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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (July 31, 1913)
THE, OREGON. DAILY JOURNAL, , PORTLAND, THURSDAY EVENING, JULY '31, u 1913. ; tt irr. . wT -" : :- . '". ' " '." ' : r: t" 1 : .. 77 A kOAD SHOW STAR. v ' f, , Jf PROGRESS. : NECESSARY, INCIDENTAL EMPLOYS BOTH OF 'EM. HIGH FINAjNCC. - ': Boarding Missus "tfou'ro not al lowed to cook in your room, slrl" , r Hamand "Madam, you - art ml'-' taken. .1 am cooking on tha flre es cape and onlyairvlas? In my. room." A.- ;.'';, : ('' Y-i j Notes of Wednesday's Happenings Brief Paragraph Give- Journal Reader the New of It Yesterday 1 .Afletiiooa aad Last Night. . v MThe noetoffiee committee Das lndefl 1 nltely postponed Its action on Senator ' Bryan's resolution to annul the post master general's power to chance rates and slaes of mailable parcel post pack ages. The' committee was assured oy '; Postmaster General Burleson that be could not ' further,! Change parcel post regulations 'Until present rates can be more thoroughly tested. . - v ' Senator Penrose ties Introduced a res olution calling tor a report from the sec retary Of state with regard to the treau ment of Jews In- Houmanla. . ; , Leading insurgent and conservatives of the house banking and ourrency com tnlttee appealed to Secretary .. Bryan Wednesday in the bop of reaching com' ' tnon ground upon which to Jtandl the currency . bjlhv Bryan Informed them that he endorsed the principal features of the Glass-Owen bill, and asked the different factions to try to get together irtthe interests of harmony. : ;- - The commander of the United States gunboat wheeling, now at Jrontera, . Mexico, has reported to the state depart- ment at Washington that stories or. aia- - turbed conditions there , were ; greatly exaggerated , and that ho, Americans are la danger. He wired the new that - rebels had looted two plantations near Frontera. but that .their attack! had been repulsed by the federals. President Wllson'hae nominated Colo nel William Boesell to be chief engineer of the army with the rank of brigadier general, and Captain Henry Mayo to be rear admiral. Three Americans reported to have been sentenced to death at Chihuahua, , Mexico, are still safe, according to re ports received at Washington . from Consul Letcher. They are still In soli tary confinement, however, on a charge : of: defrauding the Mexican government by paying taxes to the ihsurreotos, .1' ' - ! 1 Eastern. In the-clty election at Cincinnati the CltUens' ticket, headed by Walter 11. Knight and nominated to frame the pro posed new charter, swept everything be. K fore It The charter carried by the nar row majority- or 126. The vote was so close that it required the count from the next to the last precinct of the 410 Within the, city to decide, the result. During, a motorcycle race at the La- ; gooifmotbrdrome across the river from Cincinnati, Ohio, Odin Johnson, captain or-the Cincinnati team, crashed with hivcycle , into an electric pole.- A live wire dropped on the maohlne and ex ploded the. gasoline tank, throwing the burning fluid over scores of spectators. Three persons were killed, including Johnson: six . others were probably fatally burned, and 11 were seriously injured. Mrs. Oscar Addlngton has been re leased from a charge of murder at Peo f ria, UK by the coroner's Jury, after re lating to that body her story of the In dignities heaped upon her by her hus band before she shot and killed him. The mutinous convicts at Sing Sing prison, New . Tork, have now Quieted - down, and it H believed that the trouble is over. Wednesday 141 of the prison ers. Involved- in the. outbreaks were : called upon to go to work, and they re- eponded to a man without a murmur. Warden Clancy advocates replacing the Sing Sing, prison with a modern one, declaring the present quarters to be an tiquated, and it is said that his counsel : Will be followed. I ' A great, cloudburst broke at West Plains, Mo., went roaring from the hills to the bottom lands, and six Inches of rain fell In JO minutes. Olrl telephone WOMAN SUFFERED TEN YEARS JMMSBWSSaBBBBMBSBBMBsa ... From Nervoutnest Caused by Female 111 Restored to : Health by LydU E Pinkham' Vegeta Y " ble Compound. Atibtmv N. YV " I ' iufferad ' from torvoowiesi for ten yart, and bad such i organic paina that someume I would II in bed four days lit tlma, could not eat or 1ep and did not want anyon to talk to si or jbother ma ;at all - Soma times I would suffer for seven hours at a time. Different dots tors did tha bost they eould for to .. until four months ago I began fiVing f tydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- tvwinA tr rtil anil I im In u4 ' health." --Mrs. WllXlAM H. Ottx, 15 Pleasant Street, Auburn, Nw York. . "Doctor Daulfhic Took It. ; v"i st ClouJ,MinnT "I was so'tdn down ' . . . a. W - a '. a ff-l... wii.i'i'ini Ill i Ift'i: ill'Hi ! ?V isiiiiM'-'iilii 1 P 1 dj overworir ana worry mac i souia not stand It to have, my children talk aloud . or walk heavy on tha floor. One o my . friends said;.'Try tydiaE Pinkham's -Vegetable Compound; for I know, a Moo tor' daughter her jn town who takes It and sh Would not take it If it Wer i not good., 'I'jvTn:; .'' '' I sent f or th Compound at one and kept on taking it until I was all right" -Mr Bertha M. Quickbtaot, 727 6th Avenue, S. St Cloud, Minn. . ; - V tydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com ; pound may be relied upon a the moat efficient remedy for female Ills. ''Why don'tyoutrylt? 1 Burglar-"Last time you defended . me you' only charged me i5l" v ' Lawyer "That was five years' ago, -when you were a struggling young burglar; Now that you nave 'arrived', operators stood nobly by their work and saved many lives endangered ; by , the deluge.- A fast express crashed. Into the rear end of a passenger train on the Penn sylvania railroad at Tlrone, Pa. ' George K. runk, an engineer, was killed and 1 passengers and . trainmen injured. But tor the fact that the cars were of steel construction, It ,4s thought that there would have been many, more casualties, ' Oeorge Bannon, 70 years old, -the founder of .large department stores, is dead at St Paul. Minn., of cancer. He was an uncle of George Bannon, for merly of Portland, Or., and now a business man of Oregon City. ,' . Fire insurance companies which left the state of Missouri because they were displeased with an act passed by the last legislature are arranging to return, according to a dispatch from St Louis. The companies have announced that the Underwriters' Salvage corps and - the 8t Louis Fire Prevention bureau will be continued. S. Dean Vincent, president of the Portland. Or., Realty Board, won the prise of a silver cup at Winnipeg, Man., for making the best five minute talk on hie ho'me City and realty organisation. Mr. Vincent was elected as one of the vie presidents. . s Pacific Coast. 1 A. Epler of Wallowa. Or., has been arrested on a charge of arson, at the instance of the Oeorge Palmer Lumber company, of. La Grande. Ha pleaded not guilty, and was bound over In the sum of $1000. Epler is accused of set ting fire to one of the lumber company's houses located in a canyon west of Wal lowa. Mayor Jared Herdilck of Hlllvard. Wash., who disappeared last Sunday, left a not to his family saying that he would not return, according to later de velopments. Herdilck is .said to have become dissatisfied because his wife opposed his soolallstlo views. A camp wagon rolled down a 0 foot embankment near Toledo, Or., and lt occupants all escaped Injury. They were Frank Mansfield, his wlfa and I daughter, and Miss Haiel Tost Their team became frightened at an automo bile on top of pioneer mountain, and backed the wagon over the grade. Frank Mortimer of Welser. Idaho, it laying out a recreation park near that city which is expected to rank , among the finest smaller parks In the north west when his plans are brought to completion. It will consist of five acres. enolosed with a concrete wall and ad mirably beautified " with tree and shrubbery. At th hearing held by the police commission at San Francisco to inves tigate the administration of Chief of Police White, two Chinese witnesses testified that a fund of $10,000 had been raised in Chinatown to bring about White's appointment Foreign. Private reports by wireless received at Mexico City from Ouaymas tell of a terrific battle in Sonora, lh which the federals routed the rebel troops, with heavy loss on both side. Tha rebels are said to be retreating toward Her. moslllo. Bulgaria, Servla, Greece and Monten egro have signed a five days' armistice at Bucharest, Roumanla, their repre sentatives having agreed to hold a peace conference during that period. It is reported from Lima, Peru, that the Chicago exploring expedition led by William Cromer Is lost In the Huay abama dletrlot. Report from Peking say that the backbone of the revolution in southern China is believed to have been broken by the restoration of Nanking to the government It I also believed that a permanent cabinet wll now be named, Miscellaneous. Samuel D. Ilaynes, a pardoned convict, walked out of th prison gates at Thomastowh, Me,, after aervlng 14 year for th murder of a policeman. He said that ha hated to leave, having beea In prison sines ho was 17 years old, and -that he had spent the greater part of his life behind tha bars in try ing to be useful. When the small boy of Kingston. Mo., went to 'their favorite "ewlmmin' hole" they found that a IS foot alligator which escaped from a tank in a local store had taken possession. They did not try to crowd It out, and are now scheming to effect Its capture. A train near Dodge City, Kan., Was stalled by grasshoppers in a deep cut, where tha dead Insect had accumulated In suoh numbers because of a wind storm that the engine wheels alipped and spun. Ths train crew had to scoop the 'hopper off th track and sand the rails. ; i.'-:-.r.,-;w.v..N . , Dr. Frederick H. Baetjer, an X-ray expert of Baltimore, Is recovering at Johns Hopkins - hospital after a re markable operation.-. Hi . band had become Infected from the rays until he lost four fingers. The remainder of the hand has-now been saved by graft ing skin from hi, abdomen. , Keep Adrlanoplo or Die, Cry Turks. Adrianopl,' July ll--"W will never surrender Adrianopl. . This Europe may understand once and for all. The army Is resolved to bold It or die to the last man.". . .4 ;-r',yi'Vvv v.;- ...:':'.'. This statement was Issued her today by Knver Bey, the famous Turkish leader, In command of the force which have wrested the city from the Bul garians. - Enver Beys declaration was seconded by ths Turkish drown, prlnoe, 21a Ed-Din SffendL- He said) -- "Adrlanople is our holy city and Is now more sacred than ever, Its. re tention Is&Vi promise of the regenera tion of Turkey; ; I do not believe the powers intend to deprive us of It." . m. 1 - i' i .-; jjl;.' t; Mardcr4 thrown In Bog Ca r. " - Minneapolis, MtnnN July II.1 The body of an unidentified man, with .- a bullet" wound -through 4h heart, was found In an empty boxcar In th rail road yards hers today. He was well dressed. I The fact that his pockets were ripped open causes the belief that he was slain on th , street and thrown Into th car. - . - - His Wife "The palmist told me ah could see an automobile Tor ua." . . Mr. Meekton "I wonder If sh could ee the gasolln .to run ItT ( , , 1000 RUSSIANS TO BE . - SHUT OUT OF CANADA Shipload !on Way to Vancou fver Will Nor Be Permitted . .'v. to Land, . - (Voltte Pteee teaitd Wlre.l VannnnvAr. R P.. Julv J 1. With the arrival her of more Hindus on the Nip pon Bhushen Kalsha liner Bado Maru. which Is now at Victoria, and tha report that 1000: Russians rrom utoena are on their way here on a-Russian volunteer 11 th. nmUM nt what in An with immigrants from Asia is stirring of- nciais nere- toaay, tuiuouga moy . ceeded Id depbrUng the Japanese landed at Bella Bella two weeks ago. The eight Japanese landed by a Junk which brought 2S veterans of the Rus sian War to northern British Columbia, hnma ttwtav a.1wuiri1 tha Em press of India. Search is still being made for the junk. Nine Hindus aboard the Sado Maru la. tam rianortiitlnn an tha officials are informed that instead of coming di rect from Calcutta tney stayea xor a 11m, In Mnnrknnl. Thnra Was TTUlCh BX- tU.mAht amnn. fha Hindus on tha dock at Victoria when this party was not al lowed to land; but no arrests were maae. Mum Moral haa warnad tha immi gration officials not to allow the 1000 Russians to land until arrangements h,v. h.in nada tn AAnd them to the middle western provinces. where there Is a demand for harvest hands. Ha says the labor market here is glutted. CENTRAL OREGON LEAGUE MEETING MAY AWAIT LANE Sp1.l to Tha Journal,) Klamath Falls, Or., July 81. Secre tary of the Interior Lane will be in Klamath Falls on August 22 and 2S. It Is planned to postpone the meeting of the Central Oregon Development league so that It win coma while Secretary Lane is here. While in the Klamath country Secretary Lane will visit Crater lAke park, the Klamath Indian reserva tion and the Klamath reclamation pro pact. It la also planned to hold a meet lng;of the water users under the Klam ath project so that he can get first hand Information relative to the difficulties encountered by tha home builder who are transforming tha country. Secretary Lane haa already dona much to lessen the burdens of the farmers under the Klamath project. The adJt tlonal time for ' making payments brought relief to a number of small farmers who were hard pressed for funds. It 1 believed that after making a thorough investigation of the Klam ath project the secretary will be In favor of a system of graduated pay mente. This would enable th farmers to get their lands in a highly productive condition before they were called upon to make big water payments. COUNTY INSTITUTE DATES RUN AUG. 18-TO NOV. 26 (8sUm Duraau of Tile Journal.) Salem. Or., July SI. Dates for tha county teachers Institutes for this sea son have been set by the state school superintendent, as follows: August 18-22, Coos county, North Bend; September 17-19. Morrow county, Heppner: September 22-24, Crook ooun ty, Prinevllle; October 6-t, Grant coun ty, John" Day; October 6-S (Joint). Wasco and Sherman counties, The Dalles; October 8-10, Harney county, Burns; October 1J-18, Lake county. Lake view; October 15-17, Klamath coun ty. Klamath Falls; Oct. 10.22 (Joint), Jackson and Josephine counties, Grants Pass; Ootober 12-24, Doughlaa county, Roseburg; October 12-24, Umatilla oounty, Tendleton: October 27 29, Lena county, Eugene; October 24-11, Marion oounty, Salem October 29-11, Polk oounty, Dallas; November S-S (Joint), Gilliam and wheeler counties, Condon; November 6-7, Hood River county, Hood River; November 10-12, Washington county, Hlllsboro; November 12-14, Til lamook county, Tillamook; November 17-1S, Clatsop county, Astoria; Novem ber 11-21, Columbia county, St. Helens; November 24-28 (joint), Linn and Ben ton counties, Albany; November 1 4-1 8, Union, Baker and Wallowa counties Jointly with the eastern division of tha State Teachers' association, La Grande. RABBITS AND SQUIRRELS ARE WORRYING FARMERS Newnort. Or.. July II. The unusual number of squirrels and rabbits In this section this year Is drawing down tha anathemas of the truck farmers Out from Newport itucn or tna country immediately back of Newport has not been cultivated or lived upon till lately and the woods are thickly populated with all klnda of song birds, rabbits and squirrels, numbers of which are doing considerable damage to the gar dens. .. The birds are making chief havoc among the berrlea but are not being shot very much, as most of the farmers think they eat numbers of worms and peats. War has been declared, however, on th squirrels and rabbits. The squir rels chief depredation consists In eat ing the pa vines off near the ground, killing the peas.' The rabbits confine themselves to lettuce and .cabbage. Al Bradway, a farmer near Newport, re ported this week that the rabbits had nibbled off about BOO cabbage "and cauli flower heads -in his garden. The peet seems to be confined to the smalt area near Newport and will probably ba done away with wltto, , guns and poison by another year. jA ,; . $100,000 OFFER TAKEN, FOR MINE ON KANE CREEK Medford. Of July 8 1. MG. Womack Of this city received a telegram from William Ross McDonald of Butte, Monu offering. 8100,00 for his mine on Kane Creek, north of Medrord, and Mr. Wo maok leaves Wednesday for Butte to cloa th deaL Mr. Womack says that 1 iA m 3'.' Mr. Jackaon"Bay. Sam. have yon got th courase to go out to th cam etery at midnight?" - Mr. Jefferson "No-bnt 1 got half enough." , Mr. Jackson "What yoo meanT '. nip. loff.Mna .T . . . . . k.r. j . ii" wl -s a pint, but I'd ned a plnf t, if ha " had not agreed " to. sell for tht orlca Baverat vraalra h. i a aooept the offer a Monday a mark- iinu was maae en the mine. The sale brings wealth to two old miners. One Of Whom. Klmw nia-lnhnthan. ha been for several years a common la- "'n; "ulnae -gruDitaiced" him and the strike was; made. - Higlnhotham'e share will be 130,000. Four claims have been staked out ti id. . of which are placer and two quarts. MAN IN HIS 80'S RSHES UP TO MORNING OF DEATH . (8iclal to Tit Journal.) . JasDer. Or.. Julv 11 -Tnhn vr ....... - W vwasMi 4UVtl)UUtia knOWH tO Ah -nnnteval,!. a. iwv John," died at his home hr8unday, fe.1 y1"". s buried Monday at tha M t VW.An T . . f. It' "on" nd tw0 SShtera In ' yere ne naa uvea hers he made many friends. Of late years he had devoted much time to fishing, pur suing bis favorite pastime until the very morning of his death. Magnolia Blooms at Cottage Grove. Cottage 3rdve. Or., July 11. That the beautiful magnolia, larger and as pret II life NEWS OF CENTRAL AND EASTERN OREGON BEND TAXPAYERS VOTE $23,000 BONDS $3000 Is to Buy Site for a School, $20,000 Is to Build the School, (SDVrtol to ne JonseiLt Bend, Or., July II. At tha election held yesterday afternoon-tha taxpayer of Bend school dlstriot voted In favor or an issue of bonds in tha sum of tlJ, 000, $3000 to be expended for a site for a grade school and 120,000 for a build ing. A previous Issue of 248.000 for a (-high school site and building was voted aown. The vote yesterday was 81 to B8. The school board has already engaged Architect R. C Sweatt of 6pokane to prepare plans and the work of. con structing the building will be started as soon as possible eo that tha building can b completed by the first of th year. It will be built of native stone, probably, containing eight classrooms and office. It Is planned to make it the nucleus of a system for tha town, and the structure will be planned so that it can be enlarged by an addition. Th district at preeent haa a three story frame school building and three one room temporary buildings, with all of which the children could not be accom modated last session, it being necessary to rent additional roome. RECALL OF HOOD RIVER COUNTY COURT PROPOSED Hood River. Or.. July II. A mas meeting of the farmers was held at tha Barrett ochool house Tuesday evening to consider reoalllng County Judge O. R. Castner and the commissioners be cause. It Is alleged, the oounty court has been extravagant in th expenditure of the oounty funds, and especially In the matter of hiring a county road superintendent at a salary of SS per day ana i7.eo per oay tr ue used me auto. It is alleged by the farmers that the road supervisor of each dlstriot Is able and competent to look after the road work In his respective district and that the county road supervisor is an unnec essary expense. A rising vote was taken and it was unanimous to invoke the re call. Attorney a W. Stark, who Is acting for the petitioners is busy get ting out th necessary papers. Cadillac 1914 K WatoH nt Kunilav'a imniri tftt in. nouncement. (Adv.) 1a- 1 . ! ' L. 'J . ttiree v: ; swora the drunkards the heavy drinker, and the man who craves i rough, strong, high-proof whiskey, v . : Tir . t- vr .. ev e n i van ocnuyvcr cc Ttiber "Van Dauber paint cubist pictures he's craryl" Splash - "Smith buy ' 'm he's ty as the calla lily, more heavily fra grant than a Illy of the valley, a Jewel rrom the southland, couia just as wen ba ladlh Oreiron. oaona wttn Its neavy nerfuma haa been proved by C. P.Xoff- man. Who -has a tree lh full bloom. The tree, which has never had any special MM. la aavan faat In hnlrht. thOUKh ohly five years of age, and I flourish ing In the mild Oregon climate, this is the second year that it has borne bios- aoma and It now haa' Shout a dosen of th large, waxen, bowl shaped fragrant flowers., : Seattle-Crater Lake by Bicycle. Medford, Or., July II. From Seattle to Crater Lake on bicycles is the novel trip almost completed by F. C. Keen, a piano tuner, and R. H. Frazee, a real estate man, of Beattla They arrived In Medford Tuesday, having come the entire distance without a pdncture. ' The worst roads were near Seattle, they say, and the best in the Willamette and Rogue river valleys. At the Co wilts river they were forced to go by boat for 25 miles, due to high water. They will visit Crater Lake and will go on to San Francisco where they will ship their wheel and return by boat. Oriental limited Kills Citizen. Wenatchee, Wash., July 21. Charles F. Ogilvie is dead as a result of being hit by the Oriental Limited while walk ing across, the track to talk to a friend in another train at Cashmere. The limited does not stop at Cashmere and was going 40 milea an hour. Ogilvie was struck by the protruding steam cylinder and hurled under the other train with suoh force aa to crush his body. I E All .Fields So Far Threshed in That Vicinity Run 20 to 35 Bushels to Acre, fSnMlal A Tb Jfttinlal.t Dufur, Or., July II. The first load of ltis wheat to ne delivered at me looat warehouae was received yesterday and was from the farmer Milton O'Brien of Rail Hollow. So far all the grain threshed Is of better quality than the average of former years, and the yield per acre is also above the average. All that haa been tnresned tnus far nes run from 10 to 85 bushels to tha ears. .There are more than 20 threshing crews at work In this violnlty at present CENTRAL WASCO BARLEY FALLS BEFORE FIELD FIRE Dufur. Or.. July 11. Fire originating from an .unknown source destroyed a II acre barley field this morning be longing to R. L. Molntyre and located about six miles aouthwest from her. The fire for a time threatened to spread to some- timber which adjoined the field but was extinguished before It had dona any further damage than destroying tha barley. The barley was ripe and ready to cut and would have yielded at least 80 bushels to the acre. Western Pioneer Dies at Bend. Bend, Or, July 81. Mrs. M. B. Auder way, a pioneer of the west, died here Tuesday, aged 88 years. With her hus band sh came around the Horn in 186B, settling In California. Later the family moved to Linn county, Oregon, and for tha past tour years Mrs. Auderway had made her home here with her daughter, Mrs. J. N. Hunter, wife of a prominent local citizen. Two other children. Alma Hendrlokson and Arable Auderway, of Lebanon, Or., survive. Hood River Referendum Stopped. Hood River. Or.. July 81. Judge W. L. Bradshaw baa handed down a de cision sustaining the demurrer of the county againut mandamus proceedings filed by petitioners compelling Clerk Hansen to place on the ballot this fall the referendum on the officers' salary bill providing for an Increase of sal aries. -The decision was rendered on the ground that the mandamus waa Illegally nrougnt. ' jo,t general Agents HRSTL0AD1913WHEA AT DUFUR WARMS Hamilton"! understand Bulyong's daughters married s duka and . a count." ' " ' ' '-' w.v,;" ' Wayburn 'Tfes. . Now Bulyong has , m day and a night chauffeur working ., lor their board." - GOLDEN TALES FLOW One Man at Shushanna Takes ; Out $8000 In 8 Days Hardships Endured. . (United Preae teased Wire.) Cordova, Alaska, July 81.rComing Out for more provisions, John Moon and Qus Larson are at McCarthy today, direct from the new placer 1 strike In the Shushanna district. They report that Jennings, the owner of Discovery, has taken out 88000 in eight days with two men shoveling and that men on the claim above Discovery were taking out $26 a day panning with ordinary tin plates. - All the ground on Eldorado and Bo nanza creeks has been staked as well as the benches, and other prospectors are covering the nearby streams, Moon re' ports. Moon and Larson brought out 8101 worth of nuggets and a considerable amount of dust, -with Which to buy an outfit. Keports from the trail state that 16 men are at Scolai Pass and are having hard work getting over, owing to a snow storm. Men traveling light mad it to the claims in fiv days, but those with a pack horse took seven. Word of tha strike has traversed sll over Alaska and muahers at Nome are trying to get the southbound steamers to come via thle port, . INVENTOR'S MACHINE PROVES FRANKENSTEIN San Quentin, Cel., July 81. Caught by the hair and dragged to his death by a piece of machinery of bis own inven tion is the fate of Oeorge Webb, for more than five years a guard at the state prison. Webb's Invention was de signed to give better ventilation in the jute mill and ha was adjusting ths ma chinery when hie hair oaught In the tumbling rod. He leaves a widow who lives in Oakland. MUNICIPAL LIGHTING IS SUCCESS AT EUGEN IStnmMmt a 41. .rM.H.l v ' Eugene. Or., July 81. In a report to me city council last nignt . tns water poaro, wnicn manages the, municipal An Appeal to Wives ,You know th terrible affliction that comes to many homes from the result of a drinking husband or eon. You know of tha money wasted on "Drink" that is needed In tha ' home to purchase -food and clothing. ORRINB haa saved thou sands of drinking men. It 1 a home treatment and can be . given secretly. Tour money will be refunded if, after a trial, it has failed to benefit Cost only 81.00 a box. Coma la and set a free booklet and let u tell you of tha good ORRINB la doing. Brink's Pharmacy, lttb and Washing ton at. Woodard, Clark & Co.. Park and Alder. Successful in all th numerous ailments caused by defectiv or irregular action of tha organ of digestion and elimi nationcertain to prevent auffering and to improve tha general health SeW everfwSere. la feaeelOe 25s.' Fl NEW ELDORADO . -I PILLS lilOteOlGLISH DICTIONARY CERTIFICATE - PRESENTEDBY-THE : I OREGON JOURNAL, JULY 31, 1913 Y SIX APPRECIATION CERTIFICATES CONSTITUTE A SET :jwM.,t e jeanua,aja.ai. n hi how tins- oat 1 nr eadoisesneat ef thU great eaaeatleaal ppeztaaity by ths above Certificate of Appreciation with five others of dates, and- presenting them at this Offloe, with the si Mitni flataa. ana-. nMmtur Toanx kosns asaaaae hareta sat oonoett ear ma lt , severe uio ttesss oj toe seat ox paeawg. exorsss tag. elerk M and etnet aeeessary niFBirs pteaeate wita yoat abate of these tistp UATUxa ' (Lik Uluctrationa In th announcement from day MftriFRNFMrfKH io day.) U I tha ONLY entirely NEW complli KUWUWtnutlOll tjon y tha wofld'a treatett anthorhiei from lead stertdnAat? iag anlvertitUi; i bound in full Limn Leather, illustrated - ' flexible, Umped i. in . gold on back and aide, awVoi ?ltt ' pfinted on Bibl paper, with red edges and corner . 1 rounded: beautiful, strong, durable. Betides th geou eral content, there are map and over 600 subject beautifully illustrated by 3-color plates, numerous subject by monotones, 16 pp. s r of education! charts and th latest United State Census. Present at office SIX consecutively dated Certificates and- KALf UATHSB It Is esaatlr the KODERN ENGLISH Lm,V.HT lustrated , -A 5J?ik I in iafi wVhOlc , i , ; Uve edge and with J4 I square corners.' BlaX , , ' CertUieate an....... Aay beoa by malt 83o Cora Coolngton-Tott think lt'a best' to have our wedding at high noon, don't you 7" i . v ' ( Billy Billlngton "Oh. certainly! ' That will give ue all afternoon to raise our honeymoon expenses on the Presenta." : --v.. r-. --r.-x electric lighting and power plant. maJe a report for th past tlx months, show-' Ing that' In that tlm the number' tr teady,; customers ha ; Increased tfrom 1001 to 1888 and that the gro inooma rrom tn plant is 7,ooo per monin," far exceedingly the expectations of the. most sanguine supporter of municipal; ownership. The 'plant, which ha been' In AMriHtn I... .lion (A mmtm laf A V' a solid paying basis; paying Interest on . I mo uuuui una pruunuing xur a sinainf- fund. - v-n..' . ? " : i ' ) .in ' T " ., j ; J - North y taklma, Wash., July 81.? Oeorge P. Brown, a tourist from Hous. 1 ton, Texas, Is dead following a stroke - of apDopleay whloh seised him while en route from Spoken for Seattle on-' me nono uran unuuo, -ns was re- ' moved to a hospital here and. died at was with him, will take the body home.- ' When Your Friends 'it'- Prom outalda of Portland visit von b. sure that you take them to lunch at a; Watson Baltimore Dairy Lunch Room- They do not know Portland, unless they see these featurea of the city. Beside:, that, you have entertained them in a manner that : will bind cloeer their, . friendship for you. Nothing on the coast to equal these lunch ce In their P- ' pointments, service, or cleanliness. Adv.) " Effective Home Remedy X For Lung Trouble! tt Is a serious natter wee tW hinge are erected, a trip away or ta a Maiterinm t not only expensive, bet If Involves separation, from home and friend. Borne are benefited., bat few can safely retnre. ; Eekmaa' Altar-;' tlve is effective for borne treatment far ex , ample: ' ''. " :' '": "! 881 S. Atlantic Ava., HaddoaflelsVX. J GentleBxai. Ia the fan of 1005" I eon tract a very severe cold, whir settled ea f - lungs. At last 1 begaa t ralae sputum, and ' ny yajsidaa taea told me X nut go to Calt fornla Immediately. At thla time I Was ad'' vised to, take Hekmaa'i Alterative, t stayed at home and eommeaeed taking It the last week,. lo October. I begaa to Improve, as th fli week m JaBtury, 1900. I Ttmmti my regnlir ecenpatioa, having gahMd IS pound, felly atored to bealtk. It la sow sevea veafe lae my neovery beea effected, and -I eanuot praise Eckmtn' Alterative to highly-. 1 have recommended It Wit excellent remit.' r .(Signed) W. U. TATEU. (ASove abbreviated, more on reqaeat.) . . iteamaB's Altersttre bae been proven b many years teat te be moat ef f lcaetou la met-; of severe Throat and Lang AtfeetkmS, Broa.f ebttla, BroBehial Asthma, Stubborn Oolda and in opboildine the ajttMj. Do sot eoatiia . nareoUes, psbona or habit-forming dm. roe, . sale by The Owl prng Co., and ether leading' " dnurgtat. Write thav Eekmaa Lbortory Philadelphia, Pa., fo booklet Wling ef re eoverle and additional evidence. RESINOL SOAP: j iiarovlsYOURi SICIN AND HAIR There are few eo fortunate' as to pos -sess skin and hair health that Is be. yotjd Improvement, and to that great majority who do not, Reslnol Soap has an especial mlasioa ( Ordinary soaps can do little or notht ing to overcome these defective eoodU tlons. Containing' free alkali as many."; of them do, they rather tend to Increase" them. Ih fact, this use of harsh, drying soaps is one of the frequent cause of skin and scalp troubles. ' But th Beslnol medication la BeaN nol Boap tends to keep the complexion free from redness, roughness,: pimples blaekhead and other annoying condi tions, to prevent chapping and ohafingv to clear the scalp of dandruff, and to maintain th lustre and health of th hair. While It absolute purity, clean. wholesome odor, and cleansing, refresh Ing lather suit It perfectly to regular use In th toilet, bath and nureery. Bold; by all druggists. Trial free; Dept. l-It, Reslnol, Baltimore, Md. ; - , rrwmwmmwmmmmmiMiVl ! J ..J aVMUMsahe1 ent-eom- m. anis siiio. espeae stvla ef SloUonary selected twoioa, from the factory, eUeca ttasae), an geis wui be tkrea book. clotk bovmO e in plain MODERN ENGLISH In gold "4 t,i.. . DIOTIOHABX naa emu i..ir sarne IHiintruliuu unetrasa Aul t Any Be. , . x 2 . fee lave " 1 " . " " ' r- o e I v r - , ed ptatee end chert; ', sre omitted. gla Let- . tifioatee and........... evtrw fot potfe.