, .",1 . 7 Page of fc JoMPiifll FRIDAY. AUGUST 12, .1804. ' PORTLAND, OREGON. Editorifll THE OREGON DAI LY . AN t. a, JACKSON Published every evening (except Sunday) andeVy J-gjJnM Th. OFFICIAL, BETTER ASSESSMENTS NEEDED. ANOTHER deficit is In sight This fact will, of course, be used by omi people as a foundation . for an argument that the city should have kept In rt-r-hin with the gamblers, and obtained a little money from them monthly, but the better Judgment, and that of the . great -majority whT b that tha city can and -i at .inn without tni' camojcn . hwwji pilUUeU. v v Mwa , moreover, can and should pay lta bill, and arrange to meet its current expenses, without Incurring an annual deficit It la doubtless true that a deficit la mora trouble . ioim than a aurplua. Tha careful. Intelligent business man looks out that a deficit doer not ahow up against him t the end of a year or of any month, and a city should. and can make.ther same sort of record. . . The city government la Somewhat handlcappedTnoweyer, by lta legal connection with tha county , government. . It ' ' , vv. r Portland were coterminous and coincident inuiuu, iv VV.ni . - i.iih a. rnimtv. and If a new county separate county seat at Oreaham or view. We hava to reiy lor taxes on. f assessments, of a county assessor, .who haa many tsmp tstlona Tha time haa coma when thera should be a full. ' fair, Just and accurate assessment ' of tha property of ..!. .i. Tha nroaent ajtaeaaar. . Who doea DOt CO OUt Of - office until next January, haa dona rather good , work, ' as compared with that of aome of his predecessors, but there la a chance- for a big Improvement yet. We shall - be very much pleased If the new assessor la a man capable of waif filling that very Important position. Bhica tne Cliy naa to oepena in iun"m w-... officer, the city baa a right to hope he will do hla duty. There ought to be a' full assessment of property a cars ful calculation of tha amount of mioney needed -and" win he needed next year than ever before-rand then a straight -out assessment sufficient to cover tha amount. And then- no . money beyond the estimates, . i wA rt mnm iimiKifnl - emere-encv. should C&tCV 4.1 IM ... v . be expended. This Is the right, rorwara way ox uoini uuiici hmu men - .... a city should not .do It, as well as a banker, merchant or "mechanic. .... There are various ways In which he" city can econo mise, too. but there Is not much present hope of relief " by that method; what Is needed besides 'that 'Is ths right sort of an assessment, and a levy that will yield . the amount needed. A "deficit- is no better , than a vhnnl knv'a Mciua. iL- . " " , THE CZAR'S SON AND HEIR. COMPARATIVELY Jrifllng things sometimes, exer erclse the profoundest influence on mighty events The birth of one male child In Russia may alter the destinies of tha nation and appreciably affect the wellbelng of millions of people. A son Is born to the cssr; he Is the fifth child In the family, the four first having been girls. Ths prestige of Nicholas as well as the succession to ' the throne hinged on that event. Nicholas possesses neither the Strength of will nor the physical force to withstand the pressure- so constantly urged In governmental affairs by the oligarchy which la really ruling ths nation. So long as there was a strong probabUlty or even possibility that the succession would. In the natural order of things, pass out of his Immediate Una he was mors or less at the- mercy -of -the - powerttthcoterlejthf tj;TOrroundshtnt Burwllhamale heirlh'his house he has all the cards lu his own hands If he Is able to play them and can. If he will, become complete master of the situation. ' To v what degree bar will attempt to dominate It Is Impossible- to .aay.. huC Judging, him by his character as the world understands. It, : while the ' arbitrary power rests with him, It is likely to be exercised '. openly, covertly or by Indirection. yeTwerclsed, by some powerful favorite and from It all It may be too much to expect that there will be much change In the spirit of the governmental Institution "which has provoked such deep seated prejudice- all over the world. . ' 1 Nevertheless It is pleasing to note that any mad Is gratified In any laudable ambition and tha birth of a son to the autocratic csar may, and It Is hoped will, have a more or less beneficent Influence upon the whole sys tem of government. , ,V '. .- ' ' , sanvu'v nuBOirsm. -( ' The tttaaliBg of a Haa and the Coming of a rise. j If yon look out of your bedroom wln . Cow -to the west, aays Edgar Wallace, writing to the London Mail from Tan gier, under date of June 17, you will aee : the hills of Andalusia quite close- st hand.- And Andaluaia Is Spain, . and Spain la quite European, and almost civilized. ' If you turn your head ever ao allghtly to the right you will see at your feet Tangier, which la Darkest Africa and . the mysterious eaat al rolled into one. Also, It Is the ftrat or second century or. rather. It Is before the Christian era. Mohammedanism is almont a modern ity. The electric light, flickering feebly at the comers of dark paasagea, may ' pass for a miracle. The hotels are Im proved caravansarlee, and need not count. . - Perhapa It Is ths food, or the methods, or the rooms, but. whatever It la, there Is nothing in ths sverage Tangier hotol that clahea with that prevailing spliSt of antiquity which Is Tangier' very own. Low hlls, ail olive green, circle ths blue bay. A thin golden ribbon of beach . separatee the blue and olive of land and ..it: i , wk uu, iiLiimi uiiLwiti'', mill j m i an angle of SO degrees. Tangier, all of a Jumble, sits with her feet In the sea. Tier on tier, roof of flaring orange " overlooking flat roof of washed-out blue, Kt., KfW (i.lln . f.,.1AM n - Awn' I tma iiTingi.. o nol n t im. " changleabla, unsanlty. ' ' It la eastern; the eaat one reads about In- one's callow youth; the turbened , east; the east In Jalleb and fes; the east that carries spears and quaint, long-bar-.' relad, queer-stocked guna; the eaat that aaya Its prayers on Liberty carpets, and goes to the moaqus at all sorts of lncon- . venlent hours. - ,-..- - Laden donkeys stagger through the cobble-pa Ted paasages that S'rVe for streets. -Coal-black negroes, all thews . and perspiration. Jog past you wlth.tln- ' bag.. Grave .Jews In black, shaven- WmJI hdl.MM all Im mm .il.lnii. .(- Itora from Fes you know the curiosity that la expressed by a scowl and slov enly soldiery In soiled tunics pasa and , repass you every second. Blanketed ghosts of women, their faces muffled. ' shuffle awksrdly, from street to- street. . A bored little buy leads a hideously ' Mind fid man to a group ef idlers In the thronred market place. The old man whines his formula, and the little boy, i are find oa a troupe of acre- INDEPENDENT NEWSP'APBR PUBLISHED BY JOURNAL , PUBLISHING CO. PAPER OF THE CITY OP h were created, with a Troutdala or Fair- aw wn" " - reasonable, straight- bats, repeats the appeal mechanically: - "In the name of God. who will buy me a little oU for my aupperr " . . . For my aupperr pipes ths boy, abstractedly. . - ' But tha begging bowl goes unfilled. - .A lisping objurgation In Spanish from one, "Go away, can't yoT" In KngllsB from another; only a Moor atops In -hla stride to search a capacloua leather bag at' hla aide, and throws five centimes Into the outstretched hands, "In tha name of God." A babel of volcea around you, in thta aame market place. Arable mostly, then Spanish, then French, and sometimes English. ' ' "8ay!" An American "Jackey," as bright as a baby's sralls and aa Incongruous a vis ion In this out-of-the-world spot as an automobile in heaven. Buy!" Where's this English postof flcer , ' Me haa a little group of Arab boys about him.' Open-mouthed, abaahed lit tle boys, filled with ths wonder and awe of youth for mankind In uniform. . Little Ralsullr, . riding fiery Arab sticks, and armed with deadly accurate bamboo canes slung at his back with strlnga of cotton, cease their maraud ings: and ths blabbering, Infantile Perdl carta selxea tha opportunity of. making his escape. Debonair and .happy-go-lucky, with'-a smile on his wind-beaten face, the man who haa come to atop Ralsuli's greater game pauses down the Ill-paved atraeta, followed by the awe-stricken youth of Tangier. : . "ingiiesr asks a villager from Faha of the seller of coaL - "Amerlco," answera that wise gossip, and spits reflectively. I think that this is ths only dark spot on Ralsuli's .otherwise Irreproachable reputation; the only point of which Tan gierthe real Tangier that lives on fish fried in rancid 611 is not prepared to see tf a to eye with the popular hero of the moment .' Tangier Is beginning to think that per haps Ralsull waa a little Indiscreet in his selection of a victim. It waa, aays Tangier, sitting cross-legged on a greasy divan, with hla ahoes left 'at the door. It was very foolish to take the Ameri cans. Had it been only an Englishman! 'Texas .Precedent. From the Denver Poet The attention of our esteemed coun try editors la called to a pleasing prece dent established by a -Fort Worth restaurant-keeper. He shot and killed a debtor and took the amount due from his pocke JOURNAL. JNO. P. CARROLL Journal Building. Fifth and , Tamh.ll PORTLAND ELECTRICITY SUPERSEDING STEAM. . EVEN ths big steam railroads are turning to elec tricity as ths best motive power. The rapid displacement of steam by electricity as a motive power on several eastern lines is engaging the attention of the foremost railway men of the day. Some well Informed men predict that at no far distant time the steam loco motive will have for the most part , disappeared, and that all principal railroad llnea Will be equipped wlfh electric motors. ' ..- .. . Among tne railways that have recently decided to substitute electricity for steam Is the celebrated West Shore road, ' which Is about to tur Its line between Canastota and Rocheater. N. TH Into an electric road, with rolling jtoqk of Jhe lateet and most modern klnda Sim ilar changes have been made on portions of the New York Central llnea These are perhaps 'experimental as yet, but It . Is confidently expected and predicted that the experiments will Succeed so well that electricity will be used mora arid mbre. For suburban and. branch roads the electrjo system is rapidly coming Into favor. Its use gives a' more frequent and agreeable train ser vice, free frorri the discomforts of smoke- and cinders, and enables a train to make more rapid time ;" The Southern Paclflo railway. It has been recently reported, expects soon to use electricity between Portland and Forest Grove, and doubtless that and other western 'roads will gradually substitute electricity for steam along all their suburban reaches, at least. And yet this. If It should happen. Will not prevent the construction of many other electric Unas in thickly settled portions of tha country. Roads centering In Chicago are preparing to use eleo trlclty. referring to which the Chicago Journal says: , The subsUtutlon of electricity for steam will not only gratify the patrons of such lines, but will be hailed with delight by everybody as putting ah end to tha smoke and noise produced by the present ' steam locomotive. It la gratifying to learn that tha officials of such local lines as the Illinois Central " and Chicago ft Northwestern roads, having an enor mous suburban traffic, are already engaged in de Vising plans for. operating all their txains in and out of tha city by means of electric motors. When such changes shall have been made Chicago will have the greatest suburban train service, In the country, as w.ell as the cheapest and cleanest. The, growing use of electricity will revolutionise the traffic of well populated portions of the country, and do much to add to ths population and.- products of many suburban and rural . districts. , Electricity Is easily the king of forces.., ( - A VALUABLE SERIES OF ARTICLES. HROUOH an arrangement with the Chicago Tribune we- begin today he publication of a remarkable series of articles-by the noted correspondent. John H. Raftery, on the question of Canadian reciprocity. They will, embrace a aeries of first-hand views gathered not alone In the United States but in tha principal cen ters of Canada itself. ,, In tha Initial article tha- proposition Is laid down that Canada Is no longer a suppliant . for, our commercial favor, and ' If Chamberlain's colonial preferential tariff plan should carry, that country would be perfectly in dependent -of us, J. The principle 'of reciprocity received warm andhearty-advocacy at tha hands of the late President McKlnley. Since his death It has been relegated to the shelf, and while there have been those who have paid It generous vocal tribute no one is deceived Into the belief that there is any presen Intention to carry the matter one bit further unless public opinion becomes so insistent that it can no longer be withstood. For this reason, among others, the' whole subject takes on an added interest which will be Intensified by' the local" concern In the outcome. The letters, coming as they do from a strong Republican source,. will undoubtedly attract widespread attention and at the same time fur nish the country : a mass of . Interesting information which will be exceedingly valuable in the discussion of the subject of reciprocity, but more particularly as It is specifically applied to our commercial relations with Canada. ' '-?r' KZOSTT OOOS rom COB. From ths Council Bluffs NonparleL When you get up In the morning from your superheated couch With a brain all hot and addled and a - temper full of grouch. When you wander to your office with a dull and fishy eye ' -Neath a aun that's gaily biasing like a furnace In 'the sky, Oh, it's hot. but don't you mind It, though you're wilted and forlorn; It's a-little tough for mortals, but It's mighty good for corn. ' When you stagger home So dinner In a biasing glare of heat And you smell ths burning leather of the shoea beneath your feet. When your mouth is full of cotton and your collar's on the run And you bake and fry and f rlnle like an oyater In the aun, Don't cuas about the weatner and don't mope about and mourn; It's a little breath from hades, but It's mighty good for corn. When you spend the humid evening full of anger and despair, Chasing 'round with cota and pillows after cooling breaths of air; When you're hot and damp and atlcky and yoti think with mortal dread Of that little- hot air oven that sur- - rounds your waiting bed. Tou may contemplate resigning from this torrid earth In scorn. But you're foolish if you do it this is bully for the corn.-. OBT OF A ILOW BO AD. From the Louisville Herald. "I missed an Important engagement through She slownesa of the well, I won't say which road it was, but It was one that runs into Louisville today, and was reminded of a line that runs through Arkaaaaa and is noted for be ing the slowest road In creation," said M. J. Fellows of Dubuque, la. . 'This road was so slow that tha hogs In hs little country towns would beat It foot races, and one day one of its trains atopped out In the wilderness of an Arkansas cornfield snd did not movs for nearly an hour. It waa a biasing hot day, and ths passengers were IS a perfect fidget Finally they conductor came Into the car, looked -cautiously about, snd singling out a passenger, went up to him snd stealthily whis pered : ' " 'Hsvs you got a" piece of ;. string about you, sir? We've broke down, and I want to fix the engine." : '. ,''.' ".'4 Small Change Now Is the time to harvest your bur docks. Root, hog or dleT (N.1 T. ..Repub licans. . , Kuropatkln has been wounded in his feelings. Ths anti-thistle law should bs better enforced. . , The mining congress must be well cared for. Straw votea ars about as valuable aa straw balL . , -Port Arthur Is winning a reputation for real meanness. Oregon Is In fuck again haa no state election next falL J , Closing the 8L Leula fair on Sunday was a big mistake. But they aay that Candidate Davis Is young for hla aga ' : A handsome woman hag no grudge againat the mirror trust. ' - ; " A man who prefers peace, to war Is not necessarily a coward. The place to keep street clean Is right In front of. your house. . Some men looking for a Job wouldn't work under any circumstance a,. . When a person gets a reputation, any sort of a daub or Jingle will do. Tom- Taggart ean:t become president anyway; he was bora t Ireland. When Orover Cleveland ' calls on Judge Parker he will not be accompa nied by William Jennlnga Bryan. Two hundred and thirty-nine electoral votea will do the buaineaa Anybody Lean figure them out, , and elect hla cnoica. , ; i , ' An Iowa girl haa been selected ss teacher for ths nephews of the Chinese emperor. Msybe she will become the successor to Tsl An. - Chicago Newa: There are no lemon ade atands or beer tunnels In Manchuria, so sll they can think of when it Is 100 In the shade Is to 'fight What the newspapers want la a really decisive battle In Manchnrla, If they don't get it before long they are liable to go to war themaelvea 'Anybody can figure out anybody's election. Just write down the list of statea you need for your candidate, with the numbers of their electoral' votes, and there you are. It Is evidently the silly season In New York, when the papers make a great sen sation about Uncle Jim Hill "buying" that state for his .friend, Dan Laraont They must be having dog-days back there, sure enougH. "Will the next Republican legislature cut down the big grafts." Inquires an exchange. Will the Interlocutor enum erate a few such grafts. Salem States man. Never heard of them before, did youT What happy, childish innocence! Philadelphia Ledger: Governor War field la again advising - girls not to marry Until. they ara It years old.. Ths srovernor will have lust aa mnnh Intl... ance In thla matter aa he would if hel tried to atop tha sun girls will con tinue to marry when the right chance cornea I . Minneapolis Tribune! A young wo man or Philadelphia, annoyed at the in sulting attentlona of a ferryboat masher, kicked his lower teeth up Into the top of his hat tha other day and then bat tered his Jaws until his ears rang for the ambulance. Thta remedy is rather more apectaeular than the use of the hatpin, but It must require soms train ing. BUOTBZO BOASS ABB TOBTXjrO, The Tass Xnflnanoe Which They Will Exert cm the Future. From the Corvallls Times.. A proposition for an electric road be tween Corvallls and Eugene is a natural product of theae days of progress and development The preaent promoters msy or may not be the people, and the pres ent may or may not be the occasion to Install the Una but an elaborate system of electric roads to thread atid Interlace ths WUlamette valley Is a condition that the future, and In all probability the near future,' will establlah. Water runs down hill, and ha tldea of ocean recede after they flood. By the same token. Increase of population, the discoveries ' of the In ventor, anil , the Inexorable laws of hu man progress fix conditions that can neither be thwarted or even be long post poned. It Is natural and Inevitable for one after another of the adjuncts of a higher civilisation to establish themselves in a community, and after rural free mall delivery and rural telephones comes ths electric road. The latter Is .to be as much a fixture In the coming thickly Settled community as ths ordinary farm reads bavs been in the past. They ars a step In social evolution and growth, and whether Wa expect them or not, they are to be. v The Willamette' valley Is especially well suited to a profitable operation of a com plete system of electrio roads. The won der of many eastern people arriving here Is that intricate lines of the kind have not slready been established. . Cascade mountain streams present an Inexhausti ble supply of power, ao conveniently sit uated aa to be the cheapest In the world. Capital In the eaat and west by millions, sttracted by the Immense profits that always come from transportation enter prises. Is keen for Investment of the kind. The Immediate question with such In vestors Is not the profit of the moment, but the vaat returns to come In the future to tha pioneer who first gets foothold In the region and gradually gains control of the system. Thus, thers Is certainty o.' a future Willamette valley with an intricate network of electrio roads, con necting all the principal towns, threading all the more densely populated farming communities, transporting persons and products ctuaply and swiftly, snd form ing a regular and necessary part of ths dally life of ths time. v . a Miamra iio.ooo mzlx From the Minneapolis Thibune. Nearly 15 years sgo a man entered the First National Bank of Denver and walked Into the office of David H. Mof fat the president of the bank. He had a bottle in his hand that he said con tained nitroglycerin, and ' threatened to blow np the bank nnless hs waa given a large sum of money. - Mr.-Moffat sent for the money, snd among ths bills was one of 110,000 denomination. Recently the government called In all 110.000 bills, and the one given by Mr. Moffat la the only one that has not been presented for redemption. No trace of the man who got the money was svsr found. .' August II. A gentle breese from ths south carried us along 10 miles, when wa atopped to take a meridian altitude, and sent a man across to cur place of observation yesterday. He stepped 174 yards, and the distance we had come was It la miles. The river Is wider and shallower than uaual. Four allies be-' yond this bend a bluff begins, and con tinues aeveral miles; on the south It rises from the water at different heights, from 10 to ISO feet and higher Ss It re r PASSAGES FROM . (Compiled by Ambrose Blerea) ' Aa they strolled along the Riviera the setting sun was Just touching ths summit of the Alps and firing them with an electrical glow. Turning to har. he looked Into her beautiful eyes and thus expressed himself; "Dearest I am about to maxe an im portant statement" ' She almoat instantly divined the character of the communication that he referred to. and it affected her with a considerable perturbation. It was ao sudden. "If." she remarked, "you eduld postpone the statement above mentioned until a more auttable occasion I should regard your forbearance with high satis faction." Very -well," he replied, with coldness, "I will wait until we are not alone.; "Thank -you, ever so much." shs Muahad. .and all was silence. Later in -the season he explained to her tha trend of hla affectlona, and aha algnlfled the diha pleaaure that aha received from ' nis preference. ; V , The booming of the. cannon awak ened him with a start Vaulting Into the saddle with remarkable - grace ne waa aoon In the thlckeat of the fray,. and many a foeman fell beneath hla flashing steel. let even in ma wmon din and confusion of battle his mental w a v a umimI. anit he thousrht only of -the countess, while absently dealing deatn anout nun. buuuiui n was . roused ' from nis revery oj am I . a Ktla ava nnnn hla helmet .UlfmV v . - - - Mr - and turning hla eyes In the direction whence- It seemed to nava mu n ered, he beheld the sneering visage of De Grammont on a black ateed. Tl ... a a an nnnnrttinitv that mlaht satisfy tha most exacting an . oppor tunity to rid hla country, of a traitor mw.it himaaif of a rival: to serve at once bis ambition and his lova His noble nature forbade, waving nia enemy aside, he thoughtfully withdrew from tha. field, resolved to press bis suit otherwise.'. ,' rw-.M- tVa. . hfa nraaanre waa not suspected. Montague remain with hla eye glued te the keyhole. It waa well that he did so, for the conspirators now laid on tneir maaas, sjiu amuus he recognised the king himself 1 Hsrs ADAS, OLDEST CITY UNEARTHED ' '(By Henri Pen Da Bols.) J ia.v. ha nMi( ritv in the world, has Just been discovered.-It was under-the ruins of Udnunkl, In Babylonia, ana it had to be unearthed. ' Babylonia's cli mate was good and ths soil gavs ths ma terial of brick, so that civilisation ross there naturally. Adab, where it maae Its first effort was unknown until re cently to students. ', Prof. Robert F.. Harper of the Unlvei .t... nt r-hioam read of It In his re searches among documents of Baby lonia's history. He found tne name the city and Indications of its sits in a jt - t .M one of the first kings of Babylonia. Then ths university sent learned men to. dig into the rulna anA renover Adab.- Its data is lost in ths yeara before Chriat , Berosus, a wise man or oojw whom one need not believe, aaya that ,i - it kinaV nf Babvlonla who reigned before the deluge for 412,000 years. This Is ramuous, or wur i n.. w am think h.t Mahonaaaar. who 1 viiu u o ...... k . reigned' 747 years before the Christian era. knew AdaD, as wen aa Aiurui Babylon, who was the first king. - T- . . T TlnnV. vkn A 1 rr1tA thS diggers at Adab. writes to Professor Harper, who directa tnem xrora ........ ... r-hl.n that ha la aura Of having unearthed tha ancient city, be cause bricks Inscribed With the name and Udnunkl was built over Adab. and Udunukl waa built, over Adab. - Hla force of 120 men and hs will find, as they found at Blsmaya, templea, marble, statues, onyx lamps snd Jewels iH.r.i,,tiKiA in mrt inra Then the stu dents of -manners will learn from the houses of the buried city the manner 01 widow was nr bovbt. a-aeaaaaaa-ataai ' From the Liverpool Poet Scientists say that the hair and nails grow sfter death. Some Theory of that sort is needed to explain the experi ences -of a widow at a spiritualistic seance. ' . "No," said ths little widow em phatically. '1 will never attend another dark seance:" "Why notT" asked hsr friend. "Didn't you have any acquaintance among: the spooks T" "1 am in doubt about the material isations." 1 ' ' . ' "Not distinct enough f ' , "Well, it was this way "The medium said" my husband was there and wanted to speak to me. It was too dark to aee him plainly, but I thought I -recognised the outlines of Jim, and I kissed him." "Was It Jlmt" That's what I Vould like to know. "What makes you doubt KT" "The spook had a lovely mustaeha" . "O!" -Jim nsvsr had ona" And ths little widow looked thought ful. . '..-'' ' ; , rZABX. TAZ.VBS AT 9000400. " ' From ths ' Jsweler's Circular -Weekly. Ths most extraordinary pearl or, rather, cluater of pearls known ss ths -Southern Cross,' is owned Dy a syndi cate of Australian gentlemen, who value It at $500,000. So far as Is Known, it occupies an absolutely unique poaitlon. It consists of nine pearls,-' naturally grown together in so regular a manner as to form a perfect Latin orose, , Tha pearl was discovered by a pearl fisher at Roebourne, West Australia Ths first owner regarded It with so much superstition thst tie burled It; but It was discovered In 1(74, and flva years later was plsced on exhibition in Aus tralia -. ' - cedes on the river; ft consists of yellow and brown clay, with soft sandstons Im bedded in It and la covered with tim ber, among which may be observed some red cedar; the lands on the opposite side are low and subject to inundation, but contain wiUowa, cottonwoods and many grapea A prairie wolf came near the bank and barked at us; we attempted unsuccessfully to take him. This part of the river abounds in beaver. . We camped on aand Island In a bend to ths north, having made z0K miles. ', BOOK THAT SELL was a situation that he believed unique; In all his experience la court and camp there waa no precedent A sovereign conspiring for his own overthrow, his own assassination Montague , was deeply- affected by so striking an in stance of unaelflshnesa He reeled and fell to ths floor in an agony of admlra- llT , '. - ' V -'V Gladys hastened . slowly along the path leading to the cliff above the laka The full moon was rising In the eaat for tha hour waa midnight, and her warm radiance bathed the landscape in a blue languor. Harold awaited her on the cliff, where they discussed their sentiments for more -then an hour. Then, with a look of alarm. Gladys called Harold's attention to the time of night Vainly he assured her thst nons of ths usagea of pollts society were Infracted by the tryst; shs Instated that he conduct her to her fathers resi- dence rortnwun, sna ss xney pansu manlfestsd a desire to press his Hps upon hsr hand. She hastily withdrew that member, and murmuring "Fore- well," terminated the Incident ' When the sun areee upon the scene Harold was a distant man. ' As Wellington rode moodily away from the fatal Held of Blenheim, medi tating upon the wreck of hla ambition, he encountered the seer whom ne bed met the day befora "Wretch!" he exolalmed. drawing his sctmetar. "It Is you that have done thisl - But for your ' accursed predic tions I would have won the battle and the Swedish king would now bs flying before ma Die, thereforeP' - So saying, he raised his armed Jiand to smite, but the blow did not fall. Even while the blade was suspended In the sir the seefs long, black cloak fell away, the white hair and the concealing beard were flung aside,' and the Iron Duke found himself gaslng Into ths laughing ayes of Madame de Malntenon! Speechless with sstonlahment he thun dered: "What Is the meaning of thler "Ah, monsieur," she replied, with that enchanting smile which had-lured Louis XIV to the guillotine "it means that I amuse myself." . ' " . . . Drawing a Jeweled pistol from hsr bosom . she ' shot htm dead. v life of the most, ancient civilised men. All the history that has been studied painfully-for ages haa to be rewritten. The history of Babylonia may not es cape that fata Berosus. Dlodorus and Herodotus, whom ws had . to believe when we were children, are known now to hsvs been great gatherers of fablea Archeology disproves most of ths things that they asy, svsn aa aatrononmy dla provea the astronomers and chemistry the old alchemlsta Ths unearthing of Adab should reveal to us the true history of Nebuchadnes aar, whose reign of 4S years made Baby lon mlatreas of . ths world. There ars Inscriptions of his alme, but one does nob know if they be not exaggeration One aays that he built the wall -of Babylon in 11 days. . Babylon was essentially rellgloua, but Its engraved gems and metal work are full of humor which waa unknownto Assyria Ths Babylonians' were excel lent In the manufacture of textile fab rics, in pottery and in painting. More peaceful than tha Assyrians, thsy had more leisure than they for the culti vation of the arts that charm. And these ars to be revealed by the diggers ef Adab. ' -. The Importance of their work may not be exaggerated. Assyria was In art as in other things, only ths pupil and Imita tor of Babylonia Tha Assyrians had stone in abundance; and the Babylonians were obliged to take It from a great distance, but the Aaayrlana had forms of. architecture which the use of brick had made necesssry to Babylonia. Wa haye not the right to deride for this the Assyrians too much, since we build bouses of Iron as if they were made of stona ' ' FOBBTBB AID A BAT. ' I little know or care ' ' . - If the blackbird on the bough Is filling all the air - ' . i With his soft crescendo now; For shs Is gons Sway, ' And when she went she took -.The springtime in her look, . .' , ' V The peachblow on her cheek,- . The laughter from the brook, 1 The blue from out the May -And what shs calls a week . Is forever and a day I It's littls that I mind ' ' " : r ' How the blossoms, pink ar white, At every touch of wind Fall a-trembllng with .delight; " For In the leafy lane,' '; Beneath the garden boughs, ',-. ;' , And through the silent house, , One thing alone I seek; : .. . Until shs come again The May la not the May, ' And what she calls a week . Is forever and a day! , ; Thomas Bailey Aid rich. -.,1 Suppression Suggested. From the Salem Statesman. All such street-corner cranks ss Dowle and Creffleld ahould be suppressed by the authorities at tha Inclplency of their demonstrations. Instead of waiting until tha poison which haa undermined them has Inoculated a lot of other peopla There should be no exhibition of mawk ish sentimentality as to ths "freedom of speech" for a men whose mouthlngg, provs that his mental equilibrium is a' thing of the past Cruel of Her. From the Chicago News. "All my poems are returned," sighed the young writer. "I wish I could send out one that would stlcjc." . , "Why not try writing them on fly paper?" asksd ths cynical young lady. Oregon Sidelights Condon is Improving. - L Going to ths regatta , -r . , ' Pity The Dalles t It Is to have a fair.' Morrow county raises fine peaches also. Bend says It Is beoomlng a second Spo kane. -,--,..,) Several good new houses are going ap In Albany. , Much Irrigation development Is going on tn Lake county; Now Is ths time te prepare exhibits for the Lewis snd Clark fair. :, - i Six or eifht houses' are In course of construction at Springfield all the tlma Lakevlew Herald: The town is very quiet as svery one Is out Ashing or -keeping In ths shade theae hot days. The Newa presents a poor appearance 4 this week owing to the fact of Its being a good time to spend a few Weeks at the-" seaside by -the News family. Bantlam ' Newa All right;. say no more about It Albany 'Democrat; Two U-year-old boys who returned from the bay twloe as soon .as they had Intended aaid they were too ' young to go with . the girls and too old to play on the sand hill, and . what were they to .'dp, anyway T The Dalles Ttmes-Motmtalneerf Happy . V la the man who nowadaya can lay hla business aside and 'hie to the mountains, but there are not many men In The Dalles who ars so happily situated that they can get off for a summer vacation. People here are too busy to even eon- -: template a summer outing, . East Oregonian: ' Hunters report such a shyness and comparative scarcity of grouse aa to Indicate a coming extermina- -' tlnn of the hlrda, It Is ssld that this year more than ever before the grouse are reluctant to leave the timber and ' . are harder to find even there. Either Instinct or Inherited fear teach them that" -dangers multiply for them In the open. wa . ... 'The Dalies Chronicle: Now that tha ' horn of the hunter la heard on the hill. ; where the grouse and prairie . chicken were wont to roam at will, we also hear Y much of the number of hirds captured by tha aforesaid; but as ths proof of the chicken la in eating It we're from Mis souri and will have to be shown before ' we know who the hunters ara .. . ' Springfield News: .Nothing hut good can come of the organisation of the pro- , gresslve business men and cltlsens of this plsee. A' great deal .more can be accomplished with an organisation .than without , When .matters of lnteresflo our community come up there will be a way of giving 'them an Immediate and , united attention. Heretofore wa were drifting without . oara . -, , ;. ' 'Long Creek Ranger: ' W.P. Tork of. Slide creek waa In town Monday on bualneaa He reports the receipt of a letter from a brother of "Arthur George In North Dakota, In which la reported the sals of 20 three-year-old steers at aft average of $54 per head. Thla makes the . price offered la eastern Oregon 430 to S2S look like a thieving game was being played by some one connected with cat tle buying. I , '.';.' '' ' Around Helix the wheat will average SO ' bushels except In those strips which were frost . bitten. The proportion of frost bitten wheat la heavier In the Helix coun try than anywhere else In the oounty. In almoat every Instance the damaga was done on the low grounda, -though sometimes tha belt of frost would reach up the hillside for some distance, but there waa the utmost Irregularity tn the extent of the area thus damaged. Grant County ' News: Farmers from the Mount Vernon country complain of a shortage of labor, and men to harvest the second crop -are Impossible to get, slthough S2.H per day Is offered. Tommy -Thorburn of Dayvllle says that the sec ond crop of alfalfa is a hummer, and that , It la now being harvested. Men are not . particularly scares, but -wages are S2.I3 per day.. So far. little hay Is being sold, and he thinks ths market will let down soms before much changes handa Ws are In receipt of a brief eommunl- ; cation from James Inman of Looking " Glaaa announcing that hla platform aa Ir.de-pendent candidate for president of -the United States will be ready for pub lication at some time In the near future. He says this platform will be "a reve lation to the political world," Inasmuch aa It will be the beat of Its time, and that which is the bst of Its time is ever ahead of lta time." Roseburg Plain dealer. Bully for Inman. Ths only time the Mitchell, Wheeler county News has mentioned ths relief fund matter la In ths following para graph. Much has been sald about ths distribution of the Mitchell flood fund. A former Mltchelllte tn a recent Inter view published In the Antelope Herald, made a statement the text of which Is as follows: "I scorn the Idea of accept ing money from tha relief committee ' and say frankly that I do not believe any man with youth, health and strength left haa. a right to sit around bembanlng his misfortunes and expecting hla losses -to be made good out of funds sent in by sympathftlo peopla" ', TALK ABOUT OABBXBATBS. ; Scissored by the New Tork Globa If Judge Parker Is not elected, the pa rents of those "Alton" babies can claim that they were named after the railroad. Waahington Poet . , . . - - Judge Parker la not a man to claim that his hair la auburn, whsn In reality It Is red. Birmingham .(Ala) Age-Herald. : ' , ,,' ; , .' .. Henry O. Davis, the Democratic vica presldentlal nominee. Is a cousin of Ssn- " ator Arthur Pus Gnrmsn of Maryland, though It is probably not his fault Syracuse Post-Standard. It is doubtful If Dr. Swallow will get enough advertising out of hla prealden- ' tlal campaign to enable him to set up a buttermilk emporium. Denver Republi can. ( .. ; - i( .. ' Tom Wataon's admirers say. that ,. "nothing can affect hla opinions.". Might disinfect them, though. Florida Times-Union. . . . . Senator Fairbanks has gons to an ocean resort for a brief vacation. That ought to be a pretty cool place this summer. If It does not freese up entire ly. Buffalo Tlmea , . Kept Bis Word. . From the Chicago News. Pat Th boss sed thot he'd be afther makin' it hot far me. an', b'gorry, he did. " ' . ' Mike Phwat did he doT . Pat Faith, an' he. folred ma - ( ...