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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1906)
THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, OCTOBER 21. 1906. LIFE IS CURE FREE IF YOU WANT TO KNOW WHAT SMARTLY DRESSED MEN WILL WEAR THIS "SEASON," ASK BEN SELLING L Days Are Spent in Calling, Reading and Sleeping . Crossing Atlantic. THE SEASON'S CHOICEST OFFERINGS in ' . MESSAGES BY WIRELESS ABOARD mm llly Paper Is Published Aboard Vessel With News Bulletins by Way of Marconi's Won. derlul Invention. BY E. W. -WRIGHT. R. M. S. LUCANIA, nearlnjf Queans town, Oct. 4. (Staff Correspondence.) Previous to this week it has always been a source of much wonder to me why sucn a. large number of people on leaving the united states tooK tne trouble to write their impressions of the voyage from this land of the free. A casual study of the metropolitan dailies and country weeklies for many years has convinced me that this habit Is not confined to any particular class, for people in all walks of life have taken a crack at it. I now have the answer. It is all so easy to understand after one has made the trip. We are now nearly five days out from New York an J the novelty of the trip was ex hausted four days ago. There is noth ing to do but eat, sleep and read, or take a turn round the deck and watch the everlasting, unchanging and seem ingly lllimitablo blue water merge Into the everlasting, unchanging sk line 'way off yonder. I know now what tne Ancient Mariner would have done had there been a place to write on that craft from which he noticed that the. Suns rose and eet And rose and yet There was no land in sight. - He would have got out his pencil and jotted down his impressions of the trip from snore to shore. It Is this everlasting monotony that drives 'em to it, and that alone I plead in exten uation ol this letter. Lucania Can Go Some. As will be noted by the heading, I am gcing over on the Lucania. She Is smaller and slower than some of the new flyers, but the others were all otherwise engaged and could not take me when I was ready to go. Still the Lucania has points of superiority over some of the craft we know so well at Portland. She is 620 feet long, has en Sines of 30,00) horsepower and can reel off 500 miles a day without dis arranging the furniture. So much has been written of the solemnity of those , heartbreaking .leavetakings as "the good ship sailed away" that -Ralph Stuart and James IMontague volunteered to come down and cry i few tears for me when we left New York. Neither appeared, Mon tague still retaining one of his char acteristics, which were so pronounced Jn the old days on The Oregonian be fore he was discovered by Hearst. Stuart was so much impressed with the tale of prosperity in the West which I told him the night before that he was busy cancelling Eastern en gagements and preparing to fly to the one-night stands of the Golden West, at least that was the inference I gained frojp his telephone farewell. I excused ih0 both, however, for Montague with his litle hammer is very busy nailing campaign lies for Hearst just now. Besides, there were tears enough to go round. At 1 o'clock sharp last Saturday the Lucania's gangplank was hauled ashore, and a few moments later the big liner hacked out of her slip, brush ing past the end of the pier, where a few hundred friends of the passengers were waiting to wave a last good-by and shed some more tears. The get away stunt on the American end of a foreign journey varies but slightly, and that only in degree, from that which you. can see down at Ash-street dock in the Summertime when the Pot ter pulls out for the beaches, or at Ainsworth dock when Mr. Harriman's pilstial packets sail for San Fran cisco. Tortuous w York Channel. It. has been several decades since a traveler was regarded as facing the unknown when he took ship for a for eign chore, and the speed and regu larity of these modern ferryboats have eliminated a good deal of the romance of the sa and have incidentally re moved considerable cause for undue grifi at the gangplank. The echoes of the Lucama's long-drawn-out farewell whittle had hardly died away when th call for lunch sent the passengers below quite a few of them impressed with the belief that tneir first meal would probably be tne last for the voyage, but quite a number remained on deck to get a final view of New York. The bis liners leaving New York proceed with caution as they move down the harbor. The channel to. sea is so thoroughly marked that any able seaman who could distinguish a red buoy from a black one would have but little difficulty in keeping the steamer in the channel between them, but there are so many steamers, small and large, darting round that it is necessary to keep the big liners under very moder ate headway until they are well clear of the harbor Vessels of moderate draft ran make a fairly straight course, but the big steamers follow a winding route, making a sharp right angle turn just before heading out past Sandy Hook. The American liner St. Paul pre ceded us by a few minutes, and a big French liner was a few minutes be hind us, so that when the Lucania swung round to head out past Sandy Hook the three formed the corners of a perfect triangle. Considerable time is wasted in making this wide detour, and New York is contemplating deep ening tho more direct channel now used by the small steamers. A steam pilot boat was waiting off fandy Hook and the Lucania paused long ' enough to discharge the pilot who bad keot her from running over the numerous buoys which lined the lane through which she escaped from New York. The pilot also took with him mail bag containing numerous messages from toe grief-stricken pas sengers, no doubt tellinjr John not to forget to wind the clock. Mary to be sure and wcite every day: for Gladys, ' There, little girl don't cry": for Alger non, be true to me while I am at f ea " Pirates Aboard the Liner. The late Mr. Cunard. like the late Mr. Pullman, was undoubtedly a great believer in thrift, both of them appar ently insisting on their hired men col lecting the greater yart of their sti pend from the traveling public. Mr. Pullman's dusky brigands. 9 armed to the teeth with whisk brooms and liv ing in a free country. . of: course take your money away in a more obnoxious fashion than is followed by the min ion? on board the transatlantic steam- ' , A M V" 1 f - 4 -j "V, 1 i , ' 'V ', ers. who pay homage to a king or some other royal dignitary, but the underpaid hirelings on tne steamers can give the railroad man with the whisk broom points on the tipping game that he ought to know. There are. of course, a few employes like the stateroom steward, waiter. and two or three others who can ren der some equivalent for a tip. but they constitute only a small portion of the employes who exercise extreme clev erness in their efforts to place the traveler under slight obligation to them. Eastbound travel is light now. and the Lucania has only about 100 first cabin passengers, while the second cabin and steerage will hardly bring tne number up to the total reached by the crew of over 400. The North Pacific Coast Is well repre sented, considering the size of the list. Frank Waterhouse. the stenmRhin mnn and Captain James Gibson, stevedore, are on board from Seattle. The Boscowitz Bros., who have been big fur dealers in Victoria for years, are going over, and N. H. Webster, a Spokane mining man. is also a passenger. Aside from a few Atlantic Coast men. the remainder of the cabin passengers are globetrotters or Eng lishmen bound home from a trip to the States. Longs lor Dr. Brougher. Life aboard a Cunard liner Is staid, sober, eminently respectable and at times almost oppressive. There was a very en tertaining young preacher on board whom we hoped would be called upon for a Sun day sermon, but the Captain did not take any chances. He. himself, put on a pair of black gloves and a somber air and held one of those old-style services which were in use when the first Cunarder came out in 1840. I never liked the circus antics of Rev. Dr. Brougher in his vaudeville ser mons, but somehow, while listening to the kind and -well-meaning old skipper re lieve himself of his stereotyped task. I could not help wishing that at least a smattering of the Brougher vaudeville might be introduced to dispel the funereal air which hung heavy in the Lucania's saloon. According to the - unofficial log when Christopher Columbus "blared the trail" across the Atlantic, some of his supersti tious tars got to "seeing things." and. indulged in an occasional mutiny on ac count of these mysterious signs, symbols and noises. - Those mysterious voices which whispered to the crew of Captain Chris, sending cold chills down their backs, still haunt the sea. but Marconi has them in working harness, and every morning since we left New York a bulle tin has been posted notifying passengers that communication will be established during the day with different steamers bound West, and more than 1000 miles at sea we were receiving messages from Cape Cod. Messages Far at Sea. There is something positively uncanny about wireless telegraphy at sea. when the messages from a steamer hundreds of miles away begin dropping in out of the sky. The system has opened up great possibilities for the Cunard Daily Bulle tin, which appears every morning. The typographical style of the paper is ex cellent, the presswork perfect, and the news department abominable: the only live items of interest are the daily runs of the ship, the weather conditions and the position of the ships with which wire less telegraphy was established. This morning's news, under the head "Marconigrams Direct to the Ship. Re ceived from Reuter's Agency, via Mar coni Station, Poldhu, Cornwall." has a New. York dispatch regarding Willie Hearst on the Panama Chinese labor question, which was all set forth In full face type in Willie'a paper before we left New York. 6ur daily Cuban dis patches have the same warmed-over fla vor with no new news. Marconi's system is leagues ahead of anything of Its kind ever imagined, but the news it carries to the Cunard Daily Bulletin is ancient. Aside from half a dozen sticks of this news, there are 32 pages of the Bulletin, made up of ads and reading miscellany. The latter, like the captain's sermon, is of the vintage of the early '40s. so old, musty and heavy that It would make the country editors- "boiler-plate" read like hot stuff straight from the wire. There is a rumor afloat (all rumors axe afloat at sea) that there will be a concert on board tonight. It has caused such intense excitement, even for this intense ly exciting trip, that I cannot write any more at present. Couples Elope and Marry. NORTH YAKIMA, Wash., Oct. 20. (Special.) Ralph Newman and Miss Effie Belle Smith, and Charles L. Warren and Mrs. Angeline V. Cully, of Freewater. Or., eloped from their homes and came to this place today and were married by Justice J. A. Taggart. AT THE HOTELS. The Portland C. O Roskoten. O. J- Fos Koten. Miss M. C. Roskoten, Peoria. Ill ; Mrs. J. T. Wilson, Jersev Shore. Pa. ; P. C. Hol laed, C. Roe, walla Walla: E. S. Davis. U. S. R. S. : G. W. Bates. San Francisco. J. Nuerr. Boston: L. M. Rice. Seattle; W. J. Codman and wife Bo6ton: J. H. Williams, Denver: W. F. Malcolm and wife, Berkeley. Ca.1. ; C. H. Haswell, Seattle: W. E. Guerin, New Mrs. C. H. Treat, Los Angeles; C. B. Rhodes. E. Biddle. O. Hayter. Dallas. Or.: M Hart. Seattle; F. W. Jackson. X. Kauftman. A Vilbois, J. Lertenge. R. O. White, H. Dodel. J. Oestmacher, San Francisco; H. C. Fried man. Chicago: R. E. Devoy, New York; I H. Booth Corvallls. W. F. Mills. Newport; L. Willlts and family, Kansas City. Mo.; F. w. Hatcn, Chicago; K. Wilson. Seattle: G. E. Truman, J. J. McElroy and wife, Oak land; E. J. O'Rourke, J. Dewy, J. Stern, Duluth: E. E. Bidsman, W. W. Ball Wilket barre; B. Herbst. New York; C. B. Carter and wife. Yreka. Cal.; A. C. Levy. Chicago. J. T. Huston and wife. Pendleton; F. Roe. New York; Mrs. C. Rast. S. Straub. Wallace. Idaho; O. K Velton. W. Ellis and wife. Se attle: H. E. Dagne and wife Tacoma: F. W. Remick and wife. Boston; G F. Kevins, Chi cago; S. H. Lutuy, Peoria, 111. "The Oregon L. R. Traver, Pendleton. F H. Yeaton Ilwaco; E. J. Brannfck. city: H. K. Miller. Los Angeles: J. W. Douglas. Den ver; W. A. Candall. Alameda; R. F. Strauss and wife. New Jersey; C. H. Chandler, Pittsburg. Pa.; Max L- Creemalur, Boston, A I Ferguson, Tacoma: W. B. Swack hamer, Mrs. K. McKenie. Union; J. A. Miller. Chicago; William H. McWninney, Aberdeen; W. Keran. Detroit. Mich.: George F. Stone. Seattle: J. F. Mengies and wife, Roslyn; C. A. Elliott. Tacoma; F. Hach mann. R. E Allen. E. Esslinger, St. Paul. J. B. Trumbull. San Francisco; George W. James and wife. Grand Haven. Mich ; Ben G. Stone, Wa'.la Walla; J. V. Lake. St. Louis: A. R. Nail. Olympia; F. W. Bullock. Jr. Chicago; H. W. Moulton. P. J Smiley. T. w. Kougnton. Seattle: Charles R. Sligh. Grand Rapids Mich.-: W. P. Lumpkin, San Francisco: Mrs. Frank P. Talkington. Cora Talkington. Salem; T. M. Gatch. CorvalHs; Mr. and Mrs. W. Ridehalgh. Mrs. G. W. Wood. Miss A. Wood. Astoria; A- W. Glad hill. Chambersburg, Pa. ; S. C. Sweetland, Portland; George T. Rogers. Salem: L. D. W. Shelton. Seattle; Tom O'Brien, Portland; R. Hirshneld, New York: E. A. Norton, Berkeley, Cal. . J. J. McKinnon. J. W. Wel ton and fanwly. Mrs. E. B. Bodlam, J. w. Spencer, 3ar. Francisco; Herman Roper, New York: W. R. Caldwell Portland; R. C. Bruckmann. San Francisco; W. A. Huntley and wife. Oregon City; W. F. Matlock and wife. J. A- Boxie. Miss Bertha, Matlock. Pen dleton: J. P. Hearst and wife. Chicago; W. N. Dill. Decatur. III.; W. C. Smith. Jr.. Chi cago; R. C. Shatton. Salem. Ed M. Smith and wife. Seattle: W. N. Clark. Cincinnati: O. E. Silvertnorn. Portland: C. H. Bayles and wife, H. G. Stevens. Cascade;. W. C. Stearns, D. B. Hopkins. Portland: H- E. Clay. M. D . Salem: M. A Vogt The Dalles; A. H. Eaton. Eugene; W. H. Smith, New York. P. H. Graton, Ilwaco; M. Otis and wife. Portland. The Perkins Mrs. Frances Hosraer. Mies Eunice Fuller, Silverton; J. Johnson, Wood- RAINCOATS and OVER FOR MEN AND BOYS Are now at your disposal. The TAILORING and FIT of these garments is equalled only by the highest class custom tailor, whose price " is almost double ours RAINCOATS for men $15 to $35 RAINCOATS for boys $5 to $10 OVERCOATS for men $15 to $50 VISIT OUR JUVENILE DEPARTMENT for everything that is NEWEST and BEST , in BOYS' and CHILDREN'S wear burn: C. W. 'Rollins. St. Louis: H. C. Sloth. S. Frank. Denver; J. Allen, The Dalles; J. McGregor. Hooper; Miss Z. Fidler. Miss A. Walker. Catlin; S. Rich. Salem; J. R. Henry, Vancouver; E. A. Plummer Tacoma; J. H. Alexander, La Grande; G. Hamilton, Ska mokawa; W. H. McWhinney. Aberdeen; B. Bridges, citv; Dr. J. W. Reese. Los Angeles; Nellie A. Cooper, Bellingham: . J. T. Knold. Petersburg; Mrs. W. W. Dickson. Mis Dick son. Pembrook; Mr. Read. Tillamook; T. Copeland. Walla Walla; Mrs. H. Smith. Ore gon City; B.' Hoffman and wife. Carlton: T. Smith and wife. Camas. T. H. Staats, Reno: G. H. Small. Lora Small. L. Small. Silver Lake; R. Brown and wife. North Fork; F. Lundahl. Medford; J.'W. Knight. Gervals: O. P. Hoff. Salem; E. M. Cross, La Grande; J. J. Buxton. Tekoa; W. A. Coughanow. Payette; E. N. Thompson, Tekoa: H J. Van Elsberg. San Francisco: L. C. Palmer and wife, Vancouver; Gladys Russell. Shanghai; Mrs. J. H. Alexander. Seattle: A. B. Rog ers. St. Paul; G. Clark, Salem; J. N. Holmes and family, Olympia: J. . Murtha and wife. Miss Murtha. San Francisco; Inga Sailer. Bend; Mrs. J. Huntley. Floyd Huptley. Gold Beach; J. Williams. B. M. Smith, Houlton; G. W. McCollam and wife. F. A. McCollam. Los Angeles: M. R Cooper. Vancouver: T. Jefferson and wife, Dallas: H. C. Grady, La Grande; W. J. Matheson, Lewiston; T. A. Babeock. w. E. James. Seattle: J. C. Cooper. J. Jacob. Astoria; A. R. Henderson. Chinook: F. Palmer. Vancouver; E- W. Hutchison, city; Mrs. X. H. Welch. Nancy Welch, Astoria; H. Austin. Seattle: C. H. Babb, Fisher's: F. S. Hoffman. Astoria; Mrs. J. D. Houghton, Seattle; J. M. Wilson. Olvmpia: C- Mader, Seattle: Mrs. Wycoff and family. Brag; J. Wright, North Yakima; C F. McGabe, Seattle: O. T. Brown. Tho Dalles; A. Kindness, Colfax: L W. Rein hardt,: city; Mrs. A. M. Smith, TJmatilla. The Imperial F. J. Cran. San Francisco; Mr. and Mrs. J. Chute. Greater San Fran cisco; William W. Weare, Los Angeles; W. C. Thompson and wjfe, Fairbanks. Alaska: F. A. Mitchell, Seattle; S. Washburn and wife, Lebanon; H. E. McGrew. Newberg:- C. R. Abbott, L. Or Barnard. Kelso. William Fairlee. Pennineton Cal-: O. D. Doane. Tho Piles 14 Years Terrible Case Cured Painlessly With Only One Treatment of Pyra mid Pile Cure. Free Package Id Plain Wrapper Mailed to Every One Who Write. "I write to thank and also praise you for the good your medirine has done me. Oh, I can't find words to express my thanks to you all for such a t wonderful and speedy cure. I felt relieved after using your samples, so I sent right on to a druggist and bought a 50c box which I believe has cured me entirely. I feel more myself now than I have felt in over a year, for I have been bothered about that long with the piles. I ha-e told all my friends about this wonderful discovery and will recommend it whenr ever I can. You can use my name any where you choose. Respectfully. - Mrs. Chas. L. Coleman. Tullahoma. Tenn." Anyone suffering from the terrible tor ture, burning and itching of piles, will get instant relief from the treatment we send out free, at our own expense, in plain sealed package, to everyone send ing name ajad address. Surgical operation for piles is unneces sary and rarely a permanent success. Here you can get a treatment that, is quick, easy to apply and inexpensive, and free from the publicity and humilia tion you suffer by doctors examination. Pyramid Pile Cure is made in the form of "easy to u,se" suppositories. The coming of a cure is felt the moment you begin to use it, and your suffering ends. Send your name and address at once to Pyramid Drug Co.. 58 Pyramid Building. Marshall, Mich., and get, by return mail, the treatment we will send you free. In plain, sealed wrapper. After seeing for yourself what It can do. you can get a regular, full-size package of Pyramid Pile Cure from any druggist at 50 cents each, or, on re ceipt of price, we will mail you same our selves if he should not have it. COATS jiffagg 8B E Ja B ' ji8 Dalls; T. L. Huffman and wife, Spokane; W. p. Joinar, San Francisco; Mrs. R. S. Murphy, Kalama; John Brown and wife, Ramonoa, Wash.; R. J. F. Thurston. Craw fordsville; L. K. Page and wife. Salem; H. R. Kincaid, Eugene; H. B. Esrov, Gervals. Mrs. C. Sullivan, Albany; J. T. Hall and wife, M. M. Davis and wife, C- E. Glass, Eugene; Mrs. Alice TJ. Macleod. York; B. Van Dusen. Astoria; G. H. Westgatei D. P. Mason, I. Keller. Albany; Carl Rasch, J. A. Walsh Helena; W. H. Flanagan, Grant's Pass; C. W. Davis, Salem; W. B. Glaidon., Denver: Mrs. Rude, Mrs. Palmer, city; W. P. Ely, Kelso; C S. Irwin, Vancouver. Wash.: J. J. Thannen, A. H: Timms, city; Miss Bessie Kauear, Seattle; Laura Muir, Hillsboro; J. S. Plant, New York; Ellen N. Beamis. J. C. Brldwell, Forest Grove; J. R. Whitney and wife. A. McGUI, F. X. Boull lard, Salem; Mary E. Cowan. Eugene; Mrs. F. A. Erlxon, Salem,-Martin Murray, Louis ville Ky. ; Mrs. J. S. Antonelle, - Seattle; M. Voet, The Dalles; Charles H. Carter, Pen dleton; Wayne Howard, Heppner ; G. C. S. Swartz and wife, Seattle: Mrs. M. M. Haw kins. Mrs. J. A. Howerton, Ilwaco: J. T. Anderson and wife, city; J. H. Foney. The Dalles; Ed Kiddle. Island City; Mrs. W. S. Cooper. Wasco; Dr. John H. Levlson., New Albany, Mo.; Mrs. Ruth Lewis. San Fran cisco; J- A. Reeves, Kelso J. M. Fuller, J. B. Knox and wife, Seattle: Fred Wilson. The The Acme of Stove-Making Do you wish to see the prettiest and most econom ical heating stove in opera, tion? Come to our store and we'll show you. ' ! COVELL FURNITURE j Portland's Ag'ent for "Laurel Stoves and Ranges. ill - 5 V HSr r if J I I m all if 17 LEADING CLOTHIER Dalles: L. H. Dart, John Day; Paul Brown. Canyon City; G. E- Wiegand Arlington; Miss L. Armstrong, Chicago; Nina Roberts, Aberdeen , Albany football team J. Nel son. B Francis. M. Rogoway, G- H. Gib bons. E. Schultz, L. Wallace, A. Coates, Francis Coates. C- Cleek, C. D. Monteith, W. F. Jones. T. C. Ward, Albany; C. B. McCully. Pendleton; George Neil.. Forest Grove ; Mrs. George W. Burk, Sisson, Cal. ; Ed Fitzgerald. Minneapolis; George W. Rice, Seattle. The St. Charles C. R. Smith and wife, city; R. Manary, Scappoose; C. W. Christin son. Lexington ; H. C Hastings and wife, Latah ; O. Brown and wife. Stayburn ; H. I. Smith. Mayger; P. E. Gardner, city; D. Hays, Rickreal; J. B. Kerr; F. R. Wheeler and wife, Chicago; J. Eldridge; H. Baker, SUverton: A. G. Long and family.. Ostran der; C H. Klaasting. S. Roomitch, Oregon City; B. Jones, La Grande; G. D. Kerr, F. Thompson; C. B. Don. The Dalles: J. D. McDonald; 8. Doyle and wife, Lebanon; W. Roberts. Salem; H. Height, Astoria; H. R. Townsend, Woodburn; C. C. Wilson. Rainier: L. R. Connelsou and wife. Rainier: Mrs. C. Wiest, Eufaula; C. Paulsen. Oak Point: J. Strong. Astoria; P. Kintzmiller, Estacada ; C. Berg. Stella; H. Bryant. Albany; W. E. Thomas. Butler; F. Cole. Carson; H. T. Pe terson, Seattle; 'A. Jennings. Lowell: H. Jensen, Ostrander ; C -E. Burke and wife, Springbroorf: E- L. Krupp. Seattle: F. A. The Best by Test . ' " LO..iL 184 - 186 FIRST STREET Kinney, city; C. H. Ernst, St. Paul; R. C. Wilson. Stevensojn; S. M- Lilly. Corvallls: J. F. Lovelace, Estacada; V. Davis, Castle Rock; A. B. Puck. Grand Rapids; H. T. Peterson. Seattle; R. C Morris. J. Rimm, Eugene; Mrs. J. L. Morgan and family. Scappoose; A. H. Adams. J. Walsb. city; L. R. Lonneland and family. Rainier; J. G. Wahlstrom. Scappoose: T. J. Hutchison, cltl; J. A. Reeves. Kelso; S. B. Davidson. Epgene; K- H. Hanson. J. Chit wood. Astoria; L. Calvin. Marshland; W. Kraft, Duluth; B. C Bail, Muskegon. H. J. Johnson, city: J. Bacon. E. E. Innery; A G. Lesh and fam ily. Ostrander ; J C. Adams. Aberdeen ; G. . Limberg. Mount; Vernon; Miss Mabel Hick man. Springwafar: W. J. Miller, Llnnton: O. H. McClung. Boring; J Senecal, Dufur; H. G- Peerson. Seattle; H. Baker. Silver ton; J- Curtis. Harkinson; E. E- Marshall, citv; Dr. JN E. Burges, Victoria; V. Davis and wife. CasUe Rock; H. F- Julian, city; F. B. Holland. Eugene; W. M. Harold. B. Stephenson, G Geplie. W. G. Welder. F. An drews. O. Aadrews; L. Lang. Jefferson: P. Simpson; V. Hoblie. South Bend; C. J. Brit ten; L. H- Thoring, W. Smith; L. H. Les ter. Stayton; P. D. McDonald, Dallas. Hotel Doanellr. Tacoma. Wash. European plan. Xatea, 7& cenu to $2:6 per day. Fp 'bus. "Wait for Waverly Heights. 20th Century "Laurel" Heater A stove that will give you the greatest satisfaction at the least price. COMPANY ALL THE CREDIT YOU WANT