THE MORNING- OREGONI, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1906. S Great Mortality Due to Earth quake in Ecuador. TIDAL WAVES SWAMP TOWN Eruption of Volcano Rocks Earth and Flings Ocean on,. Shore. 'Many Bodies "Washed j up Along: Coast. .r GUAYAQUIL,, Feb. H. Passengers from the province ol Dsmeraldas, in the ex treme northeastern part of Ecuador, who arrived hero today, report that earth quake shocks were felt there January 31. and that several towns in the provinces of JSsmcraldas and Manaba were seriously damaged. At Esmaraldas City several houses col lapsed. Including the government house. The village of Pinguagl, near the Colom bian frontier, was Inundated by a tidal wave and many Inhabitants were drowned. Ninety bodies were washed Ashore at Tu maco. At Rio Verde several houses col lapsed. During eight days 25 shocks were -felt In EamcraJdas. The Colombian village of Guacada also' was inundated by a tidal wave, and 200 persons .were drowned. The eruption of the Colombian volfcano of Cumbal caused the earthquake. THE AUTO PROBLEM. Jlight of Locomotive Owners to Mo nopolize the Streets. Lambert Tree, in Chicago News. So many people dcrh'e pleasure xrom the use of the automobile, so many use it for practical business purposes and so much capital has come to be invested in its manufacture and that of the various applicances which go with and form an essential part of it, that it is difficult at this time, when the auto fever is at its .height, to inquire Into its ralson d'etre on the public streets and highways without exciting resentment in extended circles. Some persons are unable to see why, they may not exercise the freedom of lo comotion along the public thoroughfares in any kind of conveyance which suits their Inclination, without stopping to con sider that this is only true provided their mode of locomotion does not interfere with the safe use of" the thoroughfares by other persons having an equal right to their freedom, whether they be on foot or riding in ordinary vehicles drawn by horses. ' Liberty in a state of society does not mean the right to pursue one's sweet will, without regard to whether it conflicts with the safety or general welfaro of the remaining members of it having equal rights. If it did, the laws prevent ing the storing of gunpowder in certain places, firing of guns, the running at large of swine, the driving of horned cat tic, racing horses or passage of railway trains through the public streets and a hundred other wise laws and ordinances in restraint of the citizen's entire liberty of action would have to be consigned to the waste basket There are also persons who are sucli devotee- at the jflirlne of prpgress. thatW they tremble at" the thought of 'quesj tlomng, the fullest freedom, to the ,u of lnvehtlo"hs having for their purpose more speedy locomotion by those who have the means to command them. Serious differences of opinion exist, however, as to what constitutes progress, and it is not always safe to jump at a' conclusion that every new Invention, even in the way . of rapid locomotion, Is the genuine article and denotes a rise in the world's methods of doing things. It cannot be possible, however, that cither of these classes is entirely blind to the fact that a conveyance as dangerous in its destructive power as the ordinary railroad locomotive has been introduced upon crowded city streets and frequently traveled country roads, in the hands, for the most part, of Incompetent or Igno rant persons, or is able to disguise from itself that their introduction has been followed by accidents so frequent and so distressingly fatal as to make it apparent that the perils of street life have been increased more than 50 per cent since their appearance. Indeed, it is perhaps not too much to say that some of the more conservative of the owners of machines and devotees of rapid transit are beginning, la a half hearted way, to admit that the authori ties do possess the right to make laws and ordinances subjecting them to some sort of regulation. Without reference to what is trans piring dally in other cities in the way of auto accidents, scarcely a day now passes in Chicago and Its vicinity on which citi zens are not killed or injured in the pub lic streets, either directly or. indirectly by means of these modern Juggernaut cars, which are increasing in number every day. Whether the running of these locomo tivesfor that 1b what they are along the public streets and roads Js compat ible with the safe use of them by other citizens, either on foot or in vehicles drawn by horse-power, for which uses they were originally laid out and intend ed, and, if not, whether the use of them by these locomotives is fair or legal, an questions which may have to be, sooner or later, tried out. At certain times of the day andi night it Is as dangerous to drive along certain streets or cross them on foot as it would be to drive or walk about any of the railroad switch yards surrounding the city. It does not require any great discern ment to see that popular resentment Is steadily increasing against this method of street locomotion. On the European continent .autos and their occupants are frequently stoned and sometimes fired Upon. In Great Britain, while the same thing Is -being done to some extent, the authorities are just now trying the experiment of regulating them by the infliction of severe penalties. Thus, a man caught exceeding the speed limit Is, on conviction, fined what would be equivalent to $100 here, and the con viction is Indorsed on his license. For the second offense he is fined 5200. and this conviction is also written thereon. For the third offense, "besides" being fined, he is deprived of his license. OLD BRASS KNOCKER. Is -Coming Back to Supersede the Tinkling Bell. Pittsburg Dispatch. It has come to us. from the- East, where all fads and fashions have their first shape. and introduction, that the old-fashioned brass knocker -will- -he the proper thing hereafter on the front floor of those who wish to keep up "regularity" in society. It is con ceivable that this fad is a most pleas ant resurrection of the old-fashioned times, the days when our grandfathers delved and our grandmothers dug In the washtub, and neither was ashamed of their miraculous activity in either line. But the knocker! What recol lections it recalls' There are times HUNDRED ARE DEAD when we like to look back. There are scenes that we rejoice to recall. Senti ment In these days is crushed, out of Its proper sphere, and- there is nothing left but the rush, swirl and push for money. However, there is no man with a heart" in him through which the good, red blood of the forefathers courses who will not welcome the re turn of the knocker, notwithstanding it is of ancient invention and inspira tion. There are various kinds of knockers. There is the baseball fan, who is said to knock when he growls because his home club loses a game. He Is a .knocker of the first class, .but of low- grade disposition. Then there Is tho man who knocks on his fcllow-cm- ploycs. He goes to the head of the "department" with Ills trivial . stories of the' remissness of his companion workers. Wealso have the knocker on everything-?! You have met him. Tho weather is wrong, the neighbors don't suit. But you know them, are ac quainted with every characteristic of the human knocker. He or she is a disturbance in any community, and should be suppressed. Of the other knocker, the real thing! It is coming at the command of fashion. The old knocker on the door that used to obtain over half a century ago is a thing of noise, and at the same time an article of beauty. The elec tric bell of modernty Is impersonal. It always rings with the same tone. The majestic knocker has a personality of its own. If there is a sudden call for help from a "neighbor, the knocking on the knocker can tell you Just as well as if you went down to the door and heard the tale of woe. There is the timid knock, and we know that it if. manipulated by soft hands daintily gloved. It is a caller who comes with smiles, -who .goes away to tell other people what a careless and slovenly housekeeper you are. Then there Is the vigorous knock of the doctor, who wants to abate the illness of any one of the household who is sick. Then, comes the last knock of all the un dertaker. The blinds arc closed, the parlor is darkened and the knocker is wrapped with flannel so that 4t .won't disturb the dead or waken the living to a sorrowing sense of tho calamity. Tho knocker is all right. It is truth ful. Tou know who and what you are going to meet before you answer the Imperious summons of tho "rat-a-tat-tat." God bless the rejuvenated knock er that used to swing on the door. Its rejuvenescence makes the old boys young again. And that is something. PEACE-LOVING BENGALEES The Most Intelligent, Industrious and Efficient People in India. Bengal does not fight, but it is through the never-ceasing Industry of its vast population, so much greater than that of the United Kingdom, that Briysh India Is enabled to pay Its way. That the .Ben galees add nothing to the military strength of, the empire is true, but then, also, they deduct nothing from Its strength on the frontier. No population so vast was ever so peaceful or required so little expenditure for garrison. A po lice principally employed in detective work is all that is needed, for forcible resistance to the state is, and will prob ably always remain, outside the Bengalee scheme of life. They pay their taxes to the hour, chiefly through their landlords; they obey the legal -orders of any maglR- tratc even when unsupported by physical force; and when the great mutiny of 1E37 broke out, their quiescent but immovable adhesion to the British side made the re conquest of India a comparatively easy possibility. If Calcutta had been filled with a warlike population, and had risen, as it almost Infallibly would, either the Indian Empire would have been lost, or It would have been re-established at an expense of life and treasure eaual to that ofthe war with Napoleon. ' "Throughout t&t d&sgertks movement . Calcutta was a trariquflly."Britlsh- as London oh a Sun day" Moreover, this vast population. though the remainder .of India stigma tizes its men as women, has a character of its own, with which Englishmen on the other .aide of their heads should have some sympathy. Though Bengalees will not fight, they are, and are reasonably proud of being, the roost intellectual race in India, It is useless for any student In any college there to compete with a Bengalee rival. In every native state they are the most successful traders, and they would not themselves admit the partial qualifica tion. "Using with rare skill, especially In satire, a language, a direct derivative of the Sanscrit, which is not unjustly char acterized as "the Italian of the East." it 19 not fantastic to say that if India ever produces a literature that makes an impression on the West, it will proceed from the subtle students of Bengal, who. moreover, though they display no capa city for nrt and little for machine-making, will probably rival the Japanese In their pursuit of scientific investigation, and as money-makers- are surpassed only by the Jews. The wealth of their great capital, which is perhaps the second wealthiest city within the British domin ion, has been built up by themselves, and by the steady orderliness which has made of Calcutta a proverb throughout the East. A man may be a millionaire there and as safe as in Lombard street. The people, in fact, with their cunning, their thinking ability, and their capacity for everything except -art,, constantly sug gest to the observant the character which the Romans attributed to the Greeks, There is nothing they cannot learn, and few things they cannot understand and comment on with a gentle humorousness which if you agree -with it is delight ful, and if you disagree stings like a whip. Naturally, though they cannot fight, or at all events will not attempt to probably from some peculiarity of race, possibly also because "where the land Is wateF the men are women." for Tiature fs too good to them they are in their own way a proud people, quite convinced in their own minds of - their superiority to the more violent races around them, and not indisposed even in moments of ela tion to include the British among these violent races. Cat Story Vouched Fcr. Boston Herald. This is a true cat story- A certain cat, much petted and adored. Is believed to understand language. It having re peatedly acted upon what was said, to it. but not long since it did far more and better. It obeyed literally. The man of the house Ib a great hunter. He loves to shoulder his gun and bring down small game, and one morning when lie was setting forth for sport his wife called oyft: "If you will bring home a rabbit I will make a pie!" The cat sat by, but said nothing. A few hours after, while the wife was tusy with her sewing, the cat appeared b her side carrying a rab bit in his mouth, and then dropping the "game" beside his mistress began to sing and purr Wee a tin kettle on the fire. Nothing will convince the friends of this wonderful cat that he doesn't understand all that is said in his presence, and, they are now really afraid to mention a want as the dear fellow will think he must Im mediately gratify It, like another Marquis of Carabas. Ha'pennies In Australia. London Daily Chronicle. Half-pennies are very scarce in Aus tralia, so much so that an attempt once made In Melbourne to run a half-penny evening paper soon failed because people had not the coin wherewith to purchase it. And, if half-pence are rare, farth ings are curiosities. A shrewd Melbourne shopkeeper has imported some thousands of bright, new King Edward farthings, and he is reported to be doing a roaring trade. They are piled up In heaps In his windows and attract gaping crowds. Every article he sells is so much and three" farthlncs. BOND OF HUH Cubans Admit It Binds Them to United States. - OUR ALLY IN EMERGENCY Fervent Speeches by JtcprcscntaUvcs or Both Nations at Dedication -of Monument on HI ' Cancy Battlefield. SANTIAGO DE CUBA. Feb. 14. Cuban gratitude. American cordiality and official dignity marked tho celebration of the un veiling this afternoon of the monument at El Cancy in honor of the Americans who lost their lives during the siege of Santiago. Many thousands of people crowded El Cancy road, but in spite of this there was no serious blockade, tho police management being perfect and the road equal -to a city boulevard. At the battlefield the Fifth Artillery and the Cuban Artilcry bands atcrnatcd in play ing mlltary and other airs. Ueutcnant-General S. B. 2L Toung, on behalf of President Roosevelt, greeted the Cuban officials and people. General And radc, representing President Palma, re sponded and eloquently expressed the national gratitude to the United States and tho desire of Cuba to co-operate with America Jn every respect He said in an emergency America can depend upon Cuba, as a military or commercial ally. Rcar-Admlral Higginson, Brigadier-General W. H. Blsbce, Brlgadlcr-Gcneral A. L. Mills. Captain H. C Clark and Colonel A. C. Sharpe. Americans, and General Garcia Vol ex. Cuban, made patriotic rpceches. Both the Cuban and United States artillery fired a salute and Colonel tV. C Hayes unveiled the monument. Lleutcnant-Gcneral Chaffee, who pro skied, spoke eloquently of the achieve ments of the Army and complimented Cuba upon her efficient government. Tonight the Cuban officials dined the American -ucsts and the clubs, enter tained the visitors at an elaborate balL The city was brillantly Illuminated. Tho Americans will be received aboard the transport Sumner and the auxiliary cruiser Yankee tomorrow. .The Sumner, having on board the San tiago Battlefield Commission, and tho Yankee arrived here this morning. They landed detachments at Guantanamo yes terday and dedicated the monument on McCalla hill to the marines killed on that battlefield. Two companies of Cuban ar tilery. two companies of rural guards, a detachment of artillery and the Havana band took part In the ceremolnes. PROFIT IN REFUSE. Civilizing a Department Disposal of Waste in A'cw York. New York Sun. Up to four years ago the best thing the street-cleaning department could find to do with the stuff collected from the streets and homes of New York was to tow It out to sea and dump it overboard. There was a theory that most of the stuff thus disposed of would sink and the rest be carried away" from shore by current and wave. The theory was not held by seaside dwellers. They knew that, much of the waste matter drifted Inshore, to litter the beaches, breed disease and depreciate the value of real estate. It was a wasteful, a dangerous, a most primitive solution of a problem that every community must tackle, and the street-cleaning de partment, costly and inefficient, was by no means a popular institution. Today scarcely a trace of the old system remains. Nothing is towed to sea. The positively useless matter is Incinerated with as little offense as may be. Everything of value. or of use Is turned to profit. The ashes and heavy rubbish suitable for the purpose are used to build new land for the city. At Hiker's Island S4 acres have been made already. Each acre is worth not less than $10,000. Within four years 185' acres more will have been made, land built up from the bottom, made by the city, adaptable to many municipal uses, and made with -what four years ago would have been dumped into the sea at heavy expense. In Brooklyn the city is redeeming the sunken mead ows along Coney Island Creek. So far SO acres of once worthless property have been reclaimed. Now the Gov ernment wants to buy ashes from the cltyto complete the fill at Governor's Island. A good record for four years. The lighter rubbish is not wasted. A contractor picks It over, paying a good price for the privilege. What he rejects goes into the furnaces under the boilers at the Williamsburg bridge and at the Forty-seventh street dump. It lights the Williamsburg bridge, the public schools in the vicinity, the street cleaning department stables. These plants are young now. At the Williams burg bridge plant alone a saving in the cost of final disposition of $75 a day is made, and the light produced is worth $80 daily. The operating ex penses of the plant are paid by the money received for the picking privi lege. The Investment of city money was $83,000. The revenue produced, by it is $52,000 a year. This is a return of C3 per cent a year. Here "is natural, legitimate municipal ownership and operation, not exploited as a political Issue or a demagogic appeal to class hatred. This is only a page out of the his tory of the street-cleaning department. It tells only a part of the story of the last four years of progress. One man has written IU a man who made a real effort to 'improve New York, a man who has accomplished something. . It Is a record to be proud of. On the ros ter of those who are helping to civi lize New York's municipal govern ment the name of John McGaw Wood bury stands pretty near the top. POSSIBILITIES OF SCRAP. High-Grade Steel Made From Very Ordinary Material. London Times. How the highest class of steel can be made from ordinary scrap, such as rail ends, la explained by a correspondent. He says: "The electric furnace, if employed simply as a roelter, would not remove either silicon, sulphjir or phorphorus to any appreciable extent, and If rail-ends were only melted down you would only obtain a second-class steel, exactly as is obtained when such material Is melted in pots. Tho Kjellln furnace is really a large pot-melting furnace. In which little -purification Is effected, and hence, if rail ends were melted In this furnace, second class steel would be produced. To make highest-class steel In this furnace it is necessary to select pure Swedish Walloon scrap, exactly as is done for highest-class crucible steel, and hence I say in my article that this furnace Is not so well suited to English conditions as others. owing to its lack of adaptability both as regards materials which caff be used and any variations in design, etc. The other furnaces referred to Heroult, Keller and Staasaso are et mere meHSag pots, but, by the attltlee o-f suitable Hues, enable the phosphorus, ailteea aad sulphur to be very largely removed and carried away In the slag; and thus steel of the highest class can be prod seed from rail steel, or even still more Impure scrap. I have seen charges made from wrought iron scrap, containing 0.36 to L23 per cent phosphorus. In which the finished steel contained 0.01 per cent and under. There Is not the sllghest difficulty in largely removing the phosphorus and silicon by melting rail ends ia an ordinary Basic Siemens fur nace, although there is more difficulty with the sulphur. The great advantage that the electric furnace has over the Siemens furnace is the absence of furnace gases and practically a nonoxldlzlng at mosphere. It is not even suggested that the electricity has anything to do with the removal of Impurities it is simply the heating agent; but it enables- the impuri ties to be removed from scrap Iron under conditions that approach nearer to the crucible process than any other method, and probably under conditions where oc clusion of gases takes place to very small extent. To put the case another way: In case of high-class crucible steel you must select absolutely pure scrap and bar steel and mix according to requirements. In an electric furnace you take ordinary ma terials and purify them to the required extent bv addition of fluxes to form slag. which can be renewed several times, ac cording to the degree of purification re quired while this purification Is going on there are no gases In contact with th steel other than the little air which leaks into tho furnace." STYLES IN JEWELRY. Itcvlval of That Worn Forty or Fifty . Years Ago. Jeweler's Circular-Weekly. "In fashions we have once more come round to the somewhat heavy and cumbersome styles popular in Jew elry some 49 or 59 years ago the fads and designs worn during the days of crinoline, the -period Just before and during and even for a few seasons after the Civil War," said an uptown New York dealer. "Have you not noticed." he con tinued, drawing a massive gold chain with a pendant of Oriental or Egyp tian design and studded with pearls from the showcase, how Jewelry of this general fashion is coming In again? Why. a year ago I could no moro have found a customer for this than I could have found a buyer for the showy and tawdry belt buckles that were so popular about four years ago, and which would not have commanded the price of the material in them a season afterward. "This chain with its pendant came Into my possession about 39 years ago exactly as It Is, with the exception, of course. that I have had it polished up and prop erly mounted. I got it for the price of old gold, but somehow I never had the heart to have it melted up, and this Is by no means the only piece, of Jewelry that I have acquired In the same way, and that I have kept, contrary to the Judg ment of others. Nor is tills by any means the only Instance In which the course I have pursued has pald'mc in the end. "See here, and he brought out of the showcase four or five other samples of old style wares of the same school. "These are all old stuff, that I have acquired in the same way for the bare worth- of the metal that is In them, and which I am sure that I will be able to find a profitable sale for enough to more than repay mo for the purchase price and the Interest on my Investment for the many years that I have kept each, piece. That's the way with styles. In five years it will be out of fashion once more, but in another 30 or W It will co mo in again." How Old Is Marriage? Harper's Weekly. Tho discussion which has been carried on concerning the question of the anti quity of the marriage "rite receives somo additional light in the current Issue from a correspondent who asserts1 that the mar riage ceremony, la Its sacramental cnar- acter. not only goes back to the first age of the church as affirmed by a previous correspondent but to the earliest dawn of history. It may be true, he says, mat before the advent of Christianity there were forms of marriage among the Ro mans in which religion had no part, but that was because the Influence of earlier beliefs was passing away. The Institution of sacred marriage Is asserted to oe as old in the Indo-European race as the do mestic religions "for the one could not exist without the other." Identity In a Street-Car. Indianapolis News. They were going to the theater. The car was crowded, and there being two or three oolite men left in Indianapolis, one of the two or three gave her a seat in the forward end of the car. He remained on the platform to finish a cigar. She always lets him do that. When the conductor came along tho smoker possessed of a "steady" girl pre sented two tickets. "Who is this for?" asked the ticket pro curer. The lady up in front." "Yes, but there are several up there." "Oh. well, let's see: I'm paying for the one under Eat-Em-Qu!ck Biscuits." Mnzzlcd Women or Muscat, Allahabad (India) Pioneer. Women of the better class In Muscat all wear muxxles. which barely allow them to open the mouth or see with the eye or sneeze. If there happens to be a Cleopatra ln Muscat she will never fascinate any Antony by the beauty of her well-shaped nose, for It Is kept In a specially made, ugly case. In which it Is Impossible to tell Its shape. But with all Its faults this Is a far better system than that of cutting off the nose, as men fn the Kangra district, in India, are wont to do when any of their spouses have proved too fascin ating. BETTER THAN PIE Net Oaiy the New Feed Bat the Goad Wife, Well. When they brought the new food. Grape Nuts. Into the house the husband sampled it first and said. "It's better than pie!" When It brought back the glow of health to the wife's cheeks, his admiration for it and her was Increased, so she says, and the rest of her story follows: "From childhood I was troubled with constant and often acute Indigestion, and when my baby was born It turned out that he bad Inherited the awful ailment. "A friend told me of Grape-Nuts and. I invested In a box and began to eat ac cording to directions. It was after only a few days that I found my long abused stomach was growing stronger and that,. the attacks of Inalgestlon were growing less frequent, and In an incredibly short time they ceased altogether. With my perfect digestion restored came strong nerves, clear, active brain, the glow of health to my cheeks, and I know -I was a better wife and mother and more agree able to live with under the new condi tions. "When the boy came to be 10 months old he developed such an appetite (his dyspepsia disappeared with mine) that his mother's milk was not sufficient for him. He rejected all baby foods, however. till I tried Grape-Nuts foods, at bus band's suggestion. The youngster took to it at once and has eaten it dally ever since, thriving wonderfully on it. He now demands it at every meal and was much put out when, he dined at a hotel a few days ago because the waitress could not fill his order for Grape-Nuts.' Name given by Fostum Co., Battle Creek. Mich. There's a reason. WIH FE COMING Southern Road Will Probably Open Offices in This City. MOVE FULL OF MEANING 3Iay Have Bearing on Extension North. From Humboldt Bay, for Which Survey Was Once rMadc. There Is said to be a strong nrobabllity that before the year is over the Santa. Fc will establish offices in Portland to compete for tho transcontinental freight and passenger business originating in the acmc Northwest. Statistics are being gathered by that road und figures arc in the hands of Freight Traffic Manager W. A. Bisxcll. of the San Francisco offices. Showing the lumber traffic handled by thb roads centering In Oreson and Wash ington and what proportion of this busi ness the Santa. Fc could reasonably ex pect. Other tonnage to the East and South la being figured on with a view to placing representatives in Portland to compete for business. Charles Warren, central asrent of tho Santa Fe at Salt Lake City, was In, Port land during the past week and while he ostensibly came on no sDcdal business mission, it Is said he was looking after me interests of his road. Other envoys of the Santa Fe have been In Portland un announced and have gone over the local field and reported to the head offices. That these reports have been so favorable that serious consideration' is now being given to establishing an office here Is known. Such a move on the cart of the Santa Fe will probably be hastened because of tho strong efforts now bcinc made by other transcontinental roads to get Into Portland and bid for Coast business. The placing of an office here bv the Santa Fe will have the effect of making known tnc extent of tho business in this terri tory among the Eastern railroaders and would probably still further stimulate railroad building on this Coast- That the establishment of an agency in Portland and its bidding for trade would nave a deeper significance than appears on tho face of tho proposition. Is the be- lief of railroad men. who predict that the Santa Fe Is about to build along its survey north along the Oregon Coast from Eureka, California. The placing of an office here would, some say, be the entering wedge toward making this point the terminal of the Santa Fe. Surveys were made north from Eureka. where the' Santa Fe has already pur chased the San Francisco Sc. Northwest ern, a short road running Into Eureka and operating 42 miles of track, north as far as Yaqulnu Bay. This work was com pleted four years ago and the men in charge wont so far in collecting all pos sible data that the soil was analyzed along tho survey to determine what agri- cutural products were best fitted for each section of the country to be traversed. A mineralogist also accompanied the expedition and made a report on the in dications he found for ores in the moun tains penetrated by the survey. The re port of the men comprising the expedi tion was voluminous and complete data is available for the use of the Santa Fe of ficials when they decide to build north from Eureka: The engineer In charge of the survey reported that for miles and miles the country to be traversed. Is so level that little or no grading would have to be donu prior to the laying of ties. Four or five short tunnels are said to be the only ones required and for 600 miles the road would be in sight of tho ocean. More over there arc no mountains to climb, said the engineer who made the survey. The opening of an office here will be regarded as full of significance by rail road men who are allvo to the situation and predict the Santa Fc will build northward along tho Coast before very long. Tasto in Cigar Smoke. Tales. First Valet "Why don't you smoke those cigars your roaster gave you for Christmas?" Second 'Valet "I like these that he didn't give me better." blesdiaf, its price is a marvel of merchandising 10 FOR 10 CENTS turac Effective decoration for den, club-room or cafe. The whole series sent postpaid for 2Zc S. AXARGYROS, 111 Fifth Avenue. NewYci. OLD PEOPLE Mnfit olfl TWinlf ar crraf crtfiFrwa are seldom free from pains or ailments of some description, because they are not as able to withstand the severity of the climate, with its damp, changing weather, as are their younger, more vigorous companions. Cold weather starts the old aches and pains; they suffer with chilly sensations, cold extremities, poor appetite and digestion, nervousness, sleeplessness and other afflictions peculiar to old age. With, advancing years the strength 3nd vitality of the system begin to decline. The heart action is weak and irregu lar, the blood becomes thin and. sluggish in its circulation, and often some old blood taint that has lain dormant in the system for years begins to man ifest itself. A wart or pimple becomes a troublesome sore or ulcer, skin dis eases .breakout, or the slight rheumatic pains felt in younger days now cause sleepless nights and hours of agony. There is no reason why old age should not be healthy and free from disease if the blood is kept pure and the system strong, and this can be done with. S. S. S. It is a medicine that is especially adapted to old people, because it is made entirely of roots, herbs and barks. www.w w. if -jr ""'"j; :i J www.w. w. if -jr S.S.S. PURELY VEGETABLE. of e system is built up. the appetite and di gestion improve, the heart action increases and the diseases and discomforts of old age pass away. S. S. S. cures Rheuma tism, Catarrh, Skin Diseases, Sores and Ulcers, and all troubles arising from diseased blood. 7HE" SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA ThevKin& You Have Always in use for over 30 years, and Ti1 Jr,. sonal All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good" are hufe Experiments that trifle with and endanger the .health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiments. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Caster OD, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing" Syrups. It is Pleasant. Ifc contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotio substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys "Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and "Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the The Kind You flaie Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. TKr CCNTAU COMPANY. TT MURRAY STftCCT. NEW YQftli CITY. The cigarette which taught the merits of Turkish tobacco to the imdkers of two continents The Turkish cigarette which enjoys to-day the largest sales of all the brands in all the world The Turkish cigarette which continuously satisfies- more ducriminaung smokers than any other is A pur, sweet, rich, mild blend that never varies, never disappoints and sever wearies the taste. Its flavor is a triumph of ' CONSTANT SUFFERERS III wmTmvM. in Winfpr Thtxr duu uuuuiug-uu uiuueiucs, ana is very J i1 - i - n -Luiiu. aau genue m iu action, o. o. o. warms and reinvigorates the sluggish blood so that it moves with more rapidity, and clears it of all impurities and -poisons. As this rich, liealthy stream circulates through, the bodv everv nart Bought, and which has been, has home the signature of has heen made under his per supervision since its infancy Signature of TWENTY YEARS OF SUCCESS In the Treatment of Chronic Diseases of Men and Women. Female Complaints Treated by Lady Physician Dr. Walker's methods are regular and scientific. He uses no patent nostrums or rady-made prepa rations, but cures the disease by thorough med ical treatment. His new pamphlet on private dis eases sent free to all men who describe their trouble. PATIENTS CURED AT HOME. Terms reasonable. All letters answered In plain en velope. Consultation free and sacredly confiden tial. Call on or address DR. WALXER, TBI First Street, Csrner Yasihil, Portland. Oregan 1