E Editorial Page Of it3 Journal D PORTLAND, OREGON, MONDAY. SEPTEMBER - 19. . 180C I' 4 0 -, 1. THE OR'EG O ft ; D A ILY JOURN AL Small Change Oregon Sidelights V . .;. AM I NDiriNDIN T NIWIPAMR - 6, S, AACICSON obg avery avast (mm THBNEEDOF MORE PERMANENT HOTELS. THE ADVANTAGE of having plenty of first-class . hotel MooKnodAtlm H that it serves to create t ? aV ih mm minM thai mi kla ra1trarala fell iMHIMl that - tame ' erts of hotels suck a J wealthiest and most thickly MttM section of tha cous ttrr. . A number of 7MN ago th Plant and Flaglsr ' innk wn this mm' auestioo. ; surface a mora tmprorniatn field bean to ana. on comMnation nuire J ona side of tha psntnsula " while the ; walla side. Than both began to aaanad a moat extraordinarily expensive scale, Tttaas In " voJvsd bi noma InataaoM tha building of towaa and tha dlaaina- Ot chanaala anions tha quara and tha aoat of tha " whol vu anormota. But Una 1 zoandltnra and tha tavaatinonta anomoualr arofltabla. AU of thai i In San rrancawa lately tha hotat f haan anonnoualir Incraaaad and battarad. In Saattla avan thoaa hotala that wara buUt ahead of their time ar now In foU blaat and add much to tha revenve that eomaa ' Into the city from tranelant aoaroeo. Tha affeot la felt not alona la tha hotel buntnesa or arm tha theatrea, but ' It aarraa to etUnuftata baalnaaa to 1 partlcalarly hi tha Una of what are in Pertiand wa are not ahead, but ' demand for. hotel aooommodatlona. There la no crlUcum ' to M mada of tha hotela wa haTa, for they haw dona : mora than any other latnaat to nopalartoa tha city with tha travellnc nubUa. Bat If there were mora at them . tha baalnaaa which all would do would. If aoaelbte, be ' tarter than H la. Tourleta oomlnf bare and finding ready , and oatwenlal hotel aeeonnnodatlona would aUy loncer - and mora of them would eorae hara. Ai The Journal haa ' rreqaantly atatad, and It now bonatdarbui permanent ; hotel afieamnmdatfcm and nothing ahw, Portland la loot 1 being "dlaoorerad" by the people ot the country. CaU f ' fornla haa heietofotw abaorbed praetteally all of the . tourlat traraL It haa been widely adyaitlabd for years 1 and tha attractions which it offered hava bean exploited . tu aong and atory. But Car tha neat hw yaara a oon- atantly Ineraaatng muntoer at people hava been earning to ' ' tha Pacific northwest. V any of them hava , noma direct. , but a still larger number, after having spent tha winter In ' California, now return to tha east by way of Portland . and Seattle Instead of returning by the routes over which ther eama weaft. It la being realised, too, that for all classes of nervous com plain ta, which ' relief In California, there Is no place Ukv Portland and no climate quite so soothing. But the city as wall as the , region affords aa many attraaUoos to sightseers, many of them unique and aU of them within easy -range and 1 nona of Omsk expensive, that all In all it furnishes an . Ideal tour ot which thouaanda of people who hava become - satiated with California are delighted to take advantage. - When this berimes once atarta It grow ;kta year, and If catered to will prove In many different directions. , But at tha vary threshold tha question of ampHs. hotel t accornmodatkm confronts aa, and tf Portland-xpects to ' fully profit by tola class of travel, which la now coming ; to It practically without effort. It must solve that problem " I and eotva tt vromptly. - - . m.,. ',. ,v ' .t .: an7'''. :, ...3 . GOOD RESULTS OF INDEPENDENT VOTES. THB EJECTION la Multnomah '-county laat Juna . bud larger and mora Important results than many, j If any, expected or considered at that time ' sirapry beeanse tha sheriff of this county m doing his plain duty and executing the law aa ha made oath that ha would do when he took tha office.' PoUowlng his axampat. and borrowing from bis oouraga and official rectitude, the aberlffe of Baker, Union and parhapa other counties, have ' also stopped gambling therein and declare that they will , henceforth enforce tha taw.v - -,' This action has aroused a great oouimotlon and clamor v In soma quarters, and tha sheriffs are betas' denounced and threatened aa wall aa approved and praised. It Is i, a strange, new thing In this state, something heretofore . unheard of, that the laws should be enforced, particularly i nti-gambling law, and that sheriffs should do their --r atmpla duty m thla reepecC Baretofora tha custom baa - i been tor a aharlff to execute soma of the laws, moat of them, perhaps, to abey the formal orders of courts, and to Ignara this and aoma other laws, supposing that ; thereby they would secure tha strong support at the law , breaking element and so make aura of ra-aleotlon. As . to those voters who really are opposed to nubile gambling . and ether oea violations of law, who really are In the . great majority. It waa-argued that they had become so . aocnatoroed to these mfractlona of law that they wars , Indifferent thereto, supposed It would and moat always be ea, and that most of them would vote their party . i'tlcheta anyway. But a valuable lesson was taught, a . valuable precedent act, here last June, The Republicans bad a majority of soma 7.000 in tha county. Besides that, thaw candidate bad the support ot the ''spotting' fra ' f. ' ternttr. Tet so odtoua bad become the city's open and avowed partnership wHh this form of vice that the Bar vubUoan candidate, who It was supposed would let things slip along la the old way, and perhaps wink at various crafting processes besides, was defeated by a . large majority. -' Bbertff Word was elected to execute the laws without rear or favor and to permits no grafts -K BiioomuTO watck ih. Jtabxtp ajtb nmwm VAx.aowMiwrt : Center's for September 17 nae edl ' lertalljr rccuaawnded to the voters a . boiler which net unlikely foreshadows the real outcome at the November elec tion. It ears: . "tl any an independent wheee vote Is eet for the president and hie admla tart rat I on may wisely vote for Democrats for . congrvM. if Mr. Roosevelt is vie tortoue we should be glad to eee the election extremely eloee and the aoute ft representatives DMnocratlc We are compelled la eander ta prates the , executive and his cabinet on -toe whole, but we are tired of the senate ailgarohr . and Ita dictation t the aooea, and ahould be glad t see Its great and hid n strength sapped by a waU-led hoe Mi" house, which would also probabiy dlmlnleh sueb Indifference to meaiie as was shews la the constructive recces absurdity by the president ana 'Mr. Root. There Is no dnubt that the president Would be a better president with a Dent . ooretle houee to erltlclss and some times thwart him than ne would with a a Republican house subservient te his Impatience end to tils lack of respect for certain principles end dletlnctios thet save been arneng the eoundeet et ntente of Amerteas eeseooraoy. The . people auy vote ee es te retain hlsj la " ba M and alas keep him mors stricUjr ta haa aea, . PUBLISHED BY JOURNAL PUBLISHINO Ca J!,l "wnrfag . 1. OFFICIAL PAPER or THK CITY OF PORTLAND games. Than oa announcing that t maintain th or cigars, rt waa ISSSMt and St main Npraaentlhg money will ruk with ths ling games. Just la Florida. On tha good work baa could scavosly Hava allaned. not only a ramwo ww other took tha P- suppressing this gambling, x build hotala on whet be resorted to for apatdUy hiatlflad tha beating the sheriff, hava grown to guard all will not hualnaia Ml that thia Is only Tha great majority aooommodatlona hava decent law-aMdlnc of law braakera. many ether diraotlona. Another good erdtnarlly evteemd test; that la, not of eonrlctlona, . behind, tha ordinary BONDS VOR would hava mat haa gone by. . In unwise, If Indeed everything out of elsewhere' and it spent to meat a: present, and futur Bi tb matter of obtain Uttla or no Taxable property possible to meet caee- In the event raptdlyfrom year of immense benefit tha building will by the tha next arovlaiono for Its a sow system at and consent f pleased to hear whatever discussion v-1 MORE o BBOON needs paring to build a only tha first of of roadbed and Tb proposed .roads will give a valley, j, ' Other schemes of tha Santa F western Oregon, the line, the extension central Oregon, and are bound ts oome. Mora people and Prom the Philadelphia Ledaer. This matter of the dinner pall Is a se rious one. The pall Is not full, the ooat of making It so being toe great. It ts but partif "I led, and Is the ease of the idle aea who are crowding labor, It is sometimes empty. The Dlngley law has la some email measure end shut out the products of foreign cheap labor, but neither It nor any other federal law hae but out foreign cheap labor itself. The truth about the tariff te that It protects the few manufacturers at ths cost of the many millions of consumers, end Labor Leader MoCabe Is right la saying thet "the tariff: has been of ae benefit whatever te th. workers ot this soua- trr". . . Prom the Dea Motece Resist er'Leader. It has required but two decades to shift the center of sopulatloa from Ohio to Indiana, the center of farm mines from eestera Indiana te west ern 111 1 mrte, the center of the farm 1a onate to the western banks of the Mts stMlppi and -the center of farming area from eastern lilt sots e central Mis souri. . Two centers , have " already crossed the Mississippi and two more deoedee will fee sufficient to advance an other sores the father of Waters, JNO.P.CAKMU. Th JoHniW Brtfidkt Fink a Yamhill of which he or his trWhds should be the baneflelariaa. Tha ambllng evil waa tha biggest and most eonsplcuous ona In eight and ha want after that and sloaed up the tha theory that by putting up olacarda tha games wet played only for drinks argued that poker playing for chips waa) not gambling. This silly pnv- tenae did not serve tang1; tha poker games were dosed out too. Bvarybody knew that they ware Illegal gamb aa much aa faro or an ether.. Bo tha progressed and 'much baa bean acoom-v in Portland, but In other towns, ' In monstrous evil, publls or wide-open ' A complete and permanent victory baa not yet bean won. Tha gamblers dl hard and they are shrewd and resourceful, everything that Ingenuity can Invent will the purpose ot evading tha law and but with such a man -aa Word on avail. Nor heed they flatter themselves. a' spasmodic, temporary "moral wave.' of our cltlsena are against the open performance and display of this ruinous vlos and will not tolerate It here any mora, and future sheriffs will discover that It' la tor their Interest, as well as their duty, to ally themselves with this great majority of cttlsans, rather than with a coterie result, we are aura, will appear on a only the possibility but tha probability NEW SCHOOL BUILDINGS. THEBS WAB A TIMS whan tha Suggestion made by The Journal that bonds be Issued to cover the oust of building a new east side high school With general disapproval But that time tb multiplicity of public work which the city haa undertaken, In tha rapid and nscessary ex pan si oa. of tha public school system. It la unreaaonable. h la not actually Impossible to pay for .the current revenues. It la sot dona cannot be dona.'- Thia money la not temporary' exigency, but to provide for needs. - They ar aU part of the orderly tf rapid development of the public systems and the wisely managad municipality keep a little ahead rather than lags behind In all suck work. . , schools which are Intended for per manent service, H Is not fair that all the heavy burdens at their construction ahould be placed year by year on tha taxpayers and, fair ar unfair, tt la no longer possible. will stand a oertatn strain and no mora. ft should not be called upon )n stand mora. Tet It Is absolutely necessary at times to make heavier public expendituMc Is soma years than hV would be justified or by current taxation. This witt be the a new high school la built on tha east side. " Ther stems to be no difference of opinion, and there should be none, that that school ahould bo built. and of brick or atona. Thar Is just aa little question that the work on It should begin early enough so that be completed and reedy for occupancy fall's term opens. If that la true, then Immediate construction should be made at ts annual meeting In January. At that same masting means of payment for it must be provided. As this will undoubtedly Involve s new departure In our methods the whole matter should be thrashed over long befor that meeting, as that tf It Is considered advisable to Inaugurate should be done with tb full knowledge tn taxpayers, ,-Tbe Journal -would be from Its readers and give publicity to may arts. RAILROADS NEEDED.' mora railroads, both steam and electric many miles of them-and gradually will get them. Tha trunk Unas, are showing mors of s disposition to Improve, If not to branch out Into now territory, than they hav don tor many years past. Tha O. B. dt N. baa within h past two years expended a large amount of money m betterments, and now Is pre branch line to Condon, which may be several such. - Tb Southern Pacific, whoa lines Is Oregon hava long bean weak la respect reus, la beginning extensive and ex pensive Improvementa which, when completed, will no doubt make thia Ime tb equal of any In Its great sys tem and capable ot carrying tha constantly Increasing traffic between her and California. electric roada m tha Willamette valley. or .some of the more Important of them, will surely be built befor vary long. Talk In thia lnstanos bids, fair ts develop into action without great delay, and these tremendous impetus to the Willamette , . '. . ;- r and suggestions, such as tha extension along tha California coast Into south kmg-talked-of Coos Bay A Boseburg of the Oorvallls A Eastern through the long-deferred road to Tillamook, '! , they art' cotnlng--and their produe- tlons will help to oompol the building of these roads, and tha building of tb roads will' bring mora people, many mora, and as Orecoo will develop In tb near futur far more rapidly than aha aver has don In tha past. -...- XJf SOVTS t ' Prom the Washingtoa Poet. ' ln the beginning of the dispensary law In our-etate, I waa violently opposed to that measure," amid sir. Bryan B. at 1st. a prominent business man of Co lumbia, S. C "BTven yet I em not al together reconciled te the idea that a state government baa any authority or right to enter into business, tinea H le hard to see how. If the principle be ac cepted, any line ess be draws, "But, waiving this argument, I em now prepared te my that the dispensary law haa worked out so satisfactorily and has demonstrated Its beneneenoe so thoroughly that, along with thousands who originally opposed It, I am now a ohamploB of the 'system. It has oome to etav, end If a popular vots were to be take on tt la south Ceroliaa tomor row, the people would decide to -retain It by en overwhelming majority. "The chief blessing of the system has been the abatement of Intempersnoe. Our young men no longer get full of liquor and commit seta of felly and dis order. ' In fact. I saw more drunkenness la Boston on a recent vlelt there than I have seen la south Carolina h a year."' 1 1 1 1 " ; 1 Russia hail better he mighty careful where she eteers that Baltic fleet. Tag at seeding sxerolsa, . , Wow far Ontario and irrigation, v E Th fair U oveTTaow won't it please lA j 1 I Is It tha opes season yet sows .the river? ; . - . .. . j . Hava you bought your souvenir gold WW V, , - ')..,! if M 1 M ' Where are we a-olna ta heuaa the people next ysdVT , . y Kuropatkia is In favor of a wide-open door oort h p ard. , It la supposed the fish commissioner does not neglect to draw his salary. Ths constitution ta, too often Invoked to defeat laws desired by the people. It seems rather aAhard lob th get this campaign really opened ana keep tt open. The country is very short on wheat this year, but It oaa set apples for roue, , i , . i . . A South American revolution is no ticed only when all th rest of tha world Is quiet. .., . , ,,, Maybe it has concluded not to rain until Oregon gives Roosevelt over 14.00 plurality. . - . - . , New York Repabllcana seem to be quite -as inharmonious aa New York Democrats - With , the hops picked and tha state fair over, we really eee ao good reason why lthould not rain. . , t Republican organs nave Just discov ered that former expressions of W. J. uryaa were very good sturr. . , If DoHIver eomee along with Pair' banks, we shall hear a speech from a maa who knows how to talk. Theatrical Item la too : The bill at the Twenty-first Century theatre this week will be "Uncle Tom's Cabin.- Ths New Tors. Democratic tjwnagsrs want Tom Taggart to go back to In diana. Maybe he will, and maybe be won t There will be lots of bridge bunding work for Americans when ths war Is r If there is any money left to pay for them. Vermont has the distinction of having fired the first real xua, anyhow. At-" lanta Journal. Tou never heard ot Ore gon, did yout . . - ,.v .r , j- If Debs and Tom Watson eouid' com bine their forces, the result In figures wo did look a little better In futur sta tistical slmanacs, . i t . Ths pesBut crop now being narvasted la the greatest oa record. But you will get no more peanuts for a nickel, un less tha peanut trust chooses to throw in onexct twfc .j...' . The tears of a pretty Chicago girl typist accused of crime failed to move the magistrate, showing that the adage that justice Is blind baa at last come true. Must In thia case have been deaf, tOO. r . 4 - . , . ; . ,, A Saattla judge haa aiamtased a di vorce suit oa the ground that It was brought within one year, after marriag-e, though the law has no such provision. He is right. There is entirely too much ruehtng to the divorce court for trivial reasons, ,. The young women of Menominee. Mich., have organised a dub. ths mem bers of which plsdge themselves to wear black ellh stockings, with the Inscrip tion, worked In white silk on the ankle: Venomlnee Is a good town." Now, with the skirts properly held, that ought to be a great advertisement. If the girls travel. Perhaps they expect the city to send them os free (trips around ths country. . . ', SatWBTfldW PssuTfte Prom ths Chicago Tribune. Tha latest' Boandiaavlaa immigrant breathes the same air that animated the earliest Pilgrim father. Did the Pil grim father ae soon as he had planted a crop establish a school? Be does the Scandinavian Immigrant.-' -. Traverse ths prairie of Minnesota. The farmhouses are- small and. frail. They are aleo at great distances from one another. Tou pity a region so de void of sU the faculties of civilisation. Then you climb a knoll and just before you stands aa Immense brick ' high school. sometimes ' that brick high school Is So large that it could seat all ths inhabitants of the county. Tet the taxpayers can hardly talk Knglisa. . Ths percentage of illiteracy, so says the federal census department, is smaller among the children of Immi grants than among the children of na tive Americana The eause la th lack of schools among the "poor- but pure "whites In ths south. The Immigrant usually settles In ths north and his ohlldrea learn at once to read, and write. Already these children are giv ing Chicago some of its ablest public men. Ths satire capacity was tnere. It needed only the school. It was sound human stuff. But It Is not only that the school gives us knowledge. It Is not only that the eohoof prevents talent from remain ing Ignorant and therefore wasted. That is good. - It glvee the country which has It a great advantage over' the coun try la whloh the only talent that reaches efftolenoy la the talent that Is born of wealth. A democratic system of educa tion Is a great winnowing fan laying bare every grain of talent from one side of the country to the other. Could anything- be mora Important than thlsT Yes. one thins. Democracy. That our democratic system at edu cation produces talent for the uee of the country le a blessing for which we have given thanks on many a battlefield. where our privates were genereis. and lp many en Industrial struggle, where our office boys grew Into financiers. - Tet, after all. the greatest blessing about our democratic system Of education la that It Is democratic In a large, modern dry, however, the rich end the poor begin to settle In sep arate districts. Bhail the rich boy then go to one school and the poor to another and both fall to get a complete view of llfT Portututtety the American school sys tem continually demonstrates its power of meeting new conditions. It expande with need. In our large cities the school houses are being used as people's club houses, for lectures, classes, concerts, plays end pert lea in neighborhoods In which the facilities for such things ere few and meagre. Ne development could be more In harmony with the vital prin ciple of American democrat to education, which la that everybody shell have, as far as possible, every advantage. September It. We this day enlovad a cooi, clear morning and a wind from the southeast. We reached at three miles a bluff on the south, and four miles fur ther the lower point of Prospect island. about IH miles In length; opposite this are high bluffs, about IS feet above the water, beyond which are beautiful platne gradually rising as they recede from the river. These ere watered bv three streams, which empty near to each other. The II ret la about II yards wide. the grounds on Its aides high snd rich, with some timber:, the second, about 12 yards wide, but with less Umber; the third Is nearly of the same else, and contains mors water, but it scatters Its waters over the Urge timbered plain and empties Itself into the liver t three place. Thee rivers are called by the French Lee Trols Rivieres dee Sioux, the three Sioux rivers; and as the gloux generally cross the Missouri at this place. It Is called the Sioux pass of the Three Rivers. These streams have the ssms right of 'asylum as the Pipestone creek already mentioned, though In a lass degree. . I THE BLONDES MAY NOT VANISH ' .(By Heart Pen! Du Bote.), .. Tou ar sad." aha said. -beeause a maa of scleaoe has said that the Monde are to disappear la le years. But It 4s not true, They are not to disappear eve., 1 know,! X replied. "The daughters of LI 11th are immortal. I have read the Talmud. But ther are to be more dark worn to drs their hair. . Women are always as the poets wish then to be," "They dye their hair," she said, "It seems to be red as copper. It does not make of them blondes. The only blonde have hair which people who never see or understand, earthing: deectibea aa black. "Through It ths sub play, turning It Into gold. Consutt-tbe text ot the posts. Milton says of Bve: H the has a veil down to th slender . - waist, ( Her unadorned golden trasses wore XHshevel'd. but la wanton ringlets waved As ths vine curls her tendrils.' "Homer named Venus; 'Oolden God dess.' An epigram of the Anthology says, WttathBr I see your hair black or blonde, my queen, your grace le the same and shines with tb same lustre.' "This la not to mean that aha wor sometimes a wig. but. that he saw her hair la the sunllght-occaslonaHy. Then her hair was similar to that of Chrysla "The only blondes of the great V' nettan painters had black hair, except when It was turned to the sua The geld of the heads that Titian and Veron ese painted waa act visible to vory one mat saw them la Ufa" - ' "They dyed then- hair." I said. 1 have read it In the 'Oil Ornsmcntl dells Donne of Martnello, a physician of Mo- oena in in the compendia, de gccretl Raslenall' - of Leonardo FTora- vanti. a physician of Bologna In l7g; In the Secretle of Jacobus Weokerua, a physician of Basle la int." ' , 'Ton would have wasted less time, RICHEST GIRL Mlas Bertha Krupp, eldest daughter of tha late Fried rich Alfred Krupp, la the richest girl in the world. After the sudden death of bar father a couple of years ago, she became al most ths sols owner of th renown Krupp works at Bssen, which supplies all the countries of ths siobe with their armaments of war. Her younger sister. Barbara, had ta be content with a younger son's share, The widow, Mm. Krupp, merely received a life-long pen sion payable out at her daughter's es tate. The whole property and almost the whole wealth, passed to Mies Bertha Krupp, who ts now lust out of her teens and la Worth at least !ieo.Oeo,Me, Her annual Income must he at least tiv.ooo.ooe, - - In her personal appearance, manner end mods of life. Miss Krupp bctraye nothing of her immense wealth ana colossal possessions. Although the ware of the world depend on The supply of arms and ammunition supplied by her works, snd although the entire oHy of Bssen, numbering over 100,000 lnttsbl- tarns, le her own private property, sne is the most modest, unassuming young lady Imaginable. ' Her mode of life la the eatrema form of simplicity.- She 1 badly- dressed, wears cheap bate which the modern do mestic servant would acorn, 111 -fit ting dresses of provincial cat and aboea of unmistakably provincial shape. In her modest villa at Kseea she leads' a se cluded provlnetel life, remote from the social gaieties f great cities and de pendent for her Impressions of the great outside world oa the dull society of her widowed mother snd the mediocre eld men who form the committee of man agement of the Krupp works. She has none of the accomplish raenta of the 10th century young woman and Is ss baah- "WMVMW TM WAaV Wtah Boyal to the Prom the London Truth. ' i Bismarck throughout the Franco- Prussian war grumbled at "the Princes" who commanded under Prussian lead ership "Th princes have taken aU the comfortable , lodgings," "tb prince drink up th fine wines," "the caterers for the princes carry off th best joint from the butchers nd the best vege tables and fruits from: the green gre cere," "the ptinceg ere a eause of con stant friction and embarrassment." . Prince Leopold of Heheasollern's bag gage aa described In a French paper reminds ms of Bismarck's growls His royal highness, who 4s brother-in-law of the German empress, wanted to take to the farthest east 100 colls or trunks, bales mostly bulky and weighty. Prince Kh Ilk off. director of railways Is eald to have turned pale on receiving a letter frem Prince Leopold's secre tary. Ia his embarrassment he applied to the esar for guidance, reminding re elect fully his majesty that Russian offi cers could only take a single bos and a hand bag. After en exchange of telegrams be tween St. Petersburg and Berlin, the Emperor William derided that his oou sta could do with ft bote and balsa Members of the Imperial Japanese fam ily are on the same footing as ether officers and put up with the cteraal rice sake and handful of dried Asa. Two miles from the Island we pass a creek II yards wldci-eight miles further, another l yards wide; three miles be yond which Is a third, f 1 yard width; all on th south side. The sec ond, which passes through a high plats, we eall Bum creek: to the third we gave the name of Night creek, having reached It late at night About a mile beyond this is a smell Inland oa ths north side ot the river, called Lower Island, as It Is situated at the commencement of what Is known by tha nams of Qrand Detour, or (treat Bend, of the Missouri Opposite Is a creek oa the south about 1ft yards wide, which waters a plain where there are great numbers f the prickly pear, which nam we gave 'to the creek. We camped oa the souta. op posite the upper extremity of the is land, having made an sxoelent dev'e sail of UH miles. Our game this day consisted chiefly of deer, of which four were block tali a. one a buck with two mala prongs of the horns on each side and forked equally. Lara hards of buffalo, elk, and goats were alas seen, she said, "ta consulting ths paintings' themselves. There are Tltlsn's L vlnta' at the i Louvre; Olorgione's 'As trologer at the National gailery the astrologer's wife la thia picture waa doubtless Lucres ta Borgia; the vealos Enthroned of Veronese, in tha Doges' palaoe; Tintoretto's "Ariadne" ,m the antechamber of the ambassador, la tha same palace. ' ' "If you had consulted them yen would have learned that black hair I mean hair- which seems black, the Venetian hair that one aeea la the) gondolas and on the Plana Ban Ma roc Is the only one that tt le Titian red. I am sorry to talk hi this way. I hava an air of trying to attract attention. - But only hair which seems Mack in the shadows hag a beautiful red tint In tb sua. "It la the only hair that le every glor iously blende. Blond hair mda or takes false reflections of light. It has to be touched with henna or peroxide. which abolishes the quality of refleetlng tlntsi Do you remember that th hair of the muses waa violet T "It was violet because tt waa dark enough to let Itself be tinted by the complementary color of goM in the aun'e rays. Surely Titian, Veronese. Tintoretto and the others painted the beautiful hair of their pictures from black-haired saodela, a "Aristocratic women ef Venice round ehemlets te ooJor their hair, afterward, in accordance with the painting. But they did not succeed, I am sure. Have you aeea Holbeln'a portraits of the oourt Sf Henry VII IT Bartoloeat engraved item la ITrt to IMS. The 'Arte Bloa decglsnte,' the art' of making; blonde hair, was practised by Holbein's models. It IB evident. It deceives nobody."- , "And your conclusion let" I asked. "That there la no danger" 'Of t he vsa Ishlng of blonde. The man of science that says that says it, from kls knowl edge of science. Well, a woman's hair la a man of science's- view la similar to a flower hi a botanist's hand." IN THE WORLD ful in the presence of a young mas as sny rustle maiden of bygone ages. ' - When Miss Krupp appeared at Kiel In June to attend trie unveiling of a monu ment to her father by the Qermaa em peror, she wore a shabby straw hat snd a still shabbier .dress of th cheapest cotton material. The total value. ef her outfit was estimated by the female spec tators present to be barely- i. During the whole of the Kiel - week she wss conspicuous among ths throng of per sons of social prominence and great wealth who congregate there by the re markably bad taste and poor quality ef her ooatumes which remained the same from day to day, while all the other ladies In evidence appeared la different d rosace at morning, noon, afternoon and evening, not. to speak of intervening efaanges. Instead of occupying a gorgeous suite of rooms, as might be expected, she and her sister together had a small bedroom oa the lop floor of the hotel without svea a maid to wait on them. Her diet was ss simple aa her dress and corre spondingly cheap. ' It eeeroe ta be tha definite plan of her mother and her legal guardians to bring her up as though she were des tined to be the wife of some poorly-paid employe in her own works Instead of the awe. dealt bis mstrtseoalal.prla la the world. Eleven months of the year she spends at her quiet home St Bssen, and the re maining month la passed at some remote watering place unknown to I he fashion able world, where shs Is surrounded by the earns circle as at Essen. By the side of sny American girl of her age. Miss Krupp would appear to the casual onlooker to be sn Insignificant and de cidedly second-rate young person, de void of all the arts and graces conspic uous in her sex as the wsstsrn side of the Atlsntle. . f1- ' Prom the Denver Times. What's the uee of making trouble when It's with us every day What's ths user What's the use of doing thing tat ths - most Inconvenient way . .,, What's ths uset s-" What's the uee of banting worry t , What's th use te fret and etew. When there's not a ghost of reason. , To believe It eases you 7 v What's the use? y-, ' What's ths Use of lamentation whss a good thing paesea by., What's ths uset What's the use, when you may laugh , v and shout to turn it to a cry . ( . What's the use? What's the use of breeding frsnsy And Indulging In a howl . , '' When the world is not disposed to i Listen to your peevish grswlf 1 ; What's ths ussT - .' ' . - What's ths as of blaming others for vthe fault that Is your own What's the useT What's the uss of shifting burdens you . Should carry all alone What the uee? ' Will tt make your burden lighter , f If the world refuses to, ' ' Weep about the home-made troubles That hav mad their home with nuf " - - . M , Whet's the us? r j ,1 A Marahnsld man raises gas celery. Many stats papers persist hi printing it Teacher's Institute, . , . M. .. . A Portland Arm haa bnueht Id mi. -T loads of Hood River apple. ,' . , i . ' i i i j - 1 'V - ' Poreet drove Is in need' of a sewer systsm and better wsaen-sysfm. . Ooog sped mens of' tobacco were ' grown uia year near Harrisburgv -Rlngllngs offered a Medford maa 1400 for his driving horse, but he refused IL A Twenty-Ounoe apple nked i irtee. vail la grew exactly up to Ita nams, t wslsblng ounce. . 1 In the Hood Btvar valley fine peaches, pears and cherries, as well aa berried and applee, are raised. ( , . , Corrsills needs a public park end l some of Its people ar studying ways and means to get it. , , v., ;. Though there was Wge "svowd" In Oervam last Sunday, there waa no I drunkenness, the Star says, "to speak about, , i , , Pendleton usss 1.440 quarts ? gallons of milk per day, supplied by f Our V dairies, besides perhaps 10 gaUona a -, day from town sows. . t, u , ? - Woodburs te progressing'. ' Ths many Improvements And the Investment of ' eapltal m new building that show full 77 coonasnoo la a bright future for thia city. y . , J William Hopkins ef Qulncy le la tha Insane asylum, and hi two boys are -making a good deal of .trouble and it la ".i feared they are insane and will hav to be. taken there also, y . - -Ths Woodburs Independent eaTls for" graveled streets, good sidewalks and a sewerage system, to be paid for la th future. Towns that have thee thmga, it truly says, draw the people. - la the blgw mountains south of tha' Cascade Look, a hunter cam across a band jut naif a doses wfld oaftla, that evidently have escaped tbe round-uoa and ere enjoying Ufa. r , , ,s - The Ernst Gaston correeaondant ef tha Poreet Q rove Times says Mr. Peaches T M on the sick list, "having been to sea the doctor twlos." at he doesn't keen away from the doctor, -he to likely. at thia cat to bsoame bedfast - Ths Warren ton sawmill la runntn : steadily now, and the output Is being shipped as quickly a It can be turned out. Many sew house will be built there before lone A the demand for . them Is ooaatantly increasing. . It I reported that the authorities of Lake oounty have secured evidence -, which will be eunicient to convict the parties who shot sheep In the neigh borhood of Dav(a lake in the early part ' of this year, and that s number of L' sheep-klliere will he brought to Justice Albany Xemocrmt : It Is about' AI- banr's'itirra, Salem has moat of . tha' state buildings, Eugene haa th 0. f O. ' with He 110.00 a year, Roeeburg has its : aoldlers home run by ths state and 1 Corvallte Its fine (A A, C Now give Al- . beny ths army 'post, Don't he pork ers. '. ; . . . Mrs. S. a! Burnett, mother of Judge . George H. Burnett of the Third Judicial district Of this state, and grandmother - of Mrs J. H. Baker, wife of the stato game warden. Is IT years of age and haa : 47 grandchildren and six great-grand children. The lady te remarkably ao- : tive and bright for her yea re and an- Joys life very much. , F - T -; Koa-poisa garaage PTixvare of and Troxgmas Wales, Prom the London Times, Th world haa never perhaps beheld such a combination of laoongruouo ele ments ss ths Russian empire presents today.- The educated classss Include sums of the best informed and of the most highly polished mea snd women la Europe, many of whom openly express ideas of an advanced liberal type. They Include si so an Intellectual proletariat which has embraced, with sU the ardor of the Slav nature, the wlldeet and most dangerous theories of Preach and Ger man Social late. These men have the tastes and tb ambltlone which edu-. oatloa brings, with no reasonable pros pect of gratifying either. Beneath ts th dunrb peasant order, permeated here aad there with the new Ideas which the villagers who hav migrated to th newly established manufacturing cen ters or who havo come- into contact with th artisans and the urban work men Is the army bring , home with them. Over ell tha bureaucracy and th pot it exercise what Is -too -often-In practice an irresponsible sway. ' The church la her own ephere Is ss Intol erant and a unenlightened n th atato. - Most ominous of all, th sco nomie conditions of nobles, of manu facturers and artisans and of ths agri cultural masses sppear to be becoming more and more grievous.' Th most en lightened men of the ' empire deplore the evils they dally witness and recos-. nise that profound constitutional re forms are Indlspenssbls to remedy them. Tet they are acutely consclouo of the dangers which such reforms must al most necessarily bring, snd they hav so far failed to devise sny known pro ject which promises to effect th. trans ition from th half -oriental, half medlsevai state, which Russia now ts, te conditions essential for the develop ment of modern life and civilisation. gxoirun istrmof b nssrwAVS, Writing In Collier's for September IT v Congrseemsw Brownlow. of Tennessee says: Considering th eoustryt as a Who!, S our road ar disgracefully and deplor ably bad. They as a bar to th nnan clal Snd social, educational and relig ious progress ef the egrioultural else see which they affect directly, and a source of lose to every other .olaas which they . affect Indirectly. 4 ' The first great step toward the cor- " rest solution of the road problem tea, reoognitloa of the fact that road tm provement M not wholly a local queei ; Hon. The rural populatlen have a larger : Interest la good roads than any other class, snd they wilt doubtless always be found willing to pay the larger part of the expense. But the condition of tha ' roads affects the prosperity o the whole , community. It is, therefore, a proper subject for stata and national legisia- ties. . Bc.nl to Aaytaiag. Prom the Washington Post. 'V Secretary Wilson is now predicting that Vermont will go Republican In No vember. That man's ' political darina? iwill lead him to alalia Iowa before long. '4 1 . Jt 1 -i A