1 . VEDNESDAY, MARCH 18, PORTLAND, OREGON. ' !t .'i ,TH E O R E G v-'! v an 6 g. JACKSON - v : : i'pM mi rrraisc ept Sunaay), T Sunday nwcning M j . THE MAYOR AS A POLITICIAN. " , OLITICIANS of a newer generation who. have shied their castor in the ring in the, hop of cap turing the Republican nomination for mayor ' would do well to keep a wary eye on tneir uncic, in A 111 on. George H. Williams, present mayor of Portland. : - The mayor is saying little; mainly he is allowing it to be understood that he is in a receptive mood on the question of the nomination but that he isn't losing any sleep over :it Doubtless he Hsn't, but just the same he nas in i ' augurated a quiet little campaign that is likely to prove ' effective when the poll are closed pn nomination day. , ' So far things have been going well with him. . Some ; of those circulating his petitions have not met with quite the favor they expected -in every'trirection.- But this has , not in the least disheartened them. They have- gone 1 1 steadily forward and the petition which they 'will .finally ' . present will be sufficiently forceful to warrant the mayor V";: 2 in announcing that lie is unable to resist the overwhelm ' " Jng demand of his admiring constituents and in response Nto their demand he will consent once again- to be a can - didate. If he enters the primaries he will have at his -back a well organized force working with might and main ' toward a definite end. Every one of them. will know prei Wisely what he 'is about and those who get a little be ; ; wildered will be put on the right track by the mayor him " : setf who knows a thing or two about politics and who ; has the ability to apparently shrink from , assuming an "i. honor which it is his highest desire to attain. v -V, .There are many people in this town who would like to ' X . see the mayor renominated; some of them because thej would profit by his reelection but,, we believe,many -more who would like to fight out the campaign on the '.strict line of the issues., which his administration has raised. S Whether he . be" nominated or not there will ' ' nevertheless be the-issue, but with him in the., field as a ..candidate the issues would be more clear. cut and better '-defined and would settle for all time to come the policy .which a majority -of the people desire lo have pursued in ' Portland. '''.'.' , - ;:':': .'..". ,'-'.'.".' '.'; ; " . ','.. i. ' It would be well for the jejune politicians' to keep their 'eyes on Uncje George, for while he may be getting his usual allotment ofsftep he is very active, without seem " i Jng to be so, in his waking hours, and he is not oveflook V "ing anything that will help along his campaign which is anywhere within the- range-of vision. - -r--- ' 1 THE GREATEST JAPANESE FIGHTER. : - THE JAPANESE have several generals apparently , of the first class, with Oyama at their head, but ; so far as the reports have yet disclosed their op ; eration. it seems that Nogi must be given the palm for persistent, terrible Jighting. , The capture of supposedly -:-4mpregnable-PoruArthurpIaced him high Jnthe rank . of the world's great generals, but he has added vastly to that fame in the approach to and capture of Mukden. 1JL V'P'- It was a dark day fof Russia when the fall of Port ' 'Arthur released-Nogi and hit veterans to throw their Y strength against Kuropatkin's army. . patkin strike before Nogi could arrive? ano Nogi camewoe. to Kuropatkm. , t . . : Nogi inarched his army of Port Arthur veterans around behind the screen of battle raised by Oku's attack on the " , Russian right, and unexpectedly knocked an unwelcome, fearful visitor t Mukden's gates. His battle-ground, . whether unavoidable or chosen, was a bare plain ad by 7 ' . ' miles in dimensions, and. he converted it into an inferno.- As one correspondent says: "He sowed the frozen soil with-shrapnelnl4urstjhtLlstfrtilized jt V with melinite, lyddite and shimose, irrigated it with Rns--', sian and Japanese blood, and mowed his crop with the ' scythe-like sweep of six-inch guns." ' The Russians who went to meet him were the crop. . ' The divisions were gradually, reduced to brigades, the brigades to regiments, regiments to companies, com panies to dazed and forlorn squads. For six days and nights Nogi's six-inch gun mowed do wnTih is crop of humanity that opposed his visit. He clung there on that patch of bare, frozen earth, advancing, gaining, here and there, inch by inch for the city that lay behind it was . . well defended in the fighting, if not in the ordering of the '.battle.1 Finally Nogi progressed until hetovered with his terrible guns the railroad that was Kuropatkin's line of retreat, then cut and 4Jesfcroyed the railroad, and then ( Kuropatkin knew that he must leave Mukden and vi- ; ' cinity quickly, as best he could and the reports say that -less than half his great army reached the temporary :;;haveirofTiePass.i-- : T-rrrr:1 " r"T7"Oyama' has 'other-great fighting generals Oku,"" who r , . V , omrptzM. tmj tLurr ; : M. E. J.. In Latter to New Tork Times. ') It Is easier to criticise than to under - etand. Professor Osier's quoted and mla ' -quoted words have created a deeper dis turbance than ha dreamed of when -he addressed them to bis charmed hearers In the Johns Hopkins university, and. while . the pubttc ia agitated in various ways ' according to the news of different peo ple, let us consider what manner of man lie ia wtio voiced them. . ,, .' As a .disciple of Dr. Osier, I may be . permitted to suggest that none of his 1 immediate hearers misunderstood his re . . marks about the limit age of active life. ' etc. Aa a man. he la one of the gentleat, -. kindest and broadest: his love for and understanding of children, his. tenter , sympathy enth the aged and afflicted are marked In a high degree, and endear Mm to all who heard hla voice. It Ta a ' liberal education to be associated with "'.him in any way. Hia charming fashion of relieving the monotony of a lecture .; with interesting and scholarly quotations from biography and fiction, aa llluittrat " Ing the views of other thinkers. Is highly . appreciated by hla devoted students. As a man and a teacher be. combines ithat aweeteat reasonableness with a gen tle, kindly humor, which precludes the 1 possibility of a harsh thought or one the leaat Injurious to hla fellow-men. One , listening to a talk or lecture from htm ' comes away always Instructed and re freshed. The eagerness with which the public seised and tore to shrrds his reference (. to Trollope's novel, "The Fixed Period," is but strong evidence of the bright and shining, light that he. Dr. Osier, la. . His disci Dies, those favored few who have or who have had the privilege of . bedside instruction in tba hospital from him, can testify to the devotion ha In spires. His simplest remarks are us- : - tened to with' closest attention, for one .loams more of real value In one half liour with him that all the books' In the library can teach. Hie clear-sighted ob. , eervatlon, hla justice, hia noble self -for- artfulnee. are truly Inspiring, hi im presses one as a man who can neither deceive nor be devotedi It la said that a man without a strong sense ef humor-la' nef wholly sane, . for without ll he cannntrsee the true rela - Hon or things In other words, he cannot ' iwreeive lot himself that between Ihe fu - Mtwie knd the rldlcQloua there Is but I single step. Dr. Osiers bumor la - ON; DAIL Y J OURNAL independent: newspaper ' - PUBLISHED BY JOURNAL PUBLISHING Ca OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE CITY OP PORTLAND Summers differ; oredicted: but 'there clude that Portland The climate will and lavish here; part .welL '.'. . Why did not Kuro- ... Well, he did noL have interesting fore: :' . 1 ' pieaAanTJyomneownnnes7nes that ha seeks the truth at all costs, but It often robs it of Its hardness. When he addresses an audience, large or small, not one present . knows a dull or a thoughtless moment. This la the man who. la not aaaentood by people who have read his remarks. A case In point- have beard him harshly criticised (by one who never saw him) for stating that Johns Hopkins Hospital Medical school had rather proved It a failure for girls te study medicine, because two thirds of them married before the completion of the, course. Thla waa another bit of pleasantry on the doetor'a part, who had been noticeably kind and considerate to the girl students.' - " His playful remark waa understood by tha audienre, as It waa explained at the time that there were only three girl eta dents there, and that two of them had married before graduating. Tet hla crit ics quoted him as having "condemned the study of medicine for girls." How wide of the markl In passing. It may be remarked that Dr. Osier's Innocent reference to' "fixed period" ' will send many a curious mind to search Mr. Trollope's novels. There fore. It will be remembered, "T1s an ill wind that blows nobody good." :-- Control ef liondon Vega. - From Harper"a Weekly. Sir Oliver Lodge haa been making ex periments n England looking to the pre vention of fogs In London one of which recently cost the metropolis K.0OO.OOO. The experiments are carried on by dis charging currents of electricity Into the fog. The experiments have been sue cessful on a amall scale for example; at the Birmingham college laboratory, where a fog waa cleared for some d le ts nre about tha building. The expert- menta are aald, however, to be im- practical on a large scale on account of their expense. ; - Balesa X-Bays. ' From the Salem Journal. Driven to ' desperation by -the pro grealve Portland Journal, the Evening Telegram la going to Invest In' a barrel of red Ink. Of course, the Oregonian im't respon sible for anything. It never la Jut the asms. If tha people want to aecnm plish any reform they have to get In and get It, In spite of tba Oregonian and so without its help. ' im, P. CARROU. Th Journal Building, Kllh YmbWO swept over ground mines and through barb-wire fences and drove the Russians from the fort-crowned slopes of Nanshan heights; Nodzu, who carried the redoubts in front of Liaoyang and was nof inactive at Mukden; Kuroki, best known, who from the beginning has starred and seared the Manchurian' landscape with the imple ments of war all the way from the sea of Japan to Muk den, and others. . But it looks mow as if the greatest fighting, hero of the war is NogL-who "fought and tun neled and blasted his way, almost inch by inch, into. Port Arthur, who on the way destroyed a fleet of battleships, and who turned the Russian flank on that frozen and hurricane-swept plain west of Mukden. What general, in so short a time, ever accomplished s6 much by actual darmg, desperate fighting as he? '. ; ; PORTLAND A SUMMER RESORT. - EASTERNh rEOPLE, who remain in - Portland ; a ' . considerable length of time, next summer, will discover, in all probability, that without counting iji ihe. nearby ocean beaches and mountains, th.y city i a summer resort superior to any that they have acquaint ance with in the'eastern or central part of the country. the weather of no one can be exactly has never been one that was not a climatic paradise beside any one experienced in any part of the country east of the Rocky mountains. Hence if we have an average summer easterners who stay long enouirh to eniov a eood full sample ofit will rightly con deserves wide notoriety as ihe best summer resort city of the country. ". Thia is so not only on account of the climate, but of the site and its settings, and the more distant but visible surroundings. Not only are trees abundant in most parts of the city, but wooded hills, near and far, and distant mountain peaks, white with untrod and whirlwind-tossed shows, give this city a charm to eastern people such as they can find nowhere else. - t. .l ..Add to this the Willamette cutting through' the. heart of "the tlty, the unparalleled scenery of the Columbia be tween here and Cascade Locks, and the ocean with all its manifold, and mysterious, charms of surf and short only five hours' ride-distant, and we may reasonably expect thatihundreds-ofastern visitorwill -dedarethstwe have not 6nly the finest summer' resort here and here about, but the one constructed on the grandest scale, in all the land, ;Jv...-..l--L..V- be here, the scenery is here, the rich soil is here, beautiful shrubs and flowers grow and bloom in profusion and to perfection; nature has been liberal now let the people of Portland do their - - - - .;..-'." ''. v i ROOSEVELT AND HIS PARTY. THE TopekaXapitatconsiderrlr"certainthat Roose : vtlt will have a stormy administration, and gives Nobody. can fail to see arising feeling against him in the conservative senate. The president's radical- ism as surely turns the senate against him" as the , ' trusts and combines of which the senate is looked - .upon as more of leas closely representative. The . . big financial powers will be hostile to the president , And they will do anything and everything to see xnat1 - he is succeeded by some "safe and sane" candidate of ; . their own four years from now. On the other hand, the masses of Republicans and many Democrats as well as the former pops take to Roosereltism, be- ' ' lieving in his principle of "the square. deal." He will have a itormy voyage, but he must succeed in Tid ' ical policies or fail altogether. , This seems a reasonable forecast, as, far as It goes! But what will the results be in 1908? If the senate and the trusts and capitalistic combines continue to fight Roosevelt, and he continues to be radical and becomes even more so as there is plenty of room for -him to become pwill the Republican party not probably be dis rupted? And if the "safe and sane" element prevail and nominate a man like Fairbanks, what will the Repub licans who believe in "Rooseveltism" do if the Democrats should nominate well, Bryan, for instance?.-And if a Roosevelt Republican like La Follette should capture the nomination, what would the "safe and. sane" Republicans do? Might they not have power enough to wreck the party with an independent ticket? Much may happen in four years; politically 1908 is a long way off yet; but it is at least probable that we shall times in politics that year, and even be : r-4 Oaf From the London. Chronicle, It la aaserted that in a certain Pres byterian clab In the north there is a printed notice which runs: "Members are requested not to swear in the hear ing of yoonaj caddies.' Thoae who can not refrain from sweating should em ploy old and experienced caddies." r And the etory goes that tha parish minister one day before going out for hla round asked the ' councillors ' to ' suspend the notice, as all the' old caddlea were en gaged. And there is the other story of the meenlater who, having taken three Ineffectual strokes in a- bunker, mur mured piteously that' he must "gle it up." "Nonsense! 1 You mustn t give up a good, game like this," him opponent protested, encouragingly, whereupon tha good man observed: "I was na thinking or tne - game,- but' I muat gle up the meenlstry." - These reflections upon golfing speech may not be true, but Jf they are they In. dioate a general - tendency which must place the ladlea at some disadvantage. Quite lately the minister of a fashiona ble church In Halifax. Nova Scotia, de clared that Information had reached him that women who go to church on Sun day go to golf on Monday and "swear like troopers. Here, Indeed, waa a specific allegation of a terrible char acter. - . till FLU OX SrFLOKA, - - From the Baltimore Herald, Coeducation la receiving soma Jars In these days. It haa become necessary to put In force stringent regulations at tha Stanford univeralty In California, tha Chicago univeralty and in tha South Da kota university kissing haa . Increased. Bducators-have been unable te devise any meana to eliminate Cupid in -any school where the sexes are taught to gether. It hap been claimed that In the Univeralty -of Michigan, at Ann Arbor, the pursuit of knowledge is. so absorb ing that love la not recognised In tha curriculum, but elopements from Michi gan are not decreasing. The success of 'the little god depends somewhat on tha looks of tha material he has to deal with, but on gnidusttnn day it haa-generally been found that ha haa mads aa high mark aa tha majority who - get ebetpaklna, - ; ... : ' ' ' ' I - '" T Small Cbange Remember .Juns 1, and that time flit. WhlU in jail Mra. Chadwiek will have no motive for( fainting. It la nearly tima for flarrlman to- get the better or Hill again. .'', . , - Tea doa't hve to be an' Irishman to join in the wearing of the green. Let us Lent keepers be thankful that there is no flab trust If there isn't. ' The poatofflce addition contractor is entitled to the city a cordial approvat. Nobody ouUlde of Colorado care whether that atata has a governor or not... - , . - The beet Ui lngThat could happen to the caar would be bie capture by .the Japa. .... . '... .1, -, , . ; . The Rusalan cabal .of grand dukes ia nearl as unpopular aa the United States aenatev ;,",.;..' ' Now will the FUlplnoe be geod? Uncle Joe Cannon ia going over there, and be ia alwaya loaded. ., ' ; ' .TA bill to encourage ' matrimony ia pending 4n . the - Illinois legislature, lioch -needed no auch law. ; . Grand Duke Vladlmlr'f income la said to be f is.ft00.040 a year. . Borne of eur grand doosea can beat that. , 3. H. Alexander aaya obataoles have been put in the way of constrncUng aad opening that market Evidently. Oregon is finding out already that the Lewis end Clark fair wUl not be for Portland's benefit alone, nor principally. The Penmylvanla legislature la hav ing a long dlecaaalon over the Puhl btlL Members ' don't understand . the orthog raphy. ', J . i -. s-' . - .; ..... ' SemeUmes it rains down tar aoothern California, but when It doea it alwaya rains too much. No plaoe ao good aa Oregon.' ' ". - .-r T"""j ' ". At laat MonUrllla hopes it has rid itself of -Captaia" Schneider and h la saloon. The people out there have had a long struggle. , - Neldiinghaes ean't get into the sen ate, but being av- tlnplate manufacturer he will have lota of tin left, and will be duly or rather unduly protected. Jacob Kamm will erect a lltCMO building In San Francisco, - He will let his shacks oa First and Washington streets in Portland, where he made -his money, staixl awhile yet. least. . Trust Attorney Beck, who left govern ment service to become a Standard Oil attorney,' saya: .'To me the most Im pressive place in the world la Wall street." No doubt it beats Pennsylvania avenue. In point of salary, all hollow. It la stated that the Drain normal school will run Just the same, whether the appropriation stands sr not. It should be no great strain- on that com munity to keep the school going it it Is to turn out but two graduates a year. It is Important that the Idea that ex cessive rates are to be charged, for ac commodations during the fair does not get into general circulation, and ft la also, important that it ahould not be true, go that Portland papers can deny It. - Oregon Sidelights j Tillamook people have waked up. School population of Klamath Falls tit. gain of 6a. . Crop prospect never better. Bars the Brownsville Times. ' Pumping plants being establlahed In the river near Spray. The Albany Democrat man-appears to be a basket-ball expert. Too many thlnga proposed, one thing at a time, says the Lake-view Herald. - None of the many eagles shot 'meas ure less than "seven feet irom tip to Up." I tThe Mavthfleld creamery paid Its patrons 'as average of X cents a pound iop better d' Echo boys have organised a fire com pany, are organising a baseball team and will organise a braaa band. ' More correspondence' of Wasco News: We warn tha girls to keep off the grass this spring;. The ticks are unusually plentiful, j-, . ' ' A Lakev1ewtaaa while spading In hla garden bruised hia foot, blood . poison ing aet in and ha la laid up. Moral Never spade up a garden. . , lx Vol. I. No, 1, Canyonvllle Echo-, ar rived. Harriet - E.' Soo villa, proprietor. Neat -and newsy. . There ahould be an Echo In a village In a Douglas county canyon. . . 7 A short time ago the only preacher In Glendale left and last week the city marshal -resigned and the News thlnka that a town without a preacher or a marshal must be a good one. The Ashland TiibunS heads a news story about the Yamhill county peti tions for a referendum, ".na Call Of the Wild." But If old Yamhill la wild, what must some other parts of Oregon be? A man named. Heads tream from Wta consln. who has arrived In Klamath Falls, aaya about It families from hla section of the country, are coming to Oregon thla summer a stream of which he ia tha head. ( Klamath Falls - and Lakevlew papers should quit running down each other's county... They .are .both big enough and resourceful enough to grow and . pros per greatly, and anything that belpa one will .help tha other. , . - " Toledo Leader: : Not In years, so stockmen tell us, haa grass In Lincoln county been in such fine condition for stock In March as it la right now. Flowers and fruit ' trees are blooming and vegetation of all kinds Is In the "nooner" clsae. 1 ' ' ' A Lakerlew youngster invfted two of Uhis friends to have an oyster stew at a Chinese restaurant. They liked the oysters, but the host had no money to pay with, and so the Chinaman kept the boy's hat, which If why ha goea around bareheaded. But he may be a captain ef industry yet . . - Ttcy Ran For. President ' Few names are ao fajnlllar to Ameri cana . aa thoae of their presidents, though probably-Hot on person, in 1,00 can name them in their, ordtt. or one in 10,000 the vice-presidents. . The defeated candidates, with possibly the exception of Aaron Burr, Henry Clay, Stephen A. Douglas, Fremont, and McClellanv It one goes no further than Lincoln's time are quite forgotten. Yet the fame of the de feated candidate has in at leaat one in stance tong survived the memory of his successful rival. Everybody has heard of Henry Clay. Hla name la yet pne to conjure with; but the Whig query of the campaign of 1S44. "Who .la Jlmtny Polk?" must be answered book in band. When New York ratified the conirtl tutton ltt Msti- the tfedemllsta-'tn the etty flung out a great banner displaying the faces of Washington and Hamilton, and a mottos "Washington, the Nation's Choice for President." No one else was thought of in 17(0 or at the Second elec tion In 1TI. Tet Washington waa the object of bitter and scurrilous abuae frofn his political opponenta. . Though John Da was never a candi date for president or vice-president. New Jersey. Delaware and Virginia cast nine votes for him In 1TS Connecticut five in 176. and Rhode Island one In 1S00. So. too, at the first election, votea were east for George Clinton of New Tork. John Hancock and Benjamin Lincoln of Maaachuaetta, ' Samuel .Huntington of Connecticut, John Rotledge of South Carolina, John Milton, James Armstrong and Edward Telfan of Georgia, and Rob ert H. Harriaen of Maryland. Nearly all of John Adams' competitors were vet erana of the revolution, and Benjamin Lincoln, a distant kinsman of a more famous Lincoln, waa one of the four ablest soldiers of the war. . - The five candidates among whom the vote was divided in 171 had a unique political fate. Three of them. Washing ton. Adams and Jetferson, became J rest dent; and four became vice-president: Adams, with Washington; Jefferson, with Adams! Burr,, with Jefferson, the first term, and George Clinton with htm the second. It ia tha only instance ia American history of all -the candldatea reaching ultimate! or immediately first or second Disc. - Burr missed the presi dency almost by a alngle vote, and-CHwH ton was re-elected vice-president in no a. When the electoral vote was again counted, on' February sV-XJI7. It was found to have been distributed among It candidates: Adams of Massachusetts receiving 71; Jefferson, (I; Thomas Plnckney of South Carolina," l, and Aaron Burr of New Tork. to.- . Charles C. Ptnkney was the federal candidate again in ltot and 10S. but the honor was supported, by only 14 electoral votea to 11 for Jefferson in 1104, and by 47-to III for Madison la ltot. RufuB King received the same number as did Plnckney at these two election. Few men of his generation, and fewer In later times, declined so many and ao great offlcea as dtd Plnckney. He waa a Westminster boyf Tn London; a grad uate of Chrlat college. Oxford, where ha heard Sir William Blackstone lecture: a Student of law at the Temple; a atudent at tha Royal Military academy at Caen. Hla speech In the federal convention noon the general character of the "con stitution required by such a country as the United States places him, In 'the Judgment of many eminent critics. among tha foremost of American states men. His reputed) seply to tne rrancn directory. "Millions for defense, but not one cent for tribute,", is known to every schoolboy. King was no lees famed. He was a graduate, of Harvard- and served in the old congress. Ha moved the adoption of the famous . clause in the ordinance of 1717. forbidding alavery. He was prac tically the author of the clause In tha New York constitution of 1111, admit ting free 'negroes to tha right to vote, an innovation ef extraordinary. - oonae- auences to the American people. In 1111 occurred tba first eunooa in stance of a greater number ef electoral votea cast for the -jrice-prealdent" El' bridge uerry, 1 tnan xor im presiocni. James Madison. The federalists were quite st sea, but a caucus In New York City decided to support George Clinton and Jared Ingereoll. De Witt Clinton waa the caucus nominee of the New York legislature. He was the first pres idential candidate who, lacking tha sup port of the majority ef hla own party, the Democre.tle-ftepuDiioan. reiiea xor his election on the votes of the discon tented of all parties. He received tl electoral votes. His name, though for gotten in connection with tha preai- deney. Is written forever across the state iif Tlnir Tnrk, In lhat TSfft f""""T'? terarlse of the first quarter of The lai fentorr-Ote Erie canal. Ingers-oTtrtlki Plnckney, had studied law at tne xempie, In London. The forgotten candidate In the second. Adams camDaisn Is William H. Craw ford of Georgia. Monroe's Secretary of the treasury. Tha defeated candldatea In IIS! were Adams snd Richard Rush. Eleven veers later Jackson commis sioned Rush to secure the bequest of James Smlthson. President Polk . an notated him minister to France. In March. 1 Ml. the Democ ratio party met for the first time In national conven tion' at Baltimore. Eminent among the delegatea were Sitae Wright, "who II yeara later declined the nomination of his nartv for vlce-nresident; John A. nix. Simon Cameron. . prealdentlal can dldata it yeara later before the Chicago convention that nominated uncoin ana William R. King of -Alabama, destined to be chosen vice-president, to qualify for that, office on English soli. and to die just as he waa about to enter upon ita duties. He was ths only man elected to the vlce-preaideUCy who has not entsred that office, ,- Th Innovation of the anti-Masons, In ltlt. In their Inauguration of the con vention as a device for naming canai natea. wss followed by all later parties. They named William W1rt of Maryland anil Amos Ellmaker of Pennsylvania aa their candldatea. Wlrt'a fame aa a law yer orsrbr and writer Is still undlmmed It Is now quite forgotten that. In ltls, when Van Burth and Johnson were chosen, William "Henry Harrison re ceived 71 electoral votea and fell behind Van Buran onfy It.OO popular votea; that Webster received 14 electoral votea and Hugh L. White of Tennessee tt. At Warsaw In November, ISSt, and again at Albany tn April. 1140, the Lib- erai party rnei in convention) Inated Jamea O. Blrney of New Tork for president. James Gillespie Blrney. whose Initials and part of whose' 'nam were recalled In later year by thoea of a notable presidential candidates, Jamea Gillespie Blaine, waa a graduate of Princeton and a lawyer of ability. The defeated candldatea In lS4t wer Lewla Cass of Michigan and William O. Butler of Kentucky, the Democratic nominee, and Van Buren and Charles Francis Artsms, the Free Soli candidates. In the Whig convention, which assem bled - at Philadelphia In June Of, ihst year, est Rufua Choate, Oliver Am, Henry Wilson, Rueaell Sag. John Bel.. John Sherman aad Schuyler Colfax, ef whom Base alone survives. William ru Seward. John Sergeant gnd Robert C Wlnthrop received support aa candl.. dates for vice-president oa the first bal lot, but Fillmore waa chosen on the second. Pierce defeated Cass and Bu chanan, ths only other candldatea tnal showed- much atrengtn, ; -,-'." V . . f ,-JLetters From tne People A Orltioiam of the laAber Treat. Portland. Or.. March Jt.-Te the edi tor of The Journal There la one phase of this strike situation now going oa that the newspapers hate entirely over looked, and of which the general public seems 'to be totally ignorant, and that la the manipulation of the lumber sup- speaking, the lumber trust, uney era pursuing the same tactics" that they did two yeara ago, only thla time uvey are a great deal more quiet apoui ic Here are some of the facts:- Lst Friday I visited between .71 ! and 190 huildlns-a in course ' of construction. looking for work, and in every caae but three waa told that they eould use more carnenterglf thav eould get enough lum bar. Now what does this roeani ii means that If there waa lumber enough delivered to the bulldlnga there would be StO or 00 more men at work. It alae that the more idle men there are the leaa cnanc tne men nan v wlnnina- their strike at the fair grounas, Whether thla ahortage ef lumber la a direct outcome of the atrlke. would be hard to ' nrove. but ths fact remains that they are both here. It will be re membered that two years ago, when asked -regarding the ahortage, at first they made all kioda of excuses. One dav it would be that the log supply was short, next dsy there waa aa unusual shipment by rail, again there were more veaeels than usual in the harbor; but final I v when It was handed up te mem thev brasenly admitted that no, one could get lumber unless tney wouia nire non union men. Ana wnen anyone wen o the City Retail Lumber company-s ernes for lumber he was put through a sweat bog by three members of tha Master Builder' association, and if he didnt promise to hire non-union men.h didn't get sny lumber. That show the pa triotism and clvle nride of the' lumber trust; to tie up a whole city for the nurnoaa of carrrlne? their earn selfish ends. But w know that w. u. irenci Is a nromlnent figure In the lumber trast. and we alae know that he ia an officer in the Cltlsen alliance, and etrUnmu knows, or aneuia know by this time, what the Cltlsen' all lan oe stenes ror. - W. E. WELLS, 410 Davis street, or Without halting, without rest, i Lifting Better up to Beat; Planting seeds of knowledge pure. Through earth to ripen, through heaven to endure, .. ' , JSmerson. 1 Because the rose must fade, ' Shall I not love the rose? Because the summer ahade . ' Passes when winter blows, . , Shall I not feat me there In the cool night alrT ' : , - .- ( Because the sunset sky ' ---'; Makes the moste In my sonl. Only to fade and die,- Shall . I not take the whole Of beauty that It gives- ',". While yat It lives? - i-r" Richard Watson Glider. ,A O, to be up and doing. O ' ' i.V Unfeeling and unashamed to go In all tha uproar and tha press ;. About my' humant- business 1 - My undlssusded heart I hear . ";. Whisper courage to my ear. Thou, O my love, O my menaa The gist of life, the and or ends To laugh, to love, to live, to die. Ta call me by thear , anq H Robert Louis Stevenson. , "7. These are the gift I Of thee. Spirit serene: ... Strength for the dally task, ' Courage to face the road. Good cheer to help ma bear ths traveler's load. And, for the hour of rest that com between. An Inward Joy In all thing heard and These are the tn I fatll . Would have thee take a ways . Malice and cold disdain. Hot sne-er. sullen hsta, " Skwrn of the lowly, envy of tha great, And - discontent - that easts a- shadow On all the brightness of a common day. , t cm VMM f wumrB tobacco ajn a wsra. ... . , From tha Honklnavllle Kentucklan. - Postmaster Bretahttt haa received the followlne letter from a former Kentuck tan, who now Uvea in Oregon. We pub lish it to sssist ths writer 4n supplying both of his wanta: . ' - "Krwin. Ore., feb. the t. llOs. Mr. Post Masteri Will yo pleaae hand thla note to some old tobaco raiser. I want t dollar worth of home made tobaco from old Kv. for ehewlng. I want as old tobaco as there Is and as good. want to pay what It Is woth. Would Ilk if it was twisted. Whoever-gets this not anaer at once, I uaed to live In Ky.. in Itvlngston co.. aad If , there Is some good old maid or a widowed lady a Bout tl or 40. tell them to write to me If thay want to change their nam to a better one. . I wss married once la Ky, I sot my lioena at smlthlsnd. was mar rted at love's chspeL close to caryvllle I sot a fine lady: I want a nother one from old'Ky., they are th people and moat respected. Believe me. yore menu, J. BKSo. "P. B. Say. lady, if you do, write aend me yore picture I am thla way, quick sales and good profit. My wife haa Bin dead 1 years. I have no children. By By." jLj-' n wAjnr a xjiotsxatob. From the Ksnsas City Star. , A traveling man who "makes" Kan aa City frequently we dining In th cafe of one of the large hotel yester dae when he thought he'd play a trick on hla waiter.. "See that man at the next table. George?" he aald. Tha waiter nodded assent "That Dr. Alonso Tubba, the Missouri legis lator, who Is trying to stop all tipping. Th waiter grew Interested at one, "Well, ain't dat too bad." h ald. "Ah' been waltln on him. too." "Well, you won't eet anv tlo there.' aald - th traveling - man.- "Ah auttlngly treated hint rlshL" renlled th waiter, A few minute later the man af th other table left and th waiter returned to tha traveling man. "Well." aald th drummer, "what did I tell your "'Xcuae ma ash. but ah thinks you tole me r fabrication." aald the waiter, grinning. "Dat man ain't a legislated he's a gentleman." Tha given him a quarter. Tke Small Acts of Life By Ella Wheeler Wilcox. : (Oepyrlgkt, 10US, ky om AaMrlcaa-IeanauV .. . Kxaadner.I ,. . ' Seconds make minutea minutes make - hours,- hours make days, and e on, ; until tun melts into eternity. Jnat ao th small acts of life compose 'It In Its. ' entirety, and make happiness or un happlneae. .-'.' -.- . ,..;' Wa all deplor th degeneracy of great criminals, and many of ua wonder how they could ao mistake th road to hap- V ' pineas or so destroy th nappineaa pf their victims. ' . . ...... c . The majority of ua are not criminal. and we are not tempted ta. break the , laws of God or ths' land;-jret-many of us sre destroying comfort for ourselves and ' j other by, a score of petty faults.and -hablts which might be avoided If we , would realise how destructive to happi ness they are. - - ,-' A woman who haa all her life believed herself devoutly, religious has ruined . the disposition of her children and ' spoiled the life of her husband by' eon., tlnual nagging. . : The man waa temperate aad clean in . hia. life,' but he loved an oooaalonal ' cigar. - If hla "wife- detected the -odor; 1 about him It served for a week'a text ! of aerraona. . All bis many shining vlr- tue were forgotten in this 'one offense against the wishes of a petty tyrant. who would sulk or soold until tha house -was mad detestable.1'. ", -J. . . If a son er daughter left a hat or ; glove or book or newspaper misplaced . wearisome . harangue aad a-martyr face resulted. This woman was -con tinually guilty of petty larosny. " - - - . Again I have known a woman to apoil a home by Insane Jealousy of relatives, snd even a pleasant word spoken to af ' xauniui maia or a oompiuneni-paia 10 a guest brought sulk or tears and re- criminations. , , . - - v Sisters and brother Indulge tn. Irri table and disagreeable remarks, which ' are rifts ih the lute of domeetlo-happl-neaa, and weeks, months and year go by in many a family with scarcely a day of . rea Ihappineaa because the -members - ua ao control over thole moods, but al- low every weak Impulse to govern them. I have known a woman to dwell upon: the thought that she was out of her sphere In life, until ah became, morbid. " In the beginning she did, indeed, aeem ' superior Intellectually to her associates, but aa th year passed the woman's ' on pleasure wa derived t rem having ' her misfortunes remarked. .. - Her mental misplacement served aa an . xcuae for her uncontrolled temper, for her despondency, which .destroyed th happiness of her children, aad for her severe criticisms of others, which ortan tamed, would-be friend into enemies. 0 - It never occurred to th woman that she wa making her own destiny more cheerless day by day er that ahe- was . spoiling- the memories of horns for her ... children. t Her thoughts were so, centered upon- herself and her own disappointment that all other considers tlo na were lost. . She worked hard and performed die-. tasteful duties successfully, but even : , when her surroundings changed to thoae whloh ahe had alwaya desired, ths dis cordant and rebellious atmosphere which she had created for herself went with . . her and made happtnesa Impossible for her or her associate. - While you are thanking God that you are not-a criminal, stop aad give your- ; self a little careful Introspection, and see whether you are destroying peace . snd happiness for yourself er others,- by petty crime against daily comfort. . No matter what great, gooa piana yon may have In mind for th lettering of the . world and . the helping of tha human, family, you are not living a good Chris--tun life unless you are doing all in - your power to msk today a nappy period tor thoae nearest yeu : Thar la sucn a crime as me peny larceny of the happtnesa of others. And there -are more criminals of that class than of all others. . No amount of swu-seenne ror your fsmflv. no amount of money and . ad vantage spent upon your children, no ' million accumulated ean maae you a good husband. vlfe er parent if yeu be-, -long to th petty ptrrlolnera of demestlo peaee. " ' w v - -- d Clark Lewis an March 15. The day la clear, pleasant and warm. We Uke advantage or tne fine weather to hang - all our . inaian present and' other article out to dry before our departur. , ' , , , From the Salem Journal. -The naonla are not only going to hit the extravagance of the kglaleture a body blow of aome kind, but the next legislature will not be so infernally lop sided snd crooked one wsy, sp far as party la concerned. ' ' Tha laat leglalatur had only five democrats In the senate and only ten Democrats In ths house, and no psrtic ular leadership or organlaatlon fr any . good purpose among the RepuMloaa. It woula ne a migmy the peopl ef Oregon if the next lesla lature was a little more evenly dlvMed. It would be a good thing for the state, ao far a th national government goea. If It war close, or even among the doubtful states. ' "'" ' The statement may not suit the ma chine. It may not be what Is called hard-and-faet. thlck-and-thln Republi canism, but it la the truth and. eommon aanae, and that I what th peopl want -more than partisanship. , ! If th leglalatur were cloer th Ve ault would be both parties would watch on snother, and try to aurpaaa each other In" being' careful and economical with the people'a money. ' K Marlon county had on Democ ratio state aenator, and on or' two, Dfrao crets In ' the lower house,', th 1 result would" bTlvBlry-thow which, mad the better record, and th peopl will get the benefit. , - . . ' Th moment that Marion county gov- , eminent ia solidly Republican Usee be gin to go up, and expenses Increase. Salaries ar raised and bills are put through to restore the fee ayetem.'.t -. That la not what was promised th ' people by these men, but It shows th tendency to us .unrestrained political . power for tha benefit ' of the -officeholders. ' This 1 a 'Republican, paper, and Its editors are Republicans, but they cert see the necessity of a- closer division gmong tha people on party lines. Th people themselves will see it at the next election. .1 ,.., ....... y ' . The First Oaes. ' .. ' ' From th Philadelphia Press. ; 'S ' Ragaon Tatter Oe whlal Yer look in' tough.,- W'at'a de matter? r , Hungry Hlgglna Eatln' too much! , Ragaon Tatters G'on! ,,' I"at wouldn't give yer a black eye. . . , " . Hungry Hlgglna New. hut dat wns ' de beglnnln' of It. D barteoder hatched Km at 4 free Ivmch, : - . '' -