THE SUNDAY OTIEGONIAN, PORTLAND, DECEMBER 9. 1C00. 19 Mud Springs: .An Early-Day Mining Excitement.- By J. H. FisK. I believe It was In the year 1S75 when lour prospectors by the name of "White, Rcss. McCann and a gentleman of African descent, who had been prospecting up in the Crooked River country, camped one r.'.sht about 20 miles from Prineville, In Ec stern Oregon, near some mud-holes In a marshy ground. These mud-holes were filed with a soft, soapy substance, which the grass had grown over, leaving .an j opening here and there. The prospectors. In washing out their handkerchiefs, found that it .had a cleansing effect, like soft soap. Some one suggested that they All an empty yeast powder can of the stuff j and bring it to Portland and see what it j was composed of. On "White's arrival in Portland, he brought the can to my of- J f.cc to be tested. He gave me a descrip tion of the country and extent of the if posit. I told him that I doubted its having any value. However, I dried the substance and weighed out an ounce, smelted and cupelled it In the usual way, and to my surprise the result was over S5000 per ton in silver, at the then value cf $1 29 per ounce. "When White called for his returns late In the afternoon, he was more than astonished to find such results. I insisted that it was a fake or a salt, or something of that kind, and that in my opinion no such values could, or hsd ver existed In such material, but. no, no such explanation would satisfy him. The mud was genuine, and had never been out of their possession, and if any mistake existed at all. it was In my assay, and not on their part. I assurei them the assay was correct, and took some of the residue, submitted It to the b'owpipe test, and reduced the silver be fore his eyes. It was soon noised about the street, and dozens came to me and Inquired If I had made that assay, and If It was as rich as they said. All of which I affirmed, but doubted Its genuineness as a find. They said: "Oh. they knew them boys: there was nothing wrong with them: they got the mud all right. Dreams of fabulous wealth pervaded the public mind, and hundreds were ready to put up money for the expense of sending parties up there to locate and record claims. D. H. Stearns, then publishing a little paper called the Bee, got hold of the facts and result of the assay and published a flaming article on the new and extensive discovery, which was copied by the Stock Journal in San Francisco, which created some excitement there. There was one thing that puzzled me, to determine whether it was a genuine, natural prod uct or a salt. In making the assay, I add ed a reducer sufficient to give me a 200 graln button of lead to cupel; instead of that I had less than 100 grains. This s Just what would happen had a quantity of sliver been dissolved in nitric acid anc precipitated with chlorine and the chlo ride of silver been added to the mud. On the other hand, I knew most all that sec tion of Oregon was an alkali country and contained large quantities of soda, and doubtless was rich In niter, and this mud was doubtless talc, disintegrated b these alkalis, and If much niter was pres ent, it would have the same effect In oxidizing the lead, as appeared in the as says: one of ths Jheories was correct, but which, was my province to determine. 1 submitted a small quantity of the mud to Henrv Hanks, one of the best chem ists of San Francisco, who examined It. and stated If it was a "salt." which he could scarcely doubt, the parties had cov ered up their tracks mighty well. He stated that If chloride of silver had been iisod. It would be left in brown powder, and this mud had metallic grains of silver tn it, and similar grains had been found In the bed of a lake at Leeds, In Utah. The fine grains of sliver I showed him w-vuld also occur if the chloride of silver ha been dried and heated on metallic Iron so I was still in the dark. More mud must be had. cost what it would. SyndHates were formed, hundreds were ready and anxious to furnish money for expends in locating and recording claims. Ross leaded one party and started foi the mir.es via The Dalles. McCann, who arrived In Portland some days later than the o her three, was brought to my office by Joseph Knott, and related the circum stances of finding the mud, which were substantially the same as "White's Ptatenent, and said that he was the one who rocured the mud, and he had as good, f not a better, right to claim It as Ross, who was then on his way to the gnund. and that If Mr. Knott and mysel would furnish money for expenses he wald Immediately return via Albany and loate claims before the Ross party could ,et there. I hunted up the colored gcntleran, who confirmed all the other statemnts of the mud. By this time I was afected with the fever, which had become very contagious and was rapidly epreadlig. Knott assured me that ha knew al four prospectors, and knew they would rot attempt anyUiIng of a fraudu lent natire, and that if I would share ha"f the expense of $500, he would dis patch Mfcann, in company with Captain Foster, lbw of the Alblna Ferry, via Al bany, wiich I agreed to do. They left on the evening train, via Albany, where Knott hfd procured horses by telegraph. They ar-lved on the ground, located and staked off acres of tho mud-holes. Foster obtained a d07cn samples of the mud, and started to return via Prineville, where he met the Ross party going in. They were very indignant at being beaten on the ground, and compelled to be sec ond locators instead of the first. Foster stopped at Prinerllle. and while at din ner was robbed of all his samples of mud. He came on to Portland, however, minus his muJ, -and Kaott and myself were out of packet 5500, and no wiser than before. But -why was the mud stolen from Fos terto conceal its great richness or to cover up a fraud was what I could nt solve. Ross returned to Portland, and soon It was known that McCann and Foster had been on the ground and made location. First there was war in the camp. Leathers and his partner, who had just cleaned up about $50,000 in the Willamette Valley, selling state and coun ty rights to manufacture artificial stone, championed their cause. Lee Knott head ed a party, armed and equipped with all ammunitions of war. and started for tho mires via The Dalles, threatening to blow the McCrnn-Knott and Fisk party Wo eternity for jumping claims which h-d never been located. This was known as the "shotgun party." Joseph Knott and myself determined to have mud at any cst We accordingly fitted out an other party, consisting of Thomas Cottle ai 1 John Ladd. who arrived on the ground about a; soon as the shotgun pai ty d-d In the meantime, things were getting tropical in Portland. Several com rcntcs had been formed with millions of d"1" rrs capital stock, which was all sub scribed for in a few minutes after books wen. opened. Rufus Mallory and O. X rc-n. Whaley & Brenan. were the lead ing attorneys for some of the companies. M Oann. Knott and Fisk locations were t -Jed for several thousand dollars. 5I,-rJ" of our leading business men sneak ing v ii t in a few hundred dollars in the larlius companies. Thousands of dollars carped hands dally in stocks in the va r'ous mines. The leading mine was the E nnza Dr. Chapman, president, which st-i-k seemed to take the lead, as it was the discovery mud-hole. The dressmaker, s-hool-teacher. chambermaid and hack driver took a little of the stock. George C : . ex-Postmaster, went up to the mines ar I held the sack in good snipe-catching f sh'.n. Into which the mud was shoveled. D V Thompon selected some of the stnic chipped from the rock from our pes office thn building, and sent it to his fa- nto aYcr R. Hurley at Oregon CI", and got large returns in silver. In fact, the richness of this mud pervaded the very atmosphere. Nothing was con sidered good unless It assayed over JIC-OO per ton. D. P. Thompson was allowed to subscribe for a small amount of the stock in one of the mines, but declined. The promoters were much disgusted that he should not accept of their generosity; per haps his kfen scent, foresight or natural Instinct was aroused. I was prevailed upon to visit the mine at a good salary, to examine and report upon its fabulous wealth, and had my gripsack at my office ready to take the boat to the mine, via The Dalles, as soon as I could receive the mud and moke a further determination of It. W. Lair Hill, then editor of The Ore gonian. lamented his Inability to accom pany me. All this was caused and owing to less than four ounces of mud. In due time, John Ladd returned and brought me 15 samples of mud. He ar rived on the evening boat from The Dalles. I went to work and assayed all night, and not the least trace of silver could I find In any one of the samples. The following day I received a telegram from C. H. McDonald, of San Francisco, that If I considered the thing genuine to draw on him for $10,000. and invest It In Bonanza stock, as the Virginia City, .rvev., stocks were then booming In ban Francisco, and the $40,000 was only a flyer there. It Is needless to say that I did not go to the mine, neither did I Invest the $40,000 In Bonanza stock. But soon the mud began to arrive in Portland in sacks and In kegs, and It was all found to be extremely rich, and richer the mud greater the excitement. A large number of people went to the mine, and returned highly elated with their invest ment. Two experts were sent from San Francisco to examine and report upon the new Eldorado, and they secured about 40 cans of the mud each, and took It with them to San Francisco. I never heard of their results. Dr. Chapman visited the mine and brought out a large number of silver buttons, and gave glowing accounts of Its richness. Our colored citizens of Portland had a representative among the prospectors subsribe stock in one of the locations, and put up a mill at an ex pense of several thousand dollars, but In its operations they got no metallic Indi cations. JCo kind of advice was wanted from any one. The silver was there and that was all they wanted to know. ?o doubt that much of the silver Is thero yet. Dr. Chapman employed Richard Hurley, an assayer from Lewlston, to go to the mine to do the assaying, and he was there the last I heard of him. He never re turned. The information I got from the mud Ladd brought me, was my own, it cost me $500 to satisfy myself that it was not a gonulne natural production, and when I denounced it as a fraud. I was asked how I knew It was a fraud, and that I could not answer. The only thing I could do was to let It die a natural death. I was ridiculed for my assertions, but offered and sold my stock at five cents per share, when It was selling for 10 cents on First street, and then I was accused of bearing the market, so as to buy more stock. I was also censured for not investing the $40,000 in Bonanza stock, when I could have done so, and am accused by tome, who lost money on the stock, of putting up the whole Job until this day. althugh it Is 25 years ago. but I suppose it is quite natural to put the blame of their bad in vestment upon some one else besides themselves. It was one of the hardest things to die I ever saw. It lived for several months. Had the men or men. who put up that Job been a little better posted In handling the raw material and managing it. they could have swung the public for half a million, as well as not. This was the most noted mining excite ment I ever saw In Portland, and one which the modern stockbroker would look upon with envy. Portland. December 6. It Is always difficult to tell exactly what to take with one for the Friday to Monday visit. A man does not wish to carry more than a dress-suit case, and even this most commodious of luggage receptacles at times does not seem to hold enough. In it must first go the evening suit. Until July It Is safest to bring your evening coat. There may be a formal dinner, and a man must always wear evening dress after 6 o'clock at a house at which he is visiting, unless It be a bachelor establishment, or one where he Is very Intimate. A man in his own house can wear a dinner Jacket, but what Is allowed for a host is not expected of the guests. If you are doing your own packing be care ful of the way In which you fold your evening coat. The lining must be on the outside, the sleeves folded carefully and the tails likewise. By ruining up some tissue paper and putting it In the sleeves you will keep them perfectly free from wrinkling. The placing also of a dinner jacket In the case with the evening coat Is a matter which depends somewhat on circum stances. If you are going to visit at a house where you are well known, perhaps this may be well. But, as I have already said, it is not absolutely necessary. Three white shirts for evening wear and two colored ones will be more than enough. Some men are very neat and careful as to their evening shirts, and they can make them do for tho morning following. Your white tics for evening wear and a pair of evening gloves you can pack in the bosom of the shirts, or, better yet, in your moucholr case, and. If you have lived several Christmases, you must sure ly have one of these. If not. your wife or sweetheart should read this and mako haste, as a handsome moucholr case is a most useful and satisfactory remembrance for Christmas. Collars can be laid flat. Instead of curled. In the bosom of the shirts. Patent-leather boots must be wrapped separately in tissue paper. If you have no boot bag. These can be placed In one corner. If you have room, a pair of bed room slippers will be a comfort. In your moucholr case you can fold a few, say, two or three, favorite ties. The case lies almost flat, with handkerchiefs, gloves and cravats, and will take up very little room. One change of underclothing will be suf ficient, and one pair of pajamas. Besides three changes of hose, you should also take one pair for evening wear. Your toilet articles hairbrushes, toothbrushes, etc. can be taken in little oilskin bags, which you can purchase for a very small sum of any druggist. It Is better to take a cake of soap, because, although you will find It at most well-regulated country houses on the toilet table, it is not always so. and It Is never so abroad. Many fashionable people follow the foreign cus toms, and you must not be surprised If you find In a large country bouse a lack of these accessories. It is practically impossible to pack a bathrobe In a suit case, although once, re duced to almost a state of despair, I ac complished It. Your host should provide you with this, especially that host who has the bathroom mania. Many men who fit out country houses become, early In the work, a prey to the attractive adver tisements In the back pages of the cur rent magazines. The whole house Is fitted up with tiled bathrooms, but the bachelor 15 expected to take his dip down the end of a long hall, on which It would seem as If all the rooms of the house opened. In thla ago of tubbing one longs for the. old 0O t From Head, to Foot o t un tub which one brought with hlai acd -n nicn ne cou.u ua&. w many tlmisa witn vB.se. If you have room, pactc the bath- 1 robe; if not, trust 'to Providence and the ! common sense of your host- ' You may put into your suit case. If you I choose, a pair of knickers and stockings for golfing. We all know what an effect good clothes have upon character, in the way of self-respect and self-confidence. No where Is this more strikingly illustrated than in army life. It is related of Napo leon that, on the morning of the battle of Waterloo, while he outlined to his Generals the plans for the day, he saw, near by, a sentinel from whose coat a button was missing. Stopping short in his directions, he ordered the soldier brought to him and asked him to explain such careless.iess. "It was lost on the march," said the sentinel "and I had no time to replace It." "Indeed," said Bonaparte, "and I sup pose If you had been shot on your watch last night, I might have given the same excuse for not putting another in your place, and my army might have been murdered while It slept. You may have all the rest of your days to sew on an other." Lord Wolseley, who places much value In the personal appearance of the British soldier and believes in having him well and smartly dressed, says in regard to this matter: "The soldier is a peculiar animal, that can alona be brought to the highest ef ficiency by inducing him to beleve he be longs to a regiment which is infinitely su- SORT 'O Uncle Snra: "John, there n fly John Ilulli "Well, 'tnln't your lly, bnKlucxs." perlor to the others about him. In their j endeavors to foster this spirit Colonels are greatly aided by being able to point I to some peculiarity in dress or title, and for this reason it is most unwise to take from a regment any device or peculiarity of any sort In which the men take a I prld Make a man proud of himself and his corps and he can always be depended upon." BEAU BRUMMEL, JR. SCHOOL WORK IN ALASKA. Governor Brady Sny That It Is Han dicapped by Lnck of Fnnds. WASHINGTON, Dec. 4. In his annual rerort Governor Brady, of Alaska, calls attention to section 2S of the Alaska act of the last session of Congress, which provides that the Secretary of the Inte rior shall make provision for the educa tion of the children of that territory, without reference to race, and shall en force a system of compulsory attendance at school until the territory can provide a proper school system of Its own. In commenting on this phase of the question. Governor Brady says: "The Secretary cannot obey this law If Congress does not appropriate tne money to bear the expense. Many communities are now totally neglected because the Commissioner of Education has not the means to establish a school and pay the salary of a teacher. The Governor in all his reports has told of this and has plead for at least $60,000 as an annual appro priation, but the committee has not al lowed an increase of a dollar beyond what It has heretofore annually approved, namely. $30,000. The people In the large towns which arc willing to Incorporate will fare well, for the law allows these towns one-half of the license money which may be collected within the limits of the corporation to be used for school purposes. Juneau and Skagway have become Incorporated, and their funds for all school purposes will be ample. It Is estimated that Juneau, for Instance, will have $15,000. This Is one half the amount that has annually been set apart for the whole of the district. "The amount for Skagway will be as large as that for Juneau, and no doubt larger, as Juneau claims les than 1500 inhabitants, and consequently the liquor sellers have paid but $1000 each for a license, while In Skagway the number ot inhabitants Is much greater than 1500. and consequently the saloon men must pay $1500 license each. Here, then, we will have two towns spending as much money for schools as Congress Is willing to vote for all the rest of Alaska. This Is hardly fair to the children beyond in corporated limits. If 50 per cent of the license money which Is collected, exclud ing the amount from Incorporated towns, could be used by the Secretary of the In terior, he could nearly comply with the law In furnishing the proper educational facilities for the children of school age who should be in school. If Congress will not adopt this method of prodvlding the expenses of schools, it Is recommend ed, then, that U be urged to increase its appropriation to $75,000. Under the en couragement which the law gives, the people of Skagway and Juneau have gone vigorously to work on their schools and already have them In operation for the year. At this writing the details are not at command for this report." Smlthi in Congress. It Is a matter of course that all the Smiths In Congress were re-elected. The whole five. Henry C. William A., and Samuel W., of Michigan: David H.. of Kentucky, and George W., of Illinois, will go back to Washington with com fortable majorities. John Walker Smith, of Maryland, was also elected to the present Congress, but he declined to take the seat because he was elected to the Governorship Just before the beginning of the session. The vacancy has been filled by the election of W. H. Trebson, but Smith's desertion of the family has been made good by the election of Wal ter I. Smith in Iowa. So there will be in the next Congress a round half dozen of Smiths, all good men and true and all Republicans but the Smith from Ken tucky. General W. F. Draper, of Mllford. Mass., has received from the Kins of Italy tbe Grand Cordon of the Order ot SS. Maurice and La xare, as a token of appreciation of the Gen eral's services during his mission in Italy. The Grand Cor4oa is one of tbe highest dec orations conferred by that court. There is a movement on foot In Boston for tbe erection of a monument of Edgar Allan Poe, which will be put up in the public gar dens which adjoin tho historic common. GOOD CAUSE TO REJOICE 3IcIdJTLHTS SUCCESS SYOXTMOTJS "WITH UBEIITT AND RIGHT. Gist of a Lotter by Hon. "William Robert Xoare to the Young 31 ca ot the Sooth. MEMPHIS, Nov. E.-.Hon. "William Rob ert Moore, of this city. Is one among the many residents of the South who find in McKlnley3 re-election good cause for gratification, and take It to mean the best Interests of the United States are to be conserved. He Is of the opinion that the defeat cf Bryan is a National bless ing, and that the future has much good In store for our Nation. Mr. Smith has made the result of the election the sub ject of a highly patriotic letter to the young men and boys of the Southern btates. It Is as follows: "Let all the early rejoice. The National election has passed: and the flag of lib erty, of Justice and of civilization waves proudly tonight above our Titanic young Nation not only between the two great oceans, but. also, upon her righteously acquired possessions In the Islands of the far-off seas, which, with the early com pletion of the Nicaragua Canal, are soon to open to our American young men i- TOUCHY. - Minneapolis Tribune. on yonr noc" Is It? Wish you'd mind your own limltable opportunities for their restlesa endeavors. We have a valid right, there fore, to reverently exclaim, 'Glory to God In the highest.' nnd to adopt as our gonfalon, 'Peace on earth, good will to all men.' It would not be either wise or magnanimous now to gloat over the thoroughly defeated party of multitudin ous political sins and heresies: but It is both wise and proper to rejoice that the combined patriotism of the Nation, re gardless of party names, has, by a ma jority approximating a million votes, saved them from themselves, by snatching them as brands from the Bryan burn ing. "No man now not even the Carmack Agulnaldolsts feels any alarm fbr our flag or anxiety about the continued pros perity which, like a mighty river, has. during the present Republican National Administration, overflown and flooded all parts of the country and every class of its population. The fear that every business man has felt at even the bare possibility of Populist Bryan's election has now passed completely away, nnd been sup planted by a serene, steady and unshaken confidence that the broad, wise and hu mane national policies that have for the past four years ruled our heaven-blest Nation will for four years more be vig orously pressed and enable each and every class of workers whether employers or employes to move confidently on in the undisturbed prosecution of their business plsns and purposes. "Confidence and stability are all-Important factors In the calculations of all business men: and nobody not even the veriest Populist now doubts what the national industrial policies will be under the Republican Administration. Capital and'labor. hand in hand, can and will now move harmoniously on together in the de velopment of our unlmagined national re sources. There is no longer a mlsceg enated. Populist. Democratic party stand ing In threatening attitude to frighten and disturb and choke business enter prises. Of course there will be, as there always should be, an opposition political party; but the piebald and mosaic thing lately, by common courtesy, called De mocracy, will never again disturb the dreams of the future. 'The old thing" has died the Ignominious death that knows no waking. Requlescat In pace. Chief Cause for Congratulation. "The chief cause for national congratu lation now Is the final burial of that su perlative egotist and pestilent demagogue who has for the last four years been itin erating on rear-end trains throughout the Nation trying to array the honest la borers against their employers. To the party upon whom he thrust himself he has been too expensive a luxury, and hence fortu he can never again, with that one or any other party, cut a national figure. "No political organization will ever again attempt to force a 46-cent dollar on the farmers and wage-earners of the country. No considerable party will hereafter attempt to discredit our soldiers and belittle the Amerlcan'flag. No little bob-tall bull will ever again undertake to butt the great American engine while It is speeding with electric and accelerat ing velocity along the Bessemer rails of progress and prosperity. No. no! All this sort of wickedness is forever ended. "But, my dear sir, this unparalleled vic tory over the debased money advocates, repudiation and attempted humiliation of the dear old Stars and Stripes suggests a moral which It were wise for us all to now both appreciate and appropriate. May I. therefore, be pardoned when I suggest that my birthplace, my accumu lated years, and my long business expe rience, each and all justify me In kindly saying a few words to the present genera tion of young American voters, especially of those in the Southern States? I do not presume to speak to those of my own age "Your commendable love and loyalty to your ancestors have heretofore been strong enough to lead you away from the political leanings of your own enlight ened better Judgments and dumped you Into the pools of sodden provincial par ty prejudices. You have hesitated to break away from their political teach ings; and this is creditable to the prompt ings of your sentimental nature. But as you have looked around and about, you cannot have failed to observe that the mighty currents of modern progress were rapidly drifting the Nation Irresistibly awav from the narrow and isolated stage--oach and ox-cart methods of ante-bellum days. You have been taught and edu cated in the theory that the United States were a confederacy; whereas, by the ar bitrament of war tho highest and last court of nations tho political entity known as ths United States Is now a nation. "Old things have passed away; behold all things have become new; and. bet ter than all, you are now a proud citi zen, not merely of some little provincial locality, unknown abroad, but, "higher st!!, an Important integer of this great United States, before whom every na tloi. of the earth stands, now uncov ered, hat In hand, ready to do respectful obeisance. "Every intelligent and thoughtful young Southern man cannot have failed to no tice that the political policies urged and persisted In by the now discarded leaders of the so-called Democracy of the South ern states, have- been, ever since the great war, continuously. In their effects, obstructive, and reactionary. They have generally insisted upon prosecuting thos6 political theories taught by John C. Cal houi . embodied in the general Idea that the overwhelming majority of the Amer ican people earnestly rejecting these po litical heresies have accepted and are now vigorously acting upon the opposite and common sense view that our Nation of 45 states Is now infinitely greater and grander than any one of Its parts. "These are suggestions worthy to enlist at least the careful study and considera tion of every ambitious and studious young man in the Southern tier of states especially of every one who may In the future desire to become President of the United States. (And why should not our Southern young men so aspire?) No matter how lightly he may now heed these warnings, their thoughtful consid eration can do him no possible future harm. If he has ambition that" covers his whole country he must strive to be come a part and parcel of It, and not be satisfied to lag, superfluous, as a mere sul len, unwilling and pouting appendage upon the ragged edge of the proud American procession as it marches on in mighty phalanx to grandeur and to national glory. "Only a few days more and this red letter century will have passed forever away. Its Industrial, financial and polit ical achievements have surpassed all the centuries that have gone before. What the 20th century may bring forth Is now wisely hidden In the great womb of the future. But, judging by the past, the .Nation may reasonably expect to reach nobler heights than 'eye hath yet seen, ear heard, or that It hath entered into the heart of man to even conceive.' "We of these Southern states, espe cially, have a most encouraging outlook. Nature has given us mountains of min eral, valleys of golden products, rivers of priceless wealth and water, and a climate of uncqualed salubrity. Riches He un developrd beneath every rood of our ter ritory, and beyond the value of mathe matical computation. But they need de velopment. Who will dig and delve for it? Not the indolent and lazy sloth, lag gard and grumbler who Is merely always consuming the pioductlons of the thrifty and blocking the mighty car of progress. The Youns Man Who Im to Win. "The young man who Is to win is the now poor boy who stands ready to de fend his country's flag; who Is now pa tiently poring over his books by night and toiling assiduously by day, with the Arm purpose and resolve to carve his name, later on, among the noble Amer ican names that were not born to die. To aid him, therefore, In his commenQ abla purposes, let him be careful In his political party alliances. He cannot hope for success If he chains himself to some rotten and decaying political carcass that will forever act as an offensive break upon his noblest efforts. He cannot pull an effete and obsolete political corpse. "Then rather let him seek out that par ty which has Insoribed upon its banners, in flaming letters, the words, 'justice, progress, unity and the Stars and Stripes.' Living up to the Ideals contained In this communication and with an unfaltering faith In the God of our fathers, the way to honorable success lies today Invitingly open to every honest and Industrious youn& American boy and man." EVENTS IN THE- SOCIAL WORLD (Continued from Fifteenth rape.) turned from California and are domiciled with Mr. Klrkmanfs mother for the pres ent. Mrs. Albert Goldman, gave a largely at tended reception Thursday afternoon. In honor of her elster-ln-law, Mrs. Ben F. Goldman. President Penrose, ot Whitman, returned Friday from the Yakima country, where he had been lecturing in the interest of the college. Charles Herman Is up from Stcllacoom, visiting his brother-in-law, D. W. Mc Fadden. Mrs. Herman has gone East for a few weeks. Thursday evening Mrs. Albert Goldman entertained a large party of young people In honor of her nieces. Misses Stelnman and Kline, of California. Marvin Evans has gone to Birmingham. Ala., where he Is to be married to Miss Nancy Wallace, sister of Rev. Duncan Wallace, and formerly of this place. Mrs. John Dooly entertained a couple of score pf young people Wednesday even ing with high Ave, delicate refreshments and dancing. In honor of her cousin, Frank Dooly, of Portland. Prizes were won by Miss Bess Paine and Ben Holt. Centralia. Mrs. A. B. Rayner and daughter have returned to Tacoma after a short visit to relatives In this city. Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Wllkerson have re turned from Everett and will make their future home in this city. Mr. and Mrs. George Martin, of Everett, are In the city, visiting the former's par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Martin. Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Lang, of Seattle, are vlsltlns relatives In this city. Mr. Lang will return to Nome In February. Mr. John Wilson and son, of Wenatchee, are visiting relatives In this city. Mr. Wilson Is the owner of a large and thriv-' ing fruit farm. Tho Ladies of the Round Table met Thursday evening at the residence of Mrs. P. R. Stahl. North Centralia. Tempt ing refreshments were served and a most enjoyable evening passed. At the residence of Mr. Jesse Martin, South Centralia, on Wednesday afternoon, Mr. Herbert Fred was united in. marriage to Miss Eva Martin, Rev. C. F. Goode officiating. Tho happy couple left Wednesday on a short bridal trip for Tacoma and othr Sound cities. Miss Martin formerly taught .in the city schools. TJXIVERSITY OF OREGON. Football Season Ended With Re ception by Young Ladles. EUGENE, Dec. 8. Oregon's best foot ball season was Anally and appropriately closed last Saturday evening when the young ladles of U. O. received, at Profes sor Straub's, In honor of the football team of the University of Washington. Our eleven had been welcomed back from the hard-fought Thanksgiving game, rested a day and had given the Evergreen visitors the most decisive trouncing of the year. Every one was happy, and the visitors were" philosophical. The parlors were beautifully decorated In college col ors, delicious refreshments were served, and a pleasant evening passed In meeting the guests of honor. It is the hope of all that this sort of thing may have simi lar Inspiration every year. The seminary In political science and history met last Wednesday evening and listened to a carefully prepared paper on "Historical Sources," by Professor Schafer. Special attention was given to 'a part Is greater than the whole,' while the use of Internal criticism In working up historical material. A brief Informal dis cussion followed. The associated students held the annual debating elections Wednesday morning, and chose B. C. Jakway, '01; S. O. Goodall, '02; E. A. Childs. W. I. Whittlesey. '01; E N. Blythe, 'C2, and C. A. Redmond; 'CC, WHEN YOUR BY KKRGHRET L. BRICGS. (A!! Rights It Is a fact that beneath every backache there lurks the gravest pos sibilities. Years of- effort on the part of professional men, and column after column of newspaper space in every journal in the country have failed to impress on women that their backache is merely a sign, that real trouble exists somewhere. Many women even now today, with all the light that has been thrown on the subject, endure backache right along day after day and call it rheumatism. They actually treat it with surface applications of liniment and go through the daily misery hoping that a change In the weathex will relieve them. The ignorance concerning backache is not confined to women them selves, but to their doctor as well, for, singular as It may seem, many practicing physicians fail to diagnose backache as a symptom only. They do not recognizee the kidney or bladder trouble, the womb or ovarian troubles that may be, and one of which surely is making the backache, as a signal to hunt for something that Is going wrong. Of course, there comes a time when the cloven foot of backache shows itself, and the struggle then is for life or death. This Is no exaggeration. It is going on all around us, dally, hourly. Women are 111 with such a complication of derangements that one who understands wonders how they stand on their feet. They keep going, attending to their duties until the day comes when surrender must be made to the real trouble. Profound ignorance causes this neglect What woman would know ingly let herself drift Into the grip of kidney complaint or uterine dis order? As a matter of fact, there should be a text written on the minds of every woman in this country: "If your back aches write to Mrs. PInkham." You can get more direct and valuable advice out of one letter which will come promptly In reply to yours than you can in years of trial and consultation with physicians. Mrs. Pinkham Is authority on backache and her medicine is its conqueror. She knows what backache is. Her flies are filled with letters from women she has cured of It In curing their backache she has really cured them of the troubles that produce the backache. These troubles are strictly within the field of work occupied so successfully and so long by Lydia E. PInkham's Vege table Compound. This Is a medicine which will not cure all the ills that flesh Is heir to, but for the troubles originating In the feminine generative system it has no equal In the world, and the willing testimony of thou sands of women will and does support this statement. Mrs. Pinkham gives an earnest Invitation to women to write to her at Lynn, Mass., for advice about their health. This Is surely the easiest way to be helped and put on the right track, for no person Is so well qualified to give advice to women who are ailing. "When you write to Mrs. Pinkham you do so in perfect confidence, for all the correspondence is carried on by women, and by women only. Tell Mrs. Pinkham the story of your backache and all the other peculiar ities which make you feel puzzled about yourself. You will understand after following her advice the gratefulness of the women who write of their cure you will be one of the grateful ones yourself. as contestants in the annual try-out. which comes eff some time In January. There will be a hard run for places, and the Oregon talkers should do better work than last year. The usual weekly assembly was held Tuesday morning, and addressed by Mr. E. T. Colton, student secretary of the Y. M. C. A. international committee. The same gentleman was very favorably heard In some other addresses, especially that Tuesday evening, on "Student Temp tations the Battle-Ground of Collego Life." A college man himself, Mr. Col ton's talks appeal to students with pecu liar felicity and force. Other class otators have been cnoscn as follows: '04. O. B. Tout; '03, T. L. Williams: '02. A. H. Eaton. The local contest will be held early In February to avoid competition with the winds of March whereof the poet tells us. The state affair Is one month later at Cdr vallls. There Is a general feeling here that It Is Oregon's turn at the honors, and several poeple will work hard for them. During the latter part of the week the. Y. M. C. A. members, their friends and everybody else has been busy attending the various meetings of the state conven tion of the college Y. M. C. A. It has been a great and worthy success in every way. DEVIOUS COURSE OFTHE RHINE Few Tourist Have Solved the Mys tery of Its Birthplace. The birthplace of the Rhine, is wrapped in mystery. It is given to few to dam with their Angers the first tricklings of a great river, writes Augustine BIrrell in the Century. How many English have traced the shy Thames to her source, or the Mersey? Research Is apt to be tedi ous. To most of us, as to our artist, M. Andre Castalgne, the Rhine flows out of Constance Lake, and after giving three leaps over the rocks at Schaffhausen, steps westward with a cheerful alacrity, as If It meant, like a good American, to see Paris before It died, till it reaches Basel, where, as if suddenlly mindful of the Fatherland. It turns hastily to the right and pushes Its way up the map of Europe past Strasburg. Mannheim. Kob lenz and Cologne, by Dusseldorf and We sel till It reaches the Low Countries, where again Its course becomes obscure. What happens to the Rhine at Utrecht? "What gar my father no send me to Ut recht"? was the oft-repeated complaint of Bartollne Saddletree, doomed to keep shop Ir the BesJ Wynd Instead of draw ing pleas In Parliament Square. I can but repeat Mr. Saddletree's plaint. Had my father sent me to Utrecht Instead of Koblenz I might be an author ity on the subject. As it Is. I can but feebly demur to the modern notion that puts Rotterdam on the Rhine, but have to admit that. Just as I have never set eyes on the Toma-See, in Switzerland, where, at a height of well-nigh S000 feet, the baby Rhine springs into being, so have I never seen either of Its outlets Into the German Ocean or the Zuyder Zee. My Rhine begins at Schaffhausen and gets DON'T BE SO THIN FREE REMEDY Many ladles and gentlemen who cannot complain ot any Iclnd of sickness are abnormally thin nnd cannot find any medical treatment which will correct this condition. Dr. "Whitney's Serve and Flesh Builder Is not alone intended for those who are sick, hat also for those who appear well and hearty, hot cannot acquire sufficient flesh to ronnd oat the form. In dyspep sia, indigestion, all stomach trou bles, dehilitj: and nervous diseases, no remedy is mo prompt and power ful. In order to demonstrate the wonderful merits of Dr. "Whitney's Nerve and Flesh Bailder, every per son who will address the C. Z. Jones Company, Elmlra, ?. Y., will receive a. large trial package in plain scaled wrapper absolutely free. BACK ACHES. Reserved.) no farther than Wesel, for as for Rotter dam, it is. as all the world knows, on the Maas. and as for Utrecht, where tho river Is said to divide, I was never sent there to study. A Country Breath. Susan Hartley Swett in Youth's Companion. A 'hay-load In the city square. The sweets of a whole Summer fair. In one rude wagon piled; The fragrant breath of warm, a till rains, The scent of strawberries In green lanes, Faint petals blown from roses wild. And straightway all the bustling placet Is filled with some enchanted grace. And tinkling with the notes Of Held larks, and of sliver streams. Of south winds, murmuring their dream Through airy aisles of oats. My lady in the gilded shop Lets all the tawdry trinkets drop. And through the magic sees A dooryard sweet with mint and phlox. And pink with ruffled hollyhocks. That nod to belted bees. The sooty laborer with a thrill Plucks shamrocks on an Irish hill. A gamin cheera and chaffs; All busy footsteps pause a bit. Somewhere is toll by clear skies lit, A sunburnt world that laughs. And long and long the sweetness stays, And cheers and cools the heated ways, Like happy news from home. Till the pale moon and, misty stars Look down as if. by meadow bars. Their rays touched clover bloom. But little recks the countryman. Bound homeward on his empty van. Along the closing marts, "What store he brought with him today. Or what, within a load of hay. Could touch so many hearts. DAILY METEOROLOGICAL REPORT. PORTLAND, Dec. 8.-8 P. M. Maximum, temperature, 45; minimum temperature. 33; river reading at 11 A. M.. 5.6 feet; change la the past 24 hours. 0.00; total precipitation, S P. M. to 5 P. M., 0.00; total precipitation . since Seat. 1, 1000, 10.81 Inches; normal pre cipitation since Sept. 1. 1900. 13.40 Inches; de ficiency, 2.G2 Inches; total sunshine Dec T, 0:00; possible sunshine Dec. 7, S:46. Pacific Coast Weather. Wind. M E O 2 2. X Zo f I i -5 STATIONS. 3" Astoria I40IO.0OI 0 iE Ft. cloudy Baker City 430 0t)J SE Cloudy Xff Clear liismarcK i3to.oois 1 Boise 400.0O lEureka 152 0.001 'Helena 42lO.O0( S Pt. cloudy E 'Pt. elnudir N'W Clear W Cloudv I Kamioops, a. c; hoio.ooi i iNcan uay I4U u.uiri SE Pt. cloudy ,S Cloudy Pocatello 3S 0.00 Portland 145)0.00) I ilea isiun: im ii.m SE Foetrv IRoseburg 44 0 00 N'W Foggy I Sacramento 1 44 0.00 isw Foggy W ! Cloudv r Cl. T nl.j. inn t nn San Francisco 152 O.uO 2f iClear NE Cloudy Spokane 3S 0.00 Seattle 48 0.00 iV Clnndtr Walla Walla. 420.00 SW Cloudy Light. WEATHER CONDITIONS. General foggy weather continues In the Pa clflc States. No rain has fallen, and mlld temperatures as a rule prevail west of ths Rocky Mountains. In the Dakotas It Is un seasonably cold, with temperatures this after noon as lnw as 6 deg. above zero. The indi cations are for fair weather In this district Sunday. WEATHER FORECASTS. Forecasts made at Portland for the 2S hours ending at midnlzht Sunday. December 8: Portland and vicinity Fair; winds mostly northerly. Oregon Fair, except cloudy and threaten ing In northeast portion; winds mostly east erly. Washington Fair in west, cloudy and threat ening In east portion; winds mostly north easterly. Idaho Cloudy and threatening; winds mostly easterly. EDWARD A. BEALS. Forecast Official. SEW TODAY. HAINES' TEA STORE Fifth St.. opposite P. O. CHRISTMAS GOODS. This year are prettier than ever In fancy china. I We have an endless variety and all prices. Our lOc. isc. i)c cud :uc counters are crowded with bargains. On table reserved for gentle men's ai tides are ash trays, steins, smoke sets, tobacco jars, pen racks, etc A nice present for your wife Is one of our 50-pleco dinner sets, at $3.75. $4.75. $5.95. Don't forget the doU In pink In our window. Chance on 1$ asd a football with each 23c purchase. 1