Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, October 04, 1900, Page 10, Image 10

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    10
GENERAL REVIEW OF AMERICAN LITERATURE
(Copyright. 1900, by Scjrmour Eaton.)
THE: OREGON! AN'5 HOME STUDY CIRCLE: DIRECTED B PROF. SEYMOUR EATON
LITERARY TALKS
AND REMINISCENCES
The golden age to vrhich nations and In
dividuals look back with longing Is the
period of their youth; Indeed, the very
phrase owes its existence to a belief In
herent In the race that In youth alone
happiness is possible and the creative
power active. The highest achievement
of American literature lies, it is to be
hoped, somewhere ahead, but when we
speak of tne golden aje that is past we
have unrolled before us the years of its
maturing youth, a youth that a country
may well be proud to remember.
The admirable novels of Cooper, the
graceful prone of Irving, the fantastic
Irving: at 20.
creations of Poe, even the poems of Bry
inrit, belong to an earlier youth; they are
'isolated productions, unrelated to each
ether, related in varying degrees to the
life of the country. Bryant alone of these
bwriters survived to live side by side with
iChe group who make up the literary
j5eriod called the golden age, In which our
literature became more compact and
iomogeneoua, confined to one section of
iih,e country and having a certain unity
cf purpose and idea. To take the right
JineaBure of this period it is not enough
to read the poems, romances and essays
i?trb.lch are its best legacy to ua We must
'filso dip into biography to see under what
conditions these works were brought
liorth, and glance at the lesser fragments
tcf its literature, pages which have been
'Justly thrown out because what they say
lis better Bald elsewhere, but which testify
rto the fact that certain truths had sifted
through the common thought and were,
Often in queer and distorted forms, actu
ally lived as well as written. Por if the
i&ge was golden, it was not merely be
sauas there were a few great lights, but
'filso because there was a high ideal of
(life and conduct, a love of learning and
en effort after the best
It was a time when the struggle lor a
'national existence was over, but the re
sponsibility of establishing a national life
remained; when Puritanism had relaxed
Its hold as a dogma, but the conscience
was still braced by its moral power;
when the pioneer's ax no longer rang in
the forest, but the chopping of firewood
was still a daily chore for intellectual
"Walt "VVJiltninn.
youth; when the Inward necessity to read
and think was scarcely less imperative
than tho outward obligation to labor, and
the good housewife, after storing her pies
In the cupboard, opened her Plato and re
freshed herself at the storehouse of Greek
thought.
The conditions were almost unique in
history. There was something of the
Scotch background of religious austerity
and simplicity of life; but the Scotch
were steeped in traditions; the New Eng
landers had crossed the sea with no su
perfluous baggage of this sort, and stood
in a new land whose history was the
history of Individuals not of the racp.
Even the religious austerity had softened
and become . their one tradition. Dr.
Channlng's eloquence had commended
freedom and brotherly love and-Unitari-anism,
spoken of somewhere by the good
doctor as only the vestibule of the re
ligion to come, was for the nonce tho
National church. The people were inde
pendent, but in one respect still colonial.
English literature was still a mother'
country for the mind, as It always will
be; they had no new language In which
to clothe their new thought they had not
even, like Burns, a dialect to be raised
to tho dignity of a language. Their eye
road of the lark and the nightingale
while their ear listened to the bobolink
and the whip-poor-will. On the one hand
culture, on the other 'freedom of thought.
Tho former made its home in Cam
bridge; the latter took up its abode in
Concord. There was no battle between
them as between French classicism and
A. Bronson Alcott.
romanticism; their relations were of the
friendliest. Both were necessary to the
development of the country. But to lind
the true American spirit and the National
tang of character we turn to the village
of Concord, with Its farms and meadows,
-its slow winding rivers and tho wooded
solitude -of -Walden close at hand. It
wjLs Emerson's "own hearthstone," his
home for 50 years.
P&J& pojujd have heen nioptted
p(
than Emerson's to express the best hope
and genius of his cuntry. He carried
his culture within; books were an acci
dent to him he needed no esthetic or
traditional surroundings. He established
a weather bureau at Concord, In Just re
lation with the stars and the elements,
and made his local report of a universal
truth. It was an utterance outside party
and creed, and it leavened American
thought In more ways than can be accu
rately computed. He urged to self-reliance
and courage, bade his countrymen
"leave authors' eyes and fetch your own."
No one was less bound by tradition, and
yet his had the reverence of one to whom
truth is neither old nor new, but eternal.
He valuea freedom of thought, but It was
not, to his mind, a law to be established
by act of Congress or by the subversal of
all otner acts, It was the simple, Inalien
able right of every man who had it In
him to think at all. (
All New England came Into some sort of
touch with Emerson. His long, serene,
upright life in Concord was an inspir
ation. His lectures stirred people to a
belief in vast spiritual possibilities. They
were read from manuscripts in which it
mattered little whether ho turned over
one page or two. His prose is a series
of great fragments finding their relation
In the unity of the thought which has
hewn and polished them. His poetry Is
still more condensed, the essence of his
fancy with a runic tune of Its own.
To Thoreau, a native of Concord and
another independent spirit, the assertion
of freedom was not enough; it needed
proclamation. "The world was too much
with him' even In Concord; he retired to
the banks of "Walden and built himself a
hut, where he abode for two years, a
proceeding which has somehow contrived
to give posterity the notion that he passed
his entire life in the company of the
owls and the squirrels. His hermitage
was, however, within a mile or two of
very choice society; he still went to town
"Uk. a friendly Indian." as" he expressed
it, and kept up relations with the Emer
sonH, with Bronson Alcott, whose lm
porviousness ta depression was an Inspir
ation to his friends, and with Ellery
Xathantcl P. Willis.
Channlng, nephew of the preacher, a poet
of meditative verse, with a fine elevated
line here and there. Thoreau escaped
tho morbidness and self-Introspection
which is the danger of the solitary. He
was a cheerful hermit. A delight In
"roughing it" is less rare in our day than
it was In his, perhaps because the com
forts of life have increased; but of all
our amateur woodsmen, Thoreau Is the
most aboriginal, and his "Walden" re
mains one of tho freshest of outdoor
books, off-hand In style, but clear and
firm, with deep, delicate observation.
Hawthorne belonged to Salem, but he Is
nevertheless among the most cherished
memories of Concord, having lived for
three years In his early married life at
the Old Manse, and returned to take his
long rest in the Sleepy Hollow graveyard.
He Is the greatest creative writer of our
golden age, and the most American. The
very marrow of New England is in his
books. Never was there a more perfect
tie between author and subject than when
Hawthorne wrote "The Scarlet Letter."
In a solitary youth he had brooded over
the lives of those Puritan ancestors not
so ,yery far removed from him nearer In
some respects than his contemporaries
for Hawthorne was out of touch with the
reaction of his day with all Its idiosyn
crasies; it was new and temporary to lilm
compared with the old creed, which was
pirt of the granite rock and smacked
of tho east wind. In some crevice of the
granite he found a flower of romance.
It was a theme at once fantastic and
poignantly real; it suited his genius and
strengthened it. On the stern background
of formalism he brought out a great Im
aginative story, bestowing on it some
thing of the minute fateful care which
Hester gave to embroidering the scarlet
letter on her gray gown. The book has Its
never-to-be-forgotten scenes, like the ro
mances of Victor Hugo, but they are not
projected into a forced relief like those
of the great French novelist, but are
closely Interwoven parts of a whole that
is singularly harmonious with every de
tail in perfect keeping. The purity of
tone is as flawless as the style. The ab
sence of passion, even of tenderness, Is a
merit, not a defect, no such note could
have been introduced without changing
the whole delicate scheme of color, and we
do not miss passion In the restrained In
tensity and truth of the work, the stern
pathos, Inherent In the situation. In "The
House of the Seven Gables," "The Marble
Faun" and "The Blithedale Romance,"
beautiful as they are In workmanship,
the interest is less sustained and pro
found. The lirst is too obviously a study;
the second, in spite of Its charming Itin
erary and the distillation of the essence of
New England maidenhood in Hilda, is too
unreal and dilettante; the third treats of
those contemporary Ideas which to the
shrewd Yankee so oddly bound up with
the poet In Hawthorne's composition were
eo futile -and absurd.
People were quick to recognize In the
Zenobia of "The Blithedale Romance" a
portrait of Margaret Fuller. That It was
so Intended was denied by Hawthorne,
and there seems little likellness to contra
dict him. But he could hardly have put
any woman's figure In the vanguard of
the thinking world in New England with
out reminding his readers of a woman
whose writings are now forgotten, though
they were not without vigor, but whose
conversation Is an unwritten episode of
our literary history. She was a frequent
visitor in Concord and an intimate friend
of its group of writers and talkers, to i
whom the name of the Transcendental
School has often been given. She was one
of the staff of their memorable little
jjaper, the Dial. She taught, .wrote &njL
Fltx-Grecne Hnlleclc. .
THE MORNING
lectured, and was the embodiment of New
England aspiration and Intellectual en
orgy. The story of her marriage In Italy
to a young Italian patriot, handsome, but
with no Intellectual gifts and scant edu
cation, was the first Installment of a cu
rlous serial, the only one written, for
husband and wife perished In a shipwreck
two years later while on their way to
America.
Note This study by Miss Sophia Kirk,
of -Wellesley College, will be concluded on
Saturday.
DEMOCRAT AGAINST BRYAN.
Prominent Chicago Man Can't Stand
Assault on Business.
Chicago Tlmea-Herald.
William T. Baker, ex-presldent of tho
Chicago Board of Trade, has sent a brief
letter to the Republican National Com
mittee that will more than offset the long
letter, in which ex-Secretary Olney ac
cepted Bryan as an unpalatable choice be
tween two evils. Mr. Baker, like Mr.
Olney, is a Democrat of the Cleveland
school, but he repudiates "16 to 1 and law
lessness as personified in Bryan."
Mr. Baker has been known throughout"
the Northwest as a consistent advocate of
free trade, and therefore it is not to be
wondered at that he seizes upon the
promise of Mr. Bryan that he will "rec-'
ommend such additional legislation as
may be necessary to dissolve every pri
vate monopoly which does business out
side of the state of its origin," as fore
shadowing "a limitation of all successful
enterprise within state lines."
This would bo a policy in restraint of
trade with a vengeance.
The crusade against expansion, hypo
critically called "Imperialism," Mr. Baker
dismisses as an absolute and silly sham
conjured up. for this campaign only. He
recalls that "expansion has been the poli
cy and practice of the American people
since the pilgrims landed on Plymouth
Rock." And he dismisses it with this
stinging figure:
This talk of imperialism is like the rat
tle of the snake that hurts nobody. It
is the head, of the reptile that Is danger
ous, and there you will And the free silver
bite.
Unlike Mr. Olney, Mr. Baker does not
have to take the least of two evils. He
chooses between:
Sixteen
The
Gold
Standard
and
the
Security
it
Brings,
to
One
and
Lawlessness
Personified
in
Bryan
J t
And declares, "I shall vote for McKlnley
as representing the latter."
Mr. Baker will vote for McKlnley and
Roosevelt because he Is consistent to his
record.
In deciding to vote for Bryan and Ste
venson Richard Olney has had to go back
on every principle of his public career.
He has had to adopt the scuttle as his
symbol and toss Into it his convictions:
That the gold standard Is necessary for
our commercial safety and honor and that
"the Isolation that In nothing but a shirk
ing of the responsibilities of high place
and great power IS SIMPLY IGNOMIN
IOUS." Mr. Baker's course Is straight and logi
cal. Mr. Olney's Is tortuous and abs61utely
Inexplicable.
DAILY CITY STATISTIC3.
Real Estate Transfers.
Mrs. W. N. Smith to TV. C. Smith,
lots 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 15 and 16. block
5, East Portland Park. Septem
ber 25 J10O)
E. H. Parker to J. E. Stansberry, lot
5, block 3, Stansberry Addition, Sep
tember 2, lSti 20
"William M. Gregory and wife to Mar
tha M. Taylor and Barbara Mayo,
lots 3 and 4. block 142, druthers'
Addition. September 30 1
Charles J. Sager et ux. to Morris W.
Roof, lots 20 and 21, block 1, Mount
Tabor Place, August 3 400
Chloo Ann Lappeus to Agnes Todd,
undivided one-half lot 12, block 320,
Palch's Addition. October 3 1
D. C. Miller and wife to Elizabeth
Sax. lots 7 and 8, block 27, Alblna
Homestead. October 1 1000
John F. -Kerrigan and wife to "W. R,
Wr.lpole, part of lot 2. block B, Port
land Homestead, 7Gx9S. October 1.. 400
Edward B. Bruce to James H. Bruce,
lot 5. block G, Kenllworth. May 18.... 1
Arthur Huston and wife to James H.
Brute, rume, February 10, 1S9S 1
AnnottA Huston to James H. Bruce,
same. January 29, 1?5S 1
Charles Evans et al. to James H.
Uruce. same, January 29, 1S9S 1
Kate Stasnk and husband to Leon
hard "Wpger. lot 8. block 13,- Feurers
Addition. September 16 G50
Mary L. Toy to Mary M. Dllley. lots
V. and 17. blook 12, Mount Tabor
Villa Annex: lots C and 7, block 5.
Bralnard, September 10 100
Bniltlinfr Permits.
Russell & Blythe, dwelling, Kearny
street, between Twenty-second and Twenty-third;
$2700.
Gambrlnus Brewery Company, repairs,
southeast corner of Third and Yamhill
streets; $900.
Mr. Hooghklrk, addition to dwelling,
Stanton street, between Williams and
Rodney avenues; $750.
W. J. and D. R. Hawkins, frame build
ing, Sixth street, between Burnsldc and
Couch; J2C00.
D. R. Hawkins, repairs, Seventh street,
between Flanders and Gllsan.
J. T. Rogers, dwelling, Weldler street,
between East Eighth and East Ninth;
$2000.
Births.
September 24. boy to tho wife of George
Stari.
September 29, girl to the wife of Edwin
A. Ferguson.
September 0, girl to the wife of A. J.
Caldwell.
September 8, boy to the wife of Edwin
O. Bamford.
September 25, girl to the wife of I. L.
Endlcott.
September 2, boy to the wlfeof Michael
Moran.
September 20, girl to the wife of Oscar
Mihros.
Deaths.
Y. Kahn, Japanese, killed in railroad ac
cident at 'Viento, Wasco County.
U. Faklnaga, Japanese, killed In rail
road accident at Viento, Wasco County.
Contagions Diseases.
Mrs. Gross and daughter, Stephens and
Twelfth streets; typhoid.
E. Hill, Arbor Lodge; scarlet fever.
Mnrrlagre Licenses-
R. H. Bayley, aged 35. Cowlitz County,
Washington, and Nellie Butler, aged 20.
J. J. LIndauer and Clara Sleben, aged 23.
J. S. Gregg, aged 43, Columbia County,
and Mrs. Jane I. McDonald, aged 42.
M. W. Carter, aged-28, San Mateo Coun
ty, California, and Mary Schlup, aged 28.
Fred W. Reed, aged 23, Scott County,
Iowa, and Myrtle J. Dickerson. aged 20.
Walter C. Dey, aged 30, and Lucia J.
Hunt, aged 2G.
Lester Bell, aged 24, and Margaret Ma
son, aged 24.
William Leason, Chandler, aged 27, and
Emma Scott, aged 23.
Cheers Prom a Cowboy.
HALSKY, Or., Oct. 2. (To the Editors
Hurrah for McKlnley and the cowboy ! I
have been a cowboy myself for 40 years,
and I am glad I have lived to see a cow
boy nominated for Vice-President. 1 saw
in the papers an item stating that the
commercial travelers were all going to
vote for Bryan, and I asked a prominent
traveling man if It was true. He said
he knew of but one man that was going
to support Bryan; and this gentleman
further stated that he wns receiving $75
a month more now than he received un
der Cleveland's Administration.
WILLIAM MULLEN.
Palpitation of the hert nervousness,
tremblings, nervous headache, cold hands
and feet, pain in the barfr. reyeyed by
Baxter' BUtfip Liver Pills, ww vy
ORE.GONIAN, THURSDAY,
OPPOSED TO SURRENDER
OltEGdW VETERANS WILL ANSWER
COLOKEL BRYAN.
Flas Should Not Be Hanled Down In
Lands Won by American
Arms.
A meeting of veterans of the Civil and
Spanish War3 will be held Saturday or
Monday to pass resolutions lndorisng the
policy of the Administration with refer
ence to the Philippines, Hawallr Cuba
and Porto Rico. General Owen Summers,
who commanded the Second Oregon In
the Philippines, has charge of the ar
rangements. As soon as he selects the
placo for the- meeting the call will be
issued.
"The action of the proposed meeting of
veterans," said General Summers yester
day, "will be the answer of the soldiers
of Oregon to Colonel Bryan's policy of
surrender in the Philippines. Veterans of
our wars feel that territory gained at
the cost of American blood is sacred, and
should not be surrendered. We do not
want any more flag hauling down. Cleve
land gave us enough of It at Honolulu."
In the East, veterans of all wars are or
ganizing against Bryan. In Clark Coun
ty, Ohio, soldiers of the Civil and Spanish
Wars have Joined hands and Issued an
address, a copy of which was received in
Portland yesterday. It follows:
"For reasons best known to themselves,
the enemies of the Administration at
Washington have in desperation taken up
the cause of the common enemy of our
country In order to make what they call
a winning issue. It Is an issue they call
Imperialism. In common soldier language,
It is an issue of treason. The United
States, as a National and holy duty to
man and the world, purchased the Phil
ippine Islands from Spain, that the in
habitants thereof should enjoy the bene
fits and freedom and the careful care of
this great Republic. It promised the peo
ple of those Islands all the rights of local
government accorded the people of our
own territories, and more. Millions am
to be collected and spent for Improve
ments in schools, In roads, in cities, and
in all the branches that tend to im
prove, enlighten and civilize. Before tins
crowning act of National benevolence
could be Initiated, the Filipino leaders.
who, for personal power, caring nothing
for their people, conspired against their
redeemers, stirred the bands of people
over whom they had Influence" and power
to rebellion against the authority of the
United States, at the same time planning
for the wholesale massacre of all Ameri
cans, men. women and children, In Ma
nlla. They have fired on the Stars and
Stripes, shot down our brave soldiers,
murdered and pillaged, while millions of
their own people stood aghast.
"The President of the United States,
sworn to protect the Hag and authority
of this Republic, has not swerved one
lota from the path of duty and honor.
Never was a more unholy, uncalled for,
unreasonable rebellion Inaugurated, or
more traitorlously encouraged by the ene
mies fit the party In poser at home. To
raise a political cry, to win a campaign,
to gain a political office, the enemies or
President McKlnley have stabbed the
country In the back and openly encour
aged the Filipinos to keep up the rebel
lion at the cost of hundreds of brave
American lives. The boys of '61 are near
lng their last mlkstone. The spirit is
old. but It rejuvenates; It Is born again
with a fury at this new outrage on our
country. It is the cbppcrhead reptile
again, and let the old boys in blue stand
like a mighty monument with the young
boys in blue for the hdnor of the Re
public and the flag. Union veterans. It
13 the old cry. "'again, that beautiful,
country-loving cry, that mighty cry that
stirs the tired muscles to bands of steel
and makes the heart leap with the pas
sion of patriotism. Fall In!"
The resolutions to he ddopted at the
meeting which General Summers is ar
ranging will reflect the spirit of the Ohio
address. It Is the general sentiment of
Oregon soldiers that a positive answer
should be made to Bryan's campaign
against expansion. The matt-r was laid
before General Summers, and by request
he took the Initiative In calling the meet
ing. Pleasant Ilome Notes.
Thore Is much building in the neighbor
hood of Pleasant Home. The old Taft
place, owned by Mrs. J. Roberts, has been
sold to T. Petrie, who lately came from
the East, and he took possession of It
yesterday. It Is a short distance soutl of
the G. A. R. Hall. J. Chase Is building a
large new birn on his ranch. H. C. Har
ris, whose dwelling was destroyed by fire
some time ago, has moved Into the new
house that has Just been finished. The
carpenters at work on the G. A. R. H.ill
expect to have the upper portion com
pleted this week, so it may be occupied.
They will push construction on the re
mainder as fast as possible. It will soon
be ready for dedication by the M. A. Ross
Post and Relief Corps, the owners of the
property. The sawmills of the neighbor
hood are all rushing orders on lumber
and railway ties, so the wet weather will
not And them with too much work en
hand.
C." S. Kerns, who has operated the
creamery at Pleasant Home since last
Spring, says his business Is on tho in
crease, and he Is doing a far better busi
ness than he expected when he started
up. He Is well pleased with his venture,
and may enlarge next year.
TO SAN FRANCISCO BY
STEAMER.
At this season of the year the ocean
trip to San Francisco is particularly de
lightful. The ocean Is Pacific, both In
name and nature, and the scenery, from
the Columbia River bar, with its forts
and six-mile long Jetty, to the world re
nowned "Golden Gate" of San Francisco,
Is all that can be desired.
The steamers "Columbia" and "State of
California," of the O. R. & N. Co.'s line,
are large and commodious, and make the
750 mile run between the two ports In
50 hours. Accommodations can be re
served and tickets purchased at City
Ticket Office, 80 Third street, corner Oak.
V. A. Schilling, city ticket agent.
OUND
Lot JLad H d ft
Comes from a "sweet stomach, pure blood,
strong .nerves and hearty health. Tho
purest way to acquire theae is by an honest
use of this famous medicine, Hostetter's
Stomach Bitten. For 50 years it has
nover failed to cure stomach disorders,
beginning with constipation and ending
with kidney or liver trouble. See that a
private revenue atamp covers the neck
of tho bottle. y y,
tiOSTETTER':
STOMACH
BITTERS
Beware of imitations.
OCTOBER 4$ 1900.
Nigif wm.
Extra strain needs extra strength.
When a man begins to add to his hours
of labor, and subtract from bis hours
of rest, he is putting an extra strain on
brain, and body. In such cases many
men make the serious mistake of using
stimulating liquors, or alcoholic medi
cines. These can only injure. The spur
forces on the horse, but does not
strengthen him. Stimulants are only
spurs. The need of the body is
strength. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical
Discovery is invaluable to overworked
men and women. It strengthens the
stomach, increases the blood supply,
nourishes the nerves, and gives vital
power to brain and body.
There is no alcohol in "Golden Med
ical Discovery." It contains no opium,
cocaine or other narcotic. It is strictly
a temperance medicine.
Mr. Edward Jacobs, of Marengo, Crawford Co.,
Indiana, writes: "After three years of suffering
with liver trouble and malaria I gave up all
hopes of ever getting stout again, and the last
chance wa to try vour medicine. I had tried
all the home doctors and received but little re
lief. After taking three bottles of Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery aud one vial of his
4 Pleasant Pellets ' I am stout and hearty. It is
due entirely to your wonderful medicines."
Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical
Adviser, icoS pages
sent free on receipt
of stamps to pay
cost of mailing
only. Send 21 one
cent stamps for pa-
TRADE MARK.
it
The Dr. Sanden Electric Belt, with spe
cial attachment, makes ran strong. It
overcomes the effects of an Indiscreet
life. It gives new nerve force and energy.
It cures varicocele. Belt applied In other
ways and worn by women as well as men
for Rheumatism. Lame Back, Kidney
Disorders, Nervousness, etc. Call at my
office for free consultation, or order belt
through mall. All advice free. You get
the benefit of my 30 years' experience
without cost.
"U'rlto today for my latest books,
"nealth in Nature" and "Strength; Its
Use and Abuse by Men."
Cor. Fourth and Morrison
Portland - Oregon
5- run ;ai r op
Dyspepsia or Indiges
tion cs H teasoonfel
in a tumbler ok' water
(not icedj night and
morning.
Tohn W. Brewer. M. D.. Fish. Ga.. says-
"I hive thoroiurhlv tested your Salt and
rtin satisfied that nothing could be used tft
better advantage. cspeciallyjy those xui
ferini; the numerous and unaccountable.
and above nil, annoying symptom", of
Nervous Dyspepsin. It not onlv tempo
rarilv relieves but, I believe, trill affect a
permanent cure. . t
Sold by most druggists, or sent by mail.
25c , 00c, ji.i per nottie.
THE ABBEY EFFERVESCENT SALT CO.,
11 Murray Street. New York.
7iLT4 A fttfl jk'
V --k,
The Latest
SssseBatiiffio
Bascevesy
'& based on tho principle,
"Destroy tho cause, you
removo tho effect."
Herpicido kills tho
fferms that causo dan
druff by digging up tho
scalp as they burrow
their pestiferous way to
tho hair root, whoro they
finally dostroy tno nair.
lllSfSiffipIl Without dandruff your
antly.
stop3 dandruff and fall-
growing within ton days.
One bottlo will convinco ffl
you of this.
ForSalo at nil First- Class
HSnS-il?TT"t
.J&KSSSS3
Dreg Mores.
Bis Sut non-uolsonoci
raraedy ior Gonorrhceo,
Gleet, Spermatorrhea,
"Whltei, nnnatural dis
charges, or any lnnamma-
JPrTaU eoaugtan. tlon o mucous mem
ATHeEyansChEMIMLCO, branes. Non -astringent.
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cf The Salt Extracted from the Jiies of he3h Fruits.
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TRAVELERS' GUIDE.
fnl H) M?t east
laJcUaAQ JJ1&
Union Depot, Sixth and J Streets.
THREE TRAINS DAILY
FOR ALL POINTS EAST
"CHICAGO-PORTLAND SPECIAL."
Leaves for the East, via Huntington, at 0:00
A.M.; arrives at 4:30 P. M.
SPOKANE FLYER,
For Spokana. Eastern Washington, and Great
Northern points, leaves at 0 P. M.; arrives at
TA.M.
ATLANTIC EXPRESS.
Leaves for the East, via Huntington, at 0:00
P. M.; arrives at 8:40 A.'M.
THROUGH PULLMAN AND TOURIST
SLEEPERS.
OCEAN AND RIVER SCHEDULE.
Water lines schedule subject to change with
out notice.
OCEAN DIVISION Steamships sail from
Ainsworth Dock at 8 P. M. Leave Portland
Columbia, Tues., Oct. 0; Fri., Oct. 10; Mon..
Oct. 20; Thurs.. Nov. 8. State of California,
Thurs.. Oct. 4'. Sun.. Oct. 14; Wed., Oct. 24;
Sat.. Nov. 3.
From San Francisco Leaving Spear-Street
Pier No. 24, San Fr&nclsco, at 11 A. M., as
follows: Columbia. Fri., Oct. 5; Mon., Oct. 15;
Thurs., Oct. 25; Sun.. Nov. 4; Wed., Nov. 14.
State of California. Wed., Oct. 10; Sat.. Oct.
20; Tues.. Oct. 30; Fri.. Nov. 0.
COLUMBIA RIVER DIVISION.
PORTLAND AND ASTORIA.
Steamer Hassalo leaves Portland dally, ex
cept Sunday, at 8:00 P. M.; on Saturday at
10:00 P. M. Returning, leave3 Astoria dally,
except Sunday, at 7:00 A. M.
WILLAMETTE RIVER DIVISION.
PORTLAND AND SALEM, OR.
Owlnc to tho low water In the Willamette
the boats are unable to ascend further than
tho mouth of tho Tamhlll. For schedule sea
below: '
YAMHILL RIVER ROUTE.
PORTLAND AND DAYTON. OR.
Steamor Ruth, for Oregon City. ButtevlUe.
Champoeg, Dayton and way landings, leaves
Portland Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays
at 7:00 A. M. Leaves Dayton for Portland
and way points Mondays, Wednesdays and
Fridays at G:00 A. M.
SNAKE RIVER ROUTE.
RIP ARIA. WASH.. AND LEWISTON. IDAHO.
Steamer Spokane or steamer Lewlston leaves
Rlparla dally at .1:40 A. M.. arriving at Lew
lston about 3 P. M. Returning, the Spokane or
Lewlston leaves Lewlston dally at 7 A. M.. ar
riving at Riparia same evening.
W. H. HURLBURT,
General Passenger Agent.
V. A. SCHILLING. City Ticket Agent.
Telephone Main 712. So Third St., cor. Oak.
NcwSteamsliipLinetotheOrient
CHINA AND JAPAN. FROM PORTLAND.
In connection with THE OREGON RAILROAD
& NAVIGATION CO. Schedule. 1000 (subject
to change) :
Steamer. Due to leave Portland.
SKARFSNO Oct. 31
For rates, accommodations, etc., apply to
OREGON RAILROAD & NAV. CO..
Agents. Portland, Or.
To principal points In Japan and China.
POSSIBLY
YOU ARE NOT AWARE OF
THE FAST TIME
AND
SUPERB SERVICE
Now offered by th
S PlCTOtt
WE HAVE
DAILY FAST TRAINS
TO THE EAST
2
If you cannot take the mcrnlne train,
travel via the evening train. Both are
finely equipped.
"Our Specialties"
Fast Time Through Service
PULLMAN PALACE SLEEPKRS,
PULLMAN TOURIST SLEEPERS.
PULLMAN DINERS.
LIBRARY (CAFE) CAR AND FREE
RECLINING CHAIR CARS.
Hoar in Time Saved to
Or.mlin. tlilcno. Knnnni City.
St. Lonis. Nctt York. Boston.
And Other Enatcrii Points.
Tickets good via Salt Lake City and
Denver.
It Is to your Interest to use THE OVER
LAND ROUTE. Tickets and sleeping-car
berths can be secured from
GEO. LANG.
City Pass, nnd Ticket Agent.
J. H. LOTHBOP. General Agent.
135 Third St.. Portland. Or.
Ocean to Ocean
Via
THE IMPERIAL LIMITED
Grand Scenery.
Fast Time.
Model Accommodation
Tourist and First-Class Sleeping Cars.
TO
BOSTON
MONTREAL
TORONTO
OTTAWA
ST. PAUL
For full particulars apply to
H. H. ABBOTT. Agent.
14C Third stroot. Portland. Or.
B. J. COYLE. Asst. Gen. Pass. Agent.
Vancouver. B. C
lgREATJORTOERNlf
Ticket Office. 263 Hsrrlsoa Stmt, 'Phon: 3)
LKAVK.
No. 4
J:00 P. If.
Th Tlyr, dally to aac
from it. Paul, lilnne
apolls. Duluth. Chicago
ami all points asL
Aimn-E.
No. 3.
7:00 A M
Through Palace and Tourist Sleeken. Dining
and Bufft Smoking-Llhrary Car.
JAPAN - AMERICAN LINE
STEAMSHIP RIOJUIN MARU
Tor Japan. China and all Asiatic polau wit
leave Seattle
About October 10th
Astoria & Columbia
River Railroad Co.
LEAVES
"UNION
DEPOT.
ror Uaygtrs. IUlnltr.
Claukanie, Wotport.
Clifton. Astoria. "VVar
rcnton. Flavel. Ham
mond. Tort Stevens,
Gearhart Park. SeaIil.
Astoria and ainar
Kxpru.
Dally.
Astoria Kxprvu.
Dally.
ARRIVES
UNION
DEPOT.
8:00 A. M.
0:55 P. M.
11:10 A. i:
9HO P. IL
Tlckut office. 25S Morrlaoa it. and Union dtpot.
J. C XATO. Gsa. Paw. Aet.. Astoria. Or.
vr-
100 HOURS
TEAVELEES GUIDE.
VIA
SOUTH
Leave
Depot Fifth and"
I Streets.
Arrlvo
OVERLAND EX
PRESS TRAIN3.
for Salem, Rose
burg, Ashland. Sac
ramento. Ogden.
San Francisco, Mc
3ave. Los Angeles.
El Paso. New Or
leans and the East.
At Woodburn
(dally except Sun
day), morning train
connects with train
for Mt. Ancel. SIl
verton. Browns
ville, Sprlnstteld.
and Natron, and
evening train for
Mt. Angel and 311
verton. Albany passenger
Corvallls passenger.
Sheridan pas'gr
8:30 P. M.
8:30 A. M.
7:45 A. MT
S:2a P. M.
4:C0 P. M.
7:30 A. M.
I4:50P. &.
10:10 A. ML
5:50 P. ML
llS:25A.M-
Dally. ((Dally except Sunday.
Rebate tickets on sale between Portland. Sao
ramento and San Francisco. Net rates $17 first
class and $11 second class, including sleeper.
Rates and tickets to Eastern points and Eu
rope. Also JAPAN. CHINA. HONOLULU anI
AUSTRALIA. Can be obtained from J. B.
KIRKLAND. Ticket Agent. 140 Third street.
YAMHILL DIVISION.
Passenger Depot, foot of Jefferson street.
Leave for Oswego dally at 7:20, 0:40 A M.;
12130. 1:53. 3:25. 4:40, 0:25. 8:30, 11:30 P. M.:
and 0:00 A M. on Sundays only. Arrive at
Portland daily at 0:35. 8:30. '10:50 A. M.;
1:35. 3:10. 4:30. 0:15. 7:40. 10:00 P. M.; 12:40'
A. M. dally, except Monday, 8:30 and 10:05 A.
M. on Sundays only.
Leave for Dallas dally, except Sunday, at
5:05 P. M. Arrive at Portland at 0:30 A. M.
Passenger train leaves Dallas for Alrllo Mon
days. Wednesdays and Fridays at 2:45 P. M.
Returns Tuesdays. Thursdays and Saturdays.
Except Sunday.
R. KOEHLSR. C. H. MARKHAM.
Manager. Gen. Frt. & Pass. Agt.
DOUBLE DAILY TRAIN SERVICE.
The Pioneer Dining and Observation
Car Kontc.
Iavt. L'nlon Depot, fithaol JStt Arrlvo
No. 2
2 P.M.
North Coast Limited.
For Tacoma. Seattle.
No. 1
T A. ax.
roi'tn ialuma. ouo
Kane. Pullman. Mos
cow, LewlstoDj Uosj-
land. B. C. Butt.
Helena. St. Paul. Min
neapolis, Chicago. Boa
ton. New York and all
points East and south
east. Twin City Rxpress. Tor
No. 4
ll:S P. it.
laconu, Seattle. Spo
kane. Helenu. Butte.
3t. Paul. Chicago. Bos
ton. New York. Omaha,
Kansas City, Coum-ll
Bluffs. St. LouW, and
all points east ana
southeast.
No. 3
8 P. IL
Through train service via Northern Pacific
and Burlington line rrom Portland to Omaha.
Kansas City. St. Louis. Qulcic tlmo ana un
equaled accommodations.
Take North Coast Limited Train No. 2 for
South Bend. Olympla and Cray's Haroor
points.
Sio the North Coast Limited. Elegant Up
holstered Tourlit Sleeping Oars. Pullman
Standard Sleopers. Dining Car and Observa
tion Car. all electric lighted. Solid vostlbuk-i!
train.
Tlcketn sold to all points In tho United
States and Canada, and haggugn checked ta
destination of tickets.
For Information. tlrVtcts. sleeping-car rji
vatlons. etc.. call on or writs
A. D. CHARLTON
Annl.itnnt General l'nssfnger Atc?nt
255 MorrUon St.. Cor. Third.
Portland. Oregon.
!n September.
September Is the pleasanteat
month in the Colorado year.
Tho days are bright, but not
enervating. The nights are cool.
The mountains loolc their grandest.
Best of all. the Summer's rush la
over and the hotels at Glenwood,
Colorado Springs. Mattitou and
Denver are not overcrowded.
Good idea to vary things and go
East thro Colorado. You'll en
joy It specially the 10-mile-an-hour
ride on the Burlington's Chlcagc.
Special. Only one night on the
road. Denver to Chicago and St.
Louis.
TICKET OFFICE
Cor. Third and Stark Sts.
R. T. FOSTER.
City Ticket Agent.
Pacific Coast Steamship Co
FOR ALASKA.
THE COMPANY'S elegVWrt.
steamships Cottage City. Clty
of Topeka and Al-Kl leave
TAC )M.V 11 A. At.. SEATTLE
0 I'. M.. Oct. 2. 7. 12. 17, 22.
27; Nov. 1. li, II. 10, 21. 20;
Dec 1. and 'every nfth day
thereafter. Further Informa-
lnn nlittln (ntnnoiw'd n1taa
The company reserves the right to chang
steamers, sailing dates and hours of sailing,
without previous notice.
AGENTS N. POSTON, 249 Washington St..
Portland. Or. ; F. W. CArtLETON. N. P. R. R.
Dock. Tacomo. TICKET OFFICE. tJIS First
ave.. Seattle. E. W. MELSE. Ticket Agt.;
H. H. LLOl'D. Puget Sound Supt.. Ocean
Dock. Seattle; C. "W. AtlLLBR. Asst, Pugst
Sound Su?t., Ocean Dock. Seattle.
..UODALL. -JEKKiNS & i!0 . Gen. Agts.. S. F.
WASHINGTON & ALASKA
STEAMSHIP CO.
The fast mall steamship "CITY OF SEAT
TLE," sailing from Seattle every lo days for
Skagway. calllnc at Port Townsend. Ketchikan
and Juneau.
Steamers "ABERDEEN"' and "RUTH," Se
attle to Skagway. and Intermediate points,
every seven day3.
Through tickets to Dawson, 573, flrst-class;
and $50 second-class.
DODWELL & CO.. Ltd..
232 Oak at. Telephone Main 00.
iTE COLLAR LINE
BAILET GATZERT (Aldor-street Dock)
Leaves Pcrtland dally every morning at 7
o'clock, except Sunday. Returning, leaves As
toria every night at 7 o'clock except Sunday,
""sou Phono Main 351. Columbia phono J3L.
Un ROUTES JQJ
Colorado
IBliiili