TIIE SUNDAY OHEGONIAIf, PORTLAKD, MAY 13, 1906. 9 nfc imiipip JIIU V UG U E FOR XPDSITION t. Ballot Composes "Made in Oregon" March for the Fair. IS VOLUNTARY EXILE agulshed German Musician, Dla polnted in Love Affair, Conceals- His Identity After Coming to America. luntarily an exile from the father- there Is now In Portland employea Journalist one of the most eminent clans of Germany, and who when un; man, was a protege ot'Em- r William I. His name Is Robert it, and he Is now employed on the hrlchten, ' a German publication. B X Robert Ballot. which he Is assistant editor. He Germany about ten years ago be- se of an unhappy love affair, and then hag devoted much of his e to mining in Alaska. Ballot is the composer of the do In Oregon"' march, which he has Icated to the Oregon captains of in- try. His composition will be the clnl march during "Made In Oregon-' ositlon. Mr. Ballot plays more than IlftVrent instruments, and is a com er of no little prominence. In Ger- ny. he Is known throughout the ntry, but since he has been In this ntry he has evaded notoriety. He leader of the opera and member he famous Philharmonic Orchestra Berlin. He has a $3000 violin, which presented, to him by William I. of many. Mr. Ballot is but 40 years of Like Hero In Fiction. , (Many a hero In fiction has been de to lead a far less Interesting life in has Professor Ballot. When but imall boy he -wrote a letter to Wlll x I of Germany, requesting that a lin be given him. There was some ng In the letter that was different m ordinary appeals or requests, and ! Emperor made Inquiries aborut the He round that the youth was ssessed of undoubted musical talent, l had him sent to the Imperial Hlh liool of Musle In Berlin. It was then t He gave young Ballot the $3000 lin. Ballot graduated from the veri est schools' of musle In Germany, and s a pupil oT the famous Wlrth and lers. 'He soon brought fame to his me because of several excellent enm- sitlons,- and he has been-leader , at nous times of several of the most ominent . hands and orchestras In rmany: 'As a teacher of music he is also known. ' An unhappy lovr'affalr Mlscourne-eri hd disheartened him and he Imerlca to endeavor to forget. He waa epiy in love witn the daughter of a Unitary high In ecclesiastical ci-rcles a necause or his being a worldly uslclan the father forbade the mar .ige. This cast a shadow over the e of the young and rising musician Mich will probably remain with aim run death. Known to Few In America. I'pon coming to America he took iin to conceal his Identity and thnre re but few in this country who know no no is. He went to Alaska where he et Professor K. R. Blochberger. of ortland. who was United States Con- ilar olTlcer for the Kootenai district. rofessor Ballot worked- in different Ines, but Is now said to have several ry valuable properties In British Co mbiu. from which he expects to real e a large sum of money. Professor mn un-ttiiiH iiiierestea witn xrores- r Blochberger In mining property. During the last few months Profes r Blochberger, editor of the "Nach ichten," has been In poor health and e wrote and requested that Pfofessor allot come to Portland and assist in inducting the newspaper. He has been i Portland since February and but few ersons of this city are acquainted 1th him. Formerly Professor Ballot Kas in rather poor health but now he - strong and In the best of condition. he outdoor life of the Far Northwest as been a boon to his health. LAST OF FERRIS WHEEL down Vp With Dynamite and Re duced to Scrap Steel. CHICAGO, May 12. Blown to pieces .y a monster charpe of dynamite, the 'erris wheel came to an ignomlnous end enterday at St. Louis, after & varied areer of IS years. At Its ending It wai inwept and unsung. Constructed as one of the engineering oats of a century, the wheel first was feature of the Chicago's World s Fair, n 1S?3 Then for a long period of un .rofitable inactivity It towered in an musement park at North Clark street nd Wrightwood avenue, and Anally was emoved to t uouia to form, for the second time, the huge mechanical marvel f a great exposition. For more than a nonth heavy wagons laden with 4X cms of steel of Us construction lura iered through Chicago's streets. The old wheel, which had become St. ,ouls" white elephant, died hard. It re mired i"0 pounds of dynamite to put It ut nf business. The first charge waa ex ploded under the supports at the north (side of the structure, wrecking its found 'atloa and permitting the wheel to drop 4b the ground, a matter of but a few feet. As the wheel settled It slowly turned, with its bottom as a Bupport, and then after tottering a moment like a huge giant in distress, collapsed slowly. With in a few minutes it was a tangled mass of steel and Iron, 30 or 40 feet high. The huge axle, weighing 74 tons, dropped slowly with the remnants of the wheel, crushing the smaller braces and steel framework. When the mass stopped set tling it bore no resemblance to the wheel which was so familiar to Chicago and to St. Louis and the 00,000 amusement-seekers from all over the world, who, in the days when it was In opera tion, made the trip to the top of its height of 264 feet and then slowly around and down to the starting point. Following the blast that wrecked the wheel but which failed to shatter Its foundation, came an explosion of another charge of 100 pounds of dynamite. The sticks were sunk in holes drilled in the concrete foundations that supported the pillars on the north side of the wheel. The wheel was the wonder of two con tinents, by reason of its cost of $360,000, its dimensions and Its utter uselessness. It waa the rival of the Eiffel tower, of Paris. Chicago was glad to get rid of It, and St. Louis is said to have wit nessed Its destruction with satisfaction. George Washington Gale Ferris, presi dent of a Pittsburg engineering firm, originated the idea of the wheel that bore his name, taking the notion from a bicycle and adapting the constructive principles of steel bridges In Its erection. Ferris financed the wheel, built it in Pittsburg, erected tt at the Chicago Co lumbian Exposition, and took in $750,000 at SO cents a ride. Then Ferris took a kaleidoscopic trip to Europe. Later he lost all interest in the monster, and died In Pittsburg of tuberculosis, aged only 40. The stockholders, who had made 100 per cent profit out of the wheel in 1893, later leased the ground in North Clark street and re-erected it there. Ferris' Wheel Park was not a success, and the wheel was taken down again and. re moved to St. Louis on June S, 1903. The cost of taking It down was $40,000. Its ruins are estimated as worth $8000 as scrap iron. TO EVERETT OREGON A WASHINGTON RAILROAD FILES ARTICLES. Portland Is Glvea as tbe Chief Place of Business and the Capital Stock la Put at a .Million Dollars. SALEM, Or., May 12. (Speclal.) Artlcles of incorporation were filed in the Secretary of State's office today by the Oregon & Washington Railroad Company, with principal office at Portland. The expressed object Is to build a railroad ' from Portland to Everett, Wash., on such route as may be selected by the board of directors. W. W. Cotton, William Crooks and W. A. Bobbins, all of Portland, are the in corporators and the capital stock Is $1,000,000, in shares of $100 each. Another railroad organization to file articles today is the Northwestern Railroad Company, with Parley I Wil liams, George F. Egan and Frederick D. Hall as Incorporators. The object is to construct and operate a line of rail road and telegraph from a point on the Oregon Shoft Line railroad between Huntington and the Snake River near Nagle In a general northerly direction along the Snake River to or near Lew lston, Idaho. The capital stock, is $1,000,000 in shares of $100 each. Other articles of Incorporation, filed during the past week are: . Empire Lumber Company. Limited; principal office. Ontario. Or.: capital Stock, $50,000; Incorporators. L, Adam, El mer A. Clark and M. E. Thayer The American Bank & Trust Company: principal office. Klamath Falls, Or.; cap ital stock, $100,000; Incorporators, Fred Melhase. William T. Shlve and Charles E. Worden. , ' . The Riplev-Oregon Fruit-Food Com pany; principal office. La Grande, Or. ; capital stock. $40,000: Incorporators. W. F. Ripley u. Oldenburg and James Ireland. Llllard Irrigation Company; principal office, Baker City, Or.; capital stock. $5C00; Incorporators. J. W. Llllard, Susan B. Llllard and Willis .W. Llllard. The Rainbow Gold & Platinum Mining Company; principal office. La Grande, Or : capital stock. $750,000: Incorporators. E. A. Stephens. Allie Stephens and Carrie Ci Stephens. ' The Molson Hop Farm Company, of Rlckreall. Or.; capital stock, $50,000: prin cipal office, Portland, Or.; incorporators. Albert J. Ray. Clifton N. McArthur and Earl C. Bronaugh. , , . Sanford, Sill Company; principal office, Shaniko. Or.; capital stock, $25,000: Incorporators. A. C. Sanford. H. B. Sill and J. L. Hadlcy. Langlois OIL Company; principal office, Portland, Or.; capital stock, $150,000; In corporators, James O. Spencer, E. R. Goucher and J. A. C. Freund. Guard Printing Company; principal of fice. Eugene, Or.; capital stock. $20,000; Incorporators. EL L. Campbell, J. R. Campbell and Charles H. Fisher. Oregon & Washington Railroad Com pany; principal office. Portland. Or.: cap ital stock. $1,000,000; Incorporators, W. W. Cotton. William Crooks and W. A. Rob bins. Corvallis Meat Company; principal of fice. . Corvallls, Or.; capital stock, $5000; Incorporators. J. C. Hammel, E. R. Bry son and George F. Brown. Lane-Beckwlth Company: principal of fice, Pendleton, Or.; capital stock. $5000; Incorporators. J. F. Lane, J. S. Beckwlth and Fred Fontaine. TREES AND H0USEM0VERS Some Day There May Be Reform, But When? ' PORTLAND, May 1. (To the Editor.) The results of our damage case against a housemover for the cutting of shade trees are unimportant from a money standpoint. Possibly one dollar is the value of the trees; probably the Jury thought they would grow again. So they will, and 14 years from now It took that time to grow them the gap caused will be filled, and the trees in 1920 be again ripe for a similar heroic treatment, when the man of the house Is absent. The public should know that there is an ordinance Imposing penalties for the cut ting of trees without the consent of the owner. These penalties the housemover will figure in as a part of the cost of moving; if to this be added the sum of $1 damages, the fixed charges - are easily determined. Let the merry work go on; it does not cost much. Irving Street, "and Twentieth from Irving to Kearney were strewn with the' wreck age, but the house was saved. I am wondering, however, whether had the telephone or the electric light company cut the trees because they interfered with Iheir wires, thus increasing their cost of maintenance, and a like damage action . had been brought, the damage would have been greater or less. Permit me to add that the lover of the tree should not be discouraged at the out look. The Oregonian has made a good suggestion by its Invitation to property owners to unite to prevent the cutting of trees by the housemover. the telephone or electric light companies, when the spirit moves them. Speaking for myself, I shall be glad to co-operate In this movement In any way. financial or otherwise, even at the expense of submitting to dollar ver dicts. ZERA SNOW. Dented a Marriage License. Elmer Pratt, a young man, was grievous ly disappointed yesterday afternoon be cause Deputy County Clerk Rose declined to Issue a license to permit him to wed Grace McKlnney. an attractive girl. 17 years old. The legal age limit is IS years, and if the bride is over the age of 16 a J-Jidden Qangers Forewarned is forearmed." Before a man can protect himself from peril of any kind, he mast know where the danger lurks. We have to fight against heavy odds in tha sale of SINCERITY CLOTHES. And the reason is that 6b per cent of the clothes are "faked" into ihaft "Doped" by Dr. Goose, the Hot Flat iron, to mask Defecti in the Clothes. It takes more time, and tosts more, to de sign, and sew, and revise by conscientious hand-work. But clothes cannot be made sinter ely without it. SINCERITY CLOTHES mean correct style, perfect fit, and a guaranty of work manship and materials. . Flat-Iron style and fit, produced by Heat and Moisture, disappear quickly with damp ness and wear. Which will yu have? SINCERITY CLOTHES are for sale in most communities. If you object to Flat-Iron trickery in yeur clothes, let your next purchase be a SINCERITY suit. Send a a-cent stamp for " The Test," which is a sure way to detect the work of old Dr. Goose," the Hot Flat- Iron Fakir. You will find this label in SINCERITY CLOTHES: "SINCERITY CLOTHES" : MADE AND BDARANTEEO IT KUH, NATHAN AND FISCHER CO. GHIGA80 license can be issued by the written con sent of the parent or guardian. Young Pratt told Mr. Rose that he thought the father of his affianced would agree to the marriage, but was not sure that her mother would assent to the nuptials. DEMOCRATIC MEETING. Citizens Gather to Indorse the Candl- dates of the Party. A citisens' meeting was held last night In Alisky Hall that was largely attended. Senator Gearln, Governor Chamberlain and SherifT Word were Indorsed for re election and William Horan and George L. Hutchln were given a vote of confi dence in their race for the Legislature. The efforts of those present will be used to bring about the election of all these candidates. "Citizen" Parker presided and made an address, telling of the good work of the three Democrats who were making a fight for re-election at the head of the ticket. Having served with credit to themselves and the party, Mr. Parker believed they should be supported by all nonpartisans. Short talks were made by others along the same line, and It was the general opinion of the gathering that those who were meeting heavy opposition should be supported by citizens generally. The gath ering then formally indorsed the forego ing candidates. There was but little discussion, and the meeting lasted but a short time. A. series of meetings has already been held since the primaries by the "citizens" with the object of lining up the independent vote. Harrlman Line Incorporates. Incorporation articles of the Oregon 4 Washington Railroad Company were filed in the County Clerk's office yes terday by W. W. Cotton, William Crooks and W. A. Robbins, who are associated with the O. R. & N. Co. The purpose of the company is to build a railroad from Portland to Everett, by such route as the board of directors may select, and the capital stock of the corporation Is $1,000,000. (Piles Don't Suffer Longer, You Can Have Instant Belief and a Lasting Core by Using Pyramid Pile Cure. A Trial Packs Mailed Free t All. The rectum, like the mouth, is lined with' that soft, satiny material known as mucous membrane. Piles Is a disease of that membrane and the blood vessels that He under it. Fissure and Fistula affect the same membrane and belong to the same family. Pyramid Pile Cure slipped into the bowel, melt and spread themselves over the diseased and painful surface and act just as a salve would if the trouble was on the outside of the body' and could be easily seen and gotten at. The immediate relief they give even in the most agonizing cases will startle you, as It has already startled many thousands of "doubting Thomases" before you, who have tried everything and sent for ths sample package, firmly convinced that they would again be disappointed. . But they weren't. Pyramid Pile Cure don't disappoint. They cure. They are tor sale at all druggists at 50 cents a box, and are worth an even hundred to the person who needs them. Mr. John Byrne, of 230S Second avenue. New York 0ty. writing under, date of January 17, 1906, says: "I received the sample and used it right away. I got so much relief from it after 30 years' suffer ing that I bought a 60 cent box. The al most unbearable pain Is almost gone and my fistula has almost disappeared. I had given up all hope of ever being cured. I assure you, gentlemen. I will use every effort to maka any of my friends trv them, as I can guarantee they are a sura cure. Or if you want to prove this matter at our expense, before purchasing, send your name and address to the PYRAMID DRUG CO. 6388 Pyramid building. Mar shall. Michigan, and receive a trial pack age free by return mall. V.S. &f)e POPULAR QUAINT FURNITURE The most artistic and the mospractical of all furniture classified as "axis and crafts." The ' 'fumed" finish is acquired by placing furniture in an air-tight chamber, where vessels containing ammonia are placed, the fumes of which penetrate the grain of the wood, taking from twelve to twenty-four hours. It is then finished in oil and wax, giving it a rich, nut-brown tone, and making it a most durable and harmonious finish. In the "quaint furniture" designs of today are still preserved the simplicity and good workmanship which was so characteristic of the original old handicrafts. These designs possess a distinct and attractive individuality that contributes to the perfect beauty and harmony of the home.' OiLiif i i i j rz? ill ii r Yu ' 8l!r"'"Ts " For almost every part of the h6me the hall, the living-room, the library, the dining-room and the den, the quaint furniture designs are practically adaptable and .appropriate this because of its strong, durable and "comfortable construction. ' The quaint copper and brass trimmings, 'which are used on many pieces, are the conception and production of the craftsmen designers and builders. These trim mings and. the Spanish Morocco leather cushions and upholstery, add greatly to the odd, artistic beauty of the quaint designs. Our display of quaint furniture in fumed and weathered oak is complete, in that it comprises the foremost ideas of the craftsmen designers and builders. "Stickley Bros.' Quaint Fur niture," a booklet of colored plates, showing correct treatment of walls, panelling, hangings, floor cover ings, and arrangement of furniture, will be sent free upon request. " . MANY EXCLUSIVE EFFECTS IN- CARPETS AND 1 JZVr " '1 'Hi I 11 RUGS USIK- a T The most popular patterns in every weave and quality, and in a variety of pleasing color tone effects. ; Such is our gathering of everything in reliable floor fabrics the season's best and most desirable patterns in the different qualities of Axminsters, Wiltons, Velvets, Body Brussels and Tapestry Brussels. Our showing of floor fabrics of every description, in both Jarpets and Rugs, embraces many exclusive effects. We -are agents in this territory for the Hodge's Fiber Carpets and Rugs. SALE OF PORCH PIECES A seasonable opportunity is here offered in this special sale of Outdoor Furniture. These pieces,. Arm Rockers, Arm Chairs, Settees and Swinging Settees, are constructed of ash, in the weathered finish, and being strong and comfortable, make most desirable, pieces for porch, lawn and Summer cottage. Pieces will "be sold separately or in suites. 'Sale commences tomorrow. Settee like cut above Special. '. .$3.25 Ann Rocker to match Special .2.75 Arm Chair to match Special ....$2.50 Swinging Settee Special ..i . , $3.00 Rocking Settee Special $3.50 NO. 0614. Regular value $18.00 Sale Price 9 8.25. SPECIAL MAY SALE ' OF RECLINING GO-CARTS Owing to the fact that in the near future we will be located in our handsome, new store, at the corner of Morrison and Seventh streets, we have decided to reduce our line of Go-Carts, with the intention of lessening stock of same for removal Eight different patterns constitute this special-Sale line, and we have liberally applied extreme special values in order to close out this particular stock. These Go-Carts are all of standard elastic gear, with adjustable front and back, patent foot-brake, etc. The special prices here mentioned include Go-Carts com plete with parasols, cushions and other attachments. This sale commences tomorrow morning. v NO. 963. Regular value $15.00 Sale price .7S Go-Cart Pattern No. 801; Eegular value $12.75 ; Sale price ............$5.25 Go-Cart, Pattern No. 802; Regular value $13.50; sale price $5.50 Go-Cart, Pattern No. 966; Regular value- $15.50 ; sale price $6.75 Go-Cart, Pattern No. 805; Regular value $17.00 ; sale price $7.50 NO. 0588. ' Regular value . I1S.S0 Sale price ..$8.50 IN ORDERING BY MAIL, SPECIFY NUMBER, ALSO COLOR OF PARASOLS AND CUSHIONS NO. 8O6. Regular value 16.75 Sale price TXtO MAY 1J TO 26 "Made in Oregon" Exhibits MAY 19 TO 26 ft,. fYOURCREWTj) 1 IS GOOD i C0MPLETE-H005E-FURni511ER5l JAKE YOUR T ) WW TERMS ,j MAY 19 TO 26 "Hade In Oregon" Exhibits MAY 19 TO 26