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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1905)
PAGE SIX. DAILY EAST OREGON! AN, PENDLETON, OMXIOX, FRIDAY, JIXV 21. 1905. EIGHT PAGES HUGE ROOSEVELT US A TYPICAL AMERICAN GIRL OF BEST TYPE. 1 Not a I-uy lljriiro Unim a Fashion Plato Illustrating the "400," But I a Live, Sensible, Unaffected Young Woman In Kvory Sense a Model to Be PulterntHl After by tlie MiM Sensible Peoplo Is a Stuntlnnl for "Hie l(-st." She Is feminine. She is pretty. She has upon her the rosy tinge of romance. She comes smiling confident. The combination is irresistible. All the world capitulates, of course. Off poes its hat! Up goes its voice In a healthy hurrah! Thump! goes Its heart In generous response to her claim, for America, particularly this America of the west, still has young and spontaneous enthusiasms, still is chivalrous. Yet Alice Roosevelt's triumph has been something more than that natur ally conceded , to "the president's daughter." It has been besides a per sonal triumph, rightfully and pecul iarly her own. Alice Roosevelt is something more than the prettily-gowned lay figure to be exhibited is "the president's daughter." The enthusiastic veteran who trudged from the Soldiers' Home to the Santa Rosa station Just to see her on the day when she was taken to the Bohemian Grove is not unique In his opinion. He voiced the thought of many when, alter looking at her long and earnestly and critically, he said: "The president must feel proud of having a daughter like that!" Not because she Is an obviously su perior young person, for she Is that not at all; but because she Is so genu ine, so natural, so unaffected, so aglow with the 'warmth, so tinctured with the sweetness of youth. The old veteran had trudged a long way to sec her, and he sturdily stood on his rights as an American citizen and a soldier who had fought to hold his country together when he quite respectfully yet a little Independently demanded to have her pointed out to him. The president and the president's family belong to the great American public. Grant its claim and It exer cises its right with Quixotic delicacy. Deny It and listen to the howl of pro test. So the old soldier who had traveled the long, dusty road from the home in the morning heat stood on his rights, doubly strong In his eves and I'm sure In yours and mine and withal had only counted on looking on "the president's daughter" from a distance. When she found him out and met him half way with her Impulsive kind ness no wonder he thought the presi dent should be proud of such a daugh ter and no wonder the American pub lic I also proud of her. I - EXPLOSION FOR A NAVY' YARD. Fifty Tons of Dynamite Will Remove 70,000 Tons of Rock. Portsmouth, N. H., July 21. The last section of , Henderson's point, containing about 70.000 tons of rock, will be blown ud with 50 tons of dy namite at high tide tomorrow. It will mark the conclusion of one of the most difficult engineering feats ever accomplished, and will open the wav for large warships to the Portsmouth navy yard. The work was begun three years ago and 500.000 tons of rock has been taken away. There Is Just one big section left, which the contractors have arranged to remove by the use of dynamite, one of the largest explosions ever attempted. There have heen drilled in the last remaining section of rock about 300 holes anywhere from 50 to 80 feet deep. These have been filled with the explosive and will be exploded by three circuits with a powerful electric battery many yards away. All of the buildings in the immediate vicinity have been removed. The nearest building left standing is the big naval , hosnltal. from which the inmates; were removed today. t The Diamond Cure. The latest news from Paris is, that On- heve. discovered a diamoni curj for consumption. If you fear con HUinpilon or pneumonia, It will, hn-v-evcr, be best for you to tako the great remedy mentioned by W. T. McOee of Vn nicer. Tonn. "I had a cough for 1 -. years. Nothing helped me until 1 R.'k Pr. King's New ,'i :ov.'ry for Consumption. Coughs and Colds, which gave Instant relief, and effect ed a permanent cure." Unequalled quick cure for throat and lung trou bles. At Talhnan & Co.'t 'rug store: price SO cents and 11.00. Guaranteed.! Trial bottle free. Splendid Hay Crops. Herb Bartholomew of Cecil, return- ed Sunday from a business trip to the John Day country. He reports the finest hay crop in tne urner section e htm seen for years. He says also that his alfalfa crop at Cecil Is splen did this season and that he expected to comme nce cutting the second crop Monday. Heppncr Times. Forced to Starve, r:. F. leeK of Concord, Ky., nays: "For 20 years I suffered agonies, with a sore on my upper Hp, so painful Hometlmes, that 1 could not eat. Af ter vainly trying everything else, I cured It with Bucklen'a Arnica Salve." It's gr at for nurns, cuts and wound.i. At Tallman 4 Co.'s drug store. Only Jfe. Ilooms for Pendleton and Umatilla nountj People at the Portland Pair. Write now to Mrs. William B. Bol ton, 574 y, Fifth street, Portland, Ore. Convenient to the grounds. Rates tl.N, 11.25 and $1.50, Including breakfast. M'GAHAN AND SCOBELEFF. ffhe Newspaper Mans Ptrtnre of th Great Rmilaa General. McGnbau was the correspondent who first described to Europe the Bulga rian atrocities. What a brilliant crea ture he was, with his steel blue eyes, his face as delicately chiseled as though It were of marble, his lithe, light frame mid that suggestion of ab solute courage, iron resolve, under neath the almost feminine tlnlness of the features. He was one of the in timates of Scobeleff Indeed, the men were so attached to each other that Scobeleff nearly always insisted that BlcGauan should share his tent with talni, and McGahnn was In the tent of ScohelefT the night after the disas trous assault on Plovnn. Scobeleff was, said McGahan, a wonderful pic ture of the horrors and terrors of war. His face was black with powder, his uniform was In rags, and his sword was twisted like a corkscrew. It is evident from this description that Sco beleff took part with his own hand In 6ome of the work of the day. There was a sequel, by the way, to this pic ture. I am not quite sure whether McGahan published it, but he told It to me. Scobeleff was always a dandy. Even In leading a charge he was dress ed with dandlcal precision. In the middle of the night McGahan was woke up, and he saw Scobeleff dress ing himself with great care, putting on a new uniform and even perfuming his hair and clothes. And then came another transformation. Scobeleff, his elaborate toilet finished, sat down on bis bed and burst Into a shower of tears and a tempest of sobs, thinking over all his poor men who had been so vainly sacrificed In the attempt to gain the fortress. London M. A. P. SHE GOT HER BAGGAGE. Mrs. Isabella Bishop Wu Self Pos sessed Traveler. Mrs. Isabella Bishop, whose travels in different parts of the world secured for ber membership In the British Roy al Geographical society, visited Ameri ca when she was a young woman. She was unused to travel and was alone when she had the following experi ence: Once In a train going to New York she was dreadfully tired, and yet she bad a feeling that If she went to sleep the man sitting next her would pick ber pocket She struggled for some time against her Inclination to sleep; but, having for a moment given way, she awakened to feel the band of her neighbor gently withdrawing her purse from ber pocket. In her purse, besides some money, which was, comparatively speaking, of small moment, was ber baggage check. That was the only thing that really mattered. If she accused her neighbor of theft, nothing was simpler for blm than to drop the purse out of the open window beside which be. was sitting. No; she determined, she would leave any Interference until they arrived at their destination. She secured the services of a porter and, with apparent calmness, followed ber traveling companion down the platform. Having described her bag gage to the porter, she at the critical moment bowed slightly to the pick pocket and, with an airy smile, said, "This gentleman has my baggage check." And he Immediately presented It to her. A Well Conducted Riot. In 1767, Irritated by the high price of provisions, the poor people of Eng land rose In many parts and seized the corn from the flour mills, which they sold at reasonable prices, giving the money to the rightful owners a well conducted riot that caused a law to be passed against the eighteenth century cornering of wheat. But, a severe winter following, the distress became so great that the London common council ordered $5,000 to be subscribed out of the city funds and that "a snb ecrlptlon book should be opened for the donations of all well disposed per- j sons." "By this noble plan," says a i writer of that time, "great numbers of people were happily relieved from the mot abject state ol distress, Wax Mntchen. Wax matches, so called, are uncle by drawing strands of tine i-oilon thread, twenty or thirty at a time, through melted stearin, with it small admixture of parafiln. The wax hardens quickly upon the threads, and the long tapers thus produced are smoothed and rounded by pulling them through Iron plates perforated with boles of the desired size. Finally the tapers are cut Into match lengths nnd dipped. The neacltliis; sin of "Gentlemen." All people above the condition of la- hsirert nrp ruined hv prpess of stltnn. ju8 and nourishment, clergy Included. I never yet saw any gentleman who ate I and drank as little as was reasonable. Looking back on my past life, 1 llnd that all my miseries of body and mind have proceeded from ndlgestlon. Sydney Smith's Confession. Knew Him. I He was looking for a rich wife and 1 thought be was on the trail. "I love you," be said In soft, warm tones, "more than I can tell In words." "You'd better try figures," she re plied coldly, for she was not so green as she looked. The "Governor Was Eaoaarh. "Charles, have you ever considered going Into any business?" "Naw. The governor wanted me to last yeah, but I told blm, dontcber know. It was enough to have one tradesman In the family." Judge. The readiest and surest way to get && of censure is to correct ourselves. Demosthenes. The Methodists are building a church at St John, Wash DANCING PILGRIMS. f he Annual Carnival of ths "Saints" of l.ehternseli. On every succeeding WhlUnu Tues day from time immemorial 19.000 to 10,1X10 pilgrims of both sexes and of ev ery age and condition of life dance for four or five hours at Echtcrnach, In the grand duchy of Luxemburg, to an unmistakable polka tune and an appar ently nonsensical refrain. The central figure of this great Echternach "spriug prozeasiou" Is St. Wlllibrord, who mi grated from Northumberland to tho frontiers of the Black forest twelve centuries ago. Emperors and kings have In vain forbidden the "saints" of Echtemaeh to Indulge In their annual carnival. With the iH-asantry of East Luxem burg and Eiffel the "springprozesslon" Is as popular tcxlay as It was in 1131. when King I.othalre came to pray nt St Willibrord's tomb. The simple mind ed dwellers on the banks of the Sure and the Moselle nro firmly convinced that their best hope of freedom from nervous diseases In this world and eter nal salvation in the next lies in this mystic dance of five steps forward and two backward, by which, after three hours' Indescribable toll, they cover the two or three miles Intervening between the starting point, at which the pil grims receive the episcopal blessing and the goal at the steps of St. Willi brord's shrine. KNOWLEDGE AND CULTURE. The Two Do Hot Necessarily Walk Hand In Hand. High marks In examinations depend upon a trained memory and a power of acquiring Irrelevant Information. Culture, on the coutrary, Is a sym pathetic assimilation of the best In the realm of thought and achievement. Culture Is a slower process and a deep er, and Its reward strikes further In. Assimilation of the best that has been thought and accomplished affects not merely the brain, but the character the whole spirit of a man. Culture Implies a soil plowed and fertilized, where whatever seed falls has the better chance for growth. Informa tion even In vast quantities, so long as It remains mere Information, used for purposes of passing examinations, need not affect the manners nor the morals of a man; both may remain hopelessly lax In nn cncyclopedian mine of facts. But culture affects primarily the manners and the morals. A cultured gentleman hns external methods of getting on with his kind; he has the true sense of relationship, the feeling that all he can learn to feel or to be Is not for himself, but for service; he knows himself In a net work of human Inter-relations. In the end the test of knowledge Is not ex amination marks; It Is living. Har per's Weekly. THE WOOLSACK. It Is In the Honse of Lards and Yet Is Not a Fart of It. It Is a curious fact that the woolsack on which the lord chancellor sits In the British house of lords Is not, strictly speaking, In the bouse of lords, and this Is why when the lord chancellor rises to take part In debate be first of all moves away from the woolsack to bis own place as a peer before be speaks. The fact, too, explains why noble lords who desire to avoid voting some times merely withdraw to the wool sack, where, not being In a parliamen tary sense within the house, they are not counted in a division. Again, though the lord chancellor Is now Invariably a peer, he Is not neces sarily so, and as a matter of fact the office has been held several times in the past by commoners. In such cases the lord chancellor could take no part In debate, not having a place In the house as a peer, and his functions as speaker were strictly limited to the putting of questions and other formal proceed ings regulated by precedent from the Woolsack. The Copts of Rnrrpt. The Copts In Kgypt are the book keepers and scribes; they nre also the Jewelers and embroiderers. Their an cient tongue has fallen Into disuse nnd Is practically a dead lnnguuge. They now use Arabic, like all the rest of the nation, but the sjieecb survives In their church service, a part of which Is still given In the old tongue, though it Is said that even the priests themselves do not always understand what they are saying, having merely learned the sentences by heart, so that they con repeat them as a matter of form. New Zealand Animals. Experts say that probably there is no country In the world where Imported species of animals, wild nnd domestic, have flourished as they have done In New Zealand. The red deer grow to over 000 pounds In weight In the for ests, the trout to twenty pounds In the rivers. The sheep have not expanded to any giant size, but they multiply at i a foster rate than elsewhere. They grow a finer wool and a better mutton. Flattering. Young Feathertop If your parents till oppose our marrying why can't we elope? Miss Sharpe-C'hlnn It would never do In the world. Everybody who knows us both would say at once that I snggested It. Chicago Tribune. An Account to Settle. The Lawyer Madam, I find that your husband's will leaves you nothing but .what the law compelled blm to leave you. The Widow (angry and for getfuIWust wait till I see blm! The soul asks honor, not fame; to be nprlght, not successful; to be good, not prosperous; to be essentially, not out wardly, respectable. Woman's Life. Call for Ross Nichols' transfer to do your hauling. Phone Main I. NEW YORK LETTER New York, July 21. Tho steam yacht Mayflower, formerly owned by Mrs. Ogden Goelet and purchased from her by the United States govern ment at the time of the Spanish-American war, probably will bo sold soon. During tho time that tho Japanese Russian peace envoys are, in this country the vessel will bo placed nt the disposal of the commission. After that the government will have no fur ther use for her. Tho Mayflower is being overhauled at the Brooklyn navy yard, and will go to Portsmouth, N. H., on August 1. carrying the peace commission. All the expensive fittings, which were re moved at the tlmo sho was commis sioned for war service, will be replac ed. It has been decided by the author ities to have six of tho 6-pounders. formerly on board tho battleship Ala bama, placed on the "peace ship." so that it Is supposed there will be enough of war about the bont to keep fresh In tho minds of tho envoys the grlm ness of the conflict which they may bring to a close. More Warships Coming. With the completion of tho battle ship Connecticut, now building here, and other warships, more vessels will be added to the register of naval ships In the fiscal year just opening than In any other fiscal year In the country's naval history. In the com ing 12 months there will be placed In active service, beside the Connecticut the great battleships Nebraska. Ver mont. Virginia, Georgia, New Jersey. Rhode Island and Louisiana, the ar mored cruisers California. South Da kota, Tennessee and Washington, and the protected cruisers St. Paul, Mil waukee and Charleston. The result of this largo addition to the navy will be a swing of the pendu lum of activity to the other extreme. Not for a long tlmo have there been so few vessels In the early period of their construction as now, and the consequence will be that July 1, 1!00. will find fewer ships than in many years In course of construction at pri vate government yards. $1,000,000 Art Temple. Brooklyn Is to have a million dollar art temple, which will be a grand opera house and a Madison Square garden In one. Plans for the struc ture have been accepted by the board of directors of tho Academy of Music, and work on the handsome new build ing, to replace the old Academy, de stroyed by fire, will begin at once. The building will be constructed on the most modern lines, and will com prise two auditoriums and a ball room. The main auditorium will be for grand opera and dramatic pro ductions, and will have a seating ca pacity of 5000. The other auditorium will seat 1500. and will be used for lectures and concerts. On the second floor will be the ball room, with a floor space of 5800 square feet Enforcing Child Lnbor Laws. The rigidity with which the child labor laws are being enforced this summer Is being bitterly protested by the parents In tho poorer sections of tho city. They cannot understand why tho board of health should refuse a work certificate to a child under 14 years of nge, nor can they understand any of the other regulations which govern the issuance of these certifi cates. As a result of this Ignorance scores upon scores of angry parents are be ing turned away from the various lo cal offices of the health bureau mut tering Imprecations at tho officials who refuse to give them the certifi cates which enable their children to work during the summer months. In former years it was a compara tively easy matter for a child to ob tain a vacation work certificate, but things have changed now and no child is permitted to work unless it is 14 years of age and has attended school for 130 school clays since Its 13th birthday. So rigidly ure these two minllficatlons enforced that no work certificate Is Issued to a child unless it can produce absolute evidence of ace. together with a certificate from the principal of the school It last at tended, showing that It had Deen in school tho necessary number of clays. LEWIS AND CLARK FAIR, Portland, Oredon. June 1 to October is. mors. The O. R. & N. Co. announces rates from Pendleton as follows: Round trip, good for 30 days... $9.16 Round trip party tickets, (10 or more persons on one ticket), good for ten days $6.85 For organized parties of 100 or more, moving on the same day, a round trip rate of $6.85 will he made, good for seven days. For further particulars, call on or address E. C. SMITH. Agent. To Fight Mall Order Houses. Sioux Falls. S. D.. July 21. Repre sentative retail and wholesale mer chants of South Dakota met in con vention hero today to organize for the purpose of fighting the encroachments of tho big Eastern mnll order nouses. Those behind the movement hope to devise some plan by which the mall order houses will bo forced to aban don the South Dakota field. Seaside Iteeort and Return. To long Reach, Breakers, Ocean Park, Ocean Ride, Sea View, Clatsop Beach, via O. R. N.. $13.15, permit ting stopover at Portland. For par ticulars call on or address E. C. Smith, Agent, O. R. N. Lehman Springs Stage. The Lehman Springs stage will start Saturday, June 30, and will run till October 1, and carry passengers and the mall. It starts from Lindsay's stable, on Cottonwood street. For Sale. Two wagons, one hack, nearly new, one grain rack, one hay rack. See H. 8. Scales at E. T. Wade A Son's office. See Wlthee for gasoline engines and pumps. TWO OPEN LETTERS IMPORTANT TO MARRIED WOMEN Mrs. Mary Dlmmlck of Washington tell How Lydia H. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Made Ber Well. It Is with great pleasure we publish the following letters, as they convinc ingly prove the claim we have so many times made in our columns that Mrs. Pinkham, of Lynn, Mass., is fully quali fied to give helpful advice to sick women, Read Mrs. Dimmick's letters. Her first letter: Dear Mrs. Pinkham : " I have been a sufferer for the past eight rears with a trouble which first originated from painful menstruation the pains were excruciating, with inflammation and ulcera tion of the womb. The doctor says I must nave an operation or I cannot live. I do not want to submit to an operation if I can possi bly avoid it Please help me." Mrs. Marr Dimmick, Washington, D. C. Her second letter; Dear Mrs. Pinkham s " You will remember my condition when I last wrote yon, and that the doctor said I must have an operation or I could not live, I received your Kind letter and foDowed your advice very carefully and am now entirely well. As my case wu so serions it seems a miracle that I am enred. I know that I owe not only my health but my life to Lydia K. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and to your advice. I can walk miles without an ache or a pa'n, and I wish every suffering woman would read this letter and reallte what you can do for them." Mrs. Mary Dunnrickv 59th and East Capitol Streets, Washington, D. C How easy it was for Mrs. Dimmick to write to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., and how little It cost her a two-cent stamp. Yet how valuable was the reply! As Mrs. Dimmick says itsaved her life. Mrs. Pinkham has on file thousands of just such letters as the above, and offers auutg women neiproi advloe. Mr. R. F. Payne, (Payne's pharmacy) Idaho Falls, Idaho, writes: "We have just sold the last cure, (TRIB), send one-half dozen at once. Trlb hat cured five of the hardest kind of cases. One man here used It last Sep tember, and cannot smell wine, liquor or beer now without making htm sick. He had been a hard drinker for IS years." Father Desmaraia, pastor of the Roman Catholic church. The Dalles, Ore., writes: "I know of good results obtained by the use of your Trlb In cur ing liquor and tobacco users." 4 THE COMMERCIAL LIVERY FEED AND SALE STABLE. Slmonton Iiros. & Corlcy, Props. Horses boarded by the day, week or month. 30 cents per day. First-class livery turn-outs at reasonable prices. Corral In connection. Commercial Stables Aura St., between Webb & Alta. 'Phone Black 2021. THE POPULAR PLACF TO EAT IS THE The French Restaurant t Everything served first-class. 2 I lest regular meals In Penille- Inn fur 25 cents. SHOUT ORDERS A SPECIALTY. Polydore Moens, Prop. RIVERSIDE AVENUE X DAIRY ED MORGAN, PROP. Phone Black 2061. PURE MILK. Fresh, Pure and Clean. TRY IT. All orders promptly attended to. 4 SCHEDULE OF PEN DLETON-UKIAH Stage Line Dally trlpa between Pendleton as4 rjklah, except Sunday. BUge leaves Pes dleton at T a. m., arrives at TJklah at p. m. lie turn atage leavea Uklah at a m., arrives at Penadleton B p. m. Pendleton to Uklah, 8; ronad trip, 10. Pendleton to Alba, 12.75; ronnd trip. 19 Pendlton to Ridge, 12; ronnd trip, 8.M Pendleton to Nye, fl.BO; ronnd trip. I2.S0 Pendleton to Pilot Rock, $1 ; ronnd trip 91 .SO. Office at Brock A ateComsa' Drn Btora The East Oregon tan is Trtas4i n Ore gon's representative paper. It leads and tho people appreciate H and show ft by their Uberml patronage-. It It the shI eet listng medians of this seetlua. (Mrv. Atary Dimmick ) fllM OREGON SiioiprtusE and union Pacific TWO TRAINS TO THE FAST DAIIT Through Pullman standard arid Tourist Sleepers dally to Omaha and Chicago; tourist sleeper dally to Kan sas City; through Pullman tourist sleeping cars (personally conducted) weekly to Chicago: reclining chair cars (seats free) to the East dally. TIME SCHEDULE FROM PENDI.E- TON. EASTBOUND. No 2, Chicago Special,, arrive i:St m.; depart, 6:40 p. m. No. 6. Mail A Express, arrive 4 3i m.; depart, 6 a. m. WESTBOUND. No. 1. Portland Special, arrive 8 b m.; depart. 8:00 a, m. No. 6, Mall Express, arrive 11 p. m.; depart II p. m. SPOKANE DIVISION. No. 7. Pendleton passenger, arrive. 35 p. m. No. 8, Spokane 9:10 a. m. . WALLA WALLA BRANCH. No. 41, Mixed train, arrive, 14 . m. No. 42, Mixed train, depart. I It . m. No. 7 connects with No. 2. No. 42 connects with No. 2. OCEAN AND RIVKH SCHEDULE. FROM PORTLAND. All sailing dates subject to .-hangs For San Francisco ever ytlve day. SNAKE RIVER. Riparla to Lewlston Uan him dnll, except Saturday, 4:05 a. m. Leave Lewlston dallv, except Fri day, 7:00 a. m. E. C. SMITH. Agent, Pendleton. Washington & Columbia River Railroad TAKE THIS ROITE FOR Chicago, St. Paul, St. Louis, K City, St. Joseph, Omaha aiul ALL POINTS EAST AND HOITH. Portland and Points on the Sound. TIME CARD. Arrive Monday, Wednesday ana Fri day, 12:15 p. m. On Tuesday. Than day and Saturday. 10:16 a. m. Leave at 6 p. m. daily. Leave Walla Walla 6:16 p. m. tot east. Arrive Walla Walla at 9 a. m. -mm west. For Information reitardlnt rati ana accommodations, rail on or address W. ADAMS, Agent, !DdletOD. Oreson. 8 11. rALTlKHHRAD. O. P. A.. Walla Walla, Washington. RUNS PULLMAN SLEEPING CAR ELEGANT DINING CARS TOURIST SLEEPING CARS ST. PAUL MINNEAPOLIS Itl'Ll'TH FA UGO TO GRAND FORKS CKOOKSTON WINNIPEG HKLENA and BUTTE THROUGH TICKETS TO CHICAGO WASHINGTON PHILADELPHIA NEW YORK BOSTON And all points East and South. Throng tickets to Japan and ChlDs, via Tacoma and Northern 1'arlflr Rtmmnale Co. and American line. TIME SCHEDULE. Trains leave Pendleton daily except Sunday at 6 p. m. For further Information, time cards, mans and tlrketa, call on or writs W. Adams, Pendleton, Oregon, or A. 1. CUABLTOI4, Third and Morrison Bts.. Portland, Or. YOU WILL BE SATISFIED WITH TOUR JOTJRJfKY If rear tlskees ra4 erar the Daav rer an Rle Oreads nail road, tJM -Beenlo Una of the World." BECAUSE There are so many scenic attractions and points of Interest along the Use between Ogden and Denver that the trip never becomes tiresome. If yon are going Bast, writs for In formation and get a pretty book that will tell yon all about It W. a M'BRDDE, General AgesM, IM TbM Btreet, Portland, - Oregon if