1 THE r OREGON DAILY JOTJKNAL, PORTLAND. WEDNESDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 25, 1908.
11IUHTT0
FIGHTING
PHIL
Equestrian Statue of the
Hero of Winchester Un
veiled at National Capital
President Roosevelt De
livers Address.
UnlU4 PrtM UiHd Wtrt.t
Washington, Nov. 15. Tb national
, capital paused briefly In Its grind of
official business this afternoon while
tribute was paid to Philip H. Sheridan,
soldier and patriot, when the Borgium
statue of the dashing cavalry leader
was unveiled in the presence of the
president, his cabinet and many prom
inent guests. The statue Is. placed In
Sheridan circle at the intersection of
Massachusetts avenue and Twenty-third
street, where a vast crowd of people
congregated to witness the unveiling
ceremony. President Roosevelt was es
corted from the White House to the
place of the unveiling by a considerable
numoer or troops. .
Lieutenant Sheridan, son of General
Sheridan, had the honor of pulling the
cords that loosened the drapery of flags
concealing the monument As the statue
came into full view Its magnificence
was strikingly presented to the people.
A mighty cheer was heard, while the
military band present played the na
tional anthem. The unveiling was the
culmination of the program of addresses
In which noted speakers paid eloquent
tribute to the character, devoted fealty
to country and the courageous qualities
of the hero who is known to history as
"Little Phil." President Roosevelt was
greeted with hearty applause as he
stepped forward to deliver his address.
He spoke in his usual earnest and em
phatic way and frequently was applauded.
Eixperis aeciare mat tne memorial 10
General Sheridan is one of the, finest
pieces of equestrian sculpture In the
country. The statue is of bronie and
of heroic size. It depicts General Sher
idan on the back of his famous Ken
tucky steed "Rensl," in the very act of
turning his fleeing soldiers at Cedar
Creek after his historic 21 mile ride
from Winchester, With one hand he is
holding back his powerful horse, while
with the other, in which his hat is
clutched, he is waring to his men. The
attitude represents him at the very mo
ment when he shouts out the words:
"Come on, boys, we're going back," and
rallies hi men to a charge that turns
defeat Into victory.
The address or President Roosovelt
follows:
President Boossvslt's Address.
It Is eminently fitting that the na
tion's Illustrious men, the men who
loom as heroes before the eyes of our
people, should be fittingly commemo
rated here at the national capital, and
I am glad indeed to take part in the
unveiling of this statue to General Sher
idan. His name will always stand high
on the list of American worthies. Not
only was he a. great general,, but he
Showed his greatness with that touch of
originality which we call genius. In
deed this quality of brilliance has been
in one sense a disadvantage to his rep
utation, for It has tended to overshadow
his solid ability. We tend to think of
htm only as the dashing cavalry leader,
whereas he was In reality not only that,
but also a great commander. -Of course,
the fact in his career most readily rec
ognised was his mastery In the neces
sarily modern art of handling masses of
modern cavalry so as to give them the
fullest possible rffect. not only In the
ordinary operations of cavalry which
precede and follow a battle, but In the
battle itself. But In addition he showed
In the civil war that he was a first
class army commander, both as a sub
ordinate of Grant and when In Inde
pendent command. His record In the
Valley campaign, and again from Five
Forks to Appomattox. Is one difficult
to parallel in military history. After
the close of the great war. in a field
where there was scant glory to be won
by the general in chief, he rendered a
signal service which has gone almost
unnoticed: for In the tedious weary In
dian wars on the great plains it was he
who developed in thorough going fash
ion the system of campaigning fii win
ter, which, at the cost of bitter hard
ship and perl), finally broke down the
banded strength of those formidable
warriors, the horse Indians. 1
Ssssnts Taunt of Materialism.
His career Vwas typically American,!
for from plain beginnings he rose to
the highest military position In our
iana. we nonor his memory itself: and
moreover, as in the case of the other
great commanders of his day, his ca
reer symbolises the careers of all those
men who in the years of the nation's
direst need sprang to the front to risk
everything, including life itself, and to
spend the days of their strongest young
manhood In valorous conflict for an
ideal. Often we Americans are taunted
with having only a material ideal. The
empty folly of the taunt Is sufficiently
i -
"Man Is As Old
As His Stomach"
This Persian Epigram Is the Real
Gauge of a Man's Life.
The Persians were a very sagacious
?eople, noted among other things, for
heir deep thinking on life and the
things which make up Ufa.
The above epigram shows the wis
dom oi tneir thought.
When a man's stomach la ahle tn fur.
nlsh new material to the system as
fast or faster than the natural decay of
man requires, tnen such a man lives his
fullest and his best
When through wrong living or dis
ease a man's stomach begins to tax
the other organs and takes from the
b)ood strength which it cannot give
DacK in nounanmeni laxen rrom rood,
then begins the death of man and he
decays .fast. The stomach is strong,
splendidly strong, and can stand an
untold amount of abuse and neglect,
but when it dies, man dies.
The stomach givestons upon tons of
good rich blood every year to the sys
tem and draws only 680 lbs. of nourish
ment for Its own use. If, however, the
food which K receives cannot be turned
Into blood which is capable of nse by
the body, then the stomach receives no
help from the other organs.
Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets contain
the most perfect digestive qualities
known to science and at the same time
the most powerful. They will mix with
the poisonous juices of a sick stomach
and digest food In spite of this handi
cap. ;,
They will stop gas making and bad
breath. They tone up the nerves of the
whole digestive canal, including those
of the stomach.
A single ingredient contains strength
enough to digest 8,000 times Its weight
In mixed food. . ! '
They have stood the test of time and
today are more sought after than all
their Imitators combined.
They are used and endorsed by 40,000
physicians. Every druggist sells them,
price tOc. It costs nothing to demon
strate their value. Send us your nam
and address and we will send you a
trial V t f . - . TT
A. "Stuart Co, ISO Stuart bid.. Mar
Shall, Mich. r
shown by the presence here today of
you men of the Grand Array, you the
eomrades of the dead general, the men
who served with and under him. In all
history we have no greater instanee of
subordination of self, of the exalting of
a lofty ideal ever merely material well
being among the people of a great na
tion, than was shown by our own people
in -the civil war.
The "Chasm" TUled Up.
. And you, the men who wore the' blue,
would be the first to say that this same
loft indlffarance to the thlnas of the
body, when compared to the things of
the soul, was shown oy your oromers
who wore the gray. Dreadful was the
suffering, dreadful the loss, of the civil
war. Vat it at&nda alone anions' wars
in this, that, now that the wounds are
healed, the memory of the mighty deeds
of valor performed on one side .no less
than on the other has beooma the com
mon heritage of all our people In every
quarter or tnis country
The AmnlatAness with, which this Is
true Is shown by what Is occurring here
today. We meet, togetner to . raise a
monument to a great Union general, in
the presence of many of the survivors
of the Union army; and the secretary
of war, the man at the head of the
army, who, by virture of his office,
occupies a special relation to the cele
bration. Is himself a man who fought in
the Conf edarata service. Few. Indeed.
have been the countries where such a
conjunction would have been possible
and blessed indeed are we that In our
own beloved land it Is not only possi
ble, but seems so entirely natural as to
excite no comment Whatever.
What Americanism eally is.
There is another point in General
Sheridan's career which it Is good for
all of us to remember. Whereas Grant,
Sherman and Thomas were of the old
native American stock, the parents of
Sheridan, like tha narenta of FarraguF.
were born on the other side of the
water. Any one of the live was just
as much a type of the real American, of
what Is best in America, as the other
four. We should keep steadily before
our minds the fact that Americanism
Is a question of principle, of purpose, of
idealism, or character; tnat it is not
a matter of birthplace, or creed, or line
of descent. Here in this country the
representatives of many old-world races
are being fused together Into a new
type, a type the main features of which
are already determined, and were de
termined at the time of the Revolution
ary war; for the crucible in which all
the new types are melted into one was
shaped from 1T76 to 1789, and our na
tionality was definitely fixed in all Its
essentials by the men of Washington's
day. The strains will not continue to
exist separately tn this country as in
the old world. They will be combined
In one, and of this new type those men
will best represent what Is loftiest In
the nation's past, what Is finest in her
hope for the future, who stand each
solely on his worth as a man, who scorn
to do evil to others, and who refuse to
submit to wrongdoing themselves, who
have in them no taint of weakness, who
never fear to fight when fighting is,
demanded by a sound and high moral
ity, but who hope by their lives to bring
ever nearer the day when Justice and
peace shall prevail within our own bor
ders and in our relations with all for
eign powers.
Civil War's lesson for Today.
Much of fhe usefulness of any career
must He in the Impress that it makes
upon, and the lessons that it teaches
to. the generations that come after.
We of this generation have our own
problems to solve, and the condition of
our solving them is that we shall all
work together as American citizens
without regard to differences of sec
tion or creed or birthplace, copying,
not the divisions which so lamentably
sundered our fathers one from nnolliei,
but the spirit of burning devotion to
duty whim drove them forward, each
todo the right as It was given him
to see the right, in the great years when
Grant, Farragut, Sherman, Thomas, and
Sheridan, when Lee and Jackson, an.l
the valiant men of the north and the
valiant men of the south, fought to a
finish the great civil war. They did not
themselves realize. In the bitterness
of the struggle that the blood and
the grim suffering marked the death
throes of what was worn out, and the
birth pangs of a new and more glori
ous national life. Mighty is the her
itage which we have received from the
men of the mighty days. We. in our
turn, must gird up our loins to meet
the new Issues with the same stern
courage and resolute adherence to an
ideal, which marked our fathers who
belonged to the generation of the man
In whose honor we commemorate this
monument today.
faPwTo
grace booths
Washington State College
Will Be Represented at
the Apple Show.
(Special Dispatch to Tbe Journal. t
Washington State College, Pullman,
Nov. 25. Under the direction of the
head of the department, Miss Gertrude
McKay, the senior girls of the domestic
economy department of the state college
will demonstrate the various uses to
which apples may be put at the Na
tional Apple show. In Spokane, Decem
ber 7-12. Large apple growing dis
tricts, such as Wenatchee and Yakima
have consented each to supply for one
day all the apples that can be utilised.
A cookbook, compiled by Miss McKay
and consisting only of apple recipes,
will be sold for the benefit ot the de
partment. An immense building will be occu
pied by the National Apple Show ex
hibits, many of which will be prepared
In foreign countries. Carload after car
load of prise apples are being received
at Spokane.
The following girls will represent the
department in Spokane: Lottie Jellum,
Mlna White, Zeena Holt, Mabel Joyce,
Bertha Ktmmel, Myrtle Boone, Eula
Hart, Bess Flshback, Orpha Huxtable,
Francis Devin, Lora Green.' Ida Wood
ward, Edna Carnlne, Mary Bartlett and
Ada Wexier.
HOVJ TO CARVE
YOUR TURKEY
Many a married man of mature years
who has served turkey every. Thanks
giving for more year than hs can tell
still has the same difficulties in taking
off the legs, cutting on the white meat
and getting out the dressing that he
linn on tne rirst turkey he ever carved.
When it comes to the nawlv wadriad
husbands, their case is almost hopeless
and only careful study and some prac
tice can enablo them to properly and
easily carve the always popular turkey
on Thanksgiving day.
So much trouble has arisen over this
simple operation that it has now be
come quite the habit to carve the tur
key in the kitchen and bring It to the
table ready to serve. But this does
away witn one of the most pleasant
features of the Thanksgiving dinner,
and a feature which makes It seem
more realistic
will be encountered in getting the
dressing. The legs should always be
to the right Having Imbedded the
fork securely in the . breast - it should
not be removed until all the meat is
off the fowl ready to serve. The fork
should be grasped firmly in the left
hand and all of the operation there
after, done with the knife, r
1 1
Diagram No. 2, showing the cor
rect way to remove the legs and
wings from the Thanksgiving turkey.
Diagram No, 1, showing, the cor
rect way to take out the dressing.
The carving of the turkey Is not so
difficult on operation as it has been
pictured In fiction and oftentimes in
life. There are many methods em
ployed and any prescribed rule has to
be varied to some extent but the most
successful maintain that above all
things the fork should be first placed
midway between the wings and legs
in the breast of the fowl as it is laid
on its back with the legs on the right.
Care should be taken to see that the
fowl is correctly placed before at
tempting to serve; otherwise trouble
First cut the meat as Indicated on
the diagram, In front of the second
Joint of the leg. on the side nearest
the carver. Thi is a straight cut
downward. Do not attempt te unlolnt
the "leg from this side. After the cut
has been made, the knife should be
then inserted underneath the leg and
worked np to the second joint, along
the body of the fowl. If the turkey is
tender end the knife sharp there will
be no trouble in finding the second
Joint and removing the leg. The Same
operation applies to the other extreme-ties.
,1
Diagram No. 3, showing the cor
rect way to slice the white meat.
After the legs and wings have been
Vigorous at 78
Mr. Larkin C. Keown, a Prominent and Highly Respected Citizen
of Edwardsville, 111., Who Is 78 Years Old, Hale and Hearty,
Has Used for Over Ten Years Duffy's Pure Malt Whis
key, and Says It Is the Best Tonic Stimulant for
the Old. Mr. and Mrs. Keown Celebrated Their
Golden Wedding in November, 1907.
'4 H
....v.- V v- . xAV."?.....-.-?.SV...'.W
jf ... .-v . ':-A-:-:-:-y.f
'MR. L. C, KEOWN.
H11 ii It A1r l.anixn nnrl
1907." L. C. KE6WN. 606 Ma
"I" have at times had spells of bnd
health from colds, Indigestion, head
ache, backache, dizziness, nervousness
and various ailments, and have given
the doctors and drug stores innumerable
calls and not a few dollars, but rarely
have had to go to bed. My oooupatlon
for years has been of a clerical nature
I remained on duty, with pills, powders,
potions bracing me up. Not a dram
taken for the dram's sake, but nulls
often feeling that a stimulant would
Improve my feelings, I gave It a trial -sometimes
a bottle of whiskey filled
with bitters of some kind seemed to
help me. I gave Duffy's Pure Malt
Whiskey a trial. Now I keep a bottle
on hand all the time, and would not be
without It or exchange It for anything
else. Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey In
small or large doses, as my feelings In
dicate, seems to answer every purpose
and saves doctor's bills. It Invariably
benefits me when a languid or chilly
condition seems to ln-deate that a stim
ulant is needed. I have seldom used
more than a bottle a month, and one
bottle sometimes suffices for six
months or longer. A teaspoonful re
.vlves from dlssy spells, and no more Is
used for days sometimes. I am 78 years
of age, and for ten years Duffy s has
been used with beneficial results. I
I celebrated our golden wedding on November 4,
In street, Edwardsville, 111., October 15, 1908.
removed and laid on a plate by them
selves, the white meat of the breast
is sliced. Always slice from the top
down, removing the white meat in thin
layers, as Indicated in dlasrram. As
each layer is removed it is placed on '
mo second piatier witn me legs ana
wings, so that when the meat has been
removed it will all be on the second
platter and ready to serve.
If tha turkev is nroDerlv stuffed there
will be no trouble in getting the dress-j
ing from the right side, an the re- J
moving of the legs exposes the dress-1
mar ana rentiers u accessioie. xne aam
meat Is then carved from the legs and
ijie guests are given their choice of
Thanksgiving turkey cuts.
MARRIED TWfr DAYS
AFTER HIS DIVORCE
earthquake and soon after Theobald
came to Seattle and secured a divorce
September 26. On September 2s he
married Miss Tappan in Victoria, B. C.
The case Is tha first to be tried In this
state "Under the law 'declaring rtht
divorcees must not marry within U
months after decrees have been signed.
(United P.-ms Leawd wire.)
Seattle, Wash., Nov. 24. A bench
warrant has been issued for W. R. J.
Theobald, a local haberdasher, who
married Miss Frances Howard Tappan
of Santa Barbara, Cal., two days after
securing a divorce from a former wife.
Theobald was first married In 1884, and
in his divorce complaint alleged that
his Wife inherited $40,000 soon after
marrlatre and her affection for him
began to grow cold. Most of the prop
erty was lost In the San Francisco
Stomach Blood and,
Liver Troubles
Much sickness starts with weak stomach, and consequent
poor, impoTeriihed blood. Nervous and pale-people lack
food, rich, red blood. Their stomachs need invigorating -for.
after all, a man can be ao stroager tha a bis stomach.
A remedy that makes tha stomach strong aad tha liver
active, mskes rich red blood and overcomes aad drives
out disease-producing bacteria aad cure a whole multi
tude of dWases.
Car rid of roar Sfmmeh Wmmkattm mat
Lirtr Laxtnmma by tmkiat m coarse
Or. Plercfm Coldtm tfrdlcal Dltcavrr
th treat Stomach Rettoratlr; Lira
larlaorator mad Blood Cloaaatr.
You can't afford to accept any medicine of unlmam
composition as a substitute for "Golden Medical Discor
ery," which ia a medicine or inowh composition, having
a complete list of ingredients in plaia Eaflish on it bottle-wrapper,
tame being attested as correct under oath.
Or. Perv'J Ptmaat PlMi rtpilata aad larlgorata Stomach.
!L. - 1 J
iffl
i IBIS
Liver aad Bowtlt,
Duffy's Pure Walt Whiskey
Is an absolutely pur distillation of malted grain. It Is the most effective
tonic stimulant and invlgorator known to
moisture Its pala'.abillty and freedom
rrom injurious sunsiances renoer n so
that it can be retained by the most sen
sitive stomach.
It X"ures nervousness, typhoid, malar
la. everv form of stomach trouble, dis
eases of the throat and lungs, and all
run down and weakened conditions of
the hodv. brain and nerve. It Is pre
scribed by doctors and Is recognised as
a family medicine everywhere.
OAUTXOir When ron ask Tour drug
gist, grocer or dealer for Daffy's rare
Malt Wbiskey be sure you get the gen
uine. It's aa absolute pure medicinal
malt whiskey and is sold tn largs sealed
bottles only never in bulk. Look for
the trade mark, the "Old Chemist,'' oa
the label, and make sure the seal over
the cork Is unbroken. Prioa. tl.OO.
Write Consulting Physician, Dnffy Kelt
Whiskey Co., Boohestar, ST. T, for a
free Illustrated medical booklet an
free advioe.
science; softened by warmth and
RAILROADS TESTING
PHONE DISPATCHING
(UnlUd Press Lewed Wire.)
Chicago, Nov. 25. The officials of
railroads in Iowa, Wisconsin and Illi
nois are experimenting with a system
of train dispatching by telephones,
which, if successful, will replace the
telegraph on their lines. The action of
railroad men wan brought about by the
recent failure of the telegraph during
a heavy electrical storm. For several
hours the telegraphic system was par
alysed and the companies were com
pelled to resort to the telephones. It
was found that the service was as per
fect over the telephones as if there had
been no electrification of the atmos
phere. At every station a lightning ar
rested has been Installed and every ef
fort Is being made to protect the sys
tem from interference.
VOTED DEATH BUT
WAS NOT SLAYER
(United Press Leased Wire.)
Chicago. Nov. 24. Christian Rudo
vits, for whom the Russian government
is asking extradition on a charge of
murder, declared today that he was not
a murderer, but a revolutionist
Charged 'by the csar's officers with
the killing of three members of the
Krinse family at Binen, Russia, Ru do
vita tnlfl CniflmtHlftH., Vr.n k.
nor connected with the . actual crime.
He admitted that lie was present when
aenience oi aeatn was passea upon the
family and was one of the committee
tlonary society to .carry out the de-
Selz Royal Blue Shoes
meet the
requirements
It seems to us, as sellers of
shoes, that Selz shoes meet the
requirements of the wearer bet
ter than most shoes. The makers
have confidence in their work;
they say so in a printed guarantee
on every pair.
These shoes are made with an
evident honesty of purpose to see
that the wearer shall have value
for his money.
, If the shoes don't give it, the maker is back of them, ready
to make good.
It's a pleasure to sell such shoes, and a profit to buy them.
We ought to get together on that basis.
Selz Royal Blue Shoe $3.50, $4, $5
1
"fin"-'" i ii
Cor. 7th and Washington Sts.
XtUa
c
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Rich in Anecdotes and Descriptions. Personal Recollections by Ms friends.-
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Thomas Nelson Page
Short Serials and Stories by
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