i THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL. PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 18, .1800. 17 DO WOT -ALASKA EXPOSITION I Have Hade Millions or Dollars for Thousands of People by My Fctcr.ts I spot e make million more. Thle atock haa Inereaatd. In t1u J0 pr rant alnca Sept lat, 10. Tha natural tncrauaa of- bvmlwa nd-4rmtrtrte - f or motora ha forewl ttig TrrWa-nw vrTrry.ir it m-mnr hiarkaa. ... Thta-X. took ahould maka a life! ncoma for you. Hi, W. ""snqgesesn Mrs. Verreult, Head of Late La- jrjnented Widovy!, LoyaSyndLu- PfiELlMlARV IAN v; NOTICE-WATCH US GROW ..:ASKAACtFtCEXPO$iTlCM- ,1.1 . . . w. , . . - - ; ' V . ( -j i ...... - , f ' ' ' I s cate Has Hearing in Court. We bare Increased our factory room tOxfO feet, as large again aa wa have been nalns. ana are nnw nrenarlns ta build a factory on three acres of ground, where we will employ too men as soon as money and push will do It. x iQUEEn OF HEARTS ANCIENT RUSSIAN ARCHITECTURE PECULATE I FOR SEATTLE IS ON TRIAL it: ss&j i '.! i j y m (spoouu carraaponaanea. (SpaaUl ' Carraapondance.) aattla. Nor. IT. Preliminary ! plane for the laylnc out of the grounda and the location of bulldlng-a for tha Alaa- kapTukon-Paclfto azpoalUon. which la to ba held la Saattla la 10, provlda for a ranaral rcblteeturaj achama t which will make tha comlc fair uolqua teur, a ad the amallar atructura adjoln ila expeeltton blatory. . I In It. which will ba approximately 170 iDi npMiuon wiu vwvupy m n di rare attractlreneea, ambraoln (60 acree of the eampua ef the University of Waahlagton and tha principal exposi tion atructuraa will ba situated directly south of tha college bull.dlnta. The site Is 10 minutes by streetcar ' from the buslaaaa enter of Seattle, and la with- i In the city limits. In the heart of one V VI 111 VUIVJ wsiusuvw . evB.awassBa Lhaa a water frontaae of nearly a mile von lk Washington and a daplh of half a mils, with 700 fast of beach on ' Lake Union. The (rounds are hlch and slahtly araraeins; an elertlon. af 100 eexaJieTatiakayrtJttfon. : The general Tniope la toward the narrow neck of land whloh asperate Lake Union and Union bay ef Lake Washington. '. JUenadronatalai ' 1 The bnlldlnge are gTOupeoTTitoun 'central fountain basin 100 feet la diam eter, and the arrangement has been per fected ae aa bast to take advantage of ih.-mtnnl attractiveness af h- site. For -erample, ' The main avenue of the exposition, to be called Kainier avenue, extends northwest and aoutheast, af- nrAnr an nnobstructed view of Mount Linslnlsr the highest tek In the United States proper,whlch towere M.aaa iee h'&lnler avenue forma the main axta of the expoeltlon. dividing Into two ap proximately equal parte tne section oi the exposition site whloh Is appropriate for the placing of exhibit etructurea. The two largest buildings will be placed on either side of the fountain court, which la bisected by the avenue.. They will be built around an are, with wings . tn the north, and win be - similar In MAKE PAPER FROM Schema on Foot to Revive Thou- r. sand-Year-Old , Industry In t Egypt by British. PLAN REVOLUTION OF : ' ENTIRE INDUSTRY Plant' Extinct Many Centuries Ex- plorer .DiscoYertSeedsNesrSea of Galilee Huge -Tract of Land . Now Under Cultivation. i r I Joaraal Sneeial Servlee.1 ' i London, Nor. 17. Reviving a thousand-year-old Industry, a band Of eapiul- Ists and Scientists of Knglend-mrV going to Introduce a formidable competition Into the paper making of both tit's United States and this country. These men won't care whether the forests of the world are In the hands of the paper 'trust or not:" For they are going to manufacture news and book, as well as wall paper and kindred articles, out ef papyrus, , The papyrus farms will -be. )m Egypt The cultivation of thle plant has been extinct for over a thousand years. The papyrus reeds, at first, will be brought to England and made.ftnto pulp In -an English, mill until sufficient trsde haa been worked up. Then tha papyrus syndicate will build Its own mills In Egypt and ahtp the pulp., 1 - . More and Cheaper Paper. : II. E. Winter, aecretary of the newly formed papyrus syndicate. In an Inter view, gave many Interesting details. "Twenty million dollars' worth of pa per alone la made In England annually. We shall produce a better quality of paper and sell It at a much chenper pride. The present sources of supply for tha paper, trade are being rapidly PAPYRUS Ground Plans for Alaska-Seattle Exposition. i aixa and aaairn, Daina; aaout efo zeot Ions by lit feat wide. The wlnca ra- ferrad to.ara In reality aeparate build iagt, conatructad aa addltlona maraly for the aaka of archltactural effect. Tha big- building- eaat of tha fountain will ha davatMf ta arvinulturA anil YiAvtfmil. feet by 100 feet to Irrigation. The complements! structures opposite will be used respectively for manufacturea and liberal arte -and for educational exhibits. . Basslaa Arebitsetore. These buildings will be the most Im portant of tha exhibit palaces and con siderable effort 'WiU be expended to make them attractive In appearanoe. While no general etyle of architecture has been adopted. It Is suggested by Mr. Olmsted that the anolent Russian styls be followed In all the buildings. iThla-la considered appropriate since the exposition Is to be held primarily for the purpose ef exploiting the resources of Alaska. a eountry which belonged to Russian until purohaaed by tha United Btatee In 1I6T. Tne twlllg aseva described In. cloaa about half the circle about the fountain court. From this court, there will extend, at anglee of about 40 de gree! with tha Rainier axis, two ave nues,' called - Washington- and -Union, and leading to the lakes for which they are named. Bach will terminate In a pier, and the Lake Washington pier will be made for paaaengar steamboats. , If .you have followed the description carefully, you win see that Lake Wash ington and Lake Union avsnuee and the continuation of the Rainier avenue axla divides the couth end ef the grounds Into two triangles ef equal else. The aldea of the triangle net specified la supplied, to the east, by a street called Bering avenue, and te the weet by the Portage. At the corner of the ttianglee adjoining the roantaln Court, there are cosy locations for state buildings, and used up. Only recently Norway bad te legislate to prevent the depletion of Its forests. Canada and the United 8tatee wlU soon follow suit. "We have for soma years been work ing on eur eoheme. Mr, Smsdley Ner ton. the author and explorer, j waa com missioned to revive the seventh cen tury papyrue reed. -The- Nile grass, commonly known ee papyrua, le not the real thing. Mr. Norton discovered some true pspyrus seeds In remote parte of Syria, and Palestrae, nsar the river Jor dan, and the aea of OaUlee, and cult! ration hae begun. . riMte Baal Papyma. "Wa have now aa Immense tract ef land situated on the Nile In Egypt. Mr. C . B. Clarke, the botanical expert of Kew Gardens, has certified that our plants sre the real papyrua. After ex haustive ' experiments. Dr. Querln Welrts, consulting chemist end enalyst to the Pspsr Makera' association of Oreat - Britain,- has produeed ' the most admirable pulp. A committee ef experts haa outlined 'for us all the methods for cultivation and for paper manufacture-and we are-raew- going ahead. Papyrus grows In .water from seven to tan feet high. We gather three eropa a year. Our land Is Irrigated by the Nile and la only plowed every five years. "We will beglnnanufacture of paper, in the spring when, we will have 100,000 tons of papyrue ready for the market Eiparlmenta-hara provedtit the yield of papyrue ; pulp, after bleaching, - Is much larger than esparto pulp and ex ceedingly strong. We expect to use it for ths manufacture of all tha things now being made out of paper. Our proposition le one which will mark a tremendous, revolution In the paper trade." . ,. -" Stung All Around. . A barrister named Bushe waa trying a case In Limerick before Chief Baron O'Orady. Juat before the close of the lawyer's . speech an , ase began to bray loudly outside the court room, the win dow of which ppened on a pasture. , "Walt a moment. "" said "the - chief baron. "One at a time, Mr. Bushe, If you pleaae." . , The barrister presently had a good ohanoe to retort. When O'Orady waa charging the Jury the ass began to-bray this time at a greater distance from the court room window. . . . "1 beg your lordship's pardon," aatd Barrister Buahe, "may I aak you to re peat your laat words T There was such an echo about here that I did aot quite catch that sentence." . 4 thsse apaeee have been assigned pro visionally to Idaho and Montana. The walk from the entrance te the Rainier avenue axis, brings one to the electrical tower and thence to Cascade Court, which will be the objects of elab orate embellishment. To the left (the eaat) of Cascade Court Is the site of the Mines and Mining building, which wlU have a principal .front ttO feet long. Te the west of this building a consider able area has been set aside for state buildings, large spaces having been left for the handsome oiruoturee which Cali fornia and Oregon are expected to erect. An observation tower, situated In this neighborhood, from which It will be dos- sibls to obtain an unobstructed view of the grounds and of the magnificent mountain scenery about Seattle, , will constitute an unusual feature. The Forestry building, which. It le planned, will be a struoture unique and attractive In design, wlU have a location near the shore of Iks Waahinatop. adjoining a number ef the pavilions ef foreign gov ernments Further, south, on the lake chore, space has. been left for Hawaii, the Philippines. Mexico, and the - re publics of Central and South America. . AABwmeniaTtoeea, . The amusement street, corresponding te the Trail at the Lewie and Clark exposition and the Plks at St. Louis, will parallel the ahore of Lake Union, and between it and the lake will be a number of concessions whloh need -a lo cation adjoining a body Of water. Other ehowe- and villages of - strange -tribes will be eltuated to the north of the amusement street. The athletlo grounda have been laid' out In a big apace south of the fountain court, beyond the rail road track. Aa Intramural railway, a eenvenlenoe whose popularity has been proved at earlier expositions, will extend around the entire grounds. It has been laid out so that It will permit easy aooese to the principal buildings-aad will -be two miles long. ES QUIT BUSINESS Historic Prison to Be Turned Into Railway Station, In County Donegal. HUNDRED AND SIXTY EMPTY ALMSHOUSES Protestant Prelate Pays Tribute to Training; Afforded br Monastic "Schools English Minister for Edu. ' cation .Sends Son to Institution. , (Joorasl tpeetsl Servlee.) Dublin, Nov.-IT. No longer la It pos sible to reproach Ireland with being a parsdlse for Insy melf or persons of criminal tendencies. The Institutions which usually shelter-Such characters sre . gradually disappearing because there are no occupants for them. One of the oldest and most hlstorlo jails In ths country that of Llfford In County Donegal has closed Its 4oora for want of that claaa of Inhabitants who have occasionally to go into forced retire ment ..After some, atructural altera tions It will do service ss a railway sta tion, and ths stout walla that once In closed many a Fenian In the rebellious yesrs of 1701. 1(147 and IM7 wlU be rnore peacefully occupied. i . 'The "Tired Tim" of Ireland must be dlaappcmrtng;too,- because -one" - drastic finding of the commission that hai been lately Inquiring Into the poor law ays-' tem of Irslsnd Is that there are io less thsn lit peorhouses tn the country for which there is no immediate or prosf pectlve necessity. It' IS proposed that thess asylums for tramps and laay char acters must go and that the deserving poor must be accommodated In a leas humiliating way than being herded with Idle vagabonds. I The old spirit of religious Intolerance IRISH POO ROUS LOVE LETTERS READ "7 BY THEIR AUTHOR Calls Her .Hla Own Darling Sweet heart but Hints She Would Return His Presents If She Had an Ounce of Honor About Her. (special Dlapateh by Leeeed Wire ta The leeraal) New York. Nov, 17 Mra. Hamilton Bine Vet-reault head of, the late la mented love syndicate, faced United Suites Commlssionsr Fields in the fed eral building today. The charge against her-Is - improper uae of the malls In writing to her victims. Mrs. .Verreault, exoept for her counael, Hugh Mills, was alone. Her black eyes sparkled as her husband. George Verreault, took-the stand aa ths first witness. "Are you the huaband horsewhipped by Mrs. Verreault T" asked Mr. Mills. Objection made and Sustained. "Did you make affidavit against your wife In her suit s gainst tLe Manhattan Elevated railroad T" was ths next ques tion asked. "I itiJUtK tfeaUetjrjfrA'W-ail forgery I shouted Mr. Verreault, bang-1 lng ths table. " "Liar!" said the late mlstreae of the "House of Hearts."- MS Verreault wee then excused. Leo Kelster wss the next wltneas. Mr. Kelster reed an extract from a let ter he wrote to Mra. Verreault while he waa a eultor for her band. "Did you write thte letterT" aakad Mr. Mills. Kelster blushed red aa be looked at it and nodded. ' . - Read If.' please," said ths attorney. 'My own darling sweetheart." stam mered. Kelster. A little louder, please," put In Mr. Poor. "How could you have treated me so shamefully and disgracefully as you dldT" read the wltneas. In firmer tones. 1 lovs you more than you ever were or ever will be. To me you are alL and mv love for von la eternal. The trln- f keta I have-given you are associated I with my best wishes, through love and pure affection. I wonder what your opinion Is about retaining those trln-ketsf-Wit an ounce of honor you oould not retain them. What an In finite affection! I am, forever and evar, your true sweetheart.'' "You never said anything te her about a divorcer asked Mr. Mills. "Never," eald the witnsse, emphat ically. "If you had found her in a garret, away Trom luxury, would you have still asked her to marry your" wae M tils' next question. . "I certainly would," replied the wit ness, who wss thsn excused, mopping his brow. . Mr. Mills moved for a dismissal of the case against Mrs. Verreault, saying ths purpose of the complaint waa to trap women through the notorious per sonal column; : Commissioner Fields reserved de cision, i .', OFFERED HER IL!0HEYTO iciuc nnnuTDV Y LLHIL buunini Mrs. Harris So Alleges In Rob nett Case Taking of Tes- --- timony Closes Today. . (SperiaL Dfrpatcs aThe Jeeraal.1 r Moscow, Ida., Nor. 17. The taking of tsstlmony In the Bobnett land fraud case will end thle afternoon. - The de fense began Its evidence thle morning and the testimony of two witnesses was conoluded st II o'clock, when the court took a recess to await ths arrival of other witnesses on the noon train, William H. Benton testified that he, Bobnett . and Knight were engaged In the location business. He and Knight were to do ' the' work and Robnett was te furnish financial aid. Ha waa pres ent at Robnett'e house the night of the conference with Ferris end Robinson. Robnett did not advise them to file before going upon the land. Upon cross-examination the efforts of the district attorney to Inject mat tare that had not been brought out by defendant'a oouneel were warmly re sisted by Mr. Borah and the matter wae finally-excluded by the court, J. r. Ball, a young attorney ef Lew Iston, testified that be visited the home of Mra Hsrris la December and at that time she stated several tlmee that Bob nett and others would. pay her 11,600 If she would get out of the eountry and not tsstlfy against them In these I eases. A rigid eross-sxaminaaon isiisa to shake the testimony ef the witnsse. whloh tas eo long divided Irishmen appears to be rapidly disappearing, and everywhere, except In a narrow .terri tory In the northeast of Ireland, a bet ter understanding anlmatee the people In their Intercourse with one another. One of the most astonishing atatementa that baa ever proceeded from a respon sible ecclesiastic was made recently by- Rlghr Re-Drv-ArehdaHr Protestant bishop ef Klllaloe. Presiding at the annual meeting of the County Tlpperary Protestant Orphan society, he said Cath lies were enabled through their monas tic Institutions to give a higher edu cation to their children than. Protec tants. Catholic teschers were educat ing the children of Proteatsnts In order that they might advenes themselves' In llle. At the rate at which they were progressing Protestant children would have to ' admit that the Christian brothers and tha nuns had- done more for their, education than their own church had done. When he told them that even Mr. Rtrrell, the, minister for education, had sent his own son to ons of these monastic Institutions to re ceive the foundations of his education they would see what excellent work these good men hnd women were doing and the confidence' that wae reposed In them In high places. Until Dr. ArrhUall delivered himself of-this tribute-to-Cathollo teachers thore were few who knew that the son of the minister of sducatlon had ever been Inside monaatlo walla. Saase Thing. : Wrnrrr Printers' Ink. : On one of the cases In ths Museum of Natural History. Nesf Tork. ' appearsl a card reading,, "Hind leg of a modern ostrich." A correspondnnt of ths New York Sun aaka what the foreleg of aa ostrich looks like 1 . - nor. bsstsobt irnwiu taventorDf the Trolley Car ysessa. ' Xnvento? ef the oearlesa Motor. Inventor ef the Kail way Car Tele - phone System." -.-.'--Investor of ths BldweU Oold Motor. Investor of the Water Xleotrle Oen. erator. . . , Every dollar Invested win represent one hundred cents of the beat stock. Every share will ba exactly like oveeT othei1 share. The profit on every share wll be the same es the profit on every other share. In short, there will be nothing but a square fleet all around. This stock is fully paid and non-aaaessnble. - . I have a lifelong reputation for aquare dealing. I Will personally see to it that every stockholder fete a square) deal on this. , . .'':'." ' ; : ' ; ' These Are Cold Facts You Must Act Quickly If you want some of this stock at be sold at tha preaant-pnea I firmly believe that within a short a case of come Quick or aot at alL As to our reliability and financial standing we refer you to any eommaroial -In'order 4o make It possible for every man and woman to get In with me on UU big deal Ihava decided to All ,v. ( fn. m. .hn.t dm. Anlv at the following nrlces: J 80 Shares Cash S3T.A0; 100 Saaree Oaak S75.00! ISO Shares Oasa tlll-50 too Shares Cask tisoj S60 Shares Oaaa fUHMt too Shares Cash S339 BOO Shares Cash t37B 1,000 Shares Cash $750; 0,000 Shares dash $3,780. Our 80 Bnarse S cash, five monthly psymeaea or ee saoai uo aiaarss wwa. w wnuur w hares SIS cash, six monthly- payments ef Sit each! too Shares SaaO cash, seven monthly payments ef S1S.SO eachj 50 snares tas oash, seven monthly payments o( ga3 saohi 300 Sharea S3t cash, eevea monthly payments ef ass eaohi 800 Shares $44 cash, sight monthly payments ef S4S sacks $1,000 Shares 870 cash, tea monthly payments of 888 eaohi 5,000 hares $400 cash, tea monthly payments ef $340 seen. Hot more than s,ooo naree bom so any om penes. v- ; , Scad all money by bank draft, express money order, postofflce order or-registered letter. Special to ElectricXighten and We now ready to take orders ana 10 aeiiver wunoui unnecessary oeiay ioia union ma womon lrum e 10 ee H P and open type Motora and Generators from 1 to 75 H. P. direct current We wlU taks contracts to Install plants to light towns, fsctorles. department stores and hotels with arc and incandescent lights. - We will send our agents to give estimatss and doss contracts. If nscessary, to any place In the United States, Canada or Mexico, Write ue for estimates on whst you need In lighting or power plants. . t ;'.. BIDVVELL.ELECTRIC COMPANY, .Chicago . . - The undersigned la an authorised broker for the sale of our etock la the weet.-Call and see him and let bint explain anything you do not understand. Oatoe Open 'Beery Evening This Week Until t o01ook. -" it TH'I fllTlW. write, and, eafc for anr free hnnltlat. Tt slvea full Information. Inquiries to . ' ., . ' '425-426 Flledocr Bid?., Tsnth and Washington Sts., Portland, Or. NEW BOOKS FOR THE LIBRARY. PHILOSOPHY. , - HarrisMoral Evolution. ' ' Maher Psychology, ed. 4. Rovce SDlrit ef Modern Philosophy. Wlndelband History - of Phlloaopby, ed. s. . RELIGION. A-.an Christian History la Ita Three Great Feriode. tv. Ryan -What Catholics Do Not Be lieve. . SOCIOLOOT. Booth In Darkest England and the Way Out. Bridge Truet; Ite Book. ' Dumae Registering Title te Land. Follett Speaker of the House ef Kep resentatlvee. Markby ".laments ef Law, ed. I. Taylor Treatise en International Publlo Law. PHtLOLOaT. Tans latin Grammar for Sohoola and CoUegee,' rev. ed. . . " SCIENCE. Blair Chemical Analysis- ef Iron, 101. . .' ..: .. . Clute Fern Allies of North America, 106. ' Ooodale Concerning a Pew Common Plant, ed.,1. Helmholts On ths Sensations of Tone aa a phyalologloal baste for rouaic, ed. s. Job Among the Water-Fowl. ltOl. Lodge Elementary Mechanloa, lift, new, rev. ed. Kempe Handbook of Electrical Test ing, ltoo, ed. . . . Mlcfaelsnn Light Waves and Their fees, 11t. ' Mosef at Parsons Elements of Miner slogy, Crystsllography snd Blow Pins Analyala, 104, new ed. - ' Small Flora of the Boutheaatern United States, 1I0S., Swoops Lessons In Practical Elec tricity, 1901. Vernon Variation In " Anlmale " and Plants. 1101. : : ' USEFUL ARTS. ., Barber Repair and Maintenance of Machinery, 18&. Bergey Principles of Hygiene, 104. Conn Agricultural Bacteriology, 101. Dresssr Health snd the Inner Life, Hssluck Wood-Flnlshlhg, 103. Mather-B-Textbnok of the Strength of Materials and . Stresses In- Structure, 117. 1 Myrick Amerlcen Sugar Industry, !. ':- ' ' Peabody Studies In Physiology, An atomy ani Hygiene, lot. Poole Calorific Power Of Fuels, 100, Jnd sd. ' Rsfter Rnker--fewage Disposal In the United Slates,, ll. t My Patents Will Double the Capacity of Any Motor : I never made an unsuccessful Invention. My first Invention was the eleetrle fan, Just as It la run all over this country In hot weather. 1 didn't get a patent '' on, It, but see what a tremendous aucceaa It ia! ', . .. . I next Invented the Trolley Car System, just aa It la run today, f made It perfect and successful right from the start. . It has never been Improved since . I Invented It Look at the millions of money It ha a made for the stockholders. : The stock In the trolley manufacturing eompantea sold below .11 cents a ahara . In HOt and 184. Poor men could buy that etock then. Thouaanda of them did ' buy It. end every one who held on to It Is a rich man today. Next I Invented the Railway Car Telephone System. It la a system by which passengers or train crews. can telephone from still or moving cars any . ' whers ths asms as if seated In an office. It Is a more perfect systsm tn opera. . tlon than any other telephone you ever eaw. This la on tha road toward mill lone for the atockboldera. y. This Is Tly Greatest Invention : -Now I have Invented aomethlnr .bigger, and greater thaa either of .the above. It Is called the Bldwell Cold Motor.' It la guaranteed not to burn out. and Is exactly the kind of a motor the steam railroad people have 'been looking; for. -It will changa all the steam railroad systems over to electric roads, because It will be cheaper to run than steam and can be run faster and more safely than '.. any present method. f . The one drawback tha railroads have had In changing over, te electriolty' haa been that no motor as at present made can be run ISO-miles at (0 miles an ...hour without burning out. It would melt the very wires. By using the Bldwell Cold Motor a. train of cars could bs run from New York to San Francisco without a stop at the rate of 0 or 10 miles an hour and u.not even warm up and without a bitch. . , . - Besides running faater, they would ba more safe and sure than steam, cost 'less to operate, and would last longer than any other major now known. The BldweU Cold Motor Is the greatest Invention out since I Invented the) . trolley car.. . , - ; '. : ' , . .",'.'"' '' The Opportunity of a Lifetime " I want to give every man and woman a chance to come In with me on this, for I expect to make millions for the stockholders out of this new patent. The stock wlU bs sold on the square. . There-wtH be-no hocus pooua about preferred or common etock, nor any other scheme, trick or wrinkle by which, anybody can -be frosen out... . . ,, the present low prloe you must come In tlms ths etock will be selling at f 1 a Monthly Payment ' Randau Enamels .1 and Enameling, 100. , Thallner Tool-Steel, 10. - United Stetee Publlo Health and Ma rine Hospital Service Handbook for the Ship a Medicine Chest, 1(04. Winthrop Diet In Illness and Conval escence. lll. ' - Wood Turbines. . Theoretical and Praetlcal,-l9Sred.-l. " v- FINE ARTS. American School of Correspondence, Chlcaaro Studv of the Orders. 2 V. Handel Boaster's Gem Edition of Handel'a Messiah (pocket ed). AMUSEMENTS.. ' Lewis Card and Table Gamee, by Professor Hoffman (pseud.). Id. ed. LITERATURE. , Kellogg How to - Celebrate Arbor Dav in tha Schoolroom. PatheUn Farce of Master Pierre Patelln tr. by R. T. Hilbrook. TRAVEL AND DESCRIPTION. Conway Bolivian" Andes. Fountain Eleven ; Eaglets of the Weet. " HISTORT. Noll From Empire to Republic; the Struggle for Constitutional Govern ment In Mexico. Omen England ta the Nineteenth Century. BIOGRAPHY. - George, Henry Life of Henry George, by hie eon. Ibsen. Henrlk Henrlk Ibsen, by H. B. Jsegar. Ravers, Paul Tua Stary aX Paul Re vere, by C. F. Gettemy. FICTION. , , Bell Mr. PennycookS Boy. ' Brady The Patriots. Chambers Fighting Chance. Connolly On Tybee KnolL Doyle Return of Sherlock Holmes, . - Harraden 8cholare Daughter. - HoweHs- aV-Alden Under ths Sunset. Moree Spirit of the Plaea . Murray MartSelona and Ungava. Potter The Genlua - Ray Hearts and Creeds. Remington Way for an Indian. Savage Lady, tn Waiting. . . Scott Walking Delegate. Sterling 8hakeepenro's Sweetheart ; Stringer Lonely O'Malley. "Whitaker Probationer ' and Other Stories. BOOKS FOR CHILDREN.'.'"' Barbour Four In Camp. -,v French Heroes of Iceland 1 Fuller ttookful of Girls. ' , Hall Golden-Arrow. Pratt Play Lady. Richards Armstrongs. PUBLIC LIBRARY NOTES. The library wiahea again to rail ths attention of Ite patrons to their privi lege of drawing for home eaa any num ber of books on their non-fiction card for the purpose of Mu4v endiof keen ing them an Indefinite lime by renew ing every two weeka. These bocks, however. If In rtomand, must be re turned upon nutlce. now. There ta only a email amount te ahara. This Is your opportunity. Xt lf Plan Manufacturers A.ddress all orders and A email table haa been added to the Periodical room and upon It may bo found interesting issues of the United States government. At present It eon tains soms recent Farmers' bulletins on the cere of fruit In the northwestern United States and upon Insecticides. Ths following technical periodicals sre on file In the periodical room: Am erican -Architect.-and Building News, American Engineer and Railroad Jour ' nal, American Machinist, Architectural Record, Architectural Review, Brick builder, Caaaler'e Magazine, Electrical World and Engineer, Engineering, Engl, neerlng Magazine, Engineering and Mining Journal. Engineering News, En gineering Record. Iron Age, Marine En gineering, Metal Worker. Mining and Scientific Press. Mining; Magasine. Railway Age, Railway and Locomotive Engineering. - Rudder,- Scientific- Ameri can, Scientific American Supplement, Street Railway Journal. Transactlone of ths American Institute of Electrical Engineers. These ere catalogued la the engineer ing Index, which le in . the reference room: up-to-date and open to consulta tion at any time. A constantly growing collection of trade catalogues, now numbering about 111 le also on f fie. The transsctlons of the civil engi neers, mining englners and mechanloal , engineers for 1908 ere now on the shelves. We sre anxious to mske the library aa useful aa possible for thess lines ef work, and any suggeetlone ss to furthering Ite helpfulness wlU be moat welcome. ' THE MOUSTACHE IN PARIS Undertakers In Parts are Jollier thsn usual nowadaya, because they have rust been granted permission to wear mus taches, after a struggle of four rears. Hitherto the eompany of "Funeral Pomp," as It hae been called, whloh In Parla Is a ' eemt-muntclpal enterprise, hae Insisted on ell Its hands being clean shaved. A barber te even paid to attend to them for nothing, but the "Crooue motla," as mutes are grussomety called, here, hankered after military muerfbhea f nd now they have obtained thena. or at least the right to wear them. 'Still the privilege wss granted with much re-luctanca,- One of the directors. of the company eald pathetically: "Mustaches do not harmonise with the auatere livery of our men. Moreover, aome of the latter have utterly spoiled their looks br letting ths hair grew on their upper llpa For instance, severs I men whom we uaed to employ effective ly at funerals of the first Wees can now be sent out only to eacort paupers . hearses, ao deplorable Is ths chanae In their erpeersnrs sines they grew mustache, French funerals. It should re placed, ere dlvl.i-l yr nm-. im- it categories, iww ti '" ' ' ceremonial eM ' 7 ' muaifflu-t rtllced n UKIr . , 1