8 THE MORNING OREGCXNIAN, MONDAY, JUNE 10, 1901. SERVICES FOR CHILDREN LITTLE QNES . REMEMBERED JTf MAXY PORTLAND CHURCHES. Dr. L&throp Shovra the Relation, of the Church to the Subject of Higher Education. Children's day was celebrated yesterday In many Portland churches. The pro grammes -were -In charge of the Sunday schools, and In the exercises the children took the leading part. Among the churches that held services were Grace Methodist, Calvary Presbyterian, First Christian, Second Baptist, Centenary Methodist, Sunnyside Congregational, First United Evangelical, Mlzpah Presby terian, Mount Tabor Methodist, Hassalo Btreet Congregational, "Westminster Pres byterian and First Unlversallst. At Cen tenary Methodist Church, East Ninth and East Pine streets, special Children's day exercises were held. The auditorium was decorated with flowers. Across the grand organ were the words, "Suffer little chil dren to come unto me." In the Sunday school room the verse, "Remember thy Creator in the days ol thy youth," was displayed from the gallery. Dr. Gue preached. He baptized 17 children and re ceived 26 persons Into the church. The children's collection amounted to $3S. An interesting programme was rendered by the Sunday school. At Grace Methodist Church, the exer cises were of more than ordinary Interest, the whole day having been devoted to the subject of education. At the forenoon hour the Sunday school, assisted by the choir, rendered a beautiful service, enti tled "The Gateway of the Century." J. K. Gill, the superintendent, assisted by Mrs. C. A. Morden, superintendent of the primary department, had planned to make the hour edifying and Inspiring. Commit tees had tastefully decorated the altar, which was enhanced in beauty by the presence of the children and young people surrounding it. At the evening service, the pastor, the Rev. J. R. T. Lathrop, spoke upon the subject, "Christian Higher Education," choosing bis text from Proverbs 11:3-5: "If thou crlest after knowledge, and 11ft est up thy voice for understanding; if thou seekest her as sliver, and searchest for her as for hid treasures; then shalt thou understand the fear of the Lord and find the knowledge of God." He said: " The gateway Into the new century Is the doorway into the college. "We not only believe in education, but higher edu cation, by which we mean at least col legiate training. The college-trained citi zen is becoming more and more a neces sity to the highest purposes of the state. The state recognizes this, and is wisely making provision for the higher education of its children by the establishment of colleges and universities to supplement the high school courses. The state which pro vides for the education of its youth forti fies Itself against unseen future emergen cies and present need. In the United States throughout her whole history col lege graduates have averaged one to 750 of the adult male population. And yet from this small fraction have come 32 per cent of all our Congressmen, 46 per cent of our Senators, G5 per cent of our Presi dents, and 73 per cent of the Judges of the Supreme Court. President Thwlng flnds that a college education has multiplied the possibilities of young men reaching fame 403 fold. Out of 629 Americans we find that a college education Increases the possibilities of young men reaching suc cess today 1043 fold. This remarkable fact shows not alone the necessity but the wisdom of the state and church Insisting upon higher education. In the last quar ter of a century college graduates have in creased until now they number one In 91 of men 21 years of age and over. The known millionaires of the United States reveal the astounding fact that the college graduates have furnished 440 times as many men of wealth as their numbers entitle them to. In other words, Dr. Bash ford, who is to be credited with these statistics, concludes that college training increases a young man's chances for suc cess and influence and In gaining distinc tion from 350 to 2000 fold. "The state, therefore, educates; so does the church. The latter educates because the state cannot, at least, does not, reach and secures but a small fraction of the youth to higher education. It is too gen erally true, and too little deplored, that such a vast number of the youth complet ing the high school course drops out of school. This Is more true of the young men than of the young women. The church reaches and secures large numbers of young people for college. Our own church has a student list of 60,000, in 225 institutions. Should the church cease to educate, thousands would fall away. Then the church has a responsibility aside from this. Each great denomination has a pe culiar insight into the needs of Its young people. Perhaps few in the Nation know so Intimately the needs of the family as do the ministers of the great denomina tions. Vast numbers of young people each year come Into the church, and she would be- recalcitrant to duty did she not pro vide liberally for the higher education of this increasingly great host. "By Christian higher education is not meant that the state does not favor Chris tian education, for the state institutions are more and more becoming saturated by the Christian spirit. Nor is it meant that the church schools are sectarian, for the church college has the same curricula for the degrees, and denomlnatlonalism is not conspicuous and is little heard of, but the church seeks to surround the student with every environment which will pre-' serve in the mind and life of the student the Christ life. Teachers of decided Chris tian experience are selected, the social at mosphere is permeated with the Christ spirit, the necessity of the spiritual life Is" prominent, and in many institutions, such as our Ohio "Wesleyan, gracious revivals of religion each year take place, and to-this fact that great school owes much of its prestige and power. The church school insists that the spiritual life Is not in compatible to the highest type of schol arship, and seeks to preserve both In Its constituency. There Is a large place for both the state and church school. "The Willamette University Is our school in this state, and beautifully situated, with full courses leading to the A. B. and M. S. degrees, and professional courses leading to medicine, law, music, oratory. It will, no doubt, become the pride of every Methodist to make this a school In every respect commensurate with our opportunity for, while we love the state and rejoice In her schools, and other de nominations, and hall their work with pride we yet are to remember that Meth odism has here a peculiar heritage and mission, and the day of our opportunity is now, while the valleys are filling with people. Wisdom and knowledge are not orfly to be sought, but we are to provide for the seeking of them, as for hid treas ure, and In the leading of the people to the understanding of the fear of the Lord wo shall find the knowledge of God. There is an everlasting difference between mak ing a living and making a life and Chris tian higher education In state or church insists upon this fact." LIFE BEYOND THE GRAVE. Purity in This World Means Happi ness In the Next. Rev. G. B. Van Waters, rector of St. David's Episcopal Church, East Side, spoke yesterday morning from the text, St. Luke xvl:26, "Between us and you there is a great gulf fixed; so that they which would pass from hence to you cannot, neither can they pass to us that would come from thence." He said in part: "This parable Is one of the most strik ing ever uttered by Jesus. It Is startling. It brings vividly to mind the life beyond the grave. And from the chapter where in the text is found we draw the infer ence that there Is to be a reversal of affairs from the state in which they ex ist here. It Intimates that those who are up here shall be down there, that the rich shall be poor and so on. The Bible tells us that the wicked In the other world shall no longer prosper, that there shall be no oppression, wrong shall not triumph over right, and that everything good shall prevail. Herein 13 the differ ence between the natural and the spiritual worlds. "In the parable of the rich man and Lazarus, there is no particular descrip tion given of the rich man. As no par ticulars are given of his character, it is not right to say that he was unjust. The text does not say this. He was simply a man of great wealth. There is nothing I ' j2J c y in II m A II ulKBSKBSW""'l'mMf,""T'Msss.H!."J!l!.""'' !Vi'i!!?l'l'" ."" 'iH!!!? wBB I wiw ' - - - - .: - t - wMm u Photo by J. F. Ford. One of the most charmlnc locations for suburban homes is on the Riverside drive, over looking -the "Willamette River. Up on the high banks are grouped some of the finest resi dences of Portlanders. At the station that has been flttlncly called Rivera, are the homes of Charles E. Ladd, "William S. SIbson and Peter Kerr. The characteristics that make them attractive are the magnificent view of the river from the commanding sits, and the beauty of the surroundlnc grounds. The rose carden of Mr. SIbson Is noted among all the roae connoisseurs of the Pacific Coast. The new home of Charles E. Ladd Is a handsome example of Colonial architecture. wrong In having riches. Wealth Is a great means of alleviating the miseries of the world. But what was wrong In this rich man if he had gained his money hon estly? The wrong lay In the improper use of it. He lived in extravagance and luxury, and every thought was centered In the aggrandizement of self. He lived for pleasure alone Hence, his sin was selfish ness. He did no wicked act, but he did no good or kind act. Poverty lay at his palatial gate In the shape of a fellow mortal, yet the rich man gazed upon him without a change of heart. Suffering, because it did not affect him, stirred him not to pity, and he felt no commisera tion for woe or trouble. It Is possible for one to be poor and yet be happy. A peaceful, contented mind is riches itself. Sometimes a Question arises as how to relieve the miseries of the poor. One is by legislation. By casting the ballot prop erly much can be done. But more potent still, and more effective, too, Is spiritual regeneration. "It seems to the casual observer that f the punishment of the rich man was out of proportion to the crime, or that there should be such a gulf. It means that character is formed and crystallized. Men, in other world, can not go to the places for which their characters unfit them. It means that selfishness can not mix with unselfishness. It means that we take our lives with us just as we are. We shall be happy In the life be yond if we are good In this life. If we have the happiness resulting from a true, pure life, there Is no question about the future. If you are strong In doing good according to the light of your conscience, you are preparing yourself for a splendid residence In the other world. Though you be in affliction, poverty or trouble, you have nothing to fear." "THE 3IIXD OP CHRIST." Obtainable by Prayer, It Is the As surance of Salvation. Rev. J. F. Ghormley preached at the First Christian Church yesterday morn ing on "The Mind of Christ," taking his text from Phillppians 11:5-9: "Let this mind be in you which was also in Christ Jesus; who, being in the form of God, thought It not robbery to be equal with God; but made himself of no reputation, and took upon him the form of a servant, and was made In the likeness of men; and being found in fashion as a man, he humbled himself and became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross, wherefore God also hath highly exalted him and given him a name which is above every name." Dr. Ghormley said: "Here Is the philosophy of true great ness. Whoever rises to enduring thrones and receives names that live must bear his own cross to Calvary. If we were discussing the existence of the Christ with the Father before the worlds were made, the text which we have read would be a clear announcement of the proposi tion. Paul was the Inspired writer of this text and this utterance leaves no doubt as to his attitude concerning the divinity of the Christ. It is In perfect accord with statements found elsewhere in his writings: 'Who is the image of the invisible God, the first born of every creature. . . . And he Is before all things and by him all things consist. And he Is the head of the body, the" church. . . . For 1: pleased the PORTLAND'S SUBURBAN HOMES. BiBBiSl?gglj Atf7 $ OVp SOW Father that in him should all fulness dwell.' Colossians 1:15-19. "In fact, this truth is the burden of every book of the New Testament, from the Emmanuel of Matthew to the Alpha and the Omega of the Apocalypse. There are only two things in the universe mind and its product. We are not to present today the mind of the Christ In creation, but in redemption. Whatever is meant by 'being in the form of God,' he was ''found in fashion as a man,', taking 'upon him the form of a servant, and was made in the likeness of men.' His humiliation was the mystery of angels and the rock of offence to the false phil osophers. His mind was all-embracing, and we are to study it and receive it in the light of what it has done and will continue to do. He was rich, but for our sakes he became poor, and his poverty has enriched the world. We can know the mind of the artist only as we behold his productions. "The sculptor has his Ideal, but not until the marble is turned from his hand a finished likeness do we see his Ideal. The music In the soul must be uttered before it can move the world. The world has In the mind of Christ the founda tion of empires. No sorrow moves him irom nis purpose. On the storm-lifted waves of Galilee he Is calm, and at his "Peace, be still,' the winds and the waves obey. He has not on earth where to lay his head, but within is the knowledge that he possesses all things, and that that within will outlive the wreck of worlds. He visited the weeping sisters who had buried a brother and they were no doubt astonished at his calmness, but he has tened to the tomb, wept and bade the dead arise. The responsibility which is being rolled upon us as a church re quires that we have in us the mind which was also in Christ Jesus, the mind which will enable us to make' sacrifices for the world. We can never know the Joys of the philanthropist until we know his mind and enter into his experiences. If we have the mind of the Christ there will be no room for fear. Only victory awaits us. We are to come in the pos session of his mind by the way of prayer, by reading his word and drink ing in from every stream of knowledge. If his mind is in us we are rich. And we may say of riches as Mr. Meigs Sunday school pupil said of prayer, 'It Is to get things with.' The world Is tiring of philosophy; It is waiting for the touch of sympathy at a price which it can afford to pay. Christ went about doing good. He was so full of his mission that his mighty deeds were performed without effort. And he taught us to consider how the lilies grow. In the seed itself, with the proper environment, is all the po tency, sufficient to produce this flower of matchless beauty. Take Into your hearts and lives his words, which are spirit and life, and let it dwell In you richly, that We all may do his will on earth and be crowned at last with him in heaven." The Constitution and the Flag:. Brooklyn Eagle . Mr. Bryan refers to the Downes case as likely to arouse as much discussion as the Dred Scott decision. Indeed! The Dred Scott decision was to the effect that "the Constitution follows the flag." The Downes case is to the effect that the Constitution does not follow the flag, but may be sent after it by act of Congress. Mr. Bryan falls to realize that the Downes case overrules and reverses the Dred Scott decision. But "he is not a lawyer, he is a member of the bar," a distinction with a tremendous difference. To invoke an uprising against the Downes decision is to appeal for a re affirmation of the Dred Scott decision. The Nation defied that decision by the election of Abraham Lincoln, destroyed it at Appomatox Court house and buried it beneath the 13th amendment. The other dav. by means of the Downes case, the tribunal which had recorded it for mally expunged it Mr. Bryan's phrenetic effort to revive it magnifies the genius of the mun to try the wrong thing at the wrong time. IS THIS "SARKASM?" It SecmH, Indeed, to He So In tended. PORTLAND. June 9. fTo thf Rrlltor " j In the Interview published in this morn ing s uregonian witn u. F. Robertb, director of the mint, relating to the es tablishment of a Government mint at Ma nila, he very truthfully says that "to at tempt to push the American dollar and redeem it in gold would precipitate com mercial disturbances that might result in disaster." Thnt rpnllv Is nn nnw tn j the American people. Secretary Foster inea mat experiment of redeeming sil ver in gold in 1891, which was thoroughiy tested by President Cleveland during his whole administration, and as we all know it brought wide-spread disaster upon the whole country. The fault Is not with our American dollar if4lt Is only allowed to be a full lecal tender, and its nwn fu'i redeemer. The trouble lies alone in emas culating the dollar and providing a dwarf and impotent redeemer. We are getting along well enough now In coining American dollars that are their own redeemers, and It is the part of wis dom to let well enough alone. Our ex pansion of territory and consequent ex pansion of trade necessarily requires an expansion of currency, and the issue before us is whether such expansion shall be an expansion of "sound money," or "token money" in the shape of buzzard dollars. We all remember the old 420 grain trade dollar which meant to us discount of from 5 to 10 per cent, and there is not I one single American who wants the coln- age of any more such cart wheels. If the j McKInley Administration follows Gage's i suggestion and turns Its back upon sound money," and authorizes the coin age of buzzard dollars, a man need to be neither a prophet nor the son of a prophet to foretell that the American people will turn their back upon It, and that it will fall the victim of its own "buzzard." The United States should coin but one kind of money, whether it be gold or silver, an.i that is "sound, full legal ten der money." SOUND MONEY EXPANSIONIST. PERSONAL MENTION. B. S Grosscup, counsel for the Northern Pacific at Tacoma, was in the city yes terday. He left for home last night. State Senator E. M. Rands," of Van couver, passed through, the city last night on his way to Olympia, to attend the special session of the Washington Leg islature, which meets tomorrow. The marriage of C. Lewis Mead and Miss Ruby Wells will be held at Grace M. E. Church a; 8:30 Wednesday evening. It was erroneously stated in the Sunday Oregonian that the wedding was to be held Thursday at the "home of the bride. Thomas M. Sammons, private secretary to United States Senator Addison G. Fos ter, of Washington, was In the city from Tacoma yesterday. Prior to his appoint ment, Mr. Sammons was a well-known newsnnner mnn. and wn prHtnr fnr- n Innir ! time of the old Tacoma Morning Union. ie lert lor Tacoma last nigbt. NEW YORK, June 9. Northwest peo ple registered at New York hotels are as follows: Sumpter, Or. H. L. Stewart, E. F. .aioro, ur. jirs. w. i. .More, urana. Seattle A. S. Anderson, Grand. ' Trinity Hall'; Wash. W. W. Smith, Manhattan. BUSINESS ITEMS. x ir Baby Is Cutting Teeth. Be sure ana use that old and well-tried remedy. Mrs. Wlnslow'B Soothing Syrup, for children ttethlnK. It BOOtbr the HilM. soften the cum. 4lla all sain, cur wind culic and Ularrhut. FROM SUNKEN VESSELS FIXAXj FATE OF OM AND DEPART ED WARSHIP. Skeletons In Graveyard Bay Con verted. Into Firewood Beautiful Blue Flames That They Made. Lying right under the eyes of the conti nent's greatest city Is an island, of which many Manhattanites know next to noth ln, says a writer in the New York Com mercial Advertiser. It is Long Island. By that strange ordering of affairs which makes things near at hand seem ever com monplace. It has remained unknown. Each New Yorker has looked beyond for his wonders, assuming that Long Island, so close at hand, must be known to every other than himself, and so, save to those whom business or pleasure sent thither, it has remained an unknown land. Yet about it sandy islands and deep bays cling tales of buried treasure and sunken ships. There is a bay set down between two hills on the northern shore, whose waters were so deep and which seemed so wild and isloated that early men of the Gov ernment chose It for a strange purpose. They consecrated It a burying place for departed warships. Old hulks, even of famous ships, cannot be allowed to drift upon the sea to knock holes In merchant vessels, neither has any one been so phil anthropic as to make a home for old ships, as they have done for worn-out sailors. So that when the decrees came that a frigate or bark or sloop had done its work it was sent hither, and without so much as a prayer sunk until the ooze of the bottom filled the seamo in its worn out timbers. Here came frigates that had reeked with catrlot blood In the days when Independence was won, schooners that destroyed English commerce In the Spanish main, and sloops that suppressed piracy and smuggling In the Carolina sounds and Florida bayous. Gradually the bay was filling with the worn-out makers of history. Here and there a mast rose above the surface, showing where a good ship lay, and when the water was still one might look down upon the dead ships and feel the ghostly chill of facing the departed. There Is a little village just around the point to eastward, a very small village it is, where men from the city seldom come, save now and then In hunting season, and where the people have talked to each other about each other, and their sur roundlngs, until there seems to be no new thing under the sun. A stranger Is always welcomed, for he furnishes a topic of conversation. One day a sailboat, a sloop-rigged fish ing boat, drew up to the village and two men linded. One, It was plain to see, was a fisherman, captain and owner of the boat. The other, more pretentiously dressed, might have been a school teach er, a country lawyer or a village mer chant. One thing was evident soon to the inhabitants of the little town he was a Yankee. His conversation showed him to be brother to the captain. They ate dinner at the little Inn and when that was over went out to the graveyard of ships. There they spent the remainder of the day rowing among the projecting masts and looking down Into the water through something which looked to the native Long Islanders like a speaking trumpet. Now and then the captain's brother would make some marks in a note book, and once they spent half aT hour sawing away a spar that came above the surface when the tide was down. Next morning the boat sailed away and a week later Captain Hczeklah .Lar kln confided to his wife that he expected before the year was out to own the coast ing vessel which he wanted, but which had been beyond the limits of his purse. Hczfklah's brother made It known to his partner In the liw business that he ex pected soon to buy the house he wanted In the city, and rather hoped to have a country place as well, that the enter prise which was to yield the necessary returns was a private deal with his broth er, the captain. Meanwhile the spar cut from a warship's rigging was being cut to the size of stovewood and carefully dried in the sun and wind of a New Eng land back yard. When It was dry the two brothers spent an evening burning It in a fire place where it cracked and sparkled with the weirdest and prettiest of colored flames. "They're crazy oyer such fires at New port and all the other swell places," said the lawyer. "We can have our own price for all the wood we get out of the old hulks. We'll be rich, brother, we'll be rich." Then they drank something to the success of an enterprise. There was a consultation a few days later with a New England Congressman: then a consultation between that Con gressman and some one In the Navy De partment and as a result of which Heze kiah and Jonathan Larklns became joint owners of the skeleton ships in Graveyard Bay, at a sum merely nominal. Again Captain Lirkln and brother sailed up to the little village which lies near Grave yard Bay. This time they had come for a longer stay. They set about hiring men and barges. They brought dynamite and diving suits, saws, axes and grappling hooks. They had little to say of their plans, but set to work quietly breaking up the bones of the old warships. Men de clared they must be crazy, but as they paid promptly, there was no trouble to find laborers. Sloop and bark, schooner pnd frigate, transport and battle-ship gave up the oak that once stood so brave ly against the ocean tempests. Up came the timbers, and when raised they were dried till soft crystals formed on them. Then they were cut into wood and loaded on little sailing boats that went up and down the sound. There are many cities along the Sound and the coast above, where rich men have homes. Here in Winter they come some times to sit about roaring wood fires in old-fashioned grates and defy the cold winds which Old Ocean hurls against them. Here, too, their wives come to give receptions and teas. These have long known that certain driftwoods, filled with the chemicals of ocean, scintillate with beautiful colored flames. The only prob lem Is to get' good driftwood, but when It can "be found big prices are offered, for matrons vie with one another in the blueness of their fires when pink teas are being given. When Fall drew on and fires became the order It came to be known among the wealthy ones along the coast that a certain sea captain had cornered the sea-soaked wood of all the vessels ever disposed of by the Navy officials. He was offering the finest and dryest of oak saturated during many, many years In ocean brine. Surely such a thing had never been heard of before. To think of burning the dry oak of warships, of sit ting before a colored flame made by the ribs and sides and masts of a ship which won gory battles before the last century began, wad enough to make the extrava gant ones wild. The captain could sell all the wood he had, though It ran to thousands of cords, and could have his own price. V Before Christmas the whole had been closed out to a speculator, and the can- ! tain had his new vessel. His brother was closing contracts for his house In town and a country home. Certain persons about the Long Island villages heard of It all and said the Yankees were "lucky." And along the coast. In the mansions of the rich, men and women sat by scintil lating wood fires. They watched the ever-changing colors, and the shooting bursts of exploding sea-salt. They saw towns and battles and faces. Such faces! Some saw faces of children and angels, some the faces of men who hated and fought and made themselves feared. Some saw, worse still, little diabolical laces that grinned and mocked, just as the world had grinned and mocked with Its' proffered hopes of, blessing and suc cess. Three New Police Officials. Police Captain Moore, Sergeant Church i , ULTJI III -r-- 1 I "TH MM IKT ! IT THl rOCIl OAUIlt CO. CICIXHTI A LESSON OLLAR for dollar, more in Ivory Soap than in any household f soap. It is easy to find purity and mmss ffijvre is not easy. They combine in Ivory Soap. You can afford to use it in the7 laundry; you can not afford not to use it elsewhere. It is vegetable-oil soap, in the cheapest form in which it can be pro cured. You pay nothing for a fancy box, wrapper or perfume. It is all in the soap I It floats. AGGIE Will tickle your stomach if you are fond of a good drink of whisky. This brand has gained well merited popularity, and we keep it with every other well-known whisky now on the market. Ask for your favorite drink. We have it. AUGUST ERICKSON NORTHWEST COR. SECOND AND BURNSIDE STREETS Concert afternoon and evening. and Special Cfflcer Hoare take charge of their new positions this morning. Hoare received congratulations yesterday on his out-door appointment, and hopes were ex pressed that his health might Improve with the change of routine. He bears the reputation of being one of the neatest and best-dressed men In the Police De partment, from the Commissioners down. RELICS OF EASTERN OREGON Recent Addition to the Hiiitorlcnl So ciety's Collection. The Oregon Historical Society Is con stantly receiving valuable historical documents and relics, of which the fol lowing is a partial mention: A compass bought by Joseph Watt in St. Louis. Mo., for his brother Ahlo S. Watt, and brought by the latter to Ore gon across the plains in 18-18, who used it in Yamhill County until 1871, and in Washington Coun.ty for ten years after wards. Donated by Mr. Ahlo S. Watt, of this city. "Annals of St. Louis in Its Territorial Days," by F. L. Bilton, octavo, 4G6 pages. Printed In St. Louis in 1SSS for the author. This work covers the period from 1804 to 1821. Reference is made to General William H. Ashley, Captain John Gantt. Daniel Boone, General William Clark, who was born in Carolina County, Vir ginia, August 1. 1770, General Zebulon M. Pike, Captain Meriwether Lewis, Thomas H. Blnton, David Monestes, probably the father or uncle of our late pioneer foun dryman of a similar name, and a score or more of others who In after years be came more or less identified with early Oregon history. This valuable work was presented to the society by Miss Clara Al Billon, of St. Louis, daughter of the author, at the suggestion of Mrs. Eva Emery Dye, who was her guest recently. Guide book used by the late John B. Garrison while crossing the plains In 1852; also a Keeler presented to his mother In 1796 when she was between 6 and 7 years old, and a rocking-chair made by him early In 1853 in this city for his mother. From Mrs. M. A. Winne. A stove ax used by Indians at the Cas cades fully 50 years ago. Donated by Mrs. C. M. Cartwright. Two stone Images made by Indians. Found on the bank of the Columbia River about 20 miles below this city, where they had been washed out of the bank at a depth of more than 20 feet. From Thomas A. Wood, Portland. A very quaint meat platter, a Hud son's Bay Company trunk and a copy of the "River of the West," donated by F. X. Matthleu. Buttevllle. The platter was brought to Oregon from London and pre sented to the Matthleu family by Archi bald McKInlay, at Oregon City, more than 50 years ago. Manuscript journal kept on the brig Metropolis, which left the Salem. Mass., custom-house on November 14, 1849, and arrived at or near Sacramento. Cal., June 22, 1850. The author's record of his first day in California is as follows: "San Francisco, Cal., June 17, 1830. The first morning In California began fair, with bright sunshine; 8 A. M., went on shore in the first boat. After rowing about one mile we landed, and made our boat fast to the ship Elizabeth, of Salem, which Is made into a storehouse. Our party made our way up the town. This place Is about the s4ze of Lowell, and has the appearance of the town of Law rence on the south side of the river. There are now about 75,000 persons of every country and tongue. The city has been burnt lately, and the fires are burn ing now. Nearly four millions of prop erty was burnt. We next made our "way to the postofllce, and after waiting until nodh, got letter from J . bringing the news' that the folks were all well at home. We then made our way down town, and visited the Parker House, which is filled with gamblers. It Is a two-story building about 150 feet In length and 100 In width. Two rows of tables run the whole length covered with money, $50,000 on a single table, betting $50,000 at a bet. Ragged Indians, and the Mexican and the Frenchman, and Anally all nations. All persons walk in the middle of the street, with dust flying, surrounded by pack mules and jackasses. In Porte mouth Square, which is the heart of the city, there is the market, which Is filled with mules and wild horses, and deer, and goats, and bear, buffalo and elk. Horses and mules are sold for $60 each. While IN VALUES. pound for pound, there is to tind a cheap soap; but low price in a sinele soao MOORE there was offered $12 per day, and board was $14 per week, and boots were $30 per pair. At 6 P. M. we made our way bock through the fleet to the brig, which seemed like home." Pioneers, Indian War Veterans and Native Sons and Daughters are especially Invited ' to visit the rooms this week. Open every day from 10 A. M. to 5 P.' M. SUNDAY EXCURSIONS. Every Sunday during the Summer sea son the O. R. &. N. Co. will sell round trip tickets Portland to Bonnevillle at rate of $1 00. Trains leave Union Depot 9 A. M., returning leave Bonneville 3:02 P. M.. arriving Portland at 4:30. This convenient schedule allows Ave hours at Bonneville. Tickets on snle Saturdays at O. R. & N. ticket office. Third and Wash ington, and on Sunday mornings at Union Depot. Rich red blood naturally results from taking Hood's Sarsaparilla. It tones the whole system. TODAY, 2:30 TONIGHT, 8:00 MORRIS & ROWPS BIG TRAINED ANIMAL SHOWS Tents Cor. 11th and Clay Sts. i BRING THE CHILDREN PARADE TODAY AT 11 A. M. 300 PERFORMING ANIMALS 300 PRICES AdultM. 25c; children, 15c. FREE BOOK TO MEN My book on Na ture's Cure, free, sealed by mail. Written to encourage men who lack vigor, having Drains, . Losses, Impotency, Varicocele, &c. It de scribes my 1901 model Dr. Snnden HERCU- L E X ELECTRIC BELT, with electric suspensory, the world's greatest homo self-treatment for results of Youthful Er rors. Worn nights, cures while you sleep. 5000 testimonials In 1900. No drugs to wreck stomach. Send for book or call in at my office for free consultation. Es tablished 30 years. Dr. A. T. Sanden Cor. Fourth and Morrison Portland . . . Oregon WINEF GURES WDMANS ILLS jFj Z ai8 h a non-polsono t?Y yrzwnmedT tor GoaoTThaa. tVUEJr rln 1 1 5 diji. Gleet, bpermatorrbicn, White j, unnatural dis uiinnuce at to itrlatnre. charges, or any Inflainma- PrtTtau esnuctan. Hon of m it com men goTHsEYAiS ChewchCo. branes. Non-wtrlngent iCmCtmTI.O.I I Sold by Drosglata, D. s. a. y n or sent In plain wrapper. - bUUtf HUt UU ICqiiWii