. The fact has been discovered that Shakspeare never mentions smoking or makes the slightest allusion to the habit. This Is the more curious, as most of his contemporaries. Ben Jon sou, Decker and others discuss the then new fashion at length, and the humor ist aud satirist of the time lost no op portunity of deriding and making a game of the votaries of the weed. The tobacco merchant was an Import ant personage, In the time of James I. The Elizabethan pipes were so small that when they are dug up In Ireland the poor call them "fairy pipes." King James himself was one of the most virulent opponents of the habit, and In his ludicrous "Counterblasts" calls It a vile and stinking custom, "borrowed from the beastly, slavish Indians poor, wild, barbarous men brought over from America, aud not Introduced by any worthy or virtuous or great per sonage. He argues that tobaco Is not dry and hot; that Its smoke Is humid, like all other smoke, aud Is thtrefore bad for the brain, which Is naturally wet and cold. He doules that smoking purges the head or stomach, and declares that many have smoked themselves to death. Medical Itecord. Women in Paris. "I like the way the French take their amusements," writes Miss Lilian Bell In a letter from Paris. At the theater they laugh and applaud the wit of the hero and hiss the villain. They shout their approvnl of a duel and weep aloud over the death of the aged mother. When they drive In the Bols they smile and have an air of enjoy ment quite nt variance with the bored expression of English and Americans who have enough money to own car riages. We drove In Hyde Tark In London the day before we came to Paris, aud nearly wept with sympathy for the unspoken grief In the faces of tho unfortunate rich who were at such pains to eujoy themselves. I never saw such handsome men as I saw In London. I never see such beautiful women as I see In Tarls. French men are Insignificant as a rule, and English women are beefy and dress like rag. bags." Philadelphia Inquirer. AVi Afloat wltU Napoleon. Two men living In St. Helena who were boru respectively In 1708 and 1802 are not the only persous now living who have seen Napoleon the Great. Thomas De Moleyus, who was for many years county court Judge of Kilkenny, who was called to the Irish bar In 1S31, and appointed a Queen's counsel In 1805, served In his early boyhood In the royal navy. Mr. De Moleyns was a midshipman on board the IMlerophon when Napoleon on July 15, 1S15, after "the hundred days," placed liluiself under the flag of his country and was received on board the Bellerophon. "Maud says she Is madly In love with her new wheel." "Hub! Another case where man Is displaced by machinery." Indianapolis Journal "8 -fW 13 r C. G. APPLEGATH, S VCAR Hf AD CUTTH with a. iLVnriKLo. APPLEGATH & PRASIL FASHIONABLE FURRIER5 Sealskin Garments a Specialty MEMODCLIHa ANO MPAIHINO ) ALL WORK GUARANTEED JLJflM&TDriQNTt 4 At n v4T J 7 . -i OTTO SCHUMANN MANUFACTURE! OF Flonuments and Headstones Estimates furnished on all kind8 of Marble, Granite and Building Work. : : Drawings made by description. No. 204 THIRD STREET, NEAR TAYLOR, Pilver Medal Awarded at Portland Mechanics' Fair I have a plant o( pneumatic tools, the first in the Northwest, and am now in a position to do work better and more .reasonable. 00 TO" G. H. " . FOB DOORS, WINDOWS, MOULDING and BUILDING MATERIAL. , LOWEST CASH PBICES EVER OFFERED FOR FIRST-CLASS GOODS. Shop Opposite Congreeatlonal Church, Mala Street, Oregon City, Ore, A. J. HENRil KESSLER, IY1. D. Your cine TAPEWORM In any stage without sTlTTrTTMIIllIClIf Cured by ' nnnil I H I ItiM reniedv V, friend in Berlin. It has lv (11 Tl OdDrO L'lcers, Cancer1, etc. cured, no difference how I UUU UUULU long affected. DDiTMrnn Diseases. This doctor guarantees to cure anyil fill I ft 111 case of Svohilis. Gonorrhea. Gleet. Strictures . cured, no dilterence now ' Loss ot Manhood, or Mlgntiy 1 Th. hol.il nf S1f Ahuu- YflTTKJP WW Your error It iUUiiu illlJll remeaiea, y wholesome advice and cure 1 and healthy. You will be I, Spermatorrhea, Seminal other enects. KIDNEY AND URINARY COMPLAINTS, 'painful, difficult, too frequent, milky or bloody urine, in -. natural discharges, carefully treated and permautly cured. Piles, Rheumatism and neuralgia treated by our new remedies' , and cures guaranteed. l'atieuts treated In any part of tne country ny nis home svstcm. Write full Pkrticulara enclose ten ic stamns and 'we will answer you promptly, hundreds treated at home . who aie uuanie to come to READ THIS Take clear bottle at net aside and look at it in i hat a oloudv ietthuir in it. IE disease, aim ahouiu be auenaeu to Deioreyou get an lucur- ) able Pisea as hundreds Die every year from Bright! Di-i ease 01 Kidueya, Address or Call DR. KESSLER. 2d and Yamhill YOU OWEsi- It to yourself, your family, your friends and t all you benefit to carefully and considerately In vetllgate the inarlts of VIl'.E ORE a a remedy for those who need a rure. There Is ro experi menting, no nes work, no danger, no los of time, ft Is perfectly harmless, and may always be relied on. It is the queen ol cures, for 11 reaches the n('w of all dlsraaes, and wiil enra you when all other run, dim have failed afiei you have tried all catch-penny humbugs u4 frauds only to grow older and worse. Do n4 not neglect to give it a trial, for Vita-Ora comes to the sick and ths atllictcd ilk tha vMon of the Eaelern sur to th wise men. On every pxkagt ot the gunulne will be found th. rwl Ink ngua ture of Then. Noel, l'rice H.no by mall. MKS. M. M. LiV'KOY, Agent, Viola. Ot. A. PRASIL, FORM IN LV DCSIONKft ANB CTYCII WITH MARSHAL FIKLO, CHlCAat), 143 THIRD STREET, PORTLAND, ORE. G. H. YOUNGS Tuneral Conductor And Undertaker C askets, Coffins, Robes, Lii:lng, Etc. Best Material. Lowest Prices. Next Door to Pope's hardware store. Main Street. Oregon Citv, Ob, Portland, Oregon EESTOW R. L HOLMAN . Undertaker and Embalmci ParrinB a rnmnlnto Una nf nnQVafa nnfflm robes, etc. Superior goods, Superioi services at most moderate prices. Jsexi door to Commercial bank. Ohegon City - Obeco SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS To Watch Buyers for 30 DAYS; if ' you never possessed a watch now is the TIME to own TIME of your own. 293 Morrison Street PORTLAND, OREGON N. WRIGHT, The Iowa Jeweler Loot Here, ta& Man looks tell on yon. Can keep It A ccrei a wnue. ueiore its too late. go aud see or write to this old doc- tor. He has been treating such J cases lor over m vears and perfectly X reliable. Furnishes his own medi- i and tells no tales. of the Old St. Louis Medical andJ Surgical Dispensary, 130 Yamhill t Street, Portland, Oregon, positively guarantees to remove loss of time from business. an old German remedy. This, was sent to Dr. Kessler bv a never failed, and we guarantee it., long tanning, permatorrnea, 11 j-.mtnmious, curea permam- (TM-tiin11w currA In ahnrt "n(1 ,0,,le" of yoMth c,n be ana tnis omaoctor win give you yon make you perfectly strong amazed at his success in curtug n Losses, Nightly Emmisslona, and7 the city. bedtime and utinate In the bottle. the morning , If it H cloud v or i vou have aoine kidnev or bladder For First-Class BREAD and PASTRY Go to C. F. HENNINGS Seventh St. Bakenj or atop his wagon as it goes by. Depabt TIME SCHEDULES Alm for From Port and. moM Fast Salt Lake, Denver, j Fast Wail Ft. Worth. Omaha, huL.t,. 8:00 p.m. Kansas t'Uy, Nt 6:to. m. ' LuiiK Chicago, and Ea6t, Spokane Walla Walla, 8 p o- Spokane Flyer kane, Minneapo- rlyer 2:20 p.m. lie, St. Paul, llii- 8:30 a. m lnth, Milwaukee, ChicaRO and East ' 8 :90 p. m. Ocean Steamships 4 :00 p. m. From Portland. , . Sail every Ave days. 8:00p.m. Columbia River 4:00 p.m. Ex. Sunday , Meamers. Ex. Sunday Saturday 10:00 p.m. To Astoria and way Landings. , . : 6:00 a.m. Willamette River. 4:80 p.m. Ex. Sunday Ex. Sunday Oregon City, New. berg, Salem & Way Landings. 7:00 a.m. Wlllamslle and Yam- 8:80 p. m. Tues., Thur. hill Rivers. Mon., Wed. and Sat. aud Fri. Oregon City, Day Ion, A Way Land tags. ' 6:00 a.m. Willamette River. 4:30 p.m. Tues., Thnr. Tues., Thur. and Sat. Portland to Corval- aud Sat. lis & Way Land ings. Lv. Rlparia Snake River. Lv.Lewlston 1:45 a.m. 6:45 a.m. Dailv Riparia to Lewiston Daily Ex.Sutu'rday Ex. Friday F. E. DONALDSON, Agent, Oregon City. W. H. HURLBURT, General Passenger Agent, Portland, Or. Sew Furniture AT YOUNG'S I have just received a fine lot of new furniture, which I am offering at sur-pris-ir.nl v lnuj fiirnrpa. 1 cot It at a btircain that's hovf I can sell it at these prices. In Second-Hand Goods I have stoves, cooking utensils, carpets, bedding, furniture in fact any and ev erything you want for housekeeping. I will Buy Anything ou have to sell and pay you the high .est price. Call and see me. Q. H. YOUNG, Main Stkeet - - Oregon Cm EAST AND SOUTH VIA The Ghasta Route OF TUB SOUTHERN PACIFIC CO. Express Trains Leave Portland Daily. South. I North, ( Oor.K. I Lv Portland Ar :S0a. M S:fi2p. M. I Lv Oregon City Lv l:40a.al 7;4fii.i(. Ar Ban l rauoisco Lv l:0Ur. If The above trains stop at all stations betweep Portland and Balem, Turner, Marion, JeSer eon, Albany, Tangent, Shedds, Halsey, Harris, buret, Junction City, Irving, Eugene, Creswell, Cottage Grove, Drains, and all iletlona fro a Boseburg to Ashland, Inclusive. KOSSBUKQ MAIL DAILY. MOA.sf. ,Lv Portland Arl 4:W)r. 8:27 A.M. I Lv Oregon City Lv H.S6r.il I:il0 1, u, Ar Roseburg Lv I 7; 0 M DININO CAKS ON OGDEN ROUTK. PULLMAN BUFFET BLBEPEBS AND SECOND-CLASS SLEEPING CARS Attached to all Through Trains. 'West Side Division, Between PORTLAND and CORVALLIS KAILTRaW DAII.T1 IZCIPTSDNDAT.) At Albany and Gorvaltla connect with train Of Oregon Central A Eastern R. R. tiraxas tsaim dailt(ixciftsukdat.i 4:60 P.M. I Lv Portland Ar8:25A.M 7.80 P.M. I Ar McMlnnvllla Lv U:MA.M 1.80 P.M. Ar Independence Lv4:60A. M Rates and tickets to eastern points and Europe also JAPAN. CHINA, HONOLULO and AUBTBALIA, can be obtained from E. E. BOYD, Agent, Oregon City B. KOEHLIR, C. H. MARKHAM. Manager, Asst. O. t. A P. Agent Portland, Or. Portland, Or. BOLTON DAIRY CHAS. CATTA, Proprietor Oregon City, Oregon Pure Milk and Full Measure given; delivered to any part of the city. Trj Bolton Dairy and bo ConvneeaV -: FREE -:- Aluminum Hair Pin Ornaments. Send 12 names of your friends and an order for any ONE of the articles below and receive the above beautiful pin FREE. 12 Aluminum Thimbles. .. .." 2o 1 Key Chain, W in, good 8c 1 Key Chain, 20-in, best 2o 1 Memorandum Tablet Mo 1 Bag Check, 4-in-strap 15c 1 Hat Mark 8o 1 Tie or Veil Holder 8c 1 Pocket Comb and Case, 4-in.... 8o 12 Aluminum Hair Pins 6o 1 Aluminum Box, 3-in long, filled with Hair Pins and Menthol In haler (cure headache) 15q 1 Aluminum 60c engraved, satin finished, Cliilds' cup, spun from one piece as an extraordinary in ducement for your patronage, 1 only to a customer 30o o Promptness and Reliability At Your Service L. B.EMERSON, Chicago, III. 182 E Fullerton Avenue