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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (July 29, 1906)
1 li 13 NEW FRATEDNAL. ORDER John C Shinock, Orator. The flret Oregon asaembly of the Americana, petrietto. fraternal and In- ' euranee order, wae organised at Allsky hall recently. The order waa (orraad m California about two yeara ago and already assembliea have been or gaaised.ln that state.,. C. C.Burt, state, aaanager for Oregon, eays that within 'Ihe neat twa years thara will ba Mmh. biles of Americans Is every eity of any at a In Oreeon. '. ?. --s. New Books And Their Publishers ITJCCKSi IN IJCTTER-WRIT- INO" Br - anerwin (Looy. Among the lost arts can safely t classed tha art of letter writing.' This Is so generally accepted ' that fw have given the matter attention enough to ask why it is. and if they did tt would - perhaps be difficult to place ' tha blame., for so many eauses have combated to bring it about There la, however. no doubt that - our v schools, while they have forged ahead In many branches, have woefully fallen behind la teaching children or -the present : generation tha lmportanoe of letter-writ ing, or. aa wa used to Bay, "how to eompoae." --' .,. v- Tha idea largely obtains among young people who mean to ba stenographers that tha only thing required ia rapidity, while la fact if it la for letter-writing this should ba tha last, rather than, the first, consideration, for, aa Mr. - Cody plainly shows on every page of hla book, tha construction of a letter means suc cess or failure. - It Is not that construc tion which consists In weighing every Made of meaning, balancing sentences to a nicety and giving it a pure literary wtyH for this ia often most objection able, but it to la bringing together tha -many requisites and knowing how ta use them Judiciously. It la Just this sort of information Mr. Cody undertakes to snve and ho haa dona it In a most prae- ' tical and common-sense way.-- He fcaya praotically little attention to the verb- lags of a letter, dealing mors specifically with tha writer ana receiver aa parsons. He begins by h saying: r. - . . "Tha rrowth of the mail-order buaias to. tne United States during tha paat live rears haa been enormous. Two concerns in Chicago doing an exclusive mail-order business handle over t3B.00,0( a year." . Speaking of the thousands of business colleges of the country, ha adds: - "The marvelous fact ia. however, that of all these thousands, scarcely one becomes .a really . efficient . letter-writer. . The standard of American letters Is pre posterously low." . Hera are soma of tha blunt facta that Mir. Cody gives, quite confident that ha will not ba contradicted: ''-"Ninety-per cent of stenographers are ' disqualified for their work by their use .e)f poor. English." The eorreet English that counts ia that which makea the es pressloa clearer and sharper"- 'The euoosssful letter-writer must have imagi nation, ao that he can see hla customer . sitting before him. and in hla letter can talk to that imaginary, person just aa a good salesman would, face to face." : "A good letter-writer will learn ta write abort and snappy- letters to those who like short and snappy letters, and long and detailed ones to those who like long , and detailed ones.'.' "System la eompoel . tion of business letters will enable, a A Written Guarantee J -J " ikxkfi me besrasiis-isss yes can have f fbe aapsrtoiHi) ef the ---Columbia Craphojjhone - jmbtojto A Ideal Sammef Amusement I e-pw ia the merfln ee rhe Wfl etttVor mmrvmi The nm-cef e CltaPHOPltONC to th m&n, , CHAP, WtT AN fas WACHWtS. Free Trial ood Easy Payment Offer Toss U roes attaaee to aeoare tae SOT I auwe naiKtc FIAVC aa) Ojeaoli sei ape be aslf. . We Accept Old Machines of Aoy T Mokab Port Payment " ''' yeMra,aHe,iee ' i V ssli Oread Prtes.teUe. ise tSfheat Awere rsrtisa leeg v ... Columbia PbMograph Co CmI, wri wASJEuroTOaT or.;. A , " I Charles A. Steele, Vlca Chairman. - ' 'Any white person of althar sex be tween tha ages of It and li K yaara whoaa .ecevpetlon ia satisfactory te tha order-may become a member on eub scrlbtng to tha principle! of tha order and paying a ' amall ' fee.' V 'Whan ' In itiated, tha payment af local assembly dua and tha flrat monthly assessment la required. ---.v, :. -, .j-: t :. ...... . correspondent to write MO letters a day and make every one a masterpiece." "Business letter-writing haa Its etiquette as well aa everything else." "Writing H. O. Adair,' for example, without any title. Is considered rude and unpolished. It ia Ilka entering a private house with out taking off your hat" These examples will give a pretty fair idee of the etyle of Mr. Cody's book, for he deals with the social side of letter writing In )ust the aame matter-of-fact waf. When it comae to love letters thsre ia . also some- very . good - .advice, . but whether tt is "worth the paper it la written on" or not ia a question. It wbuld be if it wsre taken, but who aver heard of a lover that didn't know better than "anyone else what - he wanted to say and how he wanted to say It? And It doesn't matter ao much, either.' On the whole It to a book that anyone could read with profit and would be the better for having It in a convenient pleoe for reference. A. C MoClurg A Co. Price A oanta. i ,., . . ' "The Harmony of the Beautiful" By Rdward Albert Parker. ' This book was written aa tha direct outcome of college classroom dlsousston, and will be not only relevant but pertinent to the col lege man's study of rhetoric end Eng lish literature. Its aim Is to answer briefly but broadly tha question, "What relation exista between euphony, Or ver bal harmony the toiuslo of verse' and tha other great branches of art, muslo and painting, viewed ' in the light of their emotional and ethical effect? What .warrant la there for supposing tnese varied harmonies of tone, color and verbal sound to be component porta of a general law of harmony which In cludes covers and controla them all?" The author haa Introduced brief treat ment a of . tone and color harmony, as these branches of harmony are not only natter Known, out more susceptible or analytic treatment. He haa then ap plied both .the method and the results thua obtained to tha elucidation of ver bal harmony. . The author in his prefaoe aaya; "After thla work was substan tially completed, I came across a work of Sydney Lanier's, claiming to be the flrat of its kind, The Science of Eng lish Verse,' which takes up in sclentlflo detail tha principles of harmony which I have expressed here. This book had been planned before I had found any other author holding these views in their entirety, and I now claim for the coin cidence only the honor of having been on the right track at tha beginning, and of having kept measurably well to it" - Mr. Parker has undoubtedly written a most .thoughtful end valuable little book, and that ha haa borrowed from no one is perfectly evident, for throughout It Is marked by a freshness of thought aad an originality of expreaalon which ia good to look upon by ayee grown tired of repetition. Of course, thle does' not span that the'- author baa not had to take old aubjnete to Illustrate hla theory, or quote from familiar things to bring out hla thoughts, for hs has done both copi ously, but It is the new Una of thought ha starts In doing It that ia delightfully refreshing. We predict for Mr. Parker'e book a large sale among those who make the beautiful things in Ufa a .study, whether they be muslo. art or 'litera ture., Maybaw Publishing Co., Boston. Price, II. J5. . t. , , (, . . ,' '! ' aeaBMsnasBBBBt "The Awakening of Helena Ritchie" By Margaret Deland. Mre. Deland haa given to American literature a powerful novel, in which she haa retained the familiar aoenea and characters of her popular, short - stories. "Old Chester Tales" and "Da Lavender's People." It tar transcends In force and interest all her prevloue work. - The atory telle of the birth of a woman's soul the grad ual awakening of her deeper and nobler self through bar love for a child. Hel ena Richie, a young and beautiful woman, separated from her husband on aooount of his dissolute hablta aad In human treatment or her, eomee to Old Chcstsr to escape ecenee that remind her of her former happiness. She lives quietly, her only visitor being Lloyd Pryor, who Is believed' to be her brother. Hospitable Old Chester ad mires Helsna intensely, while pitying hsr loneliness. Finally" Ir. Lavender persusdss her to take a little orphan ; boy, David, -into bar home. David, is a charming child, and though Indifferent at first, Helena'a love Increases until It becomes a veritable passion. At length word comes that her husband le dead, thua ranking possible hsr marriage with Lloyd Pryor, .who In reality haa boon her lover in secret for many years. Mr. Pryor, a oold, selfish man of the world, 1 now begins to reveal hla true charaoter. He gives a reluctant consent to the marriage only because as "a man of honor." he. haa promised-to-marry-Hel ena, and win not ge Back on bto word, but refusee to allow be to keep David. Bitterly Helena realises that the man to wtiom, in- her blind devotion, she had given her soul and body is wholly un worthy, and rather than .part with the child she sends Pfyor- a way. Later, through the Influence ef Dr. Willy King, who has learned of the true nature of her reletlons with Pryor, aha le In duced to sacrifice her - own ' happiness to what aha believes to be the, good of the child and returna David to Dr. Lav ender. But out of the grief and pain thla double renunciation brings. Helena's reel character, fine and strong and true, triumphs, i ... , ,; t The story ends with a very beautiful and touching -climax Helena'a depart ure from Old Cheater, happy onca more la the psaasasloa ef the little boy, wham : ' ; t - : ' ' , ' THE OREGON SUNDAYS JOURNAL. PORTLAND, SUNDAY, IZQTZIUZQ, T JULY- tO, . ORG-AIJIZED IN Charles -A. LlnditrOm, Chaplain. .; Tha government of : tha ., ordar la vested ia a.aupreme body known aa tha senate,-which la composed of lt of ficers and representatives from tha various general assemblies! H. C Lewie of Baji Francisco, director general of tha Americana, waa praaent at tha organisation of tha looal as sembly. Thara were M charter mem- bare. Tha following off Icera ' ware Dr. Lavender Intrusts, at tha laat mo ment to her again. ' ' Aside from the main llnee of the atory there la a. subsidiary plot of great pa thos and quiet humor. In which famine Old- Chester characters reappear. ' Mrs. Deland haa created a aplandid work of emotlonaV depth 'and strength which will prove One of the moat ab sorbing and artistically wrought novela that .baa been published within- recent yeere and a triumphant culmination to her popular stories. , It is thought by many , to be a work of even greater power than her "John Ward: Preacher." Harper at Brother, Price, ll.lv. . .', VJ.U-' ' "The Sin of Saint Desmond" By Amy Cameron Farias. A love . story, pure and simple, with never a moral or a problem to redeem It One could hard ly even call It cleverly constructed, for, while tt carries a certain Interest and excitement, the author gate her atory. In the end. Into such e snarl that some body must, die to. relieve the situation. Mrs.' Vaocoe, with the pardonable in terest of her daughter at heart, urge her to marry a man who Is, she be lieves, endowed with those qualifications which will make the girl happy. Louise, the daughter, la young and Inexperi enced, with high Ideals and a passionate desire to realise that happiness of which she haa dreamed from a child, but ehe consents, for her mother's sake, to marry "the man with the big hands and tha big puree." Her husband surrounds her with ev ery poasibie luxury.Ue triea to supply every wish or desire, but falls to sat isfy the cravings of her heart, and the girl feels her life te be shallow and In sufficient, while ehe- longs for higher and greater things than diamonds and rich appareL- - Both girlish aad pathatlo are her la mentations aa aha telle her sorrow to the sea, as many a girl before her haa done: "Ah, the restlsse sea how like my soul! .Shall I never know that peace, thataupreme happiness that eomee to many? Must. I seek alwaya ror the cause of this unrest and, like the sea, never be at perfect peace? Surely, surely, there must be something more in lire than mere existence. There muat be something more, elee why waa I born?" , At laat -the happiness appeared as though her longings had been heard. and then neither her marriage vowa nor bar duty to her mother could save her soul. Her fight was a brave one, and while the atory haa nothing to specially commend It, Louise wss a very lovable and a' very human little heroine, and the development-of the story, with Its traglo ending, ahowa Imaginative abil ity on the part of the author and an un usually clsar perception of human na ture. .TUchard Badger, publisher. Price i. ...- , .-- The Touth of Messiah" Br Edward Farquhar. The author haa written a poetical work calculated to lift the reader out of the ordinary thoughta of material life and Inspire him to loftier y leal a. While the writer ehowe a de oted Christian spirit, be haa evidently derived much of hie Inspiration from Homer and Virgil. , The atyle In which the work la written ahowa essential dif ferences from modern poetry, which can neither be described nor Illustrated, and can only be appreciated by reading. All literature concerning Christ, as well aa Grecian poetry, oan be interpreted and understood better through the soul than by tha mind, and thla la the charaoter of Mr. Farquhar'e poem. The birth and death of the Savior have been prolific as well aa delightful themes , for many great poets and writers, and yet very few have thua taken the gradual - de velopment ef him, who was aent upon earth to spiritualise humanity or writ ten of the glorious beliefs and purifying Influences, and thai period of life when he waa getting development by nature or the spirit of Ood and when the di vine Ideee were being brought to ma turity. Thla feature le what haa marked Mr. Farquhar'a poem aa. unusual. Ha concludes with these significant lines: Not In one speedy fclance the daylight aprang Thmt laid hla task, and earth's, hare ' . -. after cleer; .- - - '' . Slow years of faithful watch the matin . rang: - But aa the Dove draws near The wasting adgee of that ancient ecrol! Mar llnee and tall not if It abowed the whole." Xichard Badger, publisher. Price tl. t ., - . Though Irving Bscheller'a new etory, "Sitae Strong: Emperor of the Woods," does not claim the title of a "purpose novel," It haa, nevertheless, a very Strong plea to make for the preservation of- the. Adirondack forest, new -rapM ly disappearing before : the greed of the lumbermen. "The book haa one high ambition."- aaya the author in hla fore word. "It haa tried to tell the aad etorv Xstdhustiobt f With its companions, heartburn, flatu lence, toroidltr of the liver, const in. tion, palpitation of the heart, poor blood. neaaacne ana otner nervous symptoms, ssllow skin, foul tongue, offensive breath and a legion of other ailments, la at once the raoet wldeepread and de structive malady among the American people. The Herblne treatment will ure an tnese troubles, too ootu Bold Woodard. Clarke Co. C PORTLAND r yf A J ; Frank Motter, Chairman. elected: , Chairman, Frank C. Hotter: vice-chairman. Charlea H. Steele; re corder. O. M. Hlckey;' financier, John H.V McKenale; chaplain. Charlea A. Llndstrom; . aanlor sergeant,- WlUet B. Lee; Junior .. sergeant. R. Burleigh Thompson; sentinel, Clarence I. Oalay; guard. Francis M. Buechel; orator, John C. Shlllock. Tha officers were Installed with fitting ceremony last weak. of the wilderness itself to show,, from tha . woodman'a viewpoint, the play of great, forces which have been tearing down hla home and turning- It into the flesh and bone ef cities. Were it to causa any reader to value what remaina of the forest above Its market price and to do hla part In checking the greed of the saws, it would be worth while bad aa It le." - ,,. "Row te Look at Pictures," by Robert Clement Witt M. A., a book that haa Jijst appeared under the . Putnam im print, is skillfully framed to perform a valuable eervioe for a large class of the community for thoee who are aware that wonderful power, liee hidden In great pictures, and are yet unable te find the charmed work that will bpon lte secret to them: for thoee who know that they should be Interested la plo torlal art and still have to confess thst they are bored by It This little volume should do much to help euoh people to aee pictures in the fullest aanse of the word, to . appreciate them, and to pro nounce a critical opinion on them -with some measure of confidence In the Jus tice bf that opinion. "'Although published nearly a year ago "The Mleoourlan," by Eugene P.. Lyle. continues aa the beet selling book In Mexico. , .' -!. ; ,'.''';,.;-," ' TJpton Sinclair la making a dramatisa tion of "ThO Jungle." It will be pro duced In Chicago. It la also being trans lated Into Oerman, French, Italian, Yid dish, - Bohemian.- - Russian, Lithuanian Polish and Dutch, Danish, and Swedish. PU!IWI0;i SH017 AT OAKS ;;g this iveek Popular Amusement Resort Has Added Many New Features of General Interest. Tha noreltr for the comlnar week at the Oaks wlU be a greet plantation show that la .to take place in tha oosr little theatre on the "Avenue." It la a half- hour act.- bes-innlnr with an Original plantation acene by tha Tanneesee Troubadours and songs,' dances, special ties and oakewalka. . There -will also be soma "hoe-do wns," buck and - wing dances and other features that go to make up a first-class old-style planta tion entertainment.- - - The present season at the Oaks al ready ahowa eigne of completely eclips ing the success of laat season. Despite tne many unfavorable days in the begin ning of the eeaeon the attendance haa nevertheless been unusually large. The tnousanas or - strangers, particularly from the east, .who. have been visiting the Oaka thla season, expecting to find a email imitation of Coney Island and to be bored . accordingly, were more than agreeably surprised to find In the Oeke one of the largest and moat beautiful places of lta kind la America. Nearly every modern . form of amuaement la eastern resorts is preesnted at the Oaka In a perfected ehape and there are no back numbers la the way of features or attraction ... One of the greatest . details la the splendid music rendered every afternoon and night of tha week by D'Urbaao'a superb band. Among other things that ths visitor will witness Is a fireworks exhibition every Thursday night en one of the floats Opposite. .the. board walk, out In the Willamette. These fireworks exhibits have been especially. Imported ror tne oaxe ey Andrew Kan, who will have charge of tha .fireworks. . There is a treat In store for tha na. trons of the akatlng rink on Tuesday night, when a grand masauerade will take place In ' the - rink for maskers. Beautiful and costly prises will be dis tributed ' for: the handsomest eoatuma both for lad lee and. gentlemen, the moat humorous and the most original. There will also be prises given for the best amateur - and professional skaters. Among the early great open-air attrac tions is Madame I,lUena,'the famous hlgh-wlrd fire diver. Across Mountains , by Daylight. The famous "Oriental limited" leaves Seattle for Spokane and all points east daily at :I0 a. m. This magnificent train, which la made up of modern tour ist sleepers, standard ' sleepers, uc-to- date dining car and obeervatlon com partment car, crosses the Cascade and Rocky mountains byj dayligh, Connect '-f Ing train leavea ForUand at 11:4s p. m. Tickets, -eleeplng -ear reservations "and full particulars from- H. Dick eon, C, p. T. A- 111 Third street, Portland. HOW TO FIND A DIAMOND. Go to .Omaha and Search, a Stomach , Cow the Laat. to Confesa. Te One a diamond la Ouaht, Marc s ton.rB. . tt ts set ealy Mia. afae Tbobm. sew aoder e s-rear situ tor grand Urmay, wee has seatilred the appetite tot the preoloee stoeea. Today It was leanied that a Tale able alamos, ee la ass sole, bed sees taka tne etosuca ef s eew, ears aa oauba aiapattk. The gm waa dlMevene by se .aiplnj. of a arklnf-bone., wbo tnofe H te s jwlr te era It. valne. The aader claimed the etnae as his ar right ef aterorery sad oVUne te pert with It. It was vsleed kg the Jeweler St (1M. The Nobbiest Up-to-Date LOW SHOES in .Tans ; and . Blacks, Patent Colt, Vici Kid, Russia Calf and Gun Metal Cal $3.C0 SHOES ...NOW Gents White The Dosiest.Pkce In Town HARD TIMES FOR ICE DEALERS - ProMCirtion follow' Rata PricV in All Parti of th - a In , .'Vf Country. , 1.) OFFICIALS OF TRUSTS FINED AND IMPRISONED General Protest Againat Paying Higlt Ratea Followed by Grand Jury or Prosecuting Attorney's Actiona in i the Matter. Weshlngton, D. (VJuly Si. With the adVent of summer haa come the regular increase In the prioe of loe all aver the country. But-thla year the people are not auomltung tamely, tne anuckraker la busy and In oonaequenoa numerous of ficials of the loe trust etand la t prlaon'a shadow. - Where grand jariee have been la eee- aion evidenoe tending to prove the ex istence of oomblnee among the loe com panies haa been produoed and indict menta have followed... Where opportunity for a grand Jury investigation haa not been found, eity or county or federal off loiala have taken the necessary action and with .the aame result. In St XjOuIs, Circuit Attorney Sager started the good work along by filing quo warrants prooeedlngs in the olrcult court asking for the Immediate revoca tion of the loe combine's charter and daaaagea to the state la the sum of Thla action waa taken Immediately following an arbitrary lnorease la the wholesale price of loe from II to 14 a ton. - : The ections against the loemen can be summarised aa follows; ' Indianapolis Grand Jury lnvtstlga tion of Ice combine. . Toledo Dealers convicted of forming a trust. Out on bona pending appeal. Washington Dealers Indicted, charged with conspiracy to increase tha price of a. - - Jackson villa, Fla. Dealers aoanltted of "criminal Intent to defraud." Cleveland Dealers declared by Jury not guilty of violating atate anti-trust Uw. ,( .'- Detroit Poeslbls grand Jury Inquiry. St Louis (Mate eult to annul char ter and collect penaltlea from dealers charged with conspiring to fix prices. Kansas City County Investigation of loe combine. Tonkers. K. T. Movement to furnish eltlsene municipal Ice at- cost Cincinnati Dealers Indloted , under Ohio antl-truat law. Mount Vernon, N. Y. Mayor plana to form a oomnany ta build an artificial tee plant to buck tne trust Philadelphia Subpoenas ; Issued for of fioera of alleged loe combine to appear before August grand Jury. Great Neck, I I. Residents building Ice plant of their own. . The profits in making lee were die- closed by ex-Senator Lyons of Kansas City who, on an original Investment of 1(00, admitted oleerlng MQO.oot In five yeara. BODY IN HOLLOW TREE. Indlcationa of a Murder of a Myate- rious Character. The finding ef the body of an un identified man sitting upright in a hoi-hw- tree I n. the AJ. Johnson woods neer Mount Union jollage a anile nerth -of Alllanee, Ohio, aaye-er-dtspatan,' had re vealed a mysterious death whloh may develop sensational murder features. , The body wee well dressed, glove en one hand and evidently that of a ten tleman. It had been in the tree some A Trefle atmlaa. watohman'a reelect narmltted a leak In the great North Sea dyke, which a cnlid'e finger could have stopped, to become a ruinous break, devastating an entire province of Holland. In like manner Kenneth Molver of Vance boro, Maine, permitted a tittle oold to go unnotloed until a traglo finish waa only averted by Dr. Klng"e New Dis covery. He writes: "Three doctors gave me up to eie or lung inflammation, caused by a neglected oold: ket Dr. Kinase New Dlsooverv saved m Ufa." Guaranteed best cough and cold euro, at S- G. Skldmore company's drug store. ISO end Lee. Trial bottle free. . 1223. -AN -N . $3.50 SHOES ...NOW. Canvas Oxfords and Bals., $3,00 A The BREAKERS HOTEL AMERICAN FLAX. . .1. . . J" v . a I . J, aassnasssMsaaaaeaWsaeweSsanaaaana - ULaxnra STrarjcn usom op m vaoxtzo aroaTMwasv. ; EUelrie Ugbt, ttesa. Bet ssd Cold Bait W.tw u Irrery.Tab. Boy Tickets te Bnakers, Parts. Gouty. Weak. restafOee AddreeS, IrtUm, Weak. . .. ????????????? Yea, You Are Right, but What KIND of a Switch Is It? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?.? ? ??? ? ? ? ? ? time and waa ao badly decomposed that tha cause of the deatn la aa yet unde termined. . . . There ere evldencee of violence and a atrong theory la that tha man waa murdered before being plaoed In the tree. Another theory le that the man took refuge In the hollow trunk In a storm and waa atruck by lightning. Near the body waa a grip containing a rasor, a few articles of personal ap parel end the photograph of a young woman, suppose -to-ae -a-resiaent or Ssbring. from the Inscription on the card.- Thla la the only elue to the dead maa'a Identity. ANTI-RACE SUICIDE. - : Convention Held in Iowa to Combat - , President a. Theory. . 0 An- Town atate convention of bachelors and old maids was - held In Forest City, lows, recently for the purpose of putting in nomination a full ticket and formulating a platform advocating em phatically raoe suicide. President Roossvelt waa ' attacksd for causing big families by hla hostility to race suicide and It waa declared the -only way to down the trusts is to rsduoe the population eo that the people wlU have a better ebaace for a good .A. . -'V'N &C0 SHOES mm Values SGOE EMR FACTORY Y.tLC A. DMDuG The Hotel Estacada Zt'S OooL Qniet and Sefreethli Amoag tne Plnea at the) Hotel Estacada on the brMk ef the canyon, ia the beat, moat comfortable, eaaleet-reached re sort near Portland. Admirably adapted for outing parties. A wooded park of l50 aoree gar- , reunde the hoteL, Perfect Appointments and first-Class Cuisine r Catering to hlgh-claas patronage. Magnificent eoen.ry of anonntala ehaam, forest and field. - Kvery attraction of a secluded mountain resort, combined wltn quick, fre quent communication with . the eity. .- , , . , Trains Every Two Hours Special ratea upon application to MRS. L. O? M MAHON, Man ager. Phone Betaoada HotsL. , Hotel Eaton ooa. Hosaisos An vzn pass sn. N EW BaBdeaeMly rareiased. elefastty ee.1ed. ranraot, St. sHoatM' valk rroaa keart ( hopping and hoaloM dl.trlet, aU larf. airy, entalde roasw. eteasi haatea, elertrte ltsbts, telapaeee ta eack apartsieat. et. Larce efacM. koen(tn. snoklng, wntia. ladlM receptles par iota. -. Kansas reamed by mull or trtophene. trlvato eaaalkos meets walas ssd stassMts. Room fl.OO fe $S.OO a Day Sseebd kaiaa s Oasisieralsl Mae. , vaa. ka katom, . fTorsMrly et Betel rtdpata. apekass.1 HOTEL MOORE " - OFaur axjei rmm tub, Clatsop Ecach, Seaside, Oregon TO OUT HOVSS OP OB0rOaT. - Directly on the beech, overlooking the ocean. Hot salt baths and surf bath ing. Recreation pier for fishing. - Sun Farlors, slectrio lights, fireplace ' end urnaoe heat Fine walka and drives. Sea fooda a specialty. . , , Rales $2.50 and $100 Per Day . srocxAXi sim bt m wan. ' . DAN J. MOORB, Proprlstor. SEASIDE HOUSE SEASIDE. ORECON ' P. I. SASOrrT, Kaaager. aaalda, Or. tinder sew naaassraU rraMtl and sewly rsrnlahM. .leotrle nahla. Tnmh and Mlt watar bath b(. Beating flahlni is. rraah milk and mib frms ear ews ra a airy. rrah v.t.labla (ran oar ews garden. Rat.: II 50 to S3. SO dar. peetsl ratee fey the weak or meats. . PRIVATE BOARD AND ROOMS Btr. tABAS ORAHBiaLArir, leag Sesoh, Ws, Good Msals Horns Cooking living and be better able to cope with monopolies. The convention waa called by Clinton Merrick, chairman of the old. bachelors' committee end quite well known over the state aa the "king of the bachelors."