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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (July 7, 1907)
'-THE OREGON' SUNDAY JOURNAL PORTLAND, -SUNDAY MORNING, JULY ' 7, ,1907. " DOG'S ENDURANCE WINS CUP IF YOU WANT TO KNOW WHAT SMARTLY DRESSED MEN WILL WEAR THIS SEASON, ASK, BEN SELLING : FOR PROUD YOUNGSTER OWNERS fun rout of tha recent rose"1 carnival parade j and back noma without a, rest. vnr this feat 'of endurance and b. Mir- muh of their unlqualy decorated turn out the Ad leaf lie voted to award them a ellrer cup, which hu been our chased and will be suitably inscribed and presented to tna Dora. Rov and Harry live with their father. Dr. W. T. Lyon, on Weat avenue, Sun- nvsida. ana are jusiit Droua mi navini woa a trophy In Portland's recent great mm fiesta. The Doys naa no iaea that their mod- 20 I - f ; Prince Attached to Decorated Wagon aa Both Appeared In Recent Rose Carnival Parade. ' Hoy and Harry Lyon and dor Prince, traveled with their decorated wagon prlnoe In harness from their home In fiunnyslds to the west aide, thenoe the et efforts would reault In winning a prise and It was only through an article published In The Journal that they were made aware of their g-ood fortune. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT CANNOT CALL THIS QUAIL NATURE FAKER ft At the peril of being denounced by lrsa1dent Roosevelt as a nature faker, - diminutive quail hen has rone con Jtrery to all customs established for the guidance f the an all world by hatching ft im la a, seat that bad beaa dis turbed. Aooordlng te persons who assume te know. It Is the Invariable custom of a wfld fowl to abandon bar nest lmme fllatsly When It 'naa been disturbed by nan. Bat this little quail, which has lived this year on a hop ranch near XJallaton In Polk county, owned by C. A. Ball, has entirely Ignored the un written law In this regard. Mr. Ball Jives at East Nineteenth and Waahlng- -T ton streets, Portland, and spends a part of his time each year on the ranch. Soma time ago while clearing away Drvsn aiong tna ranees en nis ranch Ball startled the quail from a haie bush. A closer Investigation revealed a nest with a dosen little white eggs In It. Ball cleared, away the brush, leav ing enough around the nest to protect It When he returned to the nest later be found that the quail had not only returned, but had laid eiaht more area. bringing the number In the neat up to id. and then proceeded to set on them. . Ball watched the amall bird with great Interest to' learn whether she would hatch any of the eggs, and was surprised early In the week to And that every one of the 10 esaa had hatched. and the little quail la now tha proud mother of zo young chicks. MORPHINE FIEND THOUGHT HE WAS P PURSUED BY EX-CONVICT PAL f, Ragged. forlorn-looking and demented from morphine Indulgence, Joseph Bell 'was found sitting on the .front veranda of Ah Portland hotel at I o'clock yes terday morning declaring be wasted tha protection of th house detectl ye against a fellow ex-convict from San Quentln 'who was seeking to take bla Ufa. Bell 'was taken to central police station, where he was searched. Morphine was 'found on his person. ' In police court Bell declared b went to th Portland, hotel to secure pro- OREGON GIRL'S GREAT SUCCESS I How Sadie Coppjtnger Gained f Wealth Amid Very Hard Conditions. ? TURNED FAEMEE AND ! f MADE IT PAY WELL I With Her Own Hands Held the Plow , and Strewed at Sowing Time jl With It All Remains All That ! Womanhood Should Be. I (By Bert Huffman.) j;. Success Is not always aoeompaaied ' by tame. Many of the most Inspiring iaxamplAs pf success are hidden away In obscure corners of th world where t tection from a man who served tlm with him at San Quentln. He aald his enemy was In Portland and had seen him. The latter was searching for him In order to take his life, said Bell. Records show that Bell waa released from Folsom, after serving a three year sentence, In 1887; and again, after serving a five-year sentence ending in 1904, from San Quentln. He also served six months In th county jail In San Francisco In 1806. , . Judge Cameron sentenced him to three months' In the county Jail. time until harvest was when she hired neignoormg neaaer crew to cut It and t ouini to thresh it. one aucuea ana unnitched her own teams, sowed barley from the wagon box, as Is the custom In Oregon, built lence, poisoned nnirrnm hnt which killed her chickens, made garden, assisted in Irrlratlnr. milk! hogs, drove to town for supplies, cooked, sewed, wrote letters, read newspapers r???Ir!y and hoUM neatly and skillfully as any of her neighbors. A Beflnsd Woman Always. And In this Outdor llf mhm none of the delicacy and womanliness of her sex. She is a refined, fairly well educated young woman, of high Ideals and splendid character, a favorite with her neighbors and one of th most suc cessful young farmers in the country. W(5 V A Ida. II- ; i-. : i t I M ? , votes, rilf l"'v'. 'C , "I T .im-l-.f .' 15-1' v,w OUR OUTING SUITS Are made with the same care land attention to detail as the best tailor gives to his highest-priced suit. This is what DISTINGUISHES Ours from the ordinary sorts while our prices are no higher - $15 to $25. EVERY REQUISITE for SUMMER WEAR for BOYS in our roomy JUVENILE DEPARTMENT ' k - r u. Leading Clothier Bine seourlsg her quarter section of land five years ago she has improved It fully as well as any of her neighbors. has farmed It successfully, accumulated goodly herds of livestock and has saved over $2,600 In cash from her crops. Th(a amount sh had on deposit as a reward for her energy and industry, when she was recently married in Pendleton. She miaht hava w'orked as a dnminfln In city homes for a lifetime and not acquired the wealth nor experience which she has to her credit as a result of her five years' work as a farmer. OREGON RECORD OF FLETCHER W. HEWES (Buedil Dispatch to Tt Joaroal.) Roseburg, Or., July . Fletcher W. Hewes was arrested at his ranch on North Myrtle creek yesterday by J5eputy Sheriff F. O. Stewart of Douglas county on a warrant 'from the circuit court at Grand Rapids, Michigan. The charge was desertion Of his wife and children, .WW.,., uiiuor ine jaicnisan statute Glen Memshaw arrived here last even ing with requisition papers from Salem signed by Governor Chamberlain, and If Hewes falls to obtain a writ of habeas corpus from Judge Hamilton he will be taken back to Michigan to answer for the alleged crime which he is said to have committed by leaving there four years ago. Most of this time he has been living at Portland. He came to Myrtle Creek about three months ago, accompanied by a woman supposed to be his wife and who was with him a4 th urn of his arrest by Deputy Stewart RED MEN CONVENEION JULY TWENTY-THIRD (Special Dlnpatcb te The JoaroaL) Newport, Or., July . A headline over a recent Newport special relating to th coming state convention of tha Im proved Order of Red Men by a typo graphical Inadvertence stated erroneous ly, that th Red Men would meet her next year. The date has also been pub lished as July . As a matter of fact neither statement Is correct. Th con vention meets her this year, not next, and Its opening date Is July St, not July I. Th Red Men have prepared an elaborate program and a very large attendance Is expected. Journal Readers. The Journal's friends, when patron ising Journal advertisers, will confer a favor by mentioning that they saw. the ad in The Journal. ' ' II.SSII III! ' I ' ' ' " ' ' , r A Peep Into a Portland Home Today ' Sadla Copplnger. ImtfS - but comparatively them. The storr of a modest airl of? eastern "Oregon may Inspire others In like sur , roundlngs te rUa from an unfavorable environment to a more congenial sphere. " Sadi -Copptnger of Pendleton, Uma tilla county, Oregon. Is the eldest of a family of seven children, she is now , 22 years of age, and for five years has managed a form of her own, making a success Of th management In vcry way. Tl fh family. iimait from Arkansas Oreiron a number of years ago with but meana, Th atner located upon a dry rarm in me ana xootnuis ana leraa'to e&rvo a hom from th wllder- - nexs. ; The oldest daughter, Badle,- se cured a quarter section ,ox jana wnen but 17 and began farming It herself. -x ia Aa th --work .41M. 7 . rti, 4 Ph was accustomed t oountfjr JIf 1 and plowed, seedd, irrigated ana Jiar Nested her own barley crop. h cul tivated ahout 80 acres the first fear. nd rractloaJIy the jnly help shi en i:gd lu caring for th crop from seed! Yours in Any Case MIME "it's the Piano Store on Burnside Street' ammoth fflmis totfoi Sale ! 1 1 A PIANO? OF COURSE! . Bless her heart, he'll not deny her a piano when he can get one during the great twq weeks . ReedFreiicSir 10em fflsftraftioH Sal at less than half the retail price, paying as small a sum per month as could be desired; from $6.00 to $10.00! For tvm whole weeks we are not going to do a blessed thing but sell pianos! We're going to put a piano in every household where they've missed that sweet sense of har monious hominess that nothing but a piano in spires! v We're roing to put pianos into homes where they couldn't afford them before; homes where the drain on the money-maker is too heavy for luxuries; where there never could have been a piano if we hadn't arranged with the eastern fac tories to inaugurate a great demonstration sale. We're going to put pianos into homes of wealth where they'll sit next neighbor to mahogany fur niture and velvet carpets, and feel right at home there, too. ..(Here's a secret: Women of wealth love a bargain as well as the women who must get a bargain if they buy at all. And why shouldn't they? Didn't their husbands make their wealth by getting "bargains" in business invest ments?) , We're going to demonstrate to the wealthiest residents of Portland that if isn't at all necessary to buy of a retailer in the heavy-rent district and pay the middleman's profit in order to secure a mm. high grade piano of permanent worth and pure tone. We're thinking of that music-hungry young girl who all her life has wanted a pjano and now comes daily home from the office with nothing to take her mind off the day's routine; we're thinking hard on her problem and we're, going to see that she has a piano before this two weeks.' demonstration sale Is over. We know a mother who sings the dear old songs of her happier ' girlhood to her children each evening her. husband has had a run of hard luck, and thejr haven't a piano we're ge'ing to put a piano right into her home and let her pay as she tan. . - ( We're going to be the joy givers of Portland for, two straight weeks. We're prepared to lose money" to prove) to you that our pianos right from themfactonf can be put directly into your home at half th usual retail price and less than that during this demonstration sale and that in tone, finish and every point that goes to make a high grade instrument they are not surpassed by any piano found in retail store. If you want a piano, if you have a friend who wants a piano, if you've any relatives who would be better off with a piano,f you are commercial minded and see the henefit of an investment in a piano while the prices are way down below eastern retail prices come see our tremendous bargains such as were never before offered in Portland's history! Bargains we could afford to sjive you in no other way but in a gigantic dem onstration sale. This, our. first demonstration sale, will prove a memprable event in more than a hundred lives; it's the time when pianos are placed- in homes all over the city at way-down prices and on easy terms Just to demonstrate that pianos straight from the factory must be just as good and fari lower-priced than when bought of a retailer do-' . ing business far a heavy-rent district To Contestants and Others Interested! Drop in any time this week and look over the lists of phrases submitted iQur recent contest.; -Many were oleased with our rhmV a mimw ;.r -cised jt come see if 7tttthtttiw't0ld''haT aone Detter than to have selected the phrases , we chose. -' ' J (0o Sixth and Burnside IV. . .' 7