Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Portland evening journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1902 | View Entire Issue (July 22, 1902)
5SStt8?3v':; " ' ; ' " : '-i THE EVEXKTG JOURNAL. , PORTlIrfrNDQBEGO FACETIOUS Merrill Makes Pointed Remarks About Millionaires' Shacks. ; rytd T. Man-Ill, councilman from the '". ftilrd ward, was not at the special meet ing of the council this afternoon, ha hav T(; cone to San Franclaco on a pleasure irip . Mr Merrill, howavar, waasufficlently in terested tn the question 'to'Vpme -fcefbre . the civic fathers to express his opinions thereon tn a letter to City Auditor Dev lin. " With reference to the improvement of Hawthorne avenue Mr. Merrill Is of the Beeided opinion that the residents of that vicinity should pay the cost of strict im provement and tn this opinion he Is not : without support from his fellow council man. But in the matter of the fire situation, Mr. Merrill has become an object of sus picion and some of his fellows who ait at OREGON CITY. Everybody Ready for the Qro . cers' Picnic Tomorrow. , OREGON CITr, jjuly .-Jaorge Oil Strap, for several years past employed In Johnson's barber shop, leaves August t or Uttle While Salmon, where he win take a position with the U. S. Fish Commission at that point He expects to remain there permanently. ' 4. H. Howard, John W. Kelly and C. ; tk Woodward went to Portland today to ' attend the Great Council of Red Men. Federal Labor Union, No. 9768, met last night and advanced 1 to the committee In charge of the tabor Day -celebration. Preparation for the celebration are be ing actively pushed, and the affair will . throw anything of a similar nature In the hade. The union sentiment In Oregon City is strong and is steadily increasing. Miss Jessie P. Thompson and Edward L. Bryans Were married yesterday by Justice of the Peace Btlpp. i,, Nearly all of tha stores in the city will close ..tomorrow morning and remain closed all day, In order to give both em ployer and employe an opportunity to attend the grocers' picnic in Canemah Park. Five thousand people are expect' d up from Portland, and preparations ,, are being made for their reception. The program fur the entertainment of those attending the picnic will be varied and Interesting, There will be land and water sports of all descriptions and a baseball game." Dancing Will be indulged in dur ing the day and evening in the Canemah Park pavilion and the Falls will be bril liantly illuminated. A spectacular dis play of fireworks is also one of the fea ture. " "" '-' t! ft: The date for the Bartender's League to meet baa been changed from Monday to Tuesday afternoons. The Building Trades . Council met last v night, and transacted the regular rou tine of business. There waa a good at tendance. A report showed that the various) tradesmen in the building line are wall employed all over tne city with the exception of the painters. This is . their dull season, but as soon as some of , the numerous buildings being erected are . completed work with them will again be brisk. A. Madaen, president of the Water " Front Federation, is expected home Thursday from Chicago, where he has been attending the convention of the in ternational association. At tha conven tion Urs.M&dsen was honored with a Ylotf-pretldency of the organisation. Circulars are being distributed through out the city from Los" Angeles warning ail laboring clasies to stay away from trier. Attention Ib drawn to the fact that the Los Angeles Times Is endeavoring to flood tnt city with, mechanics with the ' object in view of crushing organized la bor. The Walters' Alliance held Its first Meeting last night under Its new officers. An interesting session is reported. One new member waa initiated and four ap plicants for membership were received. The organisation is gaining in strength at each meeting. T. 'W. HornbacU and Rex Romayne. of Local No. 821, Baker City, have trans- ferred their' cards to the Portland Walt ers' Alliance, and are now active mem- ' bars here. The Laundry Workers are preparing for their moonlight excursion ou the river Thursday night. They have the steamer : Albany chartered for the occasion. Mu sic and dancing are the leading features of the entertainment, which will be pro vided. Othsr dates for the same purpose pave been fixed for August 8, August 2i ' and September 6. The Laundry Workers held their regu ; Jar meeting last night and initiated , seven -new members. They are how : among the strong labor organizations In the city. f .Tn members of the Retail Merchants' association will enjoy a picnic at Cane , maa Park tomorrow. Retail ana whole ' tat 4 merchants from other cities will attend, and It is estimated that fully ' WOO people' will b present. There will Tie lancing tn the park pavilions all day and In the evening, baseball and other athletic features will make up the pro gram. ."'"' , - B. P Pratt, an Amalgamated Wood worker, hag returned from a visit to As toria, lie reports that the hew union mill there is busy filling large orders lor Eastern Brms, and that It will soon toabl its working lore. - WHITJB COLLAR UNB BOATS . - Astoria,' dally T a. m except Sunday. , The Dalles, dally, t a. la., except Sua. ay. - ' Aider attest dock. . Totfe 'phonss, Main Uy V.'. i ' ' UBOH DOTES FREDDY the council table with him are seriously debating- whether or not the detectives of tha city shall be set upon his trail. The cause of all the disturbance Is the follow ing paragraph from' his latter to City Auditor Devlin The suspected man says wish te say, however, in reference to purchasing hose and horses for the Klre Department, that I sincerely trust lhat there will be a way figured out of purchasing these, necessary supplies for the Fire Department at ones without making the individual members of the council personally responsible, and If It cannot be done otherwise, you may place me on record as taking a chance at beln liable for It myself as the ctty needs pro tection. It would certainly be a shame to have some of these millionaires' old shacks burned, down before the 1905 Lewis and Clark Fair:" RIVER AND OCEAN. The Portland Asiatic steamer Indra- samha will sail tor the Orient Monday with 10,000 barrels of flour. The schooner Herman, fitted out at an expense of $18,000. has Isft Ban Francisco for the South Baas, presumably to search for $70,000,000 supposed to have been hid' den on an Island by a mutinous crew of a Japanese ship. The Frenchbark Asie completed loading Lher wheat cargo at Montgomery lock No. I. She is under charter to Balfour, Qutn rle & Co. Her 'crew has signed and she is ready to leave down. The Asie has been here since early last winter. Thirty people left Oft the boat from the Oak-street dock yesterday for the St. Martin Springs. The hotel at that place is said to be crowded. Many of those going from here are taking camping out fits along and will spend several weeks therf. The British ship Sierra Ventanna has arrived out at Falmouth after a voyage of 125 days from this port The British ship Carnorvan Boy, which sailed In the opposite direction, passed Noah Bay on the same day, 125 days out from Ola gdw. The government has Issued a new olr cular affecting sailors' allotments. It pro vldes that the allotment to ae original creditor Or other parson must not under any circumstances exceed $25, nor shall It exceed the amount authorised lu the rulings applicable to any particular case. The ruling applies only to vessels foreign bound or bound around the Horn, and not to coasters. Washington pilots have filed an Infor matlon in the Superior Court of Jefferson County against Pilot David Patterson, of Vancouver, B. C, for infringing on the Washington, pilot laws. It is claimed that Patterson recently brought the steamer Cymbellne from British waters to Puget Sound waters without surrender ing her to a WasMngtdn pilot. A Wash ington man offered, his services at Port Townsend, but the offer was rejected, Pilot Patterson satled.on to Tacoma and completed his cargo. He will be arrested the next time he comes in to port. Loaded with 181,418 bushels of wheat, and repaired of the injuries received by capsizing in Portland harbor last Decem ber, the French bark Asie will leave down the river today bound foe the Uni ted KingdonVfdr orders The Asie' masts, spars and rigging have been almost com pletely fenewed. On December IS, after being In port but a few days, she keeled over at her wharf. The tall masts and yards went crashing onto the dock and the steel masts were snapped like pipe sterna The spars were shattered and the rigging was cut to pieces. The re pairs have cost thousands of dollars, and were oompleted only a week ago. The bark is dispatched by Balfour, ' Guthrie & Company. MINING NOTES. The Almeda Mining Company of Port land, which ia working on an extension of the Big Tank mine, on Rogue River, of the Oallce district, is meeting with success in the development of its prop erty. The Etna Advance says it Is reported that a long tunnel will be commenced at the Yellow Rose of Texas quarts mine right away. This property is located on the headwaters of the Salmon River, near the Dorleska, but In Siskiyou County. The property Is owned by George L. Carr. At Kalama. Wash., the Darnell Mining & Milling Company Is excavating the ground for the buildings for its 60-ton cyanide plant. The building will be S8X S3 feet, built In steps so that no shovel ing of tha ore will be required. The plant will consist of a 50-horie-powor engine and boiler, a mammoth rock crusher and an ore mill, besides four cyanide tanks and a dynamo for electric lights above and below the ground. The mining output for the Bohemia district has been approximately as fol lows: 1893, $11,000; 18H, $23,000; iggg, $24,600; 1S96. $27,000; 1897. $45,00; 1898, $50,000; 1899, $7,000; 1900. $12,000; 1901, $200,000; total, $578,400. Most of this ore was treated by stamp mills and concentrating tables. The activity in the district has increased from year to year and some very rich strikes have been made during the Jast II months. Conservative estimates place the value in the mines awaiting the trans portation facilities at over $5,000,000. BIRTHS- To Mrs. George Balder. 4 Klrby street, on July 19, a boy. . NTowisihe Time FOG FOR THE FACE. Women Now. Give It First Place In List of Cosmetics. Strangely enough, the one complexion specific which has received scant atten tion, or no attention at all, from writers for the beauty column is fog. And yet, for the moment, It Is perhaps the most fashionable of all cosmetics. At any rate, soma smart women in society have taken It up, and head the list of Its most enthusiastic advocates. . Having once tried fog, they say, none will ever again do without It. Unfortunately fog is not put up in pack ages, nor can it be bought by the bottle. Furthermore, the only way to get the best results from its remedial properties is to settle down to a two or three months'" stay at the seashore, a plan of action which puts the price of the fog complexion remedy pretty high. . It was at Newport last summer that the adoption of this recipe by the resi dents became so general as to create a fashion. Before the end of the season the fad was copied at many seashore re sorts of lesser note and generally ap proved. The American woman, as a rule. Is not unduly modest in an estimate of her own personal attractions, but neither is she so conceited as to refuse to make use of any means wnereDy tney may be en hanced. She has never envied the Eng lish woman, either her gowns or her fig ure, but it may as well be confessed that she has always been secretly jealous of the British complexion which she discov ered long ago was due entirely to Climate, and not to cosmetics, to fog rather than to race massage. New York Tribune. The League Against Dueling. when Count Tacoll, two years ago, re- rused to fight a duel, for religious reas ons, and was consequently expelled' from the Austria court and army, lie hardly thought that he was gaining an Jm mense number of neon I e over to his cause. But he diu so as a matter of fact, and me outcome or the courageous stand be made is the League Against Dueling, which was formed in Austria, where, when it had been la existence no longer than eight months, it caused Parliament to pass a special law forbidding duels to be fought. Next, it spread to Per many, where the Emperor himself gave It his entire approval. Just now it is be ing introduced in France, and though there is no longer any such grim neces-t alty for an Institution of this kind as In tne days of Anne of Austria, when, as has been authenticated, no fewer than MOO gentlemen perished in duels, there Is still plenty of chance for the league to prevent awkward encounters. May it therefore, flourish as It deserved. ODDS OF INFORMATION When the French General, Bourbak, retreated Into Bwitseland before the emg.,raiea wa.;;is. Ww Germans In 1871 he sold 10.000 horses to- here "he """ beached and U now beln the Swiss. All these horses are dead but exhibited, as a,hlrlc sellc. . one, owned by a butcher at Bern a. - , FOUND MANT 9KBIETONB, ... A New York dealer ripens pineapples for the market, by, artificial process, H puts thern In a room heated to 110 de- grees and ordinarily three and a half or four days are required to thoroughly ripen the fruit. New Jersey has ranked sixth in value. of manufactured products for 40 years. The wage-earners of the state are 12.1 per cent of the total population, and among them are 60,000 women and 8000 children. Molasculty ia the name of a new cat tle food made In the West Indies. It consists of 80 to K5 per . cent of molasses and 15 to 20 per cent of cush-cush, the finest port of the fiber of the sugar cane. . . Of the silks used In the United States. r-'e.OOii.OOO worth are imported and 107,- 000,000 worth home made. The domestic silk Industry employs 24,0 men, 0,000 I worrten and Bono children In 483 mllls,'wlth S81.000.000 capital. The umbrella and paraol were used by .1 rr..... ., ...I me raBiern nauona many centuries De- fore the Christian area. The oldest china J ware anuws pu-iures or laaies ana man darlns snadod by parasols of pattern similar to those now lu use. Christian Smith, the oldest locomotive engineer living, whose home Is near Har per's Kerry, ran the first engine on the Baltimore Railroad at a speed from six to eight , miles an hour, which was con sidered rapid for those days. All the employes of the Barnum & Bai ley clrucs, now traveling in Kurope, are total abstainers, to which fact Is at tributed the military-like percislon with which the great organisation Is handled and the small percentage of accidents. Cato learned Greek at 80. but nobody has evr claimed that it prolonged his life. A Pennsylvania man at 8Q stopped using tomacco, and he relebrated his 101st birthday recently, says the Buenos Ayres Weekly Herald. At the. time of the Roman occupation of Britain five distinct species of dogs were there, most of which can with cer talnty be Identified with those of the present day. There were the housedog, the greyhound, the bulldog, the terrier and the slowhound. The new battleship Mikasa. built for Japan at Portsmouth. Englnnd. Is ready for her trial trip. She is 15,200 tons bur den and is spoken of by experts as tha finest fighting machine afloat. A contract for the building of a sugar mill by the State of Arkansas has been signed and ratified by the state peniten tiary board and the Governor DEATHS. J. W. H. Miller, 84, Portland Sanitar ium, on July 20, appendicitis. Kate Sprenger, Tl, 212 Seventh, on July 20, gastritis. Geo. Woodruff, 295 Flanders, on July U, pistol shot. Jas. Muvaney, 29, Good Samaritan, on July 20, heat prostration. Tha Edward Holmam Undertak ing Co faaeral directors svad em b aimers. S80 TasaaUl. Paame 607. J. P. Flnley & Son. Undertakers and Embalmer., corner Third and Jefferson streets, do flrt-cla$ work and deal honorably with all. Otto Schumann. - monumental and building work, 204 Third St. E.tl- mates on first ciaju wortconly. Clarke Bros, forf lower.' 898 Mori rison atreet. ' HERE'S THE It is a &ad thin? to think mfeans the absence of one-half that goes to make home beau tiful andT cheerful. For the growing: family the Importance of music In the home cannot be over estimated. In view ef our liberal renting offer it is a wonder that any home in Oregon should be found without the refining In fluence of a good piano or organ. We will allow you to select a good new upright and rent it from us for as little af $4.00 a month, and cost of cartage (usually $a.oo or $3.00). If, after you have thoroughly tried the Instrument, you desire to purchase it, we will allow you on its purchase all you have paid Us for rent and cartage, less simple interest. The balance due you may pay off in easy monthly install ments. There ia no family on the Coast that need be without a good piano. Eilers Piano House, 331 Washington St., opposite Cord ray's Theatre. Pour stores: Portland, San Francisco, Spokane and Sacramento. TERRORS OF THE SEA SEEN BY A DIVER Dick MXyer, Jr, a deep sea diver well known1 on this Coast, has arrived In Se attle, says the Star. lie expects to work on the sunken ateanpshlp Islander, the exact location of which. Captain Hope and associates are. no W attempting to And, with tho object of recovering some of the treatsure aboard. . Mr. Myr has Wed en- gaged in his .. dangerous trade since he was a email boy, and gives some inter esting aocounta of-hlg' experiences.- "la im.1' he said, "-I was engaged In a novel .undertaking.- In? January of tha year the London. Htusetirn began 'the task of raising the old English mair of war Success of Melbornei which had sunk oft - the Australian. ,eoast In the. year, 1810, I AO 9 snip-was. oi-in v,. "I was one ut the divers engaged lnr raisin -her. Tha tab lasted seven tnonthat hweariv ts.ooo ooo worth of treasure waa found in the Bhtp; .Thta Jnjludd. money, large "sliver and gold vases,, and a large amount of gold from the Australian mines. . 'The Success had been, engaged In car rying convicts front England to' Austra lia, and the skeletons of many of the un fortunates were found In the hold of the vessel. The heavy, cruel chains and balls were still fastened to the arms and legs of the skeletons, making a most grew some sight. After being raised the rot ten old ship was brought to Melbourne, and there repaired sufTtolently to enable her to be towed to England. She was taken by way of the Cape of Good Hope, the passage taking 102 days. Two divers, Harry Jones and Mike MoCloud..lost their uvea while working on that ship 1 help- ed to save th life of John tambers, who aa also working there, His life line a ir iD, he-th cauaht in the rigging of tne gnlPi and j WBS Bf0t aown to.see what was the matter. On. discovering the .trouble, I cut. the air pipe and gave the signal to pull Lambers up. The latter's life, was saved, but his face Is still blacp from the terrible choking her received, He now lives in Liverpool. . A MONSTER CRAB. 'The only times I was ever frightened were when I was working for the gov crnment of Pago Paao.' Samoa, While 1 was deep In the water blasting a coral reef, one of the natives, who are most ex cellent swimmers, dived nearly 50 feet down, and hit me on the head. Being unable to see plainly I thought .be was a shark. On this same Job a huge turtle crab caught my right thigh with his legs, five feet in length, and gripped It (Ike a vice. I gave the signal .to be pulled up, The ugly monster hung on to me till I reached the dredger. My companion then secured a pair of nippers and cut the lega of the crab loose front my thigh, The grip of the monster bad been so strong that my armor like diving suit nnd trousers were torn off my leg, bruis ing it considerably." MANY NOTABLE JOBS. A book, containing all of Mr. Meyer's experiences would rival that famous work of Jules Verne, "Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea." He helped to find the corpses of 40S persons, who sank to a watery grave on the German steam ship Elba In 1892. In 1S93 he waa engaged In raising the French battleship Napoleon Bonaparte, which was sunk tn a collision oft Marseilles. Origin of the Raglan. An Irishman entered a tailor Shop ' To have him an overcoat made, He was shown all the patterns from bot tom O IOP, Thinking more of the price than the There was parleying there, but at last As to goods and the nnat Af ffeamftk. - And paying deposit, the Celt did proceed ma oi me mercnant to taae. 'Hold on!" cried the latter producing . his tape " And the rest of his measuring kit: "Come back till I get aa idea of your xsnape, .p Tou of course want the garment to fit." Pat stopped at the thresholi. fhen.shak-. tits urnu -v- As ona Indisposed te advice, -"Bad dss to the fit t Just make It," he said, , , "As big aa you csti for the price!" Richmond lapatoh, - PLACE A Project to Equip Every Western Home With a Good Musical Instrument. of home without music. It SIGNS OF OLD TIMES Ancient and Curious Sign Boards of Great Britain. Long before education was universal and when houses were unnumbered and many streets were unnamed, but took their cognomen from the wares vended trereln. .it was the custom for all traders, without exception, to hang out signs above their doorways, in order to make their establishments and callings the bet ter khoWn, and In the following lines we purpose biting some of tha more curious and guaint, in this connection, including some, referring to houses for the refresh ment of man and beast, the proprietors of whieh are about' the only traders who have kept green the memory of signs and signboards. Host persons are ac quainted with: the quaint present day sign. Af. "The Case Is Alterad," opposite the gatea of Kenaal Green oemetery, but It may not be. so generally known that it was a cobbler who adopted the follow ing sign. when,;-he took-to the calling of a licensed viotuajer: "Search all the town over, and you'U find good ale at the Last," On tha Hounslow road in former times was to be seen this .sign: "Poor Jack striving to live." At the sign of the "Snail" was to be found this Inscription at a house In the King's road: '. The snail is slow, And I am low; a What d'ye think? Pray stop and drink. In the days of Walpole, on the Green wich., road, an old house bore the sign: Stand fast. Sir Robert, showing a little fat man standing upon two hogsheads. In Old -Fish street was formerly a house bearing the sign of the "Labor in "Vain," the board showing two woipen trying to scrub a negro -white; and ,-ln. Oxford Street was the "Load of Mischief," showing a man bearing on his back a woman and 4 monkey, the former with a glass of gin in. her hand. This sign has, been attributed, .to Ho garth, and certainly it Is painted in. his style. The house is, now known as the "Primrose." -. WHIRL OF THE WORLD. VIENNA'S BLUE LAW. In Vienna every man's home Is his dungeon from 10 p. m. to 6 a, m. Vienna is a city of flats, and at 10 p. m. the com mon entrance door of each block s closed arid bolted. ' Thereafter persons! passing in or out must pay a fine of i cents to tne concierge until midnight and 8 cents from that hour to 6 a m. To go out to post a letter costs 4 cents and the same amount to return. To , prolong a visit to a friend after 10 p. m. means f.;. cents to get out of the house and 4 cents more to enter your own. A natural result of this tax Is that of all capital cities Vienna Is earliest to bed. MIGRATION OP SHAD. One of the unexplained phenomena the movements of shad is that, coinci dent with their disappearance from Con necticut waters, where the schools me perceptibly diminishing, they are appear- in? in large fumbers in the Ohio river. ' The first shad taught In the latter stream was In 1876. It was considered such rarity 'that It was sent to tbe ' Smith- sonlan Institution. During the past five years the fish has been multiplying there at an extraordinary rate, and it is now caught 4n quantities within , five tnlles of Cincinnati. If the shad schools are mi grating from the Connecticut fiver to the Ohio, they must be doing It by the way of Nsw Orleans, as it is Impossible -for them to cross the Alleghanfes. i . Come to Me If you are sick from any cause and have iled to get relief,, corae rigli away. I will jiot charge you . for a consulta tion Vital Science will cure you, most likely., f . . ; DR. EDWIN C, IJOLMttS, ' ; m-m Aktagton Bulldlna. ! mm oiffl BiOBpro How to Make a Maryelously Perfect ComplexSea .and Restore Youthful Looks. HOW TO REMOVE PIMPLES, FRECKLES, MOTH, BROWN : PATCH ES, BLACKH EADS, 01 LI N ESS AN 0 ALL DE FECTS FROM THE FACE, NECK AND ARMS, w - ' jaMTTJUi - - ' There to nothing more Mantlral than the hnman face with its AwkAuum Its sparkling eye. its pleasant smile and Darted svmmetr. But the crowning glory of the face is s radians oomplaxion with Its Uval glomttrMO&tfnt ng, and its Qua, (mootfe textun. t r- 7717 on we aoescioa u cm enoa a eomoieaioa m anaiaear la Mils wonderfully pnwrasiuve sea t mn. mighty oannon, the eteci ictrlo motor, the wireless (alaaTaDh and she xmdaaiu maohineat wHai is these that la amooaaiblef By a oareful study of tha nature aad. testoreof fee skin, and a thoroaitk realms of ebemistiy and eomnouniUng of Ingredients, lemedy has bean a! last will aocompiWi tfaess resolta . This reasedtar is Sum. A. XaaMrVB Tmam Bleaeb. WHAT FACE HMtAuH IaV-OTace HMCAOtt IS-ITa lately removes once and forever I laiu bled I oao paalUTely goan ' Manatee every skia i aannos ImU to nmon avarv i snot fall to rempTe every defect. cleanse Itself IS eonstfentlr thro wing oil Its pores are not kept opaa, the unpariaea of the blood cannot eseaj face, and prodnoa all maaaef of akin troablea sock as PIMPLES, r NK8& ECZEMA ACNB AND NUMEROUS OTHER BKIN DIBEA8 ACTION Or TACK BUKAOflMow race Bleach has this two-told action! Ant, a anrnttlcal action, wbtch attracts and draws to the surface the impurities WhlcB hs looted anderthe skia; and, secondly, a cbemloal action which femoves by eattageaj form of a oae dandruff) toe eurtace of theonter, dlmued or dead cuuele, lee, ring tbensoeTitlB: beautiful, youthful-looking aad delicately tinted by natoie olear, uoooth and partes! Taia method Is perfectly harmless to the most dell cat skin, as it harmonises with tho laws of ftsJoua and oatars, the two factors which we must prove ourpersonai appearance. THOUSANDS BENirrTKD. Thousands of tiatrona who were aamevafl and with mort miserable complexion, have been iracua ana eczemaious arupuoos (itcjung, briaht. beautiful skins, and the lmnmvemants toe improveman which the oomnlt mere u scarcely a aetect to wnion the complexion is netr wnion will sot itmoamov) one es derful remedy.. Premature wrinkles and lines those Inroads of beantrej quickly eltsnad, and those muddy, dUfigurinr, sallow, Jaundiced skins are quickly traeslpissed Into e)wu, wholesome ones by itsnse. Flabby skin which else mark the ravage of tUne beansnenna and smooth after a few applieataona Skin troubles which have baffled the nostskilfnlbhy ' sioians have been removed and cored promptly, and many have expreised, personally ana by letter, their heartfelt and profound thanki for tills wonderful Fsoe Bleach. A positive guarantee is given if Face Blwch is used aecordlng to tbe new special flirtations, which are furnlihed with eaoh order, that It will remove every ditoolo ration and imptnliy fcom your complexion. f All of lfme. A, Ruppert'i world renowned preparations ere told by tu St reduced prlosa, Olds, Wortman & Kmg SOLE One -Half Price ALL STRAW HATS Latest Shapes and Styles in MACKINAW, MANILA, ROUGH BRAID and MILAN 'ONLY GOOD GOODS ONLY REASONABLE PRICES." M. SICHEL MEN'S FURNISHER and HATTER Sole Agent for the sMssssiaasSsMsgBjsM DO TSt WEATHER Fair tonight and perstura; variapie wibos, X I I A GRAND SUCCESS Our Big Slaughter Sale Saturday's selling eclipsed anything in tbe history of oar .store. Crowds thronged the store till late in the night. People carried away bargains such as they never dreamed otV Our goods are what we represent that's the reason. -There are still left few of the silk stripe $1 golf shirts that toM so fast at 49c; also few fancy stripes. ' Our 50c underwear U still offered at........-... eeseaaae -.23c ' Our 15c sox in all colors and sites at....... ...................... rc HENRY J; WHITE GENTS' FURNISHER AND HATTER. Sole Agent for theCINO HAT. 0 THIRD STREET. . VBe1 ESTABLISHED 1867. 7 V J COMBINATION GAS AND ELECTRIC FIXTURES Biggest Stwk This RrnPnriT-PDirFQ I-1 11 V "will r 1 1 I- O As F. E. BEACH PIONEER We make specialty of gelling; the Best thing? made In Painta. ; Best House Paint. Roof Paint. Floor Paint. Decorative Paint. Enamels. Stains. Varnishes at jLowesi t-nces :--;f FIRST AND ALDER STS literature ana scieaost oia Bleach Uaotaeosaaetleto noar trn, tart 1 all the disoolorations and blemishes to which theceao woman it will do all I claim. lis ulk US e a Mo Jiaat It's a well-known fact that the blood tn Imparities through the pores of the skin) bow J bnl collect below tt MOTH.BAI AND DIBOOLORAl adhere to aad fellow if we wish to paasaeneuHyto delighted with the grand improvement Had Durning ana annoying) nave oeen i mads ia their look wers slmcr 1 AGENTS. 28fl Washington St. PORTLAND, ORE. JAMESON HAT. SBBisssmflatBsmasssflHsssW OC Tuesday; nearly ststioftary tern mostly nortBerry. . - v - Bet. "Washington and TamhllL Side of Sart Francisco. ' our special oas mantle,, 7c zood as you've been paying isc Hr. a G Oi PAINT CO. PORTLAND, OREGON J.