n V. , mm PORTLAND,; OREGON,4 li '-v' a THE OR E GO N. ::. S UN DA Y . J0URN A ; - Aw7,iw pepk hp's w t -,; w.8wapFfc4;i,"'-v "l5 ':? '"V?t.'" vc - C . JACKSON AN IDEAL PLACE td USE THE o ,'REGON ritse M3d,ooo pound pf wool and nses '- a cnofmo -bounds in woolen manufactures, The "f rest it ship ot to 'be; manufactured elsewhere an4 much fit later to be returned iereJn vriou, forms and sold to me peopie, Kft'i??;-::-,-'' ' - And this js not alL We have herfr ideal onditkns 'T . , . L i l. MtantifafhirA rf nnVilfn niY .-, urtaer wnicn i cany un ; ui.u..-.". . r - Mtt Practical men who have examined into the mat- : 'ter have said that ultimately this must the woolen n.anufaeturing' industry ot we woria. we have here1 the. purest of pure, soft water;? we have the 'proper .climatic conditions;: we', have the wool and we have the ocean outlook that; brings us cheaply from Aus tralia any wool that we may require for mixture with our ' cWn products v' Oregon has somewhat of a. reputation in this respect " already; there is, something being done in various direc- tions and the .manufactured product finds a teady and profitable markets v Put why ; with alLthe conditions .in pur favor do we only manufacture one eighth oi what we produce? K:;;; . V--- Many people are beginning to ask these questions and Jlrom asking; Dome of them are; going Klogically act There is a great day ahead for the wool manufacturing -tiustrvtyOregon but so' far too few people appreciate jt SACAJAWEA--AN UNCONSClbUS HEROINR - ill! EFFORTS "of Portland - omm tn nlu the neceisarv erection of the Sacajawea monument is a wortny nt chmild meet with cordial. and rL .... - ... in DO souvenir vufici w6" v tiumhnxs and other means devised by the fair- management 4n hehalf-ot Uie cheerful a4omment.'.--" "v.. . r r :?-!v :t i Not only will the monument 'be' Valuable as -a perma- teent work of art, but it is especially , relebratinsr the one hundredth anniversary of the Lewis nd Clark xpediti6n this young Indian woman be thus .remembered and honored: for except ";Lnn miffht have been a total failure, 'crossed the Rocky mountains, Except for the apparently i w,Mnt nr incidental but as it seems really providen tial employment of, her husband an'd herself, she being ! regarded on first consideration, rather as an unavoidable , incumbrance, Lewis and Clark would perhaps and: we ' or the; Columbia river, Jefferson's ploration would for the time at least .would not now be celebrating here this American history,- ; As ?t turned outthe, f renenman 1 Chabonean employed a 'guide and interpreter, was of " far less service to the captains than his girl wife, Saca jawea, who as a child had been captufed from tb bnake , ,tribe by the Minnetarees, and sold by them as a slave to rhituMiriu. who married her as soon, as she was old (enough, her first child having been and Clark's, stay at Mandan through s It was 100 vears atro last Friday. April and Dark party left Manaan;here -they had wintered, there eing all . told $'2 persons in' the party, of whom Sacaiawea was the' only fenuld ' And who can blame womankind now, tod. years later,; for pointing: rith' pride to the fact that it was this one .young .woman with an infant to carry and. care for and a husband to serve;-who m than all the other. IT. 'not exeeptuig-'tfie captains themselves, brought the-expedition through safely, v, This was partly due to adventitious circumsunces, to tne lacr 'that Sacajawea knew and, was known by-Indians with t -whom the captains had to deal, and who except for her would probably have been unfriendly if not murderously jihostile. Captains Lewis and Clark had a shrewd suspicion that she would be useful, for in their journal of- April 7, the day of starting' from Mandan, they write: , "The wife lef Chaboneau also accompanied us with he young child, -,and we hope may be useful as an interpreter among the A Snake Indians.,, She was. httselfone. of thajjtribeJittt having been taken in warrby the Minnetarees, by whom ."she, was sold as a slave to Chaboneau, who brought hr ,m anl afterward married her." Here is a fine text for i ffcelievers in special providences, ' , ; ; A " ' v ' So let us surely set up the statue of this long-dead girl avife pioneer clairvoyant.. There were brave, noble men n that expedition, but it fell to the Jot of atirLaJ;hild, .though wife and mother, an uneducated yet wit-wi 'native girl, half wife, half slave, to bring the gallant and valiant captains' through-that . terrible wilderness upon avhich, loo years ago today, they were entering.; f,-.:.' . 3 , It was the, let trs remember, who cleared the pathway for them to thirglorious sundown sea, to this magnificent i Ultimate West of the great United Sutes. " In flooded . atreams, in interminable forests, over mountains cloud (Idispersingly upheaved, and through hunting grounds of i tribes that otherwise might have been deadly hostile, this 'girl, with 'her baby first at her breast and then a her tbacki in" her ''moccasins" and skin dress, was the great I 'white .demigods' ' guide, philosopher friend, . servant, aaviourl ;' v ' --? ,' 'J.; '';';: Z: j 1 When we think of It, we are prone to wonder whether civilization has given us anything worth its cost..; Why should we not erect and look with real reverence upon a Ji monument of this-woman, this heroine, this Joan d'Arc ;of the Lewis and Clark expedition? i ; 1.,,' v ,' Somehow, first or last, interleaved throughout human ; destiny, woman bears the heavier burdens and gets the i smaller portion of glory. For 100 yeafs school children have read , of Lewis and Clark more now than ever be Hore 4ut' let them' also read f remember and revere ; this child, this wife, this mother, this woman, this heroine "savage" and slave though she was Sacajawea! ' THE FIGURE THAT RULES. T HE SUBJECT, if we may humbly be allowed to be alliterative, is approached with dubiety, del icacy and despondency that of woman's shape as the dressmakers ordain it., Why then write about what you are ignorant of, with whfch as a trfera maje . creature ( you haVe no buiinessf Ask the moth why it flies into. the ' flame, the gambler why he pawns his waistcoat for a last i stake and appears half dressed jn the morgue. Woman, f woman's form; womairV dress,' are intensely interesting t subjects, and man will hover and flicker about them, and dart into- them, and go broke on them, until this old earth. is repeopled by philosophers instead of, .fools. ), So what we ket down herein, let it be duly and clearly ; stated Iff advance, is not byray of criticism, much less censure, but only as the maundering of themanvwho cannof-understand. CT ?T-v V .-'' : Elizabeth A. C White has recently ' readers -some wonderful things at least derful to a seit-eontessea ignoramus. 1 tire, Mrs. E. I. U Unite, (dressmaker, j he true index of the mind of. the woman.. Wonderful, ft true, and to be rcspectluiiy submitted to our friends ,'lbe Theosophists.. -.f K-4v:,-.t n-; V,fr;.rvV-jr.-y But let us notice (humbly, grAvdingly) a few detaila There wis a -Woman's Figure 61 1904, and there is An- . tthrr Woman s Figure of 1005. . The E. U. C White informs a hungering 'is as far in' advance of lhfe Figure of a whole round world can make Jt.'' tut snort it rs.-Whites 'volubility, Aht tutr - - ."'" rV. tnttor , rm Mtn... ''...' RAW MATERIAL. Ideat" ' Now that (The real figures v But let us pursue be the center of and other Oregon fund for the proper liberal response. 1m hniifrhVtn larsre - - those women and .monument. guretL a and beg leave to appropriate that inlonjy tenn, we mt tor ner ineexpe might never have CARNEGIE I give money to small great scheme of ex have tailed, ana we notable event of multitude oi small college beggars abroad in the land. It is Mr, Carnegie's undoubted, privilege to couple his gifts with whatever conditions he chooses, or not to give at all, but while there is something to be said in favor of his condition, . it is not without objectionable and embarrassing features.-. Suppose a small college needs and could 'well use $100,000, and make itself thereby a far more useful institution than it is, it mast raise $50,000 before it can get. Mr Carnegie's $50,000; and while he (an give away Ithat amount many times over- without missing it, its acquisition. by the college, within its en vironment and among its friends, may be a very dif ficult task. Then, it may be said, it is not worth help ing or worth existing.., Perhaps, and yet we cannot-feel any great degree of enthusiasm in applauding gifts made in . this way. - i.-';',..l'.;'A-v-'?' r'.V . J'x' t ;'. The idea, however, that small .eolleges are worthy of Support, and are in some respects doing as good or bet ter work than the great ones, we believe to bev Correct. At least fn a new eonntrf like the Pacific northwest we csn expect only "smaU"colleges for a long time yet, but they can be made and we believe most of them arc not only worthy of the liberal support of our own people, but capable of sending young men and women, out into the world as well equipped in the essentials of a general ducation-as-thr1arger COllegeseThaeastTThe name Harvard, Yale; or Columbia, on a degree counts for something, perhaps, yet in the battle of life few persons entitled to succeed, will achieve appreciably less success if his sheepskin bears the imprint of some humbler and far western institution of learning.', , , " ' 1 ,l " " ' 1orn during Lewis the winter of 1804-S. 7. that the Lewis I tnat tnereoy have been no appreciable results.; In Galesburg, 111., the preacners were more practical. - Two years ago the mayor . promised that he would enforce the laws, but ha did not He was a candidate for re-nomination and re election, and instea'd of praying'that he would be beaten tn .the primaries the ' preachers organized the church forces, marched Ihem up to the polls, and defeated for re-nomination the mayor who had not kept his promises. The action took the opposite element by surprise, because ordinarily the church ness? And if the . ,- , f.-. THE ROOST. . of government that . 1 ..! .f,v-..i., UMATILLA, R' . " Jl"';' V told The Journal Uhe mouth of the they eem won' "A woman s fig- Chicago)' says, "i Figure of ioo. Mrs. and thirsting world, of 1904 as the study In fact, rudely to J-igurc of 1905 is JNO. ft CASROU. it whalk we wanted the Ideal Figure. will be supplied in checks.) v ? this delightfully dangerous subject een a little farther. Listen: ''The Striking, difference between, the Figure of 4905 .and that of its predecessor of I94 is at the waist line in the back. Last year we had acquired the straight front, and in achieving that gain we were willing (p let the back take on an added wittth. We thought it was absolutely necessary. That is to 'say, in insisting upon tli?; natural contour and lengthening the waist in front the girth was not onjy increased, but the stout woman took on the effect which is sometimes de scribed as 'broad of beam. , This simply, transferred the heavyvlines,. and while very'largely mitigating former evils by no means banished them.".: i '.i,',Jiii,i' -H6w satisfying. ' How soothing, v; How' illuminating. How- essential to mankind's pardon us womankind's sal vation. :C We" is Supposed to be the Allied Association of Chicago Dressmakers, or something of ,. that' sort for wftom, or'whtch, let us hasten to say we have the pro-! foundest respect,-the mos devout reverence. . ' . - . We learn many other interesting details from the same source, for instance, that '"the Figure of ioos is higher busted than that of 1904, aiid the indications are that the Figure of 1906 will be higher busted still" Our prophetic sout whispers that more men will also be "busted," higher or, lower, as the case may.be in 1905 than in 1904, and still more in 1906 than in 1905. but what are men? Nothing.! Less, worse, than nothingexcept ;ior figures,' not Fig ures. They have no Figure thank heaven but some .of them can write figures, which will keep up the Figure of I90S." s''lf' v5'-U'"':'f '-ir-r- ';T:r.'--,-;:.-'! :' Mrs. AVhite has no use for any woman who: can't be eome a Figure. "The short and dumpy woman has had her day," she saya." "She is a superfluity. We have dis covered that there is no necessity for such a form." Glad to. hear it. Chloroform the fat, dumpy women. Some thingin the4me-ofiryrfair3rLilian-irfar preferable. - But we refuse to pursue the fascinating subject farther. retreat in confusion and disgrace. The it that we may get on a jence ,oma obscure part of town and gaze rapturously on the Figure of 1905 as it sweeps majestically and entraiicingly by. .. AND- SMALL COLLEGES. T IS REPORTED that' one of Mr. Carnegie's ways ;of disposing of some of his wealth, in addition to giving money to help establish libraries, will be to colleges, though where the tine will be drawn between large and small colleges we are not informed. But as in the case of libraries, Mr. Carnegie's gifts will be coupled with a condition, namely, that for every dollar he gives to, a small college another dollar shall be raised and put with, his dollar. This will send a N PHILADELPHIA the preaches recently held eon A, certed meetings of . prayer, for ; the mayor, hoping he would become reformer, but there people had not gone numerously to tne primaries. ;. ; " ; . - , t, . .,".', tj: " But why should they not, as well as the forces that de sire the existence of certain forms of vice and lawless church element does not go to the pri-J iiisiio iiu vuit ur wiiuiu iacy dciicvc 10 uc me oetter men, what right have they to complain if the other ele ment too much controls a city's affairs? . . s , We hope all classes and conditions of men having a right to do so will not only, vote in the ensuing election, but will also make themselves eligible, if not so already, tovote at the primariesi.Only .thus will the people as a whole get the sort of candidates and therefore the kind a majority of them Wants. 1 .1 .' - , PAST AND PROSPECTIVE.- ECENT NEWS ITEMS concerning the irrigation of the sinds adjacent to the old town of Uma tilla, or Umatilla Landing, as it waa known in the ante-railroad days, will bring to many old-timers visions of the past of that town and vicinity, ss well as td the newer people visions of the future as those wind-drifted sandf shall appear after water has done upon them its perfect work. Both visions are interesting, and. if ; the one of the future is more important,: the one of the past Is' the more romantic, though one could scarcely say that it presents many artistic features. ,r - '1 ' ' Umatilla is situated on, and in, bed of fine shifting sand, on the south bank of the Columbia river, nearly 300 miles from Portland , by rail, and a mile or two above Umatilla river. In the early days, the 60's and 70's, it waa the point of transfer from boats of the old O. S. N. Co. to freight wagons for all the supplies of the interior intermountain country,'. away through to southern Idaho?" AU the mining camp and stock ranche and interior ettlements6f this vast region were supplied by teams that toiled through the heavy sandr out from Umatilla Landing-i-team of from eight to fourteen horses or mules, the larger teams hauling two wagons, loaded with about 1,000 pounds to ?in animal. ; These were great days for Umatilla, -which grew to an, unique citjf of perhaps t.500 inhabitants, and "hot old ipwn? it rvften undoubtedly was. , t t . " ,(. t. With the advent of the railroad all this business passed - - . " - ' ' j 1 away, and Umatilla rapidly dwindled to a. hamlet of 100 inhabitants or so. Many of the old buildings, and nftt small ones cither, for such a place, became half buried, at least on one or two sides, in sand. The welcome whistle of t,he upper river bosts were heard no more The V.R,& N.. kept a few; people employed there, and a few others staid on for old associations' sake, but for 30 years the town, as compared with its former glory as the greatest freight transfer point in the interior north west, became a dead add even a buried thing. - But there is to be a resurrection, if reported plans and projects are successful, after which that ancient city as eastern Oregon annals go, and that region, above and be low, for thousands of years but a sand waste, will take on fv4 By Bev. nosaaa B. Otox7l " VE Any last wk, whll on my way boras,: I mat a ruaay-neM a-antlomui wbo looked ao human and friandly that I was moved to pass tha time of day with him. Ho cordially - iwturnod mr salutatioa, and tha flrat thin w know wo war In tha mldat of a haart-to-hrt chat about baara, birds, treaa,, folks, and a lot of othar tblna-a. .,.".''' ;'? ; In tha oouraa of out vary plaaaant converaatton my fliand said aomothlng about tha "tlma whan ha used to buy wild placons by tha barrel,. and balas upon baiea of buffalo-rotxa."' . "Wild " placona! , Buffalo-robaafi I thouaht to mysalf. "It haa baaa a lon tlma." I aald to mysalf. ralnoo wild pl aona and buff alo-robaa 'war aa plantt ful aa this fentleman'a remarks aaam to indicate." '. '-'.. The man looked vary youo. X would have gueseed bis aaa aa 40, poaalbly en a pinch at 46. Nowhara about him. ta form, atap. volea, aye or Idea, waa there the remotest intimation of tha deorep ttuda that la generally uppoaed to at tend upon aaa i '" - ray aatrioe vatefsst.) " ONT be too haaty In forming 1 frlendahlps. glrla.- -. y . - , Bacauae a person appeu to you at 11 rat meeting It la no sign that , you have discovered an "af finity." . " Incalculable trouble Is caused by fool lah glrla who confide their own and other people's accrete to comparative strangers. '- . Don't tell tha story of your Ufa to the acquaintance of a day. Any one can talk, few undaratand the art of lis tening. ; . . ' Aa aoon aa you find that you are doing all - the , talking pull youraelf together and reflect. -See If you are not telling thing you'll regret tomorrow. The g4rl wbo doea a great deal of talk ing about her attention and beaux has uauaUy very few of either. But beware of the maiden Who keeps demurely si lent. She underataads jthe value of re aerve and knowa that oftttmaa aha who talks moat baa least to talk about, i ; from the New Tork World.' ' , Howard , Summerfleld affray, 17 yaara old, of Irvlngton-on-Hadaotv told yeatarday In TorkvUle court bow It feela to wake up In Sherry a with aaaeta of 1 oanta and a bill of $2S looming up on tha table like a three-sheet poetar. Howard la tha son of the late B. 8. Jaf. fray. - ,' - ,-' . ' -. Howard la a tan youth, very blonde, quite thin and giving to startling at tire. 1 He wore "a. green eravenetta coat, troueera turned up extenalvely and aa extremely paaalonate pair of aocka allow ing above a pair of low ahoaa with as tenaloa aolea that looked like balooaiea of a aummer hoteL - Perched on the rear elevation of hla dome of thought waa a cap about tha also of a poatage atamo. To add to- tha depth of Howard' a sor row, Friday waa hla 17th birthday. But lot him tell the etory. ." :- "Wllfred Walker ana l, ne expiainw. been chuma Tor yeararHis father 1 owna two 1 Of oouraa ne anew 1. w mr hirth,iav . I waa in the drug etore . . . n.v at Irvlngton. having aa lea cream eoda. when, he came along irr ma and aaked If I wouldn't take a trip to New Tork. . ' ' ,' "I aald Sursl'.- go ha telephoned to Mlaa Hayden and told her we would be down and asked ber-4o,meet ua with oonro to' ram on, From tha tawlstoa Tribune. -, We are going to find out pretty aoon now wtiather;tt'a all ralnbaw -ehaalng or not. The Lewlaton eounUy. la not on any stampede, and It Is too busy and too earneat ta knowingly go rain bow ehaalng. but what It Is golnis to, do la find out whether It has the power to lnflunoe a vary neeeaaary and vry practical place of railroad building. It haa been done before by people of In significant means beaida thoae behind the preeent movement, ' and ; there is really no preponderating reason why it cannot ba dona again. The country is rloh an proeperoue, the field la white unto harveavand the money marketa are ovarflowlnr with Idle capital hunt ing for Just such '.opportunities for sars and lucrative employment. It Is merely a question of bringing the two together in mutual and friendly interest The part the 'affected country la allllng to take In doing eometblng for itaelf will be demonstrated todays tha reat. It la believed, will ba .the aaaler part The country,, by Ka own efforts, haa prao tloally secured aft. open water highway from Iw1 at on to the. sea, whereby aa economical and reliable outlet for com merce will alwaya be available. Inde pendently of traffic tolla by other aye tenia that are uaually ao djicou raging to local llnea. There 1 nothing In the altuatlon here but what the advantages of nature, aaalated by th courage and efforts of , a free people, can oyercoma Our way out ia at hand. Our a la a atralgbt and abort putt down hill to th hip's -aide. . If we fall to take tha way mad aa plain It Ja our awn fault - pa : e.. li " ' ' '.".I- ' f mojsisTf sagfti w moacAjraaro. . ' v From the London Tlraea ' : Admiral Rojeatvenaky furnlehed ' the newapapera with aenaatlonal "copy" in the early daya of tha Rueeo-Turklab war. . Th Rueelan government bad con verted a cargo boat, tha Veata, into an improviaed ahlp of war juat about the aama time aa tha Turklah. government turned tme -of their Ironclad a into a cargo-boat and. sent her . afloat with a decklftad of . guna,.; Rojeatvenaky waa eeoond In command of the Veata, and be and bla captain, paranoff. promptly and literally mad themaslvas beroea of re- a new life, and one y A Young Man. di; Seventy-One ' Thinking- of those ptgaoaa and bufra loea, and staadlas; there face to face With tha youna-looklne- man, I aald to hlmt ' "I , don't quite understand you. Ha, old are you,-anyway t" " .' - , i k ,; 'Seventy-one," ha coolly replied. -" J ' There be atood a young man of Til u , Tor' three-score yeara and ten,! With a full twelvemonth o apara, he had lived uponjbia earth, faoina the battle and the breeae, and In every reapeet be. looked yeunaar, and -In reality waa ' younver, than are many man who have not a yet turned 40. s ':..-,,-. ' . - I had a little lelaure qn my handa, be eeamad, to be la no particular ruah, and I thousbt would put a few quaatlona to him. ' -V . 1 : 1 ' The net result of the answers obtained waa aa . foUows-.v v ;, . . t . ,, : , . He had -never bean an aacetlo or a puritan.. He had alwaya baaa able to ad mire the beauty of tha world, and to en joy wltb deep gratitude tha good things that came to him. ... - . .,.-:..' A worker from early boyhood, ha bad always taken good care of . hlmaelf, watching out for hla health, eating plain Hasty: Frienclsliipfl ' It 1 a-good, plan to try and know people before you give them too much Of an .opportunity of knowing you. v . Ta head youraelf 4a. slight reaerve will add materially to your charm. - A man la always held, by tha girl be baa to atudy. Do not be too reaerved; ,tbat, seema ' like morosenass,-. - and - never pleases.' ' ;-.C i'1-:- : But there is a bappy'medlum, a 00m blnation of pretty frlendltnees and dig nity, .that la very' charming. ; Don't write lettera or preeent your photographs to man you barely know, ' A ceurtaoua "note caai never bring trouble,, hut be moat careful about com mltttng youraelf In any' way on paper.- Men will alwaya ask for your .photo graph If it happens to be pretty. . But don't give It to them,', They won't value It ' Keep It for aome One who will, - This doea -not apply -ta the men with whom yon have genuine frlendahipai only to tha eaaual acquaintance. How- ; Jote TtatfyViUrtast; !a Lifetime a' friend. Botbof'uV knew, tflss' fay dan. . . ;'::....N v us' 4She met ua and had f rtend with her a Mtaa EUtott' WO bad never aaen Mlas Elliott before, but aha waa awfully Jolly. I';;;:-': :k , ."We saw the town all afternoon, up and down and bad a great time. . Jn the evening wa went to v aee Haaaflald. Whatever made Wilfred take ua to- aee Mansfield I don't know.' lie waa" playing Richard III.' We thought he waa going ta take us to soma jolly piece. Mana fleld'e ahow gave aa tha wUllea, and we took a Sneak after the flrat acfc "Wilfred auggeated thafwa go to Sherry's and have aome canvaaback. Wa rode aver to Bherry'a In the auto, and went In and gofat-tablee- It waa the flrat tlma I waa ever la, 8 harry 'a 'We bad aome cocktaJle, and thea aoma canvaa back and champagne.- - It waa all fine and wa bad a Jolly time. . "rTrueaathewTn wnst7isvs"Tnaas ma oiaepy, aecauaa I aosed ou au at one a heavy-banded waiter gave ma a elap on my ehoulder- and told ma to wake up -ray friends were gone. . - - "Sure Bough they. were. Wilfred and Hiaa Hayden,. and- Mlaa Elltott : had aklppad. I auppoaa they thought It waa ft JokaV . ;.- -,t',.. "Tha check waa for I2C and something and the name of the man who presented it waa Guggenheim. He called a poMce- manca. '. Together they wrote a naming account of the brilliant victory their little. veaiel gained over the huge Turk lah Iroaolad. though, aa Hobart Paaba affirmed, they were never within two mllee of each other and apparently bad only exohanged a casual shot'- Rojeat venaky carried the report to- headquar ters, tha story got Into the Ruaalan pa pers, and eventually tha London press embellished and Illustrated tha alleged exploit .The war was over and the Incident-forgotten before It-waa dlecov ered that tha whole thing Waa an effort of tha. imagination. - KAjrr As ws gase upon the breakers . .- ) Rushing madly toward tha land,.-. Where the .wreckage and tha driftwood , Lies about us on the sand. ' Here's the hulk of some old veaael And half burled now she lay,' .. Where the flood tide once had left her. Left her there .one lonely day. v , j c .... ' v - When the winds were madly howling. Fanned the ocean Into foam, . j . , Thea it took oar noble alater ', Carried berto fHte and doom, t ... y" '' t 'i ' . . ... - ,. .-. . , Beached bar when her life' waa brightest She heeded not ber tUler'a call, . Lured by tempeat'e blaat or bluater -, Thought she'd trifle with . the squall. " : ".. . - , . She who waa once proud and noble, StaunchlOid young, loved by her crew, Here aha Ilea and faat decaying,). . . Juat bacauae, for once untrue. .; v; .'! ' ' : .. V ""' So It ta with aome fair maiden ' ' K Whose rareat beauty btinga her fame, floara toward Aha haavena like the gull , bird, - - .. ,r r . ' Broken winged falls back again. -" '.- - s . ; V e :-. , , ' Falls as from . th lofty mountain To deepest canyon, eem the change And like a weary, careworn traveler , -. , Finds no shelter ifrom tha ralna. , 1 A,-.. r- ' : " The ralna.. are ralna .of - acorn .that . drench 'her . -j. a; itw ap ea v aa aa f vmm vva aa . Tell me,f there's another guilty. She a a worn r but If yon Iban Where Uttt Who- ta the manf aa unlike the old as the pansy is un like the thistle, the honey-bee the adden-, , ' ? " " From a point three mile above textown on the Uma tilla river people of Irrigoii, seven miles away, are soak ing thousands of 'acres of this fine volcanic sand with water, and JSst east of Umatilla, iri the fork of the Y formed by the Columbia and Umatilla rivers, one com pany is already patting 8ao acres under irrigation. And these, perhaps, are only beginnings. . It ionly a question of sufficiency of water, and feasibility of carrying it upon the sands. Given these, Umatilla will again rise aa a city, not raw 8nd ugly and woolly-wild as of old, but beautiful, fragrant, rich in fruits and kine, in veritable milk and honey, . ' , V ' ' ' - ' -f - - ' food, never drinking to exceaa, giving mmeeir pientyor sleep. ; ' :v .;j , ;. , Recognising tha fact that "man'e two greateat eneralaa are hurry and worry," he had always aimed to take a "good. honest gait a gait that he could heap up" without drawing too heavily upon hla reaerve, and having dona hla days work -he borrowed ao trouble about the morrow.-. . ..' ... ,. ;v'---;;.;' Flhally, and moat Important of all, perhapa, he had never allowed hlmaelf to arow old In aolrlt. Ha kaot hla faallnaa young, via bio heart burned tha flrea of hope and good ' cheer over which the froaty yeara were unable to prevail.. . . He thought young thoughts, and th'oae thoughta kept his mind bright and nim ble. Juat a his prudence bad kept hla body aound and vlgoroua " - It waa a very handaome sight, that of tha young man of Hi- - . , I eaid to myaelf ! JThl man la Ood'a sermon to ua. warning ue agalnat the folly and useleaaness of dying before our time." ' . - V ! , ' This young man of 71 Is ho miracle. He la tha natural reault of obedlenca to nature's wlae and beautiful lawa, - - - aver, -, even ; f rtend ; are caraleau and the only man who will really "appreciate your photograph will be the man who Is la leva, with you,' .'-,- . '-.'"'.-,' '.';, j Be wlae In your eritlclaia of othara Do not tell a stranger What 'your opin ion a ao and ao is, ''. Never relate a" rumor aa a fact,' and remember that the temptation to tell a good story haa brought many a narra tor to grief. .,. i-ff jy -1 Familiarity la a quality also- to be avoided.' 'If your .manner toward men la 'free and eaay you muat aot resent it when they treat you tha same way. t A man will bold you at your own valuation-- - .' '-!;v.v t , If you are boisterous and familiar be will be the same. If you are modest and retiring he will treat you with reapeet and conjlde ration. . . v., , v.',- 'v ... s .. To hold youraelf la reaerve. to behave in a modeat way, tboae are not very dif ficult taaka, girla, and aaaura you they will repay you.- - mani ; who' took ma to" the! East. '.Fifty flrat atreet sutlon housa .' ' . v , v "I gave tha name f lames Johnson and aald I lived at the Waldorf, ao that no one would know me. Today when I aent a telegram to Robert 'White, who haa a atore la Forty-aeoond atreet "to come over and pay my fine I had to aend it aoUeet,': -... -v. i ...-. .t .- -1 - Mr. White, a large, jolly man and an old friend of tha Jeffrey family, iwaa on hand. Howard'e recital of hla- experi ence Beemtd to make a great hit with Mr. White. He told Maglatrata prane ba could promlae that the youth would never get lhto trouble again. : ; But Maglatrata Crane gave tha young maa a lecture ba long will remember. He aald the boy ought to be sent to aea jinM h la 30 yeara old. ... . . 1 1JO yoa araoKe eigaxettear" thundered the maglatrata ,- , , ; 1 Howard couldn't reply.- He was sob bing. Finally, after the maglatrata had ettea and drinking champagne, ha dis charged the boy on parole. Howard will hare to report to tha probation of ficer at TorkvUle police court twice a week for two monthe. --,- a-- . Wilfred Walker, did not appear In court Jt la aald he paid yeatarday morning tha bill at Bherry'a that taeeed the trouble. ' Walker la 11 yeara old, aix feet in height and well known. In the upper Broadway dletrtot' --- 4, omzoiar OF T BOOBU." America's martial air,' "Yankee Doo dle,; which Is a bequeat of revolutionary daya, ia traced . through tha Hesalan mercenaries hired by England to a Uer snan country dance tune. Walter Schu mann, coaaul.at Mains, Germany, haa aent a translation of a recent article In tha Frankfurter , Zeitung, giving an In teresting theory of tha . origin of the mualc. v !i ! In the publication Heaaanland Vohann Lawalter glvea axpreaalon to hla opinion that "Yankee DoodU" waa originally a country dance af a dletrlet of the former province .'of .. Kur-Heaee, called the "Bchwalm." . ' - . It la well known that 1 the tun of "Yankee ' Doodle" ' waa derived from a military march played' by the Ileaatan troope during, the war of tha revolution in America. . In etudylng th dances of the Schwalm, Lewalter waa btruck by tha similarity' In form and ryhthm of "Yankee, Doodle"' to the mualc .of theae dance - Laat year, at tha "klrmesa'f of the village of Waaenberg, when '-Yankee Doodle" waa played, the young men and girla swung into a true "Bchwalmer" danoe, aa though th mualc. had been composed for It. During the war of 177 the Ohlef recruiting office for tha enlistment of the Hessian hired soldiers was Zlegenhaln, In Kur-Hesse. It, there fore, aeema probable that the Heaslaa recruits - from, ,the "Schwalm," ho served In-the pay of Great Britain tn America during the revolutionary war, and whoae military band Instrument consisted of bugles,' drum and -flfte only, carried over with them the tune, known . to them from childhood, and played t as a march. ' , Oaat Ba Bxtermiaated. r ' From thr it Loula Globe-Democrat An official of the agricultural depart ment aUtea that- "no lnjurloua Inaeot ha ever been exterminated." In mak ing th rounds over hla farm Mr.-Bryan accept aa - Inevitable tha bussing ha heara for I00S. - - ,; . : ' " 1 11 , 1 ' ' : . ':"-r'f . Oaaadiaa law.'5;' '''- -; - From the Toronto GlobJ. -, The German emperor' naye- he early vowel -'nevr h, strike for world rtaa fery." 'It la juat aa well for hla peace of mind that he did ao, becaue he would never have got It anyway, A " CI- '' t ' ' Tilt we' all atuin- unto tha unity af ; the faith, and of the knowledge of the Son of God. unto a full grown, man. unto the meaaura df tha suture of the fuluieaa of Christ Eph..'lv:l. . ., f ffl1 HH damage dona by the dlvergea I ciea of Chrlatlana haa been too JL r,at t0 admit of .much dtf iar- " . enca Of ooinlon aa tn tk. ... alrabUlty.of unity. Practically all' ai-. tempta at unification have . been on creedal linea; many: of them have but ted to deeper dlvlaiona. r i ,; , Here, however, la aa entirely praotl-' cable platform for QhrUtlaa unity., -t It sou Ite baaia la character rather than ' In creed.. The unity of the faith la to come .by -approximation to m common llkeneaa and aot by atulllficatlon of tha mind to any oommon ayatem of logic; by growth and not by repreeeion: aot by cutting out Jtha divergence but ' by developing the -aasentlals held in com" mon. And theae eaaeatiala are found to -ba not In any statementa avan of the moat vital beliefs, but in the realisation " of a certain type of character. . Chriatly 1 eharaotar Is the common poaaaaalon of -all true Chrlatlans.. It la their diatln gulshtng mark. Practically a Chrtatian -man la a Chriatlan, no matter what hla creed; charaoter la the stamp that de- The great world haa long raeosmlaed this scriptural atandard - as the . only wuna watte wm ui vi wwivnj. li re celvea as Chrlstiart only tha things that are ChrlaUlk. Refusing to be bothered with bickering over subtle speculations, ':, it knows men by what they are, leaving s what they think to take care of Itself. -Men know that the" church Is one not beCauae : they say the same words, but bacauae .they 'do Ut aama worka. -ci . 80. Jong aa .the mind Uvea' H will be .' impoaalbla ta conform all minds to any-, one Idea,, but Uvea find It eaay ' to ba : conformed to aome great Ideal. And the greater , tha Ideal tha larger ., tha -: number wbo can, make It their type. ,JSto ', great, la Christ that every man finds something worthy In him, -Drawn to him, man are drawn to one' another.' , Nothing leada Uka a life; thle Ufa leads and Uf ta 0 it la tha magnet of all man- -hood. . It Imoarta life; Knowing him, v virtue becomes vital. Be aeta th atand ard and be furnishes tha inspiration to v reach it - He la mora than tha found- , Uon of the church: be la Ua force.. The churohea may never present to the world a solid front of coldly formu lated argument, of metaphyaleal defl- ; nltlona, of divinity and aeetiny. ' ui . they muat and they do present to all . criticism . and au oppoaiuon xne , an- breakable line of a common life, a Ufa athrtll with admiration af and devotion ' to hla all glorious life, puleatlng with tha power of that divine life, inspired with tha vision of- what that Ufa must do for the world, of tha day1 when all men shall have bla lire ana ju mon shall attain to tha full grown anaa. whan , heaven ahall aome to earth beoaaaa men have oomato- ood, nave .aoma w Ukeneas. - ""'-' Unity beglna in lire; wnere intra . Otis' life there-wilt -be aaa'ody,rand where therafWoaa body theta,wlaaon ; m 'am miruE. Thev who, jto .hla: daada ahalt know of hla dootrlna "One aauee, ? one character wMl. at. laat, aaad one , Let but tha importance of -living .hla '. life and flnlahlng hla work m a aad and lost world ba once realised and man will become so engross In thle thay wiir forget their ia conflicts of words; and at last, aoma day when the work la doaa. and the kingdom ba com,' they- ahall waken and with th clearer -vlalon' of that bettor day shall sea that living one life haa led them Into one eraed. and that one "Hia creeq,, . ,'. - ' sjjuiTJlalom Ilovs tatha bloseom afjtha rea of. Ilia, , f AU power tf born of paln, .;;-'' ,; 1 i A . Somewbera there'a a sin back of every gurrua, ' . ' - . . 1 " . Men who affect vtrtuee have no af tea- tloa for them,--;'- '' The weaRh '.of-ft ohureh ,depnd an Its work,.; writ ' 1 .' (, - ' " T BouTTpoMessloa are tb only aaseU that count In beavea, vrfV'O The beat way to pity ft man Is td pick him up.;.; ,r: - '..'.'W ' 'ir"i:"'''J:-' Real faith works too hard aver to get trvwui 5 ,K era hearts, sa.bunary aa In tha land of gingerbread. , No prayer la lifted on Stilted phrase. ' Tt takea an empty bead to rise to the . height of fashion. r richer the life within tha simpler will be that without , '1, You fcannot walk the Wayof h world and not know Its woe. , . . " , -(. - j VatrlfiMt neonle.' like petrified, tre,- take the f Ineat polish. t Hraiia kh'teida little alns will soon be . th slave of large onee., .-. ;;;.- ... - i . . - - , bm man never make a mlataka be cause they never make, a move.' s , a a ..v .... t ; -fv. ... .h.M. with hla fingers A iisj aiea ww f" w " r crosaed tt likely - to get a starUlpar . answer.:.-, 'H-.- v.f,- mi.- 4k.. mcka the rotten, tree IHf RWilU .-.- " ' Only room the sound one deeper. 11 ..,- (art anv tltn In the heavenly race by supping to help. an other, ' . . ' - ' '..- 1 . - .'-. -: " . . .knf.M tint tiaae .hla call to the ministry on the fact that hla mouth watera wnnwrvr www - AM,iMa Ma hurrW. that la nravtna- for showers ; Of blessing pnly . needs a thaw. ' ..-, -' : r.v- A rarfaot migbi. l- ' LAaeW nnmlnattnn o th rrmn mrYux . U .... I. ju. W 1 . tha god, and no dependable utterance li aa 10 ma jeruiu,iij , nwq , do lOOKCa for for at leaat threa- yeara from date. UnvKlU IfMin IT lrh.nl.. i- 8haw, . rt at have a perfect' right to mwiiu, mm -r f 11 1 vnvn, Wilu- out regard to pointa of th oompaaa- .'.Oaasa aad affect ' I., rom ne waaningtca Post, -A marrtaae In haata uan.n ( - " " . , imv.ii. m 1 dlvorc wltb pleasure. , 'V F. E. Smith, '1 t r. '',, . , 7- 1 I