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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (June 7, 1908)
THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND. JUNE 7, 10O8. 'S City By Golden Gate Already Feels Approach of Va cation Season. SUBUR3S WILL BENEFIT. Thousands Will Spend Hot Season in Picturesque Settlements That P'ringe the Bay Native Sons at .Park. SAN FRANCISCO, June 6. (Special.) The Summer exodus from San Fran cisco has begun. It will not reach the full tide until later in the month, when the public schools close. The advance guard has left, however, and the city can already feel the approach of the midyear quiet. The earliest testimonial comes from the large establishments, which offer their wares at barsain prices with the end of the Spring. It is a good season to stock ud in San Francisco and the- houHewife generally takes advantage of it before closing her home for the Summer. '. As usual, the cities about the bay will draw the largest crowds. Berke ley, San Rafael, San Mateo, Burllngame, Mill Valley, Ross Valley and the In numerable picturesque settlements which skirt the Shore have already received a large quota of visitors, who will establish themselves over June, July and August. . "Summering" is more easily accom plished here than in almost any other city in the country. San Francisco is surrounded by villages, cities and set tlements which offer an Ideal outing. Berkeley is a case In point. It Is one of the most picturesque cities ever planted on the earth. Its homes are ample and comfortable. Its architec ture Is of a type that commands at tention. The flowers bloom with a gladness that makes the Summer glor ious. The sun smiles day after day and the cooling breezes temper the night air. College- closes in the middle of May. Fraternities, sororities, clubs and associations close their houses and their menyb.ers depart for the annual vacations.'' "Tlien the San Franciscan goes across and takes possession. Beau tiful homesmay be procured over the hot months or accommodations obtained at any of the many establishments pro vided for the students. Summering in Berkeley costs but little more than the extra fare across the bay. Slany Resorts Near City. Berkeley Is but one of the many nearby places. There are 20 similar localities within easy reach of the city. Then there are the countless resorts and springs. Every county in the, state has its plentiful quota. J From Crescent Beach to San Diego Is one long delightful seashore that tilts oceanward with the Summer throngs. With all these facilities It Is only natural that all California should "go away" for the. Summer. Of all the outing3 of the year, however, that taken by the Native Sons will hold the primary place. More than 1000 mem bers of the order made the trip to the Yosemite Valley for their annual session. A like number of visitors followed them and during the week of their stay the i beautiful park held more human soula than ever before in its history. One who lives beyond the confines of the state would think, as a matter of course, that nearly every one in Cali fornia had visited the Yosemite. It would be accepted as a truism to say that the members of the order of Native Sons had been there, but, strange to relate, not 25 per cent of the men In the order had ever laid eyes on the park. The week in the valley was a rare one. The hotel and the camps were filled to capacity, accommodating more than 2000 persons, when their normal quota did not exceed' from 500 to 1000. The weather was warm and balmy for six of the seven days. On the last day in the valley a snow storm heightened the beauties of nature. The Native Sons introduced dancing and fireworks into the park. Heretofore there has been no provision for dancing parties, but the delegates erected a picturesque pavilion and enjoyed nightly dances. One of the features of the celebration was a display of fireworks which startled the wild animals on the hillsides. Plant Memorial Tree. One of the most interesting cere monies in the valley was the planting of a sequoia gigantea sapling as . a memorial to the visit of the Native Sons. Galen Clark, the man who dis covered -the big trees in 1857, partici pated and gave the affair an air of pe culiar solemnity. . He Is 95 years of age and partly deaf. His long, white beard, which sweeps his chest, glv.es him. a patriarchal appearance, while his poetic nature and gentility of soul harmonize with the surroundings he has chosen for his home. He has es tablished himself In a simple cabin in the valley. He sits daily in the lit tle porch and looks over the wondrous hills and forests. The old man has ar ranged his, own plat in the cemetery. He has planted a small grove of red woods, which have already grown to a manly height' and wave their plumes oven the "spot where the' veteral of the park hopes to repose in eternal peace. Mr. Clark planted the sapling for the Native Sons.- It was an object lesson to those, who watched. The care the old man bestowed upon the tender sprout prompted tha president of the order, C. M. Belshaw, to remark: "With trees it is as with children. You must start them right if. you desire thet they should grow up right." Mr. Clark straightened every root and fiber of the sapling and then placed It gently in the earth at the same angle as in its original bed. Then he crum bled the soli about the base with his hands until" satisfied that every tendril had been duly protected. . In dedicating the tree he .referred to the glacial ori gin of the valley and stated that the original seeds of the big trees bad been j CISCO SUMMER EXIJDUS brought down in the ice floes to find a final resting place on what had become the great land of California. nags for Little Citizetrs. . Another ceremony of interest was the presentation of ,a set of .flags by the Native Sons to the school children of the valley.. There were only nine pu pils in the school, among them two In dian lads whose heavy-featured copper faces and straight, black hair formed a strange contrast to the sweet counte nances and golden curls of the little girls. Some of the delegates had vis ited the, school and had noticed the battered flag. A subscription was sug gested, a hat was passed and In a few moments $158 had been collected. With this money a large collection of flags was purchased, including the old bear flag of California. One large banner will fly from the staff outside the schoolhouse; others will adorn the walls within, and there will be a silken flag for every pair of hands to wave while singing "The Stars and Stripes Forever." Altogether, the session in the valley was so successful that many other or ders are preparing petition to the Fed eral Government for similar privilege. USES ONION FOR TICKLER J. CAKATHF.lt FINDS FF.ATIIEIt 1USTEK TOO TAME. Masquerade Crowds For the Most Part Orderly, But Several - Arrests Are Made. Considering the many thousands of people who thronged the streets last night the police were culled upon in very few cases to exercise the majesty of tne blue-coated law. A few Instances of rowdyism occurred "but for the most part the people were orderly. A few arrests were made. O. C. Hammond, who admitted to Pa trolman Stewart that he was a Deputy Sheriff from Colorado, was arrested on Washington street with O. E. Baird. Both men are staying at the Oregon Hotel. They were careering down the thickly crowded street In an automobile shooting off firecrackers literally by the thousand. KThey were admonished and released. Not satisfied with the milder although prohibited amusement of tickling the faces of passersby with a little duster, a man wh6 gave the name of J. Caraher. cast aside his little feathery annoyer and procured a large ripe onion. He was caught in the act of rubbing this vege table under, the noses of the- girls who were so unfortunate as to pass within his reach. Near midnight Patrolman Harms found little 6-year-old Willie (Joldste 1 s I uown wasningtnn 'Street without a pro tector. The little fellow resented it when the officer told him he would have to take him off the street. He was taken to the station where he said he did not know where he lived and at a very late hovr the police were still waiting for his parents to call up On the telephone. K. E. Davis, G. Rehbcln, C. Hogland and H. Braun all youths with down lust sprouting on their upper Hps. were ar rested for throwing confetti, as were E. C. Potter and Charles Wallis for acting in an unbecoming manner on the street. It remained for John Matthews to cao the climax by appearing on the street dressed in woman's clothes. His presenee in sucn a garo soon caused a crush in his vicinity and at Fourth and Washington streets, where he was arrested, it toon several policemen as many minutes to work their way to the center of the dense crowd and attach the object which was causing the blockade to the traffic. At the police station Captain Bailey at lowed him to go home after arranging for his appearance in court to answer to the charge of disorderly conduct. Wlndel Illk was brought in from Seventh and Glisan streets, where he had been knocked down by a car. In vestigation by City 1 Physician Zleeler showed no bones broken, and owing to nis condition he was put into the cell with the other drunks. DEJECTS NAVAL BUDGET BOOIA EXPRESSES WAXT OF CONFIDENCE IX CABINET. Refuses to Appropriate for Battle ships Alexieff Denounced and Xaval Inquiry Proposed. ST. PETERSBURG, June 6. The Douma tonight, by a vote of 194 to 78, rejected the item in the naval budget appropriating $5,500,000 to lay the keels of four battleships during the year. This vote is tantamount to a vote of want of confidence in the min istry of marine and wholesale resig nations from, the ministry are expected to follow. Premier Stolypln made his final ef fort to secure naval appropriations, though he was obliged to acknowledge that he was speaking ih a lost cause. M. Gutchoff, Octoberlst, opposed the appropriation and attacked ex-Viceroy Alexieff by name and charged him with the disasters sustained In the Russo-Japanese war. M. Gutchkoff demanded the appoint ment of a committee to investigate the conditions in the Admiralty and the fleet and to report to the Emperor and the Douma. SHOT BY CHINESE TROOPS. French Lieutenant and Six Native Soldiers Killed on Frontier. SAIGON, Indo-China. June 6. Six na tive soldiers and a French Lieutenant were killed on the frontier! according to advices received here, by Chinese regu lars while they were disarming Chinese revolutionists who had taken refuge on French territory. Boss Gambler is Caught. Jue Sue of 95 Second street,' who bears the reputation of being the "gambler king" of Chinatown, was arrested last night at his gambling rooms by Detec tives Smith and Kay. Along with him Ah Gong. Ah Ching and John Fong were also taken Into custody. The arrests were made In an attempt on the part of the police to raid the gambling room of Jue Sue, which are said to flourish in suite of all police precautions. The celestials were not caught in the act of gambling but were i aptured while trying to escape from the place. They were charged with visiting a gambling house and released on ball. While tne ostensible object of the raid failed, the police are elated at the arrest of Jue Sue, who is said to have. boasted repeatedly that they would never catch him. McKlnley Statue Vnvelled. PHILADELPHIA, June 6. In the presence of a large crowd, a life-size statue in bronze of President McKinlev. erected on the south plaza of the City Hall through private subscriptions of citizens of Philadelphia and vicinity. was unveuea toaay. MARKS 40 EPOCH Assembly is Representative of Rank and File. NO MOVEMENTS LAUNCHED Final and Formatfve Touches Are Given to Ideas Conceived at the Assemblies of Pre vious Years. ET REV. WILLIAM HIRAM FOVLKES. KANSAS CITY, Mo., May . (Spe cial Correspondence.) The 120th General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church, which has. just concluded its sessions in Kansas City, can scarcely be called epoch making. The commissioners, though num bering a few of the wheel-horses of the faith, are mostly of the rank and file. This not to their belittling or to the dis paragement of the assembly, for they aptly represented the democratic genius of Presbyterianism. In justification of the opening asser tion it may further be stated that no great movements have been launched at the present high conclave of the church. Final and formative touches have been given, however, to some of the ecclesi astical forms whose ideas were conceived in previous years. With scarcely an echo, the melodious note of Cumberlandism, which is to say the modified, protesting, evangelistic type of the Presbyterianism of 100 years ago has been lost in the larger harmony of a reunited church. There is no serious desire, in any responsible quarter, to perpetuate the distinction of the new in separable phases of Presbyterian faith and polity. The unanimous election of the Reverend Baxter P. Fullerton, D. D of St. Louis, . was in nowise an attempt to prolong divisions within the body of the reunited church, but to set the seal of the larger body upon the happy event In which the withdrawing element of century ago came back with colors fiyiag into the mother church. N.o Slight on Matthews. It is no slight upon the moderational qualities of the Rev. Mark A. Matthews, D. D., of Seattle, who, in more ways than one, was a towering figure at the !lt-ciimill,. m oo,r flic fha ulantlnn r t Dr. F'lillerfrtn nppmpd f nrpnrrl a inH hv the exigencies of the situation. com prising a multitude of contributing causes. Of these, his long residence in Kansas City as a faithful home mis sionary pastor, his peculiar fitness as a representative of the body from whose ranks he came, his present posi tion as field secretary of the board of home missions for the great South west, were no small factors. The prom ises made, unsought, on his behalf by the venerable Dr. S. J. Nlcholls. of St Louis, were abundantly fulfilled by his commanding physical presence and mental poise, which, with a charm of manner almost magnetic, more than any other single appnrent cause calmed the waters that at times threatened to be troubled. "No one doubts, having followed the assembly for ten days as a disinterest ed spectator (my own position), over its devious ways, the ability of its guide. To preside with dignity over the deliberations of nearly 1000 repre sentative men, and at the same time to rule with equity in the midst of the ecclesiastical machinations, is no small task. Dr. Fullerton passed through the furnace with scarce a smell of fire upon his garments, and emerged with his personal and churchly popularity undimmed. Have Praise for Portland. Not a few of the commisFoners and visitors to che assembly have taken occasion to refer in the most compli mentary terms to the meeting of the assembly in Portland in 1892. The roses which then,. as now, abounded; the unexampled development and pros perity of the metropolis of the Pacific Northwest, so signally Increased since then; the great vision of a splendid em pire beyond their setting sun, all of these things were voiced as elements of many happy memories ot Portland in 1892. It is no small tribute to the loyalty of the Oregon delegation to say that without exception they worked as dili gently as their Colleagues from Wash ington to secure the next assembly for Seattle. Favorable comments were heard on every hand' upon the action of the Portland Commercial Club In writing to all the commissioners sec onding the invitation of Seattle. For a season it looked as though the Sound city would win, hands down; but when Dr. Robert F. Coyle, of Denver, with a host of lieutenants, arrived upon the scene the tide began to turn. Dr. Cr.yle is one of the leaders of the church, an ex-moderator, who holds an en viable position in the church because of his stalwart manliness. Denver's claim was reinforced by the fact that the assembly had never met in the Rocky Mountain district, and further, that next year Is the semi-centennial of the entrance of the Presbyterian Church into Colorado. "Climate will keep, and the Pacific Coast won't melt away," said the Den ver men; and the assembly listened to their appeal, also, doubtless agreeing that since the Coast had twice enter tained the assembly, the mountain re gions should now have the opportunity they so earnestly sought. The financial side of the matter weighed, also, witn the assembly, the influence of the mod erator and stated clerk being actively thrown toward Denver. The fact that Denver and Seattle were the only cities seriously consid ered by the assembly Is In itself a splendid tribute paid by the East, where a large majority of Presbyterians live, to the West, where great Presby terian responsibility and opportunity await the church. Great and Near Great. It is impossible to distinguish between the great and the near-great at such a representative gathering as an assembly. When It is understood, that each presby tery of the church is represented by two or more men a minister and an elder for every certain number of ministers within its bounds it will be clear that any aristocracy must be of merit, and not of craft. No body of men could b9 convened anywhere which would more effectually cry down any dictatorial as sumption of power, and which at the same time would follow mora. Implicitly the wise and unselfish leadership of men whom the church has learned to trust. Features of Assembly. The splendid popular meetings, where from 3000 to 10,000 people listened to the most stirring addresses and the most inspiring singing, the devotion and patience with which the report of the great agencies of the church were received; the practical spirit of har mony which pervaded the whole body as an undertone beneath any outward differences of opinion; the complete refutation of the criticism that the church Is neglecting the heathen at home in order to send money to the heathen abroad, by showing that no single phase of the home field, from Alaska to Cuba, from the foreigners in the great cities to the mining towns in the Far West, has been neglected; the large and gi owing attention the cause of world-wide evangelization received in the response to the magnificent ad dresses by men like Dr. J. C. R. Ew ing, of the Forman Christian College., Lahore, India, a man honored by the Indian government as few men have been, and Dr. H. G. Underwood, who has witnessed in person the missionary opening of Corea from a hermit na tion to a practically self-supporting gospel field today these are only a few of the outstanding features of an assembly that happily for Kansas City leaves no Buch legacy as Portland re ceived in 1892, a thorn in the midst of roses, that is the aftermath of a bitter heresy trial (whatever its merits), but rather the memory of a ten days' con ference replete with inspiration and good-fellowship and patriotism and genuine religion. Will Do Its Full Iuty. As I pen these identical words in mv room in the hotel, the sound of "Amer ica" rises from the theater adjacent to the hotel and is now lost in the vo ciferous applause which follows it. May - the Presbyterian church do her full duty until her Chris tian civilization, made more real to herself, shall become the possession of every ration. All hall to the Pacific Coast, and to Portland, the Rose City, during these festival days. May she prosper commercially, I ndustriallv, so cially, morally and religiously is the earnest desire of one of her adopted sons. RECEIVES -WOUND IN PLAY Men Shoot at Each Other Until One Is Hit in Lung. WASHTCNA, Wash., June 6. (Special) Todd Brockman, thought to be fatally In jured by his employer. Judd Matthews, 1 Kahlotus butcher, while the two were playing with revolvers, is improved and has a chance of recovery. They were in the habit of playfully shooti ng at each other's feet in the rear of the shop. It was during one of these frolics that both revolvers were discharged at once and Brockman .received a bullet in the right lung. Both were swinging their guns in a rotary motion and it is not absolute ly certain which fired the fatal shot. The bullet was extracted from his back. Matthews is in deep grief over the ac cident. He refuses to leave his wounded friend to take rest or sleep and ministers to every want. Brockman, who has been conscious since receiving the Injury, com pletely aosoives .vjattnews from all blame and admits that he had often Indulged in the careless and playful use of weapons. SHOT BY COLORED THUGS. Chattanooga Business Man Kille and Woman Fatally Wounded. CHATTANOOGA, June 6. Tonight a holdup occurred on Rossville avenue on the southern outskirts and Joseph Knijrht. a business man, was killed and Miss Sallie Poole was probably fatally wounded. Knight and Miss Poole started for a drive. When they reached a point just -south of the city limits three negroes sud denly stepped to the middle of the road and commanded the drivers to . halt. Knight declined to obey. One of the negroes sprang to the horse's head, while the other two covered Knight with pistols. Knight resisted the attack and the ne groes opened fire, killing Knight instantly. Miss Poole was struck by two bullets and there Is little chance of her recovery. The negroes escaped. Armed citizens are scouring the country for them and blood hounds are on the trail. A lynching is probable. LIVE M0USEJJJRES TROUT St. Louis Sportsman Introduces a Novel Method on Big Klickitat. LTLE, Wash.. June 6. fSDecIal.l F. A. Cheney, a business man of St. Louis, Mo., on a vacation In the West, sprung a surprise here yesterday by successfully using for bait to lure big fish the common mouse, cast in a live state. ' This week has been a record-break er for fishermen on the Bis: Klickitat. Up at Maddock Springs, C. G. Hickok, of Portland, eclipsed the "bunch" for grayling; W. W. Brook, trout; Audi tor MacLeod, of Klickitat, for steel head trout; William Mac-Masters, the baseball catcher, of North Yakima, for the alert rainbow. POWER BOATS IN RACE. Ailsa Craig and Irene Start for the Bermudas. NEW YORK, June G. Two power boats, the Ailsa Craig and the Irene, slipped by the Scotland Light vessel at sundown tonight in their CTO-mile race to the Ber mudas for the $1000 Bermuda challenge cup, presented by a member of the New York Yacht Club and $1000 in cash. Lookner Wins Road Race. NEW YORK, June 6. George Look ner, of Syracuse, N. Y., (4 minute handicap) won the Irvington-Milburn road race. Unofficial time 1 hour 15 minutes 13 seconds. Dance Council Crest. Sunday night. iVO J Asfy Uur doctor if he approves of this prescription for thin blood, impure blood. Accept his answer without question. Complete AyersSarsaparilld NON-ALCOHOLIC Each Fluid Ounce BamaparUla, Boot . Yellow Dock Boot Licorice Boot . Cinchona Bed Bark Buckthorn Bark . Stiliingia Boot Burdock Boot. 10 Grains 8 Grains 8 Grains 6 Groins 4 Grains 4 Grains 3 Grains Water Sufficient to We have no secrets I We publish the formulas of all our medicines. J. C. AYER CO., Manufacturing Chemists, Lowell, Mass.. RAGE WAR FEARED Oklahoma Sheriff Shot Dead by Negro Desperado. TROOPS ARE CALLED OUT Rumors That Blacks Are Arming for Fight Follow Tragedy Neur Kingli.-ilier Posses Sur round Wounded Man. OKLAHOMA CITY. Okla.. June 7. Fears of a race war over the killing of Sheriff G. W. Garrison by a negro desperado, led. Governor Taskell to or der out Company M. Oklahoma Na tional Guard, last night. The body of SheilfT Garrison will be brought here on a special train at 3:30 o'clock this morning. Rumors that the negroes are arming themselves have been rife' all evening. Adjutant-General Canton ar rived from Guthrie at 2 o'clock this morning to take command of the militia. Wounded, and believed to be in all but a dying condition, Alf Hunter, the slayer of Garrison, is hiding within a few milts of Kingfisher, with five- or six posses searching for him. Deputy Sanders, also shot by Hunter, may re cover. Reports that several other deputies have been shot are discredited. BIG flECIllfiE SHOPS H FIBE IN VICTORIA, B. C,., CAUSES A LOSS OF $ 1 SO, 000. Sparks From Molding-Room Start Blaze Department Helpless in Its Fight. VICTORIA, B. C, June 6. The three machine shops of the Victoria Machinery Depot Company, Limited, were destroyed by fire this evening, which broke out at 8 o'clock, doing $1M),0U0 damage and throwing 150 men out of work. The in surance amounted to J30.000. The fire was caused, it is thought by the fire from the moulding-room. Usually it is the custom to send out men to watch the sparks from this source, but tonight when the last cast was made, at 6 o'clock, the precaution was omitted. A Hindoo workman at g o'clock noticed a slight blaze in the central machine shop. He endeavored to quench it, but failed. He then cailed tiie foreman, Richards, and two lines of hose were laid. Failing to quench the flames, the fire brigade was called out, but could do lit tle except to save the weighs. No one was injured. T DPI HER FflGE ACTRESS GETS DAMAGES FROM PHOTOGRAPHERS. Two Dealers Must Pay Helen Wyatt $5000 for Trading in Her Facial Sharms. NEW YORK. June 6. A person has the right under the constitution lo prevent the use of his photograph for tne purposo of advertising, sale or trade, according to the decision of the Supreme Court. Helen Wyatt, in the name of a guardian because she is under legal age, sued two stores for $5000 each for displaying for sale without her consent her photographs, on some of which had been written "Miss Wyatt." The firms alleged In defense that Mls3 Wyatt had informed the photographer who made the photographs that she was a "professional," had appeared before the public as an actress and in consideration of reduced rates waived her rights in the photographs. The lower court gave Miss Wyatt an interlocutory judgment by sustaining her demurrer in both suits to the constitu tional questions raised, from which the firms appealed. Cottage Grove Will Celebrate. COTTAGE GROVE, Or., ' June 6. (Special.) Cottage Grove is making preparations to celebrate the Fourth in a manner appropriate to the day. The committees are now settled down to work, and much of the preliminary affairs have been arranged. Solve Murder After Eleven Years. BELLEFONTAINE, O.. June 6. After eleven year? the mystery surrounding ecrets Formula Represents Sonna Leaves 2 Grains Black Cohosh Boot ' . .3 Grains Pokeroot 1 Grain Iodid o i Potassium . .4 Grains Glycerin, CP. ' . . 8 Drachms mi -. I Oil Bassafras Flavoring . . J make one fluid ounce. what Is man without clothes Of the proper kind? In society, in business or at home, it is proper to dress correctly. No man feels on a par with his companions if those com panions all have tailored clothes and he wears ready - made. Tailored clothes set a man off right. If he is careful about his tailor, his clothes will be of the proper pattern, will fit perfectly and will last longer and look better than if he wears any old thing. The best fitting, most stylish and attrac tive clothing worn on the streets of Portland, come from the tables and hands of Columbia Tai lors. They are as well- the murder of aged David Detrick and his wife, in this city, may be solved through alleged admissions made by a convict in the California State Peniten tiary whose name is withheld. Recently Logan County officials went to the Coast and it was to them, it is stated, that the so-called confession "was made. The mu tilated bodies of Detrick and his wife were found in their home by a daughter August 11. 1897. an ax having been used. The house had been robbed. Ordered to Fort Licavenwortli. WASHINGTON. June 6. Thomas H. Slavins. quartermaster of the maneuver Selz Royal Blue shoe is inexpensive IHOE-EXPENSE is more a matter of quality than pay enough to get good shoes without getting them. There's a limit of low price beyond which quality doesn't go; if you go below that line, you leave quality behind. At $3.50, $4 and $5 we have Selz Royal Blue shoes; the best shoes made. We guarantee your full satisfaction in fit, style and wear at those prices. Selz Royal Blue Shoe $3.50, $4, $5. equipped to tailor a mdn properly as the architect is to draw the plans for a house. One other strong feature about Columbia Tailoring is the fact that nothing stylish can ap pear upon the streets of New York many days be fore the same cut, pat tern and style have ar rived at the Columbia shop. It is - a policy of i this big tailor shop to be behind nobody. It is not unusual for Portland tai lors to keep a year in the rear in styles. It is the Columbia spirit and ag gressiveness that make Columbia Tailoring the leader in the Northwest. A range of very popular prices is also a stimulus to good business. You can buy a suit of clothes at the Columbia shop at any price from $20 up to $50, and get it right. GRANT PHEGLEY, Manager. Seventh and Stark Sts. camp at Pine Camp. New York, has been ussigned to the command of the United States military prison at Fort Leaven worth, Kan. Burlington Cancels Trains. OMAHA, June 6. The Burlington Railroad today announced that all Pa cific Coast trains on that system run ning in connection with the Northern Pacific Railway will be annulled until further announcement. because of washouts In Montana. The Missouri River at Omaha. Is three feet below the danger line and is slowing rlriing. of price; you may Cor. 7th and Washington Sts.