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About The new age. (Portland, Or.) 1896-1905 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 9, 1901)
THE ..lvEW AGE, PORTLANI), OREGON. !U ? -.' TI,IT VK2 -W.1U " i 'H ' II c. - ---i &?; ft ' ,ti potw 1 ' w ciiArruit v. "Who lmM tin- key tu the nttlc of the house?" umIcccI tliu detective, wliun they linil (le.sceiiiletl from the pliuzn. "MIhh llnttle, ntiiHler; hIil nula-d me for it yrtttrnliiy iiiimiiIiik." "In there more limn one?" "No, niimter, only do one." "Come 'ninml here on the wiit hMu of the limine. Im tlmt yon, Uiillmn?" "Vi-h, Mum I.1111;:. It's Callmii." "No one Ims left the house, hiivo those you know?" "No, Miiih I.niiK. "Now. Iluiiuiili, who mtinloreil your nutater?" "I don't Know Hint, Mtirn Lime" "You do know who rune the door hell; but do you menu when Hubert Campbell Hounded It?" "No, Mnrn I.iiiik. no. I dlden know MnrH Hubert wiim In de Iioiimc till nfter I heurd de bell; but he miiMt Imve been, for It viin lie Hint went to de door, unci not live inln uteH nfter. when I went to de door of do library, dur he tttood, with de bloody knife In his blind, and Mar Herman 'ciinIiik him of inurderln' mauler." "Wiih that the HrHt you know of IiIh he Iiik In the limine?" "Wnlt, Mnra Limit. I had been diwln In de kllehen. Millie had nolle itpstiilrH to bed, and when I wake up I thmiKht I'd nee If ole mauler bad Kone in ImmI, and put out de IIkIiIh In de hull. You nee, I know eil, line' Duke had none to bed. hii I passed through the dliiliiK loom ami out Into the ball. Komehow, I haiipeii to look up. 1 nioe I wiih lnoklii' at de IiiiiikIii' lamp; lint 1 seed Homeone hImiiiIIii' on de HlillrH, about live Hleps down. Da had on a Ioiik while nlnlil kiiwii. At llrMt, I IhoiiKht It wh MIhh llallle; but then I need It wiim too tall mill bl for her, and de hair on he head wiih loo blaek and short. I wiih jest about to speak when de person on de HlaliH bent ober, HldewajH like, and reach ed out one arm, and wld de hand seized hole of de wire ilnt IoiiiIh to de bell at de lower end of de hall and pulled It. lie pulled It several times, and as he was bent ober, I saw his fine." "It wiih the fare of Herman Craven?" "Yea, Mais l.aiiK, and ho wiih iih white ns death. I dlden know what to do. A tremblln' seized me, and I was that tiUeer ed 1 Ink to fell down. Suddenly, I heard (do miiHlor'H video, and someone started for do door from do library. 1 thought It wiih ole master. Mnrn Herman had dodg ed back upstairs, and I ran through do illnliiK room and Into do kitchen." "Then j on did not see lleiimiu Craven descend I ho Htalrs?" "No, Mars I.aiitf. Mars Herman was In bis night shirt, and he ran back after he Inn! pulled de bell wire." "Illd he see you, Haiinah?" ' "I can't he certain; but I don't think he did, Mars Linn:." "If he did, your life may be In peril, not thai he would Tear your tesllmony, lint that )ou iniylit Kite me lurormallou. You must be mi jour gunnl, and wntcli 111 tit closely. You must never be alone never leave the bouse by yourself. He must have cominllled this munlcr." "How could he, Mrs. I.iiiik? I hadeii been back In do Million no lime when I beard a kiiiiiii. I rim back to de dinlii' room door, mid was staiidln' there Irene Mill', when MnrH Hubert pushed open do front door and run In. He was bare headed, ami I doded hack, as he entered do library door. The neM thing 1 heard Ids cry: 'Help! Minder!' then I hear Mara Herman kmnk on Miss llntlle's door ami call her, ami Haw them mine down slalrs together." "Hubert Campbell, nu say. pushed upon the front door ami ran in? It musi hnve been unfastened, then." "The dour was stanilln' ajar, Mars Lung, Ink he Ion It, when he went out lo hoe who was dar." "Then you do nut lliiuk Herman de scended the siiilrs after you saw him pulling the wire, mil i I aUcr the murder bad been cuinmllled?" "No, Miiih I.iiiik, he hadn't time." "Do j on know when Herman entered the house to-night?" "No. but I know lie was In i'e library, and I was in do dliiiu' room, when he pass ed through de hall mid went up to bed." "How long was Ibis before ho pulled the wire?" "Oh. a lung time. Mars I.iiiik, before 1 was tlnxlii perhaps an hour." "Did mi hear loud obes, n though jour iniiHior mill lleruimi wereiiuarreliug to-night?" "No, Mars Lang. Ole master nebber iiurrel. He say what ho mean, but bo neither iiaricl, and I hoaid no loud voices until 1 hoard Mars Hnberl'H cries of 'Help! Minder!'" b'ur a moment the detective stood there in the darkness, in thoughtful hIIoiico. Suddenly he said: "You know, Haiiiiah, that it would jtot have taken Herman Craven long to run down the stairs, Mill.e that blow ami dash up them again," "I know that, master; but he couldn't lime done it. If he hud already been down stitlrs when do boll sounded, and hid in muster's loom, or In de library, he might have had time after Mars Hubert went lo do door to have killed ole muster and dashed up de stairs before 1 hoaid tlmt groan and got back to do dining room dour. He didn't run up after that." "You forget," said Sellars, "that If he is the murderer of our master ho was down Hlitlis at the time y on heard that groan," "He couldn't have been, Mars I.ung, Mars Herman Is not the murderer of ole muster." "Why dlil be pull the wire ami sound the bell? He must lme known that Hub ert was In the house, and It must liae been for the purpose of calling him to the door." "Klthor ho or old master, Mars I.ang. He must have thought 1 had gone to bed." "Yes, either Campbell or your master. You say that when yon liitally advanced to lite library door Hubert was standing with the bloody knife In his hand?" "Yes, and right over ole master's body, as though he hud just pulled the bin do from his breast. There was tdood on his band and sleeve, and horror on Ids face. Y s Herman denounced hi in an muster' EffiEl Qrf$. $e murderer, but Mnrn Holier! did not kill ole innHler. He wiih not In the house when that blade was driven to his heart and I heard that cry." "Did you nee anything of a bng of coin when you entered the library, Hannah?" "Nothing, Mnrn Lang." "Him Herman any personal friends, whom he HomctlmoH brings to the house? Young men, probably." "No, Mum Lang; none have ever ac companied him hero." "Do you think your muster had n high regard for Ills nephew?" "He take him in when he come to him, liirs Lang, because lie wan Ida slster'H Hon; but olo master had no use for his father, who led MJsh Mottle a Borry life, and broke her heart before she died. I don't think he had much use for his t.on." "Yoti.don't think he would have given him his dniigliter'H hand in marriage?" "Never! He know MIhh lluttie love Mnra Hubert, and I often hear him praise Miiih Hubert up," "Well, that Is all to-night, llnnnnli. Not n word, you understand, to anyone of our conversation. If Herman speakH to you, do not seem to doubt the guilt of Kobcrt Campbell. To your mistress, say that I will hoc her to-morrow. Tell her further, that If she baa HiisplelotiH, to ket'p them lo hersolr. 1 do not think she believes Herman guilly; but hIio must not seem auspicious of him. She must try and act as though hIio believed the right party had been apprehended. Tell her that Hubert Campbell, though In custody, Is under the proteetliiK care of Lang Sellars. Now can you return to the house without your ab sence having been noted by Herman?" "Ibislly, Mars Lang." "Then do so, ami watch closely. Do not sleep alone. Your young mistress will have many lady friends hero in her trou ble. Keep Millie as near you as you can. (lood-nlght." "(lood-nlght, MnrH Lang," said tho no gross, and she had Htarted along the side of the lioitso for the rear entrance when (lie detective called Iter back. "Are Adam, the coachman, and Herman on friendly terms?" he asked. "Adam rather see the devil than Mars. Herman," said tho negr.oss. "Mars Her man 'sped more of olo maHlor's nlggorH than ho do hlssclf." "I iiiidorstaiMl," said Sellars. "That Is nil," and as the negros.s ugalu Htarted off he Jollied Cnlhitu. "You can ko home now, Cnllmii," ho Hitld. "It must lie U o'clock In tho morn ing." "I 'spec It Ih, Mars Lung," sold the ne gro, an ho made off in tho darkness. Another mystery to unravel," mutter ed the detective, iih ho paused out the gate. "Horinan Craven's hand must have gullied the Keen blade of that Hhoath knife, uoiwlthstandliiK (ho fart that Hannah slates that It could not have been ho. Nut n drop of blood on his spullesH garments. Not a stain ou Ills white. bauds, but a ilamnable one ou his guilty conscience. Whether or not ho struck the blow, bis wiih the head that planned tho murder. He pulled the wire and bounded the bell that for a moment loft tho coast clear. Campbell wiih the one mail he wished re moved flout his pilli. Hut the bug of coin? Clearly lie had a confederate, and thai confederate struck the blow and es caped wiili the com. Why, Herman had no knowledge of the fact that Campbell wits to bo there with the coin to pay that note to-night I iiieiin last night, now un til after ho had eiitertd (lie linuxo and the hanker bad Informed him In the Miliary ami then he did not know that ho would boar wltli him a bag of coin. Not a living Mini witnessed that blow, save the one wlio struck Itnot even Heruian Craven unless, perehatue, bo struck the blow. Hannah ahum kiw his blanched face when ho pulled (hit! who, and her oath would not be ndmlasllilo in a court of Jus tice. Lang Sellars. you have solved sumo Indicate eases. Solve Ibis, and bring tho murderer or miiidercrs of Hanker Do HoM'tlo Injustice. Humph! Not a doubt of It!" the detective exclaimed aloud. "Why," lie thought, "1 can place my hand, any minute, on the foimulator of this tragedy. Now for I lie evidence that will condemn him. Now for tho unknown accoinpllto if lie had one -ami I lie bag of com. I wonder," ho thought, suddenly coming lo a full halt, "if I Imve his full mntlNc. Was this murder planned after lie hud arrived at tho limine last night, and was Ids sole object to get poM-icvdou of tlmt money? If so, ho hud a confederate, sure. He might huu abstracted a much larger sum from tho bank. Ah, yes, tint certain detection would have followed. One thing Is certain: Tho object was to get rid of Hanker Deltasone. 1 think that bud been determined in your mind In fo re to night, Herman Craven, and if bo fine to-night, why, then tho securing of this bag of coin was no part of jour mo tive; but Hubert being there with his bag of coin was a circumstance, though not counted on, yet to bo taken advantage of, mid shrewdly the matter was managed. The banker Is murdered, (lie bag of coin disappeared, and the mini who stood lit the nephew way Is In the custody of Sheriff Cobb presumably a murderer. And I am loft to solve the mystery that surrounds the taking off of a good man. 1 wondet if Mr. DeHosette left a will, and what that document will reveal? A little time will tell; ami now for tho grieving mother and t.Ut-r of the innocent victim of cir cumstances, who Is pacing with anxious strides tho tloor of a cell in the county Jail." Sell.irs had readied tho widow's resi dence ou Walnut street, A bright light shone forth from the front windows, and us ho stepped on the plana a low moaning sound reached his ears from within. "Hour souls," ho thought. "I will soon dispel jour ugouhinK fears, and ore long, 1 trust, testore to you your son and broth er." And he rang the door Ml. UIIA1-THU VI. Hoger, an old family servant, to whom tho detective wus well knowu, opeued the door, uud us ho saw the tall form of Sel- Inrs before htm, the txcinmatloii!',"Thanli Uod!" fell from his lips. ; "Your mistress and her daughter know of the murder, and that Hobert is held la custody of the sheriff?" .. . i "Yes, Mars .Lnng, yes; Sheriff Cobb brought Mnrs Hobert here, before ho take him to Jail. There woh a scene, Mars Lung, a scene, and my old mistress and Miss Jennie Is distracted. Dat boy niu't no murderer, Mars Long. I trot him on my knee when he was n chile, and I oughtor know, Hrurnllty don't run In de Campbell blood, Mnrs Lnug."- "Tell the ladles I am hero, Hoger, and , ask them " At this moment tho sitting room door opened and Jennie Campbell stepped Into the hall, with a handkerchief to her eyes. "What Is it, Hoger?" she nsked. "One who has called to bid you banish all fear as to any peril your brother may be in because of tills sad case," said tho detective, as ho advanced towards her. "Lang Sellars." "Oh!" cried Jennie. "The great detec tive. Hut but Hobert said that even you believed him guilty of that terrible crime that you remarked that Sheriff Cobb had apprehended the guilty man. Sure ly, surely, sir " "It Is sometimes necessary, Miss Jennie, to divert suspicion from the perpetrators of crime, In order that they may deem themselves secure, and In their fancied se curity to let thr-in rest until they are thoroughly entangled In the network of their own crime, and n eholn of evidence be woven about them that wilt leave no doubt as to their guilt when they arc ar raigned before n liar of Justice. Such a en ho. is this. So, though seemingly 1 ac quiesced In Sheriff Cobb's opinion and ap proved of your brother's apprehension, I assure you that oven then I was fully aware that ho had an liulocent tniiu In custody. Hobert Campbell was not the murderer of Alvln DoHosette." "Hless you, sir! Hless you! Your as surance will give my mother comfort that the words of no other could. Not but that she knowH Hobert to lie Innocent, but that you, n man whose fame us n detector of crime, and who, It Is said, reads men's lives, their motives and their thoughts, in their eyes and features, an we ordinary people would In n printed book, have pro nounced him innocent. I'lense come to my mother, sir." "You Hatter me, Miss Campbell," said the detective, as ho followed her. "I can scarce speak unmerited words of j llattery, sir, of tho man who saved the life of Herbert Hussell." The mother of Hobert Campbell sat bowed in grief In a rocker near it table In the center of the room the most bitter grief site had ever known, for her loved son lay Incarcerated in Wilmington Jail, mid tho, foul crime of murder was charg ed against him. "Mother!" exclaimed her daughter, "here Is one who will drive away your agonizing fours, one who will nsstire you of my brother's Innocence." "If I could have the assurance of one man nlono in nil this broad laud," said tho widow, "that he believed ii'y son Inno cent of n'foul crime of which I know him to be not the perpetrator, my heart would be comforted. Hut alas, he also has con demned my boy. You know of whom I speak, daughter the great Southern de tective." "Madam," said Sellars, deeply moved; "ho whom you Indicate, from motives now .known to your daughter, or partly so, it Ih true, did seemingly approve of the apprehension of your sou, but let u'ie as sure you that In Ills heart there rests not a single doubt of your son's innocence. To assure you of that fact, and in n measure relievo you of anxiety, ho Is here." At the lirst sound of the detective's voice Mrs. Campbell bud raised her tear stained eyes to his face, mid now n deep sob burst from her breast, and for a mo ment she seemed choking wltli emotion; then recovering in a degree her composure, she extended one band to the detective. "The Lord lie praised!" she exclaimed, "Lang Sellars! Willi him assured of my boy'H Innocence, with Hubert under his protecting enre. all is well. My daughter, we have nothing to four. We will banish our tears and moans, (bid bless you, sir!" (To be continued. I EDWAnD TURING MEAD MASTER A MoM'um irlcolil-J '-mi tu (ho clcuco of (1 K nt o Soon lifter tliuxile-ith of IMwnnl Tilling, thirty-four yearn hoad-iiiustor of Uppingham School, u member of l'uiiluiueiit mild to bis biographer: "Tilling wiih tho tiinxt renmVkiiblo Christian mini of tills generation. Hc eiiusu he was tho lirst limn In Knghunl to assert openly tlmt In the economy of (.'(id's world a dull boy bad us much light to Imvo his power, mich us It Is, fully -tinlni'il iih n boy of talent, mul that no school did honest work which did not recognize this truth us the ba sis of Its working arrangements." When Tlirliij: beeanio lieiiibiimster of Uppingham, a "fnliv, free grammar school" founded In HiSI, It laid twonty- jVoven pupils. On his departure from his nro-woru tno scnooi iiuninoreu over four hundred poplin. Tint schoolmas ter, ns ho called himself, had a passion ate conviction that education was, In a special sense, a work of Cod. That conviction was his Martlng-polnt for school work. Ono night ho hail tho gratltlcatlon of lieniinu a statement that cheered him Kreatly because It disclosed tho forma tlvo Inllueneo of his teachings. A uen tloman, lecturiiiK In the schoolroom on "lMueatlon," told an anecdote llluatrn tlvo of tho value of a tcaohor'a Inllu eneo. A boy, traveling on foot lu Franco, full of spirit and life, had been asked by his companions to start early on Siuiday to have a loug day. Tho boy refuse!. lU-lnji pressed, ho said: "No, I will not do It; tho head-master will not like It." Tho other boys laughed, and said that tho head-master was tlvo hundred miles away; his excuse was nonsense. Hut their Jwrlng did not change his purpose. Then tho lecturer turned round towurd Mr. Tluing, and wild: "That boy was from rpplngham; that head-master was you, sir," Tho school cheered. The head-master, Kreatly moved, rose and said, "I am sure you will all thank the lecturer; you must fool what I feel deeply. I thank the school for giving one such boy, I tbluk there are many such boya auioue you."--Youth's Coinpaulou. HEROIO EXPLORER'S MEMORY. Honored bx the Erection of a Monu ment to Gen. Pike. A lofty monument, dedicated nt Kan pas City, mnrks tho spot In Hepubllc County, Kan., where Gen. Zcbulon M. like first raised tho flag In Missouri. The dedication was marked by Interest ing ceremonies, and the gallant soldier and heroic explorer w a b ban dsomcly eulogized. Tho Plko .family were New Jersey people, and Zcbulou Montgomery was iik.v. z. m. l'licr. uorn !,, tho out skirts of what Is now Trenton, In 1771), while his father, a captain In tho Hevo lutionary army, was lighting the Brit ish. While tho sou wns a child, .his father removed with his fnmlly to Bucks County, Pennsylvania, and thence In n few years to Easton, where tho boy wns educated. He wns appointed an ensign In his father's regi ment, March 8, 1700, lirst lleutennnt in November, nnd captain In August, 1800. While advancing through tho lower grades of his profession ho sup plemented the dullclencles of his edu cation by the study of Latin, French and mnthematlcs. After tho nurchaso of Louisiana from the French, Lieut. Pike was aPitointcd to conduct nn ex pedition to trace the Mississippi to Its source, nnd leaving St. Louis Aug. 0, 1S05. he returned after nearly nine months' exploration nnd constant ex posure to hardship, having satisfactor ily performed the service. In 1800-7 ho was engaged In geographical explora tions In Louisiana Territory, In tho course of which liu discovered Pike's Penk In the Hocky Mountains and reached Itlo fJrando Hlvcr. Having been found on Spanish territory lie and bis party were taken to Sautn Fe, but, nfter a long examination and the seiz ure of Plko's impers, they were re leased. Ho arrived at Natchitoches on July 1, 1807, received the thnnks of tho government, and In 1810 published a narrative of his two expeditions. Capt. Plko was mndo n major In 180S. a lleutennnt colonel lu 1800, dep uty (iiinrteriniistor general April 3, 1812, colonel of the Fifteenth Infnntry July , 1812, and brigadier general on March 12, ISM. Hnrly In 18C1 ho was assigned to the principal army as adju tant and Inspector general and selected to eoiiiniiind un expedition against York (now Toronto), Upper Camilla. On April. 27. the licet conveying tho troops for the attack on York reached the harbor of that town and measures were taken to Inutl them at once. (Jen. Pike lauded with the main body as soon ns prac ticable, and. tho enemy's advanced par ties railing back before him, ho took onu of the redoubts tlmt had been con Bttucted for the innln defense of tho place. The column was then halted until arrangements were made for tho attack on another redoubt. While Gen. Pike and- many of his soldiers were noil toil on the ground the magazine of the Tort imploded, a mass of stone fell upon him and he was fatally Injured, surviving but a few hours. HERMAN O. ARMOUR. Ilio .V.iiltliiillllniiulre I'nckcr Who I Me I K'cer- itly. Herman Osslan Armour, tho multimillionaire- packer of Chicago nnd New York, who died nt Saratoga recently, was a nrotner or the more famous Philip 1). Armour, whoso death occur led Mime time ago. Herman wns bom a t Stockbrldge, Ma llson County, N. Y.. March 2, Hs't7, and from Iho I'arui wont to Mil- 4 "mi waiikeo lu 1S3H. After a few years' business training there bo embarked In 1SU2 lu the grain commission business lu Chicago. His younger brother, Joseph, Joined him there, and In 18(!5 tool; entire ohurgo of Uk Chicago establishment, while Her man O. Armour removed to New York and organized a now firm under tho nil mo of Armour, Pbinkluton a Co. His now enterprise was a great success from tho sturt, and the llrm grow until It becitnio recognized throughout tho country. Mr. Armour's ability won for him an etnlalile reputation as one of tho foremost among the merchants and tliianclors of the metropolis. Tho busi ness which ho was Instrumental In es tablishing now employs 15,000 hands. Ho Had tho Money. A Western millionaire, who has inado n fortimo out of mines, nnd who Is re mnrkablo alike for his liberality nnd for his Ignorance of his bank account, says tho Chicago Inter Ocean, was nsked ono day to contribute to au object of char ity, Thu canvasser suggested that ono thousand dollars would bo an accepta ble contribution. "That lsu't enough," replied the cap italist. "I will give you tlvo thousand If I have the mouey In the bank, Walt until I call up and Inquire." liu summoned a clerk ami told him to telephone to tho bank to Inquire If he had live thousand dollars on deposit, as he deslreil to contribute that sum, If possible, to n worthy object. Tho clerk returned, and reported that tho bank advised that ho had thrcoJiuiidred and eighty thousand dollars In the-bank. "Dear mo," cried tho capitalist, "as much ns that! Well, make out that check Mr live thousand dollars." iHMiKtli or Facial Kouurt?s, The proper length of the forehead Is one-third of the length of tho face; the nose should also measure one-third, the mouth ami chin together the other. Ladles' Home Journal ' - - - - - - - wmm Loewenberg & MANUFACTURERS Pi gggnl Ira: m i gn' j-j-" t rgfioft 229 to 23S Taytor St root WO to 1B4- Sooond Stroot mirieanjii jnEncanijainidruL rSr.cass ijNKTfcv iWL4KaHW iBagWtk MRSKVaSRMS- w, F COR. TWELFTH AND FLANDERS STS., All Orders Promptly Executed. Portland, Oregon, Zimmerman-Wells Machinery Co. Incorporated. Marine, Mining, Saw Mill, Logc'n? Wood Working, Hoisting and Trans mission Machinery. Engineers' and Loggers' SuppHea. Agents A. Lesclien & Sons Rope Co., Celebrated Hercules Wire Rope, R. N. Namon &c Co.'s Lu bricating Oils and Compounds, 41-43 SECOND STREET. PORTLAND, OREGON THE METROPOLITAN BAMK CAPITAL - - $50,000. rrtCKcn block, tacoma, wash. I'tULlP V. CAK5.tIt, 'rt'lihnt: Dtl'MAN W. KNOS, Vlce-1'rolitonti 0. B. SKU'IO, Cnttiler: J.U'OH II. VAMIKIUIM.T, AuUtum Cashier. .... GENERAL DAMKINO IM ALL ITS BRANCHES .... Intercit allowed on deposit In Saving IK arimcnt. Clronlur letters til Credit lncl on ltmiK Koiif, China and Yokolioma. Japan; uUo Draft nnd Hills of KxclianiiO Issued ou China Hint Japan and tlio principal elite of Kuropc. Foreign monevn uxclmngod. IV. Ilavo Spoolml Faallltlca for Handling Bold Butt and Bullion. OVERLAND WAREHOUSE GENERAL STORAGE AT LOWEST RATES Low .. Insurance .. Rates KELLEY-CLARKE CO. PORTUAIND t CT V ? iv Adamant... IF YOU ARE GOING BUILD OK REPAIR I W,. '.MMiWaJCJ nEkm JHJiP;fs5832aJ VIL?.F J "P '-aSArA Cw. THE ADAMANT CO., f Phone North 2091. Office and Factory. Foot of 14th St., PrtlftntiOrti. Going Company OF AND DEALERS IN Stove Ranges, Hollowware . Household,.. Specialties... Handled by All First Class Dealers... Royal Steel Ranges Are the Best and Cheapest in the Market PORTLAND, OREGON Our Specialty 7i. Work. A Trial Will Convince. Oregon Totchnne Grant 621 Columbia Sol. LilOltd .... OREGON. In all that pertains to this line 4 "We will supply you and fit up your home or office with everything in electric light ing, telephones, electric bells, etc, in a scientific and expert manner, at fair and reasonable prices. Anything in our line that you wish done satisfactorily, tele-, phone, send by mail, or call at Western Electrical Works, Kl.' Wi.ftlnMnn S PORTLAND, ORE. "THE PERFECTION OF WALL PLASTER" TO Investigate V. .- H -i . f " .i t Hi'..ii.i -! im"nn - - m-tUmtmtmm.