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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 7, 1908)
THE : OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND; SATURDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 7, 1803. HUM OH . BE TAFT'S MflH Bumor That Judge Stands Well in Line for CaW ' net Fosition. Br. John E. Lathrop. (Special Dlapalrb t THe JwtnH Washlnton. D. C Nov. J. An 1m .portant iquestlon In practical politics has ben raise here In connection wltn the new cabinet. A man close to the White House said: 1 ail scarcely u wa, piwiu to appoint some man In hU cabinet from th far -west, .Common political con sideratlons demand the recognition of . a region which no longer needs to come bcRging. but may come demanding, to "Washington." , - ' . Hence, when the morning dispatches brought from Seattle advices that a movement had been Inaugurated to urge the appointment of R L Balllnger as secretary of the Interior. Washington rt nolltlelana really looked ud and took serious notice. Previously no In timation had been given here of any . such design by BlUlngera rrienas. ix was remembered, however, that he served brilliantly as general land commissioner, leaving a lucrative law practice at the . president' personal request, and that 'Roosevelt gave out from the White House, when Balllnger accepted after Me first refusal, this statement: "I have got a 126,00$ man, cabinet alxe. for a 16.000 Job.1' , A ,, Than, when Balllnger voluntarily went out. the -! president effusively thanked him for his saoriflce, ha hav ing laid aside private concerns to aervo 1 the government at great personal loss. Balllnger'a- servtca on Hitchcock's campaign advisory committee la also cited as a reason why ha might have high recognition by Taft . It is not generally known on the coast but is known here that Balllnger . waa urged by strong administration men while here to "go-home and run ' for senator,1 which he refused to-do. Inquiry among well Informed men to day develops the fact that the sugges tion of Balllnger for the Interior port folio has occasioned serious thought : In Washington. It la believed If there were anything like unanimity by coast Republicans lie might land the posi tion. ..... Western Stream Jniprovsmeni. Roosevelt today unofficially gave It - to be understood that his forthcoming message will emphasise river improve ment and general conservation of re , sources, urging that provision be made for the abundant caring for all great streams. -The war , department haa ex pressed opinions to me that plans in the Immediate future Will b developed beyond anything ever formed before, : and that the Columbia. Willamette and Snake rivers are destined to be mads available for navigation up to their po tential value. "While as In the past, the war de partment's recommendations wilt pre- - rede congressional authorization," one offidal Bald, "yet the activity of local - commercial bodies will count much In rrocuring recognition of local demands, t's the early bird, you know." All eastern press lists of Incoming senators include Chamberlain, saying the Oregon legialature will surely honor the popular vote of last June. HILL BANQUET BRILLIANT AFFAIR (Continued from Page One.) might be called Mr. Hill s hobby If It were not ao Important and serious a matter with him. He has been preach lng It over the entire west and north west. But If It had been a .mere hobby ha would have given aoma general In formation, have spoken in- a pleasing way on his favorite subject and that What really happened was this: Mr. Hill began talking on the necessity for Increasing the agricultural yield of the nation. The guests were interested be cause It waa Mr. Hill. Then before they realized It the speaker got down to act- 1 ual facta concerning their own part of the country. He knew what the yleld of wheat per acre was In the various counties f Oregon and Washington. He knew just how fast the population is Increasing and what the ratio of the crops la to the population. He quoted examples 'from other countries ana oth er centuries. He told it all ao simply, so earnestly, much as If he had you on the other aide of the table and waa ar guing with you. telling you why you ahould go 6it and study farming and put your knowledge Into practice for the . good of the nation, that he had nearly ' everyone In the room asking himself if he hadn't better start out right away and go to raising wheat. He spoke a good word for the agricul tural' schools and another of warning against their aping the large univer- ; fifties. Mr. Hill Is eminently a practical man. W. W. Cotton, speaking of him later In the evening, described him as the best-Informed, the best-read, and the most intelligent farmer in ' the , country. , Joke at Cotton's Expense. Twice Hill made jocular reference to the opposition he had encountered from Harrlman in getting Into Portland, Once drawing. a lesson from the toy railroad which was in operation around . the banquet table, and. which caused much merriment . because the locomotive jumped the track whenever it reached the plate of Mr. Cotton, and again i speaking In a slightly more serious manner when he said that he had been occupied for 30 years in trying to build up. that ha had always felt there was room in the country for himself and ail 1 his neighbors, and that If he could not hold his own with them and keep his . prow to the front without doing any I little act of discourtesy or delay or obstruction, he always felt that he would make a mighty poor race by be ing mean about it The guests, who numbered 860 for the banquet, were seated in the large dining-room of the Commercial club' at 7 o'clock. President C. P. Swlgert of the chamber of .commerce acted as toastmaster, being the head of the or ganization tnat wa giving tha test! inonlal to Mr. Hill. Telegr gret were read from E. H. rams of re- Harrlman, A IK NY man or woman .sit-f.i from impaired digestion, lazy liver, clogged bowels or inactive Ikidneys should follow the plan of those who have been cured and take J i in, aW assasa mum. STOMACH i K6 matter how loner von" I have suffered, it will surf ly benefit vou. It is for Poor I Appetite, Sour Stomach, ! dyspepsia,- Liver and Kid- Vc? ills, Chuls-and i;ol3s. n u SALIENT FEATURES OF JAMES .5 J J. HILL'S BANQUET SPEECH : I do not think there is any has a better entrance, a more solid and substantial entrance, for a railway than Portland has from the other side of the Columbia. I do not fear for the future of the country. I know that the United States can furnish bread for 200,000,000 or-for 300,000,000 pepple,-: but not under the methods of cultivation that have been foU lowed in the past. ' -- , . Try to make the boys realize that the man (who has his feet in the soil, the man who crows up out of the soil, is the man who will suc- eeea. and he is the man who will i;f , . life. ; I feel that bur country is able, with proper cultivation, Jto take care of three or more than three times our present population. $ You have a" richer heritage in your fertile soil than in all the min- era! yyealth in the Rocky mountains and the Cascades between the T forty-ninth parallel! and the Panama canal, and you can multiply by' e six if you like. ' J I expect to see you with 200,000,000 people in the United States and I expect to see you able to take care of them and feed them, J , and none of them will suffer. 2 A. U Craig, J. O. Woodworth. Q. B. s.i.i, c -k.t t and J. N. Hill. Governor Chamberlain was the first nibr w tnld of the lmoortanoe to tha state of the opening ,of tha new Una, not only because u aaas 10 lands prestige as a grain shipplni point, but for tha promise It holda oul - nttir tnr hranr.h lines extend ing down into tha undeveloped portions or me eiaie. no wuimuwini Hill nn havinr keDt BO' faithfully his promise concerning the new road, made on a similar occasion three years before. OoTernor aiesd Talks. Governor A. p. Mead .of Washington, who was next introduced, told of what -.... s a otafa aa vlniT that since H4U had built Into washing ton the population of the state, had ln raad from 80U. 000 to over 1.000.000. Ha also congratulated Vancouver upon Its awakening "from its Rip Van Win. kle-like sleep "of nearly a century." ' Senator cnanea w. uiion, psaimis on "The Columbia mver uateway, aiu ha trusted that the opening of a new line with a down-grade from the wheat fields to the sea would mean a readjust ment of unfair freight rates; He said that farmara In Pendleton had to pay aa much to get their wheat to Portland as farmers as far inland In the Argen tine-Republic had to pay to get tneir wheat to Liverpool. Senator Fulton quoted other instances of what he con sidered unfair rates of tha railroads. Ha said that whatever the fault waa. Oreson had not been developed aa it should be. That doubtless It was partly due to the fact that Oregonians had not toad un roe their riirhts. but anyway wanted to aee more railroads bum Into the .undeveloped portions of the state. . . . Kollowlna- Senator rulton. Miiea J. Moore of Walla Walla, Wash., spoke at length on "Railroads as Empire jbuhu- er" and eaia mat - ins nnest. inina ne had ever heard said about a railroad man waa about Mr. Hill mat ne naa never paid a dividend that he had not earned and never earned a dividend that ha had not paid. PrM dant HnwlM Elliott 01 tno Northern Paciflo reviewed the railroad history of the northwest and mentioned tha fact that almost exactly 103 years ago last night Lewis and Clark drifted down the Columbia river and fixed their winter quarters near tne mouth or me river. He spoke flatteringly or Port land, not only- as It Is now but as it will be In the future, and said that if the people would 'give, more time to de veloping the country and less to worry ing about a few cents difference In freight ratea between two points of per haps equal distance out under decidedly different conditions. It would benefit, not only the railroads, but the country at large. '. , . gpokane Snds Mayor. President Qoodall of the Spokane chamber of commerce, and mayor of Spokane, congratulated Portland upon the completion of the road that would unite Spokane and Portland. W. W.- Cotton,: chief counsel for the O. B. 4 N spoke- on "Should There Be a Closed Beaaon for Railroads.' He extended a cordial welcome to Mr. Hill and the North Bank, to Mr. Hill the moat Intelligent farmer in the coun HIS IUU.I w. v - ' ... try and one of the greatest railroad builders, and to the North Bank as a wonderful agent for Portland's pros perity. To show that the new road had done for Portland Mr. Cotton quoted some astonishing increases In real es tate values in this city in the past three years. He assured. Mr. Hill that Portland waa a city 'that held the rail roads in good esteem and was willing to work for Its own advantage and theirs. As evidence of this he spofce of the $3,500,000 raised by taxation deepen the Columbia river channel to the sea. . Answering: Senator Fulton's allusions to unfair rates, Mr. Cotton said that tha rates were not unfair. . ihat. - the O. R. ft N. had not' paid 6 per cent a year since it had been completed and that it was unfair to state that a railroad ahould only pay interest upon the amount represented' by its original Investment, ,when it was con sidered how enormously the value of surrounding property was Increased by the coming of a railroad. ays) Parties) Are Unfair. Mr. Cotton also spoke against the attitude of both the great political parties Because tney nan aisownea nay lng anything in common with or ao- ceDtlna- campaign contrlbutions from several of the great corporations, dur- insr the recent camoalKn. President Francla B. Clark, of the North Bank road, wai unable to speak because of a sever cold. H. B. Miller, consul general to Yoko hama, spoke interestingly on "Prospects of Trade with the Orient," saying that the future of Portland was full of promise because of the certainty that as time went on the trade of the Uni ted States with the Orient must in crease and the Pacific ocean must be come a hiarhway for this traffic. Colonel Wood's Eloquenos. Although the address of C. E. 8. Wood on "Highways and Society" did not come until tne close or a long pro gram, tt held tha almost breathless at tention of everyone in the hall until it was eomcleted. As a 'masteroiece of after-dinner speaking it is' unrivalled In fortiana. except possimy by similar ad dresses made by Colonel Wood. Briefly reviewing the history of highways. In cluding those of ancient Greece and Rome, Colonel Wood told of their bene ficial effect unon mankind, of their In fluence In promoting gregarlousnesa and hence, civilization. Coming directly to the crux of the railroad situation aa it appealed to the people at the banquet Mr. Wood an swered the arguments of Mr. Cotton to the effect that central Oregon waar. barren waste, incapable of supporting a railroad. Mr. Cotton, In speaking of the demands for a line Into central Ore gon, said he had' recently returned from a horseback trip through that por tion of the state and on a. whole dav's ride the only bit of life he had seen was a lonely sheepherder. "I too have but lately returned from a trip through central Oregon and In stead ff a. -lonely eheepherder I caw hundreds of bushels of wheat lying rotting on the ground for lack of means of shipping them to the market of the world. At the conclusion of Mr. Wood's ad dress Mr. Hill asked him for copies of It. Although it was spoken from notes it will ba written and nublished & soon as it can be gotten into shape by loiunei w ooa KSPEE rUTS UP -v WAGES OF GATEMEX 7 Cnited Press Leaatd Wire.) Oakland, Qal, Nov. 7. Train gat em an on the ferry; lines, of tha Southern -Paciflo who drew their Day 'today were" surprised to find 15 more than usual in their checks. AcoomDanvlnsr was "an announcement that the road now finds It .possible to grant the increase which was asked for more than a year ago by the gatemen. Several hundred men are af fected. - - . - ' - ' other city in the United States that J be the corner stone of the future,. Oil RECORD FOR TARIFF REVIS10H Important Matters to Come Before Washington .Wool Growers. (Special Dispatch to Tna Journal.) North Yakima, Wash., Nov. 7. A number of matters of Interest" to wool growers la all parte of the country will be considered at the meeting of the Washington Association of Wool Grow ers which will convene fu North Yak ima Saturday, November 14. Among the toplca will be tha matter of fixing the wages of sheep herders, fixing an as sociation prioe .for shearing, and to take steps to increase the number of sheep that may be grazed in the Kalnier for est reserve. No effort will be made to Increase the number of sheep in the W snatches part of the reserve, but in the Rainier reserve it Is claimed that there are some sections that are not touohed by,; tha allotments, while In other parte aoma men are given much mora grazing than they can use. Through the efforts of tha state mil national wooi growers associations a reduction of erasing rates on national reserves haa been secured, such reduc tions to take effect this season. This reduction amounts to about one cent a neaa, ana represents a saving of about $80,000 to the aheepmen of the country. The Washington association at Its meeting here a week from Saturday will no doubt go on record in the matter of tariff revision on wool. It is not likely that It will favor any marked re duction. Allotments ef sheep on nation al reserves In 108 aggregated 7,700,000 head, and the Interests in this state are large aa compared with the total. TRAIN PROVES DRAWING CARD (Continued from Page One.) of handling the small farm It Is easily possible for the valley to return a total of $200,000,000 annually to the men who own tne land and use it .to the best ad vantage. "It is to teach the men of the Wll lamentta valley how to do this that we are now on this trip. It has been my work and dream to teach them this dur ing all the long veara I have been en- ?;aged in the work of scientific agricul ure In Oregon. And great progress haa been made, but demonstrations and ob ject lessons are great aids to general Instruction and. speech. So this train with the object it carries will be of great benefit. The heart to heart talk' of the professors In connection with the practical demonstrations given by them will make a much stronger impression on tha people than literature and lec tures alone.- - Threa Oreat Xndnstrles. "There are now three great Industries of the Willamette valley, dairying, hor ticulture and atockrais)ng. Already the dairying industriy Is the most important of any In Oregon, overshadowing even the great wheat fields pf the state in wealth production. : "And yet the dairy Industry Is still In Its Infancy. The farmers as a general thing are ' employing the old methods, antique, unsanitary, unsatisfactory. We want to change this. We want them to know what feeds are the best, to show them how to care for their stock In field end in stable. Wa want to teach them the modern and scientific manner of milking, or earing for the milk, of mak- Charcoal Removes Stomach Poisons Pure Charcoal Will Absorb One Hun dred Times Its Volume in , Poisonous Gases. Charcoal was made famoua by "the old monks of Spain, who cured all manner of stomach, liver, blood and bowel trou- bles by this simple remedy One little nervous Frenchman held forth Its virtues before a famous con vention of European physicians and surgeona Secheyron was his name. He was oaa, quaint and very determined. His brothers in medicine laughed at his claims. Thereupon he swallowed two rei ryi grains of siryrnnine, eneugn to Kill three men, and ate some charcoal. The doctors thought him mad, but he did not even have to go to bed. The char coal killed .the effects of the strychnine and Secheyron was famoua Ever since that day physicians have-used H. - Run Impure Water through charcoal and you have a pure, delicious drink. Bad breath, gastritis, bowel gases, torpid liver, impure blood, etc., give way before the action pf charcoal. It la really a wonderful adjunct to nature and la a most inexhaustible storehouse of health to- the man or woman who- suffers from gases or im purities of any kind. Stuart's Charcoal Lozenees are made of pure willow charcoal, sweetened to a. palatable Jitate with honey. Two or three of them cure an ordi nary case of bad breath. - Thv ahnulrt be used after every meal, especially If odb a ureal a prone 10 os impure. These little lozenges have nothing to do with medicine. JThey are Just sweet, fresh willow, burned to a nicety for charcoal . making and 1 fragrant honey, the product of the bee.- Thus every in gredient comes to man from the lap of nature. The only secret lies In the Stuart process of compressing these ilmnta substances . Into a hard tablet or los enge, so that age, -evaporation r decay may. not assail their curative qualities You may- take as many of them as you wish and- the more you take the quicker will you remove the effects of bad breath and impurities arlsinr frnm a decayed or decaying meal. They as sist digestion, purify the blood and help the intestines and bowels throw off all waste matter. Qo to your druggist at once and buy a package of Stuart's Charcoal Lob engas, price IS cents. You will soon be told - by your friends that your breath is not so bad as It wrta Send ua your name and address and we will send you a trial packsge by mail free Address P, A. 8tuart Co, 209 Stuart Bldr. MaribaJl, MlcU. Anty Drudge Advises Ihe Commuter? Sir. SuiMrkmttr-"' Misted my tram I And not anodwr ne lot an hour!" , - ";: Jnty DruJp"Tht too 'bad. What waa the matter) Clock stopped?" - Mr. Suhtrbmkt-" 'N. It'a the same thing every Monday morning. I never can get my breakfast tiU the last minute.. Waahboilen on the range and no room to cook breakfast'' Jnty Drudie" How tilly. Tell your wife to dm Fd-Naptha-Thcn she won't nave any use for a washboiler. She necd only rub the clothe with Fels-Naptha and soak them in a tub of cold or lukewarm water." v When you take medicine' you go by the directions, don't you? 1 Well, that is just the way we want you to: use Fels-Naptha soapaccording to direc tions on the wrapper. You don't expect medicine to cure unless taken rightly, and you shouldn't expect Fels-Naptna to do everything claimed for it unless used in the way it is meant to be used. Given a chance, k will cure jour wash-day ills. Here is a prescription in the case of white clothes: Soap the clothes with Fels-Naptha, roll, soak in cold or luke- warm water 30 minutes, rub lightly, rinse and hang on the line. ... That's all. Ify all means don't boil the clothes or use hot water. Fels-Naptha was made to save' you from the trouble of boiling, heating water and rubbing hard. For washing colored clothes, flannels, and many other uses of Fels-Naptha, di rections are printed on the red and green wrapper. DOYOUhNOW? pi if n.i. .mi,, ii iii ii ' . . , I , I ( lng every cent of Investment pay tha biggest return. . iMfc "And here," continued tha spealter, i want to warn the dairymen of tha coun trymen about the alaughter . of their heifer calves for veal. It la unwise. The average Ufa of tl dairy cow Is 10 yeara. Tha average annual income from one auch cow Is $50. so every ,.i anii tnr vesi means an average economic loss -to. tha farmera of the valley of $500, And we can not import helfere; we must raise them. The dairy Industry of the valley la to be lta sreat; Industry, and therefore the farmers should see to It that they do nothln to hold back their own devel- Pmorttculture g one of the other great industries of the valley. .and of the .i. rallfnmU makes $75,000,000 an nually out of lta fruit, and haa neither tne ciimaie nor mo un Farmers of tho valley should learn how to raise fruit, how to ralaa the best, snd they will find a world mar ket ready and clamorins; for their prod-v ucts. The demonstration train carriea men who can tell them these things. World's Tines Btook. There remains stock raisins;. Tha Willamette valley can ralaa the finest stock In the world.' It can beatEng land In bringing: to a high atata of per fection the Ion wool of Its ahaep, and It can raise finer Clydesdale and other heavy draught horses than Scotland. 'These are things which wa are trying to tell to the farmers of the Willam ette valley on this trip. "Wa are on a tour of education, of political demon stration, of awakening-: wa want to show tha farmers definitely what they already know and believe generally, tlia Hi. Wlll.m.tt. VAllAV 1. OlA ffTAftt- est spot In the world; that it holds ovr? more Inducements to the inhabitant than can be found In any Other place. We want to make tha farmers enthu Inutln about these thlnss. and then tell them how to make every dollar of In vestment and every foot of ground yield Its greatest return. Tha farmera of the valley are not getting their money's worth, and wa want to tell them how to do it. - ' "It all goes back to tho first state ment," concluded Dr. Wlthycombe, "that wa want small farms- and many of them. Wa want a family on every 20 acres In tho whole S, 000,000. We want ach family to get out of tha Boll all there la In it. . We want to build up the country, tha State, from it , real foundation, the soil, and make Oregon the greatest In the union in wealth, in contentment. In character of population. The farm Is tha foundation. We want to build up the foundation .by a solid, modern, scientific plan." FRISCO TO REJOICE ON NEW YEAR'S EYE . . . (Baited Fran LmUmMI Wlra.t San Francisco, Nov. f . The recon struction of the down town district is to be -celebrated New Tear's eve In an old-time festival on Market street that will mark an epoch In tha history of ""cKr,- ; . ' . ;' rae l ermnncni uown jown aaaocia- tion, composed of tne chants of the city, has been planning for a revival of the famoua festival and It is announced that plans are almost ready. ..- -- Bands wUl be piaffed at the principal The Talsa ef On Bepntatlo to Tout 2 1 Years of Steady Growth One to Beasonabls-Frioed, Honest Dental Barries. DR. W. A. WISE. Mgr. Wise Dental Co.. Inc. TAWXa BU0 3D AND WASKXHOTOIT. Xt V So Tony Vlate or Bridge Work 1m One Day if Veoessary. nates 99 Up. BrlOgework S3. SO tTp. rainless Xxtrae- tiona 60c corners Of Market street and the cor ners of the new retail shopping district on Kearney, Stockton and Geary streets and Grant avenue.. The cafea In the down town district have announced their Intention of .co operating with the movement and will help to maka the festival one to be re membered. Notary Commissioned. (Salem Bnresslot The Journal.) Salem. Or., Nov. 7. Commissions as notary has been issued to C. A. Bare lnger of Hubbard. A telephone aysfem will be com- Dieted in the near future In the BVench African colonies which will permit of communication witn tne most distant sts in the interior of the dark con- Inent. ' . Chocolate Bonbons are the most delicious and the most wholesome oP confections and have the largest sale of any in the world. ' They are sold in sealed packages, are always of the same superfine quality and always the best. The Walter M. Lowney Co. Boston, Kiss. Coeaa, Ckoeolata, Ckoeelata Boabeas )OWNEVS OREdOrst The Journal's Free Information Bureau : To enabl It reader to obtain reliable, first-hand information regard ins; the hotela and reaorta whoa announcements appear in thia column. Tha Journal haa installed a free information bureau. Descriptive literal tare, rates, etc, will be gladly furnished to thoae interested. HOTEL OREGON CORNER SEVENTH AND STARK STREETS , : Portland's New and Modern Hotel. Rates $ 1 per "' Day and -Up European PlanFree Bus. ' : IGHT-DICK Centrally Located "Modern Imperial Hotel EUROPEAN PLAN . ' j Seventh and Washington , Phil Metschan 4 Sons, Props, Soar ptstano. hoa. Rates. $1.00. U very moom. , i . . THE CORNELIUS "The House of Welcome CORNER PARK AND ALDER Portland's Bon Ton Transient Hotel. Headauarters for the Traveling Public. European Plan. Single $1,50 and up. Double $2 and up. Our Free Omnibus Meets All Trams. C. W. CORNELIUS N. - Proprietor THB PORTLAND, OR. Sutopaaa Flam ICoAera Kastanraat. PORTLAND ooaT obb anuoi nomii TUB HOTEL LENOX Portland's new snd moat modernly furnUhed houl. Third and Main streets. Special rates to permanent guests for the winter. Free bust Jto and from trains. Excellent cuisine. Telephone In every room. Private baths. xxmopxAir rutw, 1 to 13.50 es Say. ABTSBZOABf WX.AM, ta.eo to f 4 Voi say. O. H. flPBNCER, Manner JZs CALIFORNIA MOTELS FAIRMONT SAN FRANCISCO Sanlc Hotel of the World Overlooks Sah Francisco Bay and City Five Minutes Ride from Ferries "600 rooms. ' Every room has bath Rates slncle mora and bath flCO, $3.00, SS.W, S4.0O, M, S6jOO, 7-00. $10.00. . Suites Sio.oo, iUM, ll&OO, faoM and ap. r MaBSg'smeiit .: : Palace Hotel Company Royal f House, Sari francisco ' roarta and Howard Utu. All outside rooms, steam heat, hot and cold water. .Rates too to $1 per day. 'Weekly ratea Cafe. Fourth street cars direct from Third street depot. From Ferry, Howard street oars direct F. It Turpln. proprietor. Diamond Douse Paint 'GUARANTEED r S ealloa iota. S1.40 par gal.. 1 gallon lota, Sl.BO par gaL Itfanufactured by PORTLAND SASH & DOOR CO. j B30 fxoat Bt, Portlasd, O. HOTEL,! Improvements mis .inn $1.50. $2.00 r i . , 1 I V NEW PERKINS HOTEL Fifth end Washington Stav Portland, NOe. OPBNBD JUNR ut. lOOfl V ; "Modern luxury at moderate prices." In tha heart of business ana shopping- district Exquisitely furnished. All modern conveniencea. Liberal num ber private baths. Sample rooms. Handsomest Cafe and Grill in northwest; music Bus meets all traina. Rates $1.00 and . up. ? , W. Swetland, Mansyer. K. CLARKE Manager Rsaeqaartars rot Tourists as Com saaroial Tralsrs. Special rates made to families aad single renilemaa. Tha manssament v'll ba pleased at all times to show tooms and alva prices. A modera Turkish Tath es tablishment In the hotel. B. O. Bowers, Hf. NORTOMA HOTEL Buraim orr viimaroi it. Portland's Only Roof Garden Bjmerleaa lUtoe to ramulae and Baropeaa Our Baa Meets All Trains ample Saitas. with Baths, fo Tras-allaf Mas THE DANMO0RE Portland's New Hotet 47S Wavakbiarken, eenat 14tk ewa, XoUis; Thesjar. 3Bniwpee la fl 00 ema trs. Bus meets all traina DAN J. MOORB. Proprietor. ' Hotel Moore. Clatsop Boaem, em alde, Or. Open all Tea, row tafoe .ties apply as xaa saaaaoee. HOTEL ST. FRANCIS SAN FRANQSC0 Each Riest receives, whlioat' asking:, the response to the rauJ. ti-form requests of the most ex acting public. The' comfort of the present Is built upon the complaints of the Salt, and Hotel St. Francis to ay represents the sum total of a study of individual Tt-equire-menta. maxxav-BirmorBAV, nou tt CKDEB TBS MANAQEMBNT OT JAMES WOODS HOTEL SAN FRANCISCO 6EART STREET ABOVE UNION SQUARE JUST OPPOSITE HOTEL ST. FRANCIS EUROPEAN PLAN $1.50 A DAT UP AMERICAN PLAN $3.00 A CAT UP A set don town hotel Steil snd brick struolora. .Futnlshsd ii cost of $150,000. Eiirj comfort ind jonTinl noo, Qn sir Untt trimferrlna U til parts of !tf. Omnibus meets ill trains and stsamen. , 1 .' 4 If yon want comfort, contenlenot and luxury at a orj reatonabla prlos, atop at the solaot HOTEL STEWART -f