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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (April 22, 1908)
THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND. WEDNESDAY EVENING, APRIL 22, 1903. mm O BE AH these Kitchen Utensils are given free with each "EciipseRangc sold during the" next ten days t.. The quickest baking Range in ,the market v . The great fuel saver . The cheapest Range The standard. Range 1 NO. 8 COPPER -BOTTOM 1 CAKE TURNER f 0 Pays for the "Eclipise BOILER 1 NO, 8 GRANITE TEAKETTLE 1 No. 8 IRON x SKILLET. I NO. 8 IRON CAKE GRIDDLE 1 NO. 8 STEAMER ' . 1 NO. 8 IRON KETTLE ; 1 NO. 8 IRON POT " ' 1 GRANITE COFFEE POT ' rl GRANITE TEA POT 1 SOUP LADLE ' ' 1 EGG BEATER 1 FLESH FORK ! ' 1 NUTMEG GRATER ' 1 BAKEPAN i: 1 SAUCEPAN 6 PIE PLATES 6 PADDIES PAN 1 POT CLEANER ' 1 BASTING SfrOON THIRTY PIECES WORTH $10, ABSOLUTELY FREE. TQ ECLIPSE . ' RANGE BUYERS v ' - : ': $ 1 'I'M- i Order Your Range 1W..VV; First-Second-Yamhill Streets ALL AROUND STORIES " OF NATION'S LAWMAKERS ByJameaErMU. Champ Clark, th distinguished Mis ourUn and nprssentatlvs from thi Ninth district, had a private tilt with Bsprasantatlv Dalsell ot PennsylTanla, on of Speaker Cannon's floor leaders. "Tou're got a big majority and stUl you do not legislate said' Mr. Clark. -Why doot our "Becanie yoa fellows make ' trouble. Jf yoa . would behave yourselves we could get away In early May," said Mr. "Our forces are so ' small tbar '2 km surprised that ' you ' count them," Mr. Clark replied. ""Tou-'are shooting at a lot of wind and the wlnd.seetns to be stronr enough to xeelst you," And then Mr. -Clark told a story. "When the Confederate raiders got Into the Cumberland valley," he said. "ana . approached Harrlsburg, - they baited at the river and began firing toward the city. - Governor Curtin Im mediately telegraphed President Lincoln. saying tnai ine enemy was near, shoot' ing wildly, and that there wasn a reaera soldier within zoo miles. "Mr. Lincoln .answered him, saying; It there are no Union soldiers near, wnai is tne enemy snooting atr So," went on Mr. Clark, f you have such a majority In the- house why are you constantly firing at the minor Ity, which can't do anything, and, as you sajt, doesn't amount to anythlngr" Senator Foraker doesn't like Secretary Taft, and he makes no bones about It The "Tire A'arm" had a visitor yester- , cay nom uoiumous. juis name was Kyle, and he frankly admitted to the senator that he favored the war secre tary for president: "But he added, "i am noi aoing anytning toward as listing him In his candidacy." "You are a rich man and a good speaaer, answered Mr. jroraaer. "With these accomplishments haven t you yet been drafted. bv the Taft army T" no, I haven't talked much about ray aald Mr. Kvle. ' "You remind me Of a time I. went o circus wnen i was quite a youin, ' around to his headquarters and talk as you have talked to me. They will cor ral you." . - -, e K. W. Sims, the federal district at torney oft Chicago, who prosecuted the Standard Oil cases before Judge Landis, was here, called on the president, peti tioned for an addition to his law library. M nil wan , VtnntM. jn Ik. h... n - humor. The night before Judge Landls an nounced the fine amounting to 129,140, 009 for Mr. Rockefeller's violations of the Interstate commerce set Mr. Sims called on Landls. .The Jurist resides at a hotel In Hyde Park, Chicago. The. two sat on the porch for a Jong time. Finally Mr. Sims asked the Judge of he had made up his mind aa to the amount of the fin to be Imposed next morning. ' "I have," answered Iandia "It ' Is to be the limit allowed by law." "What's thatr exclaimed Mr. Sims. "Twenty-nine millions! Why, Judge, If we keep on at this rate we can soon rut the treasury in such shaie as to make a tariff tax unnecessary. ' Weal wipe out the custom housee."- Then. concluding, he added: '.'When the fine is collected I wish you would let me take the sum to the attorney general at Washington. I have been wanting a lot of new law books of late and they have been denied. But If I should take such an amount to Mr. Bonaparte, it Isn't likely he would turn m down for a few dollars' worth of books."- ". The fine hasn't ben collected and Mr. Sims Is still needing the books. Justice Harlan hasn't been chew ing tobacco for some days. His digest ive organs got out of order and the venerable Jurist was advised to leave the weed alone. He obeyed and is obey leg. -' Just about the time he forswore the f leasure of tearing oil a monster por lon of the store variety, a caddy of "horn twist" fresh from Kentucky. came for him from an admiring friend. Now if there is anything Justice' Harlan delights in more than home grown tobacco, twisted by field hands. put out in the sun to dry and after ward packed away in a trunk covered by rawhide, and deer tongue leaves nun- Senator Foraker said. 'There were f e tn tobacco blades, none or . I inn ncuuRiniaucoB Knows wni 11 is. . But he is saving it, and every day he calls up his doctor to know If it isn't time to take a chew. Once upon a time Judge Harlan was traveling in Virginia. He stopped at a newly constructed country hoteh The walla of his room had been freshly kalsomined. VThey shone white as the lamo was lit But near the head of the bed waa a stain. Some one had thrown a quid stuck, "If I stained neck," ; anger. Why, REALM -FEMININE A ' some monkeys and baboons and orang outangs in cages. A negro ' ' slave . passed along.- Never before in bis life had he seen such animals. For some minutes he stood before them, saluting mem ami saying, : noway, noway, , howdy,' but there was no reply. Finally - the- slave walked away. Soon he was back again. lor. the- monkey oages had possessed blra with a strange faacina lion. - . . " "Howdy,' he said again to the big gest one. mere , waa no reply. . Then he turned away again. As be waa leav , Ing he said: 'Cat's right Keep you alls' mouf shut, cause ef de whl' folks hear you aey'lJr-put you to plckln' cotton'.' "If you want to help Taft In his .field," concluded the Ohloan, "Just go t , ,'. . . " "1 ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Art and Headgear. , ' N artful interviewer succeeded In asking Minister Wu Ting Fang ef Washington a momentous question, one upon which . much of the peace and happiness of I the country depends namely, what he thinks of the' new atyles In women' hata. The self-possessed and suave dl plomat replied, so the story' goes, that he thought them only a trifle more bid' eOus than the old styles for men. This is where the older civilisation has the best of ours. No doubt they tried all the fantastic arrangements that weare now exploiting, about the time that' the pyramids were sketched, and decided that the effect was not worth the bother. Since then their wo men wear their adornments stuck dl' rectly into their aiossy locks, and carry umbrellas. Which is much more sensi ble. The inverted saucer-shaped affair that the men or hia country wear has several points of advantage over' the headgear of our men folks. For one thing, it stays on where our men's hats blow off. For adornment the Chinese may wear a beautiful peacock feather or a yellow button, while our men wear a unirornw auu, monotonous ana unpic- turesque head covering. And Minister Wu thinks our women's hats are hideous. It is an opinion worth considering. Ihe ' divergence between oriental taste Is one not only of latitude, but of centuries of time. Many of the routes ana experiments wnion our in rant civilisation is exploiting have' been tested and discarded by theirs. we have gained our advance by the appli cation of power. China has clung to handwork. Our civilisation has been advanced by steam - and electricity, theirs by mental application. It la no less than astonishing to hear from one who has spent many years among tnem and who is thoroughly posted on the history of this remarkable nation that socialism which we think Is distinctly modern and one of our -own brain prod ucts, waa actually tested by the Chinese government! with au tne tneones ana devices which art how urged, in the eleventh century, and found untenable. This with many other facta of intense interest waa told by Kev. 'rana w. Bt ble in an awress last Sunday night of A, tobacco on it- and it had had 1 that - Yankee here who ' that wall I would , wring his aid the Judge, In- apparent Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills. - Must, Bear Signature) of the trickT" asked a friend. '"How do I know it was a Yankee T" exclaimed .the Kentucktan. "Why, can't you see It Is fine outT" ixo one in tne soucn cnews that Kino. ITALIAN, MUKDERED BY HIS COMPANIONS (fipecltt Dlipatca to . The .! looraal.) Spokane, ' Wash., April H. An un known Italian was horribly, beaten and slashed by his fellow countrymen with, whom ha waa workinr in a grading camp on the Milwaukee, two miles from Drunkenness three, have made their escape into the Now when Minister Wu says our hats are hideous, there is reason for believ ing It What is there, from a stand point of esthetics, to reoommend as headgear an oblate spheroid .of, straw a yard wide, from which rises a straw pagoda, ornamented with bright purple rones, green hyacinths and blue ger aniums? What la there to commend a cylindrical aftalt of straw rising a foot in the air, from which soar up Into the empyrean the .tails of defunct birds? Why must we admire a plateau of straw braid projected like Mercator'a maps into wide distances by spreading wings cut from the bodies of harmless IOW17 . . - Stop and look with a critical eye at the next milliner's window you come to. Are they objects of art these creations of net and straw ana ciotu nowersT Are glass cWerrles and preserved bird skins satisfying to the esthetic sense? Does It give one the same sense of pleasure and fitness to see or to wear mese ior tultous combinations that it does to Lie uoon a oeauurui DictureT But they are supposed to be objects or art, are mey noti uerxainiy n is not because we crave a head covering that trhekcynmT!ry i,l0tat V? 0fl0rrine Treatment to Be Used at Home Without Publicity, or Loss of Time From Business.- 5ee FacwSlaile Wrapper Below. ITary assail . totaka CARTERS m FOB REASACXL . FCR C1ZZIKCSS. FC3 EIUSSZESS FCS Tsitna LIVER. ' rzz cciiSTiPATtcn. rcasAuowsxia. rcsTKECsmuisa luixumi mniimwiiMwi. t u5s I Vwettr Tegetablevaw. new When the news reached. Colfax this morning. Deputy Sheriff . Dalev waa dispatched at once to the scene of the fiaht. but by the time he reached' Ros alia the wounded man had died and his assailants had ned. He at once wired to Colfax for assistance to be sent and Deputy Sheriff Palmer .- left bv team about o'clock this evening,' with the bloodhounds 1 recently i brouhtv from Tennesssee. sThe men who did the kill ing are Pete Giill, aged 14, S feet, tall, very swarthy, has black mustache and has cut on jaw: Jim Orllt. it vears. smooth shaven, with cut on- face Just under the eye. i 6 feet 8 inches tall; Tony Boneatts. 15 years old. S feat tall and smooth shaven. Thev are sun. fiosed to have headed north for the main ine of the Northern Pacific somewhere Detween eprague and Spokane. Sheriff Ratcliff . has come to SDokann t krn watch here for them. CURE SICK HEADACHE- Retirement of SlJor Ives. 1 ' (United Pres liCSMd Wire Washington. D. C. Aorll 22. M ine Francis J. Ives, surgeon, waa placed on ine mirwi list or tne army today on account or disabilities Incurred n the; une oi au'y. . Aiajor lves waa appointed en assistant surgeon in the army from New York In 188o, and during the Span ish war ne waa a brigade surgeon of volunteers. Recently he has been sta tioned at t-be Presidio of San Francisco. . The best aid to temperance Is some thing that wlir strengthen the drunk ard's wrecked neryons system and cure his1 unnatural "craving; for . drink. We believe . that,' any ,man who . really de sires to be "Cured of the liquor habit can cure himself by. using Qrrine. ' This re markable treatment has made so many Cures that we. are, glad to sell it under an absolute guarantee to refund the money If It does not care. . . KV v, it is in two xorms: : wo. i, mat can bet given secretly, and No, 2,' for those who wish to be cured. It Is not only the most reliable' treatment known, but it" Is also the most : economical; aa It costs only tl a box,, and there Is no de-1 tention from the usual, duties, -"While if a cure Is pot effected, there is no ex pense whatever. Mail ordera filled on receipt of price in plain sealed package. Write for free booklet" The' Orriae Co.. Washington, D. C or Clarke-Woodward Drug Co.. and nearly aUv druggists In Portland, ; t - ,'. these things come Into being. There are many ways of covering the head comfortably. This Is not one of them. Clearly, then; our women's hats exprees tne western idea or art ana beauty. Would you not expect a traveler from a far land to think so? But If they are not beautiful, and do not express our tnougnt or tne artistic; why -do we wear them, and, moreover, spend so much good, sensible money for them? As has been said, the Chinese women have been delivered from this tyranny. Hasten the time, then, when the women ofvAmerlca may be allowed to wear either some head covering that is hygienic, sane and beautiful, or else none at ail, as our zortunate Chinese sisters. Suffrage and the Woman. RARNARD-eoIIege' girls are being in structed on the subject of equal suffrage .by a course . of lectures giving both sides of the question. Mrs. Ruth Bryan Leavitt, daughter of William Jennings Bryan, has written from Cairo, Egypt, a formal letter de clining to stand as delegate representing the women of ner mttm at th. iHnn.i Democratic convention. Marie Corelli continues to write and speak axatnst "vntaa tnr inma." in England, while Beatrice Marraden la bflsy traveling from place to place giv ing readings from "Ships That Pass. In the NlghtVand her other books to nlu money to help the suffrage cause. Mrs. Cyrus Pittman Orr is rennrtorf as craving information as to how many women ever lived In this country or any other who, beln the mother or aeven children or more, wished to cast a bal lot - ' -Several suffragists are at present busy looking Into the matter. Mrs. Ellsvbeth t'edy Stanton had just aeven children, nve aona and two daughters. Mrs. uw ell, president of the Newton Equal Buff. raae leacue. who Is at present busy get- tine ud the Easter sale for the benefit of the Woman's Suffrage association of Massachusetts, nas in. X For the) Table. Tt THEN using olives, if a large bottle Wl is opened and only a part of If them used, the remainder, though left In the brine, become comparatively tasteless. To avoid this, pour half an Inch of olive oil on the top, and cork welL The olives will then retain their flavor indenniteiy. In one of the tearooms chlffonade salad served In grape Juice shells com' CASTOR I A , lor Infants and CMldren. - Tb8 Kind Yoa Hits Always Bsnglit Baars tlx Signature of bines grap fruit pulp, shredded lettuce. minced green pepper and a little tomato pulp cut Into small blta It la d raised, wna mijiinnain. . . The Daily Menu. BREAKFAST. . ' Cereal Corned Beef Hash. Poached Egga , Coffee. LUNCHEON. Sardine with Mustard. Saratoga potatoes. Aotola and Nut Salad. Maryland Beaten Biscuit Cream Purrs. Tea. - DINNER. Oyster and Vegetable Stew. Broiled Beefsteak. Baked Potatoea Asnaraaus with French Liresslng. Sliced Pineapple. , Tuttl Frutti Cake. Rutn Biscuit Three Dints of sifted flour, one cup of lard, one teaapoonful salt. Rub the lard and flour well to- J ether, and make , Into a very stiff ough with about a cup ef milk or wa ter: a little more may d necenMiry. Beat the dough with a rolling pin for . . . . . i i . F, Li i. nair an sour, aut mio smit vinuii. pr.ck on top and bake till brown., Oyster and Vegetable Soup. Cut scraped red carrots In half-Inch dice to measure one pint and boil in slightly salted water until almost done. Add one pint of potatoes similarly diced wuich have been parboiled for five min utes than drained. Season with salt and epper and kep at a gentle boll until oth are tender but unbroken, allowing the water almoat to cook away. Pick over, rlnae and drain three dosen small oysters. To the vegetables add a. pint of whit sauce (mad with two table spoonful each of butter and flour and a pint of milk, with salt and pepper); when it begins to simmer add the oys ters and continue the cooking until they plumb and ruffle. Then add one table spoonful of butter and one tablespoon -f ul of chopped parsley and serve at once. Tuttl rruttl Cake. Melt two ounces of chocolate, add one eup of sugar, on half cup of milk and the beaten yolk of one egg. bring to the boiling point re" move from the Are, cool and flavor With one teaspoon of vanilla. Cream on half cup of butter, add one cup of sugar, two eggs beaten separately, on hair cup of milk and two cups of flour sifted with two teaspoons of caking powder. Com bine the two mixture and bake in lay. era - Put half a cup of candled Frencti fruits In a saucepan, cover with boll lnr water, let simmer until tender, drain, then chop the fruit finely. Beat the whites of two eggs until stiff, add four tablespoon of confectioner sugar, hn that fruit and flavor With Vanilla and a few drop of almond. Spread this filling between the layers, and cover the top with chocolata Icing. ' fourth St. Bet Stark and Washington. 53 Does 4 Per Gent lot erest Satisfy Yon? If it does,' why put your money in a bank and let it stay there. If it does not, and you wish to get all of the earning power of your money, read the following announcement, and question yourself as to the advisability of keeping your money in bank. . . . " ,' ; .' " ' fV. ' ' v:;P??f -yiyiV'i-:S:- " We are offering our stockholders and the general public stock of a par value of $1.00 per share for TWENTY CENTS. This stock is amply secured by an immense tract of the finest hard woods in the world Mahogany, Cocoabola, Lignum Vitae, Espava, Mangrove, Balsam Capheba and fifty other varieties of hard woods, all of the greatest value. for use in the manu facture of the finest furniture, pianos, billiard tables, inside finishing and a hundred and dne other necessary uses. This tract, contains over FOUR BILLION feet of valuable timber and every share of stock sold is secured by One Thou sand feet, of an average value of at least $100.00, Can you find better security than this? Mahogany, of which there Is a great amount in this tract, sells in the open market for from $250.00 to $400.00 per thou sand feet. Lignum Vitae and Cocoabola, 'both extremely heavy woods, (running five to ten pounds to the foot), sell in San Francisco for from Twenty to Thirty Cents per pound.1 Just think of thisl At the smaller weight and price this means ONE THOUSAND dollars per :.'one thousand feet, or $1.00 per foot. ' - Our cruisers' reports show that this tract is exceptionally well adapted for logging purposes, and that all the timber.' can be logged to the streams at an average cost of only $6.00 per thousand feet, - ? , , ' ' , .' : The following is an extract from a letter bearing upon this particular tract and. written by W. D. Leadbetter, for years connectedwith the United States Hydrographic Bureau, and a well known and esteemed resident of Portland - "I have explored some of these rivers for a distance of 20 to 30 miles in steam tugs, and find sufficient water in them for vessels to ascend for loading,' and deep water is found where larg vessels can load at a dock. In fact, in all my travels both upon the Atlantic and Pacific coasts, I DO NOT RECALL ANY OTHER PORT WHERE .CONDITIONS FAVORABLE TO THE CUTTING, LOGGING AND EXPORTING OF TIMBER MEET THE IDEAL AS DO THE FACILITIES PRESENTED IN THIS PARTICULAR LOCALITY. v Conditions that are presented here do not and cannot exist anywhere else in the world, I have not any suggestions to make, as I am leaving this week. . I feel, however that you have brought to my attention a matter of greatest merit and splendid possibilities. If I were to remain in this country I would follow with interest what appears to me to be ONE OF THE GREATEST COMMERCIAL OPPOR TUNITIES for capital that I know.?-;y:,-;n.;'; . t . . , " ,ff; -v . ; ..v; The rivers mentioned in this letter are five in number and cut this tract almost at regular intervals, 'running from the ? mountains to the sea. This means a tremendous saving in expense, as the entire tract can be logged to these streams by uimus ui uwii&cjr, cuiu uwu uicBc oucaius ay XaX Kua. ilgntCTB iu uic win., vui wus iuii. uiuw uus lanu J us cuujr undulating, not precipitous, and with but little undergrowth (not more than occurs with Columbia river timber). , Our market is already established.' . Our common grades of lumber will all be used within fifty miles of our operations, and-the demand for the better grades far exceeds the supply. ' . ; . ' 'As to the earning power of your money,' invested with us, and if we cut only 25,000 feet per day, your money would earn for you over Fifty Per Cent per annum. .But we want to put in a mill with a capacity of at least twice this amount, in which events your money will be earning for you at least 100 percent per annum. 1 . ' : ! Come in and see our exhibit "of these fancy woods, and let us show you the proofs of the above statements. The price of this stock for the present is TWENTY CENTS, par value $1.00. The company reserves the right to increase it at any time. 4v?.!v i.:,'sy ' I'i i.?V &s ' "1 v '' ' V-' r- : - -J'-?- '" - ' - ,- -y. . ! f. '; - '' , " -. : -,-.' . The;:N6rthwestern:; Exploration & Development Co. of the United St 318 Worcester Building, Portland, Oregon '