The new age. (Portland, Or.) 1896-1905, October 15, 1904, Image 4

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THE NEW AUK, PORTLAND, OltEGOW.
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THE NEW AQE
A. D. ORIPPIN. Manacw.
Jfflca 43H Scond St., cW. Aih, Rooms I ana 2
Portland, Ortffon,
SnUred at the postofflca at rot Hand, Oraroa
is ncond-clui matter.
SUBSCRIPTION.
On Year, pajraM In advance $ 2.04
hjQ9Bsjlfc, m
Mimmiiii
I EDITORIAL
lajMWWilllUmMmi
POLITICS AND rnOIUDlTION.
9999
Politics nro not of much Interest In
Oregon this fall, boctuiso nenrly every
body recognizes tho fact thnt about
threo men out of ovcry four, or nt
least Bevcn out of ten, will vote for
Roosevelt. That Ib, this will happen If
thoro is a full republican vote, but a
good many republicans, not porcelv
Ing tho Importance of a. largo major
ity for their candidate, may not tako
tho troublo to voto. Tho New Ago
hopes, however, that thlH will not be
tho case, but that nearly all good re
publicans will go to tho polls and
do what thoy consider their duty.
SENATOR HOAR.
This being tho political situation,
tho matter of principal Intorcst will
bo tho voto In various counties and
portions of counties on prohibition.
This question promises to croato
qulto a lively contest In many locali
ties, and will bo waged with n good
ileal of zeal on both sides, If not with
tho utmost discretion on either. Pro
hibitionists, of course, want to carry
all ground posslblo, and tho liquor
ilealoro and manufacturers dcslro to
rotaln ob much ground as thoy can,
and both will put forth their best efforts.
This paper supported tho locnl op
tion law, last spring becauso It be
lieved that ovcry community, espec
ially country and suburban communi
ties, should have tho right to deter
mine this question according to tho
will of tho majority, and to Keep out
Boloons If tho majority of Its pooplo
no desired. Truo, tho old law substan
tially provided for thlB, but Tho Now
Ago thought It best to glvo tho local
optlonlsts tho law thoy wanted, and
Klvo It a trial, If tho prohibition ele
ment of tho local optlonlsts went to
extremes nnd nttemjited to force pro
hibition on tho Btuto genet ally or on
whole counties containing largo towns,
wo had no doubt, nor hnvo yet, that
such efforts would fall, nnd would
eventually do tho prohibition causo
more harm than good, for tho pooplo
ns a whole, Including largo towns, will
not sustain Mich a measure Tho
liquor trafllc Is too Intimately connect
od and nsHoclated with many other In
dustries and Interests nnd Iduda of
business to bo suppressed by any
such meusuro. Public sentiment will
not sustain It. Prohibition has boon
tried In Maluo, Vormont, Kansas,
Iowa, nnd other states, nnd bus ill
wuys been moro or loss of n failure.
In all tho many states whoro It has
been attempted except two, tho prohi
bition law has beou repealed, nnd In
these two, Mulno and Knnsau, It Is
largely n dead letter, there being
"blind pigs" In almost every town,
nnd open drinking places In tho larger
ones.
In tho Southorn Stntes, however, un
der local option laws, prohibition has
gradually gained ground, until In
Homo of those states thoro nro no pub
lic drinking places In tho majority of
counties.
The lato Senator Hoar was for
many years ono of the greatest states
men of tho United Stntes, and all peo
ple of all parties recognize It, now
that ho is dead. Ho was a flno scholar,
a sincere patriot, a vory eloquent ora
tor and a very nblo lawyer nnd
legislator. Ho was a statesman
of an utterly clean record, nnd
ono whoso consclcnco was always
nllvo and frco to net. Ho sometimes
voted against his convictions on a
slnglo measure, perhaps, but If ho did
bo It was becauso It was In Wb broad
estimation of things for tho general
good. He sometimes opposed meas
ures of his party, yet know that It
would not bo best or wIbo to holp
overthrow that party on account of
hero and thoro a mlstnko, and help
put In power a party notorious for
scarcely anything but mlstnkcs.
Senator Hoar waB ft truo friend of
tho colored people. Ho waB too great
a man to look down upon them with
contempt, ns some men do who In
comparlflon with him Intellectually or
morally, wcro ns pigmies to a giant;
as nilco to n mastodon; ns a satyr to
n saint. Ho remembered tho hun
dreds of ycors of tho Negro raco's
bondage nnd suppression, nnd was In
favor of helping them along tho path
way to clearer light and grcotcr free
dom, Instead of forever kcoplng them
In Ignorance nnd darkness nnd weak
ness. Ho recognized tho fact that un
der tho constitution they wcro citi
zens of tho United States, and ho be
lieved In treating them ns such, nnd
In gradually entrusting them with tho
duties nnd responsibilities of citizen
ship. A truly great man novcr hatcB or
despises a fellow human being be
cause of his color or previous condi
tion of servitude. And Senator Honr
was a great man. Tho senate will not
soon look upon his like again.
. afc Aite AilUiBjilfUiMilU---- 'iihifcil a, ti.r - -ilnJi a), a aj. , aj.iJ.,lnV A AitkAnl
InnwiAiv:
Opinions of Great Papers on Important Subjects.
9taJD-Ql
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D18C0KDANT DEMOCRATS.
While Tho Now Ago favored local op
tion, and giving communities tho right
junior Its moro stringent provisions
than thoHo of tho old law to prlhlhlt
saloons, It docs not favor prohibition
except In such communities as do
slro It. Moro harm than good would
ho dono by enacting prohibition In
good sized towns, or In counties con
taining thorn. Tho prohibition pooplo
should bo content to movo slowly and
reasonably In this muttor, and, to uso
a slang expression, only blto off at
first what thoy can successfully mas
ticate. Most rural communities, and
suburban precincts or portions of cit
ies are better off without saloons, and
then) tho pcoplo should bo given every
possible opportunity to prohibit thorn,
hut thoro Is no good senso In trying
ns yet to piiBh prohibition so far ns
soino of Its ovor-xealous advocates aro
disposed to do.
Any sor.t of a reform, to accomplish
anything permanently benoflclul, must
be carried along practical lines. Wo
bave altogether too many laws now
that are neither enforced nor ob-arv4.
Our friends, tho democrats of Ore
gon, nro having very hard sledding, or
to vary tho metaphor, n very hard row
to boo. Tho hills nro few nnd shrivel
ed, nnd thero scorns no uso In hoeing
them at all, for thoro Isn't tho. slight
est prospect of even a nubbin in tho
political harvest tlino this trip. Tho
shoes aro off tho sled runners, and tho
road Is both rocky and muddy, nnd It
Is ft steep, up-hill pull all tho way.
All this would not bo ho utterly dis
couraging If tho fuw democrats here
abouts could pull together, could act
In concert, could sing or hurrah In
harmony. Hut thoy can't. Some nro
gold bugs, so mo nro sllvorltes. Somo
aro nntl-lmpcrlnllsts. Somo nro for
expansion to tho limit. Somo nro free
tinders. Somo nro protectionists.
A few think Parker Is nil right.
Moro still ndhero to Ilryan, nnd
so thoy nro not only discordant
nnd dissevered, but fairly bolllgcront,
among their own few selves.
Wo nro sincerely sorry for this, for
these democrats nro not only very
nice, good men personally, whom the
Now Ago likes nnd respects, but It
would bo better for tho country, for
tho stato, for tho city, for tho repub
lican party Itsolf, If thoro were moro
democrats, If tho parties wero moro
nearly equal,
Vet wo cannot consistently ndvlso
any republicans to go over to tho dem
ocrats. Indeed, It would be, Hko wan
dering off Into n wilderness nnd get
ting lost. If no half dozou democrats
who meet can ngreo on anything, how
can they expect to get any accessions
fiom tho republicans?
CLERGY MAY WEAR BEARDS.
Pope TnlukltiK of CIiuiikIuk the Kult
iu Thia Kcepcct.
Tho Home correspondent of tho Pnrii
Temps writes that the Pope Is thinking
of allowing the clergy to wear boards.
Recently he received an Italian pil
grimage fresh from the Holy I.und.
Priests In the east are permitted to
wear beards, and some of tho clerical
pilgrims wero adorned In that respect
to such advantage as to elicit the ad
miration of the pontiff,
"I once knew a pariah priest," he
aid, "who had a horror of the razor,
More than once I heard bliu say; 'If
Tr I become Pope 1 will Immediately
give permission to all ecclesiastics to
wear boards.' That parish priest, who
do you thing he was?" The Venetians
Iu the group of pilgrims know very
well, and began to laugh. "You are
light. Yes, It was I," continued Plus
X., "and I keep my word. If any
priest here vrewut desires to wear a
beard 1 will not refuse the authoriza
tion." Passing from ono to tho other, the
poutlff noticed an old acquaintance of
his. "Are jou returning to your par
ishioners with that beard?" he asked
htm, with a mischievous twinkle In bis
eyes. "No, uo, Santo Padre, I am go
ing to haye It cut off before I arrive at
Trevlso." "You couldn't do better,"
aid Plus, "for you look a perfect
fright To you I should most certain
ly not give a dispensation!" This llttla
BlMMBtry caused general laughter,
Choose Your Life's Vocation Wisely.
HERE comes a time when every growing boy
must face the question: What shall I do for
a life work? It la an Important question, one
that must be faced squarely and answered
wisely. And jut there nre many who shirk
.ind turn away, trying to avoid a direct an
swer, leaving the solution to what they hope
will be a happy chance. Then there are sons who
leave the solution entirely to their parents; and there
arc parents who leave It nil to the sons. Each should
consider the matter witli diligence and frankness and come
to a determination agreeable to both.
In considering tho problem it will be well to remem
ber several things. In the first place, nil real success must
bo founded In the economic principle of becoming a pro
ducing member of the great Industrial scheme. Theie Is
no room In the world for a drone. Everybody must pro
duce something. The man who produces what Is most
needed nnd most wanted receives the largest rownrds.
As n general rule It is wise to try to produce some
thing of which the supply Is scant. In nny case, It is pru
dent to avoid those occupations In which there Is already
a surplus of the product. For instance, the world is not
crying for lawyers, doctors, preachers or accountants. The
so-called professions are overcrowded. There is a large
surplus stock of legal advice on the market; also medical
advice, and of bookkeeping. Consequently the rewards ore
diminishing. The kind of man that Is most plentiful In
tho market Is the one who knows nd business in particular
nnd wants something In which he can wear good clothes
wlille at work. The man most in demand and least plenti
ful Is tho one who has had actus.! experience with some
occupation which soils the hands and the clothes, and who,
at the same time, has the capacity for planning and di
recting. A railroad manager who has tamped the ties and built
a trestle; a book publisher who has set type; a lumber
dealer who has served ns n lumber Jack; a contractor who
has "measured In" and "checked out" In a word, the
man most In demand and hardest to find Is tho one who
has learned some line of huilness from tho basement to
tho "front office." Tho men who want to learn a business
from tho top down are plentiful. This Is a great Industrial
era. There are opportunities for all. Every ten or twenty
years the grout Industrial army must bu recruited anew.
Tho time bos passed when It was not "respectnblo" to be
anything but a "piofeNslonal man." Science and learning
hare become the handmaiden of the Industrial arts. To
day anything Is honorable that is done well. Produce
something give something to the world, and the world
will pour Us blessing into your lap. Chicago Journal.
signing of cotton cloth. There Is, of course, In a physician's
training somo Incidental broadening of the mental out
look to be derived from, his studies, and so It Is with the
electrician and the lawyer, who must learn something of
Jurisprudence, constitutions, governmental institutions and
history; but the higher education Is essentially something
which is not positively needed as a means of earning a
living; It is a oourse In general culture, a study of the
humanities, a broad, liberal pursuit of Ideals, of great Ideas,
great movements, and, In a word, such Instruction as is
given In a university and college In addition to the training
for a vocation. Philadelphia Ledger.
IT
m
Higher Education.
ANY parents must debate every year whether
it Is wise to give the year and the inouoy re
quired for the higher education; writers and
business men start discussions from time to
time whether the higher education la worth
while whether, In the language of the mart,
"It pays;" and tho supporters of tho higher ed
ucation are at pains, as In the caso of the disquisitions by
President Hadley, of Yale, on the subject, to Justify the
higher education nnd to try and convince tho pcoplo Hint it
actually does pay, If not In Immediate dollars, yet in moral
nnd Intellectual awakening, health, breadth, fervor nnd
power which finally Inuro to tho growth, strength and
beauty of the republic.
Ily higher education Is meant not the training of a
technical professional or industrial school or college. The
man who Is studying to be a physician must take tho course
In order to qualify himself for a diploma; the student at n
law school Is looking forward to admission to tho bar nnd
a license to practice; tho electrician or mechnnlclnu Is aim
ing to equip himself Just as the young artisan Is getting
ready to ply his trado when ho gooi to an Industrial school
to learn the art of bricklaying, printing, carpentry or do-
Mobility of the Japanese.
N the matter of mobility and In the faculty of
doing Uic right thing nt the right time, the
Japs clearly outclass the Russians. Whenever
the two armies come face to face there is an
attempt at n Hanking movement. Although the
Russians know Just what sart of trouble to ex
pect, they nro invariably beaten. Defore their
flank can bo placed for effective defense nnd properly re
inforced, tho nimble Japancso have secured the drop on
them, and there Is nothing to do but back down. Although
Russian retreats are always reported to have been mado in
good order and with no loss of dignity, the correspondents
who vlow the field after an engagement describe the move
ment as a rout Troops which retreat In good order do not
leave a trail of disabled artillery, blanket, guns and other
marching accoutrements. When pursuit become hot and
ail other desires become secondary to the desire to get
away, soldiers throw down their trappings and "ske
daddle. The Russian la a gross feeder and a hard drinker. He
has tremendous strength and great endurance, but he lacks
the mobility of the plucky Japanese, who Is trained to the
hour for his desperate work; who Is ablo to take his ra
tion on the march, without losing time, and keep up his
Jog trot movement for hours at a stretch, without a mur
mur of complaint. Ho Is an Interested soldier, who fights
for patriotic reasons, nnd the Russian soldier Is a mcro ma
chine In comparison. Detroit Evening News.
THE FIRST NATIONAL, BANK
OF DUL.UTH, MINNESOTA.
CAPITAL, 4BOO.OOO 8URPUU8 73B.OOO
U. S. Government Depositary.
' ..-- -., j - i.
RUSSELL-MILLER MILLING CO.
Merchant and Export Mlllcra of North Dakota, Capacity 2,000 llnrrols Dally
Jamestown, Valley City and Grand Forks, N. Dak.
GENERAL OFFIOE,
MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA
ANDIIKW 1. DAVIS, i. A. TAMIOTT, K. B. WEIMCK, J. 8. BUTTON
frcaldont Vice President Uhler Aulita
Aulitant Cashier
BUTTE
First National Bank Montana
IIEHOUKCK8
Loans and dlfcouuls
Honda and warrants.. ...
United State bonds at par. ...
Due from banki,
Uaahonhand
MAI11I.1TIKS
.,11,10.939 S7 Capital stock
... OT.SOS.M) SurpllH
2II.SIU.00 Undivided pronts
. 763.079 Ml Circulation ,
. . 608,663.01 Dividends unpaid.
.$ 200,000 00
80.IBO.00
.. 276,746.72-
, 68,760.00
I.IFVJ.7.'.
DepoilU 2.699,41297
$1,196,932.44 V,l9i,t32M
Central Sash and Door Agency
SASH and DOORS
GENERAL mill work.
LOWEST PRICES LARGEST STOCK.
F
n
Wasted Opportunities.
(A ROM Missoula, Mont, comes a story of train
robbers tearing up the money they had stolen
and scattering In the sand of the desert the dia
mond they had taken from their victim. One
I Inclined to look at the procedure of these
robber from a humorous point of view, and
think of the effort and energy they wasted.
And yet It 1 an everyday occurrence. Day by day men are
throwing away diamond-like opportunities. Throwing them
away, hoping to escape the consequence of some foolish
and willful action In the past. A young man enters a busi
ness house. Through sacrifice and economy hi father
and mother have succeeded in giving htm a good commer
cial education. But In an evil moment he abstract money
from the safe or drawer. Though it may be long undis
covered, hi sin will surely be found out, and gone for
ever Is that opportunity for advancement and progress. He
has thrown his opportunity Into tho saud. A young woman
trained In a beautiful home along the lines of morality
and virtue meets a smooth-tongued rascal, and presently
gone forever Is her opportunity for moving In the best of
society. The young man, the young lady, might have been
a credit to society. They might bavo been the honored fa
ther and mother of a son whose uamo might bave become
historic, but they threw away their diamonds for tho sake
of a so-called liberty, which Is after all only license, and
though with tears and bitter cries 'thoy search for them
again, never shall they be found. When once the blush
Is driven from the apricot or the peach, no chemistry can
bring It back. When once opportunities have been thrown
aside, they never return. Never again docs the same op
portunity come to a man's door. Don't throw away your
diamonds, I'lttsburg Press.
Phone Main 4795.
Catalog: Mailed on Application.
71 1st Street.
Portland, Oregon
THE ART Or DAGUERRE. ?
Although the Improvements In pho
tography nre matin so rapidly nowa
days that even tho professional pho
tographer can hardly keep track of
them, there nro many plcturo-mnkers,
says the Century Magazine, who be
ltevo the world will turn back to the
daguerrotype for Its beautiful and
moat artistic portraits.
It Is more than sixty year since the
dentine world was aroused by the
announcement that Dnguerre, a
Frenchman, had dUcovercd a method
of fixing the Imago made by the cam
era obscura. It was a crude method
then. The first picture, of a .tree
landing In the sun, required half an
hour or moro of exposure. That waa
the same year In which Ha mil el K. B.
Mors went to Europe to exhibit his
new electric telegraph. The two In
ventor met by appointment In Parts
and explained their work to each
other.
Daguerr' plate was of pure silver.
It was thoroughly eleaued and polish
ed. In a dark room It waa next coated
with a film deposited by the vapor of
lodln, and then exposed In the camera.
Still protected from the light. It was
placed over the fumes of hot mer
cury, which developed the Image, and
It whs then made permanent with
chlorld of gold.
This process was soon Improved, un
til on bright days the sitting for a da
guerreotype waa reduced to ten, some
times to five, seconds. Even with this
abort exposure, however, the likeness
es were remarkable. It 1 possible to
assume an artificial expression and
hold It for the brief second before a
modern camera, but to remain motion
leu for the long time required for a
daguerreotype, It waa neceasary that
th feature should be In repoae In
their natural position.
The daguerreotype was a positive,
Impossible to retouch. It waa of a
oft, tleh-llke tone, which even to-day,
In tho specimens of the art preserved
iu collections and among family relics,
wins admiration. The daguerreotype
gave way to the cheaper ambrotype,
which was on elans, and required a
dark background to show It off; and
this In turn was succeeded by tho
glass negative aud the paper poaltlve
print. None of them ha ever attained
the delicacy or th softness of the da
guerreotype, and the Frenchman'
method, expensive and slow a It 1,
nay win It way back Into th popu
larity It had more than half a century
PrastM MMfBl to Praaoa,
Ta gsunor of a forUga nam 1 p
Mt i ealaag nmmmm. llaaj a
of roa) kUtoa "fr" aaila
nt a price that, together with the labol,
convinces tho critical Eastern house
wife of the high quality of Us contents,
ami puts It beyond the reach of the
boarding house keeper. Rho buys "Cal
ifornia' prunes, to the disgust of her
bonrdors, who, did they but know It,
aro grumbling over fruit Identical In
quality with that set before tho criti
cal housiwlfo'a husband. For the
French have a trick that, while repre
hensible reflect credit on our product
At Bordeaux, th real center of the
prune trade of the world, the prun
crop for 1008 wa a failure. Califor
nia prune were bought by Bordeaux
dealers, who repacked them In attract
ive form, made them lithographically
French, and ehiped them back to
America,
Albion W. Tourgee, American consul
at Bordoaux, la authority for this atate-
mtnt, made In a consular report He
ay that th prune crop at Bordeaux
last year was only one-twentieth of the
normal output; yet in the last six
months of the year the dealer there
reshtpped somo 20,000 worth of Call
fornla prune to America, where their
supposed origin and their attractive
packing found them a ready market.
There la an obvious moral In this,
which Is that California prune growers
should pack their fruit aa well as the
French do, and make It In every way
an tempting In appearance. It might
not be a bad plan, either, to put a copy
of Consul Tourgee's report In each box.
Ban Francisco Argonaut.
SELF-RELIANT SHEEP.
Getting th Money' Worth.
Mrs. I.aue was young and Inexperi
enced, but certain principle of econo
my bad been Instilled Into her from
childhood, She knew that since one
could send ten words In a telegram
for twenty-five cent and any ainaller
number coat the same amount It wa
an obvious wast of monty to send
less than the tea
She had also been taught by her em
inent practical husband that In tend
ing a telegram one should "keep the
matter In hand," and avoid all confu
sion of words. On the occasion of
Mr. Lane' first absence from home,
he sent a telegram from Chicago, say
ing, "Are you all right? Answer.
Blank Hotel. Chicago."
Mrs. Lane knew she must be wise,
economical and speedy, for Mr. Lan
was making a dying trip, and had told
her he could not plan on ht where
abouts long enough ahead to hare a
letter sent Bhe pent a few momenta
In agitated thought, and then proudly
wrote the following meaaag:
"Ye. Ye. Yea, I am very wU la
deed, thank you."
Tou are sot harlBg aa unrestrained.
food old tim U eating corn off ta
eh unit) yen my keraala alaar
arwsnd to Um baek of aajn.
Owen Wlstcr says that in pursuing
the Rocky Mountain sheep, with it
gun and a camera, he once witnessed
an accident full of discipline, encour
agement and Instruction. He describes
It In "Musk-Ox, Bison, Bbcep and
Goat." A sheep and lamb were grat
ing along one of three well-marked
terrace which were rimmed with
wall of rock.
After a proper period of relaxation,
the mother Judged It time to go on.
She mounted the hill right toward me,
not fast but steadily, waiting now and
then, precisely as other parents wait
for her toddling child to come up with
her. Here and there were bushes of
some close, stiff leaf, which she walk
ed through easily, but which were too
many for the struggling child.
The lamb would sometime get Into
the middle of one of these and find It
self unable to push through; after one
or two little effort, It would back out
and go round some other way, and
then I saw It making haste to where
Its mother stood waiting. Upon one of
these occasions the mother received It
with a manner that seemed almost to
say, "Good gracloual At your age 1
found no troublo with a thing of that
kind."
While I waa wondering what on
earth they would do when they found
themselves stepping upon tho terrace
Into my lap, the ewe found a way she
liked better, but It was severe work
for the lamb. The mother got to the
wall where she could make one leap
of It It was done In a flash.
Meanwhile, the poor little lamb was
vainly springing at the wall; the Jump
wa too high for It It front hoof
Jut graxed the edge, and back It tum
bled to try again. Finally It blated;
but th mother deemed tkia not a mo
ment for Indulgence, She gave not th
lightest attention to the cry for as
sistance. There wa nothing danger
ous about th place, no unreasonable
hardship In getting the bat of the
wall; and by her own proc,
thought or Instinct ah left bar child
to meet one of the natural diflcultle
of life, and to gain self-reliance,
Th mother did undoubtedly not use
th word "telf-rellance" or "natural
difficulties," but If h bad not her
heap equivalent for what the word
impart, her specie would long ago
have perished off the earth. The mountain-sheep
U a matter at th art of
lf-prrratlon. Th maternal In
attact of thi aw mad her fore the
young on to climb for Itself.
Tkvara'a a lie ovt aosMwaeca," w
hear a aaaa aay to-aVty. afa than
taaw gvaa.
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C. 0. PICK TRANSFER & STORAGE COMPANY
Safes. Pianos, Furniture moved, stored or packed for shipping. Fire
proof brick warehouse, Front and Clay. Express and BagS4c hauled.
Office Phone, 596; Stable, Black 1972
PORTLAND, OREGON
Great Falls Iron Works
Engineers, Machinists and Founders
Special appliances mado in Steel,
HriiHH mid hncclal Mixtures of Cast
Iron. Heavy and I.Iuht Korulnu-H
mado to order. Workmanship
guaranteed.
Aro Manufacturers' Agonls for
Machinery, Hollers, Kniiics and
Witter Wheels. Make a specialty
of Stamp Shoes, Dies and Hull
Shells, which are superior in point
of strength and resistance to
abrasion.
Ore Treating Devices
Given Special Attention
Main Office nnd Works, 8th Ave. N 13th to Nth Sts.
GREAT FALLS MONTANA
tassssaTjsMysafiiasjsgir
Br7 "tl ,aZ i .j pHi jH aH
THAT YOU CAN DRINK ffim '"
IF YOU TEANT TO - IfJOgJ
I i
ELECTRICITY IN YOUR HOME
Brings comfort and cheer
fulness during the long win
ter nights. Enjoy a few
comforts while you are alive
for you are a long time dead
Portland General Electric Co
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If