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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (April 23, 1912)
page mro. 1)AHT CAPITAL JOUBKAL, SALE, 0BB605 TTESDAY, APRIL 83, 1912. THE CAPITAL JOURNAL It. HOFER, Editor and Proprietor. R. M. HOFEH, Manager ident Newspaper Drroted to American Principles and the Ptwkh and Development of All Oregon nuaeaait tares Evenkic Except Sunday, Salem. Ore. iip0BIPTION RATES) (Invariably In Adrance) Dale, bj Carrier, per rear K6.00 Per month tOc fcajj, by Mall, per Tsar 4.00 Pel month 85c Weakly, far MaO, per year LOO Six months-- COc rUUi LEA8KD WIRH TELEGRAPH REPOOT THE LEGISLATIVE TICKET. During the campaign in Marion county the statement was made many times that The Capital Journal had in some way ex pressed a preference for certain men on the legislative ticket. The straw ballot did bring out some winners. The Capital Journal takes great pleasure in saying it did all in its power to arouse the people to select the best possibie leg islative ticket, but it never tried to make a slate. Slate-making has gone with machine politics, The ticket that is nominated might be improved upon, but is probably as good a ticket as has ever been put up by the Repub licans in this county, and can do some good work. But The Capital Journal advocates letting the people select for themselves, and believes their judgment in the long run will be better than any individual's judgment. So the legislative ticket is whatever the people have made it with the help of publicityy for all the aspirants that an inde pendent newspaper can give to the people. It has become a kind of mania with a number of small poli ticians to attribute all kinds of things to The Capital Journal," and that is all there was to this charge. If this kind of thing is kept up by these small manipulators they will make The Capital Journal a greater influence than it already is in helping the people select good men. It is not the duty of a newspaper to tell the people in every election just what kind of men to select for each political nom ination, and this paper does not try to do that. But it does try to give the best men a chance to get before the people, and then tries to help them do good work after they are elected to office. The only failures that are made are by men who, after they are in office, forget the people who put them there, and follow their own will. o THE QUESTION OP MONETARY REFORM. No secular matter more vitally affects every person in the Re public than the financial conditon of the country. We have had two panics in fifteen years, one in 1893, and one 1907. Under our present more or less defective banking system panics may come at any time. There is a bill before congress to create a national reserve association which should be studied. The bill and an accompanying report can be had by any one interested sending to their congressman or senator. The bill includes provisions to overcome following defects : A plan to prevent bank panics. To safeguard deposits of all banks. To save taxpayers millions of dollars. To overthrow the Wall street oligarchy. To Rive stability to business and prosperity to all sections and classes. These are some of the objects sought in the bill now before congress for monetary reform. It was framed and presented by the Monetary Commission, composed of nine senators and nine representatives and in dorsed by all, both Democrats and Republicans. The National Citizens' League for the promotion of a sound banking system is being organized in Oregon. Thomas D. Iloneyman is president and J. D. Lee is secretary, 622 Chamber of Commerce building, Portland, Oregon. The league does not endorse any bill which is favorably in clined to the features of the National Monetary Commission bill. Many able men were on that commission, such as II. M. Feller, Eugene Hale, J. C. Burrows, Thos. E. Burton, II. D. Money, Robert Bonynge, A. P. Pujoetc, 18 in all. Eminent business men.are officers of the league, as ex-Governor W. L. Douglass, of Massachusetts ; Farwell and Bartlett, of Chicago, and Chaflin, of New York. This is an earnest and honest effort to place our bunking system on a good basis, so that we shall be as free from panics as they are in Europe. BATTLE 10 K HOME MARKET. (Continued from Psge 1.) tomblle, and If you're nut afraid you can ride along." I said "All right. I'll ride with you If thli dynamite was made In Oregon," He said, "I've got you there. This Is made In Ore gon." I said, "All right, because 1 know If I gt blown up, I will get blown higher than I would by any other dynamite." 1 rode over with that dynamite and was porfectly safe, It was "Lyonlte," manufac tured at Portland, and It Is going to tiiko the place of the hundreds of carlnnds of Giant powder shipped In here from down In Delaware, whore there are some men who have piled up millions and millions of dollars oiling dynamite to the people out west Thoy are building a boule vard there GO miles long, at a cost of 92,000,000, out of the money made from the sale of that powder. That powder Is sold to blow up the stumps out west here and clear the farms. We want more boulevards here. We want to keep those millions of dol lars here, In place of sending them back east for things that can be manufactured here. Dollar Sent F.ttt Stays. This campaign Is an educational campaign, as I started out to tell you. Wo want to teach the young people to stand up for their own In dustries and to keop as much of our money hore at home as we can. You know that the money that Is spent here that Ib paid tor articles manU' factured herekeeps turning over and ovor here. That dollar stayB hore and benefits everybody, and the dollar that you send away back east never gets back here, That dollar stays there. I have an Illustration here of what the Mndn-ln-Orcgnn movement means. There Is on this little show card a sample of the mohair as It Is taken oft from the back of the goa.ts. Iilght there Is the mohair grown In Unn county. There Is the mohair after It Is ready to be spun. There Ib the thread that Is made from mo hair. There Is a piece of cloth that For The Nervous "Woman, Or the woman who experiences hot lathes nothing It to food to soothe, quiet tmi calm the nerroua system si pure flyoerio extraot ol native medioal plants, ad made without alaohol, which htt been told by dro(iiti lor the past forty Tears, sod in oat favorably known at Doctor I'ieroa'i Favorite Preteription, In younfer years tome women tuffrr (rare ditzlneta, or fainting spells, hyiterla, ItMdaohe, bearing -down letjindi and pain. All theae symptoms ol irregularity ad female disturbance ere relieved by the tiie ol thit famous " Preaoriptioa " cs Doctor Pierce. At a powerlul, lnvi,oratin tonlo " Favorite Preteription" Impart! strength to the whole system, and in ptrticular to the organs distinctly femiumo. ror over-worked, "womout, "run-down," debilitated leaohert, milliners, dressmakers, seamstresses, " shop-, iris," houaekaepert,nurtinH mothers, and feeble women generally, It it en excellent appetliing oordial and restorative tonic "Mr itlsnma was cM retrorerekm," writes Mm. I.tdu MoPoh At.Il. of Alrfo.ta. Mit-h., Kmite 1. ' 1 hml nervous elilll ami numb spells ant! they would leavu me wry weak. ') tun I hmi liitlamnietlun ami ina diwbir said I hnil a llnellna kulnv. I riurtorett seven ntonths with our family physician, lie Mid I wWil have to have an operation. Then 1 ulled Uliliis his luecllrlna. After iMti tlue hnttles ut i'r. Tleree a mrdlrlnes I have not hud any nerwua chills or weak, spells. I am better Uian for years. "U- .1 I- .1 . T, .1 . Ml . ,-if,r . now Huns me rieernptmn ana lr. I wee Oofclen Mnlleal tilseovery. also the ' Pellets 1 lor nenronsnees and weak, tlml fwlloe. Theeu remnllee have helped her ever so inurh In a shell tiiua. We wva great leitk la your mediclaea tor female troubles." On PHrrefl f tees fWMa hn alW lateral towel mertavtaS .rN. f as. MriDowaUH Is made from raw mohair after It Is first npun and woven. Here are the samples of mohair beautifully fin ished fabrics out of which the la dies' dresses can be made, and the binding for your coats. The dresses that are made out of this mohair are finer than silk dresses. Some of the ladles don't like to wear a skirt that rustles, and some of the ladles like to rustle,, but the mohair made from the Oregon goat the goat does the rustling and the dress doesn't rustle, with the raw material produced right here In our own country. Clothes Hade In Oregon. This mohair Is made In the mills at Sellwood, Just north of us here. One hundred and twenty people are employed In making this beautiful mohair fabric, and here are the peo ple who should wear the mohair. There Is the grand combination. We produce the raw material, establish the factory, and make the goods, and we want to get the people to buy and use these goods made In Oregon. I am wearing a suit of clothes this evening the goods made out at the Brownsville Woolen Mills. This suit of clothes is lined with mohair made from the Oregon goats at the Multno mah Mohair Mills. Everything about this si-It Is made In Oregon except the buttons, and I see you have a button factory here In Albany. I didn't know It before, but I know It now, and the next suit I buy will have buttons made In Oregon. When we can grow the wool and raise the goats and make this beautiful cloth In our own woolen mills, and can make this beautiful mohair, and can make up these suits cheaper than anywhere else In the world, Is there any excuse why we should wear clothing made In the Bweat shops of the big cities of the east? Our wool en mills make the most beautiful fa brics of ladies' suitings. There are some of the suits from the Browns vllle Woolen mills beautiful flannels good enough to dress anybody In Or egon, and we are trying to educate the people to ask for these goods In the stores, and to wear these goods made In our own factories from our own raw materials. I will not go Into any grent detal's. but I want to say that Linn county ought to feel proud of being able to produce such an exposition. This exposition was gotten up In about two weeks. It Is only about two weeks ago that I was here and talked with Judge Stewart, manager of yur Com mercial c'ub. He said, "We will get up an exposition of goods not only made In Oregon, but made In Linn county." I said, "Go to it, and we will come up here find meet your Tteople. Oregon leads In Furniture. Look at your furniture factories. There Is furniture there made In your two factories that Is shipped all over the world. It Is shipped to the Ha waiian Inlnnds, Canada, Alaska, the Philippines, and as far east as the Mississippi valley, and yet I daresay that' there nre furniture stores here, In Oregn that don't keep an article of the furniture made In Albany. We havo got to educate them. You have got to say, "We want the things made In the Oregon factories," and that Is what these meetings here are for Do you know that only about five per cent of the furniture sold In Oregon Is made In Oregon The rest of It Is shipped In from Grand Rapids, Mich igan, and from all over the United States, but Oregon Ib the third larg. est manufacturer of furniture In the United States. Thero are only two states In the union that manufacture more furniture than Oregon, and In Portland we have some of the larg est furniture factories In the state. I was In a man's office In Portland the other day and he pointed with pride to some beautiful chairs, and said, "All the chairs In this office were made In Oregon, but," he said "I couldn't find a roller top desk that -was made - In Oregon." I wUh I had him here tonight to show him the beautiful doaks made right here In the city of Albany. Leok Into Oregon Mirrors. We don t know aout those things until we como together in this way, How many people in this audience know that there Is a factory In Port land where they mako all kinds of looking glasses, from the finest bevel edge plate glass to the cheapest kind of looking glass where you can't look yourself straight In the face They make all these beautiful glasses there. They had to bring skilled la borers from France and from Ger many to start that factory, and they brought about SO families of those people, and started that factory, and now over a hundred people are work ing there, and they are teaching the young men how to make this glass, and are building up splendid In diixtry. All the looking glasses that are put Into the Albany furniture fnctorles' products are made there. Kt Oregon Cereal. Now, to get closer home. I will auk you how ninny of you ent cereals and rolled outs for breakfaitt? 1 guess a great many. We have one oatmenl factory In rortlnntl that tines 400 rarlnads of Oregon white onls every month and makes rolled oats for hreakfitHt foods, and yet In every store In this town you will find the Quaker Onts, and all kinds, made In Philadelphia, and Chicago, and everywhere In the world, that are not as good as the rolled oats made right here In Oregon. I say It Isn't fair to make you pay the freight go to the greater expense of paying for shipping these goods clear out here. from the East and your merchants should put In stock and keep In stock nothing but the cereals and rolled oats made in the Portland mills, or wherever else they may be manufactured in this state. That Is bringing the matter right home to where you live, and If there are any farmers In this room who raise oats, It Is their business to In terest themselves In this and see that the merchants Interest themselves In this and call for oats that are made in Oregon from the grain that Is raised right here In Oregon. More Factories for Oregon. That Is only an Illustration. It is the same proposition In every depart ment or Industry. We need to get behind our own factories and Indus tries in any way we can get behind these industries, and patronize the men who are keeping the payrolls In our state. We are holding out a pro gram for more Industries, and for a bigger manufacturing interest In the state of Oregon. Tomorrow night we are going to have a great educational meeting here. We are going to have gentle men here to talk to you about In dustrial education the great move ment that Is coming to change our whole school system. Jn the city of Salem we are teaching the boys how to do wood work, and the girls how to become good dressmakers, make bread, and how to do all the ordin ary, plain, common duties of the household, and we are making better citizens out of them by teaching them Industrial education. I was In Corvallls the other day, and we went Into the cooking school of the Agricultural college. The lntly was teaching the young ladles how to maek bread, and they made beautiful bread, but right there on the table was a sack of flour made In Minneapolis the Washburn-Cros by flour made In Minnesota. You know there Is a beautiful advertise ment a page advertisement of a beautiful young lady, with her sleeves rolled up, and she looks charming, and she Is making bread out of this Minneapolis flour. Every body likes that picture, and Eastern people like that flour, and the Min neapolis people Bhlp In carloads and send smooth men around to talk to the grocer, and the grocer calls up on the telephone and talks very smoothly to the housekeeper "Let me send you up a sack of this won derful flour"; and our home mills, our milling Industry In Oregon, has got to compete with that flour brougt 2.000 miles, and advertised in the Saturday Evening PoBt and the Ladles' Home Journal, where they pay $2,000 for a single pnge of ad vertising and make you pay for the freight and pay for that advertising. Oregon Flour Best. The lady who was teaching those girls to make bread admitted to us that they couldn't make as good bread out of that flour as out of the flour made In the roller mills In Portland, Salem, or Corvallls, and I daresay the same thing Is true of this city. I only speak of this to show you the necessity of educating our peo ple to call for the things and for all the things made in our own state first, and because "Oregon first and Oregon best," you will find, Is the rule, If you will investigate closely. Oregon Made Tnlne. We have in this state a great twine Industry. All the farmers use twine, and a great many different forms of twine are used. I have only a few minutes more to talk, but I want to tell you about the twine Industry. The Portland Cordage Works manu factures twine, and a very smooth gentleman came along from the east and sold a carload of eastern twine to a Portland Jobbor recently, and he got it about half a cent or a quarter of a cent a pound cheaper than the Portlnnd Cordage Works' price. Af ter It arrived they examined It and a representative of the Portland Cordage Company said, "Have you tested that twine as to Its breaking power and weight?" They said no, they had bought It by the pound. Come to find out, the eastern twine a pound of It was one-third short er than the Portland twine, and would stand about 10 pounds less strain before it broke. They had sold them an Inferior twine for a quarter of a cent a pound cheaper, and actually got one-third less twine for their money; so that the Brothers! Sisters! You All Meed These! Physical and Mental Health and Strength Are the Basis of All HAPPINESS For THIRTY YEARS Hollister's RocKy Mountain Tea Has Spelled H-E-A-L-T-H. Without good health life is discouraging, dumal and un satisfying. Good health means strength and vitality, ambition, energy. Success is achieved by the healthy; failure falls to the lot of the weak and ailing. The man who lacks vigor of body, strength of mind and power of will is sick even though he daily does his allotted work. If be tosses restlessly at night and awakes unrefrtshed in the morn ingif his nerves are unstrung if his energy is exhausted if his mind is filled with worries and fears that man certainly needs a good medicine. If that is your condition, try Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea It will give you new" energy new life. This fine old family remedy aids digestion, tones up the stomach and bowels, arouses the torpid liver, stimulates the kidneys and bladder, purifies and enriches the blood. A genuinely good, time-tried and proven medicine for men, women and chil dren. Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea will relieve youof your sleep lessness your languor your mental depression. It will re move any trouble due, directly or indirectly, to impure blood or poor circulation, or to a clogged condition of the organs of elimination. Think what good health means! It gives the cool head, the clear eye, the springy step, the steady hand, the strong nerves that make you eager for work or play that assure suc cessthat make life worth living. Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea Nuggets the Tea in tablet form are preferred by many busy men, traveling men, and others who have not facilities for making the Tea. The Nuggets contain, in concentrated form, the same time-tried herbs, leaves and seeds as the Tea. No min eral drugs or poisons and no al cohol, in eitheri You run no risk n in using this harmless and mar velously effective preparation. And you must be helped by it for a remedy which acts as this does which cleanses and purifies and strengthens the entire system cannot fail to do you good. Multitudes of men and women have learned this from experience during the past thirty years. Better get a package of HollisUr's Rocky Mountain Tea or Nugget today 35c at all druggists. 9i7iesco Proves K Grows Hair Btop Dandruff and Scalp Diseases, Re stores Gray or Faded Hair To Its Natural Color. Swlsaoo Will Do This Fop You. Swlssco produces astounding results so quickly it has amazed those who have used It. We will prove It to you If you will send 10c In silver or stamps to pay postage and we will send you a trial bottle and our wonderful testi monials. There Is no excuse lor bald ness. Write today to Swlssco Hair Remedy Co., 4885 P. O. -Square, Cin cinnati, Ohio. Swlssco is on sale at all druggists and drug departments at Sue and $1.00 a bottle. Sold and recommended in Salem by J. C. Perry. HAVE YOU A BAD BACK? Drive away your backache, get to day a package of Mother Gray's Aro matic Leaf for the kidneys and cor recting that lame, sore and all un Btrung feeling of the nerves. If your kidneys act too frequently, or action Is painful and scanty, Aromatic Leaf is corrective and the best regulator. At druggists or by mail 50c. Sample FREE. Address, The Mother Gray Co., LcRoy, New York. o One of the most startling changes ever seen in any man, according to W. B. Holsclaw, Clarendon, Tex., was ef fected years ago In his brother. "He had such a dreadful cough," he writes, "that all our family thought he was go ing Into consumption, but he began to UBe Dr. King's New Discovery, and was completely cured by ten bottles. Now he is sound and well and weighs 218 pounds. For many years our family has used this wonderful remedy for coughs and colds with excellent results." It Is quick, safe, reliable and guaranteed. Prlco 50o and 1.00. Trial bottle free at J. C. Perry's. The Danger After Grip lies often in a run-down system. Weak ness, nervousness, lack of appetite, en ergy and ambition, with disordered liv er and kidneys often follow an attack of this wretched disease. The greatest need then Is Electric Bitters, the glor ious tonic, blood purifier and regulator of stomach, liver and kidneys. Thou sands have proved that they wonder fully strengthen the nerves, build up the system and restore to health and good spirits after an attack of grip. If sintering, iry mem. Only 60 cents. Sold and perfect satisfaction guaran teed by J. C. Perry. o- (Continued on page 3.) t Skin of Beauty is a Joy Forever TXl T. FELIX GOUIUUirS ORIENTAL u CREAS OR JUCiCAL BEAUTIFIES! Tan. Plrnnlasa frral, Ji.th I'atcbet, Haab, Mid Kkta Pir ana every blrtnlsn n tutT. sUi4 tit tie i.t.Kt,oii. It baa eltxet. Iba trt of tO Tra, twd ta M htrmltM we taste It to bt sure It tl nroptrl? mule. Accept oo count i" Ml uf tu Liar tame. Pr. I a. Hair Mill to ft Isvly or .tin haul s' n (t ruuifiiu: ' A fou Ultt U UM them, 1 rfeuBniii 'OttMrftMiVi Cr m' aa tha Ifaat hamirui of all lb thin (rfpinMiiwi,'' i .r wit all druiKisi nd YtiMf Ucvtil Dctitrt ta th UK4 bUltt, Catiadft tod Kurvpt. faiT.HOPtlS.rits, 17 Great Jmn WnA. IwTsk zi v 9 a, - "V m Life's worth living, lives it well! provided one Kotlce for Bids. Notice is hereby given that the common council of the city of Salem, Oregon, invites sealed bids for the making of an Improvement of Cheni eketa street from the east line of 14th street to the east line of 18th street, with Standard Bltullthlc Pave ment, Light Standard Bltullthlc Pavement, Light Gravel Dltullthlc Pavement, Heavy Gravel Bltullthlc Pavement, E' Oso Pavement, E) Oso Pavement Number Four (4), Crushed Rock Concrete Pavement, Gravel Concrete Pavement, Asphalt Pave meDt, Asphnltlc Concrete Pavement, Hassam Pavement, Granocreto Con crete Pavement, or oDlarway Pave ment, In accordance with the plans, specifications and estimates on file in the office of the city recorder of said city, which are hereby referred to and made a part of this notice. Said bids will be opened on or af ter the 22nd day of April, 1912, at or about 7:30 o'clock p. m., in open council meeting In the city hall In Salem, Oregon. Each bid submitted must be accompanied by a certified check equal In amount to ten per cent of the amount of the bid. The city of Salem reserves the right to reject any and all bids. This notice is published for five successive days in a dally newspaper published In the city of Salem, Oregon, the dale of first publication being April 16th, 1912. CHAS. F. ELGIN, Recorder. 4-16-6t o Deafness Cannot be Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There Is only one way to cure deafness and that Is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed con dition of the mucous lining of the eus tachian tube. When this tube Ib In flamed you have a rumbling sound or Imperfect hearing, and when It is en tirely closed, deafness Is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition,' hearing will be de stroyed forever; nine cases out of ten re caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an Inflamed condition of the mu cous surfaces. We will give one hundred dollars for any case of deafness (caused by ca tarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for clrculors free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Od. Sold by druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Vsiainew4 Am A TI. mdtvMirkl. r.f. i-wHs-hta and Ieabtlt niiittrad. TWENTY TEAM' PRACTICE, lllghwt nilerenc. Send modal, iketot. or pnoio. ior imj on rtnUM1UT. All builntit oonfldentlal. BAND-BOOK FREC. Exp1lnit7thtnf. Ttlli II... r (Vht.in nd fell 1-aUtlU. What InTtllttoni Will Pay, How In il Hrtntr, Mplains brt maelianioal rooTfinniti, and contain! S00 othtr nbjecU of ImporUDoe to Invtntora. AdiirCM, H. B. WILLSON & CO. . Bo H'H Wilson Bid. WASHINGTON, 0. 0. , SALEM BANK & TRUST CO. GENERAL BANKING AND TRUST BUSINESS With our assurance that we are able and willing to take care of it, we solicit your Banking Busi ness. Open an account with us, and we will extend you every favor consistent with good bank ing principles. WE PAT FOUR I'EK CENT ON SAVINGS Corner State and Liberty Streets J. L. Ahlers, President W. G. East, Cashier, S. S. East, Vice President. Dr. L. B. Steeves, L. H. Roberts, Directors. Htop your bad breath with Dr. Laxntlv Tablet. ''What made you so late?" "I met Smithson." "Well, that Is no reason why you should be an hour late getting home to supper." "I know, but I asked him how he was feeling, and he Insisted on telling me about his stomach trouble." "Did you tell him to take Chamber lain's Tablets?" ''Sure, that Is what he needs." Sold by J. C. Perry'B Drug Store. For sale by J. C. Ferry. H A sAn Cnr.ii, taut, sjr emissiMii Msweae.ieie. L iylTtAll. ".-l".HllTl. 1 B fallen Giwuilwd Smr Rhwl. Hpnt rrtMlit 2 H tofl.OOpnb.1. WlllMaSllueMirll,tob.UrM S B ebts i.lUv.6. HtnplM Vnt. II j.ar Snitsisl St, s I H hs. tfc hoS jutr srtws m the il"is7ltWrfir Sold In ij'ea 61 Pr, J. C. ? cue It Leok j Like a Crime to separate a boy from a box of Buck len s Arnica Salve, His pimples, bolls, scratches, knocks, sprains and bruises demand it, and Its quick relief for burns, scalds or cuts Is his right Keep It handy for boys, also girls. Heals ev erything healable, and does It Quick. i nequalled for pies. Only 25 cents at J. C. Perry's. o "My little son had a very severe cold. I was recommended to try Chnmber laln s Cough Remedy, and before a small bottle was finished he was as well as ever," writes Mrs. H. Silks, 29 Dowling street, Sydney. Australia. This remedy Is for sale at Perry's Drug Store. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA CHICHESTER S PILLS XX J1 !'. W Will Kl R.ol,L v At i Tr f:H-Trg U Bftt. SafeM 1 1.. to..,.. , S018 BY OftlGGtSIS EVERYWHt Rf Salem $37.90 to Los Angeles Return $37.90 I and Fares open to all Stop-overs In each direction. 0 (a SUNSET LA lUtiUENaSHASTA ROUTES Sale Dot. f April 30, May 2, 3, 4. Return Limit, 60 days from date o f sale. On account of the Annual Pilgrimage of the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, to be held at Los Angeles from May 4th to 12th, the above low round trip fare has been made by the 8. P. open to all. ,llU6, wwx Bgenii Ior reservatong and further lDiorniHtlnn. nr u-rUa 1 v. nine iu s JOHN" M. SfOTT. General Passenger Agent, Portland, Ore. "TTTTTTTf