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About The new age. (Portland, Or.) 1896-1905 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 18, 1905)
- w v . -- ' -"' jen""" V, . 1 ( 1 t tf. kirfYO ' T TUS NEW AGE, PORTLAND, OREGON. '. '"'V" u t. fcSl l IV r fb 1 ;J V k r. ff i THE NEW AGE A. D. ORIPPIN. MnnnRwr OrBea4J)V Second St., cor. Ah, Rooms I and 2 Portland, Oregon. Entered lit tho potnfnce at Portland, Oregon, M Mcond-clm utler. SUBSCRIPTION. Oim Year, payable In advance $2.00 5S!)(SSl EDITORIAL D)i)a)iKe(M)(sy5i& A REASSURING GUARANTEE. Tho Chicago Record-Herald ob serves that Santo Domingo Is lucky to havo an honest, good-nnturcd and powerful ftlond ready to do her n bop vlco. By tho protocol recontly sign cd tho United Stntcs nssumcB the hup den of helping tho littlo nation Htralghtcn out her finances, nml, In addition, guarantees her territorial Integrity, If tho United States wcro not at hand to glvo aid tho futuro would bo gloomy, for Snnto Domingo's Europe an creditors havo Touched tho limit of their patlcnco. Tho best treatment tho delinquent nation would receive from tho European powers would bo a good deal worsa Uian tho worst treatment It will rccclvo from us. "It Is truo," sayB tho Record-Humid, "our action Is not entirely disinterest ed. Wo take a smnll bunion upon us now In ordor to ayold tho possibility of a great deal larger burden later on. Nor will wo bo disinterested In tho action wo shall tako when Santo Do mingo's finance's nro Anally put In good ordor, Blnco wo Bhnll withdraw from tho custom houses and rid our selves of tho nuisance of mnringlng them as awlftly ns posstblo. "If any of tho South American re publics nro excited or worried when tlioy hoar of tho now nrrangoinont thoy will nssiirodly calm themselves at onco when thoy rend In full tho terms of tho protocol. Tlint document shows plainly enough that wo nru not nocking to tnko unjust ndvnntngcs oven over tho smallest and woakcBt of our nolghbors. "Tho permanently Important foaturo of tho protocol Is our guarantee of ter ritorial Integrity. Santo Domingo Is a thousand times tinppy to havo such protection." THE LOCAL SITUATION. A littlo llfo Is being Injected Into municipal politics, tho church clement and tho open-town people holng nl ready In tho mood for a Btubboru con test. Thoro aro ninny Issues, how' ever, to bo dotormlned nt tho oloctlon noxt Juno. This will bo n great yoar for Portland; but tho degree of Its success doponds largely on tho char acter and ability of tho men elected to direct tho affairs of tho municipal government. Mnny thousands of pco plo will como to tho Lewis nnd Clark Exposition. They will ho crltlwil oh servers of conditions ofllclal as well as othorwlao and tho Impressions thoy receive will dotormlno for them tho question ns to whether or not thoy deslro to become residents of Oregon. Tho mattor of tho contention of mnny pcoplo for a wldo-opcn town will bo fought out ns far as tho pcoplo can do It, but tho stuto law really controls thnt situation, as Sheriff Word lms shown. Tho question of grnutlng franchises, as well ns that of refusing to grant tham, will como up for sottln raont, ns will also tho mutter of award ing public contracts and tho careless expenditure) of money from tho public treasury. Recent scandals In this de partment of our city government hnvo served to show how careless public olllcluls aro, sometimes, with public busluoss. Thoro aro many othor quest tlons of Importanco to bo considered by thoso who nro substantially Inter ested lu tho progress of Portlnnd Greater Portland, Tho oloctlon In Juno will glvo tho business olomont of tho city an opportunity to protect its Interests. Rut It will need to bo ulort. "ALL ONE NATION." Ab tho guost of honor at tho Lin coin club In Now York on Monday night, President Roosevelt mndo a characteristic address on tho race problom, Ha appealed eloquontly to tho North to help tho South to solvo It; and ho suggested tho means by which that result might most easily bo toached, Ho referred to tho fuct that tho great dally nowspapcra of tbo South had recently taken up tho fight and had dono effective sorvico In rebuking tho spirit of certain class es of tho Southern states that had bo long kept nlivo tho flamo of outrage ous outlawry, Tho Prosldcnt said tout nuoh a condition must bo wrought out M wwld slve the colored raco 2) rosldont In tho South entire and un embarrassed political freedom. Ho appeared to bo Btiro that tho pcoplo of tho South were changing their mind nbout that matter but tho aid of the North was necessary to enable tho Na tion to dcclaro that thcro Is no longer any raco war In our great republic. Tho speech was received with great applaiiBO by more than 1200 guests. It will provo to ho of extraordinary value In tho work of solving tho prob lem of raco trouble In tho South. President Roosevelt's Influenco In this matter has done moro to produco con ditions under which tho Negro may enjoy absolute freedom than anything which has been done In that direction slnco Abraham Lincoln wns put away In his tomb. THE RAILROAD HILL. Tho railroad commission bill now boforo tho Washington legislature iicciiiH to ho Intended to kill tho rail roads mid that, too, In n Btato In which tho rnllroadB havo dono nuch valiant sorvico In tho development of grand resources. Washington Is proud of Its vast nntlvo wealth, but It ought to bo ashamed of having sent to Its law-making body n man who could, by any Influenco, bo Induced to framo such a law ns thnt now boforo that legislature. Tho bill, should It paBB, would glvo to Governor Mend tho power to govern tho operation of tho rnllroads, also. Its provisions are simply outrngcoiiB. It Is strango that n stato for which tho railroads havo dono so much should manifest such a spirit toward tho development of tho railroads. Tho railroads brought It hurlnoss. Tho railroads advertised Its resources. Tho rnllroads exercised an Influenco gronter than thnt from all other sources combined to people It with families whoso members were looking for homes. Wore It not for tho railroads thu stato of Washington would yet ho n wilderness. There fore, they nro worthy of consideration In this mnttcr of legislation. Tho stato of Washington, now In a most prosperous condition commercially, ennuot afford to bo mislead by a crank. SENATOR MITCHELL'S CASE. It may bo a conspiracy ngalnst Sen ator Mitchell. Tho "architecture" of tho casu gives It thnt appearance It Is probnblo that tho grand Jury could do nothing loss than It did. It Is cam posod of most honorablo man, hut thoy havo been mislead by testimony con cerning only ono sldo of tho enso. Tho statement In Associated Ptobh dispatches to tho offoct that tho United States sonnto had lost nil con fidence In Senator Mitchell cannot bo readily believed. A man who has been so useful, not only to his state, but to tho nation, as John II. Mitchell has been, cannot possibly huvo been si) careless of himself. Tho testimony of coufossed porjurers who bolong to n gang of professional swindlers should not bo taken against such a man. Strong evidence offered by reputable peoplo Is tho only thing thnt could bring nbout a conviction. HIb case seems to bo entirely different from those ugalnstllermnnn nnd Wil liamson; nnd It may bo said to bo different from that agnlnst Judge Tuunor. Tho senator's letter should not bo misconstrued, Thoro Is a largo proportion of tho public who will ro fiibo to bullevo that It Intimated that ha wns In any way criminally connect ed with tho laud-fraud operations until a trial shall havo developed his guilt. Thnt Is a very remote possibility. Thoro aro u pod mnny preachers In Portlnnd who would llko to bo mom bors of tho Oregon legislature. Thoro aio a good many men In tho Oregon legislature who ought not to bo thoro; but there nro thouBnuds of pcoplo In Oregon who aro glad that tho "min isters" nro not "in." Tho suggestion that Hon. Charlos V. Lord should bo mixed up in tho allugod plot to scandallzo Unltod States Prosecuting Attorney Honoy Is propostorouB. His indictment Is cop tnlnly ono or tho most simple things nniong tho several slmplo things that that grand Jury did. Tho fnet that tho "emergency" United StntoB attorney Is not wholly wrong in his work lu tho land-fraud scandal lu this state may bo shown In a measuro by tho lndlctmont of Oeorgo Sorenson, Soronson Is moro than usually lucky to havo escaped aa long as ho did, Tho ministerial lobbyists lu Oregon seem to havo a cinch whon It comes to sensation. Is It a crluio to practice law in Oregon? LITTLE DY LITTLE. And yet Jack Matthews escaped I Uut tho "returns" aro not all In. Isn't Edison about ready to assuro us again that the horso must go? No good thing can bo hurt by being freely nnd frankly discussed In tho nowspapers. Judging from tho work of tho fed eral grand Juhy, tho Augean stables of Oregon needed cleaning. Marconi Is engaged to a prlnccsB. Mil Won't that Indianapolis girl bo sorry that she gllted him and gave back tho ring! e A man who attended bar In Chicago for twenty years has loft an estoto worth 100,000. Dot Chicago bar-tending Isn't what Is used to bo. Jeromo, of New York, Is tho only mnn who might seriously claim tho nblllty to break tho bank at Monto Carlo If ho had nothing else to do. Hon. Francis J. Honey seems to hnvo been doing "a lnnd-offlco busi ness" In Portland during tho few weeks of his ofllclal residence hero. Tho Czar can always comfort him self with tho thought that, no mnttcr what his troubles may bo, thoso with which his subjects aro fretted arc worse. John Morlcy thlnlcB tho United Stntcs Is drifting townrd free trnde. John must hnvo n deslro to make Senator Aldrlch nnd "Uncle Joe" Cnn- noil fidgety. A New York mnn wants his niuno changed from Smith (o Cuyler. If ho wore a rich girl tho probabilities aro that he'd ho crazy to marry soma titled foreigner. The Jnpnneso nro yet a simple, primitive pcoplo. They hnve not ns yet acquired tho habit of throwing mud at their heroes whon tho Inttcr nttempt to return homo. Tho adjournment of tho Oregon leg islature yesterday marked tho closo of an unusually Interesting session. Tho character of tho work it did will be reviewed later, howovor. e It Is gratifying to ho able to an nounce that each of tho various kinds of automobiles Is thin year to havo snino sort of improvomont thnt will make Is positively tho best machine on tho market. Tho prlco of wool Is going up. It would bo advisable, uovorthoiess, to keop your flannols on n wook or so longer. This Wcbfoot state Is being considerably influenced Intoly by an eastern ntmosphore. - A KansnH populist has caused a good deal of talk by putting a bnlh room In his houso. Somo day n Kan rns populut will hiro a vnlot and then tho worst will no longor bo yet to como In thnt stato. e In Ilorlln llcouses nro required for baby carriages, which must bo num bered ns automobiles nro in this coun try. Such a regulation should never bo enforced hero. Tho poor peoplo could nt onco hnvo It thrown out ns class legislation. POPULAR TALKS ON LAW. Copyrighted by William C, Sprnguo, President Tho Spraguo Corres pondence School of Inw, Solf-Defonco. It Is a mnttcr of Importanco thnt ono know how far ho may go In using forco ngalnst forco lu tho defence of himself, his family nnd his property. Tho right of self-defenco will occur to us nu being a natural right. Ono could scarcely bo expected whon at tacked, elthor In person or in proper ty, to say "I will wait for tho law to punish tho aggressor," for tho ono at tacked has no menus of knowing how far tho attacking party may go In the uso of vlolouco, as ho oven may go to tho extent of taking llfo. Then, too, tho law recognizes a weakness In human nature or shall wo call It strength rather, thnt Impels ono when attacked to defond hlmsolt by tho uso of forco. Sclf-presorvatlon 1e truly tho first Inw of naturo, Tho law of Bolf-dcfenco Is nn old ono, recognized from tho beginning. It extends not only to ono's own poi son but to ono's own family nnd pos sessions, . Tho old law speaks of n man's homo ns his "cnstlo" and gnvo him tho right to defond It, oven to the extent of taking llfo; with certain lim itations, which wo will learn, that right still oxlsts. Of com so there must bo a limitation put upon thu tight of self-defenco or It will bo abused, and men, under cover of tho excuse that they wore put to an not of violence by necessity, will cover up acts which nro unlustltlablo nnd honco punlshablo. Tho law, btoadly speaking, limits tho right to cases where necessity oxlsts, nml It will only nxcuso n man when ho uses that violence which under tho circum stances would appeal to a reasonable man. as ueceesary fer sis self-protec- tlon. Nor will n court compel him to exorcise tho best of Judgment at tho tlmo, for it recognizes that when the occasion for self-defenco presents It self, tho mind of tho ono attacked is more or loss disturbed and tho ovon balanco of his Judgment shaken; but whero tho means taken to defend o'jo'h nclf ato manifestly moro than necessary, as whero ono slapped In tho faco draws a revolver and kills, tho act will bo considered unjustlfiablo and tho perpetrator of It held to ac count; but If tho person attacked has reasonnblo grounds for fearing thnt killing or n felony Is being attempted by tho attacking party, the defence may go to tho extent of taking llfo. It is well decided that whero ono Is merely struck with tho fist nnd has no reasonablo groundH for bcllovlng that ho Ib in danger of being killed or nt a felony being committed, his use of a gun, or n knife, or deadly weapon lb unjustifiable. Tho fact that tho person defending himself was mistaken ns to tho Inten tions of his assailant does not affect his right to tako llfo If there appeared to him at the tlmo reasonnblo grounds to believe thnt unless ho did so he would bo killed or a folony would bo perpetrated agalnBt him. It has been held that tho .rncro fact that tho as sailant put his hand In his pocket was not sufficient to Justify tho taking of tho nssallant's llfo on tho ground thnt tho assallnnt was believed to bo reach ing for a weapon. Supposo thnt tho person called upon to defond himself had been himself tho provoker of tho qunrrcl or tho im mcdlnto cause of tho attack, would his uubscquent uso of violent mcnhk In sclf-defonco bo Justified under tho rules laid down? Tho question has arisen In many cases and has usually been decided In tho negative. Tho person himself must bo frco from fault In order to Justify himself for killing another. Tho cases go to tho oxtent of saying thnt anyone who brings on or pro vokes n personal encounter cannot rely upon tho plea of solf-defonco. Wo cnu quickly hco that If tho law wcro pormltted to bo othorwlso ono desiring to kilt another would only huvo to piovoko thnt other sufficiently to causo him (o ubo vlolenco In order to tnko his llfo and cscapo tho conso qucnccB. Tho main question us to whether or not tho force used could havo reasonably been doomed neces sary Is a question to bo left to tho de termination of tho Jury In all cases. It Is nlso of Interest to ask whethor a mnn attacked Is bound to retrent. It Is qulta well decided that whon n man Is attacked with a dangerous weapon ho must retrent us fnr ns no ran snfoly do so before using Ilka means lu defending hlmsoir; but where tho ono attacked has reason able grounds for bcllovlng that ho can not safely retreat ho Is Justified In using violence In solf-dofonce. Tho right of self-defenco goes to tho ex tent ot excusing a mnn for resisting nrrest by violence "whoro tho attempt ed arrest Is unlawful. How far ono may go In tho dofonco of his property, or possessions, Ib re served for treatment In a subsequent article (To bo Continued. THADDEE8TTKA IS PRODIGY. Remarkable Hunifarlan Hoy Artlat Who Urn Picture In l'urla Hulou. Ill the entire history of the Paris salon there Is no record of thu previous ncccptanco of tho work of so young 1111 artist ns Thnddeo Btyku, the ladtof 12 years, who hud two paintings ac cepted this year, an excellent portrait of his father, unci one of hlmsulf. Young Styka's position lu this respect Is therefore unique, says a correspond ent of tho Detroit NewH-Trlhune. Tho boy Is n sou of Jan Styka, a Hunga rian, who Is likewise an artist. Thnddeo took to drawing nt it very early agu, ns naturally us Mozart did to music. When ho was In thu Catho lic school In Paris In tho Rue de Van glrad, lie used to till his sketch book every week with drawings, nnd show them to his father when tho latter went to sou him. Ills father even util ized tho thought ombodled In some of theso drawings for his own pnlntlngs. Tho tones of tho llesh of the young painter nnd his methods of depleting light resemulo those of the painter Henncr. The latter Is very fojul of tho young artist. He has n studio lu the Hnmo building ns the Stykas at .11 Placo Plgulle. Father and son hnvo the studio where Puvls de Clinvnnues onco worked. Thnddeo Is pale, with straight hair, not very Inrge, rather delicate-looking, nnd timid In manner, n contrast to his father, who Is tall, well built and ex uberant In his manner. The boy wears at his work n suit of chestnut-colored corduroys, with kueo breeches. W lien painting ho Is so occupied lie iuiiiks or. nothing else, nnd Ih barely conscious or tho people around him. Three years ago ho took up sculp ture, Just as ho did pointing, without nny lessons. His sculptures already show much talent and astonishing en ergy. Ho has ono friend that pertains to childhood his. cat. Rlgolo. When his work Is dono ho romps with his feline companion boisterously, llko any other child of his age. New Hlval f Mummoih Cave. Still another cave that "bids fulr" to rival tho wonders of Mummnth cave hns been found, this tlmo at Lime Spur, Mont. Its accidental discovery Is reported from Anaconda. Not many people know of its existence. The mouth of tho cavo Is In Jefferson can yon, about forty-two miles from Itutte, on tho Northern Pacific railroad. Eight hundred feet from the uioutli of the cavern the chamber widens out Into Immense halls. In which nro wild to bo n full quota of stalactite tapestry, col onnades, arches, festoons nnd other es sentials of a well-equipped cave. Father nml Nona. Observers nro struck with tho cama raderie carried to the verge of equall ty which obtains between fathers and their bdioolboy sons, so that their mu tuul companionship Is a source of un feigned pleasure to both and should provo a safeguard against many evils In tho future. This Is essentially a modern development nnd stnnds to tho credit of tho fathers of tho present day. London Spectator. Kho Was lHikinit INi'Hmnt. "He fell In lovo with her photo graph and proposed beroroho had over seen her." "Some retoucher have much o an swer for."lllliota t JwhwI- ELECTRIC EARS. )- Ships will soon hnvo cars cars that will hear the approach of a torpedo boat that tho captain cannot bco, or that will hear tho sound of tho fog bell or the waves beating against a dangerous rock on a stormy night These electrical ears, ns they aro de scribed by tho American Tclephono Journul, are moro Bcosltlre than human cars, because tho sounds they will hear arc sounds which travel under water, a medium which trans mits sounds better than air. It Is th's superiority of thu water as a sound transmitter thnt has brought about tho now Invention. It Is called n "subaqueous tele phone." Its principal elements are delicate transmitters, or microphones, attached to the hull of the vessel be low tho water-line. Theso sensitive In struments Intercept tho .sound-waves afc they traverse the wntcr nnd trans mit them by regular telephones wires to the captain, who, with receivers nt ids cars, Is listening In tho wheel house. It Is expected to perform a most valued service In averting collisions. A type of the subnqucotis tclephono which has been adapted to fishing- boats or smnll vessels of any kind con sists of n receiving-box with n ball- tecolver which Is lowered Into the wntcr. It Is obvious thnt some sound would he too delicate to penetrate tin skin of n vessel, nnd might not bo henrd by n receiver locntod on tho in side. Hence It is that the receiver Is Idwercd directly Into tho water, an I picks up sounds of comparatively small Intensity. In case of emergency, whero n ship Is not supplied with receivers located on Its hull, by lowering on of theso bnll-recclvers first on one side of tho vessel nnd then on the other, and not ing the difference In Intensity of tho sound, It is prnctlcal to lorato the source, whether It be the Rignal of n fisherman In n dory, a bell-buoy, or nny other nlgnnl. TERRAPIN MAKE 8LOVV TIME. Apparently Kntltlrd to Cliniiiplonnhlp for I.ciniircly .Movement. Thomas 8. Stndden, 11 prominent resi dent of Wndesvllle, Clarke county, and n former resident of Winchester, wns In this city recently nnd brought with hltn n terrapin which has rattier a rc- inarkablo and certainly n most unusual history. Just thirty years ngo, In 1871, Mr, Staddcn came ucrosn thu terrapin on his farm, and on thu bottom of Its shell ho Inscribed tho' (Into. Every time slnco then thnt ho lias seen tho terra pin ho hns cut the ditto on tho shell, and tho entries nro ns follows: 1874, 1875, 1870, 1880, 1881, 1882 and 18S1. On tho Inttor date Mr. Htaddeu car ried tho terrapin to n spot near Hto phonsons, fully two nnd one-hnlf miles from homo, nnd then turned It loose. Mr. Staddcn has always held to the theory that terrapin nnd turtles will ondenvor to wander bnck to the spot of their birth, and to tost the theory tiio terrapin wns taken to Stephenson. Thnt was twenty years ago, and dur ing all tho Intervening two decades Mr. Staddon uavor suw his pet. ln fact, ho lytd forgotten all about It until ono day recently ho came across u terrapin 30 years old. Turning the terrapin ovor, ho was amazed to llnd that It wus his long-lost put. There were all the dates, tho Initials that had been placed there from time to time, grown larger, of course, with tho terrapin, but Just ns distinct utmost ns the day they were cut there. In ordor to get back to his usual feeding place under tho mulberry tree, from Stcphcnsons thu terrapin had to cross several streams, traverse wooded bluffs, treacherous ravines nnd cross fields. Twenty years had been requir ed to mnko the Journey of two and one half miles, but, guided by an unerring Instinct, tho littlo terrapin had nt last reached homo n living object lesson of what persevcrauco cnn accomplish. Winchester, Vn., News. WHEN COLUMBUS LANDED. Old Colored Man Wui There nnd He raeuibcrcd Kvent Perfectly. Dowu In Nassau, New Providence, tuut quaint town which favored Amer icans visit In the winter months, thcro stands a statue of oluuibus. It Isn't much of a statue, being nfter tho swashbuckler order of architecture; but, anyway, it serves to remind visit ors to tho Rnhamas that Its original first landed on nu island in that chain, llelng the only statue of account in tho Island, It is known of nil men and Is of special Importance lu tho eyes of tho negroes, who point to it with prldo nnd date occurrences relatively recent from the tlmo of its erection. The knowledge of historical events displayed by the "man ami brother" Is pretty accurately Indicated lu tho tnlo they tell In Nassau respecting tho occasion, a fow years ago, that Colum bus appeared In court. Tho lawyer for tho defense, attempting to Impeach the veracity of plaintiff's witness, nn old colored man of doubtful antecedents, asked: "Sq you say you've lived here mauy yeara?" "Yls, boss, I has." "Theu I suppose you remember clearly when Columbus landed here?" "Oh. yls, boss, I does 'member dat, tlnctly," "Oh, you do?" "Yls, salt; suttenly, boss." "That will do, your honor; this wit ness' memory is evidently defective, and I claim a verdict for my client." The Judge seemed inclined that way, too, saya the New York Times, when the plaintiff's lawyer Interposed: "Wult a momeut, gentlemen, perhaps my wit ness Is not so far wrong, after all. Now, Cufue, tell us when was it you saw Columbus laud and how did ho como ashoro?" "Well, boss, I t'ink 'twas 'bout twen ty year ago, an Columbus ho come asho' In de big boxes!" The nuahteaa.l'oliU ol" View. "Do you think, that Shakespeare wrote tho plays ascribed to hlmV "Wbat differeuco dots that make?" asked the, manager, a little Impatient ly. "He Is the man who got tho money out of tbein. Isn't he?" Washington Star. -jvil i mm msamaBmam C. 0. PICK TRANSFER Safes, Pianos, Furniture moved, stored or packed for shipping. Fire proof brick warehouse, Front and Clay. Express and Baggage hauled. 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