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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 2, 1910)
..." V . ' ' v liL .... " ' - ' 68 Pages - Pages 1 to 12 VOJ. XXIX. XO. 1 PORTLAND, .OREGOX, SUNDAY MORNING, JANUARY 2, 1910. CHILL NIPS ALL MORSE'S SPIRIT TMJiEVISIOII WOMAN HALTS OIL TWELVE MEN 'LOST ENERGETIC YOUNG MAN WOOS IN RUSH -j If. BAXTER, OP SPOKANE. Hl'R. KIEDLY GETS SEATTLE BRIDE. COLOMISnMVEL BREAKS RECORDS AMAZES LAWYER COMPANY'S FORCE NORTHWESTGOAST FIGHT ONLY BEGUN BAXKEp CAlM AS HOPE FOR RE LEASE, FADES AWAY. ALOSK OX HOG ' RANCH SHE STOPS PIPE-LAYING. 1 Cold to Endure Several Days Predicted. PORTLAND MERCURY DROPPING Storm Works Havoc in Ta coma and Seattle' Harbors. WARNING SIGNALS ARE UP Local Thermometer 2 7 Above With Indications r Rapid Fall. Crops in Danger, Snow J)nc, Sharp ialc tVming. Purtland and 4lie entire Pacific i Northwest, comfortable when the Kast, i Middle West and even the Sunny South were shivering under coldblasis, are 1o he wrapped in a biting chill. ready the storm is upon us. continual rapid dropping of the thermometer yes- terrlay afternoon and evening fulfilling I in part the prediction that a cojd wave : "TJ Hf"t fevfial days. i Tliat the pi-eRcnt t hill is a harbinger of severe weather to come is written in the Weather Bureau records of Se attle. Tacoma and other Sound points. Yesterday was the coldest New Year's day ever registered by an official thermometer in Seattle and, with the hill, a 40-mile gale created havoc in the harbor. Tacoma suffered similarly and Portland Is warned that the storm It is to experience Is on the way here from the Northwest with every sign pointing to Its arrival here early this morning. Astoria, blown by a stiff eas wind, expects the coldest weather of Its his tory is close at hand. Cathlam.it and nearby points report several inches of mow accompanied by a.. lowering barometer. From the four points of the Far-Tic -Northwest chljl wind, drop- ping thermometer and fears for wheat and stock are embodied in the weather reports. Seattle's temperature at the latest reading last night was 27 degrees above aero, a fierce gale still raging: Walla Walla at midnight shivered at 21 above, wtXd 2S miles an hour sweeping not only that city but all of Southeastern Washington; Portland's thermometer 'continued to drop, the lowest reading being 27 above, with every Indication or further fall. For Portland today the forecast is continued cold and strong easteriy wintls. Forecaster Beats' reading of- the weather sign was: Tho weather chart this evening low pressure area over the It Lake Basin ami a high pres . over British Columbia. This H'on of pressure is causing - . rth to east winds in Wastaing on and Idaho, with rapidly nperatures. ave warnings were issued at . to all stations in Eastern ' astern Washington and Idaho northeast warnings were ls e same time tiS seaports on nd. Belllngham Bay and the ' Fuea. This evening the tem- J 1 ' " Tacoma was 2S degrees and ' 1 ' 18 degrees. At Blaine, our 1 -'t station, the temperature was 24 degrees. 1 air which Is now draining w valleys in Oregon. Wash Idaho will probably result Jell lasting for several days. 3m Alaska, received this ow the barometer to be un it In that territory, but the severe at the reporting sta- i i it K IT li 1 C ' ! coldest day this Winter so early December, when the pped to 24 degrees above ow feiL to. depth of six January, taps. the lowest tlud-d on Pnfie 7. la m xe In. HARRY MURPHY DISCOVERS THAT VARIOUS PROMINENT PUBLIC CHARACTERS HAVE MADE FIM HOT AXD Bl.MKR. Hro!vr4t To Lave Oae 4 Bother. Littleton Vayne as He Speaks of Three Thiss Tht "Two or Can' Yet Be Done XBW YORK, Jan. 1. (Special. 1 That .he last New Year'sday he would? ppend in New York for a great many years was speeding away fast did not seem to worry Charles V. MowA convicted banker, whose buoyancy of spirits so amazed his counsel, Marti nMf. Littleton, tltat when he came out of the Tombs late today, after sp?nding an hour with the prisoner in his cell, he remarked: "Tie is a man of Ton nerve," and," looking somewhat dejected. th lawyer added: "He feels more spirited than I do- The lawyer suid that he would not in terfere with the taking ot Morse from tlie Tombs to begin hie term of sentence of 15 years in the Federal prison at Atlanta. Oa. - "Do. you intend making any kind of a further appeal?" "he' was as"ked. ' ' ' "The appeals are practically exhausted," said Mr. Littleton, who then said that he had not given vp the- tight for the-convicted man's freedom. "There are two or three thing? that can yet be done," paid Mr. Littleton, vaguely.. "They have not quite shaped themselves yet, so I can't speak of them very well." Mrs. .Morse and her two sons, Harrv and Benjamin Morse. arrived at the Tombs in an automobile, tiip chn r.ffe.ni' 1 a large gr:psacK m.ea witn Mr. ew ear s dinner. Tlle famii-v remained with him a little n,ore than an hrf-.ir. v "ASTRO" FOUNDIN MEXICO Alleged Swindler of Coos ByyMan l.ocitlcd After ltn Chase. SAX FRANCISCO. .Ian. I. C. A. Con !ln. alias "Astro." ex-handcuff king and clairvorant, who forfeited J1300 cash hail rather ; than face the charge of grand larceny, has been arrested . in Mexico City, according to a telegram received today by the local police from Chief of Police Felix Diaz, of that city. "-Vstro" is charged wWi having swin dled ased Jasper O'Kelly. a wealthy lumberman, from Coos j4ty, Or. In searching for a long-lost stepdaughter, tot whom he desired' to pay a legacy of several thousand dollars left by her mother. u'Kellj-tsotifcht ine aid of 'Ai tro's" alleged clairvoyant powers. "As tro." it -Is alleged, induced Stella Mat teilo. of I.os -Angeles, to pose as the long-lost girl.' O'Kelly is said to have paid her nearly Jiooti before he dis covered the fraud. Steps will' be taken to extradite, him. PRISON CRUELTY ALLEGED Atlanta Offlrlnls Feed Bread With Flies as Side Dih. x - ATLANTA, Oa., Jan. 1. General Dodd, formerly overseer of the city prison, tes tifying before the investigating commit tee, in... addition to corroborating the stories of cruelty to prisoners and of filthy and unsanitary conditions, declared that the food served the prisoners was unfit even for the lowest kind of animals. Prisoners frequently showed bread con taining flies, he said, and one man brought him a piece- of bread containing a spider? He declared the place was overrun with vermin. ' Pearl Bryan. me of three Vhite women who was hung up by. rings while at the stockade, said she was struns up nearly 45 minutes and' was only taken down when' tney saw blood running down her arms. SON HITS FATHER, JAILED William Bell ln.t Serve Days for Hilling Mild Tying Sire." HILIvSBORO. Or . , Jan. 1 (Special.) William Bell, of Tualatin, was yesterday convicted in Circuit -Court of assaulting his father, and sentenced by Judge.Camp bell to SO days in the County Jail. The Bells have en in trouble before, and some years ago the father. Bernard, deeded the ton the home place in lieu of rutnre care.' The father swore the son struck him .and .then tied him with rope. rOHT OK PORTLAND CO M M IS RraltMi To filf the Po t.l l What It v ant a aaa ! iLummiris bives Key note for Campaign. CANNON LISTED AS ENEMY "Standpatters," Says Sena tor, Are in Way of Progress PLEDGES MUST BE KEPT Unties Should I!f Measured lv Dif ' fercnoes in Cost of rrodiiclitni, - and Not Aim at' Kxclnsion Only, Is Declared. , Uh;j MOINKS. Iowa. Jn. 1. "The fight for tariff revision and more pro- J irressive principles will go on more j e-iiuui. man ever ana win win in the end." Thus declared Senator Albert B. Cummins in an address here tonight at the Progressive Republican Organi zation dinner. Much interest attached to the. Sena tor's address, as it was regarded as furnishing the keynote- for the pro gressive fight In this state. A large number heard his defiance of the con servative element in the' Republican party. "With respect to the tariff" said Senator Cummins, "the standpatters feel it makes llttle,if any, difference how high the duties are if they be high enough to exclude importations. When they approach their subject their first, and I have sometimes thought, their only concern is for thejiroducer. They are so much afraid of hurting hipi that they close tneir ears to every voice save his and assume that, knowing what he, wants, ho will not 't (more .than he deserves. '"feii'tiurlotection I'rged. "The echoes of the platform of 10S, which contains pledges of the Repub lican party to the people, have become so faint in their councils that they are drowned in the cries ot impoverished manufacturers. On the other hand, the progressives remember that we prom ised the American people that the duties on ' imported competitive com modities should be measured by the difference between the cost of produc tion in this and rival lands, and that we made the promise in order to give at once protection to the producer from unequal competition and protection to the consumer from extortion., "We know that in many fields of industry home competition has been substantially destroyed and we intend to subject our home producers to the fire of foreign competition If prices were raised above a fair and reason able profit. . Fight Not Ended. "I do not attempt to ,obscure or to minimize the extent of our defeat, but if anyone harbors the delusion that the passage ot me recent tariff law ended the fight for fair and reasonable pro tective duties, it would be wise' for him at once to come to another conclusion. "The progressives, after years of struggle, brought the convention to a full acknowledgment of the justice of their position. With respect to pinner regulations)f Interstate commerce ' the standpatters occupy just the same position that they always have occupied.' It is sufficient to say. that . the agitation for the strengthening of the law regulating common carriers bts-auie acute about 1890. It Unally resulted In the amend ment of 1906.' 'It was a long, weary campaign.- .The . standpatters were either silent Or iuoppos Itlon. Cannon Never Friendly. "Joseh G. Cannon was then, as now, the nrost conspicuous member of the National House of, Representatives. In ,OoncludPd on Page 7 ) FRBDRII K A. COOK. Hrulrnl: To Malataia In My. ttmir Hisk Standard aa a niaroTerrr. TreiK h Diggers Quit When " Fair Objector Starts forHousc to Get Shotgun. - LOS AXGBLES. Cal., Jan. 1. (Special.) With only a hog ranch behind her. Mis. J. H. de Turk, of Vernon, Is holding at bay the Union Oil Company of California, which has millions at its back. It seems tnat wnen Mrs. dei Turk saw a gang of j oil eompany employes driving into her j herd with a load of pipe she asked them what tffey intended,to do. "What are you going to do with that piper' demanded Mrs. de Turk of the man In charge. "Why, we're, going to lay it," be replied. Then'he went on to explain that the Cnion Oil Company had secured a right of way for a pipe line from Los Angeles to a point severalvuilles south. - "Well, you haven" retorted -Mrs. de Turk, "and I'll get myshotgun and show you who Is running this ranch." She started for the house-. At that the wagon load of pipe was turned about ajid, t))e corporation of many . millions ' ceased right there its efforts, at that time, to dig a trench through the ranch. f f INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS - The Weather. YESTKRI)Y'S Maximum tempt rftture. a degrees ; minimum. 'IS deirree?. TODAY'S Fair and continued cold; easterly winds. Foreign. . ' Bettina: even in London that Liberal will win election. Secticrn-1, page 3. ' Politic. Senator r (iimmins in Den -Moines opln cam trn Tor further tariff revision. Section Iaicrn 1. pa are 1. Temperance campaign in Lincoln -aid -to forecast effort for proliibirioin Xluaka; Prohibitionists a?ert Bryan is with them. Hection l, page L f National. Reisresentative Hawley has bill reTief of Siletz settlers. pending for Section l; page tu. Postal deficit for 1109 is $17.44V719; TtHch- Tuberculosis on increase anion Indian r-l jorts 'Commissioner; Section 1. page 'I. Over .VrW people attend President Taf t' first New Year's reception?" Section J, pase 2. i Domestic. Daughters of American Revolution take up r cuservatloii work 4n earnest. Section 3. pa arc 2. . . , Charles W. Morse calm hi hope tf appea1 fade. Section '!, pare L Colonist travel to "West and Pacific North went in ittyfi breaks ail records. Secti'm, 1. page 1. . Switchmen's strike in- lead to 1!V not men foppinsr work . If iVi d '-r-i rr- lun u Trains r.ol'Ute in 'u V near Rillinirs. Mont. ; two known to be- dad; bageaKeman mav be burned in wreckage. Section 1. page 7. Brokaw admits wealth Is million and half. - yt wys he is pfKr man. , Section 1, page 3. - j ' .. Jalfic Northwest. Deputy Sheriff and four others accused df IvnrhlTijr Grant County murdvrer- Section L page fl. " . Ketienbach allegrd cmspiracv and land fraud case to be tried in Boise, change of venue from Moscow being allowed. Section 1. pag 6. Iashni-: Spokane man woos and wins "-Seattle srirl in quick time. Section"!. pae 1. Seattle Xew Year's roisterers trample man under foot;- death Is feared. Section 1. page . Sports. II. Chandler Ktran of Chi capo, picked as - best American amateur golf player. Sec tion 1. page '2. Thousands attracted by motor-boat races, despite chill. Section 4. pae 7. Studebakers say no conflict is on with E M F. company, lection 4. page 4. Auto output of year Is estimated at liuO.iMX) crs. Section 4. page 5. Schooiboys see Multnomah team defeat Na tionals at soccer. section 4. page 6. Many handball contenders in line for Ben y Holladay cup. Section 4, page 7. Portland firms manufacture , automobile bodies and accessories. Section 4, page 4. McCredie gives up Northwestern League club for business reasons. Section 4. page 5. Xo pugilistic titles won or lost in 1909. Sec tion 4. page 6. . - San Francisco wants Nelson-Wotgast cham pionship fight. Sentioi ,4. page 4. Local collejre men approve football change. Section 4, page 7- . f Portland and Vicinity. Severe chill nips whole Northwest Coast "and may last several days'. Section 1. page L Record sale of Annual Oreonian disposes . of -first edition in one day. Section" 1 . Dage 8. , - Contestants side of Stltx land dispute stated by J. O'B. Sc-obey. f Section j. pajre lO. New Year's revelry at Portland exceeds all previous records for hilarity. Section X page 10. Scottish PJte Masons to assemble in Ulst semi-annual reunion January 1 3. Section 1. page 11. Northern Pariflc Inaugurates new- service to Cravs Harbor: Oregon & Washington line begins schedule. Section 1. page 7. Chairman of East Side committee on car service nays Public Service Commission jnovcnicnt will s;o ahead.. Section pajre 10. - " . CIV officials and leaders in all lines of ef fort resolve to better Portland in 3910 Section L paare 11. Cave In Deschutes Canyon is "blind pig for I railroad' workmen. Section I. page 6. K.lamath Fails pressing for opening to set tlement of reservation lands. Section j THE LEGAL PROFESSION. Renolvrdl To Require Intelligent Jnroi-a. and to Il.rfinrtiKr'-tKil-ln I.ltlKatloa. IN ATLANTIC GALE Captain Learns Fate of Crew on Landing; SUGAR CARGO CLOGS PUMPS Vessel Sinks as Boats Toss on Towering Waves. ONE.PICKED UP, ON E LOST ' r St-liooner Joliamia Goes Down Off .Delaware Capes--After Ivng Wan dering, Captain Finds Boat Willi 12 Men Not Found. NEW VORK, Jan.-'I. Twelve men who were lost oil Thanksgiving day last, when the scliooner Johanna went dow-r 3 50 miles from the Delaware breakwater- were not even known to be missing uijl the survivors wero brought to port today froj St. Thomas, Danish West Indies by the steamer Kororio. - yy ','Tbe Johanna was bound for the breakwater from the tPhllippines for orders,", said Captain C. A. Nickerson today. . "When she became unsea worthy in . heavy weather. . two life boats were put out one with 13 men on board, of which I took command, and the other with 12 men. There was a howling wind, . blanket of driving scud over the face of the sky, and gray, mountainous sea. ' My boat was put out last. We saw the other boat heave up againsV the skyline on the crest oSa wave, and then we saw her no more. Mel Missing .Must Be lxst. ,'J had hoped on reaching this port to get some word of her. We were picked up by the Nova Scotian schooner te.A. Sabean and carried to the West Indies. I hoped the others might lie, equally fortunate, but since you tell me nothing has been 'heard of them in all this time they must have been lost. "It was o'clock in the morning of Thanksgiving day that the ship's car peter reported, the port seams were opening. All hands were ordered 'to the pumps. The men worked fiercely at the pumps, but no water came. For a moment .we were pazzled. Then we remembered our cargo the Johanna was laden with sugar. Sugar Clogs Pumps. "It w-as clear enough what was hap pening. Down In the ship's hold the sugar bags werewelling to the burst ing point with seawater, and as tHey burst, they filled the hold with a thick substance that clogged the pumps. "With the pumps -disabled, the fate of the schooner was. foregone. We hoped .some other vessel might see us beTore it became necessary to take to tfie small boats, but after a day of kill ing work the- Johanna began to list more and more heavily to port. j Ship Plungesto Bottom. "The 12 men, including the mate, put out first. . We were not long In follow ing, for the Johanna was staggering under, our feet. - Not 10 minutes .after we deft Iter, the Johanna began to roll and. witli a sudden plunge, she dove under forever." 3"he missing- men are First Mate Wy man. Alexander Lindsay, cflk; Seaman Thomas Kyle; J. J. Houligan, boat swain; August Sraitton,- carpenter Ch ris Clausen, a Danish seaman; Emil Heinze. a German seaman, and' four Filipino and one Japanese seamen. The Johanna- was a three-masted afTO schooner of 1742 tons, belonging to tk, Standard Oil fleet. Spreading Kails Cause M'rect. TRENTON, Mo.; Jan. 1. According to a Coroner's verdict tonight spreading rails caused the wreck of the Rock Island passenger train -near here yes terday, in which, .'three persons were killed and 43 injured. MOST SATISFACTORY NEW YEAR'S RESOLUTIONS ' ' REPIRI.U'AX VOTER. Rmtilrfdi vrr A a In to tin AmtrnT. Sees Young Woman for First Time Christmas Eve, Fivei llajs ' ' Later He Is Married. SEATTLE, Wash.. Jan. 1. (Special.) Harry Baxter, an employe of the Washington Mill Company, of Spokane, may have faults he will not acknowl edge, but one of them is not that of being too slow. When H. Baxter -wants a thing he goes right after It. and. lands it. ; It was this habit of his that resulted in Tils coming to Seattle Christmas eve. seeing Miss Irene Clark, of 1818 Ninth a-vejnue. for the first time in his life, marrying her rive days later, and this morning dec4aj-ing hisintention of tak ing her back o Spokane tomorrow. Last October a friend of Baxter in Spokane began sounding the praises of Miss Clark. Baxter immediately sat up and took notice, with the result that he was introduced to Miss Clark by mail and the couple corresponded for a month or so. .There was no talk of marriage in any of the letters. They were Just a friendly sort of communi cation, but they made aVbig hit. with Baxter Mid apparently with Miss Clark, too. i x ""Just before Christmas . Baxter de cided to jump on a train and come over to Seattle and see Miss Clark. He landed at- the King-street station the night before .Christmas and immediate ly went to Miss Clark's house. The day after Christmas he. conceived the idea that matrimony .was just in lils line. He explained this idea- .to Miss Clark. About an hour after his explanation he rushed- madly tb a telephone and informed Rev. Thomas W. Slater whom he had' never met that Miss Clark was the best hand at under standing explanations he ever.'saw. On the eve of December 29 Rev. Mr. Slater strolled over to Miss Clark's home and married the couple. TOM WATSON CHALLENGED Georgia Protestants Want Populist to Debate Willi Newspaper Man. ATLANTA. Ga Jan. 1 Watson, one-time Populist candidate ifor the Presidency, and recently a critic in I the public printVof foreign missions, to day KasLdjaUrnged to a public debate by- reDresentatives of the various Pmrestunr churches of Georgia. The challengers have named as Wat son's opponent William T. Ellis, a Phila delphia newspapetr man. DYNAMITE SMASHES GLASS Reckless XfV'ef Celebrant most Shakes Natron Dowii. Al- SPRING FIELD, Or., Jan. 1. (Spe cial. An immense charge of dynamite sent off in a vacant field near Natron by some unknown person, presumably as a New Year's -fcelebration, shattered all the windows within a radius of a quarter of a mile. The concussion, which threw dishes on the floor in nearby houses, was plainly felt here, stjt miles distant. LABOR FIGHTS, BIG TRUST American Federation Seeks $15 1, 0O0 to Limit Power Sleel Trust. WASHINGTON, Jan. l.-OfTicers of he American Federation of 1-abor tonight isssued a call on its 1.540,00 members to subscribe to a fund with which to wage a fight on the steel trust. The call arraigns the corporation as- In imical both to labor and to the country and as a violator of the lafc-s.The sum of J154.0U0 is to be raised at once. $2,000,000 EACH IS GIFT Texas Kancher Gives Xmas Presents to His Three Children. FORT WORTH. Tex.. Jan. 1. Thomas Waggoner, of this city, has just given each of hie three children property valued at 12.000.000 as Christmas gifts. Waggoner Is 57 yeans old, a rancher, banker and capitalist. One hundred thou sand acres of land. 30.000 head of cattle and 1(100 horses are given to each child. THE) IX8PR.GK-NT. Resolved t To Wear My Hair Short Hlnn falllrirr. Homeseekers More NumerousThanEver. HARRIMAN LINES TAKE LEAD Officials of Hill System Refuse , .trGive Out Figures. INTERNAL TROUBLE" SEEN Campuign in to 10 to Populate Va-i eant 'Lands .Will Be More VI g- ' orotis Than Ever Increase Above 7 0 Per Cent. CHICAGO, Jan. 1. (Special. The colonizing work done by the railroads in the West anc, Pacific Northwest dur ing the Spring and Fall of 1909 broke all records in railway history.., Figures prepared by the management of the Harriman lines show that the nuhkher of colonists who were "taken into the Pacific Coast territory far exceeded .the number in any other year. The increase over the colonist move ment of 1908 was fully 70 per cent, and may have been in excess of this. Figures for the movement over the HillJines are not available, . the man agement refusing to give any detailed information regarding the number ot new home makers they transported into the Northwest during the last year. It is understood, however, that the Hill lines djd not make af determined an effort to secure colonists as they have made in former years. This fact is said to be due to trouble in the colonist department of the Northern Pacific which led late in the year to the resignation of O. W. Mott, general immigratio'n agei. On the Great Northern' road, theHillness of Max Bass, teneral immigration agent, which re-sulu-d In his death, somewhat retarded the work of taking h&meseekers to the Northwest. , """ It Is understood that in 1910 the man agement of both the Great Northern and the Northern Pacific, aided by the management of the Burlington, are t make a special effort toward populat ing the-vacant lands along their lines in the fertile states of the Northwest. In each year t-he railroads have two short periods which they call colonist periods. " The Spring colonist period is from March 1 to April :lo, while - the Fall period is from September 13 to October 15. In the Fall period or 1909, the Harriman lines sold a total of 11. 541 tickets to California. Oregon, Wash ington. Idaho. Montana. Nevada. UtalC Colorado and Wyoming- points. In the corresponding period of 1908. the same lines sold a total of 6227." The Increase for 1909 was S314 tickets. This is an increase for the Fall period of 85 per cent. Incite Fall of 19f)8 colonist tick ets wepf sold between September 1 and October SI, during which time the Har riman line sold a total of 15,8TB tickets. Accordingly, in just half the time in the Fall of 1.109 the Harriman lines-sold within 4275 tickets of the number sold during the 60-day period of 1908. The following table shows the num ber of. tickets sold by the Harriman lines between September 15 and Octo ber 15, for the years 1908 and 190!, together with the Increases: 19U1I. - lus. l.m M..yi9 Inc. California 2,3'.'.-. Portland and Or. uotnts '2.-2UU i..ns.. 7 PUiret Sound anil other.-- WashlnKton point? . . "l.O:wr Idaho. Mont., NnvaUa, t'tah, Colo., Wyo. . . . 2.07S ' 74 S2 2t 1.4SI-. Totals 11.641 6.227 3,314 The following table giveR similar figures over the Harriman lines for the Spring period of 80 days: 1!)09. Portland ond the Pa cific Northwest . . . . . 1 1 1 California T.O'ic, Colorado and Wyominft S:8 lOS. 5,r.3 1 14 Inc. Totals .19.9.;.-. 12.497 COL. TIGHTWAD. Dnutlredl To Make fault Contrlbn tlona to All Moveinenta for a reater Portland and OreKon. nnd for the Betterment of My Kellow- - man.