THE MOBNISG OREGONIAN. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1903. TIED UP BY STRIKE Southern Colorado Mines Out of Working Forces, MANY MEN WILL QUIT CAMPS National Organization Will Aid Them In This Movement, as Well as Fight for More Pay and Shorter Day. . DENVER, Nov. 9. More than 10.000 ooal miners in Colorado went on strike today for an eight-hour day. Increase In traces and other concessions. The strike was ordered by the National executive officers of the "United Mineworkers of America, after the coal companies re f use to confer with union representa tives concerning the demands of the men. Of the idle men, COM are In the southern coal fields, 2000 In the northern coal fields and 1S00 in Fremont County. One hun dred mines have been closed down. A few independent properties in the northern coal fields and elsewhere will not stop work, since the operators have agreed to concede the eight-hour day and also increased wages. Less than 1000 miners will remain at work according to reports from the affected districts. The announcement comes that 600 have gone out in Colfax County, N. M. The others In that territory are now negotiat ing with the mlneowners. The Colorado Fuel & Iron, "Victor Fuel and Northern Coal & Coke Companies are the largest producers. Practically all of their properties have been tied up by the action of the miners. However, they are making efforts to continue opera tions under the protection of a strong guard. It Is. estimated that there are about 140 coal mines In the state with an output of some S.O0O.O00 tons a year and about 1,000,000 tons of coke. Policy of Mineworkers. It will be the policy of the United Mineworkers to depopulate the various coal districts by sending the idle men and their families to Illinois, Indian Ter ritory. Missouri, Iowa and other states where work has been secured for them. Some 5000 fares to these states have already been arranged for by the United Mineworkers and today hundreds of the strikers are on their way to the new fields. The storm centers will be about Trini dad, in the southern fields, where the number of miners aggregates 8000. In the towns of Hastings and Delagua, where the Victor Coal Company employs 2500 men, it is reported that 1000 men -were working today. Both places are strongly guarded and strangers are not allowed to enter them. General Manager James F. "Welborn, of the Colorado Fuel & Iron Company, an nounced today that the company would continue to operate its mines and the pub lic need have no fear of a coal famine. At the office of the Victor Fuel Company It was announced that all Its mines were in operation .and would continue to be , operated. The large companies operating ' in the northern fields admitted their mines were closed. Not over 150 men worked in the northern fields. Despite the claims of the coal com panies, householders in Denver and other cities who have not laid in a Winter's supply of coal found it impossible today to secure a ton of coal for immediate deliverer The supply of lignite coal is already exhausted, and companies having other kinds of coal booked orders for not more than one ton subject to two weeks' delay in delivery. The railroad companies say they have enough coal stored to meet all their re quirements for some time. The Colorado & Southern Railroad Is re ported to have confiscated nearly 1000 cars of coal which had been loaded last week and were standing on sidings. Sheriff Clarjc, of Las Animas County, has enrolled CO deputies. State militia is held in readiness to be dispatched to the coal regions at the first call from the Sheriffs of the counties affected. Union Organizers at Work. WALENSBURG, Colo., Nov. 9. Twelve mines In Huerfano County employ a to tal of 2000 men. Of these 800 responded to the strike order today. The county has not been well organized but organ izers are enlisting new members at a rapid rate. Guards have been placed at all of the mines, but no vi61ence is feared. Chris Evans, financial representative of the National executive board of United Mineworkers, says that there Is enough money available to conduct the strike and proIde homes for the evicted families of nil the strikers. All the officials of the United Mineworkers of District No. 15 were out near the mines today completing the organization of the miners. Trinidad is full of striking miners -who are orderly and quiet. All the night offices on the Denver & Rio Grande and Colorado & Southern Railroads north of Trinidad were closed today, and all night agents and telegraph operators laid off. The railroads are preparing for the de parture of a large number of striking miners. The men will go to the Eastern coal fields unless the strike here is settled. The number of men on strike In Las Animas and Huerfano Counties is estimated at about 10,000. UTAH MEN AGAINST STRIKE. Miners Will Disregard the Order and Continue to Work. SALT LAKE, Nov. 9. That the coal miners of Utah are unfavorable to the general strike movement Inaugurated in Colorado Is indicated by specials from eeral cool-mining camps. According to the reports received, the men are satis fied with the present Ecale of wages and will continue to work, disregarding the order to strike. Reports received today from all the coal mining camps of this state, including Sunnyslde, Castlegate, Clear Creek and "Winter Quarters, are to the effect that no strike of coal miners has taken place and no trouble is expected. Few of the 1900 men worklntr in the coal mines nf th state are affiliated with the union, and one of the principal causes of the strike ' In other states, the demand for an eight hour working day. is removed by the fact that an eight-hour law is in effect in Utah. Electric Plant Short of Coal. DENVER, Nov. 9. A special to the Re publican from Boulder, Colo., 'says the Electric "Light and Power Company, which furnishes light for the city and operates the street railway system, an nounced today that the street railway will be shut down on account of the threatened coal famine. The lighting plant will be kept running. A special from Florence, Colo., says the Colorado Portland Cement Works closed down this morning, although the plaster of parls plant of the same com pany will be kept In operation It is ex plained that the Industrial depression all over the country has caused a glut of the cement market and the Colorado company Is already overstocked. The Shoe-Leather Cure. New York World. E. C. Norris, who is now due in New York from his tramp of SCO0 miles, has Worn out Gl pairs of shoes and has good reason for congratulating himself on his extraordinary use of shoe leather. "When Mr. Norris, 26 months ago, start ed on his long. tramp from San Francisco, the doctors told him he had consumption. At the ends of It he finds himself a well man, with Increased weight, good diges tion, firm muscles and clear brain. His worn-out shoes are so many milestones scattered along the road to health and happiness, and his bill for shoe leather and the loss of two years' time are more than balanced by his possession of a blessing which is without price to one who has lost It. Mr. Norris' long walk, it is to be hoped, will induce others to try the shoe-leather cure. But din't wait till consumption or wasted health makes other remedies use less. Wear out your shoes while you are well and let nature, with all her blessed influences of sun and air and health, keep you on the highway of happiness One pair of shoes worn out In prevention is better than 61 worn out in cure. EERNEEE'S ABCTIC PEOJECT. He Has Raised $60,000 in Canada So Far Toward His Expenses. New York Sun. Captain J. E. Bernler, a French-Canadian sailor, who has commanded several ocean vessels, has been tryJng for two years to raise funds to carry out his own scheme of Polar exploration. He was permitted to address the Cana dian House of Commons on the subject, and his project has been heard with favor by several Arctic experts. He has now raised In Canada by private subscrip tion $60,000. of which Lord Strathcona has given $5000. It is also reported from Ottawa that the Canadian government will probably build and equip a vessel for the expedition. Nansen has expressed the belief that Bernler will succeed if he has sufficient perseverance. Dr. Dawson of the Cana dian Geological Survey, said two years ago that Bernler had a very fair prospect of success, and Sir Clement Markham be lieves the project Is worthy of all en couragement and support. Bernler Is a thorough sailor, has given years of study to every phase of the work he is planning to do, and has inspired many with faith in himself and In his project. His plan Is to build a vessel of 300 tons burden," modeled after the Fram, but with some Improvements, and take her North through Behring Strait. It is well known that the prevailing winds there are from the southeast, which causes an ice drift to the northwest. By entering the ice far east of the place where the Fram bejran her drift he hopes that instead of drifting Just north of Franz Josef Land, as happened to the Fram, he will be carried across the North Pole. To be sure, his vessel Trill )Hn drift near the place where De Long's Jeannette entered the ice and began her tedious and helpless drift to the spot where she sank. But Bemler thinks there Is a fair prospect that he will be carried northwest far more rapidly than the Jean nette drifted. llt has been observed in recent years that there have been more open spaces and consequently a chance for more f freedom of movement in the Arctic Sea north of Asia than during the time, when the Jeannette was fast In the Ice. Bernler will go equipped, howover, to strike out over the Ice toward the North Pole Just as soon as he becomes dissatis fied with the progress his vessel is mak ing. He Intends to take with him 120 dogs, which will draw a large amount of supplies on sledges. He will also carry a raft on which to load his stores and travel across the spaces of open water. If he starts north over the ice by sledge, he will keep in touch with his vessel as long as possible by means of wireless telegraphy. During the war in South Africa wire less communications were found tn h practicable for a distance of 200 miles, and since then messages have been sent across the ocean. The explorer hopes to make wireless telegraphy a very valuable part of his equipment. Bernler's cfiief purpose is to reach the pole, and he thinks he can accomplish this end In 18 months, though he will be fully prepared for an absence of three years. SHE IS THE SAME W0HLAN STILL Despite Intellectual Development, She's Still Afraid of a Mouse. Chicago Inter Ocean. Nobody of any consequence In these days would be willing to risk his reputa tion by denying that woman has made within the last century, and is still mak ing, wondrous advancement along many lines of Intellectual development We behold evidences of her progress everywhere. She carries off first prizes in the great universities. She occupies conspicuous places In the learned profes sions. Beginning as a writer of ellly novels for the entertainment of very young people, she has become a writer of great works that challenge the best pro ductions of the masculine mind. Where there was only one Elizabeth 00 years ago, one madame de Stael 150 years ago, one George Eliot 50 years ago, there are hundreds, nay, thousands, of women now who can hold their own against man in counsel, conversation or literature. And yet and yet astonishing as It may seem, paradoxical as It may seem the new woman, with all her Intellectuality, independence of thought, force of charac ter is the same woman still, in many charming respects. She Is Just as much afraid of a mouse as she was in the darkest period of the middle ages. Even when she attends a literary night at the Business Woman's Club, as she did on Friday evening last, and a mouse scratches behind the wains coting, while her mind is supposed to be wrapped in a lecture on Scotland's great est Doet. she nulls her skirts nVtmt Via ..n jumps on a chair, as her maternal ances tors uia nunareas oi years oerore business women's clubs were invents Would we that is, would men have it otherwise? Well, we should say not! The Linen King. New York Press. Brace up! Ee a king of something, or a Napoleon. There is in New York a big, blond, broad-shouldered, open-hearted Englishman who drifted here eight years ago and worked for S3 a week. His salary today is about 512,000 a year, and ho is known throughout the length and breadth of the land as the "linen king." He got into the linen department of a great houro and made himself an authority on linens. The house soon found him Indispensable. John Cooper Is his name. It Is true that he knows a few things besides linen, as countless acquaintances will attest, be cause Cooper has eyes that see. ears that hear, a nose that can smell and a tongue that can be still. As for the other sense that of touch he feels his way guardedly and his hands are always In his pockets to relhjve a brother's distress. There must be a thread king, a needle king, a hook-and-eye king, a button king, etc The Idea is be the king and the kingpin in some line. Old-Time M'erchant and LecturerDies New York Herald. George W. Sleeper Is dead at his home In Jersey City. Born in Baltimore in 1S2S, he went to Boston as a youth and estab lished a tea store which, prior to the Civil War, was known as one of the greatest In this country. But with the war came" reverses, and Mr. Sleeper with drew from business, first surrendering all his remaining property to his creditors. In subsequent years he wiped out tho debt which hung over him and amassed a comnetence which enahlprl him tn iim In comfort during his declining years. He ' gained some renown as a lecturer on free thought, as a contributor to various J nnmnhlato i.m3 ... n .. .., . . 1 i""1!"""0 xu oa an iiuu-stavery advo cate. He was the only brother of John Sleeper. Clarke, a comedian, who died in ISM. IN THE HOUSE OF SINNERS SAINTS NOW IN A GILDED PAL ACE WHERE VICE REVELED. "Al" Adams' "House of Ail Na tions," the 'Most Famous Resort of Wickedness in New York. New York City presents today one of the strangest transformations imaginable. It is the cleansing, rinsing and washing out morally of one of the most famous and infamous resorts of wickedness in the whole world, says the New York Amer ican. The four corners of the earth were ran sacked for sinners to make this spot en- tlclng and alluring. It was "The House j of All Nations" upholstered in gorgeous pinks and dainty blues and white and gold; carpeted with specially woven patterns so that your feet sank into them as in a j fleece of softest wool; walls paneled lnIl I and water color friezes of nymphs and satyrs painted by clever artists to allure j the eye; a Turkish room, an Egyptian ""', o. i-icuui luuui, a. xiussian room, a Chinese room, in fact, rooms of "all na tions," and from these the establishment J took Its name and fame. But now! at this moment, while the old furnishings TIJ,'eo PAID EXCEPTIONAL REV. J. J. IIAKTZ, ABOHBISnOP OF MAXIuZ. i and settings and background of former gayetles are still all there, the atmosphere has changed. Almost by a miracle the Franciscan Sisters have suddenly become the new tenants. The old haunt of wick edness Is the home of a most worthy char ity. Way down In the cellar are the Venuses. the Bacchantesand the Sirens which used to stand on alabaster pedestals among the perfumed palms; on these same ped estals now stand statuettes of the saints. A burning brazier of Incense has driven out the old odors of perfumes. Among the gaudy furnishings of the days of wine and revelry are the solemn pic tures of martyrs and Scriptural mottoes. To partly hide the gray old frieze of danc women tip-toeing on champagne bottles the Sisters have hung paintings and litho graphy of their most famous saints. The saint whom Christ pardoned is notable amidst It all. Its owner is "Al" Adams, the degraded "policy king," now in Sing Sing. In re morse for the great evil done in the house and In expiation of his manifold sins, he has leased it for five years at a low price to the Franciscan Sisters Tertiary. As the Five Points, once the crime center of the biggest metropolis in America, has been made over into a children's play ground, through the work of the Five Points Mission, so has the House of All Nations been made over Into tho Private Catholic Home for Working Girls at 117 and 119 West Thirty-second street. The Franciscan Sisters Tertiary under took and have finished this work. They have cleaned the stables. Where red lights once blazed out their invitation to all men. on a narrow strip of glazed glass above the door gilt letters spell this name! "The House of the Transfiguration." The Franciscan Sisters Tertiary have given it this title. The visitor climbs wide stairs of yel lowed marble and rings the bell of a door ornamented with heavy griilwork. A tall spare woman In black opens it and says: "Take a seat in the parlor, and I will call Sister Frances." One's feet sink into a green, moss-like carpet. Whichever way you glance you see numberless reflections of yourself, for you are literally witnin walls of glass. Each of the four walls is formed of heavy mirrors reaching from floor to celling. Let your eye .wander carlessly to tho celling, and there again are you many times repeated. They are soft, vague, flattering reflections, for three mirrors lie and flatter. So did the women who once lived in the House of All Nations. Garlands of green leaves and roses shad ing from red to pink fall in floral ropes between the long mirrors on the walls and cluster about the oval ones in the ceiling. Low chairs and divans of green velvet lend the illusion of banks and hil locks on the shores of the garlanded lake of glass. The green shades at the win dow shut out the garish sunshine of noonday, and In the half light the room is as alluringly restful as though it were what it bo skillfully Intimates, a "mossy nook in some far glade of a forest. Here Sister Frances, the head of the order, sits very straight In her black garb, In an easy chair, where women have lolled, and talks of the work that will be done in the House of Transfiguration. "We are leaving the house as nearly as possible as It was until after October 22," she said. "We are giving a card party on that date for the benefit of the house A great many people are curious about these costly furnishings, and we will let them see them that evening. "The next day everything that reminds one of the old. ylnful life will b torn down. We have taken pains not to sail tickets Vor that evening. They will be sold at the door. We do this so that we can deny admission to women who used to live here. "Some of the painted women have come and asked me to see the old place, and I took two of them through It because because there .was something in their J N. faces well, I was sorry for them. But. of course, we can't have them at the opening party. "It would be bad for the girls who make their home here." j Sister Frances explained that working j girls could have a home there at rates J within their means. ! "The highest price we charge, no mat ' ter what the girl earns is 53.50 a week. If a girl earns only 53 a week, we charge 52 or less. Sometimes a girl comes to us and says she Is out of work and out of money. We take her in and try to get work for her. I never ask her for cre dentials or references. In two days I know perfectly well her disposition and character. Our doors close at 10 o'clock at night. If one of the girls tells me that she Is going out to meet her com pany' somewhere on the street I can al ways tell by her looks whether she is or , not. I say: 'Bring him here. Ho Is 1 perfectly welcome. But let me talk to I him first.' "We are quite proud of the matches we ! have made by encouraging these court ships at, home. Last year. In our other house, at 111 West Thirty-second street, i we had four weddings In the house, all j of girls who made their home with, us, and who had done their courting under our own roof." , 1 Sister Frances thinks the furnished I room 13 one of the chief evils of city life. I "A girl lives I:Va cheap furnished room that she pays a dollar or a dollar and a half for, and has no place to receive ner friends, for there is no parlor In the house. HONOR BY THE POPE "We make our gfrls feel that this Is their home, that they have as much of a right here as we' have. We encourage them to bring their friends to breakfast, lunch or dlije or sup. If they choose. The cost is only 10 cents for each extra per son. "We give them extra tables for two, or four, or six, or eight. If they wish. There Is one extra room, too, where they can give little parties. We try to culti vate In them a taste for wholesome pleas ure." Astonishing mix-ups between old sin and new salntllness startle one In every nook and corner. In the luxurious green parlor was a print of Christ on the cross. In the hall was a colored print of the Sacred Heart. In the umbrella-room, so called because the dome-like celling is finished with small mirrors radiating from a central spoke and from the center of which hangs a massive carved handle. Is a painting of the Agony of Gethsemane. And beneath are the wistful words, "Could ye not watch with me one hour?" This room, around all of whose sides are carved oak Ice chests, was the bar of the House of All Nations. It Is now the oratory of the House of the Transfiguration. There are praying stools here and there. The room Is in the center of the house. No one could go farther than the parlor with out passing through It, or at least pass ing Its open door.' But the old Invita tion to drink has given place to the invi tation to pray. A narrow flight of stairs leads from the umbrella-room to the ballroom nr nnnm-. room. Once It was the splendor of pur ple, with exquisite mural paintings in j violet tones. It is being done over where tne rain has soaked the walls, and will be a modest, hospital-like dormitory for a dozen girls when It is finished. A flight above are the Turkish and Egyptian par lors. Looking down upon and rebuking this lazy, good-for-nothing, misplaced Orientalism, is a picture of the late great Pope Leo XIII. Another flight and the doors open upon an exquisite room, where satin wallpaper and velvet hangings and lounging chairs and divans have caught the true color of gold. This, Uko the greenroom, the Turkish and the Etrvntlnn parlors, was a reception-room. in tne casement are two rooms whose fame had crossed a continent and even both oceans. Here were forgotten the gorgeousness, the perfumes, the stifling hothouse air above stairs. The decorator had harked back to the primitive, and for tho dining-room he had reproduced the In terior of a log cabin. Cobblestones formed tho floor. The mantelpiece Is of rough hewn logs. The look of the tables was as though they were roughly fashioned haphazard from bent branches of trees. And now upon tho scene looks down the face of the Mater Dolorosa. The, log cabin opens upon a large rear roorn in whose earthen floor are imbedded hun dreds of horseshoes. A half-dozen wig wams are scattered about In the room, and colored prints of Indian heads,! bows and arrows and beads, decorate the walls. Here were held the bachanalian rites of tho House of All Nations. Leading from this main house is another, equally large at the rear, connected with it by a par row stairway and extending nearly through the block to Thirty-third street. The house flourished in all its splendor and vice for 15 years. Captivating young women came there from half the coun tries of the globe, which gave to It Its hateful name, the House cf All Nations. Some of the wealthiest and most promi. ncnt men of America were Its visitors. A woman known as Emma Charles was tho lessee. Where the notorious Emma once held sway you ring the bell and you en counter a pale-faced holy Sister, Besides making a pleasant and cheap home for working girls, the "Sisters have two other branches of work whose head quarters Is the once infamous house they have taken hold of. Theyfll baskets with hot meals for the Door and distribute tYim among those who ask from 1:30 to S I O'clock vovery day. Last Winter they fed SCO families that way. Another special field of their effort is the reclaiming of men and women who have fallen through strong drink. "Last year," said Sister Frances, "we labored with 200 families that had been cursed by Intemperance. We had the Joy of saving 1SS of them. You see, where so many workers fail Is that they begin the good work but do not keep It up. We visit tho families once a week and see that they are keeping up to the standard." As the visitor leaves he catches sight oi the brass griilwork surrounding the clerk's desk as It used to be, and above the desk that once held the register of the House of All Nations hangs the pic ture of Mary Margdret. YOUNG C0KBETT IN LUCK. No Fighter in Such Demand in East as the Little Denverite. NEW YORK. Nov. 9. No fighter In the East at the present time Is getting as much money as Young Corbett. The ser vices of the little Denverite seem to be in great demand. When he is not engaged In l battle he Is engaged to appear with some i different piece at tle theaters, where ho I has proved to be a big drawing card. In his two lights last week the one In Phlla I delphia with Callahan and the one In Eos ! ton with Murphy he received 52700 for his share. In Philadelphia he got 51200 and In Boston J15G0, wnich was a pretty fair figure to earn within four days. He Is the- biggest kind of a drawing card in the East, and his services are In constant de mand. He will leave for San Francisco within a few days and prepare for his battle with Eddie Hanloi. This will be a hard fight, and the champion realises that he mubt be In the best of shape In order to win over the tough 'California boy. WHY HE OPPOSES PORTLAND. Henry Harris Contends It Is Too Long a Trip for the League Magnates. SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 9. Henry Har ris, discussing the forthcoming meeting of the Pacific Coast Baseball League, said today his only reason for favoring the holding of the meeting In this clty lnstead of at Portland was that San Francisco was tne more convenient place of the two for the majority of members. "If we hold the meeting at Portland." he said, "eight members from this end will have to make the trip; but if we hold it here only two will have to come down from the North. This Is all. If they show me any reason for meeting In Portland, I'll vote to go there when the .president takes the vote by mall, which I presume he will do. ao PAttaC COAST LEAGUE. Yesterday's Score. Seattle, 3; Sacramento, 0. i OUSUU1UK Ul IJ1C L1UUY Los Angeles 120 72 .624 HeatUe 05 02 .508 Sacramento 07 100 .402 San Francisco ICO 105 .488 Tortland SO 05 .483 Oakland 84 121 .407 te Seattle Shuts Out Sacramento. SACRAMENTO, Cal.. Nov. 9 A pitch ers' battle, having . Barber, for SeatUe, and Knell, for Sacramento, today resulted in a shutout of the locals, who were weak ened by the absence of three of their regular players. Score: R.H.B. Sacramento 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 5 0 Seattle 000 12 0 0 0 -3 S 0 Batteries Knell and Graham; Barber and Byers. THE DAY'S RACES. ' At Latonla. CINCINNATI, O., vNov. 9. Latonla re sults; s One mile Circus jGlrl won, Blnehello second, Chantrelle third; time, 1:44. Five and a half furlongs Proofreader won. Commodore second, Hargand third; time, 1:09&. One mile and a sixteenth Dan Mc Kenna won, Thane second. Brief third; time, 1:48. Steeplechase, short course Charawlnd won, Itacataria second, Sea Pirate third; time, 3:03Vi., Six furlongs Morning Star won, Anna Hastings second, Miss Mollie Uhrd; time, 1:15?;. One mile Antolee ,won. Flaneur second, Adelante third; time, 1:42. At Jamaica. NEW YORK, Nov. 9. Jamaica sum mary: Five and a half furlongs Race King won, Orlskany second, Reliance third; time. 1:07 1-5. Mile and a sixteenth, selling Unmasked won. Lady Potentate second, All Gold third; time, 1:47. The Green Point stakes, six furlongs Sweet Alice won, Irene Llndsey second, King Pepper third; time, 1:12 3-5. Mile and a furlong, handicap River Pirate won. Tribes Hill second, Brigand third; time, 1:54. Six furlongs Roblnhood won, Rob Roy second, Belle of Portland third; time, 1:15. Mile and 70 yards Mamie Worth won, Buttons second. Satire third; time, 1:44 3-5. Englishman Defeats George Dixon. LONDON, Nov. 9. At the NaUonal Sporting Club tonight Joe Bowker, of fbfanchester, defeated Alf Fellows, of Chicago, In the ninth round for the bantam-weight championship. At Newcastle, George pixon, the American, defeated Pedlar Palmer, the English champion, in a 20-round contest for tho 120-pound championship, on points. Kid Broad Wins on Points. NEW ORLEANS. Nov. 9. Kid Broad defeated Tim Callahan in a ten-round bout before the Southern Athletic Club tonight on points. Callahan was best at long range flghUng, while Broad did the most punishing at close quarters. Brltt-Selgcr Fight. Full returns of the Brltt-Selger fight received Tuesday night at the Portland Club, ISO Fifth street. 2iew Yorx aaa Chicago Race. Direct wires. Commissions accepted. Portland Club. 130 Fifth street. Yellow Fever Cases Increase. LAREDO. Tex., Nov. 9. The State Health Department bulletin on the yellow fever situaUon states: New cases, 24; deaths, four; total cases, 74S; total deaths, 74. Highwaymen Slay Negros. MARIANNA, Fla., Nov. 9. The dead bodies of Ave negroes, badly muUlated, have been discovered In a cabin eight miles from this place. They had been murdered by highwaymen. Young Rockefeller a Father. NEW YORK, Nov. 9. A daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. John D. Rockefeller, Jr., todaj;. .Mrs. Rockefeller Is the daugh ter of United States Senator Aldrlch, of Rhode Island. Baron Rowton. . LONDONr Nov. 9. Montague William Lrfwry-corry, nrst iiaron Kowton, Is dead. He was born in 1S3S. Arrivals at Tacoma. Tacoma Arrived Nov. 0. Barkentlno La halna I, from Elelee; steamer Mackinaw, from San Francisco. Sailed U. S. S. Areata, from Port Tcwnsend; steamer San Mateo, from San Francisco. J$r "Why is Ghirar- . jjM dellfs Ground Choco- k fffwSwMW kte like a child just if&p W before Christmas?" ilk 0Mf I "Both are as 'goo'd as they can m I WfflrtAi fJ& 1 A bright Tl in Bannins 5Cnt in H l& wMrr $Lw thJs Prety riddlc- An3r one can H Wh&&M1 make P riddlcs on 1 feffll Ground Chocolate 4v 1)1 CASS PB3ZS3 1-03 TUB 3SST. Vr TS For fTirther information address s? Wi WWW - ff C003?2J3' rHfSI. Advertising Manager. -Ir 'Miyl& SS G6ary streii Eaa rrancisoo. A3tr -x r. ,g-"fcgsi:sirrftgxts-at.'CSa II '. If gelable Prepsiralionfor As similating theroodandlteg ufa ting the Stomachs aniLBowels of Promotes Digestion.CheerfuI ness andltest.Contains neither Opium.Morphine nor"Mineral. KOT UlAZLC OTIC . JlKtpcafOtd.I3rSiMUELFIKHER. Pmtpfon Scat" yflx-Senna. SoAdUSaUt- JPsfenrmt - . BtCaiottaitSgig hihtaypeen. fftnvrz Aperfecl Remedy for Constipa tion, Sour Stomach.Diarchoea Worms .C.onvulsions Jcverish ness and Loss cf Sleep. Facsimile Signature of XEW YORK. wit.. ..t. ai h:N-Lioubiecl with nlKbt H i JKtWki.mmi i iJujuL m sm j.k Z I 1 1' i V I li I li ii 1W.W1 illili'lllilliili'lili l lliinl'i m nli I iTflTlilliliiTlliiiHllWWDj I The Tian from Egypt 1 Smokes I If WJ1 EGYPTIAN I W CIGARETTES J g 10 for 15 centt. Cork Tips or Plain. . B St- f illness, aversion to society, which deprive you of your handhood. UNFITS YOU FOK BUaLNiJsS OR MAiUUAGE. t MIDDLE-AGED iLn.N. vnho from excesses and strains have lost their MANLY POWER. . BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES. Syphilis Gonnorrhoea. painful, bloody urine. Gleet. Stricture. Enlarged Prostate, Sexual Debility. Varicocele, Hydrocele, Kidney and Liver Troubles, cured without MERCUKi. AND OTHER POISONOUS DRUGS. Catarrh and Rheumatism CURED. ur. Walker's methodsare regular and scientific. He uses no patent nostrums or ready-mad; preparations, but cures the disease by thorough medical treatment. His New Pamphlet on Private Diseases sent free to all men who describe their trouble. PATIENTS cured at home. Terms reasonable. All letters answered in ? n envelope Consultation free and sacredly confidential. Call on or address DR. WALKER, 181 First Street, Corner Yamhill, Portland, Or, ii i t For Infants and Ghildren. The Rind You Have Thirty Years Always Bought Bears the Signature .f W ft Jp. in rt J Dse U For Over THl CENTAUR SOMMNY. NtWYOKX CITY. TWENTY YEARS OF SUCCESS In the treatment of chronic diseases, such as liver, kid ney and stomach disorders, constipation, diarrhoea, dropsical swellings. Brig-be s disease, eta KIDNEY AND URINARY Complaints, painful, dlfncult, too trequent. milky or bloody urine, unnatural discharges speedily cured. DISfcASES OF Tli RfcCTUM Such as piles, nstuia, nssure. ulceration, mucous and bloody discharges, cured -without the knife, pain or con nnement. DISEASES OF MEN Blood poison, gleet, stricture, unnatural losses, lm potency. thorougnly cured. No failure. Cure3 guaranteed. emissions, dreams, exhausting drnlns. hnh-