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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 31, 1912)
THE 3IORNIXG OREGONIAN. SATURDAY. AUGUST .31, -..1912. 4 WILSON ASSAILS VETOES BY TAFT Pennsylvania Farmers Hear Governor Speak Against Protection Policy. THOUSANDS HEAR TALKS Democratic Candidate Assert He Has Great Personal Respect for President, but He Differs in . Viewpoint Concerning Tariff. E AS TON, Pa., Aug-. 30. Governor Woodro-w Wilson invaded Pennsyl vania yesterday. Intending only to make an address at the state Grangers' Pic nic at Williams Grove, south of Har risburg. The Governor was surrounded bv such big- crowds wherever his train stopped that he found when he crossed from Pennsylvania into New Jersey at Easton last night he bad made half a dozen speeches, had shaken hands with thousands of persons and had talked collectively to a multitude in a single day. Several thousand "- persons - wedged themselves in the big auditorium at Williams Grove to hear the Gover nor's principal speech, but a tar great er number was unable to gain entrance and ha made a second speech out doors. He digressed materially from his pre pared speech. Reverence for Protection Respected. "I do not know how many Republi cans there are within the sound of my voice, at least those who have been Republicans, but are now on the anxi ous seat." Wilson said - in his first speech at Williams Grove, "but 1 want to' say -that I 'entirely respect, tnougn I do" not atall understand their rev erence for the doctrine of protection. " "What happened In the Congress which has lust adjourned? The House of Representatives, with the acquies cence of a Senate which is not Demo cratic, passed what was known as the farmers" free-list bill. What did that do? It put agricultural Implements on the .free list, it put lumber on the . free list, and shingles on the free list, and salt on the free list, and bagging and . ties for the Southern farmer. And what happened to it? It was vetoed . by the President because let me say that I have a great personal respect .for Mr. . Taft, . hut Mr. Taft has not given himself those wide connections of sympathy which enable a man to understand the demands of the people of the United States Mr. Taft vetoed that free-list bill, because, consciously "or unconsciously, he represents not the people of the United States. Dut tnose who have held their power-in trust for their own purpose. Machine Politic Censured. "You hear of corrupt influences, gen tlemen. I would be ashamed If 1 said tilings of or.e party that I was not willing to say of the other, if it were guilty, and I am willing- to admit that in certain instances, in certain places, among- other places In the State of New Jersey, the leaders of a little han'Hul hut nevertheless the leaders of the Democratic party have nad al liance of these corrupt influences, and the worst machine. you -can get up is not a machine that is altogether Re publican or altogether Democratic, but a machine that is made up of both of them and that works together at every turn of public affairs. "You have got them in Pennsyl vania and we have them in a great many parts of the United States, or we have had them, but what I want to call your attention to is that the men' that conduct those machines are a small fraction of the party that they pretend to represent and that the men who exercise corrupt influences upon h- . .mall fraction of the busl- ness men wi er of-San Fraacisco. is registered a the Oregon. Charles Butler, a stockman of Port Townsend, is at the Oregon. T. H. Moore, a contractor of Ontario, is at the Imperial. Judge T. H. Crawford, of La Grande, is at the Imperial, returning from a trip to California. S. P. Bartlett, a Bandon timberman, Is registered at the Imperial. , George Bird GrinnelL a New York capitalist, is at the Imperial. Rev. D. T. Simpson, of Hood River, is registered at the Imperial. C. A. Burlinghame. an Astoria bus! ness man, is at the Imperial. J. H. Raley, of Pendleton, is at the Perkins. John G. Wyers. a White Salmon or chardist. Is at the Perkins. Charles Miller, a druggist of Forest Grove, is registered at the Perkins. W. E. Tribble. a Gooa Bay merchant. is at the Perkins. Alex Malcolm, a stockman of Echo, Is registered at the Perkins. CHICAGO. Aug. 80. (Special.) The following Oregon people are registered at Chicago hotels: Miss U Beeman. at the uramt ra- eiflc: J. Scott. M. Barett. Jonn Burns. all of Portland, at the La Salle; Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Johnston, of -The Dalles, at the Majestic. J. F. HOSCH IS REDMOXD COCXCIL NAMES HIM AFTER CITY ELECTION. Appointment of Executive Follows Contest Between League and Business Men. REDMOND, Or.,-Aug. 30. (Special.) J. F. Hosch has been elected Mayor by the Council In place or . t: Jones, .lei0-ni4 The lefl-srue members and business men agreed that each side put up a candidate ana petitions or irr-nintni for Aisrn&tures lor canal dates to be voted for at a special elec tinn an to set the sense of the citi T.cnm to whom they desired for Mayor and the candidate receiving tne highest number oi voaies ai tne eiec tion would be appointed Mayor by thi Council. iimnh'i netttinn carried the signa tures of 92 voters, all business men of the city signing with the exception of , miir- rn learue memocrs a iiAtinGr the petition for theii candidate tor two cays, saw mcj In the minority and demanded that h. Pnnnril call ft soeciai meeting ana appoint a man for Mayor, wnom j. so.. Crenshaw, secretary oi uie itss 1 .a,n This w&a refused. At the election Hosch received s ... u V Tnnex 9. R. A. BuSh 2. A. G. AUingham 1. The league did not put up a candidate. r.r.nahw In the last issue of - his w ths firpunn Advance, attacked Hosch, asserting he was unfit for the oosition of Mayor. it is unoersiooa fr.n.hiw telesrraDhed Governor iemnVA four of the Council i th. ntv RArnrder. but nothing so far In this direction nas materialize! ADMIRER SHOOTS WOMAN Assailant Then . Kills Self, but Vic tim of Bullet May SurviTe. g rl he SEATTLE MAYOR INJURED fceorge F. Cotterill Falls From '. Horse and Is Bruised. SEATTLE. Wash.. "Aug. 30. George F Cotterill, Mayor, fell from a horse at Sultan today and. striking a stump, suffered painful bruises. When the Mayor walked from a Nbrthern Pacific train after midnight he found awaiting him his wife. Claude G. Bannlck, Chief of Police; Dr. James e! - Crlehton. Commissioner of Health, the city ambulance, a police automobile and Dr. Crichton's own car. Word had como to the city that the Mayor had been seriously injured In an automobile accident. Mayor Cot terill described what had really hap pened, admitted he was sore and thought perhaps a rib had been brok en, but nothing more serious. L. W. HILL ARRIVES IN CITY Great Northern Official Leaves for Tnannounccd Destination. L. W. Hill, chairman of the board of directors of the Great Northern Rail way arrived in Portland from St. Paul Thursday. He was in the city only a few hours when he departed without making known his destination or giv ing any information other than that he would be gone for four days when he will return to this city before starting on the return trip. Mr. Hill made the trip leisurely, passing several days at Spokane and other points on the Great Northern. PERS0NALMENTI0N. George P. Wells, a landed proprietor of .Fresno.- is at the Multnomah,-accompanied by Mrs. Wells. A. Ottinger,, general agent of the San Francisco & Portland Steamship Company, is registered at the Multno mah from San Francisco. F. D. Markham. a Spokane mining man. 'is at tlje Multnomah. T. S. Harmon, a furniture manufac turer of Tacoma, Is at the Multnomah. R K. Booth, of Coos Bay. is at the Multnomah. T. A. Hays, president of the Western Pipe tc Steel Company, of San Fran cisco, is at the Multnomah, accom panied by Mrs. Hays. W. Lv Thompson, president of the American National Bank of Pendleton, Is at the Portland. Dr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Higgins, of Baker, are registered at the Portland. P. W. Rochester, a cement dealer of San Francisco, is at the Portland. H. W. Church, a Spokane railroad contractor, Is at the Portland. William Watson, proprietor of the Victoria Hotel, of Spokane, is regis tered at the Oregon. D. M. Kelly, a Baker business man. is registered at the Oregon. H. E. Lippman. an insurance adjuster of Seattle. Is at the Oregon. W. A. Barrett, an Albany merchant, is at the Oregon with his family. R. Stanley Dollar, a steamship own- SAN FRANCISCO. Aug. 30. Edward lennw-n sa S H nmi II HI II L D LO, r i iiii, ii nv.v . - . r-w Finn rxf tUm r-ltV. nOt and probably fatally wounded ir- i 2 shjI Vi m iem m t ton r.-tj. I- .nartmant In which the woman was living wun rwoeri Finn came to tne- woman apn.ii pnt late last night, having telephoned . i A WAAir avn tn obtain some Oak- IU il v i a. -e . . land pictures and papers mai ne n iven her in tne na v anan ison. who was In the bathroom, said . i -a . ittamatlnn. the first in ner nero-t u iiw - i , rtnn'a nrxfinrA beinir three shots in the kitchen. He found the bodies on the floor. . m u.MAn miM an mm on tne police Finn was dead. The woman was taken to tne uenirsi r,ujascinj pltal and may not live through the According to Harrison's story. Finn pursued the woman from Honolulu, when she attempted to break her old association. She had. he said, apparent ly regarded Finn as a sinister influ ence. SHOTS MISS BRAKEMAN Alleged Assailant Is Bound Over to Grand Jury. HEPPN'ER; Or.. Aug. 30. (Special.) Leo Watkins was bound over to the grand jury today for assault with a dangerous weapon. He was trying to beat his way on an O.-W. R. tc N. pas senger train near Coyote station when a brakeman named Mathews ejected ilm from the train. Watkins then is alleged to. have drawn a revolver and fired two shots at Mathews, neither of which took effect. The rest of the crew came to the rescue and succeeded In arresting Watkins. and took him to Arlington and turned him over 'to the Marshal there, who brought him to Heppner. as the trouble occurred in this county. - ' E. B. Woods, chief special agent, came up from The Dalles last night and obtained a confession from Wat kins today. As he could not secure bonds he will have to remain in the County Jail here fon, two months until November. FIRE LOSS YET UNFIXED Damage to Wadhams & Kerr Build ing Xow Being Estimated. The management of the Wadhams & Kerr Bros. Company, whose ware house at Fourth and Hoyt streets was damaged by fire Wednesday night, yet are unable to fix definitely Just what the sustained loss will total. The In juries are now being adjusted in con junction with the insurance company. The property was fully Insured. Damage was done only in that por tion of the warehouse in which the flour, rolled oats and soap were stored and will on no way hamper the con duct of business. The building was In full working order at 11 o'clock on the morning- after the fire. The fire companies put out the fire within 26 minutes after it started, having been at work in the immediate proximity of the warehouse at the time the alarm was sounded. CANOE TRIP STILL IS ON Portland Rowing Club Event Not . Postponed, Says Captain. The Salem to Portland canoe trip an nounced several weeks ago by the Portland Rowing Club, will be under taken - Sunday morning by about 40 canoeists, despite the reports chronicl ing a postponement. The canoes will be loaded into a car at the Jefferson street depot before 5 o'clock Saturday afternoon. "There was some talk oi abandoning the trip because of the Inclement weather," said Captain A. A. Allen last night. "However, the boys have sent up a vigorous protest, so we will go ahead with the original plans." ARMED AMERICANS DEFY REBEL BID 300 Mexican Insurrectos De- mand Surrender of Mining Camp Near Border. 40 DEFENDERS TO FIGHT Rich Gold Mine Sought by Rebels to Finance Revolt Americans De Clare They Will Resist to Pro tect Women and Children. DOUGLAS, Arix., Aug. 30. A force of 300 rebels demanded Thursday the sur render of EI Tigre Mining camp, an American property located 65 miles southeast of here. Forty American men fullv armed Intend to fight if necessary to protect their women and children. About "0 federal soldiers de fend the town. El Tigre is one of the richest gold mines in Mexico, controlled bv Kansas City capital, ana ir cap tured by rebels could finance the revo lution. There are nine American wom en In the town. American Held for Ransom. H. C. Beaucamp. general manager of the Transvaal mine, an American prop erty, reports that the mine has been looted by rebels.- J. S. Hunter, tne store manager, was held lor ransom which was naid. Americans at the El Xlgre property hav arranged an armistice with the rebels in an effort to effect a compro mise, according to late reports. As sistance was asked today from Federal troops at Agua Prieta, opposite Doug Ian, ani wa refused. There is much oik hr nf fnrmln a company oi Americans . to rescue the American women at El Tigre. Rebels Active Near Mine. Mounted messengers representing Rafael Camra. the leader of the rebel band, rode into the mining camp early today and demanded its surrender. It is reported that no definite answer was given. Campa s force is encampea n miles west of the mine property. Another force of rebels is reported to be moving in from a point 30 miles to the East. L. R. Budrow, general manager of the mine, arrived here this morning from California and is at tempting . to investigate conditions. The camp is well provisioned. Refugees are flocking here on special trains. STRANDBORG HOME ABLAZE Owner Overcome by Smoke in Fire Which Damages Dwelling. In an 'attempt to remove furniture and personal belongings from tne sec ond story of his residence at East Fifty-ninth street ' and Bandy Road, which was partially destroyed by fire early Thursday night. W. Sr. strandDorg, of the Evening Telegram, was overcome by smoke and when rescued and car ried out of the house by Captain of Police Riley he was still unconscious. He recovered in a short time. However, and now feels no ill effects from his experience. ' : - It was shortly after the dinner hour when Mr. Strandborg was engaged In mowing his lawn, with Mrs. Strand borg standing near, that their atten tion was attracted by the shouts of neighbors that the house was on fire. The roof was completely ablaze, the fire evidently having started from a defective flue. They had started fires n the open grate and furnace during the ' afternoon to dry the house out after the recent damp weather. Neighbors for blocks around hurried to the scene and a greater portion of the furniture was removed in safety but before the fire was extinguished the roof was burned off, the upper floor gutted and much damage done by water. The house was ' valued at 13000, on whicW there was S1S00 insurance, but this will not cover the loss. The fur niture was insured for 31000, and the amount will probably be sufficient to cover that which was burned. 0L0NEL MAKES SPEECHES When He Became Governor He Hard ly Knew Referendum, T. R. Says. BURLIXGTON. Vt., Aug. 30.-Ex- Presldent Roosevelt raced over 150 miles of Vermont roads In autos yes terday, proclaiming the doctrines of the Roosevelt Progressive party. He made Ight speeches and his day's work last ed from 9 A. M. until nearly midnight. During the first of his three days' campaigning in Vermont Colonel Roose. velt encountered friendly crowds of good siie. In one of his speeches Colonel Roose velt explained how he came to espouse the principles which are advocated by his party. "I was puzzled years ago,'' e said, by the opposition which I en countered from certain big business men whom I thought were respectable. Some of them, I am sorry to say, went to church and played being respecta ble. I was shocked and horrified when learned what they were doing." One incident after another, he said. convinced him while he was Governor of New York and later In his public life that certain large- corporations were "crooked." When- he became Gov ernor, he said, he doubted if he knew what the initiative and referendum and other measures of the kind really were. It was through his experience, he saiJ, that he came to the belief that such measures were necessary to place the people in more direct control of their Government. In his speech here last night he said In part:' 'There is not one particle of hope for social or economic reform in the triumph of either the Democratic or Republican parties. Each is boss- ridden and privilege-controlled. Neither dare face the real issue, of today. Each proposes sham remedies and. tries to distract the attention of the people from their real needs by the empty sound nd fury with which they quarrel over false issues. The two old parties serve o other purpose than that of screens each for its own sinister alliance of crooked politicians and crooked finan ciers, who rule and pillage with impunity. "No man has a right to call himself progressive at all if he is supporting either of the old parties, whether in the Nation or In the several states. I wish to ask your . very careful consideration to the record of the man whom we Progressives have put up for ice-President, Governor Hiram John son, of California. For a generation California has been controlled in mer- ilesb fashion as few other states have been controlled by the tepresentatives of special privileges and the politicians in alliance with them. When Mr. John son took office as Governor he had be fore him a herculean task if he was to ake good the promise of the progres ses. "He accomplished the task and he adequately made good the promises. Under his leadership California has es tablished direct primaries, including Presidential primaries; it has adopted the system of electing United States Senators by popular vote; it has ap plied the initiative, the referendum and the recall In thorough-going fash ion; it has provided for the non-partisan election of judges. It has pro vided for the shortening of the bal lot; it has provided for county - and city home rule;- it has provided for the revision of criminal procedure; it has taken the first steps In securing the proper method of treatment for first offenders against the law; it has given full power for the regulation of all public utilities: it has secured the adoption of woman suffrage; it has regulated the working hours of women and minors; it has abolished racetrack gambling; it has passed a full-crew bill and a pay-check bill pro hibiting the payment of wages in non negotiable form. "No other Governor - of any state since the close of the Civil War has, during his term as Governor, achieved such a mass of effective work for the public as Governor Johnson has achieved. He represents the type or man who ought to be nominated for Vice-President, .but to whom it means a real sacrifice to accept the nomina tion. He accepted our nomination be cause he regarded it a call of the high est duty. He is not only fit at this moment to be President; he is fit at this moment to be a great President." Roosevelt praised the Spokane Chamber of Commerce for publishing the report of the country life com misslon. RIVAL BULL MOOSE COMPETE Filings in Washington at Closing Indicate General Contest. SEATTLE. Wash.. Aug. 30. (Spe cial.) Filings for nominations on the Bull Moose ticket closed at midnight last night with an assurance that there would be a contest at . the voluntary primaries, September 7, for all state offices. Returns have not been received from the different counties, but it is be lieved that nearly all counties will have a fairly representative ticket. The list of filings for state offices, which were telegraphed to various commit tees shortly after midnight are: Governor Otto A. Case, Robert T. Hodge. Seattle; John C. Lawrence. Rarfleld: W. H. Paulhamus, Sumner. Lieutenant-Governor W. H. Plum mer, Spokane; Governor Teats, Tacoma. Secretary ot State Eawara myuii, Konttie: W. H. Ford. Arlington State Treasurer Arthur S. Cory, Che- hnlls statu Auditor Henry Korthauer, Bellingham; Andrew E. Moberg, Mount Vernon. Attorney-General John F. Dore, E G. Mills, Seattle. ' " Commissioner of Public Lands George Peaton, Granger; W. H. Kauf man. Bellingham; W. B. Marsh. Ta coma. - Superintendent of Public iinn a v. Reach. OlymDla. State Insurance Commissioner J. W. Collins. Kirkland: Charles N. Hunt North Yakima; Paul Hutchinson, Se- Bttla Congressman. First District Daniel Landon Henry Alberts McLean. Cal vln Rutherford, George H. Walker, Se attle. Congressman - Second Congressman, Third District N. W. Durham, F. M. Goodwin. Spokane. Congressman-at-Large John E. Cal taine, Seattle; J. W. Bryan, Bremerton; w t Ris-9-er. Bellineham: Gordon C. Pnrhalev Snokane; J. A. Faulkner, Everett; El ben White. Pasco. Ice. In a Kitchen Fire. Baltimore American. Professor Bickerton, in an article on Th. vw Astronomy in "ivnowieose, rtfiaiK with the sun's- spots and eclipses Tha sun. the ruling orb of the system of planets of which the earth is a mem h Professor -Bickerton, Is-a. re volving blazing ball of fire of such size and Intensity that were its heat kept up by combustion it would require to be stoked with 600 times th coal fields of the entire earth every minute ui .v existence. Its surface temperature ia something like 10.000 degrees centi grade, so hot that the most untractable substance on earth would be fused and volatilized. The clouds of carbon that at one time were supposed to form its photosphere could no more exist in the cnliri fnrm at tne suiar buuo could ice remain solid in a kitchen fire. France as Wine Producer. London Times. Tnnm alone tays taxes in a good year on more than a thousand millions of gallons of wine and there are six bottles to a gallon while Algeria, planted with vines in the days of the phvlloxera, supplies no less than 200, 000,000. A tonneau of 200 gallons Is a pretty large vessel: a thousand such would fill a good-sized ship, and we have to multiply that by a thousand wn ne reach the production of this one French colony one-fifth of all the wine consumed in r rance, or re-exported. Coal Lands Restored to Entry. WASHINGTON. Aug. 30. President Taft restored to entry 751,691 acres of loriH in Colorado, heretofore mciuaea In coal withdrawals. More than 600,000 acres of these lands are in North Park, Jackson County. PARISIAN BUDGET IS $3 PER CAPITA Citizen Enjoys Benefit of City Government for Less Than Cent a Day. SUBURBS EVEN CHEAPER Instruc- District S. Police Protection Largely Paid for by Tax on Alcohol Sale of Na poleon's House at Elba Causing Sensation. ' PARIS. Aug. 31. For one cent a day the Parisian is protected against crime, theft and fire. The Parisian budget amounts to 44,000,000 francs ($8,800 000), which works out at 15 francs (33 per year per head. For those persons who find this expensive there is the suburban region, where practically nothing Is spent on police; a paltry 3,000,000 francs ($600,000). It may be added that the suburban policeman, al though scarce, is not overworked, and it speaks wonders for the high stand ard of orderliness and honesty of the French that it should be possible for large agglomerations of communes con taining 20,000 or 30,000 inhabitants to exist without more than a dozen police men. The expense of policing the su burbs is mostly provided for by a tax on alcohol. - Thus by poetic Justice the drunkard who is taken up by the police is paying his captor out of his own pocket. Police expenses in the provinces are considerably less than In Paris. Nice pays most in proportion to the number of inhabitants, about 6 francs ($1.20) a head per year. This is accounted for by the number of foreign visitors who have to be specially watched after or over. Of the other cities Marseilles pays 3 francs (60 cents), Bordeaux 4 francs (80 cents), Toulouse 2 francs (38), Saint Etienne 2 francs 15 (43 cents), Rheims 2 francs (40 cents) and Lyon, cheapest of all, 1 franc 50 (30 cents). The Paris police costs so much more for a variety of reasons. For one thing the police authortles have to pay for the sanitary service, the inspection of markets and the upkeep of the an thropometric department, which though maintained by Paris, is utilized by the whole country. Besides this, all the master criminals of the provinces come to Paris to hide, and the organized bands of malefactors have their head quarters at Paris, for there alone can they find receivers for stolen goods and brokers for stolen securities. The Mayor of a little commune In the Department of the Haute Pyrenees, anxious about the digestion of domestic animals, recently issued the following order: "Whereas, the young people of this commune are accustomed to meet after mass on Sundays for the purpose of dancing: whereas, the noise they make frightens the cocks, hens and other am mals of the village: whereas, there re suits from this a depreciation detrimen tal to agricultural Interest: we hereby forbid the practice of dancing within the precincts of this commune during the hours at which the domestic ani mals take their meals. .. . The news of the approaching sale of the house which Napoleon inhabited during his exile in the Isle of Elba has produced quite a sensation in France. It is urged In many, quarters that the French government should take steps to acquire this historic building, for if, it is pointed out by one organ, there are different political parties in France, abroad there is only the nation's fair fame, which would not gain by allow ing this villa to fall into the hands of some commercial enterprise. "Imagine," concludes the writer, " a German ho- telkeeper in possession of the villa of Porto-Ferrajo and the bust of Bismarck planted firmly on the facade. The French government is making a fine profit out of the gambling instinct of the French nation. Some interesting figures are published showing the steady increase in the proceeds of the casinos, which came under the control of the state on June 15, 1907. The next year they produced $5,800,000. In 1909 the total was $7,400,000 and in 1910 $8,800,000, while last year no less sum than $9,600,000 was sacrificed by the lovers of public games of chance. Apart from the amounts which are handed over by each establishment for the benefit of its own commune, the state levies a tax of 15 per cent on the gross profits, which is administered by a special committee at the Ministry of the Interior, and Is spent on worKs or hygiene, charity and public utility. In 1908 the state received from this source $860,000, in 1909 $1,120,000, in 1910 $1,320,000 and in 1911 $1,440,000. The Fall army maneuvers in France, which will this year be on a bigger scale than any held since the famous display before the Czar in 1902. will take place in Touraine and Poitou. Through August and September EXCURSION TICKETS Can be purchased for numerous dates to the East via Northern Pacific Railway Until October 31 to return. Liberal stopovers permitted on going or return trip with additional stop during the Park season, to September 15, to permit visit to Yellowstone National Park Gardiner Gateway is the Official Government Entrance to the Park. Thence Park coaches take guests to Mammoth Hot Springs Hotel. CI Let us give you particulars as to fares East and to and through the Park and "Sleeping Car and Train ser vice and furnish you Park literature. A. D. Charlton, A. G. P. A. Portland 256 Morrison Street. Main 244 Phones A 1244 Two 72-Hour Daily Through Trains To Chicago "North Coast Limited" and "Atlantic Express." TO SECURE LOW FARES EAST PASSING AUG. L9ai? SEPT. 4A8o ARE THE ONLY SALE DATES LEFT on which you can secure reduced rates to VISIT THE OLD FOLKS via 0. S. L. Union Pacific C. & N. W. or 0., M. & St. P. to CHICAGO. Soo Line to St. Paul or Minneapolis LOW ROUND TRIP FARES gS& m EQUIPMENT AND SERVICE STRICTLY HIGH-CLASS. Let us aid you in outlining your trip. CITY TICKET OFFICE THIRD AND WASHINGTON STREETS, PORTLAND. FOR THE WOMAN WHO THINKS AND FEELS. Some women complain that they periodically suffer from dull and heavy feel ing$, or dizzinest in the head, nervousness, pain and bearing-down feelings which should not occur to the normal healthy woman. But most every woman is subject to these pains at some time in her life, due to abnormal conditions in life, such as corsets, over-taxed strength, bad air, poor or improper food, wet feet, sluggish liver, etc. A regulator ami female tonic made from native medicinal roots with pure glycerin, and without the use of alcohol, called DR. PIERCE'S FAVORITE, PRESCRIPTION, bas proven its value in thousands of cases, like the following: Mrs. Dona M. Martin, of Auburn, Nebr., Roate 1, Box 84, sura ! " I thought I would write you in regard to what your medicines have done for me. 1 have used them for thirty yean for female trouble and general weakness with the very best result, and they have saved me hundreds of dollars in doctors' bills. I buy the 'Favorite Prescrip tion ' and ' Geluen Medical Discovery ' and take them together. J never was disappointed in your remedies and take pleasure in recommend ma them to any suffering lady. I am now almost fifty years old ; at forty five 1 took your meiiicinea. both kinds, and I passed that period vary easily and left me fat and healthy. I feel like a young girl. If any lady cares to write me, 1 will gladly tell her msra about the good work of your medicines." Dr. Pierce's (jrbat Family Doctor Book, The People'! Common Sense Medical Adviser, newly revised up-to-date edition of 1008 pages, answers hosts of delicate questions which every woman, single or married, ought to know. Sent fret in cloth binding to any address on receipt of 31 Ubs. Martin. one-cent stamps, to cover cost of wrapping and mailing only. They, besin on September 11 and last eigrlit days. Ninety thousand men will take the field under the supreme com mand of General JoiTre. Generals Gallieni and Marlon will re spectively command the opposing forces, which will be approximately equal numerically. At least 50 aeroplanes and several dirigibles will be encaged. Democracy of .Royalty. London Daily News. "A few days ago," writes an Amer ican woman from St. Morltz, "we saw the 'pomp and circumstance' of royalty In Bngland and today we had a peep at royal simplicity and democracy which was truly ref resliliiR:. On the snow covered path leading to the bobsled course we met a Kioup of three young people. The two women tramped aloiiR arm In arm. their dress tn no respect different from that of the middle cIhss Kiiests. The man ot the parly wore knickerbockers, no head coverinK and a muffler huntr over one arm. Bn.-s with sleds and others with skis paid no attention to the group, although every one knew that they were the Crown Prince of Germany, the frown Princess and the Princess Victoria Louise." 1000 CASES OF VERONICA WATER WILL BE DISTRIBUTED IX THIS CITV ON TEN DAYS' TRIAL FOR HEADACHES, CONSTIPATION, BILIOUSNESS, MALARIA, INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA After 1 7 Years' Success on the Eastern Market nd from the reanlta and experience we have had and produced tor the .ufferliiK, we are prepared to put a case In jour home for a ten daja trial FREE and If It doea not give you belter reaulla than any remedy you ever uaed, return he three empty hotllea and the nine full onea and there will be no charge for the water used. ASIC VOI R DEALER. BLUMAUER-FRANK DRUG CO. DISTRIBUTERS FOR OREGOX. LABO WEE DAY END AT Clatsop Beach S3 SEASIDE AND GEARHART. ROUND TRIP FARE G) Salurday cr Sunday, Return Until Monday Evecinj Seashore Limited Leaves 9:10 A. M.( Daily. Week-end Special Leaves 2:00 P. M., Saturday. Astoria and Beach Express Leaves 6:30 P. M., Daily. TRAINS FROM THE BEACH MORNING AND EVENING niw Tn Leave Portland 9:10 A. M. All afternoon One Vaj llip at the Ocean. Arrive Portland 10:30 P. M. $4.00 ROUND TRIP EVERY DAY. Observation, Parlor Cars and Large Coaches on all trains. Excursion Tickets, Parlor Car Seats and Details at City Ticket Office, Fifth and Stark Sts. North Bank Station, Eleventh and Hoyt Sts..