J 'vy.-'w Tis Portiand Journal " j ' ALFRED D. BOWEn, ' ' 10TT8XAL PBtNTINO CO Proprietors. Eastara Benreaeatatlv: ALBERT B. HASBROOK, i Timet Bid., ft.Y, THE INDEPENDENT AFTERNOON PAPER OP 0RB0ON. . L ' ,CoiBorl Bulldlag. Rttk and YeemBI 8U. , aSo YaaahUl Stret. . ' Cctafta Becond-CLas Hail Matter at I . 1 1 11 , TELEPHONES I BottneM Office; Oregon iTala 500: Colnmblaos Ceaterial Roosn . . . . Orro Mala . 1 Term, for Carrier or flail : THE JOURNAL on year THB JOURNAL. sU months " THS JOURNAU three months l- . rut jniTBNiU lit tki week " THIS JOtTRNAU by mail, per Tear..$SW TMf JOTTRKAI hv ma.IL 4 months. 1 UU CITY SUBSCRIBERS. If city subscribers fall to secure their paper they will confer a favor If : they will call up flain 500 and enter (Heir complaint. .PORTLAND, ORE., JUNE 18. 1802 v ,t THE MEANING OF IT. Aseumicg the sincerity of tba arlgi Baton Of the act of 1801, providing for av . .popular vote 'on the United States Benatorshlp, we can look to the act Itself -j jto' discover Its purpose. The preamble - recite that, -Whereas it 1 desirable "that the people should hav aa oppor tunity to Instruct their Senators and 'tepweenUtlvee In the legislative As embry as to tba election of a Senator ' la Congress, from. Oregon therefore." aid then follows the .law providing that a vote 'shall be taken upon nominations snad in the manner provided by law. This looks verjrtair. The- law received , the support of tba Legislature, without. ' wt believe, any opposition. V r But the originators were not sincere. They 014 not believe It was desirable for - people when they controlled the Legls- ' lature. Tba preamble was- Peckenlfnan The, act was a piece of political bua 00m be.-- It was to be used by them If the ektcency reaulredr but It was not A" t oreaeea that It was capable also of be- 'tn used aaainat them. -Hence when a popular vote, haa been taken In strict ac -aordance with the law framed by -them selves, it la discovered that the vote )s a tares. :' Tba point is that Mr. deer, if be has done nothing1 elms, has 'uncovered the rauo. : He haa compelled the parents of the law to disown and discredit their own offspring. Be has disclosed to public .law the hypocrisy of the little crowd ' that mean to run the politics of the 'state! without regard to any farcical" popular vote. He haa shown to the peo ple that in the view of the machine the "people are a farce. ' Machine men ilka these are not in favor of the election of Senators by the peo ple. When they say so they are aa in- v "sincere as they were when they said in .. 4thelr preamble C-at It was desirable that vth Legislature should be Instructed by ture .they don't need any instructions. . They won't accept any, nor tolerate any. To venture such instructions. is "colossal - "conceit, To accept a nomination in pur- suance or a law oc tne state ana to re ceive substantially the unanimous vote of - the party as an Instruction to the Legis lature is Interfering with the prerogatives 'of the machine, which reserves the right ,; to'ltself to name the United States Sena tor -without Instructions or suggestions from anybody else. ' Mr. fleer's vote is, however, giving the machine aome trouble. That is evidenced by the perpetual scolding he Is getting.' : Hut what has Mr. Geer done that draws ... Vpon him this tirade of abuse? He is a ; . candidate for United States Senator. But ; there are others. He did not make . speeches for Mr. Furnish. But Mr. c Mitchell, the darling of the ring.f ought , the. regular party two years ago5, and - by the votes of Democrats whose elec '. tlon lie secured sits in the Senate today. ' Ws are not advocating Mr. Oeer for the "Seoata Our purpose is only to draw attention to the fact palpable from the circumstances, that the object is to kill . ' him Off in the interrst rif tha nnnriMnlA '9t the ring. Any other person who shall ; have the temerity to be a candidate will be attacked in a similar manner. The ring means to clear thu field of rivals. "When the Ting "aisks for bread it will not be pleased with a stone." Now we are advised, at least in part, who is the : atone. The question is, Who represents tha bread? Whom indeed would the ring -,.be pleased with? It knows. Nobody else does. " ' THE AVERAGE MAN. ''Tti average man Is the balance wheel -Ofs tb woild. He stores the superfluous 'energy t the social machine and pays it 'out Jsteadlly and safely. He Is midway -between radicalism -and eonsewatism, d checks the one while he energizes the othen It is bis sense we speak of when we speak-of common sense. ; Ja religious matters he corrects the creed a H save one system from mys t'.clsm and another from materialism. He is not a skepUo who must prove all tb!agj -tear -yet- -areduleua-aeeept -a8 things without proof. He has that safe loglo that baits before it becomes ab surd, and -.that reasonable faith that mounts wbera the aenaes falter. , . , in puauiez jib vsuu- wwujnujum losing caution. He Is neither a boomer nor a moaeback. ,He does-nob cripple tits private fortune for tbe public welfare, nor refuse to society is just contribution. He is not ferward la speech tier altogeth er allent. Me la prudent but not stingy. In politics, he is tbe savior of his coun try. He is partisan to a limit and inde pendent btyond that, either politically hide-bound on the one hand nor politically erratic on the other",' he is tha arbiter of elections, and the giver Of the laws. His instinct is .inborn. Much learning does not pake him mad, nor the want of learning Impair hie Judgmtnt Ha la crltl clsed by those who go too fast, and dis trusted by those who go too alow, but he keeps tha even tenor Of hit way, and, un hasting, unresting, he attains the goal which others overleap or never reach He la the man to cultivate. There are more of him than of others. His sup port Is the essential of success and his opposition the equivalent of disaster. He makes tha ship sail and the car go, stead' les the markets, conserve business, tem pers society, sweetens religion, and runs tne government. He la, there ore. The Journal' pattern and patron. We w$nt him on our books multitudinous numbers of him at the regular advertising and subscription rate. The bill for pensioning the Indian war veterans, which passed the Senate yester day and goes to the President for hi approval. I a tardy recognition of a class of men to whom ctvfliaation owe a large debt It comes too late to the many who have passed the Great Divide, but will come to the survivors as a late bene diction of their country. The pension It self will hardly be appreciated a much a the recognition it involves of the value and patriotism of the service rendered long ago by these hardy soldiers of the frontier. ' If the kindergarten were only a place to wash children' faces and wipe their noses, the Vote defeating It was right. and Its . place In the scheme of ea ucatlon 1 so little understood and haa for so long been misrepresented that the vote I hot surprising. Perhaps ttr time, the true nature of the question being better understood, a different result will follow, Men may come and men may go, but the convicts go on forever. The good ciu laens of Washington might rise en masse in the path of this triumphal march as they would in front of an Invading army. Washington's campaign has hardly been more successful than Oregon', which makes the honor even. Dr. Bernard Daly, who ran for Con gress on the Democratic ticket two years ago, has just been elected County judge In Lake County. That Is evidence that Dr. Daly ha the. confidence of his con tituenta where political questions are not Involved. i; Idea precinct, In Gilliam County, held no eleotion thla year. It Is not an Ideal precinct "'-, The Squire Met His Match. Men, as a rule, are more indifferent and communicative concerning the inroads of age than Women are, but the most amia ble woman can generally find a pertinent remark to make -when approached im pertinently on this saared theme, "Old Squire Jones doesn't speak to me now, said a gentle faced, silver-haired lady. "and I don't blame him; ha haa excellent reasons for not wanting any conversation with me. Several months ago I was alt- sing la our carriage, near the city library. waiting for Helen, when I saw the old squire drive up near me. He always has something unpleasant to say about how old we are all getting and what wrecks we all are. so I pretended not to see him. He came nearer, however, and aceosted me. " 'Isn't that you, Mrs. Brown? How 'ye do, Mrs, Brown r "I turned around and greeted him: How do you do, Squire Jones?' 'My goodness, Mrs. Brown, the bluff old fellow went on, 'how you have broke. never would have known ye.' " Why, Squire Jones," said I, I was just going to say tbe same thing to you, never did see a man age as fast as you ave. What on earth has made you rail so rapidly? I never would hava known you.' "The poor old squire sank down in his buggy seat and wilted. He looked half his usual size and ten years older, and drove off without saying anything further. It as. wicked, really.jo deal tha poor man such a blow, but if elderly gentlemen want to receive compliments," the silver- haired lady laughingly concluded, "they must go about distributing them." She Runs an Engine. In the city of Cleveland live the only woman engineer in tne country a Mrs. Marten. who understands the business thoroughly and gives excellent satisfac tion. She recently took the place of er deceased husband and haa been faithful In . every requirement of the place thus far. Mrs. Marten had often been her hus band's helper in his work, and so learn ed the. 'In and outs pf h Is trad; The dny after his death she went to the Office of the building and asked for the posi tion that had been her husband's. The owners of the building, . knowing that the f amilr was in - poor circumstance and that the woman, from her familiar ity With tbe ' engine Was capable ' of holding the position; gave her the place at the same salary, that had 'been earn ed by her husband. There is a. janitor in the building who carries the coal, but Mrs, Marten handles the shovel and does not shirk any task. She keeps the engine room as spotless aa auch a place cair be,'air 4 TO-;HgiH ihineer liwr s new piece of machinery. Chicago hfon Icle. - " .. Gold nuggets from the Klondike present structure and appearance quit differ ent fxooiJ&Cu ct any other locality. AROUND THE STATE China Sing, who was known,-! Laka view.as Hong Dye, the restaur an teur, and who went to, San Francisco and mar ried an Americanized Chinese girl, bring. lng her to Altruas, is the father of bouncing girl. This is the first Chinese baby born in Modoc County. Ray Toft, in endeavoring to hard, a swarm of bees last week at Medford. got the moKquito net protector worn about hi head mlfced up with the flame of the smoke kettle he was using and the net ting caught fire, as did also his shirt He ran to a barrel of water standing near "and thrust his head and arm in It, but the flames in the meantime had burned one aid of his neck and face. Mike Strclsky, who resides near Boon's Ferry, had a lively runaway the other day. He used a horse te move a sled and boxes from place to Plane .in the hop yard while he was tying up vines. Bome bow tha horse got) frightened and started off. Mr. Strolaky fell from - hla high. perch, while the horse made a bee-line for home, clearing a wide road through the hopyard and finally came to a stop in tbe orchard, where the singletree caught in an apple tree. While running the horse-power at the city water- works at Condon last Thurs day afternoon, Earl Palmer.spn of Bundle Palmer, met witb an accident.. Through Some cause the boy let his foot Into the tunning gear and it was' badly cut at tbe heel. He was carried to the physician's office by Frank Armstrong, who was at work .nearby and who heard the boy shout for help, and tbe wound waa stitched. Austin Craig, Postmaster at Whlthey. has brought suit against ,the Bank of Sumpter and A. "P. Hosa, president of the bank, for CO. 000 damages, for defamation of character, growing out of his arrest last winter on tbe charge of embezzle ment of the bank's funds. The largest crop of wflbl ever Produced in Baker, Grant Malheur and .Harney Counties has been clipped this spring and is now coming to the warehouses. The crop Is not only large, but the quality Is far superior on the average to that if many year past - Five thousand, eight -hundred and eltflkj 1Ti!o -i!isrii brook ' t rout were' shipped from the United States Clacka mas Fish Commission section on Satur day to the Onegdn Fish and Game Asso ciation. They were consigned to the care or Joseph Paquet. only WD more Eastern brook trout have been allotted to tha state association by tha united States Fish Commission. ' Tim Townsend, who has - been con fined in the Grant County jail for several month awaiting trial on a charge of horsestealing, was let out on bonds last Wednesday. Mrs. O. R. Thomson of Astoria, chair man of a committee of the Woman's Club, assisted by Mr. O. B. Estes, Mrs. W. 3. Barry, Mrs, Z, Greenough and Mrs. D, M. btuart, have made arrangements to se cure two desirable lots in the city for the purpose of Starting a permanent playing ground for boys, it is the Intention of these ladles to make the ground all that Is desired. Parallel bars, rings, etc, will bo secured for the summer months so that the boys will have a place to amuse themselves Instead, of playing on the streets. SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY. One of the most difficult pieces of engi neering on record waa successfully com pleted with the recent opening of the great Aspen tunnel on the Wyoming dl vision of the Union Pacific Railroad. The geological formation through which the "tube" was cut is of a arbpnlferoua nature, chiefly, in the first stage of the work unusually hard rock waa encoun tered, then shale, and finally a curious formation that has been named by the excavators "slacking ground" and right there the real difficulties of the work began. This ground, say a writer hi th Engineering and Mining Journal, was very much of the-nature of an old- fashioned pot of yeast or, It might be likened to an asphalt bed.: A soon as air was admitted to the tunnel it' swelled after the manner of quicklime, irresist ibly. It was at first, thought that Ore gon pine beams 12 inche square would suffice; but thee 'Wro literally 'amashed Into kindling wood. - Then IB by 8-inch steel girders were tried; they- were bent like wire by the enormous pressure. The action was so sudden that the men had often to run for their lives, the ' effect being almost like an ' explosion, th ground swelling up and entirely closing the tunnel. Considerable trouble wa also caused by the occurrence of oil and water In the shaft An explosion of the former caused the death of three men In 1890. The greatest depth of the tunnel bel6w the surface Is 4C6 feet and It highest point Is 7296 feet above sea level. - - ; Dwarf plants are reported by a German chemist by a process altogether differ ent from that of the Japanese.- A secret fluid la injected near the root, th ef fect being to stop growth; although the plant continue unchanged and fiowera are produced a usual.. The atmospheric pressure upon the surface of an ordinary man is 32,400 pounds, or over UM tons. The ordinary rise and. fall of the barometer In creases or decreases this pressure by 2500 pounds. The German- government offers three prize of $1260, $750 and $500 for the three best types of wind pressure gauge. There are certain technical conditions which must be fulfilled. ' For bad cases of smallpox M. Pletri, a surgeon of Nice, recommends five or six tablespoonfuls of beer yeast dally. It ha proven effective without - disfigure ment. : . . Sodallte, says the Engineering and Min ing Journal, Is one of the deepest-colored blue vfolet minerals known, and 'ts fre- QuehTtr mtstaiten tor trnrar iirolfc--Tt - is found at Litchfield, Me., and also occurs In soma abundance in Dungannon town-, ahlp. Hasting County, Ontario It Is a new and promising ' ornamental atone, admirably adapted for mosaic work, In laying and similar spMb HOW TO TBI4 PEA8LAN RUGS. A gteat many people flatter themselves that they are Ute tell a genuine Per sian rug from a spurious, machine-made one by, touch, but In thi they decetve themaelvaKj The best and surest way to tell a genuine from ad Imitation Perslatw rug- is Dy .me renewing : If one will, look closely, he will ob serve that In the genuine Persian rug tbe Intricate and complicated pattern or de sign I not altogether symmetrical, tot corresponding flower, vines or geomet rical flgurea of On aide being a little out of line, larger or smaller, or not meeting and Joining with figures oh, the eorreapondlng detail on the opposite slsa of the rug. s Tbia is owing to th fact that In hand weaving it is impossible to Obtain perfect symmetry of patterna, es pecially when ' tha designs are aa com. plicated as they are on Persian ruga Oh the other hand," let one examine close ly the machine-made, rug. and he will find the most perfect symmetry of pat tern, so much so. In fact, that the design looks positively rigid and harsh. This Is a. pretty safe guide, and if observed one will seldom mistake an Imitation for a genuine Persian frog? PLEADS FOR GIRL WORKERS, The work of women and young girls In tin can factories waa vividly pictured by Delegate R A. Hart at the weekly meet ing f the Chicago Federation of Labor. 'The loss of a finger Or two. or some times a hand," he said, "Is a common occurrence!. Girls are daily turned out ot the' factories unfit for any vocation, be cause of their Injuries. When they as out in company they keep, their handi hidden, as they are-ashamed to Bhow the way they are maimed,? Mr. Hart said they rarely received any compensation for their loss and bitterly commented on people who were willing to see women treated In such a way without protest. : Resolutions wero .passed calling on the next Legislature te prohibit the employ ment of girls, to run dangerous machin ery. Jhe industrial committee of the Federation Of,. Women's, I'lubs will 'je asked tq .co-operate. The places' where women are employed In such work were -Said to ibjj' "fSyA )?fflt?'9t,l!. cl?n?aP!l.. wnicn controls tna; factories or rnorton Bros., Maywoodl the Illinois Can Com pany, the Hoopeston factory, and at Lib-' by. McNeill & Libby's. President William D- Mahon of the GOSSIP FROM WASHINGTON, June 18.-8y steeping In a private car every night Senator Channcey M. Depew to able to lead a dual) and almost a , triple, life. When the Senator retires" at midnight it la not in the old Corcoran house on H street; but It is in a very comfortable and com modious bed In a very luxurious and well appointed private car on a sidetrack near the Pennsylvania railroad station. That Is where his coachman ckiven after the din ner or theter engageditnt. He wake up in New T$-k, ai lfrmimjtej drive from, hla, office. NIe o'clock geist him -answering tha tnall and attending to the business ot O. M. Depew, railroad; man and law yer. If there Is a vote on the Philippine bill or a debate on forest reserves or election of Senators by the people, the junior Senator from New York is in his seat in the afternoon. ' He can be there by 3 or 4 o'clock; which is quite suffi cient for tbe occasion. JTheri there is time to dress and partake of a light repast and the affable, engaging diner-out and reconteur, Chauncey M. pepew, is ready to frivol and to crack jokes as If society were the only thing in tha world. Then the train, then the office, then the Sen ate, and then the dinner again. X busy man Is the Senator. A horrible blow at the summer resorts Is contained In a pamphlet Just out by the Agricultural Department ,. . Our learned friend, Professor L. A. Howard, main bugologtst for the Government has taken a crack at country life. In the summer, which is nothing' more nor less than a. sockdolager." He says when it comes to typhoid and malaria ' there I no place for it like the country Th farm, with its rich, fresh milk, and' Its jocund air, Is a hotbed of germs and th "breeding place of disease. That' very milk, so priced' by dwellers) in town; H Jut alive With the wlgglers that get into one in side and make merry until the funeral. And worse than the milk with It ty phoid, is the rural mosquito.' For the ma laria mosquito dwells in the- country. The city mosquito is a comparatively well-be-Kaved Individual; he la out for blood like his country cousin, but he does not make war with poisoned weapon. 'In tha coun try, and a Culex come humming round, and succeeds in jabbing hla proboscis Into one's cuticle, one might Jusff as well lie down and begin to take qninlne, for the beast has vaccinated his "Victim with the STILL THERE. Million Dollar Mines Not Abandoned by Owners. I had a lot of old mining stock tn the house," said a Detrolter, who in vests in most anything t to oblige a friend, "and when I went West last fall tooky along a list. of them. One day In Nevada town. I asked a real estate man ir he had ever hearo 01 tne Jttea Bird mine. , "Certainly I uaed to own half of it,' he replied. " 'What became of ltr "Well. It's the well in my back yard today, and a good one It make. There was no extra charge for It when I bought the place. Its the Pnly 1X000,000 well In town.' 'And what about the Lone Tree mine?' ' The Lone Tree? Oh, that bola has long been used to bury dead Chlnamea In. Makes a .$3,000,000 tomb - for them. and the critters are almost glad to die. " 'And the Blue Hill mlnef , I con tinued. ' ' l "'The Blue HiiiT Let n eee? Why r betwrviam ssiooh keeper" over mt th Hill. Is uslnl It tor a cellar. It keep lager beer cool the year round without tee. Maks a nice little cellar for a mil lion dollars ' -t - j . There Is one more. I ; want to atk about tha American. Eagle rain.. Per Street 'Cartneti' Union' denouBoeof local condition anions; street car employe "inhuman, dlegrao to civilisation, and fntoleberie" to American woTWngmeti." TO ; federation pledged ; support to the new street Carmen' union. ' TOT NEWEST COTTON GOWNS. The cotton gowns were never as truly lovely as this eeaaor. In louleln cotton, a leading model 1 la apple green atrewn with little pUiirflower. These posies are of the faintest hue. The waist ahow cluster of tiniest tuck edged with very narrow valn cienen aee. The aleevee are made With Due tuck edged with the iace to the el" bowi where the fabric fall into a droop lng puff. A TASTY DISH. Bananas fried In cream. Take as many banana as are required and peel them, Do not cut the banana, but leave them wbolerj Sprinkle them lightly with salt and then roll each one separately In flour. For. six abnanaa put a gill of cream in a medium-slsed frying pan over , the flra When the cream bubbles put In the ba nanas, and as soon a they- are slightly brown on one side turn them -and let them cook till a tight golden brown all over. SALADS. . - . Remove the tops from six green pep per and scoop out the seeds; .refill the cavities with grape-fruit pulp, fineiy ghopped celery and English walnut meat, using two part of grape-fruits to one part of celery and three halves .of wal nut meats to each pepper.- Equal quan tities of grape-fruit pulp, finely-tchopped celery 'and chopped apple also make an excellent salad. Toss' lightly togethef. mix with mayonnaise and fill Into halved grape-fruit, sklna. ' . . . 1 FOR THE NERVES. Never go to bed famt and hungry if you are exterminating wrinkles. A cup of tomato bouillon; '-a cup' of hot lemon ade or some toasted oatmeal biscuit wfll send you td sleep comfortably, giving your nerves 1 something to .work on " In place of 'taking three " meals' a" day ' It Is often better for them to take five. The .English fashion of 4 or I o'clock tei is very-sensible. Two of these five re pasts should be very light ones. WASHINGTON virus of malaria. And then the common house fly spreads' typhoid. And how are you going to. get away from the house fly? And cat and dog fleas are worse. And the bedbug doe a lot of disease-making stunts. Therefore any one wishing to have a thoroughly miserable time, and to dis cover a lot of new roads to the cemetery, should write to the department and get this pictured treatise an "How Insects Affect Health in the Rural Districts.'' Anyway, It wlll,h a' sure cure for that "want-to-go-awayV feeling, and will cer tainly prove most wholesome to the pocketbook, Ir there is any left tBe undertaker will get It. Senator Joseph R. Hawley of Connecti cut is becoming Very feeble, and It I apparent to his friends that he will hardly be able to -serve out his present term, which expires March 3, 1906. He is now In his 77th year which Is not old for a Senator but he does not carry his years as well as some of his colleagues. Mor gan, for example, is 78, and Is as valiant as ever, while Pettus of Alabama Is m his 82d year, and there Is not a brighter mind Or hardly a firmer step In the Senate than his. But Senator' Hawley takes life more hardly, and haa grown old more rapidly. He looks out through green spectacles, and has become splenetic and crabbed.' For more than a year his colleagues have had great difficulty in getting along with him, and he is treated with as much consideration as if he were a small child; his whims are humored and Ms outbursts of temper are ignored. But in a physical Way Senator Hawley is rapidly declining He totters about the Senate, cl'hglng to the sides of the desks, poking in and out from the cloakroom, ' without any ap parent purpose, and hardly. able to keep traox of roll calls and' answer' to his name, It Is the universal sentiment among his (olleague that ha should retire and take the much-needed rest to which his long and . honorable services entitle him. He haa been In .the Senate how more than 20 year, and in Congress about SO. He hart been Governor of his state, a brilliant soldier during th Civil War, and wield ed great influence as editor of the Hart ford Courant But he belongs to another generation, and Is adding nothing to his laurela haps you have hard of ltr " 'You have come to the right man, air. That wa my $4,000,000 pet mine. Tea, sir, t helped to sink that abaft my self, and it was honest work. We put It down at least six feet - While floating the stock.' " "Ever raise any ore? " "Not an ounce.' '"And fioJ dividend were ever paldr " 'Not a penny.' " 'And what Anally became of the mine 7' "'It's right back of th livery stable over there, and the man keep hj feed in It Th , Golconda u up th Street and I used for a dump, while the Mono Buch la down tha atreet and i uaed for a town lockup. The Nonpareil , 1 over on that hill, th Monte Chrlsto Just to the left of that grove, and the Bottom Dollar "But I had heard enough," said the Detrolter, "and I came home and traded atl my share for a rat trap with two doors, and made a big bargain at that" Detroit J'ree Preaa. '' ' . ' -h;I1is Profession. , , Coakley Bender . seem pretty pro-petoaK-Apparently he 'haa no difficulty in making both end meet .- r ' Joakley-No and If a alt because of hie ability to do If so well. t CoaklerDo what ,o well? - ' ( ' Joakley-Make both end meet: h' a eontiwtlonltt. Philadelphia-press v. . Fleckenstein Mayer Co. Importer of WINES AND LIQUORS Of which we carry a full and complete line. ? ' : 2i5 Oak St. Portland. Or. WILLAMETTE , . , -it - IRON & STEEL WORKS PORTLAND, OREQON.a 1 lj , . . - ,irv No More Dread NewYdrk; Dental Parlors Moirison No Pain- rir5J No Gas Fall Set of Teeth extracted and fitted absolutely without paJm. bat our lata 1 iv n rums. e sieep-producing agent or eooam. The ar the only- dental pari era TT Fortlaid bavin " pauSted af- eat the leMtaln. MttsraJ teeth, and warranted foe 10 ream. jTttk- Hour A-30 to 0.-OO.SaBUyi 030 to 300. Our GARDEN HOSE Is Dependable, It is good and you can rely on it. It wears well. The PRICE IS LOW. LAMRERSON Summer School . 'V- - Gems From yNew. Books. A thousand ' time bettir are the men who do than the WeakUHg who only know.-"God W'Ul It" V. Nature works, hot for man' a enjoyment, but for her own satisfaction and her own glory. "Our National Parka," . , Time ha klndltsV uses for hla scjtth than cutting short human Uvea. HI chief use ot it is to Out off the tops ot human memories-The Usurper'.'?" ; It la as bad te slave at work as to Slav at pleasure. "But God may forgive what people cannot help. "Laaarre." lover ot love ar not lover, only. They era artists In emotion always in quest of a still more subtle sensation, a joy more intense, a grief more hitter, and are un able to remain faithful to a monotonous fidelity, a ,, tender constancy. "Tha Screen,'' : , ,, , - 4" To really enjoy the holidays one abOuM have money, uncounted money, In a coal scuttle, let us say, with a convenient little fire-shovel closr at , hand,-"Tb Last o( the Knickerbocker." v I' ve burned out the candle o''. th Lord's mercy, an' blowed the ashes In his face. Boys Our Theory... If you r fn doubt about so ' lectins a dentist, come to us and you'll make no mistake. D1V. B. E. WRIGHT, - ,i ',' S43Ji Weahsnjrton Houra, t a. m. to I p. tn. and t to t and Jobber In Manufacturers of.... Logging, Sawmill, Power Transmission And Steamboat i S -.'' A pf the Dents! Chair S&( Portland, Ore. Teeth $5.00 PORTLAND OREGON IS, HiU MUitary ACildeniy 24th Manhan Sts. Win hold Ita SUMMIR SCHOOL SESSION from JVLY let to AUGUST 3 let-open to Day atidBoro!lnsStndeiita. School esloB doring forenoons omyt eitenootA devoCee . ....... DR. J. W. HILL, MndpaL Mersballfln'l HulMiDtar Academy 34th Stt Portfauid, Or. .' . "The Sign of the Prophet" Martyrdom, the apotheosis of resigns! tlon, comes more naturally to womef, than to men, more hardly to men than U women-Count Hannibal. Th object of all government is to da atroy the necessity of any government by developing euch a publie conscInc that no other force than that of cor science will be needed to protect th) rights Of man.-"Th Right of Man' (Lyman Abbott). In some matrimonial water) are thi kind of flsh that swallow the bait bu leave the hook untouched. "By Brea( 'Alone." If you would have a noble son, be ( noble father. "144 New Epigrams." A woman never does ear for her owi soul so much as she cares for the mat she loves. But If she la good she care for his soul more than for her happlneai -or even than for his happiness. "Th Alien." - , " . France la afflicted with a new vine dli ease, caused by the Coepophagus echlpoj us,, which haa heretofore been conflo to California, ChJH and Australia. That one pleased patron brings - another U doing; Its mission nobly. Our patrons) do not hes tate to send their friends to us. ' .There's reason for It. We have '-hundreds of testimonials frpra ' people whom we have p;eased. i - Dentht - And Associates Street, eor. Seventh, p. m ' : ' v Telephone North ll. f i i-ai