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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (June 16, 1904)
1 . ..." ( PORTLAND, OREGON;; THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1C01 TH E ORE OON-DAI JOURNAL SmaU Chari: Oregon Sidelights C S. JACKSON PUBLISHED BY JOURNAL PUBLISHING COT JNb. P. CAKROU. .Published wr vening (except Sunday) and every Sunday morning at Th Journal BnflOln,, Fifth ;-a4 Tamhm Now thought of the murmuring sea win arise. ' , . ;v i.- ; Uncle Russell Baca's money is like I 1.1 1 a. I . OFFlWlALt -"t-iic ur inn vu v.r- av t,n"M '-"- . '".1 Those far-off mountain streams and '" ' 1 . ' . i ., . t : . . .. .... ' " ' .' , ... .. .... llaJtea aand a wlrelaaa lonar-dlatajuia lnvU ? V ANOTHER AWFUL RESULT OP CARELESS- Jlary prudence and a decant regard for publlo moral, tetioa, , ...... . aw . I III I If II L lmTMI UWm . LU UaJIIlJalA. . ' - ' .. a I i . . . . .. . a NESS. v . rr.L" VL-ii, .,.::.... 5. mamng misetonari w xar- r- v ait e . y c;i 1 i arT rl - II i . ,1 a i . J:W. mlffht. Imnjil thorn. to tinholA. . i :, a ii- .T,..r n It want- It d.-Hn! L." "T"0?' l.Eariy : thl morning i W . 77: ' " " ; ."I,.- " . li'rj!?:' imna" W"B WMK,W. wu' Joined the camp of our huntara. who bad It la abundantly able to take care of Itaelf under afiyl condltlont that aro likely to arlae.: It ha no apologlei to are ilkaly to be mthar ad of ' make for anything which it may bar don or helped to NoVoabafi.. . ; .., '. . . -do In the lait campaign It la neither owned nor con .'. ' ' ' . , : -r n a v . n,..- .v. fc tood many atrangara are In Pot Portland : 'w 7"CRr BBXDOM baa to appalling eataatrophe oo-; .'1 ' cumi either on water or on land, aa mat , in V which, aoroe alx hundred people, , mostly women , mnA children, met death yesterday on Long Island Bouno, . . -j.vi. hurinr a' tha areal American I .... , v. .v. .k.. I : A good many air , ajmoK wiuuii 7- I "X l" i" vu uu" ,w.vh.. I thaaa daya, bufthare will be far more of metropolis, in aome. pi iva c..v. . . ihy tne rrohJCHioniata, ana it wui not accept aioiauon them a year benoe. ' tr. Tnr.mP tha tirmnola theatre disaster Of last Winter. I ,fvsr -ii. wv.t doaa It doaa from a. aanaa of I 'And all thl. terrible loa. of life. Uvea for the mostpari ot wnU ,t bell,vet to u rtght Juiti whlcn p0 .-g?JEto5 . innocent, prauung. joyou m i it iouows it naa zouowea trom ue nrst ana proposes to i pattle has cleared away, : . ai : agony and' multant anguish ana sorrow, oocurrva keep on foflowlnf It. i a .uij i urawiuBMi . M"ewaai - n nmr - inn w -sarn ' nur sarin Tha man not nominate at Bt Louis rinen P"1 prairie on next, north, oovered f with a epaola of umoiny, . maae our way through bad sandbar and a swift currant to a oamp for tha evening on the north aide, at a 10 . mllae - dlatanea. - Tha timber which we examined today wae not auf flolently strong for . oar a. .The moa quttoaa ' and ticks . are exceedingly troublesome..';.,: ' i.. :":.!, .Y.'-f. CHICAGO HALF PROHIBITION : ' From the Chicago Record-Herald. "A trifle more than half of tha city 6t inioago u under local option or prohlbt' graatltloo. law," declared Arthur Bun-are Far- 'll.fM h. fa lim 4aWr fa Xam In alt VtnAt I u J"- line., of aplrit but at the .am. time ym full aprecla- wSTUte ox tnat I Hon of what It mean, no matter from what point of view It I . - -i-'-'A' ' v; Uthar .. -rw- t2 th. I 4..AmA krk.i MAnii w.v v. If 7W can't. go on ti vaoatlon. yon eealattv mnnnii vr .uit . of ; Ami BDDarently trlylal" accident Somebody made what aeemed to be- a HtUe mistake, committed tie blunder, was careless, did not think, ana out t i .-..it ant inAniifluAntlal Incident the element. KCIilUUIJ munmm .M.ia ' - I IllttT J UUllUl n Wmfc J. VWUW. V ,UWIJ. l aUV 1 . . . . . .. .. I wwwwm i IW . IMI make a holocaust that cause, the whole- civUUed -world to terea h0 foolUhly Bnd to it eauae for furthet very VoS ' shudder, and thousand, to suffer with poignant grief. .': k- EJvery auch calamity preaches the , lesson of oare, of tboua-htfulneai. of strict attention to all details, however ; trivial, on such occasions, whenever and wherever crowd , Is thus gathered together but it .eern. a. If the lesson will never be learned by ell those who need to learn .. offense. "In Hyde' park alone." he .aid. there are u square milea of absolutely aaloon- COMMENCEMENT, TIME IN OREGON. A LITTLE WELL MEANT ADVICE." IT 13 " Anil After all. Ulas Ida Tarball should net 1 71' ""!T v. dlallke Mr. Rockefeller altogether. Look Uh. aiTr wh.ra ToXl oMoJiiiT i at the Job eh. baa on aooount of him. r.,,oJ..WiJ?fa.?!!1. mt.i. i. .... 1 w .v.i"everal hundred aaloona, but X hardly : ' . i. """' wo- wi- .hinv h .ku.t.i ...u ... tow commencement season, ana many ireei, ana a I half-grown boy would rather half fraaaa I ;.T7. L. .7fc f P T:r" ' V ': local onUon law exact, of the pro. Ravin 1aii it. ai-rtinn n4 tonki aii pecuve saioon-Keapar are in many .in- nr .far greater number of mlnda, are turned toward the college, of Oregon. They are the feet and minds relatives and friend, of the graduate, and other atueenta, and alumni who yet remember the . commencement of lover the figurea, Oregon can keep cool IHERB Is a disposition manirestea in some quart i wmcn tney were a part. to exact reprisals upon those wno eitner opemy or i , xne college, ox. Oregon are not numerous, nor,, af com- . ' tacitly supported the local option law. . It has al-1 pared with great eastern Institution. Ilk. Harvard, Cornell, ready gone" to the extent of .ending out big placard, to Michigan, and Chicago, large, but considering the popule- men engaged In the saloon business, each containing theition of the state they are creditable thereto, both in num nimt ajid tha line of bualnea. of those who composed tne ber and standing. And along with Industrie of various local optlon executive committee, each edntalnlng a eug- I kinds, they are yearly Improving, enlarging their scope I. joung ougiiaime " two bad ula- gfstlon that It be filed for future reference" and each and usefulness, and becoming better adapted to th educa- -thar. attar that waa donl in Tot Vmin signed by the name Of an Astoria crowing company. . i uonai nea. ox tne siaie s increasing population. bimaaix, and ao eioaing the tragio Inol . - . w I . .ma MaMk rr na NT.ra I innMnit a, v ti... iMMtiniMi paium uhl xnere were soma unwuv uuiis uuw uur.iis v- , Muau, m. iiivmuwn vwuv,, i . . . . . . i a a I a S1... 11 1 B..I.. -11 1 .1 rm a. I ' palgn, tbere nave neon some unwise imnga none ami.--, uuu wi w.wv vwnp . cvm, wu,a, nwumLw Tn- hoTnaaaakara rate" serosa the surely none quite so unwise aa this.; A secret boycott has I University at 8alem, Albany College, McMlnnville College, AtlanUo Is helping to bring over a great stances dlahoneetly obtained. "Recant efforts on the pert of aldar men to aet aalde local option and pre- niniuon district, tndloate a spreading dealre among the people to abolish the saloon influence. Parents are reoognle- and attend to buaineaa, and let the ether states do the political fussing.''. - Secretary "Wilson having Imported a lot of llttla nut anfa . to. trill tha htll weevil," might it not be well for Becre- to Jeopardy the boys and girl, are tary rayne to get some for the pull evllT "U1DUJ " wnue suojecMa e tne in- , r. , - iiiuenoaa a aeioon environment onnga.- invasugatlon shows that the follow ing districts are strictly prohibition: Dlatriot bounded by the lake, Devon avenue, Kedsle avenue, Chicago, Milwau kee and Bt Paul tracks end Hayes ave nue, exoepting a : strip 100 feat wide weat of Ridge avenue. , iJinirici oounaea oy uevon avenue v - in.n,n..4 in ,htoi Tha .Tmimal ttaa tha dlatinotlon I the Pendleton Academv. the normal achoola. and otharaimany undaairabla Immigrants. But tha I North Sixtieth, annua. Brm Mawv ava of being included, la which it appear, t be proposed to ar doing good work, and the close of each year's .ucces.- bteamshlp Unee have a puU with coo- nue and North place. ban upon every one who did not think like and ful work la properly a time to regard these institution. : : i '. bus. North Sou thport aVanua. Byl did not act witn tner liquor men in tne campaign jusii w ""u ana cuiu unarm oi moat peopie moivia-i uoua rw or -we-iron etreet ana unoom avenue. , . .. . l' .1 .1 .-a nail mn.Mnvwl unfara In Inillvlnat .4.t. 4.neO. lOVe, DUl tne Kina tnat muraare a I niatrlet honnilail hr AAM.nrt ifH.) . ' 1 ...1, la . 7.nM- wnnn. it nates: but the interest of the nuhllo ertenda bavond tha S?, I?,.,ib!r.,lfat?! iJL ra Montroae boulevard. Bun- "uc""' - M. ,v " ' llTrr ;; "?',rZL :"-." -! nyiae avenue, Forty-eighth avenue and nas among omer cnaracierisiica uio iacvuij 01 va vwu- w"c un ... . -" 1 uuwaukee avenue. . l- . .A. . . 1 . . ilAm.A ,Im" u(iim I "C Th... !UlAlhAMtlv.l .tn.ll .Allaa . A MA Jktl - r 1 .MMMM . I TM tiHn, k.Mi4l . ..,rv. th ho .nt it But tha thlna- to which The be desDlsed. but In the onlnlon of manv thev do a r.a.riv I w. 1 -.1 Vt."7. North Blxty-elxth avenue. North Beven- M seaavav -kawww - - w ' " ' I . " " -w IIW M (WW UJVir VVIITVUVeUafe, 1 tHea"eAnii . . . . a. la a,V. AWI-aa. 1 Kaa4f a tatTAvtlr tsa satAsla..waa aa-aaaa. ka. Ala. Wa.A --.11 I TV..au.a.A a.. .taVava, . u I sT BWVUU. JOtimiVI Wimnesl IO OITACL DaMTlClUllX saVLLffLULlUn ! Ul WUII w v a avi ui TVIMW IIUUVUI WUH IHI irni CgueiB VIU1W(V VWUTUUUWB vTiUIUUe ; m IVW I r1eaa4n f Wa....aavJt V. "Tvl. V...1. which baa frequenUy provoked criticism, among thoughtful do. While this theory 1. not likely to be generally ec- l0d. tj1'". f""1, I vard. PuUerton avenue. North Leavltt people not otherwise deeply prejudiced against the liquor cepted, It remains true that a young man or woman can tha aun. v . ". . . rr J,tr?t and Nortb California avenue. , -vifc . . tntniaranoa it la iianoaal to rfan v I secure venr usefuL and for most Practical nurnnaaa a I , n . ' , '.i- r ,5' I sutoi nounaeo oy iNortn avenue. IGllicjiS " V . Mm W . 1 mr . r W w . n. 4.Uw ka rlkf a fM. nnMMlnn of nnlnlnn IBUfflclent hlaher education rla-ht hara In flrcroB 1 . -. - - - , . .Mn.h.M,n.H..,nMiiM.i,.M ,uni " un j-r iuia arwnua ana -which It stouUy claim, for itself. It 1. disposed to coerc Tne private academies and schools, particularly, of the madi by unreaaonablerompialnant-. a South Forty-eighth avenue to Twelfth the timid, to Whin Into line men in business who are de-1 Cathoilo and other Christian denomlnatlona, also perform Dalles family who have returned aay ,ttJ.e Vf"0 we-t. ? S1tle.tl Tin' i - ' i. ..... .... - i iiarinnr niiinnai nva HYtsvw-aiwtn aa i pendent upon all classes for their, trade; to browbeat Ty valuable service In their several communities and I tMT ' a,V.1"lfnu,e5ln,r . those who are elected to office or to exact retribution lu m P Mate t large, and with all these, a. welt aa with Ilrchw f the event of their failure .to flo. those thlngf whioa tney " rawp pmru cowegaa, is is tne commencement time, reaaonabla. ... i1ra.4 In Tn a rnntmrnant nurh ha Aura avarv. I WOen rOUUne BlUaie. SJ XOr time laid aalda. anA eho I "v.- .. ' - :' -.' . ' ' thlna-rests with the people themselves The expression of roung people begin their holiday, or In the case of the! ,?h!?,I!.wlll ,i0? TT?V'67 their feeling Is ofticlallr, found In .the! ballot box.- What Jgraduatea perhap. begin "the battle of life" that -they Joyable vacaOon before them providing nrat alley eouth' of Forty-third etreet, the majority of the voteri say there ia the ro they could save enough money out, of rst silereaat of Halsted street, and w ..- i.- -.A v.. v-. thua icattera at commancamant ttma War v. their salaries to travel aome. There are Forty-ninth street - AU lllfj WJU VUa lUOyUI VTIIJ (WU VIUHQU .MV lUCll I ' "V . T a vvwM W W UK, '.I V J ' al av a m - . . ' a . . taught , to bow. As he grow. ln ..ge .and experience he I "J61 women 01 ma jana, ana worx out, in their day discover, for himself that the- government rest, first, upon I na generauon, their .hare of It. history, and destiny; a free and untrammeled expression of the publlo will, sec Dlatriot bounded by Forty-sixth ave nue, Madison street, Harrison street and Fortieth avenue. ' ' "District bounded V by V Thirty-fifth street.' Champlaln avenue, 'Thirty-ninth street ana arena boulevard. a. Dlatrict bounded by Btewert avenue. ondly, on a fair return of the vote cast, and third, upon the peaceful acceptance of the result by the minority. Whether It is good or bad, whether it will work benefit or evil, whether It waa the best thing that could have been done or the worst, the fact still 1 remains that it now is I the law and it cannot for the present be changed. There fore those whom It concern, face a condition not a theory, a tangible and existing fact . If that fact' 1. met by a spirit of Intolerance If the, liquor men .tart out with the I A REPUBLICS IMPERIAL DUTIES". N conferring the degree of Doctor of Law. upon Mr. Ellhu Root, late secretary of war; Prof. Burgee, of Columbia University said: . A free , republic can discharge imperial duties' suc cessfully and honorably . without -sacrificing or im pairing or imperilling Its own historio liberties. . ; The exact scope of bis meaning, even if It could be de- idea of making reprisal upon those who were not ;wtth fined, i. not aacertalnable, but on Ite surface the state them In the last campaign, tbey have undertaken not only ment 1. open to doubt, not to say dispute. Quoting It, the a heavy and mfortunate contract, but they have set about .New Tork World make, these comments, with which The It in precisely the right way to , do themselves and their I Journal agrees: cause the most harm, "i s ' ,1 A great university consecrated to the finding of the , . It would anam to na that thla la tha tlm nf all tlm.a I tm'lt mU,-,TA .11. a a a. il k - ' ' ' " ' ' - --- I . buuvuu UW ,IUI UJ HDU1I IU U1B WOrOS OI. when reason and common .ense should prevail on bbth , one of ,lt lnstructdra, put forth prophecy for fulfllment ' sides, when,' instead of trying to provoke antagonism, or to arouse enmities, there should be an effort to bring about -( amicable relations. All classes, for the present at least, , must live under the, local option law and the liquor men - particularly should not too Industriously seek to enlarge , the circle of those who oppose them and by their own In '. tolerance drive Into the arm. of the Prohibitionist, men , who In principle stop far short of that point, ' however much they, may favor such restrictive measures as or- , claim for proof, assumption f or v fact Not in three year, or thirty year, can thl. amazing ' proposition be established.' It can never be estab lished. The precedent, of history are against it The rule of reason denies It : And the present current of political . events doe. .how that? our own "historic liberties" are Unpaired and Imperilled by the atUmpt. to discharge Imperial "duties" which a. dutle. never existed. ; ' , WHAT A PREACHER SHOULD KNQ W ' 1 . . . . , ... i ' (By Rev. Thomas B. Gregory.) - We live in a wonderful age, an age . that abounds in things of which our forefathers never dreamed. ' Among . the ; many : other ' wonderful , things tnat we have today mention must be made of the "School of Religious - As I understand It, a school of -religious pedagogy is an Institution n . which they teach: a preacher to preach, , Just as a normal school is an institution , in wmcn tney teacn a teacner to xaacn. Now, Prof. George E. Dawson of the , Hartford School of Religious Pedagogy baa been telling the preachers what ('they should know, in order to be sue ' cesaf ul in their calling, and from the , '. profeaaor's prescription we quote the , following paragraph: i; : 'Relieloua education should be con - formed in its aim and subject matter ( to the standards of modern sclenoa. In , , training for the. ministry , there ehould be included such courses as laboratory 'j work in physiology, neurology and pay- chology, including thewsjudy of mental dtseasee, vice and crime In Institutions for defectives and oellne.uenta; research work in sociology, sspeclally as com earns the antisocial classes and institu tion: the study of; ethnology, with a view to discovering tha origin and de velopment of domestic, educational, morel and religious ouatoma and lnati tutlons, and educational psychology." , . " It ie aaie to say that Professor Daw son Will find very few preachers who ', sre able to come up to his requirement He has practically " asked that the preacher shall . know all things, a hall have a universal knowledge. ' Any one of the many lines of Investi gation mentioned by the professor Is enough to keep a man busy all his Ufa, without - paying) attention to anything An Alexander Humboldt.' a Cuvler. a , Herbert Spencer, might possibly answer , , aa a respectable substitute for the man demanded by the Hartford professor, tut no known clergyman could come within a thousand miles of filling the bill,- . This ware a , great pity if Professor Dawson's ' requirement were ; hsj abso-1 lutely neceasary one. Fortunately U is, not necessary. Fortunately a be a successful preacher without having the aalentlflo knowledge that Profeasor Dawson would insist upon. . - How much sclentlflo knowledge did Bt Paul have, did Bt Augustine have, did Chrysostom have, did Luther have, did John Knox havet . And yet It will probably be admitted that these men were pretty successful preachers of the gospel. : .j ' ' -, ' ; . v That last word tells the etory. . The main thing that a preacher should know tsthe goapel-he "Good New..'! ue sneuia Know now to make men hopefiL how to make them look on the bright sie of life, now to make them feel the majesty and saeredness of truth and goodness.' ' It will, of couroe, do the preacher no harm' to know sclenoe; but It U by the geapei. and not by science, that the preacher moves men to love, the good and hate the evil, to hope and not to de spalr, .and to live bravely and grandly hare on earth. Preaching , is not the art of showing a man the. wonders or tne teiesoope or the mysteries of the microscope it is. rather, the ; art of showlna man the wonders and mysteries of bis own mind and heart the divine-possibilities that ye 'Wlthl his town -breast xt-'-To, introduce man to those possibill ties, to arouse within his soul the de sire and determination, to make those possibilities real, to stir blra up and in spire him . with a heroic, unconauerable love ' for rlghteeusneaa -for righteous ness for its own blessed bake these art the things that a preacher ehould know how to do. ' , ' - v - , ' - HOW TO OBTAX9 XOXZBX TAfTB. From the Chicago Journal.' ' In calling attention to the dangerous influence which : corporate ' - interests exert upon legislation, Justice Brewer has performed valuable service, 3 ; He has pointed ou.t the weak Joint In the people's armor carelessness in the selection of men to make laws. ' When a 1 farmer bullda a ' dyke to keep out the rising waters be employs expert r engineer and- honest builders. ' in : nine oaaea out ox ten men are sent - tot tne-egiaiatureHot because tney are nonest and expert in law making, but because they "are in" wnn tne cosses.-.r' - Tat lf la juat as important that the atate ehould defend itaeif from Hhe oaierui mnuancea of avarloioua 1 and unscrupulous class Interests" as that the farmer should protect his land irom nooos. ' ti, - Water wUI seep through an embank ment wnerever mere la - yielding eoll, uorporaia aggressiveness , will make holes in the law wherever there, is a aivua- n p legislative ; Bulwark. were is a lesson for the voters of Illinois.. " :". t i ,''; . ii tney want laws enacted In thair own oenair tney will select the right kind of men to make such laws. On the. other hand, if they cara less for their own welfare than thev do for viumm interests tney win nave no trouble In finding men to represent those spe- inera is reanv no other -ara looKin. at tne question, And it is up Uke What Xe Oete. . From the Washlnaton Timaa One notable thlnar about Prinna t Lun, nephew of the emneror of rhi. yrvBom a, visitor to this coun try, is that unlike U Hung Chang and other Chinese notables, he does not nm a private oook on his travels. The prince says that he likes American food. A Frenchman would deolare that conclu sive evidence of Chinese barbarism. ' . , Brew Away Trex Kume. . . . v ? Front i the Chicago Tribune. ' " ; A London Journalist' has diacovarad that .President Roosevelt is laying plans to be nominated in 10S for a third term, . This is something far more than mere poliUcal sagacity,. It la prophetic Inspiration. , . , . Towtb. in Japan's aravy. ", The average age of the Janana'aa navv ie lower than- that of any other navy In the world: No one over 20 rears old is accepted for enlistment The average height is 5 feet 4 Inches leas than the average height ' of any other navy in the world. , . ; , some advantages and compensation in the teacher', oooupatlon. j, . v "7 & A Brooklyn, N. T woman with hus band and five children, visited 17 flats District bounded by Center avenue. I Thirty-ninth street Ashland avenue. Forty-fifth street Loofnl. street; and Forty-seventh street .. , t District bounded by the lake, Thlrty- wlthout being able to rent apaxtmente. ninth street Bute street Fiftieth and Everywhere the children were .the ob-1 Fifty-first streets. Cottage Grove eve Jectlon, and so it Is to a greater or less I nue. Sixty-seventh etreet Jefferson ave- extant in all cities children not wanted. Moral: Get a home. If only a shanty at j first In the suburbs. ' : -1 , Everybody living In or near forests or large tracts of timber lands, or traveling through them, ought to be careful from now on till fall about starting fires or allowing them to be started. Tet it is Impossible to make everybody Careful. and accidents will happen, ao fires of greater or less .extent may be expected as long aa there is material to burn. J nue and Fifty-fourth place. District . bounded by , Fifty-fourth street South Park avenue,: State street and Blxty-third street ; ? -i.. ' . District bounded by Fifty-fifth street State street, 'Seventy-ninth etreet, Hal sted street and a strip of territory along Fifty-fifth street to w Western avenue, thenoe along Twenty-ninth street; this strip U 00 feet '..,';. Dlatrict bounded by Sixty-fifth street, Western avenue, Seventy-first Street and South Forty-eighth avenue, -! District bounded by Sixty-fifth" street Wood ' street, Beventy-flf th street , .nd 7nkVX v , 1 . ,' . . . . . ' . , a-xuoieuin in niv. a. new Kannai ainK Linn county business men need a 'road ? to the Blue river mines, .. ., i 4 Ashland Is said to ba In man raananta very "early model town, ,v V ' Bxtenalve Improvements are being made . a tne Mxeview watarworns system. . im. uranae, a ec tares tne observer, m . a proper place for a large trultdryer.-. Many people' think Taoulna Bay la the ; prettiest summer resort on the coast al m m mi ai lala-la avaaia.a awaa 1 ' non-imgaiea lana,. along the Deschutes 1 Twe men' and two womea will take an , automobile trip from The f. Dalles , to ' Baker city. '.. . . -..a - :,,' trf tv. - , " vvuuaw as. vauiuuiia nnnnnrn bull was bitten by a rattlaanake and -: will probably die in censaquenoe, , t- , Saloon men . and other ? buaineaa .man m vrea-on xowna are already preparing to fight prohibition next November. ' ' 1 - . , ' ; . .. .... . . . ' ... '; - . - - . y ll ' Western avenue. . District bounded by South Park ave nue. Sixty-seventh street Lawrence ave nue and. Seventy-first etreet, ? r District . : bounded " by Seventy-first street South Chicago avenue. Seventy fifth street and Champlaln avenue. . 'Dlatriot bounded by the lake. Sixty seventh street Jeffrey avenue. Seventy first street Jackson Park avenue. Sev enty-fifth street Jeffrey avenue and Eighty-third street, ' a gruuly bear that dressed 700 pounds. .- The capacity of sawmill' near Bend ft V at as l.aua iaH.aa.4 av. iA AA a a. ' nay ana new six-saw gang eoger nas a : . MAMSi.M ' .AA AAA A . V-iWU, V AW, WW 1C.V B, UAf t . , .' ) . - i.na rvuuunatte vauey now neeos rain. . and a Salem paper suggests that lt .be prayed for, That would at least do as much good as. urging it editorially,.; , ' rl. VTnlA. nuj.li 111 4. Llt-- a.'i,. ' District -f bounded," by ' Ninety-third I fuUaat oanaaltv. Tha ownar haa alraaVIv street Illinois Central railroad. Ninety .bought 160,000 pounds of, wool this year ww a v.. I auu wants to out iouluw oounaa mora, District bounded : by - Ninety-fifth I --s-- '-;-!'; ' , :v : street , Western aveaue, One Hundred Fourteen teams and a large force of and Seventh street and Vlnoenne road, ma are at work on the roads aerose the Dlatrict bounded by Ninetieth street rtw from Albany la Benton county, ln- Stewart avenue, ' Ninety-ninth street eluding the road approachlifg, the bridge, i SUte street One Hundred. and Fifteenth ( .-rt'TTT th. "wi,,. street Vlncenne. road. One Hundred and L ; 5?Sf52? iSlS iSj la Ji-!2a-W' 8eventh street and HaUted etreet a Vum.,r District bounded by On Hundred and I Ivr'J ZL,?CT7 ...JT"Z Twentieth street P C 0, St L. rail- 7?lL? ZbSSSt tTma way. One Hundred and Twenty-third " to b4op, benefit t many. ..... , street and first alley west of Wentworth A relies hobo who had been put la JaQ avenue. V V " ' ' . l.n.ll, uaait urn, uan ! . In ? Dlatriot bounded by Armltage avenue, 1 the atswf ( ei . wavak er fnaiaaat A t eawet sif e a North Fortieth avenue. Weat Fullerton I -t.w ... aM v. aiiwi a w i." avenue and North Forty-sixth avenue intendlna to clean hlmaalf of the bnrdan ' The local option district, in Chlcagolnf iifa Z, - , tiiwt.' .. . ' , District bounded by Hayes avenue, C I Hobo are thicker than flea alone the . M. and Bt P. railway, Peterson avenue,! aand dunaa of the Columbia these dava Southport avenue, Roaemont avenue, the land they haven't overlooked The Dallea, .. lake, Byron "street Hvaneton - avenue, I either. . sava the , Chronicle: A small North Clark street and Fullerton avenua regiment numbering eO were rounded up .4 tM-i. At. . B .a a. a. as- a a.' a -m. I . . 1 juiaixict pounaaa y .. 1 nirty-nitu 1 ona . mgnt :.,-r . -. 1, y. -,,. i A marriage license leaned in The Dalles was . returned '.'unused" ;, The .mother Of a l-year-old fianee became offended because the groom-to-be was a day late and" eo would not conaent to the mar-' street Wester avenue, C a A. railway and California avenue, r i . A piece of .territory bounded by ..Thir ty-ninth street Cottage Grove avenue, north line, section t, and the lake. . An extensive section of the eouth side Of Chicago known chiefly as Hyde Park rlage,. but she may relent and Englewood and bounded by Thirty-1 . ' . ' ninth etreet South Forty-eighth avenue, . a . 011 nma tnat town Elghtyeeventh etreet, State etreet On h" .. T -P J county seat fight Hundred end Thirty-eighth etreet the ht TrJ9; .oun,ty Indiana Una and tne lake, excepting sushi TT" ', " w " "; parte already mentioned aa being prohl bltlon distrlcta In this section, and ex cepting certain territory west of State street and . south of Eighty-seventh etreet whioh 1 'pen." - ' ; District bounded by Foster avenue. Evanaton avenue, the Cr M. and Bt Paul tracks and Lawrence avenue. .'. - Also a recently proscribed territory bounded by Fiftieth street' Prairie eve- nil, mtt-w.fl rat atraat anil rVitta . 1mm,. I . avenue. ,-' ',.' f':'.-Y''iv'i-":-' : k,:A Z v.-." .'Ji,','r.i',!,,.v-fe".?- The section Of th Twentieth Ward I Batman '4M and EOS nannla VaaMa In and bounded by , Oakley boulevard, Claremont I about Bend-about double the number avenue, Fldurnoy avenue and slg-sag" that was bare a year ago. " Every man 1 os omer iiiwi, aet asma on onaay busy at good wage, and nas plenty : of night by the City council as local op-1 work ahead, t.-.va tha Bulletin. Fifteen tlon dlatriot . h '. , ; . I bulldlna-a are now in course of eonatruo.- tlon. and prepare tlona ari in nroa-reaa for ' TH roxxratAaT OF XZOLA ntUX. I It throwed tew hosemen over a tree, "T more. Thla is due .to expected de- Granda'a favor at tha recent election. . ' He thinks th court will stand by Union. ; ' Four - girt, of one Linn oouaty - family J have been married within year. , tha fourth one," who waa only IS years old, ; last week, ber mother consenting. ; There - , are two girl left in th family and it la ' expected that they will be married soon, ' If they are big enough. Their mother will have her hand full aa a mother-In- ' . Holman F. Day, In June Bucoea. Ablmllech Bprowl was man of sprawl, Three feet through him and' six feet Once when we humped old xnree. HecU Ablmllech Bprowl for fun. one oavl Shinned .the stream whan we a tart ad to I velopment of surrounding lands, of which 17,000 acres have been taken up and set-) tied upon thla season. A band of about SO religious faiUtlcaJ u.na"4 Advice tO the Lovclom calling themselves ."flying rollers," have reached Chicago, which ' they Intend thoroughly to oonvert In short order, and then they will turn- their attention to the rest of the United States. The men re fuse to be shaved or have their hair or! beards trimmed, but it is doubtful If 1 their Insane folly matches that of the late Oregon "rollers.' BAVX WatSCXXSa AJT9 OTEXatB. 1 From the Chicago Record-Herald. J. E. Marcell " was a Kansas bank cashier. He forged papers - to the amount of, ISOO.OOO, thereby wrecking his institution. Being found guilty, he has been sentenced to J5 years' Impris onment He must serve 18 years of that before he can even be - released on pa role, .-Already he has put on the con vict strines and begun to learn the tailoring trade aa apprentice under an Imprisoned outlaw and bank robber, Em met Daltotv. --.'.' .y--f. 'a, . Probably it was the belief on the part of the court that Marcell had concealed the greater part of his stealings, hoping to profit by them after his sentence ex pired, that led to the infliction of the very, severe punishment , Nevertheless, It is clear that there waa ntf inclination to view hi offense with any sentimen tal leniency. . His victims were in final analysis the depositors of the bank he wrecked, and it was easy to see that he 'er through. Teeth was double the whole way round, Every tooth .In his jaw waa ound; Kalroeene lie waa nla winter drink. For it kept him warm, he used to think. Oh, the man to lead and the man you need Is the kind that's quick to get up speed; No dlff runce what the scheme or line, Only the man of sprawl will shine; Ana ADimuecn eprowi was the man that we , . Elected the foreman of Heola Three. Whoop, for the day of the firemen's muaterl , ,j f ,r - ' ' 1 With Ablmllech Bprowl on the brake we'd bust ''er. We'd squirt -all day and . danoe all night : ' And never lose a chance for a soolabls fight . j,, t j,4 Ablmllech Sprawl he km owed hi Ma, And be never wore no gallowsle; Shirt was red and hi. stookln's, too, j And when he ewore the air turned Nue. Air , stayed blue till he . swore yuther ' way. Then the air turned red till noon next . : day, f--'-t j'uji'i His regular straddle whs more'n elx feet A He used up the width of a common vised street r4 ifm-vJ? And waved his hand to folks in the : street ' what la ths fun of a muster, now T I wo excuse rer a good, sauare row: Northln' to fight for. north in' to dew 1 But to watch some engines whia-te- .. .... bk.l ' ',...(. .'. ', ',, ... .,, ' . j. ., For a sight to see and a right mart stream, f Take sixty men and a stout brake beam, a leeson is mere xor every many-. All together! -That's the plan; Ail together, ana gumption, , too. BT BIAtttOX y Any AS. " lone, , Oregon, ,- June 1 1. Dear Mis. Fairfax I am a very young girl. A short time ago I kept 'company with a young man, but after while I found I did not care for him, but I knew he , still likes me.,. His folk, moved away, and bo asked me If he might write to me- and X consented. He wrote two letters and I answered? tha first onlv. And there's nothln' then that you can't las I did not care to write any more, I ram through. Hay for the day. of -the old-time " squirt.- . . . ' -. With a red-hot foreman and red-hot shirts, , v ' - 1 . As it wa In 'the good old day when ' - WO ' 1 -r Slammed down with Bprowl and Hecla Three I , , , - bad done more harm to more people than j Carried , one horn, and sometimes tew, . . ,t-i v. ,,v. I rul hnatad alsaa avarv-tlma ha hlaw. cqu -iuhiW,;.it, u" vr -m- -r r irZ. ".v.! T -i.' .aJ aa M. .H.,Htm ... Mr ui.ii. . to "lraar. Tt Am hattar al.-i robber with whom be must hencefortn " W1L.U4 7. "n"mC"2ZV failed to answer the second. A few day ago Z nep3ived another letter from him. Please leli. me. what.AAhall. do, J Writ to him in a friendly spirit and tell him you do not oar to continue the correspondence. The woman , that you are will ; prompt you to write to him ; In the right way, and the man that he should be will accept your decision in the spirit with which you giver ex pression to It . . ; ' ( ; ' t tone,' Oregon, June JO.. Dear Mis ' 1 Fairfax I am a glrL 16 year old, end thinking It Improbable that Mayor Mo- keep company with a ,; youth aged II Clellan-ofNew York; will become euf- years. We have been going together -flclently prominent as. a presidential for a month. When we are . alone I do candidate to be an important figure In not like his actions towards me and have the Bt' Louis convention, he 1 one of told him so. v would you advise me to - the "dark horse" possibilities. As such etop going with blmT I like him except It Is not surprising that the mention of tor this fault VIOLET. hie name ln'thla connection should have Tts, I would advise you to stop going given rise to an interesting dismission I with him. Both of you are too young Z xs axTOxro ' sottbt xuazsxaL i ' From the Chicago News.' While there are, several reasons for silently associate. There, has' been a great development of publlo opinion in the last generation toward the sterner punishment of crime, of this kind. ; Nevertheless, ,r there . is plenty of Toom for still further develop ment. The offense of the promoter ox a watered trust that collapses and there by rulna.the small stockholders, while the founder is able to get safely away with his profits, IS closely akin to that of the bank wrecker; In one -case the Innocent depositor suffers. In the other the Innocent Shareholder. In the course of time our criminal laws wUI take cognizance of thla fact If such a devel opment of. law bad; come earlier the 1 sand; v , , . . .' t Out of the grit la the good gold panned. And the man that slips or th man that fails . ! Is the feller that doesnt sand his rails. la e-aviarallv htM, ,w Krn-i . it, I tn await maturltv, ' tiafore itkmlnntna many. While the son of an American what goes under the name or love mak- cltlaen aoqulres cltisenshlp himself on ing. .. No boy nor glrL can safely pas - coming of aga even though born abroad, through auch ordeals aa you intimate it remains to be determined whether as experiencing without great harm and a person thus Situated Is eligible for j loss . of mental and bodily strength to , the presidency. , Apparently the Jurists j both Of you, to the destruction of every era divided on the polfit - Not a few I fibre of good character. , - 4 SBCBBTAEt SAT XQTXX. 8IXA. Ray for the good old muster days J ,Hoop ' for h the - good, old-fashioned waysl -.-f,;.s-' -.a ; :ri When 'twas quick, sure death for to holler "Foul!"" To the gang that pumped with Ablmi lech BprowL , . Ablmllech Bprowl " he : knowed morel torl votee cast f or Mr. MeClellan even I era of St Louis by the published report Ttrtcks:1' ?- - (though they were sufficient' to elect thathe,had been, charged a bill of 77t xr. f..a .. i.w .Mil K.vl i.. I him. Hona-reaa Itself mirht nmruul tn I for his stay Of Seven davs at ona of tha A.v uocy . v mvmwv, v " . tt.v iAD,- , -: . r -I, . . , . , aharnera -who onaratad in T Wail "itraii Put In eody so she'd foam, et a preslddnt'ln tb manner; pro- a?"'"" during the merry days .of trust flotation "L?! r f.TJ!X? Lhotel bm i of them lean to the, opinion that Mr. McClellan la not a "natural born" cltl ! sen within the meaning of the oonstl Itution. If that view beacoepted pre sumably it would be within the power Washington Cor. Philadelphia- Ledger. fiocr.tiirv Hut, M tnov !),. .. of congress to refuse to reoelve alec- MnJustice had been done the hotel-keep- that culminated in 1891 would 1 have had shorter .shrift and fewer vlctima , The' Terrible Cossaeke. , From the Chicago Record-Herald. " According to all accounta a , good. atrong 10-year-old boy could out up and disperse an average band of Cossacks without eye, having to breathe hard af ter being through, , . 1 s ,4;-'y;; 1 " 1 i. ' The Conventional Koodoo, 1 , ' From the Chicago Tribune. .' Man on the Bank "How's the fish- ingr ' 1 1 . .. Fisherman Well,"- It's purtr good. mister, oonsiderin' that thla is a presi dential year." vv.r. Thutty men waa on each brake, Up-stroka, down-stroke, suck and take! Down-stroke,, up-stroke, flisa and squirt When th brook 1 went dry .we'd shove through dirt. v In ease ' the Judges seemed in doubt We shucked our shirt and fought it out r-the whole questlonVmight ' be thrown H1. Im R sise, but I did not re in to the supreme court However weak gad t as unreasonable at all.' My party the plea; of ineligibility may be, the tact mat xnere , wouia ( oe . grouna xor questioning Mr. McClellan' election con stitutes a barrier to hi nomination. V.'f1 Bfo Oow o To Btataon. Muscle n your arm and muscle In your From - the Richmond Times-Dispatch. grit! - President L. E. Johnson of the Nor- Face to the front Is the way we fit ' folk and Western railroad has made the Fftfi to the world and you don't get Roanoke. CVa.) city councilra unique kicked, ' s- ' - proposition, which probably will be ao- And never let em know that you think cepted. T am Jady," be said, "to be- you're licked, t r l gin at once the construction of a new 1100.000 depot here If the council will Ho, for the day. when the old tub J agree to pas a 'and enforce an ordinance I used throughout the country as an lndl r - v , . . I - w. . TT W . M.W b . VVt, W A Ul V I (.ALIilll Lll.L LI1H fill I. HI. Ill 1 UH I . , 1 V Al . Hi, for th way the poxxle danced! city," , i charging extortionate ratea." consisted of six Persons, and we occu pied eight of the best rooms, in the ho tel. We had splendid service; end every day an automobile was placed at , our disposal to facilitate , Our visit, to the magnificent exposition, which is one of the wonders of the world. -Th hotel charge was not excessive, amounting to : but little more than a hundred dollars a day for a -party of six. For like ac commodations, In any of the first-clas hotel of "New York City, one would have to pay . probably 1150 a day. It is an Injustice to St Louie to have the fact that I paid a hotel bill of that sum