Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (May 26, 1907)
THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAIi . PORTLAND, SUNDAY, MORNING, MAY 28, 1807. : I : AmerkmMillioMreWM v flex Season's Music in the East : i? njk' .: ?yb II 'r fj rfURRBNPBN PARK lTr J ul. $ v I f 'V"' -V ft I 'iiiiiLii !. m w.'.aiixau. ' "'..-l-..-.' !&i'S'" -rJSJTX '.' "!'.- '''"." "' I r ... r-fciW'tew b o5 CULPTOM B oo w. At lut, tokln a. rul. b mrkd jKXT rt an American multi-mil-1 on a map a atralght una betweitn tha I VI Ilonalra who aavar rat haa b two eltlea and aaid that waa tha Una I II In Amarfea propose .to ro tbara tha railway would bava to follow.., Tha L and what la mora to aattl down routa thua arbitrarily chosen Involved each tremendou phyaloal dlffloultlea thftt no An aouIH hi tnttnA a tindAi- Inoommonly. lntereetlna; announcement take the taak until the Wlnane brothers fctieh I am able to make on tne au- appeared on the acene and offered to horlty or . tne man or minions mm- take the contract at a fancy flrure. Ulf, "Walter L. WJnans. who Is fotnr "Give It to the audacious Americans." 0 compete with two other American said tha caar. at the him time atlmilat. taUllonalraa next month for tha honors nt- mor heavy penalties If they failed r. tne miernaiionai norm muvw t0 complete the work In a specified time. pendon. But tney didn't falL and they cleared Mr. Wlnana. whose "barrel Is SO nobodv knows how mnv million dnllura Mr that it would be futile to amess at x.t.. ike extent 6 It. and wfioee aecom- Bot brothers had a nervous dread of bUshments probably are more yar ea tn, Ma- Whje Thomas took his cour- han thoaa of any other millionaire nv- .M ln vth handa nii ratum. to inf. tails ma mat na naa maae up mm Amerlea William settled In Bngland. hund oennitaiy to ena tne -expaina- HU mon vrifr waa then II years oM, ion" wnicn naa laatea ever ainca mnd had been educated In 8t Peters- Llrth. In less than a twelvemonth he Durr Th fatntr m not believe In Will move across the AUantlo and build pUing up nm moner when he had k house ln Baltlmora, where ha owns a I m.. .nfflirh rtm devoted bimaeif to lot of orooerty and where tha founda I h innnMnn nf nimr.hnui ahin to BDortamen whoee reDutatlons had made Lena of tha family fortune were laid I aaJTeruard himself against sea sickness. America too hot for them. Auatria, yr turn winana, wno buui mm suur 1 1 i. uit on vi. rturn voyaae to wnere trottinr naa taxen a creat now. fnora A Ohio railway. , I Amerlea. Tha ship waa not a suoceas offers him a better and fairer field, and mnA tha mnn waa navar marl a Mr. he now haa 1 trotters at Vienna. That Livt fot Enjoytnant. J Wlnans. senior, died In London ln 1IT. va aome Idea of the scale on which . wi.... it vaara old for IS I His widow survived him until 1I0B. ne aoea ininga y ears' BncUnd haa been his home or At Both his ..parents i war. Woata, Mr a-t hls.hadquart.r and t will b. a J- " .l""'r " " . . .... jIb; obance to leave tha land where tnei " """ uinur attraoiious ue nas aaaea to our- hirillonalres can' enjoy Ufa as they I as weu as nis own sense oi nnai amy, i rend en par besides the sumptuous sta ll .tthnu hln a tunned on. for the that he did not take up his residence ln bles. He haa Introduced thera the fcountry where criticism and denuncia- rio lun, lion of mUllonalres la a sort of national Ustinia. Many of hla ilk, br the way. Give Up Garden of EngUnd. had tha problem of what to do with Tn attrMtlon of the land he has khelr millions a perplexing ona, but Mr. Barar seen must be strong Indeed to mnana haa solved this problem to nis ,n(luo, Mm t0 y, Up Surrenden park. N EW YORK, May It. 1IIT-At this time of year, when Uie cap itals of Europe are at their aea son's height, and New York runs Intellectually and artistically dry and stagnant, Boston, city of the sa cred eodfliibrkeeps burning .the divine fire with Itsfamous series of "Pop" con certs, where 71 cents will buy you a table aeat reserved belowstalrs and 21 oenta will secure you the privileges fif the second balcony to hear "popular" music from It of the men who, during tha regular season, make a large part of what is generally acknowledged to be Amerloa's beat symphony - orchestra, These "Pop" v concerts, In their twenty second season, are under the direction of Timothy Adamowekl, who has been in tha Boston orohsstra continuously for II years, and has been second concert- master since 1101. He has now re signed from the orchestra and expects to devote hlmaelf next year to . the Adamowakl Trio, ' and will probably or ganise a string quartet This la lucky, as the prospects to and are supported br tha etty. Mr. Helnrotb will also aooept a eharoh po- sltlon In Pittsburg. . , . 4 ' Following Is ala program en Wednee- -day evening: ... , e, . , , ( , , , , Testai Prelude Dethter; "Taaaoty J ale," Gull roan t; "Passaoaglla' Baohr ' "Spring Bong." Holllns; "PaatoreJe," from Second Symphony, Wldor; Over turo to Sakuntala, Ooldroarttt Baroarole. Faulkes; . Funeral March, Chopin! Too oata from th Symphony,, Wldor. - ' ' v-v.: -rij'-f.: Speaking of organ lata. Clarenoe Dddy haa been engaged as organist and-choirmaster of tha Tompkins Avenue Con gregational church In Brooklyn. Mr. Eddy announoes that the choir of the churoh will consist of solo quartet and, a chorus of 18 trained 'voices. He will begin hla new duties on tha first Saa day In May. During the rammer e mag nificent four-manual organ will ha In stalled ln tha church. t 'i r The last of the series of reottaas at that line are not rosy. The future f ! 5lmJ- unlveralty waa given onTuea T..IUU la atut n 4nn,t mr, ik. T afternoon by Miss Kate S. Chltten- departure of Will Hess to Europe for J,n Panforte; McCall Lannam. bart- a year, has put an end to tha Boston t'L'"1"s tavia waoow I eky,, clarinet; Samuel Perohonock. born. 1 When Fran Kneleel announced that he nd Benjamin Kohon. bassoon, - Tbeee waa tired after a string quartet season. f,ul have become very, popular, and hit. in.tia4 a b r s.noo m(i " "P" of the entiolng spring waatbar and that ha waa unwilling to think of doors, Earl hall waa well filled, . . practising all summer to oreaJt- In .a ' -- frm waa: - - new celllat to take the place of the Qntet (Kochel No. 411) Moaart retiring Mr. Bchroeder. and that he Largo allegro moderato; larghettoi waa half inclined to write the word, . rondoallegretto. 1 Flnla" to the . history of hla famous ior pianarone, eian- nuarteL ha aroused a atom. Now that nct "-na oassoon ....unnica the well of chamber mualo la running dry, we are finding out how much v-e depended on Ita sweet water. It la 11. V having a tooth pulled; tha-hole Is al ways so much bigger than tha tooth ever waa And this is where the unex pected happened and the "vex populi" ln the moutha of a loving cup commit tee composed of Dr. Prank Damrosoh, Schlrmer, and others, spoke In no un certain tones. If Insuranoo companies and railroads are classed as : "pnbllo utilities." why not string quartets also? Largo; allegro eon spirits. Songe , , Aria from "Patrta" Paladnha 'inrea Spring Songe. .desman All tha world awakea today The dew la upon tha Illy My aong is of tha sturdy north. Quintet Beethoven Grave allegro ma non troppo; an- , dante can tab Ue; rondo allegro ma son troppo. .... . Tha operatic po oontlnnea ta boll. "Chamber muaio must go on In New I and over the cable comes news of the York." said Dr. Damrosoh for one. aeo- Euronean dolnaa of tha aoda ana mA. onded by Dr Felix Adlar. "It la pro- aeaaaa of tha opera world. -SeJotne-poaed. and tha plan Is ta be seriously , . , .. ' , . " considered, that Mr. Knalsel shall soon Z T' , ' " " u rtni taka what la called a Sabbatical year. an rr,nl,uJ' wtlo made her Parisian at the expense of tha subscribers to debut In tha name part seems to have hla concerts during 14 years past in scored as many kinds of triumph. Oon- faot, as that's twice seven already, he rled. who expresses himself as pleaaed ought to have two Sabbatical years I with what ha calls this "vindication" coming. I of Strauss', much-talked-about maater- "What we ask Is that tha changes piece, announces that If the directors that have come shall not upset the lm- I of tha Metropolitan Real Estate com- medlate future. Our declaration of In-1 pany do not change their minds and dependence is that chamber mualc of 1 allow him to produce tha opera ln the the Kneiaela. by the Knelaels, for the I Metropolitan next year, he will make Knelssls. shall hereafter be chamber music of the people, by the people and for the people. We believe our great quartet has become and, In spite of hanges, will remain an established public institution." arrangements to give It ln a theatre. From London cornea tha word that Ca ruso, "In . spite of the monkey-house Incident ln New York." waa received with tremendous enthusiasm why notT Commenting on the failure of a Nw York audience to recognise the voice CHAJ1P10N BIG PMfc OP ENGLAND. American buffalo, the American wa piti and other species .of elk from .oth er oountrles. The wapiti, as all nat uralists know. Is noted for Ita big ant lers. Mr. Wlnana haa a notion that by a flash, aa the photographlo oamera does. In his schoolboy daya this gift used to get him Into trouble with his art teacher and still later with mora compe tent orltloa, before Instantaneous photo graphy had ahown tba more true action of horses ln walking, galloping and Jumping. He depicted them in motion Just as he saw them. He was told that hla sketches ware all wrong, that It waa impossible, for Instance, that a horse should have one foot on the ground and the other three raised. But the camera haa proved htm to be right The Thousand II Ills. Prom the Denver Republican. When I came down from tha Thousand Hills, . Drear waa the heartless, surging town; Tha daaallng fronts of my oold. proud peeks Were lost In a dismal veil of brown; And the song In my heert changed to a sigh As I saw the throng go tramping by. When I oame down from the Thousand Hills The marketplace was all a-surge. For many years he haa kept a pack Of drag hOUnda Ona day. When OUt anA from tha aa of human kind cross breeding with other varieties of ror ,ln mom menas. he came t Baw one ghastly face emerge; up wiu a leuow nunisman wno naa 1 caught one glimpse of Its black des lost tne irau 01 me nounas ana was c.t easting about him in a hopeless man- An(t behold! the fsce waa no lonaer ner am anowing wuiun way 10 turn. there. The owner of the pack galloped to the right Without a moment's hesitation. When I went back to the Thousand Hllla ana tne otner man xoiiowea mm. a welaht of wo lev on mv heart "How on earth do you know where For the face that I saw in the market- they have goner' ha shouted. place Mr. Wlnana laughed. "I saw tha lm- From my waking dreams ne'er stood The Sootlsh Cooperative society was organised In 1161 with a capital of less than 19,000. Now It has a capital of more than 114,500,000. Lwn complete satisfaction at any rate. th MmX country aeat which has I n2d nyJVi hE Era haa devoted himself to trying to get K" h, fcm. , v.r. Hit..at.i ron twPltl" splendid spread and his Ln k. .moment nosslble. out of his TCI ." IVI. "... ..vi penmenta thus far have made him r -"- . . i I i""" "" T""" V"""7. wrt ninrtilnn of aucneaa He haa alar) E"7"rla- In Kent, "tha garden of Eng land" as it trlad W.Vlng the buffalo with domestlo ..T fc. . -t-rta ln " "m ""JU""f yirt' l .Z cattle, but has not yet succeeded ln I.a...v .TTtk- L h. ommlblr cBaKm- n l'.m .la ! v a evolving the "cattalo" as "Buffalo" ML Jit devothe bt r",uir ""f" for th makln "j! Joneg of Aroerlcan fame calls tha hy- f TZe ki- ul T Zun ur more ' he no m"1 l muj v....... brld animal which he has produoed. -ear. of hU Hfs 1 to piling up mora, he hand ,n th- MW rt4 Here ten gal- Probably breaking records Is Mr. Wln- Mta IO n-e. ISO you 1 lant family Of tha Derlnga maae 'their I - -.,...t v.ht,, V7 h.. mn imm nrlnl thulr nada In tha duat." ha anart: I X MkBOw1ad(e4 that n", home In the sUtely old mansion of Bur- Btar, than any raan i,vlnr One thou- answered. At full gallop ha had pick- And 'twill be long, long, ere I go again t , TImim.rlre million-1 rel,d9n' n-1" noDle P" M ra"- sand have fsllen to his rifle and about ed up at a gUnoa tha trail which the From my Thousand Hills to the haunts -,.,--.-- - long avenue . 01 oeecnea. n anu 1 half as many hinds ln Bcotland. If that other man had searcnea I or in vain. or men. Urea wnom 1 nave met y"onKn to descendants of that "very par- sounds Ilfci slaughter It should be re- He might have been a famous scout Bn for tna -piling up a' -- flt knight" who fought at Hastings, numbered that he haa been at It for had not fate made him a millionaire. iRooicereiier. jor "'"""' ' I 7 and of men and women whose names many years. And If any man thinks fonly ohothe comparison was 1 an in wrltten many a brave page of aeer stalking Is an easy game ha has Like Pigeon Racing, Kr Wlnana favor. He Is alert ana v... . txrin.n. ! thai . 7. I 0 " pgoroua. sound in wind and plaoa. but that hasn't prevented him category with that favorite sport of La10.',; It I'm nil n!n. onS rV Iwell and aleepa well, doesn t know what ,D-ndlng money on it most lavish- aristocratlo Englishmen-pheasant bat- -HiVVA 'r n..?n!l0"d. "' bervaa axe and has xlthau-h the glory of Surrenden hues ln which the birds are driven on l. L ""or"1' "'"om"Tlou.ml sh - hnrry-up-and - get "A nark la of ancient data, he haa added the guns bv aamekeeners and bamt- "iffS. .."VJ"'' , li- oharantarlstlc Of tne man wuu i , vl- - . T . - i ouuauiuie a ennous oosiacje in vneso I" " . vu it han-1 one xeature w ine rawiiuu '"" " rr nii raou anuvmr nae one or iwo Thav r.ttn nhaaa ik. hneasurea time by dollars. Yes, ir nap- . i- n a. I .tf..HU. i.. vi. ... . vi pigoon -raoaa. may orten onase toe ' M ail-a l I KlUntJ lllBBVO A 1. nvivu HViua - v BlLuuuaiita V iubhj W W LV1IBS 111! UllUi I Vla M MM Ik. M . t A. m a pinesa ha ur being s ena The beautiful and splendid stables, The deer fore.ta which ha rented from citctlng and killing them friTht.n then I ,h81 7ji?sh nlni from his own design, are of more 1872 to 1885-11 of them altogether- era and drive "em off thlr corsa Wlnana must be accounted a shining magnificence, for when1 It extended right across Scotland, through JJll JKZI f". ??u"- r , cornea to the things, that money can inverarr. - T ToubU ".JSUTaJS ltxr- Vmn-ln Manr Ways. ?omman " li.tT. y!.. ?" .wnT. f" 1 ona It la to release with the racing twm - - 1 aavs wiin tne mum-miiiiun.ii jv- acciaimea as a uourniT jsmauan enim. ni.Mi a nnmK.. nniiiim Ha haa won far more fame, too, than thing could well exceed the luxury of I pion." He was denounoed in aome I pigeons, whose oonsplouous color at- -n,iid hut acaulred by tne process the stablings. Each horse naa tne most quarters aa a ruthless American million- I tr. m. hawka and th. nn.a. of doubling hla pue. a mignir spacious accommoaeuoa anu ri iuu.i- 1 air wno arove peopie on tne tana mat 1 quently tha first objects of attack. the winner as well aa oonor mii""-1 arn convenience aa iav . "ni. un waaie country mignt proviae mm Fish-hooks are attached to their backs hla Rlslev cups, the best pistol shot would say. Nothing Is left undone to with sport. "I never evicted any man." in which the hawk that strikes them ihMM if not ln the world, the keen these eauine favorites of fortune he said. "The deer forests were there rata tana-lad un. the raault uauallv halne iu - - . . A. 1 : . . - . . . . . . .. . . 1 . . . . . 1 greatest literary authority on encomia, m the pink or conaition. a nne iraca ana 1 aimpiy leasea tnem. 1 nave nev- death for both. Mr. Wlnana is now ex- a thorough sportsman, a sculptor and an(j steeplecase , course provide the er owned an acre of land In England or erolalng his ingenuity by experimenting painter of no mean ability, exhibiting at means of exercising them. Part of the Scotland." with an aluminum whistle attached to II. sn.il anadamv. the French Salon anulnmnnt Is an indoor riding school tha hank of a nla-eon. tha idea balnar and elsewhere, and, not last, tne owner Which might surnce ror a oaiiroom ana collecting Vttr a nODDy. that the noise made-by the whistle when and breeder of the tnest lot of trotting aoeB Mrvt aa a gymnasium and shoot- w,.,. ,vIM.na f(, a racing pigeon is ln flight will scare horses, hackneys and show horses in nn- gallery. Ik,. .' a.. . 1, off the hawk. . . . .J' wT. u n...h. Amartna - lu" u over, bpocihb insi cur- it m w V .Tr..iit.i. . Ovr 100 horses are lodfied hero, and pe furnishes. He has shot deer also M ? K H!t 'bit in spite o? all their 1lllTZffi i l estl- fn Siberia. Manchuria and Japan. And good time of It, but m J" ' . Blcee8( 1500.OOO. Mr. Wlnans has the hunting of new varieties la one of temptauona ne na n..,. ,- rtriaa ln no fewer- than l of the 124 the delights he looks forward to ln American, t asaea n I ,.rt - ,t tha Internatlon- America. But his favorite snort la wild 1 "'lt U Horse-show, which begin. onJun. boar otgHe had Just returned I have always ex-1 - -"v 1 ; ' v. ' We are to have a number of violinists of its beloved Caruso when ona hlght next vear. after . worrvlna alone? this I he nlaved the little inke of alna-lna- n,a I eeason with almost none. Krelsler and music of tha invisible aerenader :n U11BI.II. UVU.U.I, WW IIV ft ' V n ' WJ " d .l.Vl, ,U. 1I1UUI1Q LC 1 1 rapidly that ha can no longer be classed a contrasting anecdote of a London as an Infant prodigy, have long keen audience: "Tha younger generation of planning American tours, and now Dat English amateur Is apt to think that lei Frohman announces that he haa se- 10 years ago there waa little real ap cured Jan Kubellk for a tour which will preciatlon of muslo tn England Wa include Mexloo and Havana. In spite ner and Puccini had not then 'arrived' of Dr. Karl Muck's seemingly deadly here. But we well remember a perform antlpathy to soloists at symphony con- snce of Rossini's 'Othelo at tha old Hr certs, both Krelsler and Etmann will Majesty's, in which Nilsson waa Dis appear with the Boeton Symphony or- demons, Paure was Iago and Tamberlik chestra. This season Dr. Mnck per- was Othello. In this opera a baroarole mltted the appearance of Mme. Melba. haa to be sung behind the scenes, but Mme. Fremstad, and Mrs. Bertha Cush- on i-.e program no mention was made lng Child, a Boston contralto, but next of the artist to whom It waa to be in year he Intends to dispense with vootl- trusted. As a matter of fact, it was lsts altogether, and the Instrumental sung by Big. Fanoelli. an artist with a soloists are to be limited as far aa pos- beautiful voice, who was no actor and ible to virtuosi of the highest rank, rio musician, and who waa ln no sense One of these will be PaderewskL fashionable.' He sang the barcarole. ww ' however, so well that tha audience Mr. Charles Helnroth. organist of the rose' at the unknown singer and clara- Churoh of the Ascension. Fifth avenue I orousljr enoored him." end Tenth street, haa been appointed I w w city organist of Pittsburg and will take " Max Hammersteln is at present Tn up his new duties. In the fall. Hla place London and aays during hla first day at the Cnurcn of the Ascension will he I there he heard 1.781 applicants for en- taken by Richard Henry Warren, for-1 gagements at tha Manhattan opera- merly at St. Bartholomew Mr. Hein-1 house without finding any pOBslblll- roth gave his 'last New York recital st ties. In spite of that, he says he will the Church of the Asoenslon on Wed- build a 1400,000 opera-house ln Wash nesday evening. Admission waa by In- lngton, D. C, and conduct permanent vl tat ion only, and tha ohurch was opera ln tha national capital He is crowded. Two years ago I heard him tn said to be negotiating with Constantino, ' the same churoh to not more than half for tha Manhattan, but It is quite likely the audience. In Pittsburg, Mr. Hein- that Constantino and Nordloa will re roth will receive from the city a salary main with the San Carlo company aa a of 4,000 a year for two recitals a permanent Institution In Boston. Oil week during the season, given on Sat- oago la also agitating tha question of urday evenings and Sunday afternoons, a permanent opera company, with an These recitals, to which admission is re on tha Ban Carlo oompany. free, are given m Carnegie Muslo hall luOlc LD YINCENT MILLIQAN that way, blood, , I. suppose. S'Iim-'ET. T or other to make my exhibitor. Is expected to uphold" the game wnen i saw. mm jw,. .... . . ...i. i I nraatia-a - of the old country againet Vi Xm sa In ' A martca In my travels in uveaaw - - - - mnrone. I have always stood on my American citlxenshlp. It has helped me, too. Whatever vnay be the reaaon, Americans are certainly more popular the continent than English folk. By the way, I have been told that I have a bit of American accent Do you think ao.aV'"--"' ' - : ,T eouMwTt detect it But If Mr. Wi naprIacks . tha much-abused American ftfoent. which he seems to regard aa komethrna- to be desired, ha haa the " cordial, unaffected American manner which puts the stranger in -'hla V.. presence instantly at ease. :He Is entirely free from that air of haughty frigidity which character Ises the typical Englishman of wealth Mid leisure ln dealing with suoh -humble rolks as American newspaper corre spondents.' He doesn't, make you feel rou have to thaw hi n to get at him. ; , 3ora Iri St Petersburg. C I ?He waa-born Irt St.;. Petersburg. His father, William' Louis Wlnans, and his incle, Thomas Wlnana, rich railway i iOntraotors from Baltimore, njaae ; a mge fortune building railways for .the Russian governmt-nt The atory goes hat the Russian engineers angered the ixar - by their - confused plans . for a ailway "trom St, Petersburg- to Mos- the American representatives, , Alfred "That is the sport." he eald. "to test one's nerves and try one' skill. The It is not generally known that Mr. Wlnans is a clever sculptor, aa well as an artist whose work surpasses thatl of most amotears. It Is due TO these I accomplishments that he never suffers from ennui, which is aptato affllat the rich man whose only recreation Is sport His "Cowboy Mounting a Bucking Broncho," in bronse, waa awarded a sil ver medal at the Paris exhibition of 1900. Buffalo Bill's show supplied him with the models for this piece. , It is to be shown at the International exhibition ln Dublin, with two other statuettes. 1 -ill Has Two Grown Uofts. His two eons,? aged 10 and II, re- Vanderbllt and Ogden Armour. A L6n-1 prlae-wlnners at the shooting compe don newspaper, disregarding the fact titlons at Blsley; would not stand much that. .he is an American citizen and chance, as a rule, at that kind of ehoot antlclpatlng for him a sweeping vie- lng. There Is no lyingdown., to take a already acclaimed him "En -1 Pot shot at a long distance. You must land's doughty champion." fire at your boar with the glanoe of spectlvely, have tJready won distinction At horse shows ln England and on an eye, one shot as you catch sight In the polo field. They played in the h. .ninnt ha haa cantured Drixes aa- of him. and another. If that doesn't I Oxford team laat year aa No. 1 and No. lore and holds many championships. I etop him. as he makes for your legs 1 1 In the match agalnat Cambridge, with His four-in-hand team of bay horses wnn nia murderous tusks. It is apt to tne result mat oxiora. wnicn naa Deen have never been beaten and they have I go hard with you If you fall to kill previously beaten three years ln suo- been snown ai rrB, xt un, - The Hague as well as in England. In 1 . the big hackney class his pair of bay, I Champion Pistol Snot Cokers. . ,.- . . .' But it in aa a nlstol shot that Mr. Rosador and Prosperine noia a Wlnan.a fanie la worid Fop cession, won "But they don't take after me alto gteher." said Mr. Wlnans. "They want to go to work. Queer isn't ItT I sup pose that comes to them through my similar , record, and the former Is "the hid rather, though he discovered that he amnion of En eland. . A smaller pair, lu, " V , '"V" "Jrr" hed had -enough or it Derore he was Londsborough and Lonsdale, are also thftn 41 championship medals ln England English champlona In their class. For y on th contlnnt trophies the last 10 years 411 .th,E1 enough to fllh big van. It, Is said horse shows he has swept' the boarJs tharha-haa adtmtad tnr hU amnri.t in the light harness classes. i bearlngrs a, big gold-barrelled revolver t. l.i Inner atrina Of trOttClH andl,i. .w .. mra ... . naoere. most of them, of course, either wh,eh na- hmm a..e,tf trn.i.td -r.iva A report just complied by the chamber American or American bred, that have I atralght and shoot straight" Doubt- Pt commerce of Pittsburg shows that won prixes Innumerable.- He hss triedjesg lt tu t0 hiB remarkable eyesight $180,000,000 is paid annually to the wage hard to popularize trotting in England, I that ha owes much of hla mnrvallnna earners. of tha Pittsburg district a ma. but that must be, accounted n of hlaaCcuracy . of aim, especially at moving Jortty of whom are Included ln the 150, fallurea. . He has now given up racing targets. In this most difficult branch 000 workmen employed in the 1.021 on English trotting tracks, mat was 0f the art he Is inapproachable, either manufacturing plants of the district oecause oi me minrausiwn w so many i witn me revolver or tha rifle. '; He haa The nroduction or tne aistrtot for last "rlngere1! trora, America by. unsorupuious 1 eyef which reveal things as they, ate In 1 year waa 111,990,000 tone. 40. and knocked off. However, I am glad they feel that way. and mightily pleased, too, that they want to go to work la America. That is one reason I why I am going there." I Brealdng the Furnitarc Trusl Federal Grand Jury, to Indict the Furniture Trust The members of the Jury were clos eted all day reviewing the disclosures of the two weeks' inquiry Into the practices of the so-called trust among the furniture dealers. This consideration will be re sumed when the jury reconvenes at 10 o'clock. Monday morning.-Oregonian . May 25. Princess or 4 Drawer Dressers Full swell or serpentine fronts. Genuir solid quarter-sawed Oak, finest Birdseye Maple or genuine Mahogany in new Tuna finish. Hand-polished, made East by the very best workmanship, neat carvings adorning frames and stanchions, or with- " out carvings. Extra heavy French pJate beveled mirrors, 18x40 inches. The "Trust Stores" have pledged themselves to sell this class of dressers for $29.00 and $31.50, BUT OUR PRICE IS ONLY ?23.75 Rugs, Linoleums, Matting, Stoves, RefrigeratorsBeIow"Trust, Prices Royal or Pacific Oak Dressers Princess or four drawers, French beveled mirrors 17 v by SO or 20 by 24 inctarvail swell top drawers; exactly the same makes, etc., as the - ".Trust Stores" sell at .50. OURJPRICE ONLY .$13.75 White Maple or Ash Dressersy the "Trust's" $16.00 qualities and style .V.. ..,". ? 12.33 Model Kitchen Cabinet, base 28 by 42 Inched, height 7 feet, exactly the same as the "Trust" advertises at "Trust Price" $18.00. OUR PRtCE,... ?11.75 INDEPENDENT FURNITURE CO., 106 first st. The Only Sxolnatve runltnxe tore That Is Wot Zm the mnltue Trust or'. Bet. Washtarton m r 'ni Any Othax Combination. - 1 Oreea ffrunt i.. -. 1