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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (July 14, 1903)
. T1TE OTtEG OUt l DAILY OUnNALV 14, 1903. 11 IS DOING WOODMEN TO BEGIN BIG SHOW TONIGHT SOME OF THE SIDE SHOWS AT THE FAIR what: the southern CARNIVAL COMPANY Management ; Offers ; Amtfcement ; for the: Many at the , Stadiuip, Dog "and Pony Show and the Many Other Special Attractions ; 4 t f ' ' I '"' 'I vat msxss, Proprietor of the Southern Carnival Company Shows. The Southern Carnival Company, derful aquatlo xhibltlon of living under which la furnishing- the altractlona for the water, eating, drinking, smoking and tho carnival, was organized by Nat Kels. (he proprietor, who haa success fully managed the ahowa winter and uramer for five years without losing a weeK. it la an Eastern enterprise and thla ia Ita first year on the Coast, com ing to Portland from the big Electrical Carnival at Sacramento. The ahow consists of 16 different attractions, chief of which are the Stadium, the Old Plan tation, American Theatre, Dog and Pony Show and Dreamland. - There are many other attractions, and xs. j. a. rzn. - fit 7 . a number 01 otner swimming. tripka, and fancy WOMEN AFFILIATE WITH WOODMEN (Continued from Pare Ten.) becomes part of the fund, and It can be Invested only in united Btaiea uov ernment bonds or In municipal bonds backed by an assessed valuation of not less than $1,000,000. The reserve runa will be allowed to accumulate until It reaches $2,000,000, after which the In terest will be uaed to pay death claim. It la even now available for such usea. In event of special emergency, for In stance In case death claims were to call for more than IS assessments In any one year. Such a reaord, such an admirable plan, so large a membership, such strong as sets and so brilliant a future are testi mony to the intellect, faithfulness and courage of Grand Guardian Van Orsdall and the little company of women who instituted the Woodcraft War of the Revolution six years ago in 1897 and formed the new fraternal government for the nine states of the Pacific Juris diction. From the facts herein set forth. It ia rlghf to concede their claim to the most -remarkable growth of any -order known to fraternallsm. I rr" ' ( ill' J i The great Pan-American success at Buffalo. N. T. Here you will witness the exhibition that haa astounded thousands of people, but no one has yet been able to say how it ia accomplished. You alt In wonder and amasement at the beautiful visions and scenes that are enacted before you until the conclusion, you rub your eyes and exclaim. "Have' I been to Dreamland V ALCOHOL IS NOT TO BE ALLOWED Standard Oil' Magnate Makes a Thank. Offering. of $250,000 for Hospital that Will Not Use Fiery Liquor, Science Has Demonstrated, Ac cording to the Donor, that Better Results Are gained Without Its Use, . (Journal Special Service.) NEW YORK. July 14. -Mr. W. T. WardweU, formerly treasurer of the Standard Oil Company and a noted prohi bition leader, haa given a plot of land fronting on Central Park, at West One Hundredth street, valued at $250,000, as a site for a model hospital building for the Red Cross Hospital, which waa founded by hlra. This la In the nature of a thank offering on the part of Mr. Wardwell for his recover- from a re cent Illness when the doctors declared he had no chance to live. A peculiar feature of the new hos pital la that alcohol la to be absolutely barred from it Alcoholic stimulants will be- uaed neither in medical nor surgical cases. Mr. Wardwell's letter to the trustees of the Red Cross Hospi tal Is in part aa follows: 'I have bad occasion to know the suc cessful results obtained by the most approved scientific methpds practiced by its' staff. Tbeae results have been reached uniformly without the use of alcohol as a medicinal agent, both in surgery and in the treatment of all the various forms of dlseaae brought to the hospital, including typhoid fever, pneu monla and cases of septicemia. The exclusion of alcohol by the staff has' been based not on moral grounds, but on purely scientific Investigation and practical experience, all of which have proven not only that alcohol is unneces sary, but that It acts in all cases upon the. human organism with deleterious results. . '"The experience of the hospital In this respect only confirms the testimony of slon In this country and in Europe. "Impressed as I am with the impor tance of this treatment of the sick and suffering, giving relief without Impair ing any of the functlona of the body or creating a dangerous appetite, I desire, as far aa lies in my power, to extend ita Influence and make permanent a larger and ever-increasing sphere of helpfulness and blessing to humanity." mil ENTERTAIN IOWA'S SENATOR Portland Commercial Club Will Hold Reception Wednesday Evening in Honor of Hon, J P, Dolliver, FROM ALL OVER THE STATE THEY GATHER Prominent Business Men to Meet the Noted Lawmaker and to Acquaint Him with Their Interests. AMERICAN VS, ENGLISH When the Egyptian government The Portland Commercial Club, I alsted by the other commercial bodies of thla city, will hold a reoeptlon at the Chamber of Commerce Wednesday even ing 'in honor of United States Senator J, P. Dolliver of Iowa. Senator Dolliver has been engaged to deliver a lecture be fore the Chautauqua Association In the afternoon. The reception will be a full dress af air but the program and means of enter tainment will be informal. Col. Jamea Jackson, chairman of the entertainment committee of the Commercial Club, has XT V1 trrfif.. i .ft- a . t r ?M". &4 Toe Madium. The Stadium, the star attraction of the Carnival, is the pride and hobby of Mr. Relss. He haa scoured the four polnta of the compass and gathered a gal axy of novelty acta that are new arid startling. Acts from Japati, Afghanis tan, Europe, Asia, and the cream of the American continents. V . ' .t J hA V One of the Tree Aota. Matt Oar, the champion of all cham pion high divers, dives twice dally from tower 100 feet high Into a tank of water but four feet deep. Rose and Lemon, In their aensatlonal and thrilling Vide down a 90-foot stair way and back again. Du Bell, the aerial electric king. Tan Fuklno. In his marvelous slide on his feet without the aid of balancing pole, forward and backward, from the top of a 75-foot pole to the ground. kduuM auauaer oX me stoatoera Carni val Company. promoter, . describee Steve Wood, the them aa follows: totta. In thla pavilion you will see the peer less Lotta, the fire dancer; also all the latest and up-to-data aleotrleal daneesr such as the rainbow, ribbon, skirt, pic ture, and water dances; electrocution of Czolgna: pictures of the late President Venetian Glass Palaoe. You may have, seen glass exhibitions before, but nothing travels that equals what Is to be seen In this pavilion. Here you will see them making, spinning and wavtng glass in all its various stages. ,01a neckties, cloth, etc.? as fine and 'flexible as the hair of your head. Each visitor . to this exhibition receives a Jhandjpme glass sojjyenlr of' the occasion. Easau. The strangest human being born to illve, sitting in a den of live rattlesnakes, !not a few, but hundreds of them. You (wlll seo this living mass of hissing and venomous reptiles crawling all about him, biting him, all of which only ex cites hia admiration, and when they are not furious enough he will grab them ,by the armful, showing bis displeasure I by biting off their heads and eating them with the same relish as you would a nice, delicious banana. Animal Show. Here are gathered the wild beasts of the forest, tamed to the trainers with the docility of a kitten; educated to the degree or a college grauunie, etti-n anu ievery animal an actor. Wallace, the king of beasts; the un tamable lion; killed six trainers and in jured scores of keepers. At each and every exhibition his present trainer, Joe Kttool, will endeavor to enter his cage. . rerria Wheel. The wheel that made Chicago's (World's Fair famous. Take a ride, get -ujflfthearth n nave-a pleasant tlme4 taken. acerry-Go-Bonnd. ' TBe ever-popular children's favorite i ducementsto cluba and -parties for Ky-'v w,' rsrr w ; .,i I iciK M it si JO-.. . Jtv. At. 11 f:7 liiiTMitiM" placed a large order for railway bridges announced the following reception com- of exceptional sixe In the United States, says the London Olobe, British makers of such goods excused their backward ness In allowing the business to slip out of their hands, on the ground that certain American firms happened to have the very things required in stock. The same extenuation was pleaded when American locomotives were preferred to English when occasion arose to Increase at once the rolling atock of some Bur mese railways. But two new orders have lately been sent across the At lantic which surely ought to have corn within the compass of British achieve ment In one Instance, a glgantlo American dredger will shortly be seen scooping out the bed of the Thames to an Increased c'nth of four feet. In the otner, a aosen motor omniDuses or American design 'and manufacture threaten to add to the existing conges tion of traffic in London streets. It must certainly create an idea among foreigners that John Bull, of old the self-he) pf ill, Is getting played out when he finds himself constrained to invite American assistance in such purely domestic mutters. It was not to be ex pected, of course, that any such British firms would keep in stock such out-of- the-way goods. But their American competitors were. 11 ! laid, similarly circumstanced when the demand first arose. The difference was that they at once addressed their minds and ener gies to supplying, the required articles. mlttee: Unlted States Senator John H. Mitch ell. United States Senator Charlea W. Fulton, A. L. Mohler, president of the O. IL.Se N.; Harvey W. Scott, editor of the Oregon ianr-C. 8. Jackson, editor of The Journal; C. J. Owens, editor of the Telegram; A. H. Devers. Cyrus Dolph, United States District Attorney John H. Hall, Postmaster F. A. Bancroft, Qen. Charles F. Beebe, Whitney L. Boise. "Senator Dolliver Is a prominent man RAILROAD MEN'S HOURS Indiana, with all her faults and all her vagaries, does some good things, and when they are good they are very good. Indeed. One of them Is the law pro hibiting railways working their em ployes on the rail for more than 13 con secutive hours. The legislation is not only humane In its provision, but It con tains the largest measure of safety for the traveling public end for the safety of freights. Under the provisions of the statute the executive oJllclaH of nil roads operating In Indiana are obliged to placard the shops and other buildings of the road with notlcs to tho operatln officials of the existence of tne law pro hlbitlng them continuing any employe In work beyond the specified time. It la not to. be believed that the railways would willingly overwork their men to the point of breaking them down, for good and trained railroaders are not picked up In the market places, though the fact that the pay la often according to the CARNVIL OPENS THE FUN IS ON Woodmen of the World Already to Make Initial Bow Gran'd Parade to Start at 7:30 O'clock Sharp. Women of Woodcraft to Havo Charge of Country Store-.' Everything Will Be in Placo at Appointed Timo, Dog and Pony Kbow. The. children's delight;, entertaining and instructive to parents aa well. Dogs that box, cake walk, skip the rope. The ever-funny monkeys, the educated horse that adds, subtracts, spells, etc., In fact, does everything but talk. special hours. ' See the manager. The Electrlo Theatre. but the one with the Southern Carnival Company l-up-to-date. ;. All the moving : pldtures presented are produced- with electrical effects. Mr. Relss haa at great ' expense procured the scenes of 'the recent disaster ,at Heppner. --You will also see tne ivory inai ium to life or the. story of Pygmalion and Oaltea, and. several ; other illusions. This is tho most' costly exhibition ever placed under canvas. . .-.A-- : "V- .: I . , Cap. Caarlei .Seaofc. '.' ; .-.--y Known as fix human sn, la his 'iron OREGON BLACK TAILS Sportsmen Who have hunted the black tall deer on the western slopes of the Cascade Mountains in Oregon look for ward with pleasure to the middle of August, when the deer begin to trail. About , this time the immense herds that have summered in the grassy meadows surrounding the chain of lakes lying be tween the headwaters of the San t lam and Umpqua' Rivers, begin to change their range. The does with, their fawns and the yearlings start first, with occasionally a three or four point buck. It probably will be - several weeks later wnen tno last old buck takes tRe trail. 80 it is that during the bright sunny days of October these high ranges that earlier nrtfirseasort would ts.ve yielded a half doseii: deer to the acre, scarcely "how a fresh track, - ' In the early; fall sportsmen from-the valley are frequently seen in wagon loads going up the Mackenzie River to met the deer coming down? Of course; this does not mean that, they will meet in the road, although It ls not unusual, in fact, it la quite .comm to kill a deef from the wagon, when nearlng some place where their .trail Icrosses the river. Sherman' Powell in Sunset Mag azine for July. XOW-UTEI TO -XX2 BAST. The Canadian Pacific will again place on' sale excursion tickets rood for stop overa. with long-time limit These tick-l eta will De on naia juiy xi, is, n, 10 and H. and again on August IS, 19, 25 and 3 8- ForxulL particulars, call on r addreas F. K. Johnson, F. P A JM prominent physiologists and men of the highest authority in the medical profes- PRODUCTS IN STATUARY Statues modeled in the different products of Louisiana will be a display in that state's exhibit at the St Louis World's Fair. The devil in sulphur has been completed to show off Louisiana's -wealth ln thla - mineral The devil, stands astride such leaping flames as are supposed to belong to his region. "Miss Sugar" will be a llfe-slsed figure of pure crystallized sugar. Cotton will be displayed In the form of a negro and plow-mule. In this statue the fluffy appearance of the cotton will be pro served by attaching the raw material lightly to the surface of the dummies. Other statues of a like character will complete this unique display. 'ibUinaHH t, J 1 u ... S. -i. - . : -i7 4 -y. irhH-J-'-' -v i .'i ! "( vi - - t, r - x 2 4 JtHlL - ' ',l. 5 Tne Old Plantation. The Old Plantation Here are depicted the scenes and doings of the early life of the old plantation negro as he was during the war. The funmakers of the Carnival. CT J M . W . -V X Tjfl ';:f;: Jf ... . v . ,i ; Amerloan Theatre. . ..Here you will aee Just what the name Implies, the cream of the American vaudeville atage; performers that have appeared In all the leading .vaudeville houses; singers that sing; dancers that dano; comedian Utat make you laugh. K jrou don't enJoyR nertx eMfb, pU3K.ji.waji ' 4 - v in the United States Senate." said Col onel Jackaon, "and we want him to meet our business men and become familiar with our interests. The reception haa no political significance. We want to entertain our distinguished guest aa well as possible." ATHLETIC TRAINING The trainer of a generation ago would simply have stood aghast at the sweets and other savory foodstuffs eaten by your modern rowing or running collegian. Yet it may be doubted If the physique either of the individual ath lete or of the nation ever stood at a higher general standard of 'fitness. " One pertinent fact with regard to train ing is that both past tradition and pres ent practice condemn with emphatic voice the use of tobacco and alcohol and other Indulgences to which healthy man wonderful animal that he Is Is un happily prone. So long as the main principles of temperance, plain living and abundant exercise are carefully ap plied to the man in training, so long will, the results be likely to succeed. Every human being under reasonably good conditions of environment ought to be, like the healthy schoolboy, always in a state of "training." mileage Is an Inducement which some railroad men nre unable to resist. But there are interests above and beyond and of far greater importance than the wages the men may desire to earn and tho roads be willing to pay, and the safety of life and freight is among the higher interests. Eight hours of rest, with less than eight hours of sleep, are not more than sufficient for railroaders who have been on the ralf. In the en gine cab or on top of a freight for 18 hours. If Indiana will but enforce her statute good will come to men and to roads, and other states may profit by the example set by the Hoosier State. POTATO COCKTAIL The Shawnee News gives a novel remedy for the "drink habit" or rather. The summer carnival of the Woodmen of the World will be thrown open to the public tonight. The carnival Is located in the Park blocks, between Ankeny and Flanders streets, and as arranged will compare In beauty with any previous show of - this character ever given in the North-' west. The opening parade will be held to night at 7:30 o'clock, and will start promptly from Fourteenth and Wash ington streets. The entire formation ' will beas follows: The Procession. Formation, north aide of Washington. ' Carnival Band on Fourteenth, right of line at Washington. Ulfornr Rank, W. O. W.. Col. J. C. Jones commanding, south side of Wash- . Ington, right of line at Washington. Webfoot Camp, south of Washington, - on west side of Thirteenth, right of Una at Washington. Multnomah, north of Washington, on west side of Thirteenth, right of line at Washington. Alblna, south of Washington, on west side of Thirteenth, right of line at Washington. Portland, north of Washington, on east side of Thirteenth, right of line at Washington. Prospect, south of Washington , on Twelfth, west side, right of line at Washington. George Washington, north of Wash ington, on west side of Twelfth, right of line at .Washington. Prosperity, south of Washington, on east side of Twelfth, right of line at Washington. Sunnyslde. north of Washington, east side of Twelfth, right of line at Wash ington. 1 Montavilla. south of Washlngton.'west side of Eleventh, right of line at Washington; Mount Tabor, south of Washington, , east side of Eleventh, right of line at Washington. Country store, north of Washington, :. on Eleventh, right of line" at Washing ton. Animals, south of Washington, . on . Tenth, facing Washington. Bout of March. The line of march will be on Wash ington to Third, south on Third'to.Mor-. rlson. west on Morrison to Sixth, north on Sixth to Washington, west on Wash ington to Park, north on Park to tha .. carnival grounds. The management of the carnival has worked hard for several weeks perfect ing arrangements for the big show, and tonight, when the doors are thrown open ; to the public for the first time, all booths, shows and exhibits will M M . readiness for inspection. The Country Store will be one of tha nntoue features of the grounds, 'ami will- be In charge of the Women of "Wood craft The booth for this exhibit waa completed yesterday. Confetti of the old popular kina win be seen and felt as of yore. Ous E. Mey ers, the contractor, securing neanjr ton of the bright-colored pieces of pa per yesterday. ,. WHAT A CONSUL IS I was highly gratified to discover In thti consu Jftr Ksulftttont thftt consuls--of the United States ran with colonels In the regular army, orcaptatns in tne navy, altnougn, even oerore learning this, I felt quite as Important as any colonel, says a writer in the Atlantlo Monthly. The chapter on the official regulations of consuls to naval officer was also pleasant reading. Whenever an American vessel (or squadron) visit a port whero a United States consul is stationed, It is the duty of the com mander to send a boat on shore with an officer to visit the consul and tender him a passage to the ship. The consul, must accept the invitation, visit tha commander and tender him his official services. While the vessel is in port the consul is entitled to a salute of, seven guns (nine for a consul-general), which is usually fired while he is being; convoyed from the vessel to the shore. The official etiquette requires the con- . sul to face the ship and at the end of tho salute acknowledge It by raising his hat All this has practical significance to our consuls at Mediterranean ports, but none whatever in the case of Ghent. ituated some SO miles Inland. r But, . nevertheless, Ghent is technically; The reduced homeseekers rates, effec tive February 16. apply via the Denver Rio Grande. Have your friends come through Salt Lake City, over the scenlo line of the world. . w .. - The most delightful trip across the continent is via the Denver Rio Grande, the aeenlo line of the worlA. Apply t JInU4 prUnd,-f or rates. - w . .i4-. v. for enabling those whq haya swora og4 "seaport," thanksio ship ; CMiaito lerneuica, uu uiv www wviui ting vessels of 18 or 1 fset draught My vain hope was that soma inquisitive man-of-war of the United States would manags to penetrate to Ghent; where upon the seven guns would boom forth, shaking the dust sf ages from ths ancient belfry. ,nd reverberating , through tha ruins of mediaeval castlo of the counts of ,- Flanders. f - This, of. course; was a were Dream. to remain "on the water cart" It con sists of ice water drunk through a raw potato. Peel the potato and cut down to one end of it until it can be easily In serted in the mouth. - Dip the potato in Ice water and suck it every time a craving for strong drink comes on. It is claimed that this treatment will' ef fect -an absolute cure. The why and wherefore are not stated, but the process is such a simple on that there can be no harm In trying it if anyone is afflicted with - a thirst that he really desires to loss. .w- If you are. contemplating a trip East this month -you . can avail yourself of very low excursion tickets over . th northern Paciflo on July 1J to 1. For full details call on or write A. D. Charl ton. Assistant Genera! Passenger-A cent tti Mo rr isB -street earner-ef-Third. Portland, Or, . . ; , . - , I Th y of a young child is a trans parent as 1 water; that of the youth a little less so; In the man of 10 the eye begins to bs slightly opaque: in the man of or to it is dwcii.fHy nr.; .-, and !in the man of TO or km and lustreless. This ' I mant of opacity It f - ' of fibrous tinxnfl n i . matter, ia j ;