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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 3, 1903)
tfUE . OBEGON DAILY JOURNAL, rORTLAND, MOKDAY EYENiyGt AUGUST 3, 1903. rf&f - ui..!ji-ag.aujwfti- ,u4gw..i'Bff'v."!aii-i i ! .-. r t ' ' ..:-'!.!: r:--.". 11 : ' . " .':'''''',':''''''''' " 1 ! I THE TIARAS OF THE BATUOAD TTHXTABTZS. ' WANTS ARSTOCRAT. .CATHOLIC RULERS DETECTIVE AGENCIES PROSPER THROUGH THOSE WHO ARE SUSPICIOUS j ; J mm W 1 ''A couple of stairways, one moderately light nnd fairly -well carpeted, tne suai 'entrance to the aeeond floor, of .tJrCTJld- Style Qfflce building; tne seeontr mgiu narrower, darker, and with a carpet worn, not straightforwardly as well-lnvl tentioned carpets art, but at the ecu. In furtive places. In a sort .of shame faced way. Thla aeeond stairway leada to the vantage point, which la. briefly. the reception room where the head of the confidential detective agency ana waiting to hear more trouble. To hear trouble la tne actective ' agent'a role In life. To learn of the vamy aide of human nature li hla dally and hourly taak. According to him. there la no one worthy of belief, no one In 'thla vast city, seething and throbbing with all aorta and kinds of human na ture, who should be trusted. They are all alike," he says, waring Ma hand with expansive gesture toward .teeming Broadway, and fixing the Inter viewer with honeat-appear.ng eyes of a lluatroua brown, enough In themselves to. Inspire confidence In aplte of hla word. lie puta modern phrase to the old Scriptural Injunction and says: "Put not your trunt in millionaire, nor in any aon lof man. nor woman, either." he adda la worn out and gives It up. . But aa a general thing we can tell pretty wall Just what time and money will nave to be expended." Women DeteotlTes. "What do you pay your woman detec tive." "Usually fB a day and expenses. We hold very few on salary. As a general thing, we employ one until the caae la finished and then we may not need her again for a long time. We have alwaya a number on our Hat to whom we ran apply when a caae comes In suddenly." rou pay the men detectives the same?" "We usually give ft a day and expen ses for the commercial work and 7.60 for divorce work." 'Is the latter harder?' 'No. it Is really easier, but when a man or a woman starts out to" get evi dence for a divorce be doesn't mind pay ing a little extra." "And the commercial work Includes?" "Oh, watch'lng confidential clerks. people who are trusted with other peo pie s financial Interests, etc. Do you find that woman In busi ness is more honest than the monT Six of one and six of the other. We haVA 1uat ftnfahail th kii nf a wnman 'ententlously, true to his Instinct of po- cie leader in Sunday school, pious IKeness. which Incudes woman whenever 1 10 ,nP UniU wno wu, nnBjj, caught with marked bills and confessed that aha had been stealing for four years and had taken thousands of dollars. Everybody In the place had been suspected but her You see religion Is some good. "Will she be prosecuted V The detective looked pained. "No. her employer forgave her. Tou see. she worked on his symnathies. I felt sorry for her." And after mo ment's thought. "She was a good looker. I m always sorry for women." He did not add that they had to be good lookers," but as most of his cases seem to haye concerned that rare species It Is natural to assume that sympathy Is more easily aroused by Grecian features than the reverse. The next rrirestlon was: "What does ttosslbla. Tell us all about It." and the Inter ' viewer sinks luxuriously Into a red plush .halr. which la drawn Invitingly near 'the desk, and consults a much-nibbled pencil which haa never yet fulfilled Its destined use. "Isn't this a dull season tor your business? Everybody Is get ting resdy to go out of town for the . summer. Is this the time when you cut down your force and take It easy?" . Take It easy? I should ssy not." . He lowers his voice, and one prloks up one's ears expecting to hear the villain music which announces the entrance of " pthe dark mystery 1n opera boufte. But .. the only music Is hte noise of the pat tering raindrops outside, while the de - tectlve unrolls page after page In the . book called life. TThere is no time when we are more busy than In summer," he says. "Tou see when the wives go off to the summer resorts they want their husbands watched, and the husbands want the wives watched, so we are really buslet than when they are both In the city, for then they sort of keep track of each other." I ' "Tou mean to say that this sort of lining really happens? . Tou mean, of . course. In Isolated cases r fThere are hundreds of such cases Irtght on my books at the present time. (Hundreds of women are making their plans for a summer outing which will Include more than they bargained for. Hundreds of husbands add to the sum itotal of summer expenses ttie fees, paid ( lior private aetecuve nervier, i . Soma Comparisons. "Somebody said In a popular story once '.that married life Is like champagne with I the aparkle a-one. Apparently the detec tive agency baa found, a way to restore - 'the bubbles. - ' Imagine Mrs. Johnson who, secure In ,the belief that thousands of Intervening 'miles separate her from her husband, is Ignorant of the fact that the mild-eyed man who reads a newspaper every day In the corner of the hotel veranda and - seems to have no other object In life than the stock market. Is in reality a private detective who is sending a diary of her Incomings and outgoings to the faithful. John, who. In the city, takes his private secretary or- some other charming aolacer to dinner every night and heeds not the lurking Sherlock at Jils heels. There Is excitement In the ivery thought Hammer Charms. . And when they meet In the autumn or ton those rare 'occasions when John, mid the crush of things, finds time to spend Sunday with his wife. Imagine them talking over the Innocousness of their respective lives, the wife who "haa sat every day on the veranda talking with that tiresome old Mrs. Page," and John who "has moved with clock-like 'regularity from room to office and from . office to room," grudging the time he , has had -to spend going to and from his work; the wife meanwhile with the reports of John's misdoings, and John with a fac-slmlle. of those cataloging 'her flirtations. .- . It Is very probable that the ambitious raaker of summer hotel prospectuses wlll, In the near future. Include, In the . many attractions offered, that of the services of the private detective, who may be consulted dally from I to 4. ,Thls would greatly reduce the present expense, while It might stir the lethargic to action. ' A woman who had never thought of suspecting her husband might, hearing her summer acquaintances describe their ' sensations when Initiated Into the mys teries of the consulting room, go and do likewise. Even golf, dancing, and or chpstra every day and other common place attractions will have to take a bock seat when forced Into competition with the hotel that furnishes the prl yate detective to its patrons. ' The interview is interrupted while a . Quietly dressed, soft-voiced, pleasant mannered young woman passes through the office, stopping for a word of whis pered instruction. "The best woman detective on the Staff," s-ys the agent, looking after her retreating figure. "She can get any thing out of anybody." "Tell me how." "Ok It s a different method with everybody. She's Just been working on an Interesting case. There have been a quantity of valuable furs stolen from one of the big fur stores here. Suspicion pointed to a salesman and a woman with Whom he has been very friendly. r 'This woman lived at a boardtnghouse In one of the Thirties. We sent this woman detective there with Instructions to stay until she ferreted the matter out. "She took a room, dressed the part, got ' acquainted with the other woman and in course of time the latter offered to get her some furs, telling her that she could buy them, in the summer season for less than coBt She introduced her to the very man we suspected and the rt was easy. 'The girl says good-bye' and that night the young man finds her at a roof garden with a young fellow whom she knew before she waa engagedand whom She had sworn to her fiance she had broken off with entirely. The engage ment was over then and there, '."And the girls? Do they employ da ted Ives r 'The girls don't so often," anewered the detective, "but the parents of the girls do. They are not quite sure about the man. although hla stories may aound pluuslble and take In the girl all right. So we shadow him and find out if he tins been telling the truth, If he has any bed habits or If he' la paying attention to anybody else, you know." So even courtship is honeycombed with suspicion, according to the detective agent. The man who holds his sweet heart In his arms may have, at that mo ment, In hla breast pocket a report from tlio detective agency announcing that "nothing of any consequence has been discovered, but that there are several clues." It is all quite up to date and Interest ing ss a study of human Imaginings, but there may be those old-fashioned enough to believe that It la better to have loved and been deceived than to love accord ing to the detective agency's standpoint. Thousands of cases are carefully writ ten up In thla agency's books. The re ports are tabulated and when the dally report Is made reference Is had only to the number placed on the books. For Instance. Mrs. Smith, who Is hav ing her husband watched, receives dally memorsnda marked, say "6.000." If the memorandum Is picked up It simply reads "5,000; Blsnk's store, t o clock. and to the casual reader It conveys no evidence, but to her, learned In the de tective cipher. It conveys the Informs tlon that husband at t o'clock met the object of his secret affections at Blank's store. If husband nicks It up, she has been Informed what to say, and recelvea his questlorlng blandly. It Is an appoint ment with the dressmaker, who Is to n uai uvrva . - . . - a aaa man do when he suspects his wife of "ll0W ner n'w. a'- Rna Infidelity and wants to find out er If ,n Qua'" number, or someimng oi well if that sort. It Is all very simple, accord- The detective looked at his long taper- ,n t0 ,h "ytem. and ono could be ing hands and smiled. come quite a proncieni romancer wnn a Th-v alwava take a train for RM. ' practice oy lis means ton. That is they tell her that they are going to Boston. Its a funny ming tnat a man always In those clr- cumstsnces takes a train to Boston. He never by any chance says he Is aro- Jug to Baltimore. or Washington or Buffalo. "It's always Boston. There must be 'Yes," said the agent In answer to one of the last questions asked him. "we sometimes learn that our detectives huve been bought up by the other side. bdt that rarely happens. We are pretty cautious. In fact, oftentimes a detec tive does not even know the name of the man whom he Is shadowing. He knows some connection between the two Ideas. nlm onl h number. a. - . - I 'All tha nl I sen Inn but really If I were a wife I should be on my guard when my husband said any- ining aoout going to Boston. Then, of course, he does- take the tralm We send out a man with him and do the roping. 'The ?" "Ys get the Information he Is after We have Just finished a case like that. r inun niiwniown met anotner man. a friend of, his. who said carelessly. 'Just saw your wire at lunch. Jack, at the Imperial.' The deuce you did! With whom waa Stathoda of. Beautifying the Bummer sne luncningr Only I guess he said All the preliminaries are arranged, he Is taken to a certain place, the man to be shadowed is pointed out. and he simply watches his actions and reports. If a man is bought by the other side and It Is discovered. It is all up with him, and ha has sacrificed his future for a prtsent gain, for of course he is never trusted again." New York Sun. FADS AND FANCIES. I p 'il' i ? is i -. ff ' f ." 7 JL ill .' 0 . r m 0 . a r There -Are Now Five oMhese Costly Jewels in the Vat ' lean Treasury: II. N y a mo Tha tiara which tha Executive Com- mitteo presiding over tha festivities commemorating the Jubilee of th pon tificate of Leo XIII presented to tha boly father. February 10 laat. as an ex Inn at exultant iov from the whole 3 TRAINS to , the EAST DAILY ilia) Wivniivnv esr s " "oURIOWPACIHC Tseaaffe Pillows tawUr4 sn foarlat stos tag cars dally to Omasa, Qileaso, f poaiMi tourist stopping ears dally to - Kassas 0Uy tbroufh I'ullmaa tourist sleeping ears (paraaa ally euaducud) weekly to Chicac. kasaia City) radioing ebalf cars (seats fares) to ue Kaat ally. . ' ' - - UNIOtf Dg POT. Leaaaa. Arrlr CUJOAOO- PORTLAND FBC1AL. Far the Baat via Bsat-latum. to a. bu uuy. ao a. sv 1111. oo a. , :Wv' The attentions of Austen Chamberlain, eldest son of tha British Colonial Secretary, to Miss Muriel White, daughter Of Secretary .White of the American legation In London, are the cause of much Ulk at present on both sides of the Atlantic. It Is said that Mr. Joseph Cham berlain wishes his son to marry an English countess. ATLANTIC. EXPRESS. to Um Hast ria Uuai- lactoa. Milanl, an engraver who both In tha con ception of the work as well aa In tha - a a ... I execution of tha same, naa snown Him self to be an artificer of the first rank. Tha tiara consists of thin plates of leaf lets of silver, worked together after tha manner of fish scales; Us form Is ovoid, slightly pointed at tha apex, the wholi being surmounted by a cross which rests upon a diminutive globe, representing the world, which la per- ivrniw Willi mmi into uw.vw w M n v , t, M semDie a sons or me nrmameni. i rol k.,,.. The silver ovoid Is divided Into three toa. Wall Walla. Law. sections by three golden crowns placed oa, Cjie -"; one above the other; and In the bands .Kih hiinm tha ernwna are I . . , ; . V. , ' . . . mtv V T' v. a. . ' . . . frlesea displaying oltv branches laden 1th berries, bundles or leavea ana twigs Indiscriminately . Interwoven, Which cover the base with leavea and fruit Now. Jn order to maintain tha yoK SAN nUNClttCO. shape of tha tiara more nearly In oop-1 g. s. Oao. W. Eloae formity with those already In existence, and at the same time constructing it wholly of metal Instead of brocade, as heretofore. Milan! conceived tha notion of ornamenting It with a light and rich bas-relief, consisting of decorative cartouches Interlaced with olive twigs growing at tha base and developing Into full flower at the summit Of the medallions between the cartouches, three represent tne inree popes wno nave oo- Allro,t 4, U:S0 B . Aogust 6, : s. at. I c.uplftd the papal chair for tha longest August 6. 1:16 p. m.; Augaat T, :00 a. at.l perioos, vis., oi. reier, nui ia ana -ueu i jiuu. wnaruay;, m.bu p. i. 8:10 sv IM-lr lo so a. at. 1 Palis. ooxa ajto irm uatunvuL Augaat 10. W. 50. S. 8. celambla A Of oat 0, IB, SO. rroai AUaka Does, is.W a. k :Ws,avl Ooloarkia Blvw Btrtstsa. FOB ASTORIA sad way Bolota. eoaaaetlna with vtmr.i rnr iiwaoe sea North Baa eh. sir. Baa-Saturday sala Aah-at Sock. s oo a. av Daily. n Sunday 10:00 a. ss, POTTEB 8AIUNO DATES (Ash Bt. Daok) THE SHAKERS ARE NOW RETROGRADING Communistic Sect Is Losing Strength Lebanon Settle ment Contains Only 120. 'who' instead of 'whom.' they are usif'- anv ungrammatlcal at such times. 'The man tells him 'a stranger.' He cnins rignt to me. "What shall I dor" he asks. 'Uo to Boston tonight.' I sav. Cottage. While there are no new fabrics In sum mer draperies, there Is no end of variety In design and attractiveness in colors. Cretonnes sre used to a lavish extent, and are gay and "summery" In their "He tells wlfev that he la called "oral richness or srtistic drapery She kisses him good-bve snd half effects. They ere used for curtains, fin- hour after starts for the Waldorf to meet the stranger with whom she was luncning. I reit awfully sorry for her. She was a pretty woman." "Don't you ever allow your sj-mpa-thles to govern you?" "W can't. If we did once we would simply nsve to at all time, for vou can't help feeling sorry for people when tney get caught. Especially the women." and he sighed. When do men and women cease ta become suspicious of each other?" Sherlock looked bland. "There was a little girl who said once that the marriageable age was from 14 till death, and I guess the age of sus picion has about the same elastic boundary. It Is an absolute fact that I had men and women of over 60 come to me to have the partner of their Joys Ished with lace borders, all manner of draperies, cushions, pillows and for upholstering rattan and willow furniture. And though one may pay 11.60 a yard for a lovely piece of cretonne, her neighbor, In drawing room and veranda, may make as brave a showing at 30 cents a yard, the reproduction of design and coloring being so excellent. Of course, if one desires more costly and richer furnishings there Is a wide range of choice to be had in Oriental silks for all manner of draperies, pillows and cushions. There are the lovely Habutal, Bhlktl and Moucha silks for curtains, the Shtkll (or raw silks) b'elng used mostly for sash curtains, aa they are so soft and come In all the art tones. But all the cotton draperies mentioned are preferable for Bummer cottages, yachts, houseboata and for all town flats and sorrows shadowed. There la really and apartments temporarily turned Into "Ta ihat th iiaunl mAh rt niw. cedureTi, "Aa a' general thing, yes: to make the acquaintance of the suspected party in '. ; an apparently natural way and usually when that is accomplished it is not hard to reach the end. ?The one keynote of the detective ' business Is the knowledge that the crook In whatever line he may be will confess as soon as he thinks he can c trust his hearer. They must have a 1 'Confidant It's a queer thing, but no matter how old they may be in the business they never learn to hold their tongues. At they did we would lose many a case. "But talk they must and will. The only thing; necessary is to be on the ground, .sea the . suspected party ..constantly, break 'down any barrier of reserve by .." . propinquity, find out bis weakness and trade on It" r 'Isn't It a rather long and expensive 1 process?" , .. "Vary. 'Sometimes it takea months, .1 yen years. There ta a detective now. in Paris on a casa fhat has taken two Years, but ha lias his prey now, sll right Ex ( penelvaf So expensive that sometimes tfca party who Ja trying -to get avldence no age limit "How does the man act when he cornea here to have his wife, watched? Crasy! He walks up and down, curses and gets fairly violent, particularly If it Is the first wife and the first time." That last remark opened hew vistas of thought. The first wife and the first time'- one might as well be In Chicago! "And the women? Oh. they cry. Nine timer) out of ten they .lust put their poor little heads down on the desk and have a good cry. I'm awfully sorry for the Hjswien. poor things." "Io you often break down at the last? Oh. my, yes. I have all the evidence for a divorce ready and the woman has thrown the case over and her husband never knows how near he got to free dom. "Why Is It? Oh. I suppose at the last moment the woman concluded that She did not want to be divorced. Tou know there are lots of women right here In New Tork who haven't an id enough to get a divorce, and simply won't give their husbands their freedom, no matter If thev beg for it on their bended knees." "Isn't there danger that the suspected party will In turn susoect? Doesn't the correspondents, the daily reports or something like that arouse question ing?" "Sometimes. For Instance, a man aflked his wife the other night if she was having him shadowed. We had told her what to say in case the question was asked. She promptly replied In an In nocent way: 'Are you doing anything for which I should have you watched?' "He said no more. "Another man told his wife that he had bought up her detectives and she broke down and confessed. The next day she telephoned to me to meet her at a certain place, and such a. bullyragging as I got! I told her thtkt he had slmnjy played a bluff game and she had fallen Into the trap. "When the husband came to us we promptly denied any knowledge of the affair, told him that his wife had said it probajily to frighten him and when he got home that night she. took back everything she had said; before accord ing to our Instructions and the ran never knew until the matter came Into the courts the real truth." , His confidences were. by no means con cluded. "It isn't the married men and women alone who hire detectives," he said. "You would be surprised to find out how many young men nave snaaowea tne girls to whom they are engaged to be married. . "A man isn't quite sure of a girl and so he comes and puts a detective on her track. Nice business, Isn't It? Trusting nnd all that: but it's all right" said tha candid detective, "you can't trust any body in this little old New York, not anybody." "Does a young man often find that his suspicions ore well founded?" "Oh, my. yes. Loads of times. We have. Just Unified a case. Toung man comes In. tells his tale of woe and we tell him to take a train to Boston. He goes and sees the girl, recites some cock-and-bull story about his having suddenly to leave town, and says that he w11 be absent a week. ' cool Summer houses As regards a taste for all white, there ts an Infinite variety of "furniture mus lins," plain, striped, embroidered. Inset and edged with one of the popular laces. ruffles, fringes and frills. But any one of the artistic color schemes for Summer furnishings will be found far more rest ful than an all-white outfit. Summer floor covering were never so attractive, and are shown in straw mat tings, both Chinese and Japanese, and East India Dhurries of rich Oriental de signs; simpler mattings in cool greens and straw checks, fibre and grass rugs In all the popular colors, are effective and Inexpensive. White enameled furniture, in complete sets, is lovely decorated with clusters and garlands of roses, with buds half blown and foliage that suggests a riot of garden bloom. Of course, many fur nlBhes cling to tho brass nnd enameled Iron beds, but the white woods are more elegant. Moorish prints nnd Turkish curtains, draperies and cushions in cotton or silk striped are cool and attractive, but the latest fancyls to use transparent madras In white and green stripes or large broken checks for window draperies and a solid green (a darker shade) for por-tlers. THWING ON CO-EDUCATION Apropos of the Boston discussion of co education, resident Th wing's annual report or ne trustees of Western, Re- university ai Cleveland naa a certain pertinence. In 1888 it was de ici milieu nui to receive women any more Into Adelbert College, but to es tablish a separate college for them aa a department of the Western Reserve university. 'President Thwlng now states that the system of co-ordinate education thus adopted has been proved aavaniageous Dy an experience of 1 years. The college for women has come to enroll. a larger number of students than the college for men. and is in a prosperous condition. He ,1s open minded, however, In his attitude toward other methods of co-education, and also toward entirely separate colleges for young women and men. Each, he thinks, has advantages for certain classes of students, as well as disadvantages. The susceptible boy and the susceptible glil should be sent to separate colleges, as otherwise their adolescent emotionalism Is In grave peril of working evil re sults. The woman who Is obliged to earn her. living should usually, ho be lieves, go to the same college with men. She may thus lose a certain delicacy, easier to feel than to define, but she will gain a strength, power or Initiative. persistence and Independence.-.which help her to make her way in the world. It Is Interesting to note that of 237 women who have received degree at -Western Reserve University, 54 are married, tS live at home, while of tha 120 who earn their own living 99 are Jeachera. Is the communistic sect of Shakers about to "pass on" and become a mem ory, like so many orders founded on more or less similar Ideas? It would seem so from the steady shrinkage of their numbers. The Shakers themselves say they have no chance of rebuilding until the outer world becomes calm and gives Its attention to religion, and for this miracle they hope. For a century and a quarter they have withstood calumny without measure, written and spoken, even accentuated In the earlier days by violence and lmpris onment. The more they were opposed the more they thrived. Now. in this age of general toleration, their troubles of opposition are ended, and they have proved to the world their many virtues, yet they are steadily losing ground, Never since the days of Ann Lee, the founder, and the settlement at Water- vllet on the upper Hudson has the mem bership been at so low an ebb. One Hundred Tears Ago. There are today In the 15 Shaker set tlements. In eight states, from Maine to Florida, between 800 and 900 "believers." One hundred years ago the Shakers num bered 1.632. Twenty-five years later. 1,000 members had been added to their census. At the end of 1839 the entire membership of the Shaker societies numbered 6.000. Since the Civil War their numbers have- steadily decreased. Only the long lives which the faithful live has kept the decrease from being more rapid. The settlement at Mount Lebanon N. Y. has always been the Shakers' pride, not only from its numbers, but from the value of the property which, is owned. in common. It is still the largest settlement, but It furnishes a striking example of the numerical decline of the Shakers. Within the memory of some of the "believers" still sheltered in the. great white houses of the village this commu nity numbered 600. There were five prosperous families, with acres set out in seed-producing crops, and factories and mills which were busy from early In the morning until late at night. Now there are four families, with only 120 members. The women outnumber the men five to one, and the majority of both sexes are old. The mills are closed. for the trusts have made It Impossible for the Shakers to meet competition. The seed business is abandoned, because other seed raisers appropriated the name "Shaker" and cut prices. Even the Shakers admit that they are losing ground. "We may be running out." said an aged elderess, as she sat back In her comfortable chair and gazed dreamily over tho green hills Into the valley below Mount . Lebanon, where dwell the busy,- prosperous world people "we may be running out. but until there Is a change In the outside, world we cannot hope to build up our numbers. The decrease began with the excitement of the Civil War. which took our young men away from us in swarms. The con flict between capital and labor, which Is now raging fiercely without, Is the dis turbing Influence at present. Until that is ended we do not expectmany people to give heed to our truths." "The strength of principles la' not measured by the number of those sus taining them." added a sister whose lit erary work is doing much to keep alive the spark of Shakerism. "We are con tent to work and wait unttl the' battle of the present crisis has won its laurels of peace, when Justice and liberty will be re-established on broader and firmer, foundations than ever before. Then, when thd material wants of the people shall be easily supplied under vast co operative systems, we believe that the small, still voice of the Spirit will be heard speaking to the pouls of the peo ple and guiding all whom the Father and Mother have prepared to the light of the City on the Hill." BENEDICTINES AT HOME IN ENGLAND rOB DAYTON, City ao XamalU Hivar poluta atr. SlaMra, aab-St. sock. IWator permitting) XIII; two of tha medalllona also contain the dates and the , dedica tions, while the third presents tha figure of an angel. All are of silver lattice or grille work, and the same may be said of the medallions In the upper part which present tha figure nt tha noiteemer and the aeal of the . .w. h-v nt tha tiara . I FOB LBWIBTOK. Ida "I I ind Dolata. fro- Tho three crowns arrangea one aoove Klparla, Wash., staast- tne otner are executea in iun ronoi nui an spesaae aaa u- maintain the heraldic character of the utoo. ornamented with YaaikUl aUver Baste. T:00 a. at. Tnasday, Taarada, 3a tarda. sake Blr Boat. tiara, being further I a. svl in. Hi, i i r maa MtY I A boat 6 oo s St, uauy rloay. ExpeUed from France. They S0,SW ti" ffi hind bhelter on British T. T boi neir oiory. sacerdos. I A A rL7. A w Kf F A V A A a-F a a apavit MQVE MAQISTER. omtce regis christi PASTORUM PASTOR OVILE. Between the uppermost crown and A strangely significant little cere mony took place recently at Charing Cross Station, where a deputation of I tho, surmounting globes runs a perfor-1 English Roman Cathollca welcomed back ated aone rendeyd necessary In order to their own country the English Bene- to lighten the weight of the tiara, which The most delightful trip across ths MntlnAn la-, via tha v Donv.., . TOIa ..nln Una A Ka -,..1. Apply at 12 Third at. Portland, for " w" puDiicauon, ratea. ' ' 1 nuwivasuis uw vuiai rwiutuiu, vnt BESTGUI SATES TO SEASHORE. Go to Newport on Yaqulna Bay an Ideal beach. It Is becoming very pop ular with the Portland people. The low rata of $3.00 has been made by - the Southern Pacific Company in connection with the Corvallls & Eastern Railroad for the Sunday round - trip from Port land, tickets good going Saturday, re turning. Monday. A delightful ride, through the beauti ful Willamette Valley, with privilege of going up one side of tha .- Willamette River, returning the other. t Ask any Southern Pacific Company or Corvallls &" Eastern Railroad agent for a beautifully Illustrated booklet describ ing the seaside resorts at xaquina. Journal friends , ana readers whan traveling on trains to and from Part land should ask news agents for Tha Journal and Insist upon being supplied with this paper, reporting all failures in dlctines, expelled from Doual, says a London correspondent. "The wheel Is come 'full circle." Indeed when France banishes and England welcomes the brethren of St. Benedict, and 200 yeara and more of perilous and Intricate his tory were summed up In that meeting on the platform of Charing Cross. Nor waa the place as unapt a setting for such a scene as might appear to a cas ual glance, though a railway atatlon Is not as a rule Instinct with the romances of history. For almost within a stone'a throw stands all that yet remains to us of old Whitehall, and but a little farther, if one follows the curve of the street past the entrance to St. James' Park, where the Horse Guards keep watch like stat ues of scarlet and steel, the spire and buttresses of Westminster lift mist gray by a steel-gray river. Of all that Is suggested by the great Benedictine abbey It Is Impossible to speak In pass ing, for It Is In truth no less than all English history, from the days of Ed ward the Confessor to our own; But Whitehall has Its own links with the Order of St. Benedict. It has been truly observed that when Henry VIII re moved his court from Westminster with Its traditional sanctities he symbolised the breaking away of the nation from the dominance of the church. Wolsey's York House, claimed from Its magnlfl cent owners, became royal Whitehall and witnessed strange vicissitudes of warring faiths. Dark days for the old faith were those times of leveling the ancient structure and laying the new foundations. Hammer of the. Honks. Thomas Cromwell, Hammer of the Monks, made broad space for the Eng llsh to be with his devastating reforms, until the hour came for him to follow the "martyred" abbots of Colchester, Glastonbury and Reading, and expiate on Tower Hill the crime of having served his King and his age too might ily. The monks of St. Benedict must have suffered more bitterly than others in the day of the great upbuilding, when cloister and church, the treasures of the sacristy and the scriptorium, were swept away together. "A Dominican or Franciscan or Jesuit," writes a Catholic chronicler of the Benedictines, "has no home In any one house of his order more than another. He Is here today and gone tomorrow. But 'home' ia the very Idea of a Benedictine monastery." From such homes the black monks were driven by the hammer stroke of Crom well's remorseless reforms; from such "home" the monks come today, Eng lish exiles In England. Mary Tudor, that Queen of unfulfilled hopea and frustrated efforts,, brought back , the Benedictines to Westminster, with a brief and pathetic pomp of restitution. It was one of those same Benedictines, John Feck nam. the last abbott of West minster, who Interceded .for the hap less "nine-days' Queen," Lady Jane Grey, and for ; "the Lady Elisabeth," who later was to prove no friend to him and his order. ; - Th Seminary at Sonai. It was in the reign of Elizabeth, when the monks were scattered In a final ex ile, that William Allen founded the English Seminary at Doual, that learned and devout priests should not be lacking when the Catholics were recalled to their own In England. Little he guessed how long the exile should last, who ex pected tha Invincible armada of Spain to conquer the heretic Queen and bring the true faith back In - triumph. The religious and political antagonisms were tragically Interwoven In that period of striving and plotting, and since the banished Catholics intrigued with Philip or Spam and Mary or Scotland 'against their native sovereign, it was . small wonder that the edicts 'of Elizabeth against the Catholics were edged with mortal penalties. So tha Struggla-went on with . plot and counterplot with worldly : ambition and religious zeal, and the hopea of the English Catholics did not falter, even when the armada waa driftwood. Doual remained a holy city of guidance and inspiration to them, a witness to tha true religion which England had rejected, and It sealed Its mission when It gave to tha world the famous Doual Bible, which ' la even now tha accepted Catholic version.. tOrm AUOTBT BATES. O. aV ft BT. Ag-ala Olves Xong-.Tlme Zilmit - . and Stopover. .. . ..ugust 18, 19, 25 and 28 tha O. R. A N. again sells long-time, tickets to points in tha East with atopover privi leges. Particulars at -city ticket office, Third an Washington streets. turns the scale at exactly a kilo. Milanl could In no better way have overcome tho great difficulties which presented themselves, and his work does great honor to Italian art. The tiara is esti mated to be worth $24,00.0. TICKET ornci. Third sad Waahlagtss, Tale, shoae atala Tla. PORTLAND & ASIATIC STEAMSHIP CO. roe Yokohama and Boas Seat, eaDtsg at Kobe, Kagaaakl and Shanghai, taking fratght Tla eonaaetlDf eteemars toe """b, tart Arts at sad VladlmistocB. nrDBABAKHA lATIS ABOUT JTJXY N. Foe rates aod fall Intbraatioa can aa ar as. draas officials or agaata of the O. U. A B. Oa, TXSZTOBB TO POBTXAVD Bionld 8as tha Beauties of tha Match lass Columbia Blver. Leaving Portland dally at 9:20 a. m., by the Oregon Railroad' & Navigation Company'a "Portland-Chicago Special. tna Deauues ox ina upper vuuuiuia River are seen by daylight arriving at Cascade Locks at 11:05 a. m., and The Dalles at iz:3o noon, iteturning, tne train leaves The Dalles at 1:20 p. m.. Caacade Loclra at 2:45 p. m., arriving at Portland at 4:S0 p. m. If desired, re turn can be made bv river steamer from Caacade Locks on the way up, arriving at Portland about 7 P. m. Return can also be made from The Dalles by boat The T. J. fotter leaves ior Astoria ana Ilwaco every day In the week, except Sunday and Monday. Particulars at city ticket office. Third and Waahington streets. EAST via. SOUTH IQoooN.nAsnJ- V V J 1 1 BAILBOAD TIMETABLES. a. at. 40 a. . T:S0 a. Bt. 114:60 p. at. tmo DEPOT. OVERLAND BXFBBSB trains, for galexa, Hoaa burg, Aahland. Sacra nonto. Of dan, Saa rraa- TrsS a Sb elaco, llotaT. Laa Aa ralaa, Kl Paso. New Or wans and the Bast At Wood barn sally (leapt Sunday ), ntore Ing train for aft Aa- -.a gel Slrrertaa, Browns. rllla, SDrlngflald. Wea4 Ung ana Natron. Albany paaoangar, eon- aectt at Woobura with ym kit Ansel and SUrar toa local Corvallia passenger..... 8aM s. St. Boerldaa pissaagr..JJi a. at TW WBT OF aVtWYTMIWO CXI 70 HOURS PORTLAND 5. SAGO via the 0. ft. R. & N, Co, Oregon Short IineUnion Pacific and Two trains a day, with through Pullman drawing-room sleeping cars, free reclining chair cars and dining can (a la carte). connects at Granger with the famous Orerland Limited, the most luxurious train in the world, to Chicago from the Coast . fie tar your tickets rtad over the Chicago ft North-Wat tern. 4VO. BARKIR, Qlfkk Aor. 0. M-W. ftr, ISS TmMO ST., BOBTtAMA OAS. " 1 Pally. UBatly a xcapt Sao day. ' Vartlaaa-Oswaga svbwtaa flsrrise and Tajaain ElrUloa. Depot Toot oi Jaffaiaoa Btmi. Leave Portland dallr tor Oswam T:Bd a. am i 11:60. 8.06. 1:25. 61 tM, 8:80, 10:10 p. at, Dally (ascent ttundiri 6:80. :80. l&S. 10 !Z a. m.( 4:00, ll:ao p. av Sao day only. Katamln from Oswmo. arltva Portland Aatt ?:80 a. .; 1:66. t.'Oo, 4:80, 0:18. TA6, S:B0. 1:10 p. m. Dally (except Sanday) Otaa, T:88, :W, 10:30, 11:4ft a. m. Bxeaptafonday; B):sd a. m. aunaay ouiy, iu:uo s m. Lcava from nam depot Tor Dallas and la tor Swdlata points dally (asoept Bandar) 4:00 B, an, ; Arrive Portland 10:30 a. m. Tbe Indapendcnca-afonmoati! Motor tine operates dally to atonmontb. and Alrlle, eaa j aeetlns wltb Southern Paclna Company's tracks at Dallas and Independence. Itrat-clasa rebate tickets oa sale from Port land to Sacramento and Baa rrancUoo, Net rat. I1T.50, berth ftg; aaeoad-eUai fare fit. without rebate or berth; seceaa-claaa aertfc 2. 60. Tlcktts to Barter? points and Europe, sm . aapaa, unina, uonoiaia ana Aoaomua. Otty Ticket Offea corner Third and wi tsa streets. Pnooe, Mala TU. ft W. STINOEB, W aty Ticket Aeat. B. OOKAH, won. Pas. Agt. TIME CARD TRAINS PORTLAND i Limited, Seattle. Bend Paget - Bound for Tacoma. Olrmnla. South and Gray's Harbor points. North Coast Limited, for Tacoma. Seattle, Butte. St. ' Paul. Min neapolis, Cblcaco, New York, Boiton and points East and Sootbeast. Twin-City Express, for Tacoma. Seattle. Spo- aane. Helena, at. rani. Minneapolis Cblcaao.' New York, Boetoa and all points Bast aad soutnca.t. Puget Sound . Kane. Clt -St. Louis Special, for Tacoma, Seattle, Spokane, Butte, Blllinsf. Denver. Omaha. Kanaae uty, at. ixHiia and all points Bast and Sontb. eaaC - , -' Departs. 1:80 a. m. rOOp. m. 11:45 a. m. 8:80 a. m. Arrlraa, 0:80 a, m, T.OO a, av T:00 p. t T:00 a. aa, ii nun aally. excent en South 4 A D. CHARLTON, , .,,,t"nt General Paasencer Ageat 12S Morrison St. corner Third. Portland, Or. Astoria & Columbia . River Railroad Co, Laares. UNION DEPOT. - Arriraa. . 5?r. Msy". Rainier, Dally. " Clatskanle. Westport. a m a . Clifton, Astoria, War. iiJO s, av. Da Ttntoa "l'l. Ham. Dally. njond aiort gterens, 2:80. p. m. Bearbart Park. Seaalda. Sat. enljr. Astoria aad Meaabore J- Bxpreaa, Dally. v t:00 p. a. - Ex Sat. DJ Astoria Expreas. $-.40 p, m. J. O. MAXO, O. P. and P. A., Aatoria. Or. f L B. L. LEWIS, Commercial Agent. 84s Aider tt I fbooe Uala BOO. , . , 1 .-, w ' ? ' " , n .M4 .v..