THE MOKNING -ORE GONIAL, MONDAY, DiSUEiVlBtfK 2, lyui. TRIBUTE TO DEAD Elks Hold Impressive Me morial Service. OCCASION FULL OF SOLEMNITY Dr. Stephen. S. "Wise Delivered Splen did Address la Remembrance of Departed Members P. H. D'Arcy Gave tae Eulogy. The world over, -wherever there exists a lodge of Elks, on the first Sunday In De cember of each year the members gather together to pay tribute to the departed dead. The Marquam Grand Theater wis tilled yesterday afternoon with members of Portland Lodge, No. 142, their friends, and visiting members of the order, to list en to the programme arranged In loving remembrance of deceased members of the local lodge. The dreary day outside had In it a sug gestion of the solemnity of the observ ance, of a meeting called to remember with loving tribute the passing away of friends and brothers. The barrenness of the trees, the dying foliage, the sense of dreariness, after the seasons full of life and warmth, all lent an atmosphere thor oughly in keeping with the sad observ ance. Before the appointed hour, 2 o'clock, the auditorium and the balcony were filled, and many stood during the entire serv ice. In the boxes were invited guests and officials of the local lodge. Governor and Mrs. T. T. Geer, and Walter Lyon, private secretary to the Governor, oc cupied the lower stage box on the right hand side of the house. The flrbt four rows of the dress circle had been reserved for the members of the lodge, of whom 300 were present. On the stage was the choir of the Taylor-Street M. E. Church, which, under the leader ship of W. H. Boyer, furnished excellent music. Exalted Ruler George E. Chamber lain, Chaplain Horace Thleleon, and the speakers of the day. Dr. Stephen S. Wise and P. H. D'Arcy, P. E. R., of Salem Lodge, Mo. 3SG. One of Founders AmonR the Dead. In the list of names of deceased mem bers of the order on the programme the first was that of Charles A. S. Vivian. But few of the audience, except members of the order, knew who the man was. He was not of Portland, and though known to but few of the local Elks, his name Is a familiar one in the order, be cause of the fact that he was one of the coterie of splendid fellows who were the founders of the Elks, and are responsible for the being of the organization. In the East Vivian -was well known to the world at large as an actor of attain ments, and during his long lifetime ho endeared himself to the public as well as to his comrades and friends. He died during the year, and his remains repose in the beautiful Elks' Rest in Mount Hope cemetery, just outside Boston. Since the copy for the programme had been given to the printer another name was added to the list, that of C. S. Waite, who died in this city Thursday morning. XUtaal One of Beauty. The Elks' memorial service is a ritual of simple beauty. Perhaps nothing was more touching in its spirit of reverence and 'remembrance than the reading of the list of deceased members. As Secretary K. "W. Rowe read each name, there wa6 a second's pause, and then was heard the sweet, clear tolling of a soft-toned bell the token that there was no response. Throughout the service there was con stant recurrence to that spirit of com passion and forgiveness of earthly faults that finds trite expression In the lines from the ritual whirh read: "The faults of our brothers we write upon the sand, their virtues upon the tablets of love and memory." In opening the service Exalted Ruler George Chamberlain said: "This day and date remind us that we are again paying mournful tribute to our honored dead. These annual gatherings serve to cement the more strongly the brotherhood of our order, and to create a better understanding of the principles we subscribe to." Address by Dr. Stepnen S. "Wise. Following the invocation by Chaplain Thlelsen, Exalted Ruler Chamberlain in troduced Dr. Stephen S. "Wise, who de livered the address of the day. The key note of Dr. Wise's address was that true spiritual greatness comes from consecra tion through grief, and ennoblement by great sorrow. He said In part: "The remembrance of the dead Is one of the most sacred offices of the living. Nothing can be more elevating, as noth ing can be more unselfish, than to sum mon back for a time to the halls of mem ory the virtues and moral graces and spiritual excellencies of the dead. What ever may be our final destiny, these serv ices and the spirit which underlies them are eloquent of an Immortality which Is the portion of those who are enshrined in the Imperishable ark of memory. How fitting, moreover, that thee services be held on the first solemn rest day of the Decnber month, when tree bared of foliage and orchard reft of fruit and field shorn of grain alike tell of death and destruction and dissolution. AVho would not believe In Immortality and per petual renewal of life In the Springtide, In the month of May or June, when Hhc grasses begin to peer through the frozen earth, the trees to put forth their tender blossoms and the plant9 to send out their early leaves? To meet In commemoration of the dead and In the hope of everlasting life at this season of the j ear. when Na ture seems to be spreading Its ley pall over Held and foreot and flower, bears witness to a larger trust, a deeper faith, a surer hope. "In one of his remarkably Interesting chapters on word stud, Trench observes that the word 'tribulation' Is of deep sig nificance. It is derived from the Latin tribulum,' a threshing Instrument or roller whereby the Roman husbandmen separat ed the husks from the corn, the chaff from the wheat, the light, trivial and poor from the solid and the true. How expressive this Is of the results of tribulation, the chastening of grief, the ennoblement of sorrow. For. js thf thresher brings forth and preserves the best, o docs grief call forth the bet In man and conserve that for evermore. An upllftmont and a consecration reside In grief which no other human experience affords. Sorrow .should be wing to lift up and not weight to bear down. Powerfully was this, thought brought home to me seme years ago while Inspecting some great gold-mine w orks In Alaska, where I beheld the huge ore masses hurled Into a machine, which, with massive and terrible strokes, crushes and macerates the ore; again and again it Is subjected to this treatment, until at last the concentrate appears, bearing the cold In easy solution. Life Is the ore, which does not yield Its best and mObt precious until crushed by the hammer strokes of grief. Sorrow is the -magnet which draws forth the golden particles of character from out the ore of life. "This Is the universal experience of hu v inanity. Through losa and trial and sor row, men and women and children, who hefore served evil and darkness, are won over to the good, the true and the beau tiful, to God and the God-like. If we this day dedicate ourselves to the mem ory of the dead, the remembrance of them will consecrate us, even as 'In Mcmorlaxn,' Inscribed to the loved memory -f Arthur Henry Hallam. is In trutn a death.lt?? monument to Its author, Alfred Tenny son. The roi,ccns1!cn of Grief. "In order that the consecration of grief may be ours at this moment, let us seek to define the ways in which this conse cration can make Itself felt In our lives. For one thing, we are to remember the dead in love and tenderness and charity and reverence, not alone in this hour, but every day, a custom beautifully ex emplified In the manner In which you daily and nightly cast a loving and retro spective glance upon the resting place of your departed brothers. How pious, how touching, how beauteous is this office of commemoration! Whatever else man did or was or had at the time of his death, ho Is one of a brotherhood, the members of which hold hhn In affectionate and brotherly memory. "The higher consecration of grief will be our lot. the true comemoration of the dead will have been achieved. If we be moved and inspired in this hour to be more just and tender and merciful and brotherly and charitable than we ever were before to the living. Shall not such a resolution find support in the principle of your organ ization, to write the faults of your fellow men upon the shifting sands of time and to inscribe their merits on the inefface able tablets of eternity? Shall this noble practice obtain only toward the dead and not toward the living? Is it not the very aim of your 'benevolent and protective order to further the teachings of love, to spread the gospel of charity, to pro mote the spirit of brotherllness, to widen the horizon of toleration? How better serve and honor tho dead than by service and consecration to the living, by being more tolerant in our judgment, more kind ly in our speech, more compassionate in our deeds? I know of nothing more tragic in life than the plaint of Paracelsus, which voices the heartbreak of mankind: " 'TIs only when they sprint: to Heaven that angels Reveal themselves to you; they sit all day Beside you and He down at night by ou Who caro not for their present muse or sleep. And all at once they leave you, and jou know them. "Shall we not know the angels who share our life, or must we wait until they spring to heaven before learning their true worth? Let us not wait to strew flowers about the graves of the dead; let us bring the beauty and the fraerance of the flower of love Into the lives of those who walk and toll and J dwell and suffer with us. Let us not dedi cate an hour of tears and regrets and repinings to the dead, but let us conse crate a lifetime of joyous, tender and un selfish service to the living. Ono came and said to a prophet in the East: 'My mother has died; what shall I do for the good of her soul?' The prophet thought of the heat of the desert and replied 'Dig a well, that the thirsty may have water to drink' The man dug a well and he said: 'This I have done for my mother.' "Finally, the true aim of these me morial exercises is to help us to grasp J the earnestness and sacredncss of life, to dedicate ourselves anew to all that Is best and finest and highest in life, to make life of lasting worth and undying beauty, so that in time to come men may revere our memory and cherish our fame. How helpful and sustaining the thought that it lies with us to fit ourselves for im mortal living, that Immortal life Is not a necessary corollary of earthly existence, but a reward to be gained through en riching and perfecting the content of life. The sages In Israel command us: 'Live as though the next hour might prove thy last; work as If life were to endure forever. This be our commemoration of the dead. For those who are no more our hearts' own tears and unfeigned sor row; for those who yet dwell with us, renewed love, deeper loyalty, truer friend ship, larger forbearance, richer services; for ourselves, consecration unto purity, truth and holiness. Eulogy of P. H. D'Arcy. P. H. D'Arcy, past exalted ruler, or Salem Lodge, No. 336, delivered the eulogy. In which he reviewed the principles of the order, and Impressed upon his hearers the compassionate leniency with which tho members deal with the faults of an other. Mr. D'Arcy said In part: "We have met this afternoon In a lodge of sorrow to pay our tribute of respect to the memory of our brothers who have passed from this life to the great be yond. We have assembled In loving- re membrance to offer to the memories ot those who have gone our affection and our appreciation of the virtues which en deared them, to us In life. In these cere monies we are forcibly reminded of the uncertainty of life and the certainty ol death. "On this day, wherever there Is an or- ganlzed lodge of Elks, true to the prin ciples of the order, memorial services are being held In honor of the departed dead. Tho members of the Elks under stand the weaknesses of men In all their ugly and forbidding aspects. We sympa thize and we regrtt, but we forgive and not condemn. The faults of our brothers we write upon the sand, their virtues upon the tablets of love and memory. "I regret that I have not time to speak of each of the brothers of the Portland lodge, who are among those who have passed away. You know them, and hold them In loving remembrance for their sterling and admirable qualities. Brother Charles Vivian, one of the founders of the order, heads the list of the dead. He . i' The repairs ind extensions of the slopes and dam at the lock in the Tamhlll River hay been com. Icted. The lock now presents about as finished an appearance as it Is possible for Buch a -work ta hae. Owlnp to a succession of Hoods in the river last year It was Impos sible to finish the work complete'. The, pavlns of the slopes with rock, has now been finished, ard the dam extended 23 feet Into the east bank, which will prevent a recurrence of damage from floods. The lock, which has a lift of 1C feet. Is about a mile below La Fay tt'e. at the foot ot the Tamhlll rapids, and Is Intended to enable boats to overcome the 13. V - --- -I -- t dled in his Eastern home, and lies In the', beautiful Elks' Rest, In Mount Hope ceme- tery, near Boston. Few of us were given to know him personally, but wo mourn for him because he was one of us, and was one of that band of men who gave to the world the Order of Elks. The musical numbers on the programme were splendidly rendered. The Taylor Street M. E. Church choir sang three numbers, under the direction of W. H. Boyer. Mrs. Clare Edward Farnsworth sang1 "Come Unto Me," by Hawley, and the orchestra, under the leadership ot Frank M. Griffin, played several selec tions. The committee In charge of the memorial service was composed of Henry D. Griffin, chairman; Ralph W. Hoyt, li R. Krleger, Harry Meyer and Frank A. Heitkemper. The namta of the deceased members of the Portland lodge who died during 1901 are: H. H. Holmes, November 14; and C. S. Waito, November 2S. J. J. Baldwin died December 26, 1900, after the memorial serv ices for that year had been held. WORKINGS OF CIVIC CLUB. Things Pointed Out That Could Be Done to Beautify City. PORTLAND, Dec L (To the Editor.) In regard to the matter of public Improve ment noted editorially In this morning's Oregonlan, will you allow me to speak of a society to which I had the honor of belonging in an Eastern city? It was caiied "The Improvement Society," and the objects were precisely those which you mention. Both sexes were represented on the board of management, and every member of the society paid annual dues of th A committee was chosen, which thor oughly canvassed the city by wards for members. The board of management consisted of a representative, man and woman from each ward, together with a president, vice-president, secretary and treasurer. As a rule, men and women were selected who were not too busy In the Industrial world, and who could give time and thought to the matter. It is true that in that city there was not a hundreth part of the work to do that lies close at hand In Portland; but the city would, Indeed, be ideal In which there were no duties of that kind to be performed. A large share of the work done, aside from the actual expenditure of money, was in suggestions and petitions to the City Fathers for the abatement of nuis ances which menaced health, and for Im provements In crosswalks, etc The so ciety also made It a point to be Interested In the blocking of sidewalks by merchants and In various things of that nature which seem to be totally neglectedhere. More good can be accomplished In this way than In the expenditure of money, for while the average cltizTcn may rail at the laxity and carelessness of a city government which permits such a condition of things, j et nothing but concerted action can avail for correction of existent evils. The money expended was principally for beau ufIng with flowers spots which would otherwise look barren. For Instance, a small square like the plazas of Portland, situated In the heart of the city, where thousands passed by It every day, was adorned with a flower plot which bloomed Ihe entire season. A circular plot, very near the sidewalk, was enclosed with a. wire fence sufllciently high to exclude the ever-present dog. This Was planted solidly with tullp3, with the different col ors arranged artistically, and proved each Spring a thing of joy and beauty. As soon as the tulip season was past, it was replanted with scarlet double geraniums, making a bit of glowing color through the long sultry Summer, grateful to every weary passer-by. Later In the season It was again planted with red and yellow cannas, and the bright hues and green leaves were objects of beauty, even after Jack Frost had stripped the century-old, stately elms of their foliage. Now, even the newcomers, who have set their feet for the first time on Oregon toll, are interested in the great Exposition which looms up for 1?C5, and the present time Is none too early to make this great and growing city a veritable garden spot. The beautiful and luxuriant shrubbery, the wonderfully vigorous flowers, and, above all, the masses of dark green Eng lish Ivy, trailing over lattice and wall, and even wandering along the crevices of the rotting and dilapidated sidewalks, are. one and all, a delight to the New England woman born and bred, and It Is the hope of th writer that prompt action will be taken to make the city one that shall be the amiratlon of the thousands of East ern tourists who arc sure to journey over the Rocky and Cascade Ranges In IMG. HELEN CLARK PACKARD. Rev. Xlng-h Miller Rclnstntcd. PENDLETON, Or.. Dec. 1. Rev. Hugh Miller, pastor of the Pendleton Baptist Church, who denounced religion and with drew, was reinstated by unanimous vote. He lives at Muncle, Ind., and will go back to the ministry- THE COMPLETED --- -- ---- ---- WHAT A TRUE MAN IS TOPIC CONSIDERED BY SPEAKERS AT ST. MARK'S SERVICE. His Duty to Family, State and Church Speakers, A. C. XewIH, Ed ward Johnson, A. E. Bernays. Helpful addresses relating to the duties of a man In the family and as a citi zen wero given in St. Mark's Protestant Episcopal Church last night. Rev. J. Id. Shnpson announced that he hoped to ar range for the delivery of a series of sim ilar address to men on the first Sunday in each month in the church, and asked that the services be as largely attended as possible for mutual Improvement and enlightenment. Principal A. C. Newlll, of the Bishop Scott Academy, was the first speaker, and he choys for his topic, "The Relation of the True Man to the Family." "I presume that our rector in arranging for a series of these addresses thought It was time for laymen to take a helping hand In. this work, and let us know frcm personal ex perience what the feeling Is like when peo ple leave church and say: I don't think much of that sermon. Turn about is fair play," began Principal Newlll. "I don't think there could be a bet ter title conferred upon any man than this: 'He is a true man.' One hears of a certain man spoken of as a 'family' man. Why is not every man a family man? Surely the duty of a true man Is his family first. Before anything else. A true man is a good son. The child is the father of the man. Why a man as a son should not be obedient to his father and mother I cannot see. The commandment tells us Honor thy father and mother,' and there Is no limit placed upon the age of any person. The first lesson to all men Is that of obedience. A true son Is a good son, and a true man la also a good brother. Love must reign supreme. The brotherhood of man means that we ought to be unselfish and that we should regard all men as belonging to a common fam ily. "Then a true man who Is a husband and father is a true gentleman with a spirit of chivalry of medieval time a man who Is ready to light for his home and fam ily. We husbands are not true men when we expect too much from the wife or mother. A man, we will say, comes home tired with the cares of business and thinks his wife should greet him with the same cheery smile. The maxim should be reversed. Why should the wife not be tired with the ceaseless round of her family duties? It Is then the duty of the husband to greet her with a cheery smile and pleasant word. A true man as a father has a sense of parental responsi bility. Most fathers know that their duty is to control their children, but some of them are too lazy. They want to read a book In the evenings when their children ask to be helped with their home studies. Where parental responsibility Is neglect ed, wayward children will grow up." Rev. Edward Johnson, of St. Paul, Minn., spoke on "The True Man In His Relation to the State." "The Individual occupies a place In this world like the relation of the fingers to the hand, the hand to the arm, the arm to the trunk, the trunk to the body and the body to the head, brain and heart," he began. "No life In this world can be absolutely lived alone. The child finds Itself In a community with different Individuals In the family, and his Influence Is like that of a stone thrown Into a pool, the circles are small at first, but they gradually grow Into larger circles. We belong to the town In which we live, to the state and to the Nation of which the state forms a part. Each separate Individual has a part to perform In deciding matters of government around him. If he had eyes to sec Each one can cause influence for good to radiate from him. Some one has said: 'The state Is a good one when In dividuals In that state are themselvca good.' An Individual cannot be good, un less as an Individual his will and mind are good. It rests upon them as Indi viduals to take their part In electing thote who govern the state. Never say: 'My vote won't count.' We did not come into this world by our own choice. We have work to do. We have to live outside our own circle, beyond our Immediate family. We all have a voice In the election of those who make our laws for us. Look at the victor. won In New York the other day over the vicious classes by good citi zenship." "The True Man In His Relation With the Church" was the topic assigned to A. E. Bernays, one of the masters of the Bishop Scott Academy. "If wo ask our selves what Is the church, In the widest sense It Is composed of congregations of Christian people dispersed throughout the world." he said. "What should be a man's attitude, then, toward the church which embodies Christian doctrine and ideals? He cannot be true to himself and adopt a purely neutral attitude. He can acquire by reading, study and conversation, by LOCK AND DAM IN -- Hce::i4it)nnuit(MtiitMn acceptance or rejection of the truths pre sented, by loyalty to conviction no pol icy of mild acquiescence or half-hearted belief. He cannot escape the responsi bility thrust upon him; he cannot ration ally. In this Increased light of modern thought and knowledge, be an agnostic. He must choose whom he will serve. "The crying evil of the present age Is that men are too Indolent to undertake this course of action. Sheer laziness and Indifference, not reasoned unbelief, are our besetting sins. Christianity Is regard ed by many men, who will not trouble themselves to enter Into the question, as a harmless superstition fit for women and children, and not as a matter of par amount Importance demanding patient consideration, and dispassionate, mature judgment. Hence It Is that so few men are to be found In church. They are not hostile to the church, and they often be stow their patronage upon It In the way of gifts distributed by their women-folk. They never take themselves or the church seriously., it must be observed, however, that this Indifference Is less noticeable among university students, who. for the most part, tnke a definite stand either for or against religion. Loyalty to the church. If It means anything, means loy- 1 alty to Chrlht. j "How, then. Is this loyalty to be shown, ' so that men may know under whose ban ner we are ranged? By a faithful, lov ing, unalterable adherence to that Chris tian body to which either by training or by choice we arc attached. Ideal of uni ty should ever be borne In mind conslst- . cnt with perfect charity to those Chrls- tian sects In which, alas! the Christian world Is divided. Where else beside the ( church fold shall true peace be found? Lord, to whom shall wc go? Thou hast the words of eternal life, and to thy church thou hast committed the treasures ' of thy kingdom. May he make us all , more worthy members of that blessed so ciety, 30 that, having done our duty as good soldiers of the church militant, wc may at length be admitted to the ranks , of the church triumphant." EAGLE AND GERMAN CARP. An Odd .Mls-Up In the Shallows of the Sn.iqucltannn Flats. "The shallow waters of the Susque hanna River above Havre de Grace are i alive with the big, hog-like, worthless uerman carp that some crank of a plscl- culturlst Introduced to American waters j some years ago," said n Marvland man. I "They root In tlv mud In droves, and farmers spear and trap them by the ton for fertilizer and feed for their hogs. "Ospreys by the score constantly turn their sharp eyes upon the carp from I far up In the air, coveting the meat that Is on them, but no osprey has as I yet ventured to test Its strength against I the bulk of those swinish fish, j "Eagles, which are still numerous along the Eastern shore, and of tremen- dous size. In turn keep watch on the ospreys, so that if one should at last pluck up courage enough to drop down and set its talons In a carp, and should j have the strength to lift It, they might ( pounce upon the bold bird, rob It of Its plunder and bear It way to feast upon It themselves, after the practical habit of the bird of freedom. , "One of these eagles a big, bald headed fellow having at last despaired of any such attempt on tlv part of an osprey, and being pressed by hunger, determined one fine day recently to cap ture one of these carp himself and shame the faint-hearted ospreys, and It dropped down upon one of the rooting piscatorial .monsters In the shallows. "Such Is the opinion, at least, of Cap tain Jesse Popler, who, while cruising In his little yacht over the Susquehanna flats, saw at a distance a great commo- tlon In the water, heard the unmistak able shrieks of something in trouble, and I presently saw a splendid specimen of the J American eagle speeding along like the wind over the surface of the water, pro- 'pelled by no effort of its own. In fact, the eagle was using all Its efforts to stay I its progress and to rise from the water. i "Captain Popler turned his yacht, head ed off the speeding eagle, and succeeded 1 In grabbing It by the neck, although the bird fought fiercely against it with beak and wings. I "When Captain Popler got hold of the 'eagle he discovered why it was taking that strange Journey against Us will. The 1 eagle's talons were burled In the back ! of a big carp burled so deep that the bird could not get them out. The enrp being too heavy for the eagle to rise with, and the eagle being too much weight for the carp to sink deeper Into the water with, the situation to both was unfortu nate. "The eagle would doubtless have been eventually drowned, and the carp must have died in the clutch of the eagle. If Captain Popler had not Interfered. He ( was unable to loosen the eagle's talons from the fish, so he lifted them both Into the boat, where he cut the eagle loose and let It go. The carp he knocked In the head. " 'I don't know but what I should have killed that eagle, too. or at least locked him up for life,' said Captain Popler after ward. 'He deserved capital punishment. YAMHILL RIVER. foot fall In the river between that point and McMInnvIlle. It is a very substantial struct ure, the walls being: of concrete 12 feet In thickness. The lower gates are each 25 feet square, and the upper gates 0 by 25 feet. The cost of th work was about $ 70,000, and by Its completion McMInni Hie. the county seat of Tamhlll County, has ben brought In connection by steamboat with Portland, and a long-chrished dream of the citizens baa been realized. : : . c t i ; 1 ccmiiHT iiim it th mocitu A OJMM CO. ClICIHHATl A CALCULATION. ES5-7 HEN you are ready to buy, stop and com fepl pute the cost of household in a mm mmm and for the slight difference in price you will never forego the pleasure of using the purest soap made, that is, Ivory Soap. It is the most inexpensive of pure soaps. You rneed no knowledge of chemistry to realize this purity, use it and you will know. It floats. Foreign and Domestic Coal We can give you good domestic coal wood, or a better grade for the grate or we can send you the finest foreign coal Call us up and get our prices. HOLMES COAL 247 STARK "A FAIR FACE MAY PROVE A FOUL BARGAIN." MARRY A PLAIN GIRL IF SHE USES S2 A oii 1 Just think of the great American eagle disgracing himself by tackling a mud rooting German carp.' " WHO TOLD THE BIGGEST? It Wna Sunday, but Thli Didn't Feaze the Tmth-Tellers. The sight of an earthworm, angleworm, or fishworm on the asphalt pavement m front of the entrance to the Union De pot, while the hotel busdrlvers were wait ing for the Astoria train yesterday fore noon, was the cause of an animated dis cussion among them. "Now. where did that fishworm come from?" asked one of the drivers, who no ticed that the ground all about was cov ered with concrete and asphalt. "Rained down," replied a veteran of the gang. "I have heard of Its raining dogs and cats, and flshworms, but I never be lieved It." said another, "because I have never seen It. I think It Is an old super stition." "I never saw It rain dogs and cats, nor flshworms, but I have seen It rain frogs and flsh," chipped In a late acces sion. "Where was that?" asked several, "and how did. you know they rained down?" "It was about 13 miles west of Omaha. They came right down In the road, where the water was running knee deep after It had been raining 15 minutes. I knew they rained down because there was not a stream, pond, or even a damp spot within 16 miles of the place, before It began to rain." "When I lived In Western Mlssour'. some 75 miles from the Mississippi," said one of the old hands, "a tornado swept 1 1 j t j f j 4 : a ;:::o m --- the soap used by your day, a week r month, for the furnace that will cost vou less tnac or cook stove at a slightly higher price, on the market AND ICE COIVSP'Y STREET. over that part of the state. When It broke It created a lake about five miles long, in a sort of natural basin, and this' lake was found to be well stocked with' big channel cat and other fish, which must have been carried all the way from the Mississippi. The boys hail good fish ing there for several years before the flsh were all caught out." ' "That is very probable," remarked a tall, lank fellow, who had been listening. "When I lived In Round Prairie. Tex., about 100 miles north of Galveston, there was a sort of hurricane ono day, and a tremendous amount of rain fell. When the storm was over the ground was cov ered for miles with salt-water flsh o many varieties, and thousands of young alligators and some half-grown ones. Tho flsh must have come from the Gulf of' Mexico, and the alligators from lagoons' along- tho coast." f Another bystander, wearing a nugget' scarfpln and a watch-charm of nuggets, chipped In: "I once witnessed a tidal wave on the coast of Southeastern Alas ka, which swept back over a. level tract of country for some eight or 10 miles, and left an old whale and two young ones' ctmnrlAf n mllf frnm thn hpnrh Rpnlfnnc seals and many kinds of fish. Including! (j thousands of salmon, littered the ground' for miles back." Then the man who had discovered tho fishworm remarked that It was Sunday,! and nobody said anj thing for a minute. ' The Kansas man picked tho worm upt on a stick and recited: An Inadvertent step may crush the worm That crawls at evening- in the public path. But humanity, forewarned, will step aside and let the reptile live. He threw the worm over Into the grass plot In front of the dining-room, and Just them the whistle of tho Astoria, train was heard, and the meeting broke up In a hurry. Changes In Olympia Ticket. OliTMPIA, Wash., Dec 1. Two changes have been made in tho Citizens nonparti san ticket nominated here last Wednesday for the coming election. Charles Talcott has been named for Mayor, In place of Allen Weir, and RoDert A. Graham as Councllman-at-Largo In place of A. D. Sheldon. Messrs. Weir and Sheldon de clined the nomination because of the plank In the platform favoring tho restriction of saloons to certain districts. ReanlBltlon, for Hardt. OLTMPIA. Wash . Dec. 1. Requisition papers for Charles Hardt, defaulting treaa-j urer of the town of Tumwater, were se- cured today. Hardt is under arrest in Leadville, Colo., for embezzling $772 ir 1S9S. Panp$m :7t H. -i-WVCN .v l I l A -. I -. -TV- 4 - i . .O-- : There is just enough rice flour in our pancake mix ture to make the cakes or waffles v brittle and tender. Rice flour is an imported article. Were it omitted we would make more money, but you could not have such fine waffles and pancakes. KJS Ull " -