THiS U1-A UKhUUMAJT, FUKTLAiXD, OVK31BJEK 10, lOT. WHENCE THE NAME "OREGON"? Argument Eliminating Every Theory Except That it Was Derived From the Spanish "Aragon." BY WILLIAM H. GALVANI. THE beginning of things", or of sym bols for things, has from Indica tions, always been an item of great Interest to the mind of man. Hence, it Is that history, dealing in affairs pertaining to this world, as well as theology, dealing with matters relating to all other worlds, are so prolific. And, Indeed, It Is but quite natural that It ."hould be bo for It Is only in the light of the past of the race that the mind of man can suggest an explana tion for the present state of things; and, again, from the union of the two, the past and the present,, we may have a glimpse into the possible future,. That Is why history and theology are so prolific; It is our deep concern In the fu turefor in life, as Byron so well ob served, there Is no present that makes it so. That is why every subject had been handled, time and again, by everyone who thought of having a thought, or a ca pacity of transcribing facts or fancies', into words and phrases. Hence, it is that history, or the romance of history, in cludes not only persons, events and places that had an actual existence, but also de tailed accounts of events that never hap pened, wonderful biographies of persons that never existed, and graphic descrip tions of places that no geographer ever located nor moral eye had ever seen. We thus seem to know more of what we sup pose happened thousands of years ago than we do of what actually transpired but a few years ago, or, indeed, of what Is going on right now, before our very eyes, fo to speak. It Is my purpose to deal with the deriva tion of a symbol, or word a matter, it is true, not so important as that of an actual or tangible thing That word is OREGON, and the fact that the. subject, every now and then,' receives some attention from editors, statesmen, historians and even poets, must be my apology for submitting the following observations. Without going much Into detail, I beg to remark here that the various explana tions for the derivation of the name of Oregon have absolutely no foundation. Chief among these explanations are the "wild thyme" myth, an herb of unusual abundance found here by early explorers, but which herb has, with the advent of civilization, so mysteriously disappeared. Then comes the story of Jonathan Carver, who, while among the Indians on the waters of the Upper Mississippi, in 1766-6S, was informed by them that they heard of far away tribes in a territory of that name which meant the "great Rive.- of the West," as if that, even assuming this to be absolutely correct. Is sufficient an explanation. . Another solution is that offered by Junius Henri Brown, who. In 1842, in Hunt's Magazine, solves the great mys tery by attributing the whole mutter to a supposed tradition, said to have preValled among the Indians near Lake Superior, of a mighty river of the name of Oregon, emptying its waters Into the Pacific. Then, too, Bryant's celebrated "Thanatopsis," written In 1Si2, refers to the Columbia Riv er as the Oregon "where rolls the Ore gon, and hears no sound save his own Uashlngs." Finally, we have just been treated "to the latest folly In the world's great mad huuse, and by no less a person than Joa quin Miller, the poet of the Sierras; who, after 30 long years of contemplation and Inquiry, made the startling discovery that the name of Oregon Is derived from the Spanish Oye-cl-agua; hear the waters. Wonderful, most wonderful! Herein is practically a complete list of the explanations for the derivation of the name of Oregon, explanations which to anyone of a historical or linguistic turn of mind explain nothing, absolutely noth ing whatever. In the absence of documentary evidence, there Is but one way to get at th heart of this mystery. We must turn to the early settlers and to the homes they, left hehind them. Just as the Dutch, the Eng lish and the French on the Atlantic, or east coast of the New Continent, applied to their new homes the names of their former cities and districts, so, indeed, the settlers on the shores of the Pacific must have done likewise. Hence, since It is ad mitted on all sides that the first settlers on the Pacific were Spaniards, they, and they only, must have named the new ter ritory, and after some spot most dear to their hearts. Undoubtedly among those Spaniards, who first settled In what has become known as the Oregon country, there were many who fled from Spain be cause of the political tyranny and ecclesi astical persecution of those' days, so fa-' mous In Spanish history. The Kingdom of Aragon suffered and resisted those hor rors possibly more than any other terri tory under Spanish rule. When those ref ugees, or even if some of them, were but ordinary adventurers In search of fame or fortune, landed in the Oregon country, thev could not help finding here a picture so strongly resembling old Aragon. For. ' be It remembered that the Kingdom of Aragon, which Included Catalonia and Vu lencla, was noted for its long coast line, auspicious climate, beautiful valleys, dash ing rivers with exulting song Into the glit tering sunshine, forest-covered hillsides, and the majestic mountains of the Py renees with their snow-clad sentinels all of which familiar scenes of beauty and grandeur they found here in their new abode.- Under ich circumstances it is but natural that they should have trans ferred the old name to the new home. If the Indians used this name In later years. It Is not because of having invented It, but because they got this pure Spanish name from the Spanish settlers, and they re tained it even though those Spaniards sub sequently disappeared. That is all there Is to it. . Should anyone insist upon an explana tion for the transformation of Aragon Into Oregon, here it is. The chief, ororimitlve. vowels in the different Aryan languages are represented by a, I and u (pronounced as In the Italian). To these primitive vowels all other vowels are traced as to their common source. This is recognized by the physiologist no less than by the linguist. The modifications, or gradations, of each were brought about under the in fluence of other vowels or consonants. In tracing these gradations we find that "e" and "a" owe their derivation to "a." Just as "el" and "ai" to "1" and "lu" and 'au" are traced to "u." Hence, the first and the second "a" in Aragon. by the natural process and ac cording to phonetic laws, have Impercep tibly become transformed Into "o" and "e." Examples of this are as numerous In modern languages as they are in Sans krit, the mother tongue of all. , In the light of these few observation even the plea of "the poet of the Sierras." based upon "an orchestra of angels away up In yonder clouds, crying: Oye-cl-agua Hear the water" must give way to an ex planation . based upon human nature, and supported by the principles on which rests all linguistic development, ancient and modern. Speculation Over the Name of Our State, With a Few Collateral Poetic Reflec tions. BY JOHN GILL. A RECENT article in The Oregonlan from the pen of Joaquin Miller long a resident of California, but with still a passionate love for his old home, Oregon offers material for new conjecture In a matter of perennial in terest the origin of the name. The Oregonian . has often raised this question and spoken wjsely and inter estingly upon It. . Your editorial pub lished In the Issue with the poet's plea for Oye-Agua, recalls an- expression in your columns' 10 years ago concerning Carver's use of the word in his "Trav els." That brief editorial of a .dozen lines disposed of Carver very curtly, but contained an odd refutation of Its own conclusion, which was, that "Car ver invented the name never heard it from any Indians, Naudowessie or other." A moment to crack this nut. If Carver Invented the word Oregon, which was first printed In the story of his travels, what about the Nau dowessie Indians? Who has ever- read of a tribe by that name except In the story of Captain Jonathan Carver? Carver says they called themselves Naudowessie, and told him of the "great river of the West, r Oregon." It is palpable that If he Invented the latter name he also invented Naudo wessie; but In this name which these Indians applied to themselves is the proof of Carver's candor. You know, as everybody knows, that the Clatsops and Chinooks. hearing them selves called "sauvage" by the Cana dians, considered the name honorable and called themselves "Slwash." So the Asslnlboines. who had been trad ing with the French Canadians many years before Carver met them, had heard themselves spoken of by the French as "Indiens du Nord Ouest," or their country as the "Nord Ouest." They copied the word more exactly than Carver, who wrlte it Naudowessie; but it is irrefutable that Carver's word equals the original. His barbaric spell ing of it proves he had no conception of its Gallic origin. It meant no- more to him than Assiniboine. His unique record of the tribal name, unwritten by any other traveler, proves the truth of his story about the river Or egon. As to Spanish origins, the origanum and orejon are as wide of the mark as oye agua, at which Mr. Lummis scoffs, with good reason. The Spanish word for ear is oreja. The Spanish word for sage is salvia, for wormwood (our sagebrush), artemisla; for thyme, tomlllo. If Nuttall or Douglass had been sponsors for the country possibly they would have used a Latin botanical name, but they would hardly have used a term meaning "wild thyme" on account of the abundance, of that plant along the rivers.- If it was so abundant as some seekers for a reason tell us, what has become of it? Does any modern bptanist find wild thyme in this Oregon country? Thomas Howell, In his "Flora of Northwest America," the great est botan- of ' this region ever written, gives no trace of any of the above but artemisla. Gabriel Franchere, of candid and blessed memory, relates a circumstance which may open a' new field for argument. Speaking of his first journey to the Cas cades of the Columbia, May 8, 1811, he says: "We saw a hut of Indians engaged In fishing where we stopped for break fast. We saw here an old blind man who gave us a cordial receptionr Our guide said that he was a white man, and that his name was Soto. We learned from the mouth of the old man himself that he was the son of a Spaniard who had been wrecked at the mouth of the river; that a part of the crew got ashore, but were all massacred rave four, who were spared and married native women. These four, disgusted with savage life, attempted to reach a Spanish settlement on the south coast, but had never been heard of afterward and that, when his father, with his companions, left this country, he himself was very young." Lewis and Clark write of the Tilla mook Indian with a fair skin, blue eyes and red hair, and John Minto, In 1846. saw an Indian girl at Morrison's so pale that he thought her sick. She was the daughter of Cullaby, for whom the lake east of Clatsop Is named, and when Mr. Minto talked with Cullaby about the red haired Indian of Clark's acquaintance, Cullaby smote his breast and cried, "Nika Papa:" (he was my father). This story, of old blind Soto will yet be connected with the wreck of the bees wax ship on Tillamook beach. Being an old man in 1811, he was probably born before 1750. Sixteen years after that date Carver left Boston for his exploration, of the Red River country. There was time In that 16 or 20 years since the wreck of Soto's father for the name these Spanish sailors may have given the Oregon coun try to have spread beyond the Rocky Mountains. Suppose Carver had spoken of the river as "Grenady," and that name had en dured till now, should we be ridiculous in tracing it to Granada? La Creole, a name given within the memory of living men to a beautiful west side river, has been barbarized for two generations Into Rickreall a much greater remove from Its origin than Oregon Is from Aragon. Somewhere some day In Spain, Mexico, or California, documentary proof will be found perhaps, that some Spanish sailor or castaway visited our coast and river and named it after the country of Fer dinand. As Joaquin Miller truly says, "They never Jested with the names of places or things." And what a lovely rosary of names they stretched around our American coast, from El Rio Grande to Puerto de Los Angeles! One word In answer to Miller's query: "Where did the boy poet Bryant come upon the poetic word Oregon and find warrant to say nearly a century ago. 'where rolls the Oregon and hears no sound savo Its own dashlngs? " Bryant wrote "Thanatopsis" in 1812, when the .Journal of Lewis and Clark was of great popular interest. Their story of the mighty cataract at Celilo, the wild revel of maddened floods In the passage of the Grand Dalles, the roar of the Cas cades re-echoed from mountain to moun tain, and the eternal song of spirit-like Multnoma these were the inspiration of the greatest poet of America. LOST LANDMARKS. I wonder on what sheltered bay Of Wapato'a wide, level sand Fort William. Wyeth'B stronghold lay? And -where upon th Scappoose land The old trail left Multnoma's strand. Threading the fir woods darkly grand To reach Tualatin's fair plain? Where was bold Wlnship's uarden planned? Upon an oak-grown rldire they say.- A year before the Astor men. He built and planted all In vain: "hat Summer's flood swept all away. Where did the "Tonquin" meet her doom? Some Inlet of the Northern shore Once blunt Neweetee. heard the boom, And echoed from its savage shore The crash of the explosion's roar. That fatal port is known no more. What pine tree on the lone North Beach, A bowshot from the billows' reach Bore Captain Lewis' carven name? Some fellow trees thrive to this day. But that stout witness to his fame A thousand gales have swept away. I wonder if- some ship of Spain. Far-wanderlnit in this northern sea Touched haply on our western main. And all unknown In history. Some bold hidalgo named this land. S With floating flag and flashing- brand. In memory of Aragon? Did wandering Wascos bear the name Far eastward to the river fountains? Did pl-?roed-nose hunters spread Its fame Beyond the distant Shinlne mountalnsT Dear land, proud name However given. Of all fair realms 'neath the wide heaven . Thou art the peer and paragon! WHEN GOLDEN SHIP, COMES One Lyrical Portlantler Breaks Into Rhyme Over the Situation. PORTLAND, . Nov. 9. (To the Ed itor.) If you don't send this to the waste basket clearing-house for inso lent poetry, and if you publish It, please do not put It in your 24-karat type. I -want to read it, and I have lost my microscope.. As I write I am in bed, lying upon my back. I never He any other way. For one week I had the rheumatism.- but now. thanks to the 1908 remedies of friends and doctors, the rehumatism has me. I ntver knew before that there were so many remedies for rheumatism in this world. I am told that the best remedy Is to wear a buckeye in the pants pocket. A friend whose reputa tion for probity. Integrity, honesty- and medical science has never been dis counted, assures me upa the honor of an honorable man tlTsTt he got a buckeye yesterday .arid -put in his pocket and has not had a trace ot rheumatism since. And he Is of the opinion that it is also a great pre ventive, as he had not had rheumatism for 11 'Oregon years prior to yestoi day. I have engaged 1.000.000 b'uekeyes and will pay the exchange just as soon as "our boat comes In." You know misery loves company. I don't want to be too severe upon the long suffer ing public. Nor do I want my poetic license revoked. The public has stood a good deal, but this poetry Is not altogether bad. I have seen worse, but I do not remember where. If you think it will not drive your readers td make a run on the clearing-houses, where the golden streams flow in over the bars as the schooners sail out, you may, in the language of the college sharp, "let 'er went." WHEN OUR SHIP COMES IN. Prosperity, O Prosperity, thy name is not in vain. You blossom In our sunshine and you revel In our rain. From the Rocky Mountains, all along the Pacific's slope. The Horn of Plenty buoys us with moat alluring hope. And we will all be happy, O so happy, then, When our ship of gold comes In. Across the broad Atlantic the Argo nauts are fleeting. Oh, there'll be no end to joy at our ex pectant meeting, For the Argo pays our cargo, billed by sailors long ago Long before the panic laid the Bulls of Wall street low. But we will all be happy, O so happy then, When bur golden ship comes in. The hungry foreign nations bought our'apples and our wheat, And they took our lumber, stocks and everything to eat. So now they send their bullion, whose bars so shiny, neat, We'll leap like hurdles o'er a plague with nimble feet. But won't we all be happy, O so happy then, . When our boat of gold gets in. Prosperity, O Prosperity, thy name is not in vain; Only frenzied finance and the weak lings are Insane. The clouds will soon be drifted and our depression lifted To reveal the Golden West of all its troubles sifted. So won't we all be happy, O so happy, then, When our ship of gold comes in. G. L. H. DR. T. C. ILIFF IN PORTLAND Secretary of Methodist Board of Home Missions a Visitor. Dr. T. C Illff, a secretary of the Board of Home Missions and Church Exten sion of the Methodist Church, arrived in Portland yesterday morning and is staying at the Hotel Portland. Dr. Iliff's present home Is in Philadelphia, but he is best known as the superin tendent of Utah missions, which posi tion he held for 23 years and in which he won a National reputation as be ing the head and front of the Gentile church movement against Mormonism. He was recently the chairman of the American forces that successfully op posed the seating of Congressman Brigham H. Roberts and that has fought Senator Smoot Dr. Iliff's present visit to Portland is in advance of the meeting in this city, November "14, of the Bishops of the Methodist Church, sitting as the Board of Home Missions and Church Extensions. Over 50 Bishops and leading laymen of the Methodist Church are now in session in Seattle as the Board of Foreign Missions. This body distrib utes over $1,000,000 annually to support church work In foreign lands. As the Board of Home Missions It distributes over $2,250,000 each year toward the building and maintenance of churches on American soil. During the last 75 years this body has spent over $30, 000,000 in the erection of over 15,000 churches. It meets annually, and the meeting next Thursday In Portland is the first one the body has ever held on the Pacific Coast. BUREAU OUTLINES WORK Irrigation and Drainage Now Sep arate Divisions. ' ORHGONIAN NEWS BUREAU. Wash ington, Nov. 9. Although Elwdod Mead has resigned from the head of the Irri gation and Drainage Division of the De partment of Agriculture, that depart ment shows no sign of consenting to the transfer of the office to the Interior De partment, making it a branch of the Reclamation Service, as has been pro posed. On the contrary, the work for merly done by Mr. Mead will hereafter be done by two officials. Samtiel Fotier, former assistant engineer of the Denver Water Company and chief engineer of the Ogden Water Works, has been made Chief of Irrigation Investigations, and C. G. Elliott Is made Chief of Drainage Investigations. The work of these two bureaus Is set forth in the following bul letin issued by the Secretary of Agricul ture: In view of the fact that probably about 5.000,HX acres of land provided with water for irrigation will be available for settlement at the close of 1!08. It is belleveil that in no other way ran more good be done than in supplying practical information through pub- Starvation Sits At Loaded Tables You Can Lead a Dyspeptic to the Ta ble, but You Cannot Make Him Eat. There comes a time in the lives of a great many men and women when even a sirloin steak ceases to be poetry. It becomes a protest. The appetite be comes fitful and fretful. Nothing on the bill of fare can coax it. The appetite is there and yet it isn't. This makes eating n mere matter of machinery the mouth doesn't water. The stomach has been worked overtime, and the body and the brain are paying the penalty. There are thousands of peoplp Jn every station of life who are walking What If a Man Gain the Whole World and Lone Hla Appetite! the earth today with dyspeptic stom achs. They wear a dejected, forlorn ap pearance, their energy Is at zero, noth ing, interests them, and they interest no one, their faces are shrunk, their nerves are wilted and their shoulders sag. Everything on the table may look de licious, but nothing will be tempting. That's one sure sign of dyspepsia. If yoti have ever felt bloated after eating and imagined it was your food that filled you; if you have felt your food lie "like a lump of lead" on your stomach; if you have had a bad, sour breath, difficulty in breathing after a meal,' suffered from eructations, burn ing sensations, heartburn, brash, or gas on the stomach, make up your mind you have dyspepsia. And the chances are you have had it a long time. Your stomach Is overworked, abused, fagged out. The gastric and digestive Juices are weak, the muscles of the stomach are jaded, and the whole busi ness needs new life. It needs some thing which will take hold of the food as it comes in and do the digesting, and let your stomach take a rest. Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets do that very tiling. They contain a most pow erful ingredient which helps the stom ach In the process of digestion, cures dyspepsia, sour stomach, indigestion, heartburn, eructations, acidity or fer mentation. They invigorate the stom ach, increase the flow of gastric juice, and do two-thirds of what the stomach would have to do without them. That gives the ' stomach some rest, and a chance to got right again. You feel the change flrs,t in your mind and heart and then over your whole body. You'll feel rosy and sweet. That's the object. You can get these effective little tablets almost anywhere on earth for 50c a package. Send us your name and address to day and we will at once send you by mail a sample package free. Address F. A. Stuart Co., 150 Stuart Bldg., Mar shall, Mich. licatlons and expert advice 'to the new eet tlers on this land, and it Is therefore, deemed advisable to broaden the scope of this work so as to make It valuable to every class of farmers dependent, upon Irrigation and to every project whether public or private. The scientific and technical investigations will be a continuation and extension of what hae already been done. Prominent features of the work will be to determine what bcomes of the large quantity of water which is an nually epread over cropped soils. Involving a study of evaporation, seepage and distribu tion losses, with a view to securing higher economy In the use of water; the relation of Ir rigation water to quantity and quality of crop and adaptation of methods to different soils and crops; and a study of the more tech nical features of the measurement, conveyance, storage and distribution of water on farms, and various devisea used for pumping. During the past plans for the drainage of about 2,000.000 ucres, principally in states east Of the Mississippi River, have been made In the office. The irrigation and drainage investigations of the office of the experiment stations are largely carried on In co-operation with the state experiment stations and the state govern ments. Several states have made appropria tions for this work to supplement the Fed eral funds. ' The irrigation and drainage investigations of the office of experiment stations is entirely distinct from and supplementary to that of the reclamation service of the Interior De partment and does not Involve the construc tion of irrigation works but rather the study of problems connected with irrigation systems already in lira and the giving of advice and aid to farmers. INCREASES ALL SALARIES Pacific States Telephone Company Gives Employes More Money. The girl operators and all other , em ployes of the Pacific States Telephone & Telegraph Company have been given a raise in salary. The order went into ef fect November 1, and the operatives of the telephone company are correspond ingly happy. The raise was made in all the company's exchanges, but-what were the Increases granted outside of Portland Is not known here. Last night General Manager Hickman confirmed the story of the raise for the local operatives. He said: "A general increase of salaries has been ordered for this district. It covers oper ators, linemen and office employes, and an advance of 10. 15, 25 and 40 per cent In salaries is made. The new scale went Into effect on November 1. I believe the advance has been general, but have n7 Information except as to thls'district." Don't forget the golden' rule "Home-phone-it." Seyenty-seYen for Grip and "Seventy-seven . " will do the trick, Most doctors think it cures too quick." A drawback, from a profit-making standpoint, of Humphreys' Seventy seven is, that it cures a Cold too quickly, one 25c vial often curing sev eral persons. A small vial of pleasant pellets that fits the vest pocket. Ask your drug gist. Humphreys' Ilomeo. Medicine Co., Cor. William and John Streets, New York. STOVES AND We are the Portland agents for Bridge, Beach & Co.'s line of Stoves and Ranges, also Garland Gas Ranges. Several hundred kinds and styles from which to choose. These lines are recognized as the highest grades manufactured. Our selling prices are lower than other dealers charge for inferior lines. Before placing your order, see us. Our prices remain the same from season's beginning to end. We here with quote on three handsome patterns. "Woo c (Superior FOR WOOD . This Stove is one of the most popular styles which we car ry. The, body is made of high grade polished steel. The front and top ornamented castiron. It is also fitted with a heavy castiron lining. length Wood. 18-inch ; price 13.00 20-inch; price $14.50 22-inch; price $15.00 24-inch; price $17.00 HOPE TO RESTORE CANTEEN FOR GOOD OF SEUVICE, 1K CLAI5E OFFICERS. Friends of Movement Fear W. C. T. V. May Prevent Passage of Measure This Session. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash ington, Nov. 9. From present indications. It seems that all possible effort will be made this Winter to secure the re-establishment of the Army canteen. The War Department will recommend Its restora tion, because If is almost the universal opinion of commanding ofllcers that the canteen should be restored in the Interest of the enlisted men of the Army. It is most unfortunate for the friends of the canteen that the Woman's Christian Temperance Union Is going to come to Washington this Winter to endeavor to make this city a prohibition town. These well-meaning ladies. Inspired by the suc cess of the prohibition wave which has swept over the South, believe that this Is the proper time to place the lid on Wash ington. The District of Columbia, being entirely under the control of Congress, prohibition can only be established by an act of Congress. In view of experiences in the past and the' comparative ease by which the W. C. T. U. had the canteen abolished, it is rather difficult to figure out how the Army can hope to win their fight in the coming session. The very presence of the W. C. T. U. In Washington will serve to frighten evefy timid member of the House and not a few Senators, and at a time when they are about to go into another campaign these timid men will prefer to dodge the issue rather than to incur the animosity of these temperance women. In spite of this fact an attempt will be made to restore the canteen and the Army will be aided by the Spanish War Veterans. Walter S. Hale, commander-in-chief of that organization, in a recent Interview on this subject said: "The restoration of the Army canteen is absolutely necessary If the Govern ment desires to maintain the regular Army at anything like Its maximum strength. I served as a soldier In the regular Army and know 'by experience that the operation of the canteen was most helpful In maintaining discipline fioiieyman - - - -- - i ' - iawariTTa tdnj d Jf ' VI Sonora FOR WOOD 99 This is our most popular small Parlor Stove. It is fitted with bronze urn, nickel top band, nickel footrail, nickel screw draught-register. The body is made of high-grade blued steel. Heavy steel linings. Length Wood. 18-inch; price $8.50 20-inch; price $9.50 Hardware FOURTH AND ALDER STREETS and contentment among the men. It was beneficent In that it made many of the men contented and discouraged them from visiting low brothels and dives where vile compounds termed as liquor were dispensed. In the interest of sanita tion, morality and discipline I hope Con gress will follow the recommendations of practically all of the high officers of the Army and former soldiers and restore the canteen at military posts and the Soldiers' Home." Will Work Unconditionally. PORTLAND. Nov. 9. (To the Ed itor.) I should like to call the atten tion of the business men in Portland to a condition which I am sure will interest as well as surprise a great many. It Is that of the woman who unfortunately Is obliged to be self supporting and equally unfortunate to be prepossessing in appearance. There is a certain class of men here who only offer positions conditionally, particularly If the applicant happens to "look good" to them, as a great many express themselves. For the past seven weeks I have ad vertised and answered numerous ad vertisements, but as I was not willing to accept a position "conditionally" or permit any familiarity I have positively been unable to secure anything in my line of work. I am .a stenographer, fairly good, with the advantage of an excellent education. I have frequently offered my services most reasonably, providing that I be allowed to attend strictly to my office duties, but up to the present time it has been of no avail. Although I have lived in Portland only a short time, and have very few acquaintances, I am sure there are a great many conscientious business men who require the services of a stenographer, so should like to take this methpd, if you will permit me, to make my wants known. If there Is anyone in need of a stenographer who is willing to devote her entire time to her employer's in terest, at a moderate salary, I. should be very grateful for the position. Very respectfully, R. B. F. Was Member of Tenth Iowa Infantry EUGENE. Or.. Nov. 6. (To the Edltnr.) I saw the notice of the death of E. S. Brim lull. I wish to say that Comrade Bramhall enlisted with me In August, mm. at Car lisle. Warren County. Iowa, in t'ompany H. Tenth Iowa Infantry, served some time In my company B and on account or the mortality caused In the resriment by an epidemic of measles. Mr. Bramhall was sent North to recruit new members for the regi RUG LOVER'S Have you a Rug want? We can cover the spot big or little. You will always find what you want here, and always at the right prices we're not in the trust, you know. We have a few exceptional bargains n room-size rugs 8-4xl01,. 0x11 and 9x12 in numerous pleasing designs and colorings. There are onlj- about 75, so come soon. You can't fail to be pleased with this splendid assortment. Seamless Roxbury Rues beau ties every one. and the equal of many higrh-prlced rugs. Our regular price was $25. t I " TZt This sale they are... O I J .Dvl INDEPENDENT 104-106 First, Bet. RANGES Gas Ranges "We have just received a car load Garland Gas Ranges, which includes many different styles. The pattern shown above is very desirable for those who desire an elevated oven range at medium price. We carry this, series in two sizes 16 and 18-inch oven. Our price is as follows: 16-inch $27.50 18-inch $28.50 ment to keep up our numhers, which he dlil. I knew Mr. Brumhall rrom nil" youth. He. was a noble man and a good officer, and all who, knew him loved and respected him for his worth. He was always at his post and did not fllncli his duty, even at the moutn of a cannon. His word was ood as golct, and his character unspotted. He was a member of the Methodist Episcopal fhurch at that time and proved himself worthy. By his death his wife is berett a good husband and his family a good father, and the com munity In which he lived a good citizen. Tnis is the tribute of one of his old com rades of HI -.". I never knew he ever en listed In the Ninth Iowa Cavalry. The fam ily has my heartfelt sympathy EI.IAS F. CHAPMAN, Late Private, Company B, Tenth Iowa Vol unteer Infantry. Dreyfus Will Have Pension. PARIS. Nov. 9. Among the list of those to whom pensions arc to be granted, printed in the Journal Of ficlel. Is Major Dreyfus. He is to re ceive $470 annually. His service ex tends over a period of nearly- 31 years. Hanan Shoes Sold at Rosenthal's. TEETH TEETH - ' OUTrXAJQ WtlACTTJ CUT RATES To advertise our new and won derfully successful Alveolar Method, we will do work at cut rates for 30 DAYS A ten-year guarantee with all work. Examination free. Silver fillings, 50c; crowns (22k), $3.50 to $5.00; bridge work (per tooth), $3.50 to $5.00. Plates as low as $5.00. Everything first class. Lady attendant Boston Dentists SBlii Morrison St.. nop. Postofflce. OPPORTUNITY Smith's Manor Brussels Ruks worth up to $25 at trust stores. We sold many of them at $18. For a little while flJIO Eft they're marked plA3U FURNITURE GO. Washington and Stark Go