PORTLAND. rOREGON, r- ... - .i--.- m notour Luutf (urn T:H.;e.7;o ' f V -v 1 tV JAICSQnt PubJtoUd;T -evetrlng ( xcpt' 6undr) -and' rvsry 8uady 'ncrmng at Th Journal Building, Fifth and. YamhiQ y.V. v'-' -tI.... !v trtJ Portland, Oregon.-. ".'..-. t .-.V--.'-, v.:..v ? PORTAGE FQAD SHOULD --..' , THE BUILDING of the portage road was riot Tin i ', J . tu de-taken for the purpose "of direct-"gain by'.tbe -. xr j Vstate,J 'Its purpose ,'Was . to afford relief to .the .... i m r r Tna munn v ri i i, r . iibi ;;.;comp1ish;tut 1t ill db "Worei The. 'action is almost incalculably good, ' ; that need wateVognlied" tni nerefacted upon, sThe ? people waited forbthera toJact with tlenaf-mvlt. I But -once : they acted for -themselves, once they realized "-Tthartiicjf not 6nly knew what should 'I ' .. ' - - ! Kl VA ttiaf Jim' mt 'will be built and 'J) 1 by the middle of May the people are. i consideration of the proposition, of Tt tinnll nnf 'Y)fnramttn that it rotten that i is Tcnterprise,' any more than ire the locks at the" Cascades, a than will b the Celilo eanal when the federal government ." ! xompletes ; iL purpose js to afford relief to ' torn . ' niercraiid IronT this standpoint it itjerits the most liberal treatment " The Journal does not believe that any tax ). should-.be levied uponsthe commerce Which passes bvflr 1 it.JtThe cost of its operation Will besmal and that cost, i our judgment, should come out of the ordinary .Ux - .funds,' In this way immediate, relief is-insured and the ;..:pblic wHl get -the benefit at once without waiting for it; ; Jff ; RAISINO STATE REVENUE. OVERNOR PARDEE of California, according to ., m . .. i-jn s"":u .:::v:: hes esP state revenue oy inaircci uuuuu, u iu un i... V will be laid only for county, municipal, school and other local purposes. One of the principal means by which the would rUe state revenue is by an inheritance tax, mnd , 'corporation taxes would provide most "Of the rest . "'triThis recommendatiortjs injine witb the trend of the ; l best legislative thought and action. The last Oregon ' legislature knade. i good beginning in Ibis-directidnf but -r ; only fair beginning. ,, Jt might be well to raise the acale of inheritance taxes -somewhat, but whether so or t 1 not, thererjcer.tain1yshould be ja law "-taxing valuable rancWscv' and' corporations 1 doing a -very- large,- and V lucrative busines in -this, state, but which have com ""J: fparatively small amounts oi . tangible, physical assets sub . ject to taxation.-. - ' ;;';.-,. ';.,--' , "-":' ! " -v. These taxea should be .reasonable, but what is reason : ble should be determined Jy fair-mindiddisiiiteiested .. men,' and not by the officers of thgleotporatkjna, who, ..like; most other mert.'JjLke topay Vs little taxes-as jo? sibie. :. - i'.;-r-.--y&?-HVi. ;j,7- ciu-, v; Witfr,. the- eraolBtnents pf the. state, of ficrs cut down to reasonable -salaries,' and the fees "now7 receivedpitd into the treasury,' and irith fair. laws pt the kind sug' ;rgested.Oregon, whose, expenses asa state need not , after this year be very heavy, should raise nearly if not ' quite all its revenue without levying direct taxes upon' 'T: (he -counties. .' - f--,:;.:' Cv;4 i-.-I'.-Mv ' ' . i ' .. Toward this end legislators ought to work. Thus they will; do ' something . entitling them provaL . ; ; - ' .?rJ 'S-r ' AN ENCOURAGING EXPRESSION.. ;- TN DENYING a morion for a new trial in. the cases of certain boss' gamblers, Judge Jrazer Said Saturday: 4 "The time has come when a The word must sro forth that men woo be 'punished. .Thitikliigliten-alrcverhe country-art apW . palled at existing eonditions. , We must protect the peo ple from ihose who defy the expressed will of the peo ple.Too often, bright liwyers bring into court some ' technicality and clear their man when he is concededly V guilty." -' ; , 4v-r;:";;v r v"T".The -gamMersattoraeymakmgiaTrotest -against this :K unSuaV but jyery .trye ; and pertinent language Jrom the .?i bench, the judge responded that he would go just as far .' as. the law allows to convict men known to be guilty, and - known, as 'such Joy eyery one in the community, and, v while be would not exceed the law, he would think that he was performing- public aervice-and-doing something ' to stem, the tide' of crime and re-establish the respect ' ...of. the people for the court if Jeassisted' in ; convicting 7; " guilty rmen who" sought to escape an, technicalities. ' ; :r This spirit and this kind of language, coming from a judge of the.circuit court for this district, is very gratify- nig to all who believe that the laws should be observed " 'and enforecdrand especially by the men elected for that .. '. purpose. - -. i.. ' : ' -r-...' " ' r . people are becoming astonished and "appalled", at the .' ' lawlessness allowed and in some eases encouraged and 1 Lewis J and- Clark TwinUiiriftuartei'airtarniaBaan t ; North Dakota. . ';' thermometer at aunrtoe. vu tl deareee - feelow sero. - SUfOnanU ttreauaaten witn and paptaln Clark with thre or four men accompanied him and a ptty of flmltana to hadt. 1 vwhlch they wera eo - ' lonumia mm tu kui kuuiuti vi www, byjBh ancjjuayv wJpatvaBSl . bjr axtrume colS; evrul of th Indiana . um tm the fort nearly frown, others are mtealna, and we are uneasy, tor one : of our men- who waa separated from the t reet durlna the chaee haa not returned. " Bumimai sxttt iuivii, A .T, 4By George V. Hohart.) CopTdt, ,04, mf W B. Ueant.t ' Per ueanlna ot -poatortty la a lot of penble vtcb vlll forces all abould yon ' before day vaa berti-- t . ' ' Der meanlna; of opportunity Is.aome. . dlna rk-h vtahas to aee you, but alvaya ralla van youvaa ould) ,' ' toer meaning of a aoralp vaa a rotrmn . fiot ran put two und two togedder und " snaka five. l..--f., - ' Der mean In r of frenstad finance vaaa ". Votnaa dot ean putAip a lot of talk und took down a lot of money. . ..: h --'vi" '.. 11 1 "' '- ' - f)r meaning of pathoa t a poor vldow telling her leedlo daughter dot dare, ata'd - nevef vaa no 0anta Clauav J :' : ' Def meaning of der Uneggapeeted ra der cheapneea of der Chrlatmaa preeent '.; vlch cornea from tvr rtcheat relative. . . Der meaning of charity la acmedlng ANVINDiriNDENT . NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED BY 'JOURNAL' PUBLISHING CO. OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE CITY OF PORTLAND BE FREE..; ;'v realizes that he defy .the expressed The rule has iiiuii b m.. b norl jeffect ol:tfie come a scandal nere wa i cin m and it is therefore fare striving for be done, but could the tide of crime ple for1' the court." Let us Jiope that animated y-a like " V L ' ..- radr lor business face to face with a ; AN OLD what it was built lor. not a money making 'not depends ' of the thihar wisdom .In other jiwuuuim iiu wiu ' WHERE i . were ana. to the people's . ap- better done, -with a an office, and there generally and tax with' nride.' ; ":-" , halt must be called." break the law will tng ana Urging gonian will be wise be. vlch begins at home und.flnlhes among der. homeleas. - ; . Der meaning of advice Is. somedlng vteh a man doan'd vlah to follow, so he la alvay a alfina it to aomebodyelsa - Der meaning of a cook (a a voman dot makea up her mind to atay In der kitchen und den loaep her mind. ,. r. Der meaning of . eacaperlenco la der school ve go U rough von ve play truant mlt ooraelvea. " ' : - .;"' , " Hmw meawlw of toot time Is It-wui III of headache und It cents In-small change left In der pocket," . :( ' ... . ,. . , .. -;-. Der meaning ' of a lobster Is a ah in after der pollah Vearg off. . - . Der meaning of a apendthrlft la "a man mltould money trying to spend hit time. Der meaning of ability la to know vara to plant a Chrlatmaa preeent eo tt vlll bring forth somedlng- mora eggepensive. -T" Japan's roreala-nt. -:"7.'-' From the Kanaas City . Star. t The preparation man by. Japan for the mobllUaUon. of a great reinforcing army and for the eatabliahment of ad ditional ooaat - defenses - Indicate --that there lg tr be no overconAdeneo boeauaa of the -rlctorlea thue far achieved, but, on the contrary, a-far-aeelng apprecia tion of Ruaala'a long-run advantageo In the war now In progreee. - Japan's hope fof complete aueoeea Ilea In eruahlng Rua- ata before the latter ean utiiisa lta great reeourcee In combating the more quickly aervlceebU powef.of tba enemy, if an other great Japanese army la araUable, and If the arme and ammunition to-equip It are et band or' In eight. thl-rln-foten.eBt fart be made effective long be fore an equivalent reinforcement can be sent to. OensraJ Kuropatkln. . ... . .V, JNO. P. CARBOU. sanctionedT by .tie officers ".of the law, and that judge is doing a very valuable and ntueh appreciated service who "must protect the people from tno.se wno will of the people." ; - been, or '-t least tt has been true in lar too many cases, that courts would go far to sustain -technicalities by which persons known by everybody , to be srullty should escape punishment. This has indeed be and an evit in American jurisprudence, especially encouraging to those who better conditions to hear a judge declare (hat rather thn seen tor or entertain any iccnmcamy m a notoriously guilty man's favor he would, on the con trary, "go as Tar as the law allows" o. tonvict auch man. For. as he says, this "will dd something to . stem and re-establish the respect of the peo , the supreme court of this state is spirftr- -,:-i,;:.'i';v.;.;;;.;- '...;-y DOCTRINE REVIVED. HE DOCTRfNE that whether a thing i wrong or on who does it and not on the nature done 1 not a new "one. but it la sel dom so offensively proclaimed asU was yesterday by the Oregonian. . . ' - ' , . , ' : , '.,.' i ; The ancient dictum, "the king can do no wrong," raod er nixed and locally adapted is, the mayor of Portland can do no wrong. ' If it be asked why, the answer is: He is over lout-score yeara old, has filled high positions, and has always borne a good character. , ineretore. wnat ever he does is right; whatever he Jails or refuses to do is twrangc ?-V .'' ; : -;;' : . tt Uran rffi-er." The law nrovides-spcdfic duties for that officer, whomsoever he may be. The mayor does not act as the Jaw requires him to act '. But therefore we are told he does nowrong, beeause of his age, his honors, his terms, he ia above the law. especially obligated to support and enforce is an "outrage. Then to indict anybody for any infrac tion of law, if he.Ve old, aad wise, and distinguished, is an ouf tage.i . . ' '...-. - ; Hereafter grand juries, when considering a man's al leged offense against the law must ask: How old is be? What 'offices hashe h eld ?t What baa been his status as a ci(izenf Hw high does; he stand now in officialdom? tiThe" liigher .up a man is,, the wiser he is, the more prominent he is, the,lesf is he to be excused as an officer forinfractiortAttaws, lor-setfiflg'iip his own opinion in defiance otJwS-.rv?'- --;-:--;::zz:.. : l-The nebple of- Pof tlarid, of Multnomah "county, and of OregonwanJLlQtn.. in office, who. .wilLreapect, obaerva. obey, execute-ana eniorce ine jaws; ana xney are going to have such men, more and more, and will not tolerate gross delinquencies on account of 4ge or reputation.-: ;t IMPROVEMENT IS EEENT." T -IS AGREEABLE, while making criticjsmalupon so. many things and men, to find those here ana iney are not a-rewin me igircEiio- that can be-conscientiously" and cheerfully commended Such a case is that of Count Clerk Fields. ". His of fice is not only self-sustaining but yields a little revenue to the county treasury .besides. . Although the' work is much greater than it.was three or 4our-yearalago, it is smalleforce t efrtbioyea, Here is are some others, td which the people - payers in particular, can really point . .- ' "r-r.r Y'j-"-,-:; -;, r;r While Mf. Fields has done his part toward bringing about this result much of the credit therefor must be given to the Multnomah county members of the last leg islature, who secured the passage of a bill that cut down very materially the expenses of this and some other of fcesTTAnd iehmd: thiJuatottledegiilatureriirompt- u, was inc organization -Known as i"c Taxpayers league, wnicn naa careuiny siuaiea tne niua tion and discovered what should arid could be done. The coroner's office is another one that -has been thus reformed: The county court isyastly superior, to what it has been-in-times- past The auditora office lappeart to" berweir conductedLr... Andpthe ewt oi msintaining these offices, in proportion,-to the work done, has been greatly decreased. '-'X" . ..''rrtX-'' These are encouraging . beginnings of the general reformation of oJficialdqm; they comprise the-dawn of the day when county and city governments shall be con ducted on strictly business principles, and in the interest of the taxpaying public, and not of some political party or its machine. ' "l '.-- ; - ' -. ' When it is 'understood that the grand jury's condemna tion df the mayor tarries with it a condemnation of the Oregonian, its methods and" what it has stood for, the unmeasured denunciation of the grand jury by the Ore better understood than it would other , .;''-;... otns roxjer. From th tVashlngton Post. ..,. ' For our part w hav alwaya regarded the arranaament as a. blunder. It in- apiraUoniaadmliabl. hUsJiUxroplcjwdJ all that' Nothing could, read mora amoothly and melodiously, put on paper in the form of purely-descriptive litera ture. The theory that wa shall educate the rillptnoa up to the point of aelf government haa aa sweet a sound aa any mlnatrera aong. Jt la 'pleasant to alt- by -our owa comfortable f 1 '."-IT'j--'it-jl' btlful-l acleetln j civil government -over-there, -witn -tta beneficent example, Its wonderful moral effect upon the native Imagination, tha Btlmulag of Its-example, and ail uie reat of It. Wa are told how tha civil service Is a model; how the school teach ers exert an uplifting and a wholesome Influence; h6w iff time tha whole mass of tha once-benighted population must come under tha apell of our mlnlatra tlona, etc. ate, And, aa wa any, it reads aa amoothly an a story In some precious little book. - , But wa recall the days if reooastrae tlon at tha south, and, aomehow, it seems Impossible to pin our faith to a civil government which oartnot stand a. mo ment without too pro tee Hon of the -soldiery,. -The experiment la the Philippines la soma years old. .at present, but wa have aeen.no fruit of It aava tha ap proval of those who hold the of floes and draw the salaries behind thf Careful barriers of our bayonets. Wt do not forget that tha "educated. Cultured, and refined "Flllplnoa" brought over here and exhibited as specimens at tha gt. Louis fair went homo a gal a, sailed their frlende together, and made speeches pas sionately demanding Independence... Nor do tha so-nailed "Jadrones" 'permit 'us to forget for they never mine an op portunity for demonstration that their murderous resentment knows no sleep, or even drewslngv , -. I : Small Cliangc . Biennial bustnsss bcglna ' Tom Lawaon appears Jq be', getting tlredtv--r?-.77 - .; . - fl Did-that resolution, remain Intact for a week T i "ii ' Shouldn't the. week of prayer bo ex tended over seven weeks biennially t - -Car of tha Insane la the heaviest Item of atata expense, . Pleaaa don't go oraxy. - Did tha Chafoo correspondent alao Write those poems charged to the ml- kadot . . ... ' . . - Some lobbrUta engage In proper and necessary work, but most of them should bs ..ignored. - Russia's new year will not oocur till January- 11. - And It won't be a: very happy new year then. Fortunately- tha fata - of tha nation. nor of tha. state, doea not. hang on the organization of the legialature. , Senator Denew la a director In II cor porations, mostly railroads. What . a fine representative of the people I , . Nearly all county offJcera will 'want their salaries Increased, of course. But if not Increased, they won't resign., -. If wa-evar get a rtver and harbor appropriation, wo can stilt, point with pride to that sacred tarirx and that glorious 41,000 majority.. ... r - Th subject of Mr. Bryan7 'latest ad dress - was "Watchman. What of tha. NlghtT Black and heavy, as tha' darkey said whan asked what kind of weather It was, aa ha was carrying noma a stolen sheep, -.-----"; .. i -. , . ' Professor Crook promisee a, -poem on "His First Klsa" W would prefer a photograph of it. Washington Post And . yet - photographs ar so unreal, -Salem Statesman. But "hew waa th professor's first kiss any better than anybody else's t c. Wa It somehow Crook-dT -j? :ci'.:.. : .-'vt -i-; 2 The Multnomah .crowd JwllLact' aa If tha atata of Oregoftwaa limited by tha boundarle o'f Multnomah county and will support Multnomah Intereets, . re gardless of those, of ths rest of the atate. Sclo News. Th shadow of this ancient superstition haa. been dispelled from moat part of Oregon, but a patch. of - it aeam still to rest up around th fork of ths Santlam. ' Blow. It . off, brother. ;:-- ' r O reon" SadeKglits mFrog ara lhglng over ...On . JCoos bay. Dayton needat a. furnitur store i Oallc laac town, -v- .' ; ' ; nw Joiephln-7uatycnnd meat tin, a bristle-from a toom- . Gold Hill wlH oon hav thre mora atorea. ... ,,.,"-. -r - v -- ..'r.,0 .-, -Only " ro5k-beddeoT foad r jnVlo.ln Oregon, r , . '. .." i-.. f : ... .,. . Forest Orov may hav. an lc plant thlayear. - ;;- ; "Thar waa only on death In Pendle ton In December. .::ir r : rj r , J. l- ' I .-.J.'-r. ' i ..' Bom suspicion win hang around those soft-drink saloon,.' - . .. ' Newberg Methodists and BaptUta ate a New Tear'a dinner together. .... . No reasonabl people are ocm plain ing about Oregon' winter so far,- : .-. .' .Many mor local telephone lines tr extension up the Willamette valley are plannad. t-r.ifi. &-CTt-..--r.i-.i. L Hllvtrton men have formed a breed ers' association ' and purchased- a fln staluoa. ' A Prlnsvilla man married "an unex pected lady" unexpected," perhaps, by some othea marriageable ladlea. . . - 'Coast rang black bear a re now fat and hav fin fur," but only one l wall anybody Jim loat any neara Sherman county doe not want "to contribute any territory to help form th proposed new Stockman oounty. Near Perrydale last week. John By rrey lost II head of fat goat through poisoning, , probably- from eating toad stools. ,'; V . ... " Th PortUnd-Forest Orov-HlUboro electric line may be eventually extended up Galea creek and over into Tillamook county. ;-); ; . ;; ;. 7 Th Hood River Glacier haa taken a census of . that : to wn, and found it population to b 1.7 II,. an tncreasa of 171 in on year..- , f .," . ,' XNhalem old bachelor received a a Christmas present 'a wooden rasor and a bar of laundry soap, but he refused to consider It a proposal from any par ticular woman. i ; --.,' J. i. . . Th oldest man In Hood River valley Is. James H. - Hubbard, -bom- In J I H, who cam out laat year from Kentucky to spend tha rest of hi day with . hie on, H I well xcept for a cough, from which h says he haa suffered "ever since A be Lincoln freed the nig gers.", ," - ' Olen correspondence Toledo Reporter: This is such a healthy place and w ar all so busy setting stove wood, that Hems1 f Intei set at ' aiiaiua. " Tf laat Only eould persuade our wive to get th wood w mignt nave lime 10 ao something of Interest hut they won t Tamhlll county has been leading th world acaln. This time It la-a anow whit pin squirrel that tha oounty haa produced something tnat local naturat late hav never seen or heard of before. Som barbarous man shot the pretty. Innocent 'thing and Imagine h -- did somtblng smart. ' I , a Th Baker City Herald tell ai queer story of th modus operandi of a horse thief of Baker City. H keep on band a bunch at cheap caynaaa, and when h captures a valuable animal ha kill one of hi cheap horses, out out a plo of hi skin bearing tha brand, also re move a Ilk piece from the stolen horse, graft th other patch of akin In lta plac and so efface proof ot ownership. This may be a . substitute t for a fish story. - - v ' ; ' , - - ' . -, ' To Kit by th raata.. , , ' From th Memphis Scimitar. . Th man who hasn't been selling some thing that he hasn't got. or buying some thing that ha never expects to have act ual poaaeaalon of. Is not particularly worried at a report of a panio by .Wall strt ' i T k e'Cau e c o f ; Appendicitis7'"; From the National Review. ' . v ' Tha recent ' Huxley Jectur delivered by Sir William Macewen baa one again raised the oft-r scarring question so pain ful' to the public:' Why la appendtoltla so common at the preeent tlmet This affliction spare neither age nor sex. and It Is equally dreaded In palace and cottaga.. The king haa been among lta victims, nor hag It neglected, the pitiable vagrant on the embankments Aa Infant of seven weeks haa recently succumbed to the baneful Inflammatory . process, while a medical baronet long past tha allotted span of three acora yeara and 1 haa happily fought a successful fight against appendicitis. ' Tha Idl girl with out definite employment succumbs, as also does tha soldier on active service. The school boy la particularly prone. J-and the affection does not Ignore th high dignitary of the church.- Can It be that tha email blind tube placed within tha abdomen has auddanly be come rulnerable to assault, or 1 tt that there . la soma peculiarly potent . fore now at work . which, did not formerly axlatT It is not to be denied that mora accurate diagnosis haa led to aa ap parent Increase in tha number of. ease Of : the complaint Peritonitis, or-. In flammation of tha lining membrane of th abdomen, haa always been a common and a dreaded malady, bat tha precise cause of tha Inflammation haa fre quently been entirely overlooked in, the past, and tqday It la the opinion or moat medical practitioners that considerably more than on half of th cases of peritonitis r primarily attributable to an Inflammattaa of th vermiform ap pendix. - It la auch an every-day oc currence that w almost wonder not why our closest friend hag been - struck down, but when our turn may come. ; v -It may not 1 therefore altogether without Interest to review aom of th known oue -of appendicitis, and e how they may b avoided. Although this Is strictly a professional subject yet to be forewarned la to be forearmed, and thla must b th excuse for discussing- It Som peopl would atlll sem4ajcherlah tha Idea that fruit stones and pip of all sixes, from .th cherry ston to tb small appl pip. are liabl to enter th cavity of th appendix and there caus dire "havoo. - As regards th chsrry ston thla Is pur fiction, and th sooner it Is disposed )f the better. When th reader realise that th ntrane of th tub, which haa a larger.- diameter than any other -part, will hardly admit in' th normal tt tb top of an unout cedar pencil. It will readily b seen that ven a moderate alaed cherry ston . would hav soma difficulty in passing in. that smaller foreign bodies Mty- gain access to th Interior ot th ub is undoubtedly true, but th jiumber of Instance in-which auch hav- ctuUy been .discovered within th diseased appndlx-1 com paratively amalt A single duek "hot a . small f raa-ment of solder from a Drusn.- a SptCUI zrom in unina; i so enameled aaucepan. and an-ordinary phv hav aU bean known to find their. way Into th Interior .of th appendix, and one ther such bodies may undoubtedly Indue Inflammation In the manner sub sequently. deoribdV' j j.4;,r:, 'v.WhU then admitting that ta t ftw case extraneoua matters ot th char acter and lxe 'mentioned may play som part in th incidence of appendicitis, w must seek a mor common caus for th frequency ot th affection. Th. human body 1 constantly harboring mloro-or-ganlam which are ever ready-to attack tha ttsauasrand ar ea pec tally capable of doing ao whenever th person I below par, or th particular tissue with which they ar in contact haa suffered soma in Jury. The micro-organisms, styled bao terla, ar constantly taken in with food, and more particularly ao In towna- Ba in; thus perpetually reinforced, they are continually multiplying, and abl to at tack any undefended point. ' There la cerhaoa nothing which so rtanda to assist their multiplication -and so Increase their virulence hurried andV irregular, meal Involving th re tention of Imperfectly dlgeated food. Then It la that the microscopical or ganism will crowd into what may be called tn backwater or th sppenaix, her to stagnate and to develop a power, ful poison, which, acting upon the walls of tha tub, aeon produce inflammation, which I evidenced by pain and all th train - of symptom incident , to ap pendicitis. ' " .. ' "i .''" Take a day In th Uf of th ordinary elty man, who, having risen somewhat later than usual find it necessary to hurry his breakfast perhaps vn to run part of th way to tb station In order to catch th train which will enable him to keep an Important appointment He I busy throughout th morning, and finds that to gat thiaugh hi work aad en able him to leave hi office at a respect able hour in th afternoon, lunch must be a cramble. though he la unwilling to forgo hi usual full complement of di vers food. On reaching horn h la too tired to enjoy any healthy exercise, and a third meal, 1 a, dinner, follow upon th two previous badly digested meals h ha already taken, with th result that th Inevitable evil consequences fol low. He may keep up this anwholeaome rush for a while, but before long he will feel th neoesslty for a holiday. Off he goes and perhaps opens th ball with a tousb. round of golf, or possibly a aerie of hard set at lawn tennis, or, maybe even a day sculling. Than ha 1 aud danly attacked with appendicitis, -and placed In considerable danger. The moral la ' to cat one's meal de liberately, , leaving time for the com mencement of the process of digestion liiiuuelns undue traJn 1 oar tn liiiuuelna unau train 1 oar muscle by rushing to th station, or the mental faculties By any intellectual ei fort auch as a smart financial transac tion. I9ok again at th young debutant who baa appeared at her first drawing room. Hr subsequent season haa been a full one, containing much to weary tha flesh, , while tha mind ha not been In active. She haa eaten jrich food often at late hour, with th Inevitable reeult of Indigestion, and tn dn time appendioitla Lastly, turn to th child of .th poor, fed on atrociously Unsuitable food, th mer Infant having exactly th earn It parent and how can wa wonder that it should fsll a prey to th ever-ready bac terial force. It will thu be realised that the- medical -profession- look upoa th modem )if of rush, strain and .worry with unwholesome diet and irregular habit a ona of th principal cause of th Increase of appendicitis, aad It be lieves that those who wish to avoid this ailment must liv mor plainly, take matter mor easily and pay greater at tention to what nature- proclaim a a rational existence. Remember that one tuck of appendteltia I liable to b fol lowed by another at an unknown Inter val., and th survivor of th first may succumb to tk second. " A haa. been suggested, much ean be done to avoid the onset of the attack, and possibly evn if It haa com to a head, car in diet, regularity, ot arcls and an In telligent, well-ordered ' life. snsjrsrv t postpone, or vn prevent a ieoond prostration. . ' ; 1 . :The" operative treatment -of appendl. cltla has two tnaia objects, via, to re lieve the urgent symptoms during the out attack, and to prevent 'any pos sibility of a recurrence of the mischief. Th gravity of th operation necessitated during-th attack by tha urgency of the symptom aria-not"so-nnuoh from ths operetlv- . measures - themselves, but owing to -the peritonitis which accom panies appendlcltie. .Should.' however, th acuta -. Inflammation subside, an operation ean than be undertaken, to re more th .offending organ. - Tha opera tive meaaurea In tble quleecent stag r almost without a death rata, tha operation, tn fact If skilfully performed, being lean dangerous to lit than th re tention of the.tub, whloh 1 ever liable to a fresh lnoidene of inflammation, the result of which cannot b prophesied. Th conclusion of th . whol .matter would seem, therefor, to be avoid the obvious causes of appendicitis hav Ira mediate professional attention on th first aymptom of an attack and sub mit to th removal at tb tub if o ad. vised after tha a cut etagw tzaa paseed. ao aa toavold Ah danger of any-recurrence, ... - :'.' ;. The ;Play - i, , The Holy City," presented for th first Urn la Portland yesterday by tb Columbia Stock company; 1 a durtlnct Innovation. It 1 not only-th ; first wholly sarloug wort -atUmpUd by this favorite organisation, hut a play that go a llttl further than moat Bibli cal creation for th staa In th effort to b realistic. It smacks f Mrs. Flsks's "Mary of Magdala." even to pas sagas of dialogue, but le bolder bolder, la fact- than any of ' tb modem dra matlo production written around ' th tragedy of th centuries, - Th characters of th Magdalene th disciples Peter, Judas, Jam and John, and Pilate, Lasarus, Calaphaa. Rebecca anil others are introduced. . Th Mas ter In on seen la uppodly pear at hand. ' HI .trial la pictured from th portico of th Judgment hail. - Th laat supper 1 described Just without th door or Martna a noma, tjoaraciera on lhaataaa watch, hlm-perform-mlra-l clea so near la th Dlvln hepberd. whli' on or two ar performed aven upon th stage, wlth.th Christ sup-posdly-Jooklng upon - th - persons cland. ' :- - . - . . . Th play la wonderful tor It bold ness of treatment- It . impreeslv at mosphere, th beauty : of its diction aad th perfect manner In whlchcrlptu ral quotation arer iaterwoven with th action. All' at the sacred things -are handled and aaered theme discussed In a way that render Impossible ihe chars; of saorlleg. -The story opens when th Christ -had first com Into prominence through Ula miracles when tha Mag dalene was most acarlat and defiant and closes with th ascension. ,11 in cludes a vivid repreeentatlon of - th awful tempest which followed th cruci fixion. V -1 - "Th Holy City" Is a mighty produc tion for a stock company to undertake, and the fullest credit belong to William Barnard- for tha magnificent manner of hi staging-." In this connection praise must also be given -Soenta Art st - King for hi beautiful picture ..fiva la ura- Th liat of performer 1 ioari With th Naxaran. himself concealed fTom view, tha central- character la Mary of Msgdala. ' It I th heavleet vol Cath rln Countia haa played and to my waw nf hln1rln . aha nraved Herself equal to Its requirement. At first sh gave a forceful plctur or -we aeartat Uvry7of ln." Abandon. ' lndlffrno to all aava luxury, and cold-heartedneas, wer imenta easily portrayed .y her. Th keynote ot th character sh strike In these lines, which serv also, as a worthy example of , th diction ot Thoma Broadhuiafg masterpiece: Tls women like myaalf whe ruiitt world. ' v - W smile, and at our feat ar laves who :. kis, , -:.. Our garment's hem-Wber wappar w vanquish. Men dl and wonts weep because of aa For fair Delilah's amorous lip and eyes Th mighty Samson paid with strsngth and Ufa: -V For beauteous Heleh'sfac high Ilium ;- fell And proud Andromach ' Vept bitter -. tears - '-' - - v In Cleopatra' swarthy arms gret An- tony loat '' '' And deemed well lost th empery of th world.. ' ' ' '--;-r - -)nto th wanton's lap the whole earth . pour . - ' Its wealth of gold and gems and all thing beautiful, . " la never-ending stream. . Sh' drank ' - with power. ' - - '-'"-' -7- " -Her foot Is on th neck ot th universe. For, call her by what nam y may ----Helen, - . ';:'-rZ.,iZ' ' : Delilah, Kgypt, Mary th cartt --woman- I conqueror still. But oh, th price w pay! I:- . Th pric our vary soulsl ; . ., & ..... . . . , . 1- ; ..!..'". - 1 . Mlcah 1 describing th renting of a wanton Int th Master's ilght, rr T Mlcah They brought th . woman to Him and said. "Tls Moses1 law that such stoned ba What aayest Thouf - Mary What answer mad He themT Mlcah H aaidj lt him among you without sin th first ston cast at her." Mary Dost hear, SllenuaT. "Let him among you without sin." How well He know thy sex! . Did one among them darT -- - - -. i -, . - - ,,v :: --r- Mlcah Not dn,f ' V. , . Mary Th. dogs! . t know ' them whlted tombs, all fair without within unclean. Lip servers, flmug hypocrite. They make us what w ar and then would stone" ua '1 The woman, what- of hrT -''- t.:. Mlcah TO her He Answer made, and said, "Go thou and sin no mora" . Mary "Go thou and aln no mora" He knowe'th womaiC too, thl Nasarena That word hath bound her soul to . Him foray. ..- . ...-. - - ' ,, . i- It 1 here that th Magdalene's repent ano begins, and Miss Count Iss, be tt aid to her credit work out th revolu tion very effectively. . , ; ; ... Th second remarkable eh'aract of th play la Judaa Iscarlot- Impersonated by Mr. Bernard. Tha latter play htm as a weakv-aowardly, cringing follower of th Naxaran from th start. . He car ried out thl conception o sincerely. In fact that In th early passage I thought h sometime wa almost to -sever oa th old disciple. But It was a highly artlstle and finished performsnoe, with a climax Judas' remorse, madness and suicide that - waa . positively JekyU Hydelsh. There 1 a piece of buslnsss In Act II worthy Of special comment namely, th die gam In which Judas participate. Few author would hav thought of thu rvllng th betrayer varlcioua natura .1 . : "n Mr. Bowles applied Ms art conscien tiously t th Apoetl Peter, ahowlng up solsndldlr th weakness of the man, al though tb weaknesses, too. It seemed to me, hava'ntieen developed rather to arty. . 1. , - -' v Mr, Baume appears as Barabbaa, ; 1 h3 President fl Wiskea " By Rev. ' Thomas " B. " Gregory. .- I offer th following thoughts,, not as a politician, but as a plain American, who lovea hi country and ardently hopes for It continued prosperity and peace. , - ,.. 1--i r- I cannot help feeling 'that If ur eountry la to endure It must eontlnu t reet upon tha old basis, tbtf good and wis foundation that was laid by.th fathara '., -.' ' 1 .' i ' j 1 It is a matter 'for regret to. every patriotic American that on of the f sign of the 'times sign so' plain that ha wha understand hletdry cannot ,pos- v Ibly he deceived in tbem ar anything' j . but sncouraglng. .' ,'.,., .? ., I would respectfully call th-reader" attention to th headline of thl article. "Th Prldnt WUhea" 1 ,Vry harmless worda' thy would, seem to be; and yt th Ida, lurking In -those words 1 dangerou la tha attm -to th foundation principle of th great 1, constitution that wa devised at Phila delphia and later on "ordained and estab lished" by th atatea -... j, - !.; ' Befor attempting to Show hw' thl v la let m tell how It la that 1 am using th phras in queet'on. - . - -t It will remembered that, when the' congress met th other day la Washing ton, there was considerable talk aa ' to, : whether th tariff waa to b raviaad. ---To th question, -What ar yon going to dot" vral of th congressmen replied, ' "W r going wait until w can" Und out .what th president wtshe . are." -. ; - , " A . "Th president's wishes!" . ' - I thpusiht to myself. "Thar la death, . and destruction In th Idea, and aa a . lover of my country 1 am tremendously sorry that such an idea 1 abroad la th land.- - -. - : ' - -r" . - Th ma who mad th constitution : mad It ma that-th government .to b created by It should hav thre depart--ment the legislative, th-Judicial and -tha axaeutiva tha , department that -should mak tha Jaws, ,th department ; that should determine with th .constitution,- and, finally, tha department that , ' hould nforo th law a mad anijl ap--r proved. v i : ; ' , . . ". ' ; . lv. . ,' Common sense and Justle would tell lis that these dejrt ment r.iob. mutually exoluslvs. each attending to its own business, each refraining from any -attempt to attend to .the business of4th u other. '.: fc :- - . By no other arrangement - ean th . spirit and Intent of th constitution b . preserved; by no other arrangement ean , th government created by th constitu tion ba maintained.-. , - ' . . With th Judiciary epartment tefllnr -tha legislative department what laws It . should pass; and th leglslatlv depart- . ment telling the Julelary what interpret--tatlon It should glv ot-,th teOngr-.... lonal statute; and wlth'th executive department dictating; to ths" Uwmakera '. and to th law Interpreter what course, they should pursue. It 1 plain that it would not be long before ' fh busines would b Involved In hopele confusion.:-" Let th shoemaker stick to his laat" - A conarressman 1 th rr entatlve ot hi atat in It federal relationshlpa and aa such it 1 hi busines. together with th-reprantatfV i ef th - other i -i . . ,M.t mm hA, M. utiea, w wb uvm - . I latlonshlp shall aeenr "to lemand; anL 11 h should hav no occasion, a h aliy4 J haa ho' rlsTht; uo . bsx-r waiunsTxor 'tns . exeonerve-braneh th srvrnmet to , signify it "wish" In tha ea "- In thl country the chief executive 1 . not a monarch: ha I -almplytha -chief executive; and fata offlc ia not to .snake the lawa but to apply them after .they . shaU hav bean mad-foe h)n by th , congress and expUlned by tb supreme ' court - - - p-Lf-t- i'A - By all means, then, if wa would -have o our government endure even on third -- long as om other j govrnmnta- have , endured, let th shoemaker stick, ta hi last- f-"" " .,.-tv--j--.'.'-r?.4.c-" . " ; If we era to realise th nobl dream of the father. "An tadetruetlbl union of indestructible states," w will - need Jealously to safeguard th Idea ofc he ; mutual xelulvene and independence of th thr Tat department of .onr federal govemmentr -rr. - Jewish patriot not tha Barabbaa who waa crucified. He love th Magdalen and On of his passionate cn with br In th flrt act caud v murmur-in tha auditorium that meant distinctly "S-h--o-k!" Mr. Baume' voice serves him well In this role, aad h give an effectlv interpretation of th author' ; Idea a Barabbaa who thinks -long- and well befor surrndrlng absolutely to -tb wish of tha reformed Magdalen. Mm m.ini.i rmmA tha eomaaratlv- Ml. ' ly few lin ot th Apoetl John beutl- ruliy. - Jar. jssrreu was mutov lenus, the debaucher. Mr. Dill (Cala- phas). played th trial cn with good , effect Herbert Ash ton. engaged for th occasion, made a great impression a ina centurion and Mr. Beaton did Splendid bit sa,ZachsxlM.-,.. v --y -..- . -- ui.. u,..Ht aricah.- tha dlaalnated yoaag Jw, aava a good idee, at tb In tense skepticism which existed agalat th Christ Bmallr part fU tou rette, Allen, blanch Douglas. Ror r- nara and vot rtersaro. a n- , danced arracefunA during aoeneot revelry, 1 . f Last night's performance waa badly marred by.th faUtJr of a large number , of upernumerartea to put In. their hp- , . n-k. m,mm a. ainofll-thnrS- ky mob---woaan Md-xhlldren -Thla. waa a misrortuna wnrc-h y vm..., be remedied. L. l la alt fl;a aafrd !!.. " It hould b. no matter how monotonous It 0OOmeV.Dt na HI u aia 11m. vm.Mwi ) Interlude aa though they had forgotten refaearsatItr Isn't at all Ilk tham. . ' i TJMMMD TMM JmVTHMWCM. ' . i r--" - . ..'."U -,ghUaSSSSaaW "' J r " -"f Vf"- " v "Rudoiph ' nndAdol?h.-whtctr servM J many rear a tha vehiielaaf Mason artd Mason, rs ne more btelng presented sin Portland. It 6pend s,n naagemntt , th Kmplr yetrdyi and played to very- large iudlenoe trv afternoon and evening. ' . .V ; It w well receive !, th , comical antic of th "Dutch romio. who ar - ikii'mr hv-Harrv Went and Harry M. Prte. ralllln torth much t... n,aat mrm ftntSi well no In their dialect and handled-tha amusing scenes which arts from mistaasn laenmriin a very creditsble mnnar.'Th songs of th leading comedian went very . weill. Other epeoialtiss introduced wer onks and eoeentrlc dancing by Robert -jB. MoV wh play . the) Hebrew gasman, and songs by Beaale Phillips, th.su bratta Tb latter us th old "Sammy Idea from 'The. Wiseird of Oa -that of singing to th boxesi which ha "grown to somewhat of a "jhetnnt" her Thtf oth.r women of 1th company, sirs Dbrothy Scott and Gertrude Taylor, who ar -comely,' and Ada Henry, th last named playing th' Inevitable Irish cook. nuaoipn ana Aaoipn , wiij run nntu Wednesday evening. KACB WHITITBT . From th Wt hinjrton StAr." f 1 Th talk of punishing French dualists seems needless and vlndtetlva French duelists never did sobody, an tMm -I -4 ' r. I. 1.