The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, July 02, 1905, PART TWO, Page 15, Image 15

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    THE SU3TDAT' OREGOXtAN, PORTLAND JULY 2, 1005.
1
Clever Woman's Impressions of the Fair
Nancy Lee Visits the Buildings, Sees Homer, Davenport
and the Trail and Writes Entertainingly About All.
WILL SPEND A
SANE FOURTH
SEATTLE, July L (Special correspon
dence.) It anyone had suggested to
Brothers Lewis and Clark, not to mention
Madame Sacajawea, that In such a little
Fpace as a century people -white and peo
ple black, people rich and people poor, peo
ple who know things and people who want
to know things, would meet on the bonks
o the Willamette to see a "World's Fair
of beauty and strength, these same three
would probably have said little, but
thought much. It Is a far cry from the
Atlantic to the Pacific, and the first
thought which pops into the Easterners'
head on sefelng the Portland Fair seems to
voice Itself In the expression that Mis
souri and Oregon are not too far apart
to prevent the mantle of St. Louis from
fitting the shoulder of the Far Western
pioneer.
"Comparisons are odorous," says Mrs.
Malaprop, and no one would be so unjust
as to compare the Portland Fair with
the St. Louis Exposition, but If one did
the very fine proportions of this latest
Fair would show up strongly as contrasted
with an exposition which the whole -world,
civilized and barbaric, contributed to
make great and grand.
The Oriental, the Forestry, the Liberal
Arts. Manufactures, the Mining, the Ag
ricultural, the Government, .the Foreign
and the Fine Arts buildings are important
as educational factors, and most interest
ing and fascinating.
Scenic Effects Beautiful.
The scenic effects throughout the
grounds are beautiful, especially at night,
when myriads of electric lights and sen
tinels along the walks, or twinkle In the
shrubs, and among the gay flowers.
Portland has been called "the Rose
City." and the thousands of La France
roses all over the Fairgrounds certainly
lend their beauty to crown the hill crest,
and garland the sunlit glade.
Possibly Mr. Homer Davenport's
"Farm" -ittracts as much attention as any
feature at the Fair. There are birds
and beasts of all nations. There Is a
white peacock which opens his tall as the
loveliest of fans. There are pheasants
of all kinds, occidental and oriental, from
Europe, Asia and Africa. There are
Arabian horses and stallions as proud
looking as they are valuable, and there
are goats. . Tou see a great many car
toons exhibited at the "Farm," which all
readers of daily newspapers are familiar
with. These cartoons have made Mr.
Davenport famous, but they hae not de
prived him of his modest mien or his am
bitions to do the very best work.
Davenport Makes Frientts.
There is a sort of Swiss chalet In which
Mr. and Mrs. Davenport and their three
children live. Mr. Davenport in the last
campaign showed what the little piece of
charcoal which he- keeps in his right-side
waistcoat pocket could do. When he drew
that cartoon. "If he's good enough for
Uncle Sam he's good enough for me." he
gave the farmer a hold on "Teddy" Roose
velt which could only be demonstrated
by the vote on election day. Mr. Daven
port has made money from his lecture on
"The Power of the Cartoon," but he has
made more friends. When that stalwart
young cartoonist tells of his boyhood days
in Sllverlon, Or., and draws the picture
of his father, who wanted him to "saw
wood," there Is a whole epitome of the
fifth commandment in the way Mr. Daven
port tells his story.
' One of the most interesting events of
my week In Portland was the night I
went to the Marquam to hear Mr. Dav
enport's lecture. In several boxes his
father, his wife, his old Uncle John and'a
dozen young and pretty girl cousins list
ened in a devouring way to what "Homer"
had to say. The manner that those de
scendants of the pioneer leaned out of
the boxes to catch every syllable from
the lecturer's Hps. was as touching as It
was charming. To say that Davenport.
Sr "swelled with pride" faintly depicts
the tableau. Mr. Davenport's lecture In
itself Is a gem, a gem of fueling and In
telligence, but those ulsters and cousins
and aunts from Sllverton. Or., "listening
to Homer," was a genre picture which
no Tenlers could paint
The Great Sceneshlfter every now and
then presents one of these simple dramas
that the looker-on may read a human doc
ument byond the price of pearls. The
clear girls from the country, those white
headed men leaning from the boxes intent
on the cartoonist who, born and raised
in an Oregon village, has risen to the
apex from which he makes men shudder,
or laugh as the pencil caustic of plastic
shapes his design, give a fellow a lesson
In civics which no tongue could better or
argument deny.
There are some funny shows on the
Trail, about 33 attractions, the biggest of
which is Kiralfy's "Carnival of Venice."
Innes Baud is one of the great features
of the Fair. Professor Innes Is a great
admirer and exponent of Herr Wagner.
"His Sunday night Wagnerian concerts are
attended with enthusiasm.
The state buildings of California. Colo
rado. Idaho. Illinois. Massachusetts. Mls
rourl. New York. Oregon, Utah and Wash
ington, are devoted to the products and
pursuits of the different states, and offer
inviting resting places and visions of
comfort to the weary feet of the pleasure
Feeker. California, for example, has ev
erything In that building that the heart
of man could ask for. There is a special
punch brewed there e-cry day, which not
- only -wets the Hps, but moistens the eye.
Some fruits are very strong. Take the
Innocent little grape. How downy and
innocuous it appears clinging to Its parent
stem. ho would be so wicked as even
to suggest that this artless attachment to
a numerous family would ever be con
verted Into a liquid strong enough to
deposit an American citizen of six feet
and one Inch prone upon the highway?
The still Is mightier than the gait
The flowers in the California building.
bottled though they be, seem to shed
perfume around. There Is one shrub un
foottled and standing stiff in the moistened
earth. Around this shrub the women all
pause. Women big, and women little.
women young and women who might be
more so. Ladles with black hair and la
dies with white hair. They all stand
and most of them smile. This shrub
stands for woman's popularity with the
other sex. No matter how 'tis worn.
"whether crowning the white brow of the
maid of 16 -or stuck somewhere about the
elderly spinster's curls, the orange bios
som Is the snow-white flag before 'which
the ladles lay down their arms.
And the men? Well, when the lady
drops her arms 'tis the signal that the
men carry."
Llfe-Savlng Exhibition.
There Is a fine exhibition of life-saving
every day about 2:30. If there - is any
class of men whom I like better than
any other class, it is the men who. up
and down the coasts, risk their lives for
people whom they never saw before and
probably will never see again.
These Hfesavers spend most .of their
days Just waiting for trouble. Just think
of it. They are solitary as hermits and
have to bo bachelors! They must keep
clear heads, and clean hearts, and be
ready any time the weather is squally or
a ship springs a leak to rush out on the
rolling wave and give their own precious
lives to save the other fellow's.
It's a fine thing to die for one's coun
try. It is a great privilege to give one's
life to save that of one most dear, but
to sit quietly thinking thoughts and be
roused from a peaceful cat-nap to wade
out and come back a floater, would seem
to be the finest sort of heroism and the
kind of thing that makes me want to
Ewallow hard. '
Thoy give a mighty good imitation of
the real thing at the Fair, and when the
life battle Is won, I am thankful that the
y?nr Is over and nobody's hurt
In the building devoted to mining there,
was much to . see. Every kind of mine
was exhibited with the manner of work
ing It The people who infested this
building were even more interesting than
the exhibits. Eastern people, who snow
about Alaska from reading Jack Lon
don's stories, or from newspaper clip
pings, looked with rouiJU-cycd wonder at
the men panning gold. They seemed fas
cinated with each exhibit, and hung
around trying to assimilate wme of the
mysteries and absorb a knowledge of
something absolutely new and bewitching.
One could discover, at a glance, the suc
cessful Klondlker. He strutted through
the aisles with his head up in the air.
He condescended to drop a glance now
and then at the miner or his work with
a smile on the Hps which appeared to
say. "I am It. I am. I've been there and
I've made my pile. I could tell you
things, but I haven't time. My sluicing
days are over; now I'm blowing it in.
The Returned Klondlker.
Then there was te other type, the re
turned Klondlker who had learned to
cook uu there amonsr the snows. He
slouched along, too. through the aisles.
He didn't stop, either. Poor fellow, min
ing had done him up, and he did not caro
to face ghosts, or see too closely things
that memory had best not get busy with.
There is much good advertisement work
done at the Fair. One firm has a whole
building. There are kalclscopes and pic
tures j-alore of everything, and a clever
young spieler to tell the audience fairy
tales. Advertising is getting cleverer
with the march of years, and every
World's Fair shows the advance of Ideas.
If you tell people the same thing often
enough, they believe It. Newspaper ad
vertisement converted John Wanamaker's
one store into a whole block in Phlladel-
nhia. and then they call the "Dead
March" the Philadelphia quickstep!
There are somo wonderful old trees
In the Forestry building. In gazing at
these mighty guardians of the primeval
forest the old worship of the Druids
seems very fitting. There is something
so sheltering and protecting about a big
tree, like the all-powerful guardian to
avert the sun light, to Impede the dew of
night. To the dweller in the Middle
West this monster timber must seem
wonderful. Had the trees In the garden
of Eden oeen as big as those of ours, and
had their leaves been In proportion. Eve
could have plucked Just one and tailored
Adam a topcoat and avoided all that
little scandal by which the poor girl lost
her home. But then, the tree of knowl
edge can't grow very tall, for people who
are not blind are forever passing it oy.
or stumbling over it in a vain effort to
reach a star which turns out to be a fire
fly.
Miniature Hospital.
What Firecracker Money Is Go
ing to Accomplish In One
East Side Family.
There's rood c-rounds for all of this dis
cussion as to a sane Fourth." said a caller
at Ellers Piano House yesterday, "We ve
discussed the matter pretty thoroughly at
our house, and yesterday my aaugnier
found that the money usuauy diowu m
fnr firrradf(r noise and disturbance at
our home is more than sufficient to make
a first payment on a Pianola, jay oiaesi
boy will buy a year's Pianola library sub
scription, and with this start, the young
sters themselves win nereatier tcp uV
do. especially as I am myself goln
make two payments in aavance ior
iht now.
a.
Among the necessary evils. I started
to say, but I will revise my work and
say among the Indispensable require
ments of the Fair, is the miniature hospl
tal for the comfort or relief of the sad
or sick. It is the dearest mlniatura
sanitarium, on a side hill, where roses
flourl&h and all sweet-smelling flow'
ers thrive. The first day I saw this
charmlncr retreat, tne sun was more
than tepid, and three or four ener
getic no thin very tlght-walsted
ladies had succumbed to the ardor of
the sungoJ. One of the prides of Port
land i3 her magnificent hospital "The
Good Samaritan." This wayside mis
slon at the Fair is kept going by
nurses from tho Good Samaritan. The
day I was there, two most Interesting
young nurses -were neallng ana neip'
incr. One a brown-haired girl. Ore
gon born; daughter of a Judge, who;
pretty face woulu make any young
male patient decline to get -well, and
any sun-wilted lady rejoice In her
misery. The other, a darling daughter
of Fair Scotln, as sweet and as whole
some as the heather of her native
land. Did you ever notice tnat one
can't help nick-naming all things dear
and sweet Now, this nurse was
christened the good, old-fashioned
Bible nnme of Mary, but no one calls
her that. The pld, the young, all call
her by a love-name, for everybod
lo-es this tall, strong lassie. The world
seems bigger and brighter as she goes
bravely on her way. Her. eyes are
only what Is right and her hands go
out to help all those wno suffer.
If 1 were tied to a chair and com
manded to remain there until 1 had
made up what I am in the habit of
terming "my mind as to wnat struck
me most forcefully at the Fair, I would
have to answer "the people.
Crowd Intent and Peaceable.
I never saw so intent and so peace
able a crowd. There was not a bad
character of any sort that came Into
my eye range. Not one tipsy man, not
one rude man did I run across. Now,
don't think that I am disappointed be
cause 1 was not shocked on the Trail.
I was agreeably surprised, that's all.
In the street-cars It was the same way.
Tne men stood and the women sat. and
though I saw lots of women standing
up, too, I did not hear one unkind or
discourteous word.
T did hear one -woman in an elevator.
In a down-town store, pantingly gasp:
"Oh, my, 1 never sat down in one of
these telephones before. I was scared
stiff and am glad It's through with."
There were lots of well-dressed East
ern women, there were all kinds of
well-groomed Eastern men. But the
thing that arrested my think-tank
were the crowds of earnest-looking
women and quiet, honest-eyed men
who came from green country homes to
see the wondera of the Portland Fair,
not to criticise or to frolic, but to bow
in reverence before the structure which
to them was the Mecca of all endeavor.
I have one big regret In leaving the
Portland Fair. There was an exhibitor
of phonographs in the Liberal Arts
building. He gave you a record of your
spoken words in the phonograph. I
never seemed to get to the booth when
the machlno .was doing things. Now,
my big regret Is that I do not go down
to posterity through the medium of
the Columbia records shouting: "Hur
rah for the Portland Fair."
NAXCY.LEE.
monthly payments, which they can easily
do,
mal
rlel
Th Wnnnia mfftrA bv them, a Metro-
style. In elegant mahogany case, to match
their beautuui roanogany-caaea aididsu
which they bought of Ellers Piano House
about lour years ago. win oe ucmcicu
first thing Monday. Why not a Pianola
In 3-our home?
What It Means to the Home.
A creat factor In the Pianola's world-
"wide popularity Is the fact that It brings
pleasure, not merely to one or iwo mem
bers of the family, but to all. It appeals
equallv to the wife, whose nousenoid ana
social duties have interfered with keeping
up her piano practice: to the business
man. who needs some recreation after the
dav's worries, and the growing daughters
and sons witn a n-aiurai craving ior sonic
form of entertainment, and who will seek
it outside If it Is not proviaea witnin tne
home.
Suits AH Moods and Needs.
Pn much has been said of the artistic
possibilities of the Pianola in rendering
the great classics of music that It is well
to remember that It ls also a humanly
familiar Instrument eatable of rendering
popular selections the latest light opera
hits, dance music, ravorue oia songs, col
lege glees, and the homely and lowly. In
fact, it has Instant response for all moods
and needs.
Todav th Pianola has . place In thou
sands of the best homes In this country
and abroad. It Ms the general testimony
le owners that they wouia not part
with their Instruments for many times
the cost provided It was impossible to
replace them.
Surely Worth InvestlgatlnQ.
Surely an Instrument insuring such un
limited pleasure, and coming within the
means of any person who can afford a
piano, is deserving of a personal Investi
gation. Wc suggest that you take the
first opportunity to call at Ellers Piano
House, where the complete Metrostyle
Pianola Is always on exhibition. The
cast of new Metrostyle Pianolas Is $230
and JSOO. Purchasable on easy monthly
Installments, if desired. Pianola library
subscriptions, giving access to the most
complete music-roll library west of Chi
cago, costs $20 annually. Ellers Piano
House, corner of Park and Washington
strets. entrance number 23L
it was discovered that only one kind of a
dog would do. This campus chaperon
must be a low-browed, bench-legged ccph
alate. of villainous mien and truculent
disposition. The more hideously repcllant
the dog, the better for the purpose.
The bulldog has no doubt helped many
a struggling 'varsity student over the
hard places during the anxious years
when his whole soul was bent upon the
laudable ambition of getting on the "first
nine" or breaking out of the football
"substitute" class. As a picturesque ad
junct to the real collegian, the bulldog
has taken a high place with the postage-
stamp cap, the yellow and green sweater
and the "rah-rah trousers. Who knows
but if the bulldog Is eliminated from the
dear old college days the next step may
not be an order for haircuts, derby hats
and other rational reforms which we all
know would rob the college boy of his
chief if not his only distinction.
The cause of education owes much to
the bulldog Just how much will never be
known. When Willie comes home from
school and lands at the old farm with a
bale of flags, ball bats, tennis racke
beer steins and a bulldog as the vlsll
assets of a college education, the hard
headed father somehow feels a yearning
sympathy for the bulldog, -and figures
that after all he may be of more real
utility on the farm than anything else he
has to show for his Investment.
College authorities should go slow on
the bulldog. Perhaps he was Intended by
beneficent Providence to contribute
through a self-respecting physical exam
ple and force of Intellectual stimulation
a modicum of sense to the college boy. If
this be his mission, then preserve the col
lege bulldog, say we.
c
FOURTH OF JULY SPECIALTIES
Red Fire AH Colors
WOODLARK
SURE LIGHT
RED FIRE
PURE RED
Woodlark Red Is a special preparation put up in our
own laboratories. It is not the kind you buy from fakirs,
made to sell, which burns a sickly pink if it burns at ail.
Woodlark Red Fire is made to burn burns a pure, rich
ruby red a marvelously beautiful color burns every time.
Woodlark Red or
Green Fife, per pound .25c
Other Co!ors,per pound .35c
Special Prices:
WOODLARK EMERGENCY PACKET
FIRST AID TO THE INJURED
Too much importance cannot be attached to the usefulness
and timeliness of a package containing appliances fo'r immediate
use in the event of accident with Fireworks.
Having this packet in the house may mean a life saved.
Tetmus (lock-jaw) or blood poisoning will not set in if a wound is
promptly cleaned and dressed with proper antiseptics.
The Woodlark Emergency Packet contains everything
necessary for emergency treatment of cut, bruise or burn; and by
having it at hand, severe injuries may be checked till the doctor
comes. The Packet contains: Antiseptic Cotton; Adhesive
Plaster; Antiseptic Powder, for dusting on wound to heal quickly;
Antiseptic Bandage, to wrap wound; Pins to fasten bandages. To
tal value of separate items 50c package SPECIAL 25c.
EARLY ELECTRIC ROADS
Baltimore Line Perhaps First Reg
ularly Operated Here.
CLEARANCE SALE OF QUAKER GREY CUT GLASS NOW ON
It's Safe for the
Boy to Shoot if He
Shootswith a Buster
Brown Camera.
He can make snapshots
xof the fireworks and the
crowds at the Exposition
without danger to himself
or his chums. The Bus
ter Brown Is more than
a toy It's a perfect Ilttl
camera taking real pic
tures 2x2, details per
fect. We develop the first
films free to show him the
way.
RUSTER. PRWA
mm
that- THE BV$TlR BROVN
CAME. R. A.
is thecamcra thattakes
Tj.gkrooD Pictures. truso takes
Trie C AKE.. iT TAKES VERY
1TTL TROUBLLTOUORK IT.
IT TAKES VeRY LITTLE. J0NEY
TO BUY IT
"&USTR BROWN
Kb HM
HBSl
rot. M 9K"K -
mm
Little Girls Are
Enthusiastic
About the
Buster Brown
Its awfully Interesting
to. take pictures of the
Exposition buildings with
their friends In the picture.
A souvenir they'll value in
years to come. We devel
op the first films free to
show them the way.
Bring in your 4th of July pictures for us ,to develop. By our special electric device for drying we ar& able to
finish and print photos the same day. Better than the slow way, too.
INDEPENDENCE DAY BUT WE TAKE CANADIAN (VI O N E Y AT PAR
Woodard, Clarke & Co.
HOLIDAY SPECIALTIES FOURTH AND WASHINGTON
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of the Ninth-Avenue Elevated Railroad
for a distance of two miles, --vhere a
series of experiments was carried on
during: the latter part of the year ISSo.
with a locomotive called the "Benjamin
Franklin." The motor was mounted on
a platform pivoted at one end, and mo-
tlon was communicated from the arma
ture to the driving-wheel through
grooved friction gears held in close
contact partly by tho weight of the
machine and partly by an adjustable
screw device. This locomotive, pulling
a train of cars, made several trips; but
the experiments were soon suspended,
and they were not resumed till three
years later, when, during several
weeks, a rebuilt and improve "Benja
min Franklin" was frequently run be
tween the steam trains in the section
between Fourteenth and Fiftieth;
streets, attaining at times a speed ot
25 miles an hour, and on one occasion
pulling an eight-car train up the max
imum grade of nearly 2 per cent at a,
seven-mile rate.
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HOPGROWERS
Need Spray Pumps This Year!
Many are buyingnov. Those who are not Should do so.
Too much is at stake to warrant you in putting it off.
It's tie salvation of the crop.
THE COLLEGE BULLDOG
Is That Branch ot Ideal Education
Doomed?
Kansas City Journal.
Is the bulldog, as symbolical of Idealism
in college education, doomed? The ques
tion is suggested by a recent order of
Chancellor Day, of Syracuse University,
that henceforth no student of that institu
tion shall own or harbor a bulldog. The
full importance of this innovation can
only be realized by those who are famil
iar with the exalted and intimate place
that the bulldog has occupied in the col
lege world during the last few decades.
The very proposition to divorce education
and bulldogs Is portentous, not to say
revolutionary- Until this daring Syracuse
chancellor conceived the project of shat
tering the intellectual affinity between the
bulldog and the college student no one
thought it could be done with safety to
the mental integrity of the latter. But
the experiment will be made and the
world will watch the outcome with breath
less interest.
Just when the bulldog became a neces
sary factor to the college career is not
Tccorded. We can only Imagine that .the
circumstance was ushered In when Wil
lie, the family pet. strolled across tho
campus one fine day unconsciously fol
lowed by a misguided bull terrier. This
cet the pace, and, like a great many oher
heavy Intellectual movements, the value
of this species of canine as an aid to men
tal expansion in youth was the result of
I an accident. By an odd coincidence, also,
Century.
Daft began work on the Hampden
branch of the Baltimore Union Passen
ger Railway Company In August, 18S5
nt first with two, and a year later with
two more dummies, which pulled regu
lar street cars. A central and the run
ning rails were used for the normal
operation, but at crossings an overhead
conductor was Installed, and connection
was made with It by a transversely
hinged arm carried on the car and
pressed upward against It by a spring.
The driving was by a pinion operating j 99
on an miernai gear on one 01 me
axles.
This was, I think, the first regularly
operated electric road in this country.
and the conditions under which the
contract was taken, including waiting
a year for payment conditioned on sat
isfactory operation and finally, even
on these onerous terms, secured only
In the face of an opinion by a well
known scientist that no one but "a
knave or a fool" would undertake it
were anything but encouraging. For
tunately for Daft, however, T. C Rob-
bins, the general manager of the rail
road company, was strong In the faith.
This equipment was followed by a
more ambitious one that of a section
HOTEL MOORE
Clatsop Beach
SEASIDE, OREGON
Finest Summer resort in Ore-ron. The only
hotel on the beach overlookinic the ocean.
Sea foods a specialty. The hotel bu been
rebuilt and newly furnished. Hot salt baths.
Fine surf bathlnjc directly In front of the
hotel. Strictly flrst-clas. American plan.
For terms and reservations address DAK J.
MOORE. Proprietor.
THE COLONIAL
SEASIDE, OREGON
New. commodious boildln-r. well furnished,
containing al. modern convenlehces; beautiful!--
situated and adjacent to the big- bath
house; fine view of ocean. For further par
ticulars write.
The Pump That Pleases Large Hopgrowers Is
Myers Hydraulic
A Big Pump that will stand lots of pressure.
One that will do the business for you as it has done for others.
Salem. Oregon, 10-2099
Mitchell. Lewis & Staver Co., Portland. Oregon:
Gentlemen: Last Spring we purchased from you two Myers Hydraulic -Spray Pumps and wish to
state for the benefit of Oregon and Washington Hopgrowers. that they have no equal. Our yards
are trelllsed with what Is Itnown as Wheatland California trellis, which Is 20 feet high and we find
no trouble In forcing Quassia and Whale OH Soap spraying compound twice the height of the trel
lis with a Myers Hydraulic Spray Pump. Since we purchased the above pumps we have also pur
chased another large 500-acre yard near here and intend to furnish same with Myers Hydraulic
Spray Pumps. When Oregon and Washington Hopgrowers use hlgn trellis and spray their hops,
THE HACKNEY COTTAGE
SEAVIEW, WASH.
Now open for the season. Home comforts,
excellent table board, centrally located, beau
tiful surrounding, fine surf bathing, a most
desirable place for amllles. Tell the con
ductor to let you off at Hackney Cottage.
Seavlew second stop after leaving llwaco.
P. O. address, llwaco. Wash,
99
lice and mould will be unknown. Very truly.
Here's Another
Smaller and costs less than qne
above, but just as simple, same valves
and plunger, etc.
Barrel Pumps, Bucket Pumps and
the only Knapsack7 Pump with an'
agitator. Pumps that throw a fine,
misty, penetrating, insect .killing
spray. Pnmps that last and do the
business "while they last.
(Signed)
g-S-B"B""iHB"--B"-BJ
JtBm IBB
6 Pi:
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jS,
1 WW
1 I ? T 1 ::
HORST BROS.
Has solid plunger, long lever, 36-inch air chamber, powerful
agitator, most simple, a common wrench is all that's
"needed to tajie it apart and set it up. Has two discharge valves,
two sprays can be used at once, drains completely.
Portland, Oregon, Nov. 3, 1S99.
Messrs. Mitchell. Lewis & Sta'ver Co.. City: V
Gentlemen: I woulj say that I have used In my hopyard the Myers
Hydraulic Spray Pump and that I have given same a thorough test. I
find that in workmanship and adaptability it far exceeds anv of the sev
eral pumps that I have Heretofore tried. It bears every Indication ot
behig,a durable as well aa effective piece of maehjnery. Yours very truly,
(Signed) J. W. HILL.
-Myers-Make.s Them!
Mitchell Sells Them!
All Wise Hopgrowers Use Them!
Spokane,
Boise, Ida.
Sajem, Or.
Medford,
Or.
FIRST
and
TAYLOR
STS.
PORTLAND,
OREGON
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