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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (May 13, 1905)
I- A. THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL PORTLAND.' SATURDAY EVENING, MAY 13, 1905. EtTIOTT'S REPORTS SEVER QUESTIONED -Mayor, TesTifying in Riner Case Says Engineer Had Full 'Authority." r.," MTATEtTStWEK WORK" WAS OF THE VERY BEST Oreenleaf Says Under Oath Con ' 7 "duit " Is All " That " It , Should Not Be. V Yesterday afternoon three- wltnee whoa statement were to form the sub ' nunc of . the state a - proof that the ewer was defective Mayor. Williams, City Engineer - Wanser and Civil Hn ' Klneer R. . Oreenleaf were called and supported the allegation that the work rluna be U. '111. IHhm w .'in inn anuiUlng " to the plana and specification. Mayor Wllllama wui called aa chair. rnun of the executive board. He placed the burden of the acceptance of da fecttve construction n W. -C. Elliott, who waa city .engineer when the sewer -was- ba4ltiiR "We took the report of Sit;- Elliott as ..conclusive evidence that-the require ments of the' plans and specification hade, beeiTTnet,"- said Mayor Williams. "No work wa accepUd by the executive board without a certificate signed by the city engineer, and usually ' th con- ... tractor abjo signed the certificate. "Mr. Elliott .waa present when the matter came before the' board and . atated to ua that the work was done - properly.' I waa particularly careful to ask him about' the character of the , wnrlr. nrt fpn-cii to the plans, and . aperificutlona, and. he was explicit In naying that everything waa done as It Mould have -been done."; .'-- o Objectioa to Signature. . rResar(tttig .the-Slgnntur- ef EHtottto the t:mjfi.cte.iilmedby Auditor Dev. lin to be a forgery, the mayor said that ""It nevrr was uuestloned by Elliott.-t,he -".'-. tilnrrs or any one else.- :The matter .was before the board, for . several 'weeks' and "iio one ever" ques tioned the signatures, said the mayor. changing the sewer and making It con- form with requirements, and It will ba a better sewer than It would have been hnd MrrRlner done the-work according tfr th plans."! '" Then in the cross-examination by At- torney Mendenhall the name of Morris rtellelintilnrwhii' had - been - searched - for with a subpoena and who could not be ' found, waa mentioned, when the lawye - 'asked the mayer if he knew Retnateln. . The answer waa "yeB'-and to the ques tion whether or not Relnsteln waa not one of those who bid for th work orig inally and was one of the men who .- stirred up: the Investigation, the mayor . - ': did 'not answer and the court ruled out the question amid the smiles of evej-y one In the room, . . ' City Engineer Waifxer, after - mora than an hour of testifying, gave tt as ghtff -OirtnftHrrhat he ewer-was iMiTmHt: . pwperly, and that common' aenae would ; havef suggested proylsions for common safety and some "detatll-whtcn-tntghtlnvtted Mr. Brombaugh to pay him a rol have been called-for technically fry tnespec)ncations. ..,. rrrs. .z, r"y , ; 'Wa n jToaUaaeedt -r" i Attorney Mendenhall lndltated that he expected, to set upthatthe technical , requlrementa of the plana were met. and : that not One Item in addition would ba -i.--admitted by the defense aa eaaentlal to Rlner'a assertion that he had fulfilled .': all he had to In building the aewer. He showed plainly that the defense would asa xne court ia 11 so nominaiea in ins bondr'nff WOUHTepttdlale Ihe propo--sltton that tiaage7 might be Invoked when "Tthere ras rrllten contract. R. 8. Oreenleaf told the Jury that the sewer waa defective. "Did It not conform In some respect to the plana" asked Mr. Mendenhall. -Well.- answered Oreenleaf, 1t had the shape of a sewer, looked like a newer, tint was tint unlit as L sewer should have been built" J. P. O'Neill, who had arted-afrehOuB. - Errol's burleaquera, in their , man for Riner for part of the time. .showed how the sewer was defective '"and that It would have been Impossible ;- for the defective- work- to have beep done without, knowledge of the con , , tractor. " ' 'It was constructed so that when the outside timbers supporting 4 he false r worfc"r5tted away the" whole" structure would fall." said 'O'Neill. ..-- Court adjourned this morning mit of respect to Judge Bellinger And no tes- t tlmony was taken today, AGED, DYING KANSAN KNEW WORD YEARS AGO "Frorh the wayeJiajerformeiLhla-J duty In enforcing the-law I believe he Is the . same Tom Word that , I knew 1 - l 11 -'-I j u .. ti 1 p 7TJ?Sl'Zr,,w ' t aCeofn modaleTh e Tocomotlvea Trboy-ln-miter Springs f lh, Albany Joc traIn whlrh wlu b. Kansaa," said Thomas Brombaugh, aged 70 year, who Is lying at the point of death at .hi home att l7 Sacramento street. "I would like to see him once again before I die, and tell him how-iiuiclv-iJJP'dj Knoughriew. -appreciate his wonrTn behalf of the t -young and inexperienced.'! added the old man with M sigh. J ' Mr. Brombaugh had been a constant .reader of The Journal, and had" there fore dallj knowledge of the -sheriff official dolag lit the way of" suppress- 4 ing gambling and other crimes. His -neighbor gave him eomealdtt1onaiJtt- format lon,-ed-therr-tr waa that he ex pressed his wish to see Mr. Word. . A . neighbor told the sheriff of the dying J. man' .desire.! and that officer Immedi ately called at the Brnmhaugb.. resl- dence. After 1 an exchange of greetlnga Mr." Brombaugh' Said he remembered k r young traveling man named Word who was in Kansas year, ago. and ha soon 'i-rr-rir..-' . , :-- . - 1 - : , -n. ' - ,- ' V 11 . - -, - -.. - ... - 11 .'1; The Best .- 'i - , AScourinr Soap AMeUlFolifh AClat Qeaner rri ii rr II II M,', . , ii- i-i ll i :'. Y w.--.ii - - I I i General Nelapn A. J. MUeg, Who I the Next President of the Equitable Life Insurance Company. learned-that the sheriff and his old The conversation turned to old times and the end of It was that Mr. Word visit- a r-aothr-w a" tie wss able The -con versation: had such a cheering effect on the old man t'jiat he aald he efeit )lke arising from his bed there and then, but he thought' he had better remain until harww aWe to-b.abOtttr The Orpheum Theatre's Frea In vitation to O. R. C. Draws Large Crowds of Visiting Dele ""gates"-" M" .. y-v.-. The generous offer of the Orpheun. tneatre management this week to the Order of Railway yonductors ha been much appreciated,- Judging- from - the large attendance of delegate -nightly who . have availed themselves of this courtesy. It mould be a difficult task thanJJJa---sTtted-1)yhtg-"ptThlr famous mimical melange ia. productive or roars or laughter, the ballet lntro. aucing tne pretty well-drilled pony girls ts pronounced par excellence by all admirers, and -the- falent throughout as presented by this up-to-date- show house Is among the best on the coast The free invitation extended by the management to the O. R.TT." early" this week will remain in force as long as these distinguished visitors rem,ain in Portland. 1 : TO CONSTRUCT EW TURNTABLE AT EUGENE (Special Dlatxtc ts T Joernal.) ' Eug Pacific compauy-iis- to at once construct a turntable here for the Kugene yard extended to Eugene within a .short time. It will alao be used In turning the loco. motives of the trains which will come Into. Eugene , over the Bpringfleld-Iten derson connecting link when It Is com- unloaded at Henderson to construct the line, and it is said that the work wUl begin within a very short time, X locATnrq jtbw kaxuload. . f"ixvll rlptrh ta The Journil.) "" ChehaJIs, May I S.-rTha-surveyors of trie ivortxern Paeirie wiwt re surveying a line froVi a point between Napavlne and Cheha he toward' eastern Iewls county-are ito W , working near A. Kan deck! place, iy Webster postofflce. by- making a lVatlon-.Jlne About; 10 furvey and latefvhave carefully gone over the work anX completed the Job by making a locatran line. Tbout 19 miles of line ha thuikfar been J oca ted. Scoortng Soap Made v 1 ' . .. ,. ... - Reported to Mtve Been -Selected at NOCAIi-CAN DANCED - AT JAMES HYDES.BALL -fJonrnr gpeoUl rrle.) , , lNwiTork.-:May:llrThe -famou fancy dress French ball given by James H. Hyde at. Bherry' January Jl was described . by th . giver today. under oath. Hyda-deelared r "The . said" ball was In all respect a dignified and artlstle -enterflnmertt, - nor " were there any Improper or scsndaloua occurrence at tha aald ball, nor any can-can dance." I Tttla-aworn-ilerlarsttnn will ha nleaa. ant readlng-for-Mmei-ReJairai-for-aoma-tana on - circulated the report !4hat--tha fam""n Fretrh H"t'ep, ne nf Hyde' guasta, wound up the festivities by do lng the can-can on one of the banquet tables. '-?tv- Just wHd circulated the report I not known, but the sworn statement of Hyde name Jam(a W. Alexander, the venerable, white-haired president of the ICaui tabUlJf eJU&de's.. jepud lat Ion oT the can-can dance was In his sultlo oust Alexander a trustee of the Hyde estate stock. FATHER AND SONS - PLEAD NOT GUILTY (SpecliV DlapatcliTe Tha Journal.) Eugene. Or., May IS. W. B. Bmlth and his son. Norrla and Ben, who re side near Ehirlra;were "arrested yester day by Constabla Jack Smith of Eugene charged with assault with a dangerous weapon upon James B. Montgomery laat Sunday. They pleaded not guilty before Judge Wlntermeler of the Justice court, and their examination waa set- for May 1 Montaomerv. who waa nearly kllleri yelnghlFoveriheeadwTre a clubTT"'"" m De oeuverea ror display Is Improving slowly and Is now out of NEGRO DESPERADO IS- LYNCHED ON SUSPICION Jmirnal flnH4l flrvlr. tfffitW, Hay-ISrTonTvlTOerr epoon, a negro, was taken from, bfflcer at Belmont, : Missouri, II miles below Cairo, by a mob last night and hanged In the public square. 'The negro was suspected of having extorted $600 from Fred. Hess,, rm a threat of killing his wife" and child. Wllhersnonn-wa an ex- convlct and. was tracked by blood hound. T he mob did -notwalt-loe- hi Identification. . . SEVEN KILLED IN MINE" -EXPLOSION IN MONTANA - . (Jouraal Hpeclal gerTlce.) Butte. Mont, May IS Seven men were killed and one fatally injured In an explosion In the Corla iqlne, a Helnxe property, yesterday afternoon.., The dead are Daniel O Brlon, John Jtoulahan, It. 1)8,1)11 OBrlen, John Jtoulahan, H. JUuTiaWd-ailleU-WajnpaUto Kramer, Daniel Hanlon; Hugh Medial was Injured, wampa was carrying an armful nf-dynamite, which exploded. LT.WILLIAM TRUXT0N"Tr DIES OF BERI BERI NoffolkX May . II. Lieutenant-Com mander WllHsm Truxton, U. B. died here thlg'morhlng of beriberi contracted n the Philippine, aged 44. He waa th son of Cotnntodor W. T. Truxton. - rOOK TABIC ISTVAni SZAB. . (aperlal IHapate to The "ornl. - Corvalll. Or., May IS. James Miller. an Inmate of the county noorhouae, wa Brm at Heiiefmintam tht -we-.- Mr Miller wa committed to the county farm In 111(2, and has been an extraor dinary county charge In many 'respects, ss he frequently went out during ihe harvesting season and earned II. h0 pe dax. Mr. Miller -waa about Tf year ot age. . . t . ' "DEilAVEN TO SERVE . (Continued from rage Ona) parted' Jurist. - Mrs. alxed this feature. ' Bellinger empha- Judge Bollinger was president of the Crematorium association, and the as a'unprron0lI6hrhe'5MyTte Incinerated, Before final' dissolution, thr-lllbea short service In the chapel of the . crematorium, afwhjch Drv-T.-l t KHot. paator of ther Unita rian church, - will officiate. The laat services will be Msgonlo. Judge Bellln- city, havinor charae. . . . ' ' Mr. Dolph was able to announce the active pallbearers this afternoon, those namedf or. act 1 ve aery Ice .being W .'WV Cotton," M. O. Xownadle, Dr. Chapman, E. Du JIcKee, FAV. Ilolman and C J. Reed. The honorary pallbearers will be A.'Busb of Balem. C. A. Dolph. Judge Oeorgs U. Wllllama. Judge R. 8. Bean of the auprem benchJudge A. F. Bears and Tyler. WoHdward. It Is , possible that either JodgeGjlberl or Juda llarv-. ford of the federal court' will also reach here In Jlme to act In the list of hon orary pallbearer. . The. funeral car will leave First and Alder atreets at 1:45 o'clock, and there will be another special car to the crematorium at 1:30 o'clock. The gen- aral publle la Hrajad to take the eegu Bell wood car or the 1:3 apecial. as It' is probable that the last car leaving will be crowded. . The Sell wood cars run by the grounds. . this being a l-mlnut service. All the members of Judge Bellinger's family have been summoned,-and will be .In attendance. Friends of the do ceased are coming' from all parts Of . the state to attend the last services, show lng their esteem for the sterling quali ties of the departed in every- manner possible. All of the valley communities where ha formerly ltved will be repre sented by large delegatlona A number of messaged are being re ceived... expressing condolence and the sense of loss felt by the commonwealth in the early death or one who has labored-ao well -for hts state, and the north west. -- . - ALL WORK STOPS. Dreary waste. Even a casual observer would have felt that the spirit of., death had set tled, lover the federal courtrooms ' had he visited them today. For some tithe workmen have been busy tearing out JjpartUto.ugUMttf.lnjr, away, rtrnntmumta and crating furniture for-the new quarters, but when Judge Bellinger died yester day afternoon work stopped In the courtroom, ' and a ruin that Is almost ghaatly wgg left- - I The solemn clock that had faced the Judge during the jnontha .of apctaeula court -sessions had atopped almoat at the hour of his death yesterday after- noon. -A solitary Janitor moved the hand to a less suggestlveTiour. - Of the Judicial bench only -the gloomy hangings remained and these, slowly waved back and forth In the breeze thai, blew through an' open window. -The )utf- bench waa tipped back and -tood In th whadow of -on-corner like a skeleton; Th-dusty floor was strewn with pamphlets, scribbling of nervous lawyer and Jotting of the-elerk. A pamphlet on guvei nuieiit 1aTidg ndthe opportunities in' the wet spread it torn cover In one corner... while! a booklet oh diamond pontine jeeheme or.j wit-J Ties to other trials. Dogeared books, with citations on the prosecution- of eongxesHmen'upderscored. and references written in the margins, littered the .open pace.- JUNE THREE CHOSEN AS t ROSE EXHIBIT-DAY W. 8 Blbson. eeretary Of the Port kom opieiy,-na announced June a rose aay ai me xiwia ana uiara fair. In hi report to the society Mr, Slbson state that six weeks after the first bloom usually find tha .fose In th best display-condition. The exhibit will be. held In the exposition-audito rium and the local florist have prom Ised to assist by. making display and decorations. Tne society desires the co'operatluu1 'uf every hcitytQ make the day a auccea beyond all former exhrbltl0n.B-tm4 this day tha thousand of eastern vis itor will ' have their best opportunity of discovering why Portland is named th Rose city. It la recommended that during the coming three week the soli around -rose btis.ie be kpet foose by conllnuou -T:ulttvat ion wh enth u r fac I not to wet. It is further d- 4 vised that the plant be given once each week a watering with weak liquid fer tilizer, or that bona meal be mixed with the soil a few Inches below the sur face. . AH but the central bud on each stem should be rubed off so ss to throw the full strength of the plant Into the single .flower and dally -cultivation ia recommendod Later th committee will announce wben, where and how' AN INSANE" ITALIAN IS .CAUGHT AT WHITE HOUSE (Joarnal Special Service.) Washington. D. C. May It. An Ital ian arrested last night while trying to ffect an entrance through a rear-doai of the White House waa this morning committed to St. Elizabeth hospital for the Insane. Trolley Rides on O. VV. P. Round" trip Sunday to' Oregon Cltv. Canemah Park and Oresham, 25 cental Rstacada ana way ioint Mcenta Cars leave First and Alder streets for uregun ny "u lancnun rara at I a. m.. and very 40 minute thereafter. for Oreaham and Estaoada, at 7:30. t:3, ll:0. 1:30. 1:40. - "' BATTLB WITH HAITSIT. (Journal Special fUrviea.) Caspar, Wya, May. ti- pherltX. Wbb wa overpowered by Ed Lee. Martin 1 T rou l a n dJ'-Ul,m.-WaitUof three prl- I"" "... 7 w onera wno ma ineir escape after ee- pursued" and overtook-the band It a. and a pitcned name enaueo. At ixat report tne outlaw were sun uneapyired. Takequtmg;.orre.Is not ai laa,5iI,er- Schilling's Best, irr nutmeg, is ground fine from difficult nuts to grind be cause full of oil; the oil is their virtue. .There -are dry; nuts; there art wormy nuts." We axe no more careful m nutmegs than all through. r r 7" .Your grocer1'; moneybaclty TBAira tt O-AJLXsca .' sukow. From the New fork Commereial.- . He la something over six feet tall Is Clarence 8. Parraw of Chicago, whom tlayor Dunne of that city has appointed special traction attorney,-with .charjraf of the negotiation and legal - proceed inga In, connection- with - the proposed - 1 tnnnldn-iii.atiAn nt th street railways. Broad shoulders he has. shoulder that remind one Of the Russian wrestler theyl ar talking about in metropolitan ath letloTcirele. lnafao l-amooth and lined with furrow which he says no photographer must take out "since It cost pq rnuch to getjthem there." His tiaiH,BHiir'n'qrwrrn'm m rgnmn or Henry Clay a lock wandering over the massive forehead as the head swing from side to aide, elephant-like. - Alto gether,' a-strong --man- - earnest,- and deeply Impressed with the Importance of being earnest. In personal appear-, apce. siouchy. . : ' His tongue Is th most ..wonderful thing about Par row. If It were ueed In a cause lcs revolutionary than the enterprise to which it , I dedicated Its bwnefwmild b-Tcarlw-nguhrly-lo. quent. )iad it been hi tool In oma great constructive effort. Instead of the plaything of a man who admit In hi latest b03k, "Farmtngton," that all hla life he has been "planning, and hoping, and thinking, and dreaming, .andT'.waltT lng, until the day le almost spent and the twilight-at hand, Mr, Darrow would not be. a he I now, essentially un happy becauae ' relatively useless. His career J on In which, -splendid talent have been little more than . powder burned upon the aurjace of, a rock. -rJ'AH I-want is to write a long novprf '3et me make my living as a lawyer and devote my leisure to writing stories and essay;" "I Am dreaaaer .of dreams" these are the passionate outlines with which hi Chicago friend ar .familiar; and they reveal the idealist. Darrow -call himself 1 a -" TolBtolan. n"ll? u '.. yen that fiiiy. m ino -ncgaiivs. jus is tne spirit that denies not the Mephistophelean u:rt ciKitaif re; jaith of Mr, Darrow. , iveciurer. corporation lawyer, "alngl - taxer.'.xJiamplon.'.of the 'working man. politician, representative of th mineral in the anthracite coal settlement, radical dawn Clarence 8. Darrow I a maa who has drifted drifted, drifted; -or, better atlll, lost hla way. . oaxT liuocirxT wxiat oomirEB cTxnxo th - Newark . Xw- B-far -known-t-tlat T-th only really aucceasful corner In wheat (re ferred to In - scriptures aa "corn") waa that by Joseph -when h presided over the destinies of Egypt, but it wilL b recalled that be had mora than human aid in estimating the sis of forthcoming harvest. When domestic wheat crops were much smaller and facllltle for transporting and storing them at distributing-polnt-wer much less ef ficient, perhaps SO year ago, there were several so-called successful minor cor ners In wheat and corn, but the only successful corner in wheat within 20 years wa that engineered bv Hutchin son at Chicago In 18x, when he put the price up to f 1 a bushel, and made 'Hie shorts settle at that. Records of simi lar attempts Include- Keen loss of ta.OOe.oe in wheat - In 1879. HanSy similar loss of 11,660,000 in 1881, Har per's dropping 14,000,000 on the cereal in ana cuaany in in- which "cr"J r,lia.ld-i!l0"' .V-i in MJtVv inl, which he lost l'rZT:T"?!" HAT WZX.X. mot isnai. , (Journal Special Service.) ' St - Petersburg, May ,13. Secretary Hay " la reported grently " lmprQYedy Bpeni:erTH:.Ti:ddjr"or ihe American em bassy, who has returned from" Bad Neuheim. He ute that there t no y th t.ut.-Hjriii Th aciUeaaltiiB. Cobwlgger Society in thl country la sinirather- cruder Merrltt Oh. well, . perhaps some day the member of the mart set WlU get I married with a little publicity a they get aivorcca. - - ... irothla' Sola'. Troni the Chicago-New. ThPubllaher Wa will publish your joka-book if you ar prepared to guar antee us againat loss. . - The Humorlat Not me. I never could enjoy Joke at my own expense. - Special , Sunday Rates c on ' 0. W. P. ound Irlp Fb-Oregon City' and nemah Park; tt cents; ' Oreham, cents; Eagle" Creek, Eetacada and upper I Clackamas river points, 60 centv Vin net at Hotet Estacada, 75 cents. Danc ing . at ' Canemah and Entacada Parks. All cajs leay from First and Alder street... ... . '... .- rATVASTxm aos wioia. i- Ban Francisco, May IS. ICaptaln Franklin" -W.. Hart. paymaster . of the rannnrt Tjiaitnn ! imH.r I A,iinb.nnMi anA will V,. 'nn,i k. a. .1.1. I It is alleged that he came down with I Mare lalnnd with 110,000 worth of or ders on the navy pay office which could not b located. - . Fat Folks. . T have reduced my weight 85 pounda, buat nine inches, waist eight Inche and hip nine lnche In a short time by guaranteed,- harmless remedy without exercise, or atarvlng. I want to tell you all about' It. Enclose stamp and ad dress: Mrs. Charlbtte Woodward,. Ore gon city, Or. i . isTSAjra noK tobacco (Special map tee to The Journal) - Cor vaOll a. Or . May' It WQ. Qrean wa adjudged Insane and taken to th asylum at Palent, Wednesday. Exces- slvs use of tohaccjp 1 said to have pro- UUL'UU 1IIB' MI1IH1U., linBalftnfe. rtr&TOaf at moixBvmo. i ' (Special Dlapatrk to Th Journal.) ' -RosebjuTr.-Or.;- May 1 . Ar the grad uating exercises to be held- her on Maj 16, United - State. Senator FultcfH has been engaged to deliver an addres 4o th .class. , - Xan'a VnraOBabln , 11 often a greiM aa a woman'. But Tho. B. Austin; Mgr. of th "Repub lican. - of Leavenworth, Ind., waa not unreaaonahle, when he refused to allow tha doctor to operate on his wife, for female-trouble -"lTmtead,"-he) says, "we oncinoeoj to try jTiiecino fitters. any wife was then so sick she could harrilv leave her bed, and nv-.S) physicians nsa lauea to renevs ner, - Aiier rnamg F;iectrio bitter, she was perfectly cured, and can now perform all her household dutl. (luaranteed by Bed f'roe Pharmacy, Blxlb and Oak a'treele, en th way to ihe postofllee. i'rlce 0c ( ' '' . ' ' ' Mi mwmm - -'e-P-A f -V -CP-7EM A - . . n in 11 . 11 11 11 mi in Looked More Like a Piece of Raw Beef Tbah a JDpciors CURED BY COTICURA ;;'."' 7,-77 , , , 1 . : ttX Blessed , Relief After First ; Application and First ' . Real : Sleep 4n Weeks Facts of ; This Won- denial v Cure by : m wunrs Neighbors. 'Vords cannot'descripc the I T. . , . . . v , - , , 1 it Droke .out on my head ana kept rh?le f was ?t:ss .4 & head ; loot. -1 looked -more like a piece, 1 . ' - - -f- L wm. i rrJsc-.- v - - i : --in-m f ' S 1 I ' s La 1 AA wsl . in-law begged me to try the Cuticura Remedies. I said I would.. BlitTiad" no. hope:of jrecoyery, But oh, what blessed Telief I experi-V enced after aonlvinEr Cuticura Ointment. . It cooled" th - hlrlinrr itching flesh and brought me the-first Veal Asleep I had Httt V&Tt$XlZ&c& W" " P?1?? -burning tongue.. I would I vim vtat iuwaicr, auu, v-uiituiaooajj-iiirn apply ine ;ini- nient freely. . I also took t time the sores stopped running, the' flesh" began "trheat,". and t kriewjlwas to getAvell aganThen the hair on my head began' to grow,rand-iii a slioil time 1 was compJetely cured. ISut 1 kept on taking the" Cuticura Remedies, as they" did me so much good I did notwant to stop them. - - - "My? curt was so wonderful I "thought I would " write you about it. I cannot praisiFCiitfcpra enuiigh. I wish ! couldTelt evervbodyTwho his Eczema to fi0 terrible 'tha't what cured me awful disease, . It any one doubt tn write to me. : "135 Thomas St., Newark, N. "The undersigned are acquainted with a'nd neighbors of Mrs.- VVm. Hunt, of .133 Thomas St., derful cure of eczema by the, Cuticura Remedies, as stated by Mrs,. Hunt -in hef Ietterr-bigned AIary-E.ooper, 135-Thomas St., Newark, N. J. ; Mrs. Susan Taylor, 488 Mulberry St., Newark; N. J."- Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Mils, 'templets external and Interssl treatmeat for every Onroor Of the Sla, Scalp "(1 Bland, from Infsaey t Are. price the Bet On Dnllsr, are sold thronchont " tha world. single set Is ftea mffMest to ears th amst torrnrlng. dlnflgvrlng. Itching, burning ' and sraly bnmon, raahes and trrltstlnos, whea all other remedies and area the best -physician fill. Potter Itrn Cnem. Corp.. Bole Props., Boston, IDS Ualnmbas Ave., Boston. U. S. A. - Mailed Free, "AU Ubont th Cuticura Dollar. Uumor Care." 1 - AT THE THEATRES. -7"Prslftl to Be Repeated. J. Alexander Hanna will again present the moving pictures of Richard Wifner's opers. "Parsifal" at tb Merqoam Grand theatre seat i'rlday andJSaturdny. Blgbta. !'TheJlflL of LauI XIV." one of th. finest fllme erer pro dured. ' will aloo b ihown. Mm Walter' Reed will aaalat. Tne aanc ate opens nexi ttq neadar Biornin at 10 o'clock. . --At tne iync. . The nhennmenallv auceesaful week of "Katb lean Mavrmrneen'' la drawing to a cloao; tonlsht aad tomorrow . ar the laat , opportunities 01 wu- I ueang what is probably the greateat Irtah play erer written. Acta continuous today from 1:30 until 11 o'clock. ; - . At the "fitker. ; Today and tomorrow srs the laat opportuni ty of seeing Ihe all stsr'MHst the Baker tNa wee. Iieaoea ny u - rire mumrai iot landai" Th performance will be continuous to morrow from 2: until 11 'clock'. Tonight at T:80 and e clock. . f - : - . Last of "Our. Boy." The " ereat fanshlnc ancceaa... "One-iBoya" arnlcn aaa Kept autiicnces ai ine r.mpire in s-non hmone -all wee kiu b giraw xns- ts ast a tonlsht. As predicted, it Has nee one 01 the COmedy nit 01 ins season. ,' -- ."I Mi.. Illddcii'g Vluliu Rtclul. -ma-aavanM-sals nf sssrs'fnr ' Raslnald T. I hlddea's violin recital at the Marnuam Grand 'theatre neii Wednesday evening will open Tues day morning, at 10 o'clock. Kiltae B. Courses wui a tn ccomoanb- - . .. v . List of "Red Feather."- Tonight at :lo o'clock the latt Berfprmane ef the ranantle comic opera snceeaa. "Red leather," will be given, at the Marquam CrannV t sea us.,. , . ti iii i . Tomorrow ArWomng Revenge.? - The first performance of the hi senaatloral melodrama, K Woman's Hevehse," will he glren at th Empire tomorrow afternoon. Uatlnae vcjll be glrea every day it week. ; c X-ZOTaUO XJBB AUBBD. (Joarnal flnertal gTTlce.) ; -.J.ewlston, Idaho, May 13. The Inde pendent electric line front Lewlston.to Urangevlllw ha been assured. Arrange ments hava been completed to finance ''.- ' ' ' ' .'" -' - : ". . '." Human Being. Useless. Cutlcijra: for by : terrible Eczema I; suffrrl with 7 .7'. spreading until it " covered mv ox raw beef than a human beinc. The paiiV and acony I endured seemed more than ! could bear. ' And- pus -opzed-fforn the- gfeat:s6re on my scalprfrom un der my finger nails, and nearly all over jny.body. ;: Myears were so crust?d and Swollen I was afraid theywbuldbreakoff. Every hair. j .j : y,head fell outI could not - sit down, for my . clothes would. .11. stick to the raw and blecdiner flesh, . makTnfoerjrTnitf ronv3H "My family doctor did all . he 6uld,.but I got wprse. and jworse.- lycondition was awful. . I did not think I could live, and wanted death to come and end my fright-. ful sut f Tings. ' w.'.... "In .this condition mv mnt1nr- u ie . Cuticura. My. condition was cannot fail to cure anybody of this": the truth; PL this letter, tell them ' r ' ' -r 1 ' ,.-i-r--v-.-, . MRS. WM.- HUNT." and have knowledge of her won Extracting, cleaning and examination FRE8 during alt thta week. Th Boa ton'Palnle Dentist will "gly tha lowet price ever known .In Portland for trlctly- hlgh-clas dental 7 work. Don't put It off. but come In at once., Oood -worrtnowr price, guaranteed for 10 year, ha made- a Iworld-wldn reputation for th Boston Dentist, 21H Morrlaon atreet v ' " "-" BztrantliJa' and ZxamlnaUoa . ...TBZB SILVER nLLINQB ,.;..; 3se aoLDFiL.LiNaa ,.Hi.,.mjT. 75- OOLD CROWNS ..... .B.t nrt VLtl. 1 - - - - - j 1 1 . . t MHlDUBi wurwt; 93.00 ' Other dentist corrle and go, but. th Boston lentist remain the same liauie, uy-tu-unts ueuusis - SPECIAL- - - - Boston Painless Dentists Y." ieiH MorrUoa Bt Opp. Keiet j yraafe 1 - and Old froswrno. . .. . HOURS 4 .1 0 -a, m. to p.'m.1 'Btfn- day. :I0 a. nt. to 11:10 p. m. the project and a committee' will" at " one go to Portland to olIclt atock ' ubicriptton. - - , ' OOTTAOB OBOTB OBAOTJATZl! , . " (Special Wasatch to "Ts"" J,o4fnr. ' Cottage Orove, Or., - Ms 1J Ths graduation exercise, of Ohe High school :v were nia Friday i, evening. Ths four - graduate are; Memo Flnnerty. Oeorg- -etta Berg,- Etna Holterman and Daniel Thomas. The exercise v were fond ; throughout. ; ; -I i ' t - - 1 r