f 46 THE SUNDAY, OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, MARCH 19, 1905. Chauncey M. Depew on American Oratory ESTIMATES OF PUBLIC MEN OF THE PAST GENERATION PRESENT- DAY " SPELLBINDERS " A GIEAT SPECIAL SALE OP IRON AND BRASS BEDS This week we expect two cars of Iron Beds from East. In order to close out our present stock, especially those one of a kind, we offer some extraordinary values. It will pay you to supply present and anticipate future wants at this great price-saving sale. In addition we sell on easy terms $1 down, $1 per week. UNITED STATES SENATOR CHAUNCEY MITCHELL DEPEW, the Junior member from New York in the upper house of Congress, Is per haps the most versatile man in that body of talented gentlemen. There are many good lawyers, many good business men, many good speakers, many profound thinkers and many gifted orators among them, but none who combines all these qualifications to the same extent as Mr. Depew. Beginning life as a lawyer, almost half a century ago, he took to stump-speaking quite as naturally as a duck takes to water. From this to after-dinner speaking was, to him, a perfectly natural 6tage In his career as an orator. Then, when demands were made upon him to deliver the opening addresses Upon great public happenings such as the opening of the "World's Fair at Chicago, the dedication of the Statue of Liberty in New York Harbor and the like, he rose to the -occasion. Nobody knows how many speeches Mr. Depew has delivered during his 60 years of public speaking, but It may he safely asserted that he holds the record; nor can any other speaker be recalled who is equally efficient upon the stump, on th'e rostrum, in the courts, in the halls of legislation and among the good fellows who linger over post-prandlal coffee and cigars and enjoy the brilliant sallies of wit and wisdom of the finished after-dinner talker. As a business man his career is a lesson to the young. Beginning In 1866 as counsel for the "Vanderbilt interests, he held every position of respon sibility In their gift, which required great executive and administrative ability, displaying powers of concentration and application which -made Wm Invaluable to his employers. His political career is no less remarkable. At the age of 25 he was a member of the Assembly of New York, then Secretary of State; next he was made United States Minister to Japan, but declined. One office after 'another was proffered him during the ensuing 20 years, but he refused all of them, making his re-entry Into political life In 1SSL when be was an un successful candidate for the seat vacated by the sensational resignation of Thomas C. Piatt, his present colleague. Pour years later the Senatorshlp was formally tendered to him, but he declined. Then he received 69 votes for the Presidential nomination at Chicago in the Republican National Convention which chose Benjamin Harrison as its candidate, and was largely instrumental in bringing- about that result. Finally, in 1S99, he took his seat in the United States Senate, to which he was re-elected at the present session of the Legislature of New York. Hale and hearty to an extraordinary degree. Senator Depew, at the age when most men think of retiring to private life, presents a truly remarkable example of the benefits of hard work combined with proper care in the matter of temperance both in food and drink. Although he is one of the most frequent of attendants at banquets, dinners and the like and has been or 50 years, he shows none of the signs so common to men who thus indulge themselves, which is to be attributed to the fact that, upon those occasions, he eats sparingly and looks upon the wine-cup more fre quently tflan he looks Into It. His acquaintance among the public men both of this and former gen erations is widespread and intimate, especially in the case of speakers of all kinds. His recollections of some of them and his opinions as to their merits will, therefore, be of unusual Interest. They are embodied in the following article, which he has kindly dictated by special request: BY CltCCNCEY M. DEPEW. iY maldeA speech to the public was dellvereS in the town of Cartland, Nov YcSk, almost 50 years ago and was the result of an accident. A recent graduate o Yale, where I had Imbibed anti-slavery notions and opin ions from tha lips of Phillips, Garrison and others, I returned to the home of any parents iu 1S5P to find that all, or most of my relatives were staunch Democrats and pro-slavery advocates. Tills fact, however, did not prevent my attending Republican mass-meetings upon every possible occasion. At one of these, thejone In Cortland. George 'William Cur tis was scheduled to speak to an audience composed of 10 per cent Republicans and SO per cent Democrats. He failed to keep his appointment, through an un avoidable delay. The crowd called upon me to address them, thinking doubtless, because of my family and its known loan ing towards democracy, that I would mak a pro-slavery speech and turn the tables on the abolitionists. At the end of the hour's talk I had with them, or to them, -they were undeceived and thus, at one and the same time, I made my advent into the Republican ranks and began my career as a public speaker. Since that time I have never missed a campaign either state or National. It is but natural that I should, during the many years which have elapsed since my debut, have met on the stump many eminent speakers of both political par ties, and I am asked to give my Impres sion of some of them, and to say, whether in my opinion, public speaking really accomplishes much, if anything In the way of affecting the results of political fights. Decline of Stump Speaking. I am inclined to think that stump speaking; except in isolated localities is not as productive of results In the pres ent era as it was 50 years, or even ten years ago. "While It serves to awaken enthusiasm and greatly helps to get out the vote, the main part of the work of educating and instructing the voters is now done by the newspapers and by the tons of documents sent through the mails to be read at home when the voter has ample time to digest them. Thl3 prac tice has been steadily growing, especially since the establishment of the system of rural free delivery by the Postoffice de partment has made It possible to reach the farmers with almost the same fa cility that wa3 formerly the case with the residents of the great cities. It is true that these documents consist, in great part at least, of speeches which have been wholly or partially delivered on the floor of the Senate or of the House of Representatives in "Washington, and which are the result of days, perhaps weeks of thought and careful study upon ihe part of those by whom they are ut tered, or who were granted leave to print them in the Congressional Record. And these differ from stump speeches in sev eral important respects. A stump speech must be more or less anecdotal If Its maker expects to hold his audience, or unlets he be an orator of exceptional ability and, brilliance. Men will sit by their firesides at home and read an argu ment from end to end, even though it takes an hour or two to do it, but they are not willing, as a rule, to stand for the same length of time in the cool night air in front of a dimly lighted platform, or to sit in the crowded uncomfortable seats provided for them in the Town Hall, and listen to- it, unless they are meanwhile amused or entertained by a humorous or Interesting anecdote inject ed into it. For this reason. I am in clined to believe that the documentary arguments now sent to all parts of the country in every national campaign, are, to an extent at least, supplanting the spell-binder" and limiting his usefulness. The latter is still potent, however, as a magnet with which to draw the voter from his lethargy and to feet him think ing, thus preparing the soli upon which the fruit bearing seed may be sown to a better . advantage by the printed speeches and statistics which may there after be sent to him. "Lightning Change" Orators. The art of stump-speaking has also un dergone a radical change. Fifty years ago the speaker was thought to have per formed his full duty If ho spoke to three audiences within a week. Now It is no uncommon thing for a spell-hindor to make as many as 20 speeches between the rising and setting of the sun and even higher records than that have been made. All this is possible, first, because the speeches are much shorter, those of the sood old times being from three to four hours in duration, while 15 minutes Is shout the average nowadays for the touring "spellbinder." and, second bc n&u the railroads can 'haul a. man hundreds of miles in the same number -f hours that the stagecoach took to iriuwport him a dozen. This latter fea ture, which may be termed the "light ning: change" part of the business, re quires considerable powers of endur ance and no small measure of mental agility. The former Is requisite for reasons which mu6t be at once appar ent, while the latter is a prime essen tial because of the necessity for local izing; each address to fit the town or hamlet In which it is delivered. For ex ample, it would not do at all to deliver a speech having for Its principal theme, the prosperity of a community In which the largest factory had recently closed down for want of business. My Initiation into the "lightning change" artists' class took place in 1S96, when the late President McKinley, then at the head of the Republican National ticket, sent for me to come to Canton for a consultation. "When I arrived he told me he wanted me to do something to offset the enthusiasm and admira tion Mr. Bryan was creating. "He is making 17 speeches, and talk ing five hours a day." declared Mr. Mc Edna Edwards' Sidetalks No. I Chances for Amateur Gamblers Review of Card Games By Edna Edward. DID you ever gamble? If so, why? Had you any justifiable excuse? Perhaps you "only shook for the drinks." In that case, either you got a drink for nothing and your friend wast ed what would have done more good elsewhere, or your friend obtained a free libation and you were out .the prico of n pair of socks. To be sure, if your friend lost, you gave him his revenge, and the dice rolled again. If the loser of the first throw lost again, he Insisted on another change to get something for nothing, and if the winner lost it was "horse and horse," and absolutely nec esary to "shake off the tie" to see "who was the best man," and three pairs of socks were darned by some body's wife in consequence. Had you any excuse? You were "passing the time away?" You may see the day when you will want the time to linger longer. There is never a min ute in any man's life In which he can not be laying up something for the pro verbial rainy day either physical or mental strength, or cash. You never laid up any of these in a barroom, and there was only one thing you ever took out of one which you didn't have when you -went in and you wouldn't have cared to have your wife or girl friends see you with it, either, no matter how much It cost! Checks Versus Wife's Pocketbook. Perhaps you gambled because your family needed more things than your, limited salary would allow, and you are In the habit of taking a fiver occasion ally and Investing it in a stack of whites with, which to woo fickle Dame Chance. If so, let me tell you that five silver dol lars in your wife's pocketbook will bring you more peace and contentment than enough checks to cover a faro lay out. "Why? Because, leaving tho moral side of the question out altogether, you so seldom take the cash value of the checks home with you- You sit there like an Idiot and watch those checks vanish. "Easy come, easy go," is a saying that will always hold good. And you know that you lose oftener than you win. Expensive gambling es tablishments are supported entirely by amateur gamblers. The conditions of the game are prescribed, not by you. but by your opponents In other words, by "the house.'1 and tho mere fact that its proprietor treats you with such uni form courtesy should be ample projof that he has an ax to grind. But perhaps you boast your prowess in "the "great American game of poker." Think you you ran beat this game more Terhaps You Only Shook for the Drinks." Kinley. "Now, although you are 25 years older than he is. I believe you can do the same thing. At any rate, I am going to ask you to Iry It. and have ar ranged for a train which will leave to morrow morning and go over the same route and stop an equal time at thu places in which Bryan spoke, and yon are to make 17 speeches, covering flv hours. "Will you do it?" torn hira I would, and I did it. I also spoke two additional hours that night at a big meeting at the end of the route, after which Mr. McKinley wired me that I had broken the snell woven by Mr. Bryan, and that I might go home. The records of the late President Har rison. Colonel W. J. Bryan. Senator Falrchlld and President Roosevelt as "lightning-change" artists in the stump-speaking line are too recently made to require review at this time, but that of James G. Blaine will admit of it. Mr. Blaine was one of the most versa tile orators I ever listened to. speaking many times each day at a different place, and he always had something new' to say. He consulted the local re ception committee carefully, and rarely, if ever, made a mistake, although ho might have had me born In Poughkeep sie. instead of in Peeksklll. If It .bad not been for a fortunate accident. We were touring New York Stato during the campaign of 1884. and 1 was acting as master of ceremonies that is, I was Introducing Mr. Blaine to his au dience. After we left Sing Sing, he asked me where we should next stop. I told him Peekskill, adding that I was born there. "Why," said Mr. Blaine, "I always thought you were born In Poughkeep sle." Then, when we stopped five minutes later, and I began to introduce him, he interupted me. "No. no, fellow-citizens." he said, pushing me back, "let me do the intro ducing here. As I have passed up and down your noble Hudson, upon its un equaled floating palaces, for the past 20 years. I have felt the inspiration of its scenery made famous by the genius of Irving, but the deepest and tenderest emotions possessed me when the steamer was opposite Peeksklll. for there." he said, "was born my oldest and best friend. Chauncey Depew." It is quite likely that this would have been said to the people of Poughkeepsle shortly after. If I had not told him I was born in Peekskill. Wendell Phillips' Power. The most successful and powerful speaker I ever hard was "Wendell Phil Hps. He possessed the rare faculty of rousing his audiences to the most fran tic pitch of hostility against himself and the cause he advocated, and then by his eloquence subduing, capturing and turning them into shouting enthu siasts. George "William Curtis was. upon the other hand, a lecturer rather than an orator, and won his audiences by his logic rather than by his eloquence. Tom Corwjn was perhaps the greatest of our stump-speakers, and could cap ture voters for others by the richness and abundance of his humor. He failed to get them for himself, however, and never rose to ' the position his ability merited, because people would not take him seriously. Garfield, who also possessed a rich fund ; times than you lose at it? You may be right in saying that this Is a game In which skill may triumph over a bad run of luck in the matter of hands held, but do not lose sight of the hungry "kitty." Do not forget that in a 25-cent ante game the "rake off" frequently amounts to $100 a day if the game be full and lively. Did you ever sit In a game Jn which seven players each lost from $5 Did Yoa Ever Get the Other Barrel?" to $20. No? "Well, Just watch next time. You are skillful Indeed If you overcome this percentage. Neither must you forget that in all of the games where there is a "rake off" and you will not find one without, unless you start It yourself "the house" has from one to four representatives. Of course this fact is not advertised in the daily papers, but they are there. These men are satisfied merely to "break, even," each conscious of tho fact that in the course of the night about $10 of bis money goes into the "rake off" box. They, as a rule, play close, and rarely make large winnings. Tfiey are on a salary, or play for a percentage of their profits. They are "good fellows." and are ready to stand for a drink at any time and the more you drink the more they are pleased. True hospitality! They take advantage -of all your weak nesses and of their wide experience. How "A Pair" Beat One "Jack." Did you ever sit between two men and discover that every time you raised the pot the man on your left gave a back raise, and when it came to the man on your right you "got the other barrel?" Then you dropped out and the other fellows got your money. If you "stayed," there were two chances to put draw you. even if you had the best hand to go. They can beat you at this game as surely as you can beat them in matters which come up at your office In the course of a day's business. It may be that you prefer faro bank because In that the percentage against youIs less than in other games in which you play agalnt the house. Would that I could give you a column to each of these games instead 'of squeezing them all Into one short arti cle. I shall some time. If you "play the bank" you know that every time two cards of the same value shows on the same turn the dealer takes half of all checks on that card, or else places them all on the high card. In which event you have an even chance to get them all back or none, as the "turn" may Tesult. He is always ready to do the lat ter on account of the possibility of an other Isplit." In which event It Is four to one against your ever placing those checks in your pile again. Can't you see that you have the worst end of even this game, and do you not know tliat money you obtain In this way Is I of humor, never allowed . himself to gratify his love for It on the stump, "be cause he held to the theory that the American people would never ully trust a humorist with high public office. John Van Buren also possessed a wit as keen as that of Sidney Smith, but rarely used it on the stump, contenting himself with a few lightning flashes at the end of a somewhat prosy speech, usually of two hours' duration, but his hearers always waited la patience to hear those few flashes. Horatio Seymour was the moat polished man I ever saw upon the platform. In apparel as well as in his language he was far and away above the average of his auditors, but he held them spell bound for hours at a time and they revered him as they might have done an oracle, uttering the riddles of life and death. Rcscoe 'Conkllng was a marvelous cam paigner, who always prepared his speeches with caro and committed them to "memory. Although he never con sulted a note he rarely omitted a word from the original text, and It Is said of him that he once delivered an address fonr hours' long during which a news paper man held a copy of his speech, as serting afterward tat Mr. Conkling de livered It ad verbatim, ad literatim et ad punctuatlm. "William H. Seward's speeches were marvels of beauty and excellence. Dur ing the canvass for Mr. Lincoln, he de livered three each week, none less than C000 words in length, and each absolutely new and as finished as the essay of a collegian at graduation. Horace Greeley's famous series of speeches during his memorable, but dis-' astrous campaign for the Presidency, are the only efforts I can recall to equal those of Mr. Seward. Fascination of Public Speaking. There is a fascination about public speaking which takes a firm hold upon these who practice it, whether on the stump or elsewhere. Like an actor the public speaker finds the acme of pleasure in noting the effect of his efforts upon the faces of his audience. Their applause Is quite as sweet and their disapproval fully as bitter to him as It Is to the most sensitive disciple of Thespls. but. like the latter, he may be mistaken in his estimate of that effect. The crowd which applauds him most heartily Is often the one upon which he has produced the least Impression, while one whose apparent dullness fills him with despair holds many a convert to his theories. It Is In this fact that we must look to And the origin of the term "spell-binder." Unless I am mistaken It originated in 1888. during the candidacy of ex-Presl-dent Harrison, when by reason of the fact that my name had been presented to the National Convention by the New York delegation and I had withdrawn It in favor of Mr. Harrison for the Presi dential nomination. I. felt obliged to take a more active part In the fight than usual. This brought me frequently to the room of the National Committee, where I heard each speaker report that he had "held the audiences spell-bound." At the termination of the campaign we held a banquet of glorification, over which I was called upon to preside. No more appropriate name than the "Spell binders' Banquet" suggested Itself to me and I so christened it. Hence. I believe, the term, which has become part of our political vocabulary. (Copyright by Bert Cobb.) With Men and Players' Chances. either brought back later and lost, or else you spend It on questionable amusements rather than to explain to your wife where it came from? Walking Home "Broke" Isn't Funny. Perhaps you enjoy the music made by the dear, little, white ball as It gaily trips the light fantastic 'round and 'round the whirling roulette wheel, and bounces Joyously over the red, black and silver trimmings while you watch it with bated breath knowing that it Is now a question of winning or walking home! By the way did you ever walk home? Do you remember what your thoughts were? Did you think of what you would tell your wife In the matter of the grocery bill which she had promised to pay from the lost salary? Did you recall that there would be five men at your office the next day to collect those long overdue accounts? Did you remember the loan shark -who had an order on your salary, and who was likely to turn said order in at the next payday, and thereby make neces sary another explanation to the dear little woman at home who had mended the children's clothing until it was past another such treatment? Ah, yes! You thought of that and swore by all that was holy that you would never do it again. But you did it again, now didn't you? Did you lie to her? And did the He hold good? Or was Jt the last straw that broke her faltli in you? Did you get on your knees and pray God to help you break the pernicious habit? Others have done so and succeeded, and some have lone so and failed. How did you come out? During this walk did you remember all at once that you were several hundred dollars In debt, and that it would take months of pri vation for your family to lift you out of the slough. Fallacy of "Getting Even." Did you go back to the gambling-house next payday because the sum received for one week's work was so small that It was simply an aggravation? If you did. "Suppose Your "Wife Gambled!" look at the present situauon with me. If you had. since the night of your walk home, put all the money earned Into househoud bills, and those "old debts," you would have been able to look the world In the face today Instead of con templating bankruptcy as you are doing! Now. some of the streets of this city are closed to you and you need a map In order to navigate with safety. You eat cheap lunches far removed from your place of business because you owe all the neigh boring lunchrooms more than you can pay. and there Is only one untried laundry in town! You are paying ca3h,at the gro cery now. because your credit is exhaust- r Handsome Iron Bed like cut. heavy brass chills and posts, center body -finished all colors enamel. A pretty bed. Regular $12.00. Special 99.30 51.00 down, 51.00 per week. S1H.OO 1UU. IJEIJ A beautiful bed like cut. stands 6 feet high, heavy brass work, beau- tlfully chilled: all colors. Regular $1S.03. Special SI3.50 $1.00 down, $1.00 per week. SI.OO DOWN, S1.GO PER WEEK SPECIAL BARGAINS IX CARPETS. The largest stock of Carpets in the city at cut prices. FINE HARDWOOD I. GEVURTZ & 173-175 FIRST ed. and you find it hard to do this because all your debts are overdue. Xext payday you must either pay a claim equal to your salary or suffer a garnishee, and to save your position you starve your babies! If you have not already patronized the 10 per cent a month loan shark you do so, and then you are "all in," Indeed. It Is the beginning of the end. But to return to the roulette wheel. There are SS places Into which the ball may fall. If you put $1 on a certain num ber and that number "comes," youa re ceive $35 and your own $1 back. Isn't that, great? In short. If 2S men each play $1 on a different number, one wins and the house rakes In $37 and pars out $35. Can you estimate how long the money of a group of men will last at the rate of a roll a minute with the house making $2 on each roll? Philosophy of the "Crap" Game. Perhaps you prefer "craps." The num ber most likely to "come" when two dice are thrown Is, of course seven, and you think yourself favored when you are per mitted to win when the charmed seven shows up on the first throw. Do not lose sight of the fact that although you win on a seven or an eleven, you lose on a two, three or twelve. This gives about an even chance on the first roll, but it Is after this first roll that you are "up John L. Sullivan and King- Edward Famous Bostonlan Tells of His Conversation With the Ruler of Great Britain. Br John L. SaHIraa. WHBX I met the present King Ed ward VII. then Prince of4Wales. In 1SS7, I shook his flipper and wished him welL He struck me as a sport of the right sort, and we chinned .one an other for two hours. 'Tm sorry, air. Sullivan," said the King (then Prince) "that your people ever left Ireland. Tou would be a credit to the British Empire as one of Her Majesty's subjects, as you certainly are to the American Republic, where I have many true friends." "My people didn't want to leave-Ireland, Tour Highness," said I, "but they couldn't stay, not with, their appetites." "You mean" "L mean that if I lived In Ireland a year there'd be another famine- there, that there Isn't enough to feed the Sulllvans in that country: that's why so many of us had to vamoose the ranch." "Tou Irish-Americans If that Is the right way to say it are a fine blend, a fine blend." said the Prince, smiling cor dially. "You have caused us over here some trouble which we would have been better off without." f "Yes. Tour Highness. It would have been money In your pockets to have kept the Irish Just plain Irish. As plain Irish they don't want much. As Americans they want everything in sight." And we chatted as hall fellows well met. I boxed at a private exhibition before the Prince, there being about 250 persons pres ent, and he. admitted that he'd got his money's worth. When He Didn't Punch(KIng Edward After my return home to Boston I was telling a few friends about my meeting with the Prince. It was along about St. Patrick's day time, when Irishmen feel llko "doing" everything English, and one of my friends, a fellow who believes that some day England will be used as a browsing place for Irish goats, got very much excited. "Do ye mane to say yez were all thot tolme wlddln arrum's reach of the bloody tyrant?" he asked. "Sure I was. DInny." "Ob. melia murther, what a chanst! An ye let It go by?" "Let what go by?" "Xhe chanst to land on him. And you wld the pounch that could git square for. slven hundred years of . starvation and misery! O my! O my! Yez ought to be ashamed to tell It If Ol'd been In ycr place Fd given it till him so he'd be wil lln to make Olreland free whin he klm out av ut, th robbln" Invader." My private opinion of the King Is that If he had his way he'd give Ireland free dom, for he Is a pretty good sort and would rather make friends than enemies. YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD $12.00 IRON BED &50. A very handsome bed with extended brass rail on head and foot. 5 feet 9 inches high. Cheap at $12.00. Our sdo- clal $1.00 down, $1.00 per week. H A very pretty up-to-date Iron Bed in all-the new colors and effects, extra heavy, chills and posts. A great spe- clal at 315. OO $1.00 down, $1.00 per week. 100 STYLES OF FOLDING GO CARTS. Extra values, latest styles, easy run ning and durable, up from. ..gS.SS CARD TABLES AND FOLDING 219 TO against it." The chances of the mystic "seven" are small compared with the ag gregate chances of four, five. six. eight, nine, and ten. and If you throw any of these six "points" you must make it again before the favored seven comes in order to win. Otherwise you lose. This game is nothing less than a day light robbery. Tou may play games other than the ones here enumerated, but they belong in the class with "chuck luck." and "the wheel of fortune," and are even less "on the square." Buying or selling wheat "on a margin," or dealing In fictitious mining stocks, which have no existence outside of the "clock." which is "wound up" the night before, are no different when It comes to cold figures. Suppose Your Wife Gambled. What would you think of your wife were she to show such poor business in stinct as to venture some of' your hard earned money in one of these games or on the races, where the -percentages of chances are made by the other fellow? You would file a bill for divorce forth with. Have you lost, and are you "gamely" trying to get even? If -so, take all you can spare for gambling and place It in a good bank until you have accumulated a sum equal to that of your losses. Take the consequences of your acts and be But he has to keep his job by doing what he's told. If he tried to get gay with things he woldn't last as long In the King business as a ham sandwich at a Hebrew, picnic. He's only a hired man. John L.'s Marvelous Constitution. As I sit here and tally the past I cannot but wonder what a crackerjack of a con stitution I must have had to stand up under what rve been through. Talk about crowded hours and strenuous living, why, I've got the best of them skinned a mile. A few years ago, when I was sick In New York, to the hospital for mine. The doc tors got out their dinky little saw3 and things, and began to cut the bad all out of me. They put me down, and while I took their count they found that I had a rup ture of the bowels, and that I'd had it from birth. I took their word for it. They had to go back over my record to be convinced that I'd lived so many years without complaining. "I never made any complaint at being alive," I told them, "although some oth ers had." They thought; It wonderful that I'd been able to train and fight so long. I told them that in 1SSS. some time after my threo hours' fight with Mitchell In France, during March of that year a se vere Illness got me. and I was In my nighty In bed for nine weeks, suffering with typhoid fever, gastric fever. Inflam mation of the bowels, liver complaint and heart trouble all at the same time. This sounds like some of the things you hear members of Congress and skinny women telling about In patent medicine adver tisements, but It's sure enough truth. When I was turned loose by the doc tors in the hospital I was partly para lyzed, my legs being on strike and re fusing to work- With the use of crutches I Was able to get around to meet the boys and see If the supply of coffin var nish was holding out. It was six weeks before I gave the crutches the glad heave. It was in the latter part of December. 1SS3, that I chucked the crutches. Stick a pin in this date, and then remember that on July 8. 1S83, I fought Jake Kllraln at RIchburg. Miss., that battle lasting 75 rounds. What do you think of that? And I let that battle go 75 rounds n purpose to show that I was able to go any dis tance any living fighter could do. I'll tell you In my next how I let Kllraln do all that was In him in that fight, holding off the knockout till - everybody was tired of the battle, just to show that I was still the champion, and the crutches didn't show In the count. I have brought out these facts at this time to show that I can recover from anything to good enough notch to put It over the 20-ronnd ladybirds who are. today doing vaudeville stunts and calling it fighting. -I have, it In me to press the button for the bert of them, and . they can't talk down the facts of the past any $o(XOO BKASS BED $30.00. Handsomo Brass Bed, extra heavy posts and rails, gold lacquered. wnicn absolutely prevents tar nishing. "Very special at $38.60 $1.00 down, $1.00 per week; S90.00 BRASS BED This swell bed. satin finished; one at the prettiest brass beds in, the city, 6 feet high, 3-Inoh zilllars and -posts A great special at 97G.C9 $5.00 down, $2.00 per week. ECLIPSE COOK STOVES. Guaranteed 15 years, up from. $18.08 $1.00 down, $1.00 per week. CHAIRS FOR RENT SONS 227 YAMHILL contented to work out slowly, but surely, and profit by your valuable and costly experience. If you. have not yet learned your lesson you are a more storm-tossed craft than is the drunkard confirmed la his dipsomania. Is gambling a habit which you cannot break? Then yoa are a mouse not a man, and the sooner your family loses you the better. But you can stop, and you know It, and you know you know It! Putting a bad" habit behind one has never yet proved fatal. Friendly . Games Destroy Friendships Perhaps you gamble with personal friends where there Is no percentage taken out for the benefit of those who conduct the enterprise. Don't you suffer just as much from loss of money in such a case as in any other? On the other hand, does It. give you pleasure to take money from your friends without giving anything in return? Is your friendship strengthened by tha "little friendly game?" Don't you know that the con firmed amateur gambler Is the most un happy man on earth, and that he cannot do justice to his life's vocation if he al lows himself to waste time, and suffer worry over this form of speculation? What? Tou don't gamble? Then you are the men I most wish to reach. I'll tell you a secret. There Is oiio way to beat all the games. Stay awayt- more than they can duck the dead-sure thlng3 that I'm futuring for them. I have a "front that makes my belt wider thaxvlt ought to be, but Tm getting that reduced every day. My neck Is the same size it was in my best day. My arms are the same size, and as hard, and my legs tell the same pretty and com fortable story. Since I stored away Jack McCormlck at Grand Rapids a few weeks ago all the smart Alecks have been explaining it as an accident! The Texan thinks it was al most a fatal accident for him. But there was just as much heft in the swipe that made McCormlck forget the Alamo as there was In -the one- that persuaded Joe Goes in 18S0 that I was a comer. Here's the reports from the Knockers' Associa tion: Jeffries: "I won't fight John L because it would be a case of assault and battery on my. part." FItzslmmons: "Sullivan is an odjua old man, and I haven't time from my theat rical engagements." Corbett: (Mostly bad language and a swift run for shelter.) They are making it appear that I ought to be in some old ladles' home, and they don't want to make some money anyway. They are three of a kind, and they are afraid to .see my "bluff," as they call It, with my pair of dukes. Ain't they the limit? Jeffries said the other day that President Roosevelt was good enough boxer to get into the ring with some of the best of them today, yet tho President, good scrapper that he is, and all honor to him for it. is older than I am. Fltz is 43, nearly as old as I am, and he has the gall to put 'em up. Jem Mace- at 40 and Joe Goss at 43 did some good work And John L. Is going to butt into the Knock ers' Association, arid he's going to make the motion to adjourn. They can't como too fast for me, and they can't lose yours truly. Say, this Osier must be a horse doctor when he talks of 40 being the time to dope out. Me and Lillian Russell are going to make him raise his figures or we'll, send him to some correspondence school to . learn his lesson over again. Yours truly. When a Man's Married, Etc., Etc. Hazel Bend Corr. Tillamook Herald. It Is currently reported that Oliver Mills will soon return to dwell in our midst and that he will not come alone, for he has persuaded some fair Valley dame to share his fortunes and misfortunes; In. short, has taken unto himself a wife, so, hoys, lay In a, good supply of cans, horns and powder Jhat you may be able to give him a good' sendoff on his wedded, career. We wish him Joy by, the bushel and many years of happiness.-