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About The new age. (Portland, Or.) 1896-1905 | View Entire Issue (April 19, 1902)
'? TBLH3 NWV AGE. PORTLAND. OREGON. ft 0 PIER HARDWARE ...COMPANY... ..HtXTKHSOHH TO.., HUNT HARDWARE OKF.OON M'llONK OAK 361. COLUMBIA 'I'HONK 277, CO., Second and Morrison Sts. Established Jan. 1.1009. Incorporated July 0, 1891, Portland Coffee and Spice Go. For the Trade Only. Tea, Coffee, Spices, Hairing Powder, Extracts, lite. AUR HPKCIAL IIUANDS. Spleen, Acmr, Mult noniah; linking Powders, Defiance, Double quick ; Coffee, Iloyil lllctnl ; Sugar, xzzx liar, .24-20 Front Street, 1 JJet. Aah and Ankany. PORTLAND, OREGON. EDWARD HOLMAN UNDERTAKER Fourth and Yamhill Sts. BOTH PHONES NO. 607 RENA STINSON, Lsdr Alllltint. L.W.CAKNAIIAN. President. ('. it (IWlliNHU, Vice President. V. V. TKIlltY, 'treasurer. Portland Implement Co. JOHN DEERE PLOWS, HARROWS, ETC. FARM MACHINERY AND VEHICLES. 188-194 Front Street, Portland, Ore, T Do You Know the News ? Vuu van hate It all (or Per Month Eflf Per UU Month In The KvrnliiK Telegram, of Portland, 'Oregon. It l tliu largest m.MilliK news paper published In Oti',(ii; It I'linlalna all the ncwaiil the stale and of Hit) tin Hon. Try It (or a month A sample copy wIIIIh) inallud In yon (rtu. Ad arens THE TELEGRAM, J Portland. Oregon W. I. McCain, Keatlle. , H. Hamilton, TiU'oina, M'CABK & HAMILTON .STEVEDORES.. PVGET SOUND Also Honolulu, H. I. Head Oflloo: Taooma, Wash. (able. Addrc.s Mt-UAIIK GRACIE, BEAZLEY & CO., ACnti M Water Street. Llvtrpool. Phone Ori'Kon Main 770., Columbia o Hie U GRANDE CREAMERY COMPANY BUTTER, EGGS AND OHEESE. All goods uliolcsale and retail. tdi Yamhill St., ur. Third, Portland, Or Big Money Can be miule. in Portland real stute. The city Is (jrowiuj; tauter than moHt people think, and property vulues nre steadily ml. vunclng. What will lie the result i( the (irent Lewis and Clark Centennial? Consult u if you want to make prolltnblu invest intuitu, largo or email. 11UY NOW WE INSURE TITLES. Tiilm Gumrmntmm & Truat Co. U and 7 Ohambar at Oam PORTLAND, ORCBON. Trade Mark DCtlQNI Copyrights Ac. Anion, a.nillnf a lie trh and 4crtitlon mar dolrklr uoartalu ixir ululoii fr. wb.tli.r ail lufNillmi I. prvbatlr p.lentnl turn ruroiuunlra- tloiu .Uldlr coiiO.leiill.l, IUu.ltookoiU'lcuU lire ull mix (re. Jet aitenry fur ..cuniijr Mlmlm. 141. Ilk rv fur i amKUlniU4, without clurne, tutb. 1'iitiiii lai.n mroutfU Nuim a Co. I routfb. Uuim lj. rev.U. Scientific American. .wkiAAigt 60 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Ahaod.omelr UtuitrttM wcwil. I-antMl elr euuttoii of any ( IcmlDo lurti), Term., 14 i oat i four ruoiitua, L tk44 bjall nwilal.r. feaacfc Sac, it F BU YfuhUnluu, U.C. IDAHO ADVERTISING. DOI-IMI fa'CHUKIUKIt. Funeral Director. 9IR-120 Front Btrcet, rark, Hull photic 8I2F. Onnonlto It. It. Depot liul. phono 49. 110ISK, IDAHO. VTATK HANK OF IDAHO. Wolscr, Idaho, CAPITAL, SGO.OOO. Edward Hhnlnwnld, Prealdcnt. Chan. J. Hclttyn, Caililar, Alun haii a blanch at ('ambrlilire, Idaho. People's Hank. Solicit jour business. 'I ha Hotel Weiser, Wclscr, Idaho. BARTON a BRIZENDINE, Proprietors. Frco Sumplo RooniH. HutcH reason able. MIiiith', Stockmen's and Com morutal Mcii'h IleadquarterH. Largest and bent appointed hotel In WcHturn Idaho. Uooiiih with bath, Hteunt beat and electric call bolls, liar bur uliup in connection. The Idan-ha IDANIIA 1IOTKI. CO., Ltd., Proprietors K. V. SCHUHFUT, Manager." IIOISK, IDAHO. OPENED JANUARY, 1901 AMKIUOAN PLAN. RATKS f2.50 AND UPWARDS. Headquarters for Tourlstfl, AllnltiR Men and Commercial Travelers. Prcscott, Brandt & Co., Onieo with J. II (lit Willi 1., Immigration Ant. O. 8. !,. It. It. REAL ESTATE AGENTS The great homo land mild climate, pure mountain air, Una wnter. The death mto la lower In Idaho than In any cither state. In tliu tlnlnn. No c flour, storma or lilliiarda. First premium on (rult at the World a Fair, Chicago, IH'j.l; Paris Kxposlllon, 10W. Firm premium on Lamba at Chicago Utosk Show, I WO. Hold, silver, roppor, coal, flnu timber. Grow wljeat, oati, barley, corn, all klnda of cultivated grasses, and cgelnblcii to perfec tion Wo will bo pleased to ahow yon tine Irri gated lamia at Nam pa, llolsc, Caldwell, Paycttn and oilier polnta. Wehato bargains In land from 110.00 per aero up. t'orreipotidenco io Helled. AddrcM PRnSCOTT, BRANDT & CO. Itoom ft, lllckcy llnlldliiK. NAMPA, IDAHO mllK COMMUItCIAI. HOTKI. A. Illlike)-, Proprietor Flrat claim In all redeem given to I'omiuerclal mon. Special attention I-ong distance tele phono In connection. NAMPA, IDAHO. FOR CHEAP HOMES And How to Reach Them, Cull On or Addrens J. H. GRAYBILL, Tnvellne Immigration leant Oregon Short Line fly. NAMPA, IDAHO. The Bank of Nampa. I'ltKD (I. MOCK, Catuler. WK hOMCIT VOUH IIUHINKSM. NAMPA, IDAHO nTAlt I.lVKItY. HUM) AND O llOAItDINd KTAIII.K Flrat elaai rlR tnrnlilied to all points. Hpe. clal rati a to F.mmctt, titar, Pearl and Bnalo Ithor, special attention given to eotumerclal mon. W. J. HUVAl.l., Proprietor, Nampa, Idaho h OUIS IIUNZIKKK. I PltACTlCAI. WATl'HMAKKIt, JKVVKI.KK AND OPI'IOIAN. Dlamouili, Watchei, Jewelry, Silverware, Op tical tloodt, Cut (Itaiia. 7.HJ Main Street. PKNDI.K10N, Orecon rniiK OWL A (IF.NTl.KMAN'a HK8011T. rineit Wlnei, Liquor ami Oljara. (ItvaUia Call. Opp. lpot, Utt Hand Walk. SMITH A UOCKWKLI, Propa. L Grande, Oregon Rates 12.50 Per Day and Up. THE GEISER GRAND (AMKH1CAN) A. GKISKIl, Proprietor. Commercial, Family and Tourist Hotel. UAKKH CITY, OREGON DARINQ DEATH TO LIVE:. Occiiimtioti Which Aro CmiHldercd Jlmt DuiiKcrntin In the World. It Is no exaggeration to way tlint ninny thousands of our fellow-country incti work for their dally living on the thrcHhold of the unseen and unknown world. The builder ascends u ladder, and one moment's giddiness, one slip of his foot, may bring him to death. Work ers with machines, If they cease their vigilance for one Instant, ore caught and crushed to ntoms In a second's time. Hut even leaving out of count Htieh tremendously risky employment, there are numerous trades where dan gers to life and limb are ever pres ent. Take, for Instance, the bottler of aerated waters. Did you know that the women who work In this trade have to linve protectors? We nil know, of course, that the llroninn and the worker among poisonous gases have to wear respirators and ulr pumps, and In gas works and factories where fumes of ammonia, etc.. are liable to escape It is often necessary for a kind of diving apparatus to be worn by the men who Have to enter such places. Another kind of danger arises where the grinding of metal or stone Is car ried on. The Hue dust gets Into the lungs of the workpeople and Is apt to produce a species of pneumonia. Mnny devices are used to prevent tills. Specially constructed fans are used to curry oil' as much dust as possible, but this Is not sulllclent !u the case of sand blasting, which Is a process of engrav ing or polishing by means of a power ful blast of line sand directed against the object. The workers here huvo to wear n helmet and Jacket, much like a ilremuu. It would hardly appear on the sur face that 'he bundling of skins Is at tended by 'tny great danger, yet, as a matter of fact, persons engaged In the tanning and fur-dresslug trades arc frequently exposed to grave peril. There Is u peculiar kind of dust, min gled with minute fragments of hair, which gets Into the lungs and sets up a special form of Irritation, which sometimes results In serious Illness. In the llnx spinning and other trades con nected with the mnklug of textile fa brics great danger, as we all know, from Irritant nud poisoned dust, Is of ten present, and has to be guarded against by various precautions In the way of ventilation nnd personal clean liness. One of the most perilous of all man ufactures 's M'cn In the alkali Indus try, which Is carried on principally around Whines and .St. Helena. The testimony of medical men, hays Harmsworth's Magazine, Is unanimous Hint men employed In the alkali works rarely live to an old age. Their appe tites disappear, the foul gases destroy the tone of the bronchial tubes and bring on asthma; all the men are tnoro IIOTTl.INO Al:llATi;i) WATKllfl. or less unaeiule, nud disease of the kid neys Is a common complaint. Very few of tho men live beyond IM). In the manufacture of bleaching pow der, chlorine gas Is pumped Into slnke lime, and this gas Is so polbonous that the men whose work It Is to till the barrels with bleaching powder havo to wear goggles over their eyes and some twenty thlckueses of llnnnel over tho nose and mouth. They even hnvo to cover all openings In their dress, so that no particle of dust could possibly Hud Its way to the bklu. Danger of ipilte a different character Is encountered by the workpeople en gaged In Iwttllng aerated waters. Here the daugo" arises from tho liability of the bottles to burst. The pressure of the eondeused gas Is very great, and If the bottle contains the slightest flaw or weak pbtco It Is pretty certalu to go. All the botMers wear wire-gauze hel tnets, and their arms are protected with full-length gauntlets. The workers In explosive factories, too, run great risks. They nro scut tered In sheds, only two or throe meu working together, with the sheds placed far apart. No Iron Is allowed In these buildings. Visitors appearing In ordinary boots dare not euter, be cause of the nails In their footwear. All the workers wear woolen guern seys and specially constructed over shoes and tho gas Jets are la lamps hung outside the windows. THEY NEVER "HAD A CHANCE." Loat Opportunities uml Their Influ ence on Uvea of Men. Probably nine out of ten men past middle life, If asked how It happens that they are to-day only barely earnlug womt ok powor.it packing. their living, would tell you thut they "never had a chance;" that they were kept back;, that circumstances were against them; that they had no opiwr Untitles, such as other boys around them hnd, or that they did not have the proper schooling, or else plead some similar excuse. The probabilities nro that opportunity did visit every one of these men more than once In their youth or early man hood, but that they did not sec that ull good chances consisted In doing every thing they undertook cheerfully, promptly, nnd Just an well as It could lie done. As boys they did not look ujon every errand as a chance to be polite, prompt, energetic; on every lesson in school ns a foundation stone In their success structure. They did not think that the demoralizing hours of Indolence and shlftJessncss which they were weaving Into the web of their lives would mar the fabric forever, nnd reproach them through all time. They did not realize that thn Impudent reply to their em ployer, the carelessness and Indlffer ende which they slipped Into their tasks, would conic out as ghosts, In the future, to mar their happiness and suc cess. They looked upon every duty shirked, the minutes they could cut off from each end of a day, as so much gain. They did not realize that these things, which seemed so innocent, would go grow Into giant defects which would mar their future success. They did not think that their slipshod methods, their careless attire, and their aggressive manners, would He as great bars across the path of their future suc cess, and keep them buck from the gonl of their ambitions. They did not think that nil these things were the real causes of their be ing llxtnres at salaries of $10 or $l.r a week. They did not think that these seem ing trllles In youth would doom them to he perpetual Janitors, clerks or farm hands, nnd that It would be nlmost Im possible In maturity to. outgrow the de fects of their youth. Success. General Ira I. Jones, who was for many years the very elllclent mannccr of the Xashvllle (Tenu.) American. wn wont to say that the advertising col umns were the most Interesting parts of it newspaper. He said that thev were evidence of the thrift, the cntu prlse, energy and prosperity of n peo ple; that advertisers are men who nre too busy to mind anybody's else's busi ness and that advertisements told buy ers where to go for what they wished thus being great economizers of time ns well as savers of money. Ho nddeo that men who werj away from honih for years could learn through tho nd vertlseiuents In their homo papers who of their former friends were alive nud kicking. if addressing women, make your ad vertisement as speclllu as you can. Go Into details, and let your description be ns minutely accurate as you can nmke It. Women like details, and you cannot describe n thing In which they nro Interested too closely to suit them. Not so with men. Mnke your adver tisement to them ns brief as possible. rrlntors' Ink. TURNING SMOKE INTO GOLD. Clever Wuy In Which Kulelli Defcutcil Queen Kllxubeth. Queen Elizabeth of England was not a thoroughgoing spinster, for she hnd so little prejudice against the practice of smoking that she permitted Sir Walter Halclgh his pipe In the royal presence. She was sulliclently n woman, however, to twit him openly on his devotion to tho weed, and 'It was on one of these occasions or so the author of "Tho Soverane llerbe" shrewdly surmises that the knight replied: "I can assure your majesty that I have so well experienced the nature of It that I can tell even the weight of the smoke In any quantity 1 consume." "I doubt It much. Sir Walter," replied Elizabeth, holding It was Impossible to weigh smoke, nud mayhap scenting a Joke, "nnd 1 will wager you twenty gold nngels Unit you do not solve my doubt." Gallantly accepting the wager, Ral eigh tilled his pipe with a weighed quantity of tobacco, smoked It out, and then, weighing the resultnnt nshes, an nounced the weight he had smoked away. "Your majesty cannot deny that tho difference has disappeared lu smoke." "Truly 1 caunot," answered the queen. Ordering the wager to lie paid, she turned to the courtiers around her nud said: "Many alchemists have 1 heard of who turned gold, into smoke, but Ral eigh Is the first ruau who has turned smoke Into gold." That Dread Uncertainty. A local real estate tlrin had occasion recently to send a large number of cir culars throughout tho country. They had no mailing list of their own, but succeeded In getting one from another Arm that succeetllug events showed was sadly lu need of revision. Among tho many returned envelopes was one that was addressed to Rev. J. B. Simp son, Kosciusko, Mo. On tho face of It was stamped the usual "Returned to writer." The uuuie and address had been scratched off, and underneath was the following: "Party dead for eight years. lresent address uukuowu." Milwaukee Seu-tlueL n IN UMTta .MBTISEMEHTS. CLOTHES THAT WEAR , and arc lit to wear, boar our label, Barbers' Coats, Wallers', Jackets and Aprons Qans& Klein, HELENA AND BUTTE, MONTANA. HERRMANN & CO. Furniture and Carpets, 201-203 Bromdwmy. Undertakers and Embalmers, 120 Broadway, T.leplionn 24D. ItKLKNA, MONT. Messier Brewery, 'mmm BREWERS AND BOTTLERS Of HlKli-Orndo Hccrr, Helena, - - Montana. OAl.l. AT TIIK Keller Studio rOR YOl'll Fine Photographs We lime nil tho latent atylen in Mount. liruiK nr kihiiii; wort hiki kci prices. 1131 I PD t:i7! N. MiiIh Strert, l-l-'-'-.l, Opp. P. O. HuleiiH., Slont. Arthur Dm Marshall Real Estate and Mortgage Loans Farms and Ttmhor Lands (tivmatmantm mdda and propmrty hmndtad for non raaldanta. 821-2 Third St. Portland, Oragott, HOTEL OSBORN CLEAN, AIRY OUTSIDE ROOMS REASONABLE RATES Transient Solicited ...IIOTH PIIONF.S... Travelers ihould tako"8" Street Carat Union Depot and tramfer at Yamhill Street to Kait AnVney Car, A. W. HEWETTT, Prop. Multnomah Market THEO. A. GODEL. Dealer In Fine Meats and Sausages, also Fish, Poultry, Oysters and Game. 512 Washington Street. Oregon Phone Main bXL Columbia Phone 633 BRANCH MA RKET-295 North 16th St. Colum hla Phone 160. Oregon Phono Clay bit. Smoke the SCHILLER and STATE SEAL Cigars. Schiller Cigar Factory Manufacturer, Wholeial and lletail Dealer In HAVANA AND DOMESTIC CIGARS Telephone No. 1831 Black, S81 Washington Street, N. W. cor. Fourth, PORTLAND, OR Ask Your Dealer For .6onw or r7s-v TUB. MARK. white shims; Cavaria Beer Hail. I.OUI3 ttl.1'0, Proprietor. Cor. Si'cond and Oak SU. PORTLAND, Or. PARK GROCERY. A. J. JONK8, Proprietor. Itctall Dealer In STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES And All Kinds of Imported Delicacies. 21 N. Turk Street, rOUTLAND, OREGON S. W. ROBINSON. COMMERCIAL PHOTOGRAPHER 361 Morrison Streot. Developing:, Printing: and Mounting ior Amateurs A Specialty. Largest Selection of Pacific Coast r iews BROMIDE ENLARGEMENTS. P. S. GODFREY Wholesale nnd Retail Dealer in STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES And All Kinds of Imported Delicacies. III t Hurnsido St., cor. Sixth. Oregon Phone lllnek 29.12. Columbia Phono !M. 1'OHTI.ANI), OB. Blazier's New Place. 144 First St., near Madison "? Julien 5c Smith, ..GROCERS.. STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES 45 Sixth Street. Goods delivered to all Parts of the city. Quick Sales and Small Profits. PHONE No. BLACK 2935. The Trades Union DYEING ahd CLEANING Company. C. DellAKT, Proprietor. Special attention given to Dress Skirts nud Light Colored Goods. K moro troublo over ragged old cloth ing. Send it to tho Trades Union. Satisfaction Guaranteed. 1691 N. Street, PORTLAND, ORE Tne Limited," evening train, and The Eipreaa." noon train, from Omaha (or Chicago. UNEXCELLED SERVICE Day 'Jain and evening train from Omaha Io Minneapolis and St, PauL Ticket! ot agent of connecting line. W. H. BUILL, DUt. Pass'r Agt., Oman. A. H. HANSON, Q.PJL, CUM-., J.r.MEUBY.A.OJM. (titftifiivwiiii'iii For particulars regarding freight ptuenger rates, call on or addrena B. H. TRUMBULL, Commercial Agent. 3. 0. LINDSEY, T. F. & P. A., 142 Third St., Portland, Of. i 'i . , V f. 1 W ?ii&tebmjrZJi&'.'i?. ' ' jmmm&i: r afliiA''rt''- -j"."- -''- .. s