Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 1, 1907)
HIE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL1, PORTLAND, TUESDAY: .EVENING, 'OCTOBEIT I,' ISO?. I - - wsjtfsjtm w r. si Christian HoapIUlitjr. '' On recently arrived In Portland says ' that h ha attnd4 church several tlmea without being, spoken to' by any ( person in ..the congregation, and Ue consequently cans ua coia ana unsym ' pathetlo toward straog-er. We are apt to rorm ' our opinion in aome . ujn hasty way, and first Impression am lasting ana atrp. Thla la not altogether peculiar to Portland I mean thla kind of crltl clam, but It ahould be taken aerloualy to heart by all of ua who profeaa to ie living tne moat humane and com prehenslvs religion that the world ha - ever known. Of all people on earth, we nave tne leuai excuse ror intoler anre, or bigotry or unkindneaa. ( perhaps , aome of ua - remember re cently the report 'of a woman who at' tended church several tlmea In Boa ton aa an experiment, to aee how aha would De treated. At one they would not let her In, and at other aha waa icily received. It la undoubtedly, true of Trinity. Boa- ton. for the writer of theao linea re call a certain Sunday morning when aa a stranger in Boston aha ventured to thaf church, bound to hear Phillip Brooke . whether anything elae were done In Boston or not And by exei clalng aome patience, and being somn what eurprlaed- at being turned away from the downatalra portion wherein were fathered the elect. I did. hear him. J. aat on the atalra In the gallery, and aiobody In all that vaat aaaembly hung rnrtr AnrantiirAif nnnn ivir wnH than aid me mue unaopniaucaiea gin irom Oregon who aat on the atalra. '' But all of thla wa a long time ago, nd we are speaking of our duty in the Christian churches of Portland. It. la not altogether a teat of sincere Character and belief, that we do not receive atranger more cordially, I grant you, but it la an Indication by which DADle ara harahlr or klndl Judged b? those who are outalde of the church relation. It Is a curloua thing that ' there are atill many in thla land of enllffht merit, many within aound of the church belle who look upon, churchgoare aaaumtna- or presuming a kind of au perlority to the rest of mankind. Those who ara thua . Judged mar - be . ouit unaware, of tt. but that underlying feel Ing often exists, the Idea being that people who go . to cnurcn "give toem aelvea airs" aa It they were superior to thoaa who do not often go. ! It cannot b merely a queatloa of I clothe, for those wno aneer at in churchgoer, themselves put on their best on any holiday or when exempt J I Will UBII7 ftU.ft. .v...wt .. exist, or however It may have grown, It I certainly the duty of the Chris tian to diaarm auch criticism, child ish and unreasoning aa It may be, by a impl cordial attitude toward all mankind, and -the expression whenever possible, or tnat Droaa cnarity wnion alone le In line with the preaepta of the great teacher wnom we ail lonow, pastors do what they can In greet- in atranaer and in makin them wei come, but obvioualy, where there are several door a ne cannot stand at inera all., not can he diaoriminata and so run tlfe risk of mlaelng-those who may par- nors tlnnlarlv wish to so him. 8nme tas aDDolnt a reception committee, and these aid in expressing a friendly greet ing toward other, but after all, it la the people of the'' church who make up Ita general tone and atmOSDhar. If thla la excluaiva and coot ' the atranger will feel It, and If the oppo lt it will make Itself felt Even at the rlak of some of the amusing mis takes which arise aa when one who had been attending a certain 'church for 1 ft veara waa cordially arreted aa atranger by one whoae membership waa recent but enthualastle. It behooves u tn let down the atlff barrlera of ret! oence and aelf-conaclouaness which pre vent ue from saying the cordial word that we feel toward atrangers in out midst For weeternera, we of Portland are oulte cenaervatlve. and perhapa we do not know now tnia anecis tne new com er. Even at the risk of making a mis take, w ought to be more careful that mien mines as mis cniiun reception of the stranger within our gaea do not occur. .V nun Is. a relleion or love and eer vloe. We are not fulfilling our duty nor appreciating our full privilege If the thing are not manifest In our dally life, at at at The Blesslnga of Poverty. From the New, York American. It may . be that Andrew Carnegie and other billionaires who descant on the blessings of poverty really believe that poverty la good. Such men have apent their Uvea conferring the blessings of GREATEST OFFER YET TO BANK'S DEPOSITORS EILERS PIANO HOUSE COMMENDED ON ALL HANDS FOR THEIR LIBERAL ANNOUNCEMENT. Offer to Accept Any Depositor'! Account at Pull Pace Value Toward Any - New Instrument in the House Meets With Instantaneous Approval "A Bird in the Hand Better Than One in the Bush" to Most Depositors. The announcement In Sunday's pa pers that fillers Piano Houae would ac cept depositors' accounta on the Ore gon Trust & Havings Rank at their full face value, dollar for dollar, toward the purchase price of any new Piano, Pianola Piano. Organ. Orchestral le, Talking-Machine or Talking - Machine Records, created great lntereat yester day throughout the city,, both from the many depositors and the public In gen eral. Thla liberal offer waa received .with unanlmoua .commendation upon the part of the business men generally, both from the depositors' standpoint, as well as giving encouragement In the re organisation. aro mzsTBxoTiojrs. The attraativeneas of thla offer will certainly appeal to a large number of the bank'a depositors, owing to us hd ral featurea. Any depositor may ap ply hta or her amount, large or small, toward the purchase of any new instru ment, there being abaolutely no restric tion; the offer applying to every de partment throughout the store, up to one half the purchase price. All mualc-lovlng depositors now have an opportunity to realise at once upon all, or a substantial portion of their funds which are tied up In this un fortunate Institution. Not only will they make aure of receiving the full -value of their deposit, but they can apply It In a manner which will cer tainly bring them unlimited pleasure. rXAJTOg B2TTXB THAJT FBOSPBOTS. .Ellers Piano House recognises the fact that the settlement of these claim may take a conaiderable length of time, and therefore urges all depositors who wish to take advantage of this offer, to be prompt In their response, as only a certain amount of these clatma will be accepted In thla man ner, and when this limit Is reached the offer will be withdrawn; therefore, all who are Interested will do well to call at ' Ellers Piano House, look through their splendid stock and make their selections at once. "A bird In the hand la worth two in the bush," and this old saying Is worthy of serious consideration In connection with this offer. A fine piano in the home today should certainly prove more attractive to any music lover whose funds are tied up and who has no musical lnstru ment. than the prospect of an Indefinite period of waiting, and a haxy uncer tainty as to what may be eventually realized in cold cash at aome later time. "gist raoir. muzjtn trow. If you have a "silent" piano, why not exchange it for a Pianola Piano the piano that any one can play or per haps you might prefer an organ, or one of those splendid Orcheatrellea which bring the finest orchestra music right Into your own home, or even a talking-machine. But the time to act Is now while the offer holds good; take no chancea; lose no time; convert your depoalt account Into a definite, tan gible asset at once see Ellers Piano House today, S5S Washington street, corner Park. 1 poverty on tha maiorltv of their fellow rltlsena. Perhapa they have been follow Ing consistently a cherished principle who worka 10 or II hour a day for two Hut th belief I not likely to be catching. To the anaemio factory girl or three dollars a week, to tb mother who ee her 1-year-old son going to work with his dinner call, to the vonth wno i robbed of recreation, opportunity and education by the necessity ol up DOrtln hi aaed na rents, poverty seem anything - but the splendid schooling that Mr. Carnevla nlstured It -Giving th boor llbrarle when they need clothin. art aallerle when they need coal, hero fund when they are witnout employment, ana eimpunoa spelling when they are starving? doea not tend to unroot their dlabellef In the advantages of hln noor. Oreat wealth doea not always bring happineaa. It la true; neither does gen lua, nor beauty, nor any of the gift moat treasure! hv mankind. But if billionaires aeldom laugh, helplessly poor people never do. - For one - aourea ncn man there are thousand of desperately unhappy poor. . , ' If, Inatead of preaching the bleaalngs of ooverty. Mr. Carnegie and hla rich and philosophical brethren would get iv tn ma would find that Incentive to Induatry uu hul retail in iw 1 -w that ' the country's output of good and even rich men would be as great as it ever has been. . St el Modern Giants. Marie Faaanauer, a, Tyroleae woman. to were to the height of eight feet. But Marie, In spit of her many inches, I not the moat exalted lady who ever lived, Juat a quarter of a century ago, the world gased with craned head and open mouth at a atlll taller glanteas who looked down on her admirer from a height of eight feet two lnchea and who wa aald to be "atlll growing." Marian," as this remarkable maiden was called, had been born only II years earlier in a village near the Thurlnglan mountains, and the "Amason Princess" was for some montha the greatest at traction in a spectacle at the AJhambra theatre in which aha wore a wonderful ault of armor and waa crowned with a towering headdress, th topmost plume of which waa a good 10 feet from the etage. Nor waa Marian distinguished: only by her great height; for she had a beau tifully proportioned figure, a distinc tively nrettr face and a most amiable disposition. Thla maxnlflcent creature had a very brief tenure of life, for she died at Ber lin leas than two year later and. before she had seen her eighteenth birthday. In 186 and 1870 Mi Anna H. Swan, the Nova Scotia aiantes. caused con siderable aenaStlon. Thoue-h her father. a Scottish Immi grant, wa barely five feet six Inches ih and her mother waa nair a root shorter atlll, Miaa Anna reached alx feet at the age of 11, and at IS waa the tall est person In Nova Scotia. . Bhe had aome histrionic ability, as waa proved when aha appeared a Lady Macbeth In New Tork. and before goln to England she made a triumphal tour of the United State. In her prim Miss Swan waa but a few Inches short of eight feet, and she tain Martin Bate the Kentucky Riant, found an appropriate husband in Cap- actually two inchea taller 1 e St SEIf , SUIT, SK From the Largest Stock on the Coast Today and Wednesday Specials i '' , C O A TS IN BROADCLOTH AND FANCY MIXTURES, ONE OF A KIND, GOOD MANY BLACKS, LARGE SIZES. VALUES UP TO $27.50 $1 BoOO May and Mesday Specials SUIT ABOUT BO SUITS, ALL SIZES UP TO 46, IN PANAMA AND f FANCY MIXTURES. VALUES UP TO $50.00 $-29.7 Fur Ties $12.50 Values $5.75 SILK WAISTS In Blue, Brown and Black. Reg;. $6.50 Value $3.75 Silk Petticoats Regular $16.50 and $17.50 Values $8.35 J. M. ACHESON CO. FIFTH AND ALDER Wholesale and Retail who wa than herself. What to Exact From Children. Silly mothers supply homes and com forts to sons and daughters who never think of offering to pay for them. Wise mothers ae like the one who, although their father Is a prosperous business man, allows her sons to pay board out of moderate earnings because it teaches them Independence, and like the mother of a large family of children who has passed the care, of the home oyer to her 'owina daughters, contending that the amllr aewlnr and the care of the younger children are her full share of the burden. t.Those girls are Paid week. ly wages for the work, and By her ad vice half of the money ! banked each week. It la easy to see how much bet ter prepared for the future auch chil dren will be. ft Given Tomato Pickle. Slice one peck of green tomatoes and two quarts of small white onions, sprinkle with one large cup of salt and let stand over night. Tn the morn ing drain thoroughly, cover with cold water! let stand half an hour, then drain again and cover with vinegar. Add two pounds of brown sugar, one quarter of a- pound of mustard seed, two tablespoons of atlck cinnamon, two tablespoons of whole cloves and ono and one-half tablespoon of allspice. Cook until the pickle are tender, tunr into Jars and aeal. . at ft ft Tomato Preserves. Select small, round, ripe, but firm to matoes of even else. For each pound of tomatoes allow one pound of sugar, one MILITARY ACADEMY PORTLAND ORE. A Boarding and Day School for Toung Men and Boy. Preparation for col leges. U. S. Military and Naval Academies. Ac. credited to Stanford, Berkeley, Cornell, Am herst and all State Uni versities and Agricultural College. Manual train ing. Business course. The principal ha had 21 year experience In Port . land. Comfortable quar- ters. Best environment Make reservation now. For illustrated catalog and other literature ad dress J. W. HILL, 11. D.. Moots! and Proprleto. ounce of green -ginger M two lemon with thin rinda. 1 Scald and skin the tomatoes, a few at a time. Place in a bowl in layer with the augar between and let stand over night. In the morning scrape the ginger and cut in thin slices. Scrub the lemons and slice without peeling; remove the pips. Drain the syrup frori) the toma toes, add to it the ginger and boll until quite thick. Add to it the tomatoes and sliced lemons and cook slowly, un covered, until the tomatoes look quite transparent Skim out the fruit and fill the Jars, pour In the syrup until over flowing, then seal immediately. 0 L USIIIESSCOLLEG "THE SCHOOL OF QUALITY" TXZ.TOSB BTTZUttJra. TSsTTX AJTB XOBBXSOsT. a. p. luunoia, il wyoxwax. Ours la a large and growing institu tion. We occupy two floora 6BxlOO feet, and have a 120,000 equipment Reputa tion for thorough work brlnga mora calls for help than we can meet posi tion certain for each atudent when competent All modern method of bookkeeping taught Chartler 1 our shorthand easy, rapid, legible. Student admitted at any time. Catalogue, busi ness forms and penwork free. Call, phone or write today. Telegraphy BAxutoAs aits comcacxA& TBUQBAHT. -Pleaaaat, Profitable Positions. ACTVA& MAXV XXn PBAOTZOa OH BUST WXXSS POB ABVAJTCES TVTX&L. Mot call for graduate than ws ean apply. Oood positions t big wagaa as soon a oompetent Day and evening elaaee. Catalogue and particular on application. OREGON COLLEGE OF TELEGRAPHY Commonwealth Bldg., 6th and Ankeny. NIGHT SCHOOL No pupil teacher instructs our Night School daaaaa. Department are not overcrowded. Personal attention to each stadept is our method. You may enter at inv time SllbiCCtS Tatlllt ,BookkePin Arithmetic Penman 1 ,UU5"UBhip, Shorthand, IVpewritimj, Eng. glih, Spelling, .peed Shorthand, Banking, Accounting. Bray a postal for mr College JtoaraaL a wAHffrroH tenth gT. Portland, owe Wnrrt to dim B-APOXJBOB BOXTAPAJITB Showed, at the battle of Austerllti, he wan the greatest leader In the world. Ballard's Snow Liniment has shown tha public It Is the best liniment In the world. A quick cure for rheumatism, sprains, burns, cuts, etc. A. C. Pitta, Rodessa, Louisiana, says: "I use Bal lard's Snow Liniment in my family and find it unexcelled for sore chest, head ache, corns, In fact for anything that can he reached by a liniment" Sold by all druggists. NEW POSTAGE RATE BECOMES EFFECTIVE The new rates for foreign poatage went Into effect today. The moat Im portant change la In regard to the rate on lettera. The new rate Is t cents for the first ounce and S centa for each ad ditional ounce or fraction of an ounce. No letter can be sent for leas than 6 centa and prepayment of poataga on auch mall la optional. THE leading BUSINESS COLLEGE ELKS BUJLDINO, PORTLAND. OREGON. CONSTANTLY GROWING . 1902-1903 286 pupiU 1903- 1904 387 1904- 1905 483 - H. W. BKHNKB, Pre a 1905- 1906 681 pupils 1906- 1907... 842 - Eatimated 1907-1908 1.000 " ' SENS F8I CATALOGUE I- M. walker. Prln. WIFE SAYS KARASTA TRIED TO KILL HER (Special Dtapatch to The JoaraaL St. Helena, Or., Oct 1. Andrew Ka- rasta, a Ruasian Finn, Is In th county Jail here charged with kill hla wife last Thursday at their home on a farm a mil and a half northeast of Clatskanle. Mrs. Karasta fled to the houae of the nearest neigh bor and later had her husband arrested. Karasta has alwaya borne a good repu- . tation. ... Metsaer A Co.. jewelers and optician. attempting to 342 Waahington atreet 'ft October Records Now In Visitors alwaya welcome to our parlors in the Gift Room, fourth floor. Complete line of Victor and Edison Records and Machines. Easy payments plan. OPEN EVERY EVEN ING UNTIL 9 O'CLOCK. a "Mia jria BIG SOAP SALE Week September 30th to October 5th Free Delivery Phones: Exchange 11 Home A 1139 The Household Emer gency xCase j s3 j Should be in every home. Con tains many handy and useful articles for use in case of acci dent. Gauze and cotton ban dages, court plaster, two mus tard plasters, absorbent cotton, safety pins, adhesive plasters, styptic cotton, one pad of picric acid gauze. Price 50c Each A FEW FOR THE KITCHEN Bon Ami, regular 10c, special 5 Sapolio Hand or Scouring, reg. 10c, special.. 5 Rainier Mineral, regular 10c, special 5ip Fairy Soap, regular 5c, special 3 Lava Soap, regular 10c, special 7 Cotton or Floating Bath Soap, special, doz.30 Klean Ezy, regular 10c, special 7 Hood's Medicated, regular 25c, special Craddock's Medicated, regular 10c, special 5 POPULAR SOAPS Kirk's Juvenile, special 11 Pears' Scented, special 15 Jergen's Toilet, regular 60c box, special .38 Jergen's Toilet, regular 8 in box 45c, special. 27 Vernon and Ruby Glycerine, dozen in box, regu lar 60c, special t . .37 La Pompadour, reg., cake 15c, special, doz. .77 CASTILE El Almoda, white, 3-lb. bar 33 El Procress. white, 4-lb. bar .81.36 Anton Luggard, mottled, 4-lb. bar .57 Conti, mottled, 4-lb. par , oo? Wash Rag Soap, regular 10c, special 7 Pine Tar and Glycerine, reg. doz., 60c, spec. .36 All Pure Pine Tar, Jumbo size, regular 15c cake, special, one dozen 58 Waldorf Oatmeal or Turkish Bath, regular, dozen 50c, special, dozen 33f MEDICATED ..lit Liquozone, regular 15c, special 10 Woodbury s Facial, regular 25c, special .... 10 THREE CAKES IN BOX Arbor Series, regular 25c, special 14 Milady Series, regular 25c, special 11 Fine Art Series, regular 25c, special 16 Arcadia Series, regular 25c, special 16 Violet Buttermilk, regular 25c, special 16 Virgin Violet, regular 25c, special 16 Premo Glycerine, regular 25c, special Oip Armour's Super Tar, reg. bar, 20c, special, three cakes 32 Sylvan Toilet, reg. box, 25c, special 16 Savon De Armour, reg. box, 50c, special . . . 19 ,La Vogue, reg. box 25c, special 16 Savon A La Violet, reg. box, 50c, special . . .23 Piles and Constipation There is only one method of treat ment to absolutely effect a cure and remove the . cause. Dr. YoungV Rectal Dilators. For sale in-the V ....... .j,., ...y Surgical Department, second floor.' Per Set of Four $3.00 Egyptian Complexion Lotion A harmless liquid Face Powder. The perfection of toilet dainties. Perfectly harmless, leaves the skin soft and smooth. Removes all eruptions and sallowness. The next time you are , down town stop in and ask about it. Per Bottle $1.00 Toilet Goods and complete line of Theatricai Goods, first floor, Washington street entrance. Telephone Yoiir Orders At Once for Quick Dtliveries. etc., to ALL DEPARTMENTS Exchange 1W Home A 1139 mm FRES CLASS IN Photographic Finishing i . l ETer'Wlnts!r Evenfaj Third Floor -' You are WcJcc.t:; j