Portland evening journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1902, July 18, 1902, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE EVJBNING JOITOXiAX,? PORTLAND; OttEGON, FBIIA,Y, , JTJLT- 18, 1902,, .
4
PORTLAND JOURNAL
" - ALFRED D. BOWEN. :
JOURNAL PRINTING CO.. Proprietors.
T ? . Eastern Representative: -',
lUbert B. Hasbrook. SI Times Bid.. N. s.
.' . haruora Blag., i;aicagv.
' THE INDEPENDENT AFTERNOON
PAPER OP OREGON.
Coodnourh Building, Fifth and Tamhlll
, , streets. ZS TarnhUl street
Entered, as Second-Class Mall Matter at
rostomce, roruuw, v.
TELEPHONES
Business Office; Oregon Main 600; Colunv
bla TO!
Editorial Booms: Oregon Main 250.
TERMS BV CARRIER
:'. TtfE JOURNAL, one year
THE JOURNAL alx months...
; THE JOURNAL. three months
THE JOURNAL,, by the week.
..15.00
.. 160
.. us
.. .10
""WB JOURNAL, by malt, per year--'Jl
, : run; Trirpwi. hv mail 4 months.. l.w
CITY SUBSCRIBERS.
If City Subscribers fall to secure
their paper they w;iU confer a favor
: If they will can up main 5w "
enter their complaints.
PORTLAND, ORE., JULY 18, 1002
. ' , THE BEST FAIR SITE.
" It 1 a Question of dollars and cents
that must be considered In selecting- a
site for the Lewis and Clark Fair. The
" matter ot scenic beauty Is not to be con
lldered as primal In this connection,
The point of acenlo beauty will still
- be available, ho matter where the Fair
ro. And Portland must have them to
Show to visitors, as well as the Fair it
Self. "
Gate receipts, therefore, constitute an
essential consideration and must ba taken
Into account if the Lewis and Clark dl
' rectors are to select wisely when they
vote upon the Important question tonight
Hawthorne Park offers the best facilities
. for ths easiest getting to a fair grounds.
Therefore. Hawthorne Park Is the best
site for the Fair. It meets the requlre-
menu of being where trafflo may flow
-te Jt along the lines of least resistance.
The street car lines may carry people
there one car per minute from, say
Third and TamhlU, which would amount
to (000 per hour.
Cheap, but substantial ferries could be
built, on to run each from the foot of
Taylor,-Salmon and Main streets, each
making three round trips an. hour, each
boat carrying 2000 people a trip. This
J would carry 18,000 "people an hour In tht
manner.
.Thus, by street car lines and ferries,
14,000 people per hour may be carried to
: the Hawthorne Park, which would meet
every requirement, as to transportation
facilities, j
". Furthermore, a wrong Impression has
been In the minds of the people regarding
" tna proposition to sell 85 lots of 100 by
, permanent park. It has been thought
that this was required by the Hawthorne
'.'....., .... ,(
Park advocates; but thI 18 not true-
Not one rod of ground need be bought,
If the city does not want to buy it for
" permanent park purposes. The East
' Side people oiler the 10 acres in any event.
for permanent uses as a park, and part
of Ladd's tract 1b avails, ble, so much as
' is needed, to give commodious grounds,
. free of cost, excepting the payment of the
" taxes, practically nothing.
. Let K not be forgotten that It is es
sential to provide for the gate receipts
: being Just as largo as possible. And that
scenic beauty In connection with the Fair
Should be secondary to the financial con
siderations. Furthermore, that in scenic
. beauty, the various other locations pro
posed will remain more attractive even
- than they would be were they effaced by
the work of levelling Incident to the con
struction of a great exposition.
EASTERN OREGON'S GREATNESS
- Governor-elect Chamberlain, in bis ad
dress at the Gladstone Chautauqua, on
lwls and Clark Lay, said:
"Until I bad made an Intended journey
across the eastern half or the state, I
bad not realized the vast resources and
great possibilities of that region."
-,: Mr. Chamberlain in these words said
what the majority of Western Oregon
people would say were they to say what
is true. The people of the Willamette Val
ley have not ret readied the certainty of
the tutor that awaits Eastern Oregon
-and parts of Eastern Washington.
That l really a great region, great in
Its present productiveness, and great In
wbst it ' promises. ,. Already, the grain
that pours its flood through Portland each
rear add materially to the . wealth of
the stats, sad forms a considerable por
tion ot be,bread supply.of the country.
There are Immense quantities of live
stock annually sold la the packers, Ttere
are tralnload of fruit. . There are In
, .' , ' . i
creasing dairy , products. There are
mines. There is timber. There is every-
thing that Oregon anywhere has er pro-
duces. '
Yet, as Mr. Chamberlain said, - the peo-
pie here are accustomed to look upon
that region as given over to sagebrush
and Jackrabbtts, Inhabited by cowboys
and Indians, and, susceptible of develop
ment only by the legerdemain of some one
who has not yet appeared to pronounce
tils exorcUm of evil spirits and conjuring
of the good ones. , '
Without Eastern Oregon, Portland
would be sadly lacking In business with
which to grow and become the great city
it is destined to be. Without Eastern
Oregon, Portland would not b a city of
100,000 people, ' with promise that it will
become one of half a. million before
many decades elapse.
It is demonstrative of the breadth ot
observation possessed by the 'Governor-
elect, that he has come to a realisation
of these facts. It Indicates that he will
broaden the scope of things at Salem,
and permit his vision to range over ter
ritory larger than that comprised within
the limits cf Hhe Willamette Valley.
ABROGATING AGREEMENTS.
As The Journal has frequently set forth,
the Chicago strike of freight-handlers
Drought to the front the question as to
the responsibility of the labor union. The
after situation there Is one that involves
this veryolnt It Is said that the em
ployers are desirous that the sympathetic
strike be done away, and that they rea
son that so long as It be used by the
labor forces It will operate to Induce
the abrogation of agreements made by
unions not directly, concerned in the
utriie.
One cannot get away from this ques
tion. In the discussion of labor matters.
It Is crucial.
If the union is to be the instrument
with which the laborer Is to fight his
battles and fight them to success, there
must be forae sort of plan whereby the
union is to be placed in a position of legal
responsibility. The employer Is so placed
already. He may be sued. He may be
called Into court, and compelled - to
answer if he violate an agreement that
has taken the form of a legal contract,
written, verbal Of implied.
Let It be noted that one just cause for
complaint against many corporations dur
ing recent years has been that they have
been abla too often to elude responsibility
for disasters and losses of life caused In
i
some instances by too great parsimony
and inadequate facilities provided under
a too rigid regime of cutting off expenses.
Such Instances are numerous, such as
the New Tork tunnel horror, and a mul
titude of others.
But, In the main, the employer Is legal-
ly responsible, and the union must be
the same if It Is to be the means whereby
the laborers are to win their victory.
THE PROPOSITION IN CHICAGO
THAT UNIONS SHALL RESERVE THE
RIGHT TO ABROGATE AGREEMENTS
WITH EMPLOYERS in order to suable
the joining with sympathetic strikes, is
not to be supported. It Is subversive of
all justice and fairness.
OREGON BOYS FOR PROFESSORS
Charles A. Redmond, Oregonlan. has
been elected to the chair of history an
economics at the Ashland State Normal
School. He Is a native of Yamhill County,
Is 26 years old, and Is an alumnus of the
University of Oregon, at Eugene. He Is
one of many bright young men who have
been placed in professorships ot Oregon
institutions and who promise to honor
their alma maters, their state and them
selves.
There will be general indorsement of
this plan of filling chairs in Oregon edu
cational institutions with Oregon men.
It will even be granted that oftentimes
atlvlty shall overwelgh slightly greater
ability on the "part of an applicant from
another state.
However, there may be too radical an
ppllcatlon of this, and it may operate
to the detriment of the systems ot edu
cation that are maintained here In this
state.
It Is not desirable that all teachers In
Oregon schools be men and women who
are native here. It Is good that oc
casionally someone come from elsewhere,
to Infuse new blooa ana inculcate new
Ideas into the conduct of the schools.
Indeed, It is this very lack of provincial
ism that makes this Nation great. It
the lack of lines of demarkation to
make state separate from state to too
great an extent, that creates homogen
eity, and makes for solidity.
It will be by a compromise between the
advocates of employing only Oregon-born
people in the schools of the state, and
those who would always be Importing
from the East os-other Western states, it
only by such a compromise that the
ideal results will be attained.
TRACY MUST BE CAPTURED,
Tracy must be captured, dead or alive.
If law Is to be respected, If outlawry is to
be less than heroism in the eyes ot the
people, the convict "must be brought to
the gallows, or shot down as he attempts
to escape from his pursuers. The ex-
pivu. oi i. iw mm nersioea jn tne
A. . 1 -. A a, . . m m . m . .
dally 09wpaprs, as talked npon every J
street corner, as debated. In every horn
on the Coast, with a marked? U-adency.
towards maudlin sentimentality; ' h
sympathy with hi bloody career, argh
I that the good of society demands his
destruction.
It la amaxlne to hear at times and
from people of refinement sentiments that
are In pal'latlon of the red-handed crimes
now charged to Tracy. It Is unthinkable
that men and women of good morals will
intimate that such a vllllan ought to go
free.
Tet, such things are heard frequently,
and from people who ought to know bet'
ter.
Tracy's crimes and the pursuit thus
far fruitless, have become paramount Is.
sues here upon the Pacific Coast. They
call for-determination on the part of the
officers, and demand that executives ex
hlblt no parsimony In providing funds
to keep up the chase.
The very structure of human society
Is endangered by such Incidents. In
deed,"" the Tracy affair goes beyond the
mere Incident. It becomes of vast 1m
portance upon the future of the Coast
communities, which have progressed
away from the primitive Ideas of law
and order that, were born of the limits
tlons met by the early settlers. Penlten
tlarles must be secure places In which
criminals may be kept. And when men
escape therefrom, they must be pursued
to the end that they and others learn
that law Is higher than individuals, and
he who violates law will suffer dire pen
alUes.
GENERAL SMITH'S DISGRACE,
Let no man speak of the American
Army any word that does not upheld Its
honor, and indicate admiration and re
ajiect for the men who carry the flag.
Let no man do aught that will smirch
the- honor of that organisation that holds
the love of the Nation.
Therefore, let General Jacob H. Smith,
guilty of what was reprehensible, and
what brought shame upon that Army, go
from the service, and let his name be
stricken from the rolls. Let his expert
ence be a warning to all men that they
must do nothing that will not uphold
the honor and reputation of the defend
ers -of the flag.
It was not less love for the Army that
prompted the trial and censure of Gen
eral Smith. Rather, It was deeper love
and greater respect for the military
that urged that' practices should be
stopped that were not calculated to dig
nify the Army in the eyes of the people
here at home and In the archipelago.
It was fortunate that the decision of
the court-martial was not rendered dur
ing the time Congress was In session, for
then had fnome of the firebrands made
of themselves, and
brought further Ignominy upon their
names. It was good for the Democratic
party that those few radicals had not
the opportunity to exploit their detests-
ble reflections upon the boys who have
been carrying the Stars and Stripes over
the plains of Luzon and through the
swamps of Samar,
It is for the Army that General Smith
was tried, ana it Is for the Army that
President Roosevelt writes his name In
signature of a document that dismisses
from service an officer whose course was
sure to lower the standard of humanity
and bring upon the name of our people
the never-dying hatred of the people of
the Islands.
The dismissal of General Smith from
the Army for wrong-doing as a command
ing officer in the Philippines, proves that
both the factions In Congress were wrong;
that Is. U . we accept President Roose
velt's final action as founded upon Just
findings of the court-martial. It's an
other instance of a dispute over the pro
nunciation of either, and the Irishman
coming In with 'ayther." At any rate,
it demonstrates that It Is not all of wis
dom to be a Republican leader on the
floors of Congress, nor all of the opposite
to be on the other side.
In the defeat of the brilliant Spooner
of Wisconsin in the Republican state con
vention, the cause of primary' election
legislation triumphed. And If that be
true, as Indicated In the dispatches, then
will it but again prove that often men
of less ability may, do more for the
people than those of larger powers. De
sire to do good' is essential, quite as es
sential as the potency so to do.
It will require Ingenious reasoning to
refuse the $1500 reward for Merrill's body.
dead or olive, to the woman who has
gone to Salem to claim the money. He
certalnley Is dead, and it was not nom
inated In the bond that the taker ot the
reward wes himself or herself to do the
kiting.
How many people In the world could
toll you today the name and previous of
ficial position of the present' Premier of
England?
Great Expectations.
I'So you ' want td marry my daughter?
What are your expectations?". . .
"We expect to elope If - you refuse
your consent to our marriage, ana we
expect' forgiveness when we gsVtfeack.
Then we expect you to make fnV an al
lowance." Pearson's Weekly.
rtesldente ot Buffalo, N. Y., use more
water than any other city In the world,
'Es JOURNAL StiOKT STORT!
They had hauled him souffllng out of
a coal bunk one morning where he had
managed to stow away, and where he
had lain curled up 'until the steamer was
well clear of land.' !V
Back somewhere at one of the South
American ports Rio most likely he had
sneaked on board art dusk, and crept rat
like to the security of the coal bunk. And
now, dragged Into the light of day or,
rather, such light as penetrated Into
the grimy darkness he stood and grinned
like a detected schoolboy at the little
knot of firemen who bad ferreted htm
out of retreat .
Old Peters, . the boatswain, who had
gone below to investigate, pushed his cap
far back on his head and combed hi
grizzled beard with -a meditative Btrokv
of the hand as ho regarded the stowaway.
What should they do with him? The im
mortal Dick, If hs bad been present,
would have decided promptly and em
phatically, "Wash him!" For ha cer
tainly needed It The layer of tan which
had spread over his scraggy face was
capped by an additional film of coal
grime, and the whites of the fellow's
eyes, as be looked around him with an
affected easy, devil-may-care expression.
were the only distinguishable marks in
his features.
'I've 'arf a mini to turn the hose on
Mm," said the boatswain, as he regarded
the object of Interest that stood mute
before him. But eventually he decided to
take his quarry alone to the captain just
as he had been discovered. He was drag.
ged up on deck no, not dragged exactly,
for there was some Indefinable touch of
distinction about the, man despite his gro
tesque appearance that made itself felt
to his rough captors and they led him
quietly, almost respectfully, Into the cap
tain's presence.
The Interview turned principally upon
the unknown's ability to work his pass
age, now that then was no means of get
ting rid of him until they touched at one
of the West Indian ports. On that point
the stowaway, speaking for the first time
and with eagerness, jjave an ample as
surance. He knew all ubout machinery.
he said, and if they wanted nn extra hand
In the engine room, why, he was ready
to turn to with oil can or xhovel that in.
stant Hli name?
"No, that is my own concern nobody
else's, lama Welehman," he said, quiet
ly. "My reople are well known In Car.
dlff. Perhaps I could tell a tale If I lfked.
Perhaps I couldn't. It doe in' t matter to
anybody." And he looked at the captain
with eyes that meant he had said all
he Intended to say on these points.
It so happened that they were short.
handed enough in the engine-room that
run, and the captain turned him over to
the burly, prowling Scotch engineer, who
did not seem to regard him with any great
favor. "Taffy," as he was called, dis
appeared below, and succeeded within an
hour In completely reversing: the engine
ers opinion. The latter, who stood by to
watch him. could see with half an eve '
that the man was quite at home among
the throbbing, pulsing engine, and turned
away with the growling comment "He'll
da"
Thoy had. few passengers aboard that
trip, and In the dusk of the evening, when
Taffy stole up for a mouthful of fresh
a'r, he noticed a dainty, -little childish
fgure go skipping along the deck. He
stood there, with his grimy head poked
out into the softly charging! twilight,
watching her. Every tlmi She turned and
skipped past him his notable eyes slewed
Strange, But True. .
One of the most important Industries at
taching to the cheap power now produced
by Niagara Is the electrical tearing apart
of the molecule of common salt resulting
In the formation of caustic soda and
bleaching powder.
One of the "Peculiar People"' In Hol
land recently broke his arm. He declined
to call in doctor, and wrapped a leaf out
of a bible round ttn small toe of his left
foot. He duelures that his gave him In
stant relief. He still walks about with a
broken arm.
An outbreak of fire occured under ex
traordinary circumstances at Aston, Eng
land. There were placed In the window
of Mr. Salt's chemist shop "Six Ways,
Aston, a number of bottles containing
chemical solutions and rays of the sun
were focused by the gloss on to some
celluloid articles behind which eventually
Ignited.
SONG OF THE CAPTAIN OF
INDUSTRY
When I was a lad I managed to squirm
In an office boy for a brokerage firm;
I cleaned the rug and the cuspidor,
And at lust bought and sold things on the
floor
I pushed along so successfully.; .
That now I am caittain of Industrie.
I watched the ticker and Itook a chance.
Now nnd then, on a slump or a sharp ad
vance; i
Things happened somehow to turn my
way, ; .
And I bought out the brokerage firm one
day
Then I was the firm and the firm was me,
I'd become a captain of lndustree.
I watched my chanoe anil I gpbblod blocks
Of what I knew to bt- gilt-edged Btocks
I gobbled stocks wherever I could.
And wrecked roads where It would do me
good;
The money came rolling In to me,
And so I'm a captain of lndustree. .
I've a marble shack on the avenue,
And a brownstone cottage at Newport,
too;
I've a Bplendld yacht and a private car".
And my fame's wherever the -railroads
are
I have pulled the strings so successfully
That now I'm a captain of lndustree.
Oh, I often think of those days when I
Gave my broker orders to sell and buy.
And my heart stands still and my face
fets pale, -might
have gone from the floor to
Jail ..
I used funds not belonging to me'
In becoming a captain of lndustree."
I have dined where a Prince sat down
' to dine, v .
And few have wads that are bigger than
mine; i .
I possess two hundred million plunks,
When I travel I take alonv nia-hiv trunks.
Oh, I tell you what, It is great to bs
A glorious captain of lndustree.
S. B. Kiser in Chicago Record-Herald. 1
round and followed her. And as hs
gazed wistfully after the merry Innocent
little creature the "apple" In his bare
throat' moved as if with a gulp.
Ay, perhaps he could have told a tale
if he had chosen.
Every evening after that hs slipped
away from the engine-room at the sams
hoar, and looked anxiously out along the
deck. The child was nearly always there.
Sometimes she smiled up at the greasy
watching face as she went past, and
Taffy carried that smile below with him.
wrapped Op in some odd corner of bis
heart
The steamer had run into St Pierre,
and was lying snugged up close to the
shelving beach. They were to sail again
next day. and it was a busy night on
board, Cargo had to be unloaded and
fresh freight shipped from the barge's
alongside
Taffy, being an "odd man," ' had been
put on the donkey engine, which he work
ed steadily throughout the evening. Many
a time, while waiting for the word to
"heave," his eye turned restlessly to ths
distant summit of Mont Pelee, towering
high up there in the darkling heavens.
The huge mountain was growling -and
rumbling ominously, and there was a
strange, lifeles lull in the air, like that
which Betokens an approaching thunder
clap.
It was far Into the night before he was
released from his post and free to turn
in for a few hours. Heavy and weary,
he tumbled Into his bunk, and was soon
fast asleep.
What was It that woke him? A strange
moaning Sound coming from the land
broke on his ears. He sat up in his
bunk. Something was about to happen.
lie felt the mysterious, unknown calami.
ty coming.
The air seemed to shiver and then to
stand stIU. A flash, mors vivid and) blind
ing than the lightning followed, and then
It seemed to him as If all the machinery
In the world all that he had ever seen
or handled had beert collected In one spot
and had exploded at the same instant.
For one breathless second he sat there
in his bunk, staring wtftfeyed and open-
mouthed. The next he was oh the floor.
as If he had been hurled there. He
dashed up on deck, whence screams ag
onized screams reached him!
iHis Bhipmates, passengers and crew
were running madly about there. And
no wonder. Taffy ran also, but his eyes
were searching frantically through the
fiery deluge. The child the child!
He found her found her screaming and
panic-stricken under the bridge with her
little ha nd prrased to her nostrils to shut
out the deadly, suffocating fumes. He
picked her up, snuggle her to his breast.
and ran again. The burning hail beat
upon his bent back, the fire in the air
scorched and shriveled him, but still he
ran. Down he plunged far down Into
the body of the ship, where the blighting
fumes had not penetrated and the Are
from the sky could not reach them. And
there, In some dark comer, he fell
When the Intrepid rescuers who even
tually saved the pitiful remnant of the
crew explored the hold of that steamer
they found a man a man who had evi
dently been In his bunk when the fire
smote the ship lying dead there. But
underneath that -scarred and blackened
body there was a living, breathing child.
And so he perished.
in the official list of those who lost
the Ir lives on board the steamer he was
rated as "One Unknown.
HINTS TO WOMEN
STILL IN HIGH, FAVOR.
White pique, duck and linen gowns are
always popular, and 'this season, in spite
of the myrald new styles In cotton gowns,
are as fashionable as ever. It may not
be so smart to wear shortwalsts and sep
arate skirts as to wear a gown the waist
and skirt of which are of the same ma
terial, but with the white waists the
fact that the skirts, are different, pro
vided the skirts are white. Is never no
ticeable.
THE MORNING VEIL.
The use of crepe for mourning veils is
becoming less every day, and in summer
the crlnkley fabric Is scarcely seen. For
widows or other women wearing deej
mourning it is the fancy at present
wear a short veil of fine grenadine or
gauze, falling in graceful folds at the
oacjc ana draped on a bonnet frame of
light weight edged with a narrow band
of crepe. A ' bow of crepe adorns the
front or the bonnet.
THB SUMMER CURTAINS.
In the season's showing of curtain fab
rics nothing presents more attraction for
use In summer homes or cottages than
the white or white and. cream madras, a
thin, scrim-like material having a closely j
strewed pattern over It that Is done in
fluffy lace, much like the snowflake ma
terials, ii may oe naa in cotton at a
"mere song," and by the yard, a boon to
housekeepers, since curtains may be
made of any desired or necessary length.
They are best shirred over the window
poles, whether these be of wood or brass.
SMART AND PRETTY.
Pongee jackets are quite new and are
especially attractive. An example In the
natural hue is embroidered in black silk
floss. It Is' made with a yoke lncruste-1
with black lace medallions and. a box-
platted body, The sleeves are flowing and
are finished at the harder with lace me
dallions. The jaunty, narrow turnBown
collar has the lace medallions and at the
finish, at the front, are long streamers
of black velvet ribbon, satin-faced, an
Inch and a half wide.
This Troublesome World.
Tired latter Don't you wish you wus
one uv dem guys wot ain't got nothin'
but coinT -
Weary Walker Not ennymy boy.Wy.
jest t'lnk some uv dem blokes has ter
Changs dere shirts twlcs er week. Dallas
WW!. -! .
F 1 e c H e ri s t e i n M a y e r jC o .
'' Importers of and Jobbers in. -
, . WINES AND LIQUORS
Of wfdeh W carry a fuO and complete One. - 23S Oak St, Portland, Or.
Is Your Power Transmission
f AO that it should be? Perhaps you know H to ? AD -out
of whack,? but cannot find time to take care of it
Drop us a line to come down and look It over, and
we will make recommendations which may prove of
value.' ' ; '
Willamette
Works,
No More Dread of the Dental Chair
New York Dental Parlors
. 4th and Morrison Sts., Portland, Ore.
No Pain -v2
"'VsMssA' 11 ftf Ai
, Full Set of Teeth $5.00
Teeth extracted and filled absolutely without pain, but our late seieattfle
method applied to the rums. No sleep-producing agents or cocaine.
These are the only dental parlors in Portland having patented appli
ances and Ingredients te extract SHI and apply gold crown and porcelain
srowns undeectable from natural teeth, and warranted for 10 years. .With
out the least pals.
Hours: 8:30 to B.-OO--Sunday! &30 to 2:00.
HILL
MILITARY
ACADEMY,
Special courses In, modern languages and music. New buildings;
modern equipment; private sleeping rooms; no open dormitory; re
creation rooms; large armory; athletics promoted and encouraged;
chemical and physical laboratories; experienced faculty.
A boarding and day school for boys of all ages; younger boys
separate. For catalogue, etc., apply to
DR. J. W. HILL, Principal,
MARSHALL AND TWENTY-FOURTH ST. PORTLAND OR.
Fall term opens September 17.
THE PORTLAND
PORTLAND,
AMERICAN
PLAN
HEADQUARTERS FOR TOURISTS AND COMMERCIAL TRAVELERS
Special rates' made to families and single gentlemen. The manage
ment will be pleased at all times to show rooms and give prices. A
modern Turkish bath establishment In the hotel. ' r'
H. C. BOWERS, nanager.
BELOW COST i
EDISON ELECTRIC LAMPS J
To consumers of current from our mains we are now selling LAMPS
AT ISc EACH, or $1.75 PER DOZEN. These are the same lamps
that we formerly sold at 25c each, and are made expressly for us. J
Buy Them If You Want the Best.
Delivered in Dozen Lots Free of Charge.
t Portland General Electric Co.
A SOUND TEETH- ARE NECESSARY
Queen .to both health and beauty. We attend
Is SHe .to ; neglected teeth in .the best, approved
WKom, rnanner, without inflicting pain, at lowest
HefiltH P$sible cost consfstent with good ' work
, and with lasting and guaranteed results.
Beauty Crown and Bridge Work
Bless a Specialty.
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DIL B. E. WRIGHT, Dentist And Associates ;
I 342J Washington Street, cor. Seventh. . " v.
Honrs. I a. my to 8 p. m. and ? to 8 p. m. ; ' i Telephone Korth tin.
Iron b Steel
PORTLAND, OREGON
No Gas
The Success and High Standing
Of many hundreds of Dr. Hill's graduates and former pu-
pils during the last 23 years indicate the merit of his
i methods. Prepares for college in Classical. Scientific) and
English courses. Regular course is practical training for
business life. Manual training and mechanical drawing.
OREGON-
$3.00 Per Day
and Upward
1