THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL. PORTLAND SUNDAY MORNING, MARCH B, 1911. UNNAMED BEAUTY-OF-THEVVEST- 1 . . . '"; ALBA BROS. X .DentalPrices fbr30; Day; r ! i 1 ' "The Bivouac of the Dead' The muffled drum's sad roll has beat , The soldier's last tattoo; x 'No more on life parade hall' meet . That brave and fallen few. r On Fame's eternal camping ground -4 ;': Their silent ten t are spread, v v And glory guard, with aolemn round. ; ine Bivouac ot we deaa. r Mo rumor of the foe's advanc ---- Mnw unmi the -wlnri -t-.i - Ko troubled thought atmldnight haunts Of loved ones,.left behind:- u v No vision of the morrow's strife ;' The warrior's dream alarms; ' V' No braying horn or screaming fife.. ' At dawn shall cull to arms. . -'; ;.; .? .r .. , Their shivered Words are rel with rust, Their nlummt hMria r hnwcd' Their haughty banner, trailed In dust. is now ineir maiuai snroua,- And plenteous funeral tears have washed The red stains from each, brow, And the proud forms, by battle gashed, . Are free from anguish now. ". j . ',' ',! .?. -,-y, ..,--v-The neighing troop, the flashing blade, : The bugle's stirring blast, The charge, the dreaded cannonade, ... The din and shout are past; - ' .Nor war's wild note, nor. glory's peal Shall thrill with fleroe delight;. Those breasts that never more may- feel . The rapture of jne fight. , , Like the fierce northern hurricane v That sweeps hi great plateau, ;-v Flushed with the iriiunph yet to galrij c Came down the serried foe, ' .c! , Who heard the thunder of the fray Break o'erihe field benealh, -Knew well the waieliword of tuat day Was "victory yi death," - . ,. Long has the doubtful conflict raged , O'er all that stricken plain, ' For never iiercer tttrtit had waged , . The vengeful blcud of Spain; - , , And still the storm of battle blew, .. Still swelled the glory tide Not long, our stout old chieftain knew, . . Such odds his strength could bkle, -, ,'Twas' In that hour Tils stern command Called to a martyr's grave; - xne rtower or, ma oeiovea lana, ' The nation's flag to ave. By rivers of their father's gore ' v His first born lam els crew. - And well he deemed the sons would pour Tneir lives iar giory, too. Full many a norther's breath had swept O'er Angostura s plain And long the pitying sky has wept ! Above the mouldering slRln. - ' The raven's screatu, or eagle's flight. Or Shepherd's penBlve lay; " " I Alone awakes each sullen height i That frowned o'er that dread fray. 8ons of the dark and bloody ground, Ye must not slumber there, , Where stranger Bteps and tongues re sound Along the heedless air; - . Your own proud land's heroic soil She claims from war, his rlchestiSpoll The ashes of tier brave. So 'neath their parent turf they rest, Far from the gory field. Borne to a Spartan mother's breast, On many a bloody shield; The sunshine of tnelr native sky Smiles sadly on them here, And kindred eyes and hearts watch, by. The heroes' sepulchre. Rest on, embalmed and sainted dead, Dear as the blood ye gave: no impious iouinit!iB nero ensii ire&a ' The herbage of your grave! , , Nor shall your glory be forgot . W'hlje fame her record keeps, ,:. Or honor points the hallowed spot , . Where valor proudly sleeps. Ypn marble minstrel's voiceless stone In deathless song shall tell. When many a vanished age hath flown, , The story how ye fell: ' ' blight i i v Nor time's remorseless doom, ' Shall dim one ray of glory's light That gilds your deathless tomb. jColonel Theodore O'Hara. ..fflHi: BIVOUAC OF THE DEAD I Is one of the most beautiful of Iall poetic tributes , to the fallen hero. -It tells In the , most simple, yet In the moat exultant way, of the appreciation and the, glory of those who for their coun try rest in the "deathless tomb." There is no poem in the English language more often- .quoted npon the recurring celebration in honor of the nation's dead and the simplicity and beauty, or us linos, as well ' th sentiment the represent, are destined to, be everlast ing. v . . ; '.v. . , - This beauUful tribute to the soldier dead was written by Colonel Theodore O'Hara,- the poet, journalist and sol djer. No one was mora -thoroughly fitted for the writing of such lines, for O'Hara spoke from experience, the ex perience that comes with the apprecia tion' of the Just deserts to those who have offered up their lives for their country, for he himself bad Jived the Ufa of a soldier, and knew fujl well all that must be sacrificed and endured before rest Is finally secured on "fame'4 eternal camping fwwwa,' Wf'iiTf O'Hara served through the Mexican war as captain In tba regular army. Being breveted major on the field for gallantry; he took . 'part. In 185i, in Lopes'a first expedition to liberate Cuba. At this time he held a colonel's commission, and was severely wounded at Cardenas. O'Hara also' participated in Walker's filibustering expedition to Central America, and was one of the soldiers of fortune of that episode, ; -.- He anbsequenUy edited, with marked ability, several southern newspapers, among which were the Mobile Register and: the Louisville Times. During the war. of the rebellion. O'Hara. served in the Confederate army, and when the war was brought to a close he held the commission of chief of staff to General John C Breckenrldge. r t. "; " His 'celebrated poem printed above was written, and read by O'Hara in 1817, on the occasion of the reinterment of bis comrades-in-arms, the soldiers of Kentucky, who had fallen . In the Mexican war, j principally at Buena Vista,, and whose remains werejsrought home by the state ' of Kentucky and burled with high military, honors in a lot set apart for them in the Frankfort cemetery., . . '.1--'.''.-' O'Hara died in Alabama several years after the Civil war was closed, and the legislature of Kentucky caused hi .'e mains to be brought home to Frankfort and reinterred In the State cemetery beneath-.the shadow of an Imposing shaft erected by the state to the mem ory of the heroes, whoso valor was so grandly sung In. "The Bivouac of the Dead." .. . t .. Although written by a southerner this famous poem has been so much appre ciated in the north, in fact in every sec tion of the country, that the national government has disposed, at Intervals along the driveways and paths at the Arlington National cemetery, near Washington, metal tablets Inscribed with some of the; most beautiful and soul stirring extracts from this much admired poem.i Lines from this poem are also found frequently Inscribed unon the tomb stones of eminent soldiers In the south-, and it Is on the table of the "Roll of Honor The Dead in National Cema teriea." a work published by the gov eminent It was originally called-"Ken tucky's Dead." Theodore O'Hara was the son of an Irish exile, and was born in Danville. Ky.. In 1820. He was educated at St. Joseph's academy,, at Bardsboro. where he taught Greek to the younger classes while finishing his senior course. He read law, andxis appointed a clerk in the treasury' department at Washing ton in whloii Bervlca' he was employel at the time of the breaking out of the Mexican war After the war he retired to a planta tion in Alabama, where he died on June S, -1867. - He wrote several other poems, the' best known of which Is "The Old Pioneer." Thevbest among hie poems, following' "The Bivouac of the Dead la the one containing these 4lhes: " 'Tl the old,, old story, one man will reaa, - . ; ;Hia lesson of life in the skv: f And the other blind to the present need, Will sea with the snlrit s eve. T You may grind their souls In the self same mill,. -You may blind them heart and brow But the poet will follow the rainbow still, And his brother follow the plough." O'Hara was fond of adventure, of daring disposition and full- of restless energy; richly endowed with gifts of mind and heart. He was even genial and generous in disposition ana as Nature's: Hair Restorer -1 "v ) 16 1 E One Great Reason Why I This Great Hrir BeauHIier and Color Restorer Produces Such Remarkabls Results . Sulphur is a Natural Element of the Hair When there is not a sufficient amount of sulphur in the hair, it loses its life, color and strength; turns gray; and falls out. There arexmany forms ot sulphur but only one kind that is suitable for treatment of the hair and scalp, and that Is thc4 kfnd used In - jprep&rlnf u VYETDS SAGE AND SULPElin IIAIIl It CRIED Y. We Have tht Secret, said We Qh e Too : the Beneiit bl It it in Exceedhgly low Price . i Far twe of three years my hair liad teea filling eat I? BALDNESS CUZED ni getting quite thht, until the top ef my. head wi entirely bald.,- About ifouf -months ago I cpsanenced Sage and Sulphwr. The first battle seemed to do some good and I Kept awing it regufarty tmta new , I haw sed fow bottles. The wfcoV top of my .head fcirlr cowed wetl hair, and it keeps coming h tolckcr. I siaia fcetp asing it a wMk langer, as I netice a coirttant iwaprcawnut.- 52c. arid $1 Bottlcts, At AD Drcists Seat Isseeas rrtII Vsea lectin ef Fries 71 ccrnxArrrr ct r;zv ycii oty. r. v. , - .- i cr sale ana rccouuucuaoa hy uio Owl vrvg KX vim?' -; :.0 i :-y - .,?'L5ViCat:l ? a-"' winiMii I'in'ww.n.iiwrr I VJ. , ' tiTiiIiiii ift 11 rr-hiti fr-'-r-n'r ffi""" '"' type of western beauty, which, according to George A. Lederer, the famous theatrical manager, has no duplicate In the east Mr. Lederer Is emphatic In his assertions that the weat has a corner In the beauty market and hauls qut the replica of the above cut to prove his argument The lady's name could not be learned. Without Plateo Teeth r v ' v-V.' .'. '' - FuU Set of Teeth $5 22rk GoldBridgeTeeth$3 22-k Gold Cronos $3.00 Gold Fillings $1.0Mver FilEgs 50c We give expert tervice, and even at thi minimum of rates our fifteen. year guarantee holds good. conversatlonaltst was unusually nappy and brilliant having been the charm of many a social gathering and the life and soul of countless campflre circles in the war. . He was rather above the medtuin height, slender and graceful, witn a well proportioned figure, ana eroi-v, military bearing. O'Hara's tomb, wnicn Is situated amid the graves of those b whose side he fought In battle, ana whose valor he commemorated Inverse, is worthy of notice. His name w in scribed beneath a sculptured sword and scabbard encircled by a, wreath-or oan and, laurel. At a little distance rises the reat memorial shaft surmounted by marble cannons and flags, and above these by the winged figure or victory. Among the graves of those who once listened to the cannon's thunder stand the blackened and silenced guns that brought death and destruction at Buena Vista and Chapultepec At the foot of O'Hara's tomb the full force ana neauiy of his lines may be felt today and 'simultaneously the old sta tion of the R. & N. company at Rlparla across the Snake river at this point has been abandoned. "Hhe new order of things went Into effect this morning, making Lewlston Junction the official stopping point of all passenger trains on the O.-W. R. A N., the North ern Faclflo and the Camas Prairie rail roads. The' Stuart hotel Is planning to es tablish a lunch counter here so that the 16 minutes allowed for train stops will permit passengers to obtain light We are able to handle such an immense volume of business having one of the largest offices in the city, that with the 10-year lease on our quarters upstairs on the corner of Second and Morrison, our prices are accordingly lower than others'. . : . . Every painless method, to save the nerve-racking to sensitive patients. Is employed, t " C ; Instruments are carefully sterilized both before and after using. Therefore no infectiqn can occur. Anybody can come to our office and get an estimate on their work. , It entails no obligation on your part to have us do the work. EXTRACTION. EXAMINATION; AND TEETH CLEANED FREE ALBA BROS., Painless Dentists SECOND AND MORRISON 'STREETS ENTIRE CORNER " buried in snow Bend Photographer's Camp Equipment Found, but AH Trace of Man Lost. (Rnrll DUouteh to Tti Journil.) v KlaniathallsrOrrMarch 4 The last searching party has returned from Crater lake without finding B. B. Ba kowski. the Bend photographer. The party found all his camp equipment In a snow cave about 1 miles below the rim of the lake. 'At the rim ofhe lake they found; the photographer's camera cases. It is believed that the adven turer went to the rim of the lake to take some pictures. The snow must have given way and be was pitched headlong down , the steep embankment to be dashed to pieces on the rocks. Everything thatJBakowskl-toolt-wlth him, so far as is known, was found In the camp' be had established except bin cameras, snow , shoes and a pair of woolen blankets. There Is a remote chance that the missing man Is safe somewhere In the mountains, but tbose who made the search feef-that his re mains are r either at the bottom of Crater lake or else burled deep In the snow In the. surrounding timber. , The searching party reports extreme ly cold weather at the lake. The ther mometer Inside of the buildings at the rim registered only a few degrees above aero, and outalde it was at least 10 degrees colder.. The lake is free from ice, except: where the water is shallow. ' Cooking School Tomorrow at 3 P. M. Menu-Mocha Tarts, vMerln-l gues for Pies and Puddings, Orange Sticks, Orange Filling, Coffee. Phone Orders Private Ex. 12, A6231 Prompt Delivery All Parts City Delicatessen and Bakery 4th. FL-Candy Dept. 1st Fl. and Basement TENTH GRANGE FOR -DOUGLAS ORGANIZED IPvblliliert' PrM teased Wlre.1 Drain, . Or., March ; 4. Drain grange has been organized by State Deputy Cy ras H. Walker with a charter list that gives promise of success. The officers are: Master, J. T. Bedford; overseer, A, E. Stocker; lecturer, W. C. Edwards; steward, Lena Hedrlck; assistant stew ard, E. A. Putnam; chaplain, R. A, Do sler; treasurer, William Wise; secretary, Ada-Redford; gatekeepef,' Osoat Apple gate; Ceres, Vivian Uedrlck; . Pomona, Lottie atocker; ? Flora,1. Gertrude ' Hed rlck; lady . assistant steward Matilda Applegate. ,Thla makes 10 grange tor .Douglas county,-all organised since the first of last June.' Some of the Willamette val ley counties had better be looking out for their laurels, as leading in number ot; grangectrirr": " r."' LEWIST0N t JUNCTION : - REPLACES RIPARIA (Bpeelal Dispatch to The Joertjil. i Rlparla, Wash March 4.-The hand some new -depot -opened t we- public W3M , : . - '- ; ' . . . : tv f-, . Kt I 3 V II " a At the 1 iW)rtininSM-IKtoffl Sfipe Tomorrow, in the Pure Food Grocery Store, Fourth Floor, wholesale pnce Knei of high-Grade Honest Foodt" Canned GoocU will be epecially featured Supply your hornet Hotel and restaurant keeper take notice Peruse the following list and note the special low price: RICE SPECIALS v Southern Had, VA lb. at 25f Japanese atyle, 5 lb, only 25 Pure food unpolished, bag, 25 SALT SPECIALS Best Dairy, 50 lb. "ack at 35 Worcester Dairy, 50 lb. sack 80 SARDINE SPECIALS ' Demi, X-lb., 100 01 1 7K " tins to;case, at only tPXXe l tr Ship, '4-Jb7 100 tins to Qfc QA case, special at. only tpUeeV Yacht Club, tOO tins CI C KH " to case, apecial at vXUeiJV Radiosa, 100 .tins to case, flO Excelsa, 100 tins) to case, f 12 Nopeer, 100 tins to case, f 34 BEANS SPECIAL Small White 5 lbs. only 25 Small Red, J lbs. at only" 25 . Lima Beans, 3 lbs., special, 25 SAGO; 5 pounds; only 25c TAPIOCA, 5 pounds 25c BEST BOHEMIAN BUTTER, 2 pounds 65c HAM SPECIALS Sinclair Sugar Cured, lb. at 10 Swift's Sugar Cured, lb. at 19 Frye's Sugar Cured, lb. at 1 OYSTER SPECIALS Napoleon, 4-dosen case, $3.50 Jumbo, 5. or. 4-dor. case, f.lO Jumbo, 10 or. 4-dor. case, 1 4.30 Fountain, 2-doren case at f 3.95 Fountain, 4-doren case at f 3.95 RAISIN SPECIALS Seeded, 40 1-lb. cartons,' f 2.80 Raisins,' off stock, 50-lb. boxes, the pound, tomorrow, at only T FLOUR SPECIALS O. W. K., sack $1.40, bbl. 85.30 Olympia, sack $1.45, bbl. $5.50 Gold Medal, at, the' sack 82.90 ROYAL SOAP, 22 bars 50c OREGON RANCH EGGS, Per Dozen 25 c CLAM SPECIALS Minced Otter, 48 cans. JA to the case, special at "w Minced Razor, 40 cans Qyf CA to the case, special Minced Razor, 24 ci to the case, special Minced Razor, 24 cans CM (( SPICE SPECIALS v Cinnamon, the pound, only 65 Cloves, the pound, special 30 Cayenne, the pound, only 30 Nutmeg, the pound, special, 65 Mace, the pound, special at 85 Black Pepper, the pound, 25 CRACKER SPECIALS Square Oyster, i box, only 70 Square Oyster, M box, f 1.25 Mustard, the pound) special 25 Ginger, the pound, special 30 Allspice, ths pound, special 30 CRAB MEAT, Jj: lb. can, choice pieces, two tins35c BACON SPECIALS" 1 1 Light fancy, the pound, at' 2 By the piece, lb., special 22 SUGAR SPECIALS Best Cane Granulated QJZ A( very special at, sack tV"". Best Granulated, per sack 85.15 EXTRACT SPECIALS Vartilla, 2-or. bots., 4-ounce bottles;6 the; 8-or. $10.75; lS-ot; Lemon, 2-or. bottle, 4-ounce bottles, per 8-oz. at $7.25; id-oz. dor. 83.00 dor. 85.75 at 1 120.50 dor. $7-10 doz. f 5.75 at $13.75 CODFISH SPECIALS Middles 20c"; lb.,' i lbs for 50 Shredded, special, package, 10 AH kinds salt fishes. ' cannedpineapple; M. J. B., 15c thi can, 2 for 25 M. M. J. J- 20c 25c can. can, doz! dor. $2.20 $2.75 Olive Oil,- Crosse & E!ac! wellVspeciaL jlLcUIs 7z mm specials Hunt's Stapit;, tie Un, at.. ' One dozen tins, t, c ' ! :