Editorial Page of TEe Journal TUESDAY, JULY 8, 1904. PORTLAND, OREGON. THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL journal Small Change AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER . PUBLISHED BY JOURNAL PUBLISHING CO. JNO. P. CARROLL C S. JACKSON Noisy, after all. Mow put up your blackberries. evening (except Sunday) and vary Sunday morning at Tha Journal Building. Fifth and Yamhill treats, Portland, Oregon. "- Young man. get a home. Ashland Is legally drugstores. dry, but It has How much real patriotism T ..Deer are becoming southern Oregon. plentiful in OPFI6IAL PAPER OP THE CITV OP PORTLAND Let us besane for the next 1(4 days. Oregon Sidelights BAD FOURTH OF JULY FEATURES. ON FOURTH OP JULT people living In the country flock to the towns land many of those living n the towns flock into the country. Each In this way get what they most need, which is complete change In their environment and the ordinary conditions by which they are surrounded. Hundreds of people from the sur rounding districts came to Portland and doubtless found hare the strenuous pleasures which they Sought. If , their craving, surely .ouahtfgxiul-gidalll M'hel- desire, nwreThe 1. w4fe whatever In It any more. There la al a -S' I .:, ami ii1 a atifflclent one for this. 1 f fully satisfied. I But the day Itself was, after all, a daj of terror to many of those wlio were unable to get out Into the country. We hear much of a sane" celebration of the. Fourth and In tnj-ltricteat sense of the word that is neither poaslble nor B; desirable. It is a day when the exuberant spirit of patriotism should have its vent, when the rule which governs on other days and in other seasons is rightly re laxed and young America has free swing. But even within these limits there is a place where the line should be drawn and that rigidly. For Instance there is no Jus tification for the atrocious dynamite' cane. Beside this Implement of torture, particularly In the hands of a rowdy, the giant firecracker is tame and Innocuous, It was con stantly In evidence yesterday and it inflicted tortures on the whole community'. Its use was simply barbarous and it should not hereafter be tolerated. Neither should any , one under any circumstances be permitted to use a re- yolver within the corporate limits of the city. Imple ments of this sort usually fall into the hands of the most Irresponsible and reckless. Such people have absolutely no regard for the rights of others and their delight was to discharge their weapons without warning Hose to nervous women, finding their so-called pleasure in the pain which they so evidently Inflicted. The streets should have been cleared of youths and men of this stamp. .The public en joyment of the day would have been greatly increased if these two din provoking features of the day had been eliminated and there had gone with them the dynamite cartridge. The fireworks feature of the night was a source of much . pleasure to every one who had a chance to view them at ease. With the experience of yesterday' fresh in, mind, some member of the city council should draw up a rea sonable ordinance regulating future Fourth of July cele brations. Done in advance the dealers in fireworks ' would know exactly how to regulate their purchases and thus no loss would fall on them. On the other hand the people of the city could look forward to a reasonable and very much more enjoyable celebration of apprehensively watting It as a day A NEW PRESIDENT FOR THE declination of Harvey. Scott of a re-election to the presidency of the Lewis and t'lurk exposition opens a broad question which in the interest of the city, state and section, should be seriously considered and that at once. The time for the opening of the ex position is now so close at hand and there still remains so much to do that a man In the position of president must necessarily seriously devote all his time and attention to the fair and the preparations which are going forward for Its holding. The enterprise has proceeded so far that the pride of the whole community Is now involved in the outcome. We must not only have a fine exposition, but if it is humanly possible it must be ready on the day of the opening. This is not so difficult a task as it would have been had we' been forced to draw aH the exhibits from original sources. As It happens much of the work . has already been done by St. Louis and a Judicious selec tion from the masses of material there shown will lay the foundation for many exhibits here. It Is only Just to say that we have not done all that might or could have been done for ourselves in the exhibit at St. Louis. That has not come up to expectatlona and none of the returning Oregon visitors are filled with en thusiasm over what has been done there for the state. For lack of preliminary preparation and an exhibition of genuine foresight which is elsewhere shown, other states which we outrank In many Important products overtop us completely In the displays which they make. The Journal la led to say none of these things in a spirit of carping criticism, but the experience there should furnish lessons for use at home and It is mach wiser to profit by them now than to regret them afterward. Aa In every big en terprise of the sort the actual work falls most heavily on the shoulders of a few men. These men make the sac rifice of their time for the benefit of the Whole community and In a spirit of public pride which will not permit such an enterprise to fall. The time has now come when our own exposition must be viewed in the same spirit and similar sacrifices must be made if we propose to make of the affair such a success as will lastingly redound to the credit of Portland. Whoever may be Induced to step into the breach and make the sacrifices which the position Involves Is en titled to the hearty moral support of every citizen, the di rect aid of every one who can render It and the Energetic backing of every commercial body in the city. All of tbia he should have aa a mater of course and he should know and understand It from the moment he takes charge of his difficult undertaking. POLITICAL PARTIES. m' WWM i - .-m --hh. THE POPULIST party, granting that -there Is such a thing, presents a spectacle that would be almost pitiable If It were an entity capable of physical or mental suffering. It is In fact, however, only a shadow, a ghost, a skeleton of a defunct party, a sort of scarecrow left In the field until husking time. There ( were less than ZOO delegates in attendance yes terday when this alleged or pretended national parly was called to order In Springfield. 111. The mayor of that city, who was scheduled to welcome the delegates, showed his contempt for the farce that Is. being played by a corporal's guard of citizens by staying away, and not even sending t substitute or making any excuse. Only half the states nurniH ros After long experiment by bacteriolo gists la their employ, the H. K Mulford company. " chemists, of Philadelphia, have sent sgents to Texas with in structions to obtain all the beestings they can for medicinal purposes. An for .',0.000 stings waa placed with tie bee farmer In that stats . A serum tor Injection through the kin will be made from the fluid with which the tiny weapons sre charged. Of Its efficacy for the er or msumatlsro, Milton Campbell, manager of the com pany, saya their experiments have left no doubt. The first "experiment" was Inadver tenl. A farmer afflicted with rheuma tism waa set upon by a swarm of bees were represented, is n;i id to adhere Time waa when power In the land. dosen or so reorese - came into existence waa occaalon for lta burn and flourished being In vain. But they might have the Populist party reason, and a sufficient one. for this certain specific, everything else did four years ago, the -esult. of the day, instead i ot positive terror. THE FAIR. . be wider apart than will be done there. cannot control the one at Kansas city, tional affairs of However one' may and even criticise has the advantage the people can understand. The man who Is WORD AND one could hear nothing anywhere but "Word.". The at convince the voters basis they had the tories the state has Sheriff Word has a faculty of doing, snd frightfully stung. His face, neck and limbs were swollen for days. When the swelling subsided the rheumatism was cured. The Unwashed Dishes. When the long summer evenings sre With, us and the front porch has be come the most attractive, part of the home, the question arises whether or not the woman Is Indolent who stacks her dishes and goes out on the front porch and visits with her husband and family. The question Is most essUor answered by asking another. Which Is' most Im portant to the happiness of the house hold, the washing of a pile of dirty sup per dishes or the comfortable family reunion on the cool front atepsf and these by nobody of national prom inence except ex-Senator Allen of Nebraska, who U really ah able man, aa la alao Thomaa E. Wataon of Georgia, who to this skeleton-scarecrow -of a party. the Popullat party was a considerable It carried several states, and had a ntatlves In congress. It had lta use; It because there waa need of It. There existence, else It never woult? have been to the extent It did. Nothing cornea Into with the -pswrnia; jf th "hard times shrunk, dwindled, shriveled, and died. The men who once made the Populist party a power in the land went back Into the. did parties. Of thse the late Governor Rogers of Washington was a type. He frankly and openly deserted the Populist party when he saw that It could not be made a great, permanent national party, and announced himaelf as a Democrat in politics, and as such was re-elected governor, though he had been elected four years before, in 1896, as a Populist. Others, Just as conscientiously and reasonably, perhaps. Joined the Re publican party. But the Populist party, as such, has been dead for the past six or seven years. A convention of an alleged or assumed Populist party la now merely a min iature political farce. While all ths is true today, there are those who suppose that th Populist party may be revived by a bolt led by Mr. Hryan. f the platform ' adopted and the candidate nominated at St. Louis do not suit Mr. Bryan, It Is ex pected by many that lie will revolt, and head a movement In the Interest of what he conceives to be a "true" Demo cratic party. But this Is not likely to happen. ' Mr. Bryan waa It is true, twice the candidate Of the Populist party, as wen as of the Democratic party, but he was so as a Democrat, not a Populist. Names are not so important as character and principles, yet narnes are necessary, skid there will be for sorrfe time in the future, as there has been from the beginning, only two great and principal political parties. There may be bolts; a portion of a party may temporarily act in op position or Independently: but In a little while these voters will drift back and become assimilated with either the Re publican or the Democratic party. The Prohibitionists are an excep'tlon. They stand for a definite principle and policy, considering of minor consequence; but they are not likely to grow Into political Importance In the near future. The Socialist party may do so, after awhile, but not Just now. Debs will probably receive some more votes than he but not enough to cut any figure in AT ST. LOUIS. THE Democratic party Is far from being united. It is still divided into two great wings which now .mfr.l aoK nlhn. a U . T nnl. ., H ...V. Int. ... it uHrei hi . , . uuum aiiu ffiiii.il 11107 ever as a result of the work which While it is true that Bryan Is not the overshadowing power he was four years ago and that he convention at St. Louis as he did the he Is still a powerful factor in the na the party and one to be reckoned with disagree with him in some respects his relations to certain public affairs he of standing definitely for things which now most spoken of for the nomina tion is Judge Parker of New York. He has an aggres sive backing, but Just what he stands for no one pre cisely knows. So far aa the people have been able to learn of the man himself they have learned nothing to his discredit. He is a man of ability and of unblemished character; But it is not so much Parker himself that the delegates who are opposed to him mistrust as they do those who stand sponsor for him. At the head of these is David Bennett Hill, a thoroughly discredited politician who enjoys neither' the respcet nor confidence of the party nationally. The financial agent of the combination is August Belmont, who Is not in politics for his health or the notoriety which will thus come to him. The rank and tile of the party Is Justified In looking askance at such a combination and viewing with some degree of suspicion the claims of any man-whose fortunes are thus pushed. If there is some middle ground between these two that can be definitely occupied and some man selected who will enjoy the respect and confidence of those naturally allied with the party It will be possible for It to make the show ing which a great party should make at the November election, but not otherwise. THE COMMERCIAL MEN. WHAT a lovely lot of hustlers the traveling men are and how fortunate the nrian in politics (or out of it) who enjoys their cordial good-will. Tom Word Was one of them. He was a traveling man; he Is sheriff of Multnomah county. It Is almost a case of putting two and two together. When it was. suspected that he wanted the nomination they went to ,work at high pressure. Politics wasn't their business, but they took to It like a duck takes to water. Soon after they started in mosphere was fairly saturated with the name. All the men are good single-handed talkers; they have a convinc ing way about them. What they started out to do was to that everybody wanted Word. As a fact that they wanted him. Before they got through they pretty , nearly proved their case and helped to score one of trie most remarkable political vic ever known. . ..... reason 'to be grateful to hla friends They not only knew WrW but they did it. National politics cut no figure with therrl. Word was a good man and square; besides he was one of them. He wanted the place and the only way for him to get it was for them to- hustle and the way they did hustle,- day and night, was simply a sight to behold. They got what they wanted, as they have and while Tom Word Is happy he is not a whit prouder of his triumph than the newest man In the rankgof traveling men who did his level best to elect him. Spendthrift To ring X.oTr. From the New Torker. "When young fellers begins a oourtln'." said Farmer Ralcede of New Jersey, "they Jest gits erssy, an' that thar boy Jim qmle ain't no exception." "What's Jim bin a-doln?" asked Farmer Soanreep. "Hanged If he didn't go Inter town yesterd'y an' spend a hull quarter fur a teeth brush!" . Information. From the Chicago Tribune. Unsophisticated Visitor By the way, why do you enll this the 'piker ' k Guard f tired of answering the ques tion) Because it feeds on gudgeons, suckers and email fry. The 'east side Is booming. No won ahw. . ' ... .; Better burn powder In peace than In war. A noiseless Fourth of July is evl dent l y aa, impossibility. It 'did rain, perhaps Just to make The Journal's prediction come true. Too much or too little rain, no mat ter; Oregon Is all right, anyway. Some papers print his name Swallows. But there Is only one Swallow ol nim. It is an especial pleasure for moat people to sprinkle the lawns aiier nours The suburbs of Portland will surprise most Portlanders who go through them. The country districts of Oregon poured Into Portland many hundreds If not thousands of visitors yesterday. A happier and more prosperous looking lot it would have been hard to find and the way they enjoyed themselves wss a sight worth seeing. JAPAN'S TT TASK. treat Difficulties la Its Way of Success. Antung Correspondence Chicago News. Though they minister to our physical wants, the Japanese are not so ready to furnish us mental food. A question to. a subordinate officer, no matter how trivial, will bring forth one of three answers: "I am very sorry I do not know." "I wul ask the general." "I am not' told many things." This Is as It should be. Military ae crets are not likely to leak out. A gen eral may tell you that the answer to your question la a secret. He may give an answer which haa nothing to do with your question. He may tell you the truth. He may tell you a lie. You never know what to believe. The only way to get anything Is to send your interpreter after it. It will take him half an hour to ask a simple question. He enters Into 'conversation with an officer. and skillfully weaves the qu tlon into the talk. Incidentally, as It were. In such a marfBer aa not to excite suspicion. The mere aaklng of a direct question is enough in itself to excite suspicion. The Japanese Is never off his guard. He alwaya looks for some ulterior mo tive. He seldom acts or speaks with out a hidden purpose and he naturally looks for the same In you. The Jap anese never gives expression to him self. Indeed, he does not seem to feel the necessity for spontaneous exp,ras slonA Can this be one of the reasons why there Is no literature of Japan? It Is certainly a strong element in their military success. We were allowed to go to the hos pital where the Russian wounded were cared for. The staff officer who ac companied us had to have a written pass to get In. The Russian wounded were certainly well cared for. .The rooms were clean. The officers were separated from the men. They had plenty of bedding and looked comfort able If not happy. Those of the wound ed were allowed to move about the courtyard. Some were waahlng their clothes; others were sunning them selves. None of them seemed to feel the weight of defeat much. One of my companions asked of a group; "Do you speak Oerman T" "We are Jews, and all Jews speak German." - Tes, they were a large number of them Polish Jews, who bad fought (much better than the officers of the Slav staff who commanded them) for a country which they hated. In the officers' quarters we were not slow to get acquainted. That com munity of lntereat which we failed to nl in our relation with the Japanese soon put us at our ease with the Rus sians. They were only too glad to talk and tell us all about It. I waa astounded to find that they spoke much better German than French. I entered Into conversation with one of the officers who had been in charge of the guns off Conical hill. He tolddjsjkejjiat all the offcers of his hatti'staJMPcept hlinbelf had been killed. He Tvaa very Indignant against the Russian staff. They had all run away, he said, and left the line, alone without a head. I asked him how many Russians were on the fighting line on May 1. He answered all told about 8.000. They were battalions from va rious regiments. No complete regi ment was -present. All the battalions were east Siberian organizations. At this point the Japanese inter preter, who stood at my elbow and waa taking notea of the questions I ssked, plucked me by the sleeve. I could see that he ..ad difficulty In following the rapidly spoken Oerman. "Move along," he said. "You have talked long enough with this man." I waa somewhat indignant. I had given no Information, but was only asking about the facta of the battle, and I expostulated. The staff officer Intervened. "These men are alck men; you must not overtax them. Besides, you were aaklng nlm about numbers." Aa the man to whom I waa talking had only a slight wound in the leg and waa moving about freely I Judged the last reason the real one. It was "in tended that all the Information which we got should be official information. It haa long been evident to me that the only reaaon the Japanese have taken ua along Is to use us to make the Im pression they want On the foreign press, it turned out that the officer w.lth whom I waa talking' was the only one who spoke Oerman tiuently. To be an ob ject of suspicion Is not pleasant and I made no further effort to draw In formation from the Russians. How ever, they told me enough to make It clear that no united action had been taken by tne Russian force on the Yalu. One thing is certain as I look over the military situation that If the Jap anese could strike a blow at some vital spot In tne Russian army they would win. The Russian army la undoubtedly badly disorganised full of Inefficient officers ""Wbe- hdld their positions only because they belong to the nobility. Nothing, however, that Japan can do even with her splendid army can pre vent Russia from reorganizing her army and taking' her time about it. The present Russian army In Man churia may mrlt away under the Jap anese onslaught, but only want of money., foreign Interference, length of lima of communication and dissension at home Wj.. prevent Russians from putting new armies In the Meld ss Soon as they are destroyed. It If. indeed,-a herculean task that -span haa undertaken. July . We crossed over to the south and came along the bank of an ex tensive and beautiful prairie inter spersed with copaea of timber and watered by Independence creek. , On the banks formerly stood the second village of the Kansas. Judging fi in the remains it must have been a large town. We( passed several bad sand bars snd a" small creek to the south A MAN WHOM (Savoyard 'in Denver Post) -No other state In the American Union has been represented In the national house of representatives by so many able and distinguished men as Ohio. Four of her representatives attained the great dignity of president uf the United States, i Many of them' were more famous ss senators than they had been as representatives. Several of them be came governors of the state. From tne time of John McLean and Samuel F. Vinton. Ohio haa ever been a leader in debate on the floor of the house. Robert C. Schenck and Allen O. Thur man were Intellectual giants. Thomas Corwln was a perfect master of rldlculo and a consummate actor; S. 8. Cox was a delightful humorist, a scholar and a poet, and Benjamin Butterworth was the first wit of congress that knew Thomas Jir 'need and the merriest Quaker that ever was. Josuha R. Glddlngs and Cle ment L. Vallandlgham were fanatically devoted to principle, though disagreed upon every political, question, and It would be difficult to determine whether Glddlngs' hatred of slavery was as In- tenae and as sincere as Vallandlngham'a love of the Union. Lewis D. Campbell and John Bherman were practical and constructive statesmen of the very first rank. William Allen. John A. Bing ham and Frank H. Hurd wers superb orators. William S. Oroeabeck. John A. McMahan and Ezra B. Taylor were Pro found lawyera. Jamea A. Garfield waa In a class by himself, the moat ac complished man who ever sat In either house of congress. lie had made in cursion Into .every field of learning snd had mastered most branches of knowl edge. His versatility wss wonderful, arid had he been less Impressionable, less like wax and more' like granite, he would have been the foremost disputant the Republican party ever had In either houee greater than Fesaenden, even, who, waa greatest of them all but he would not have been president. If It had been his fortune to supplement his nine terms In the house with three terms In the senate, he would have been the .very first among the scademlc stateamen of the half a century last past. One of the leading men of the Fifty- eighth congress Is Theodore E. Burton of Cleveland. He is big enough to kick out of the party traces, now and then, and there Is nobody hi ths state, or na tion, big enough to crack the party whip over him and make him afraid. He Is the rivers and harbors committee, and when buslness"from that council board la considered in committee of the whole, Theodore E Burton is mighty. near the American congress. Why cannot every constituency learn that it is good policy to elect b Rains to congress? In the fifties Ben Wade was in his prime and a citizen of Jefferson, Ashta bula county, In the western reaerve. It was a Puritan community, peopled by New England families, provincial, fa natic, lntenae, exemplary, ignorant, and prejudiced. It was strong on abolition ism and ready to violate the supreme law of the land for It, ready even to fight for it. When slavery waa yet an Institution at the south Hinton Rowan Helper, who I have not a doubt in the world la the original of Charles Dickens' "Gradgrlnd" wrote a book on the sub ject. It waa a celebrated publication. purported to deal in facta, and Its ob ject was not so much to free the negro from slavery as it waa to free the south from slavery. The argument waa that the institution "was unprofitable, and If the south would make money she must rid herself of her niggers. What scenes of blood and tears, what scenes of ruin and deapalr, what rigors of conqueat anf, oppression the southern people would have escaped If, in 1868, they had seen slavery with the eyes of this English man from North Carolina There was another book written on the same subject by a woman, Mrs. Har riet Beecher Stowe. There was not a fact in It all fiction from beginning to ending, and extravagant fiction at that. Indeed, In the light of common sens it was absurd. Ashtabula county accepted the fiction aa gospel, and, doubtless, resented .the fact, because the- Indorsement of the latter book coat John Sherman tne speakership, and perhaps the presidency alao. i ' And. here at Jefferson, when the slavery question reeked from every po litical pore, Theodore Burton was born. That waa In 1C61. He got considerable book learning In his youth, snd at the age of .1 yeara was graduated from Oberlln, doubtless the most narrow minded college In the world. He studied law, waa admitted to the bar, and in 1875 began the practice at Cleveland. He was no lazybones, but a student end a thinker, and looked on life as some thing to be lived and not squandered, and so he persevered, and clients never yet failed a. man whir treated the pro fession after that fashion. He wss soon successful practitioner and a rising man, though he never reached the place at the bar held by Virgil Kline or An drew Squire or W. E. Sandera or John H. Clarke. He never had that gen us for the law with which Rufua P. Ranney. Morrison R. Walte. Allen O. Thurman and John A. McMahan were endowed. Perhaps his mind wss too di rect and downright to follow the law In lta sinuous courses, now here, now there. In 1188 the Republicans nominated Mr. Burton for congress and he was elected. He Is not what Is commonly called and generally miscalled "a men of the people." He does not love a crowd. He does not care to mix with the rabble. He never flattered the vulgar herd for votes. He is a stud ent, almost a recluse, and whatever pop ularity he enjoys is a tribute to his In tellect and his character. Boon the city of Cleveland began to suspect that this Burton was the man to do its busi ness In congress, and hence he does not have to take a ready-made platform, or a ready-made party machine along with the nomination. Samuel J. Randall and Alexander H. Stephens were that sort of men, snd they sre the salt of a repre sentative republic. It la true that Tom Johnson beat Mr. Burton for congress in 18)0, but that which we called Yellow Ochre creek. from a bank of that mineral a little above It. The river continues to fall On the shores are great quantiea of Miintmar anri fall am naa htflr are not so abundant as usual, but there are numerous tracks of elk around ua We camped at 10 miles' distance ,on the sooth side of a high bank, opposite which was a low land covered with tall rushes and some timber. OREGON NEEDS was the year the people expressed their opinion oi tne jnrty-nrst congress, ana there were but 88 Republicans returned In the whole Union. Even a majority of the New England delegation were Democrats three of the New England states unanimously so. Joseph G. Can non himself went down In . defeat. It was in 1884 that Mr. Burton was again elected, and be has been a. member ol the house ever since. . Thomaa B. Reed waa speaker of the Fifty-fourth congress, and he recognised In Mr. Burton a superior man and gave him an advantageous committee assign ment, if there was one thing in the world that Mr, Reed abominated above all other things it waa a dunce in con grass, and his contempt for such a man became ah Intense hatred. But no man had a more cordial greeting for a cap able member, and the last few years of his public life were spent In a search for the best material In congress on whom to bestow advantageoua places In the organization. But It wss not un til the retirement of Warren B. Hooker that Mr. Burton became chairman of the rivers and harbors committee. It III nll 'iinf " P"" important com mittee ami makes and unmakes states men. Twenty years ago It unmade a president, for If Chester A. Arthur had not vetoed a river and harbor bill, he would have secured the nomination at Chicago, and had he been nominated he would have been elected. It was rivers and harbors that' made Charles F, Crisp speaker, an event that had momentous consequences In its effect upon the Dem ocratic party and upon the country Mr. ('etchings of Mississippi threw his Influence to Crisp solely for the rea son that Roger Q. Mills wss not a very good friend of rivers snd harbors aa they appear In congressional appro priations, and It was Catchlngs adroit management that turned the acale; that nrougnt tne springer louowing into the Crisp camp. To come down to the mere vulgar, concrete, material advan tags secured for his state and section by a single member of congress, Tom Catchlngs stands first of our solons of the past half a century. - The millions he secured for the improvement of the lower Mississippi were worth hundreds of millions to the producers of the great valley, upper as well aa lower. Pete Hepburn haa an annual speech, which he makes against the Mississippi river. It is s good speeeh, very eloquent and very provincial. Congress roves to hear It and knows that it is money in Iowa's pocket to secure the lower valley from ovornow. Mr- Catchlngs Illustrates the whimsi calities of politics. Though he had done more for his people than both senators and all his fellow members put together he agreed with Grover Cleveland that a dollar was 100 cents. They order thlnga better In Ohio. Mr. Burton does not be lieve In a stand-pat tariff, but the Re publicans of Cleveland keep on voting for him all the same. Mr Burton has done ss good work for the Great Lakes as Catchlngs did for the great river. When be became chair man of rivers and harbors, Cleveland waa not much more Important as a lake porP than Ashtabula or Contaeaut. Ha secured large appropriations for Cleve land, and so greatly has the harbor been Improved that It Is now one of the most Important of all the lake porta. The ores from the Superior mines, on thslr way to the Pittsburg furnaces, are trans shipped here, and that business of Itself would make It one of the busiest har bors on the' lakes. The people of Cleve land know whom they have to thank for thla. and that Is why they are In love with Burton and resolved to ' hold a. seat for him ae long as he can be in duced to stand for It. They feel toward htm aa Philadelphia felt toward Samuel J. Randall, and that Is why he may, with perfect Impunity, tinker with the tariff, oppose an Imperial navy and condemn the ship subsidy scheme of .hla late fellow townsman, Mark Hanna. In the ordinary anticipation of the. word. Bur ton Is a poor politician. He is not - a hand-shaker nor a baby-kisser. He calls few men by their "given names and slaps even fewer of them upon the back. He works on wires at the primaries, but he selects his own managers. He la the highest order ot politician he haa con vinced Cleveland that he Is the man to do her business in congress. The river and harbor bill is one of the things any ordinary congressman can make a good speech on either side of. If . we are to believe the Congres sional Record, a man named Updegraph kept congress laughing a whole week at his assaults on the "pork" of a rlvef and harbor bill. S. S. Cox made a very witty speech oh the question that haa been several times "warmed" over.' It waa John G. Carlisle who answered thst he would not object to sn appropriation to MnAdamlze the stream when he was a rising young member, and waa asked If he did not want the Licking river' In the rivers and harbors appropriation. One of hla successors got 125,000 for the "navigation" of It. Mr. Burton la one of the first de baters in congress after the order Of John G. Carlisle rather than Stephen A. Do'uglas. He Is not a genlua. He Is unable to Jump Into a debate and make a great speech on a subject he knows nothing about and earea leas about. When he la on hla legs making a speech be sure he haa obtained all the Informa tion in regard to the question that la to be had, and given It long, careful and laborious study. He Is seldom eg the floor of the house, and when he is there It Is not to attrnct the gas of the gal leries. He Is generally In his com' mtttee room poring over-books and pa pers, and that is a very good way to make a first-class legislator. When he Is on the floor It Is for the purpose of transsctlng public business, not to loaf or to gossip. His management of a rivers snd hsr bors bill Is the wonder snd despair of his followers. There hss been nothing like It In congress since thst other Ohio man greater than Burton Robert C. Bchench, conducted a general tariff bill In committee of the whole. There waa not an Item of the bill that Schenek did not understend snd that he would not defend, and there were upwarda of A disturbance in a Houlton church arouaed the active ire of a fighting parson. Five-year-old twins had fun with matches, near Woodburn burned their papa's barn. An ex-newspaper man is a Coqutlle City evangelist. ' What a change was there, brethren. Rainier Is becoming quite a manufac tng town, a. big aoap factory being the latest development. A new telephone line Is to run from Eugene tor Florence, on the coast, via Elralra (not N. Y.) A man back of Goble harvested 8,000 pounds of strawberries, worth 4 cents a pound, from an acre. Mining operations in southern Oregon and In the Bohemia district, are Increas ing and expanding rapidly. The carnival queen's. ' reign is all right. In its way, but some cloud's rain would be .better appreciated. It la a good time to kill thistles, of which there are too many in both town and country, all over Oregon. Albany Democrat: Once a day Is enough for airy boy to bathe, and he shouldn't make it an all day affair. Raspberries and cherries are also raised In the Hood river valley. In large quantities and of first class quality. Ashland Tribune: Olve us new side walks, or tear up the old ones and let us go back to the cow trails of our fathers. The Woodburn Women's Lewis and Clark Fair club Is putting up pint Jara of fruit for -exhibition and distribution next year. Only a fool will steal a bicycle In Salem and aell It In Albany Albany Democrat. Where would . a wise man steal it, or sell It? North Yamhill Record: A lsdy In Tillamook county advertises for a man to slash. Bachelors hereafter will no doubt steer clear of Tillamook. Borne people go to a place where there Is a. celebration to celebrate, and some who live there go where there la no celebration or would like to. About 100,000 crates of strawberries. equal to 141 carloads, were shipped from Hood River this season, and lots went to waste or were given away besides. Hood river people, notwithstanding the Columbia river flows past their doors snd Hood river through their midst, are complaining of a scarcity of water. F. J. Hard, working Bohemia prop- ertlea, will abandon the boarding and bunk-house system, and build cottage for the miners, most of whom have families. Roosevelt and Fairbanks' unanimous nomination is explained. For several' weeks before the convention the Gervala Star had kept their namea at the head of lta editorial columns. The Davenport Bros.' mill In Wasco county has started up, with a capacity of 75,000 feet a day. They own 150. 000,000. feet of lumber. They are build ing a' big water ditch, and expect later to pipe water to Hood River. Forest Orore - Tlmea: Prof. J. W. Marsh left for the eaat to attend the commencement exercises of the Uni versity of Vermont, from .which he was graduated 47 years ago. He came to Forest Grove 17 years ago and ' hss never been back to the old home since. Eugene Register: Albany is Just now reaping the benefit of a street carnival held In that city whereby a small lad aged 11 years ran away from home In a earn! villous mood. Several young girls. Infatuated with the life of oarnlval women, are under aurvelllance to pre- Urent them taking a similar route to tnat or tne runaway boy. 4.000 of them. He told the coat of the finished product and of the raw material, the domestic production and the foreign Importation, wages at home and wages abroad, the effect on production and the effect on consumption, the consequences to trade and the consequences to reve nue, and all that. His speeches stamped him as one of the greatest debaters under ths five-minute rule perhaps the greatest our country has ever produced. Hurton conducts a rivers and harbors bill after the same fashion. He knows every river and harbor In the union. and in Kurope. He knows the volume of water, the depth of channel, the recom mendation of the engineers, the tonnage existing and the tonnage prospective. All these things he has at Instantaneous command, and so wonderful la his grasp of them that it has been said that he knows ths conditions, the wants and the possibilities of commerce of all the rivers and harbors of the country better than any other congressman knows them of any one river o any one harbor. It Is s feat of memory that equals Me- Cauley's repeating In their order the archbishops of Canterbury and the lofd ohancellora. And there Is little doubt that Theodora E. Burton could manage a tariff bill as well as he does a river and harbor bill, and that Is the supreme test. From the Salem Statesman. As the time approaches for the an nual meeting of the Chautauqua aoclety, at Oregon City, It will be in order to remind the management of the very In adequate sanitary conditions prevailing mere last year, ana or tne promise to have them remedied In time for this yesr's assemblage. The knowledge that this baa not been done. If It haa been neglected, would keep marry people away. There la no spot In Oregon better suited by nature for such a gathering aa usual ly assembles at the Chautauqua meet ings st Oregon City and ths otherwise perfect surroundings should not be marred by a continuance of the sanitary conditions that have heretofore pre vailed there. Aa a result of the grati fying financial success attending lta meeting last year It was given out that the surplus funds would be used for this purpose, and the Statesman would be pleased to announce to the public, that the aaauranoe has been consummated,