POP.TLAUD. OSSGOlC 7 .l ... . V V..! H E O R E G AN Cg.JACKSOM PaUtatod every- wants ! TAPPINO THE INTERIOR V, 'HE NEWS thai provisions, the extension of the Dufur i i it iMffth of 45 miles ' its starttn point : coupled with the Bend is its ultimate objeeitive, is of rery much more than nasainsr mtntttVS''a-.'U r-f' .... 'The project in itself way be neither treat nor extra ordinary, yet there is so much to be done in the; way of railway extensions through tne aiate aao w rerj unw U hiinor done that this particular project deserves and will receive 'jreater pportionat'rooaideration than might' under other and better "conditions-be given It The building of -thetiad will, five an easy and we hope reasonably inexpensive outlet to s an area of country which hitherto haa been forced to rely upon wagons to ' tret it nroducts to market It will provide a" feasible mean of transporting products which heretofore hare hid no outlet Thia is particularly true of fruit i. In he more distant sections the people, have been forced to vegetate. Many things' that.they could raise and others thaLthevdoriise are of little advantage to them except in so far as they provide means of subsistence for them selves. XBut they have loaf th income from" what they could under better conditions market and thus tne pro gress made has been little in comparison with. what it might havev been.." Every foot of railroad thua built en hances the Value of all holdings, stimulates industry and ambition, brings about a fuller utilization of tha natural resources and attracts other settlers. Even the building of 45 miles of railroad will do very much for the country, without eferenc to the much greater and mora ex pensive project of extending' the line to Bend and tap pinsr the rich country which intervenes and lies there abouts. ?; Vv " '',; ; : : l7 ; v ' ' There are many signs which make it evident that the time fdr building railroad extensiona Into the interior of the state, something so long called for and so long denied, is now close at hand: The interior ' must be ' brought-to the' river..-. In Idaho they are solving the problem by beginning the building of electric roads that will brmcr the products from the Thence they may .be 'transferredU by and the portage road. - Other methods tention and the day is undoubtedly close at hand when these matters will reach the solution which they de- mind. Meantime the starting point . prises must be boats on the upper river tdjitatt the pro iacts to the sea.,1 With that enterprise once well begun tbe whole question will then be in line to be practically solved and the new day which has .dawned for aome sec lions of the state will have dawned for all parts of it .: OUR PRESIDENT AND FOREIGN RULERS. .'J A RECENT DISPATCH Ifrom St Petersburg in--V j , formed readers that the czar has ordered a fines T A composed of spiked pickets, IS feet high, built around one of his palaces where he has taken refuge. We are also informed that h'custoreary eception to his guards has been abandoned. In brief," the"czaF is pratf ticallv a prisoner, surroortded by picked people supposed to be faithful, and yet he. is in terror ... . i ... . . j: One Ot Uiem (noma DC a mnor in uisguwc, inu uvum bc carrying around a bomb or a dose of poison to use wben opportunity offered.' V 4 ' "'- , '.-' v v';'ir"';''',':;,-y . King Edward visited fafis recently, but "none of the general public was admitted to the railway station where he arrived.' and along the route of his journey through ' the city the people were kept at g dons oi soiuicr. When Emperor William and King Victor Emmanuel . met at Naples one day last week, "the streets on which the king passed were lined with troops from the railway station to the arsenal." '. ' i-(V-,'v'-,iH y.-fvV- .At Stettin, Germany, a house painter was heard to re mark that the emperor was "making an ass of himself as usual, and poking his nose into what did not concern jjiim in Morocco." .The painter waa sent to priaonJor aix . monthf. r-T'' .. V: ;-,..v-- ,!. "'5 . But now consider how different it is in our glorious ; country, even down in Texas, Oklahoma and Indian Ter . ritory, the wild and woolly southwest . : ;. ; . At Tuskogeet'lr T, a man on a telephone pole called out to the president: - "Hello, old pal, glad to isetf yer," and he was rewarded by a dee-lighted smile and a vig orous nod. ! . ' - A -f ''f- f ; .'u !' : ' ' .AtJTerapleex-lhrough-which-'amall -town the presidential' train was scheduled to pass "without Stop ping, the-council held a hurried apecial meeting and rushed through an ordinance requiring all trains to stop in that town at least three minutes, and thia action was o Tsxuara vxai rt wzu fro ; Prom' tha Prlnavffle iournaL ":. i : 'Tha Portland Journal haa chaaod tha rainbow oolora In wlucn tt la printed . tfowa the -street and the old woman in tha tower will apply soma to the facea of her own family, namely, ' tha . Bvcnlnr Talaaram. In fact ona laaue af tha latter haa already appeared In all tha Korteoua array capable of belns ad mlnlatered by a four-decker, maeaalne aupplemaot Haa parfactlns . praaa. and promiee la elven of mora to coma. So far, tha pMamatio eolora of the Tele gram are oonflned to Its humoroua aup plement In Saturday avenhts's adUlon, but oolora run and no doubt they will aradually , work -.tbemeelvea areand to the front ptm Thia, -of eouraa, will be a alow procedure, ee-the publio will not gala tha Idna that tha Talearaai 1 aping- tha pracresalve atyla aet by Tha Journal. ' But ' tha ehaage la oomlng. The garland of red will aooa be a promi nent featore of tha old woman's twi light mouthpiece. The alsma of the time all point 'that way. Even tbe old woman heraelf may succumb later on to tha aame atyle to keep . from : loalng VAsnmm. Kenogg thirland. in Boston TranecHpt Tha praae will treat It aa a splendid ' eenaatlon. Thia can aearoaly be avoided, Mr. J. O. Phelpo Stokee, son of an old, , arlatoeratle family, deacendant of three Colonial governor ' of Maaaaehuaetta, tha preeldeflt' of a railroad and af a large mining eompany," member of the governing boards af a doaen odaoa tlonal. barltahla and philanthropic ln atluitlona, member af aereral-ef the moat exclualve clnb in New Tork. ; writer, traveler and public lat thia man, with all thia Intellectual, aoelal and ma terial wealth behind and around htm,, ia about to marry Jtoae Harriet Pa tor, a , Ruealan Jeweaa, born hi Auguatovov 8o walk. child aC a Whltechapel Jewry, and who for 11 year waa a olgarmakar In a tobacco faotory. Tha faou at first aound ataHltag. Really, thia la bat a natural step In tha development of a maa waoaa life haa been lived strongly and fearleaaiy and whoa goal haa ever bn tha living plane af true, ajrapl demwraey, t , Any eo waa kaaw both Mr. Ctakss OtN ; D A I L Y.J OUR N A L INDEPENDENT. NEWSPAPER - PUBLISHED s BY JOURNAL PUBUSHXNd CO. ) W ommey mamlac M Official paper of, the city of Portland OF, OREGON. ' have" been mad for road i miies, w from The Dalles, information that M is impossible, or , '- ,V reasonable sum In proceedings, which ' .1 farm' ; to the rrver. steamer to Celilo are receiving at will parallel their for all these enter- of ju gradual industrial revolution of great importance. day and night leat .' A LA E HAVE think ssfe djstance by cor the pretentious premises of the rich. - ' and Mis Pastor Intimately can under stand the situation and appreciate with out difficulty how it came about . Dir. fere nee in eoclal station can never be eaaentlal with men.' and women of thoughtful temperament. " Mlaa" Pastor la ona pf that vast army born In ob ourlty who have aome to their own In maturity. A long line of ancestor, the branch of a spiritual people, gave to her a birthright of Idealiam that has blossomed and fruited In tbe early year Of .womanhood. : ... Tormg ram bbabzsTO. ' - From the Philadelphia Ledger. 1 Sir Edward Grey, in a speech at a literary dinner la London, made aome variatlona on the now familiar theme of tha productive period of Ufa. . Ona af hi definite, opinions was . that the vital reading of a man 1 usually don be tween the age ot tl and IS. There are no doubt - precocious children who at tack masterpieces before they get. to their teens, but the , majority ' of gorged ourselves with rubblah la child hood. One la our live Mayn ' Bald and tfarryat and Dumas were tbe lit erary king. - But the healthy, advanc ing mind throw the rubblah aside aa time goes on and the maturing Judg ment begins to drift and search for tha mental food that tha Individuality ro aulres. ' About It, however, the bone of the intellect, to writ In a metaphor, begin to Indurate. About tbe mind of few men continue to expand, though tha Judgment of many continue to ripe a. Tha page w tarn it "not vara now. Only proee." ;. XAnUBAirm-cvt rxouDA. ; Jom the Beaton Traaecrlpt. . ' ' But few -people have any conception of Florida' extent.. A land trip from one end ot Florida to the -other I as long a from the lake to the gulf. A eitlsen of Main . who make... up hi mind t go south may get on the cars and . pas through stain. New Hamp shire, Massachusetts. Connecticut; New Tork, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Dela ware, Maryland, the District of Colum bia and far into Virginia. ' When ha baa don thlr he has taken no longer rid than he eould have taken by aa equally direct line from one Florid town 14 another. -; ' ' - - - .. , . , ... ... t .(-. 4 :!'".' V-i-'-.X-. ;-'.' ' JfOn. P Tb Jews. BeAdm Fifth hI Tnabd wired to the approaching train. The president imrteaef of being angry, rather liked the Templates audacity, and tha train obeyed their ordinance and he made them . speech.', :- " 5'":?. .m ',?''. '';'? .'';;'?' t' ( At Frederick, Oklahoma, the president headed a band of cowboy and went racing and yelling in regular west ern cowboy fashion through the town,, and he as well, as the rest of them enjoyed the lark immensely. ' Everywhere ha haa .been greeted with informality and even familiarity, apparently a unconscious of and as im mune from harm aa any. governor pr congressman, or even any private citizen might be.' t - , T' -"''' ' True, some precautions are taken; aome secret aerrlce men are around him; but they are really alight protec tion if any. ' There ia always the possibility of a Guitean or a Caolgoaz, but they are rare freaks, and the president might very Jikely "travel all over; the country for, weeks unprotected, 'without encountering one of them. - Yet precautions against such insane' freaks "should be taken, and there is ground for fear that the, president in his irrepressible vitality ia aOmewhat too reckless.. X - However, it is plain that our president travels about, in city and country, under very different conditions from those which surround European monarchy when abroad, or even at- home. .,,; ?,:, ... " 11 g V V:" s7, ' MAYOR DUNNE'S "IMMEDIATE" PROGRAM. AYOR . DUNNE evidently means, business. ; He was not elected, on a municipal ownership p.at form to sit down afterward and say tha thing that the difficulties seem insurmount able, or that there must be months and perhaps years of investigating and considering ways and. mean. He pro poses to move right forward, and literally ,.keep his pledges, or at least to try to do ao. , He aaya he win make an offer to the owners of, the street railways of a compensation for their properties. If they refuse this; and refuse to leave the amount to im partial arbitration, he will at once begin condemnation he thinks he can bring to a success- 1 .1. - 11 t. a 1. V-T1 I 1 rut coDCiusioa in a icw monuta. obi u an u wuw tu this, if the railroads refuse a -reasonable price for their properties and obstruct condemnation proceedings, he roads. This, accustomed' to our nar row streets, seems to us impracticable, but Chicago s streets arc much wider than ours, and, Mayor' Dunne, presuming that he is not bluffing, evidently knows -what he is talking about and what he can do. . ."-, Sit would Seem that a good deal. depends on tbe courts, and the common apprehension naturally ia that the trac tion companies rather than the people are likely to find allies or supporters in the courts; but Mayor Dunne has himself been on the bench a good, while, he has been Studying this "problem, a good while, he knows the legal phaserofhe-artuatfonr and when he says he can bring about municipal ownership as demanded by the people it must be supposed that he" bas m pretty "safe and sane" idea of what he is talking about 'S ; v .."''.. At all event, Mayor Dunne will be an object of wide spread and. attentive interest during his term of office. If he succeeds, his aecomplishrnent may be the beginning ' IMPROVEMENT OF HUMBLE .HOMES. NOTICED, with pleasureand we the fact merits this notice that civic y improvement is by no means confined to the premises of the' rich and well-to-do those . with fine houses and grounds. In a great many cases; and in all parts of town, the poorer people, those living in com paratively, humble houses, and who perhaps have but a little patch of ground in ; front or on one side, nave spaded it up and sown it to grass seed or planted flowers therein, and are otherwise tidying up their premises. Thia is not astonishing, indeed, it was to have been ex pected, for poor people usually, do their full part in any good work; but the fact should be noticed and approved, and the wprkcnconragcd-jrherdlarccQrt of jiouses far below those of the first or even the second class that are being improved a little in appearance m one way or another, as the tenants can afford; and many a little plat of ground that haa lain untouched by spaded rake or hoe, and barren, for many years, will this summer rejoice in a new coat of nature's inimitable green, or gladly bear its quota of ornamental shrubs and flowers. While this ia true, there are many people who have, not yet done their little part in making Portland tha-City- BeantifuL Chances to do this are still nomerous, and none should be neglected. . The humble homes of the poor ought to be thus improved and rendered atractive, even more than Prom , "M oUaatrava," a Popular London -" . - puy. The woman' who know Greek wfJl still spend an hour and a half la d lng her hair for a party. I calculate (hat If Women wore their hair ahort a mill ton ' unemployed hours would be thrown dally upon tha world. The young couple with tha grains of tic still upoa them start blithely across th marriage links. Much depend on the way they negotiate their flrat disil lusion or bunker - -.- . . . Passion wing maids, and perseverance widows. - ' Th rejected lover should never lea hope. In addressing the lady hi ton should be soft, mellluflous a aonth wind rustling aver orange trees. Orange trees noC cypresses. . . A woman acquires log-le when aha has a checkbook of her own. Maa la fickle and 'woman capricious. Or vio versa. - :" , ,. The-man who sum up women in sentence . is ths man -' whom can fool with a phrase. ' . - It I a , woman' delightful quality that' ah 1 not Interested In politic. What is love? An electrio spark that files at Irregular- tangent and rleo-cheta-wUdly from heart to heart" Now it soars upward and finds a lodging In tha superior brain, ; then Itg descends. boomerang fashion, and leaps at th mil of a girlt The poef hare babbled of rove since th first Introduction -of rbyms, philosophers look through their g lasers chemists dissect and grammar ians parse but all that we know or need know IS that Cupid is young. ' - Th-woman -who I attracted by th man of the massive brain will do wisely to marry hi good looking brother.' ... Proud af sTa t,e ly XJf. . Prom tha Atchison Olob.- .Tou.sr worrying yourself unneces sarily about th old woman who live alone," write a snappy woman to th Qlobe, , "I wleh to aay that I hare my garden la before any of my neighbors, that I bav my work vdne earlier In ths morning, that I keep my houae and lawn looking better-that I . nersr dis turb my neighbor by nols of quarrel ling or babies coming from my bouaS, and they hav no occasion to worry about " Small, Ctcc . I,-.! -.1-1 -,111-!) ;, But jefrenm. Is dead, : .y'-;;- v' rNe, tat ragtatee yonr peltttoa. ' . ', An - Nan eeeaea to the front asjeJa next lively tima trtata. . - The church wOl maatx addS- Uona t ' Oct yamr eexomutailof Setetis and avoid jta ruah, Perhaps not hunting real hard for Togo. to be afraid of thd local option law. When , woman get after dirt and atanehoa they have to fly. The poople of aorthar Idaho aria ge tag to show how to do tt JuAt Roe-oa la risht;. elaan p tbo guionaa, and soap taam clear of ruux. f Vt tha paopto bwlat .eat naodad rafl roaaa, and ga after tham vnta thay t . .v.- -J-.. ;'; iv-t" v. Don't warryi doubttaaa Uara hi Snaka btu anUdoU aioag wtta tha futwatdantra If Taddr ahooid ba bitten by a, or a anaka ho aalght net think It eulta a Jolly. - . ;. ' Work on tha Cenio eanal win aaaa basin at laat, on aoooont of which we oaa an afTord to haTTmh acaln. Battar be a doaen old than marry Chlaaman Albany &NBOCnbta Or any on of a good many white men, th,r' ... v H'J' A rt.y - But If the president had gun ant alnglei handed and nnholpad. tha wolves and bear might not hav com so easily In hla way. . . . ,.y.- -, , ,".-.. District ' Attorney Jerama aay Tfasmaa Jefferson was 'a faker. Jaracae la detarmlnad to keep adding t . hla stock af notorlaty. ' "Lawyer k T. C Dedd dsolara that Rockefeller and Roger ar saints on earth. And Rockefeller and Roger re spond: m Dodd w tmat.t--v..-i-. ' Judge Parker aald seen vary good thing In his Jefferson day peach, and so did Mn Bryan m hla, and yet their political Ideal ar vastly different, v - Nevertheless, tha people wm not be pleased to see H. C Prick placed in tha cabinet. ' Thar are eertaisly aa able men wh are not as objectionable aa ha. Tha advanoe'ruard of thai army faker, swindlers and thieves who al waya follow big crowd are airtvrag to take in people attending th fair. Look out foe thanv . , , t t ...... If young Dud Hyde haa so many millions, perhaps ba had better' dlvld soma of It n with tha Equitable polhry nouwra wnoaa mooey h nas a spending so lavishly. . As If th enar did not", hav trochlea enough, be now ha nearly an tha Ri tan lawyer after him and bis anti quated government. Tha bin come constantly mora hopeleaa Greet year for Orwjan,' . , N up. ly all Oregon towns ar cleaning ; Anything a eaa want oa. earth in Oregon. Bom alfalfa field U re or IS Inches high already. . One eompany ia Malheur county, with mar titnea, will shear lrt.se sheep. r. Weal aiowats win hav lots of moot with which to visit th fair this year. '' Produesr of , ths : splendid ..Oread Bonds valley say tt looks Ilk 7 year there, - . Two Benton ounty ' naany goats yielded SH pounds each at mohair var a foot . long. ,-'. .i ' tlood snarning: la your dog poisoned yetr- is th usual salutation asw la Iiulepandanoe. ; ' ' : ; s j ' Vp In 'Xaa county, a ' grandmother and granddanghtar were both married tha aame www. " .. . " .-. The - Albany Democrat demand that barn be moved off th streets. 'Tweald be a good more. ; -..; i ',- Bops, wool, fruit, grain, ftah, lumber. Uvoatock, dairy product mines every uung au rignt in uragon. . ' . ;. ' Harvest time lasts all tha year In Oregon for grain, fruit, wool - flab. gold, lumbar, . fat - oattl - and other Within th past two weeks three Im ported stallions hav been purchased by Wallowa county farmers, at a oost of 7,00e.i '..-.; ,' ,'..,', A Paadleton man was fined til for merely trying to indue another man to take drink with- him. But. h used a gun as a piraadr. . . .... . . , 4 . Aa Albany boy 11 months old drank a lot of ooal OIL perhaps out of Infantile sympathy with J. D. but tha doctor pumped him out and be smiles again. Milton people ar boycotting the mill and stores owned by J. I Mam, wh ha brought a suit against a large um ber of people who have beea aoev torasd to us water, from th Walla Walla river, which Elam claim th ax- elusiv us for hla mtlL . ; - , ; t Madras Pioneer: Chris Barry want to Portland Monday to look after some property, and incidentally, be aay h la in need of a flret-clasa eook, whom h intends to seour on hi trip. Bravo) Now, you other bachelor friend, go thou and d likewise. - .. , . . A Portland young Wian was an rased to teach a echool la Wallowa county. and after teaching en day -hit th trail" for home. It la aald that he wUbed to get a permit t tasch without an evaminatlon and when . tbe eonntv superintendent rf USsd this h grew Oregon SicleKgkts j .tfaint hearted. - t Sunday CcKool' 1 drat. Jaakma, B. B.) 'April it, IMS Topic: "The "upper at Bethany John ajl:ll. Oolden text She hath done what aha could Mark Xir:. Responsive reading: Psalm art. Betweaa th raising of Laaaras and tha visit which Jesus paid to hla home la Bethany, perhaps two months Inter vened. Kaowlug at what, data tha pas chal full moon that year, we know that "U day before th Passover," tha data of our Lord's return, would coincide with the last day af March. - Tha rais ing of Lasaru occurred probably In January. Jeaus had withdrawn. to Gel Ill ee Immediately after restoring Lasa rus to life, because to hav waited would hav aonatltuted the hoax at Bethany a atom osatar of priestly animosity. For a brief period be sought quiet gad rest at Ephralm. a town of whose sit we know nothing further than that th nar rative require It to be looked for In Peraaa,; so me where south of th Baa of Qelllee, and probably near to ths river Jordan. Aooordlng to Matthew (Matt. xix:l). our Lord .returned by a detour through - Qelllee;- ... aooordlng' to . Luke (Liuka xvtlill). he passed through parts of Samaria aa wall. Mark mentions a a umber of wwman (Mark kv:0. 41) who followed with him "up- to, Jerusalem." Some f the w know to hav bean of tha neighborhood of Capernaum. It would tharafora aeem probable that he at friends and disciples from th vi- amity of that city. Both Matthew and Mark tell us that hi prog ma was at tended by vast multitudes wh aeoom- It waa while upon this final Journey that th blessing of little children oo eumd (Mark x:ls-l). It was en his way to Bethany that ha encountered tha young ruler who was so impressed by tha teaching of Jesus but so f ottered by the love of wealth (Matt, xlx:l). At Jericho be healed a blind man (Mark x:-U),' and astonished both friends and foe by going to be ,gueat with th publican Zaoeheus (Luke xlx:l-l. - Our liord not only ' foresaw what awaited him at Jerusalem, but he sought to prepare the minds of hi disciple for these events - (Luke xvlll:il-lt). The hint of violence seemed , Incredible to them, surrounded aa he was My hundred. perhaps thousand, wh- would hav given their Uvea for him.' Indeed, for som time it and to th rulers them selves an though all plots war likely to come to naught because of th crowd which gathered as soon aa his preseno waa made known. Nothing seemed lea likely to occur than his arrest, unless h should b given up In aa unguarded moment by soma pratandad friend. Thia is th last thing hi, real friends thought of. but Jeeua himself knew that such a betrayal waa coming. , JV .. , V-''- t The fcawjosv : , Tars 1. 'It required a little eourage oa the part of th family at Bethany t receive guest a threatened. If he should be put to death, what would be tha punish meat roaarvd for tham? Las- arua would be regarded aa his confeder ate. Tha . Immediate disciple separate ana nr. bat Lasarus horn la the very hot bed of Jewish hata. He must remain. But thoa wh feel that Jeeua has "Saved them" d not count tha "peas and cone.1? - XJfavltoalf U at the disposal of the Master. Those wh era ashamed of Jesus or afraid- af man have .never been conscious of all that Jesus does for hla beloved. If we wool that h ha given unto us Ufa, tha rage of man to a llttl thing. It oannot affright us. - .- c Vara S. How far tsumru and hla atoters wee from hiding their dlsclple- snip, in seen in- the net that they not only roealred Jesus, but received him publicly and treated him with marked honor. The man who Is "saved" ought not to whisper the nam of Jean into th ear ot a safe confidant Be should everywhere exhibit hi affection and gratitude, fa this reception accorded to their master, both Lasaru and hla later played conspicuous part. What they did. they did in a large way. Vers a, Mary was not content with making a feast for Jesus. Probably the moat eosuy treasure she possessed waa a -vial of precious perfume, th gift per naps or asm rick friend. Prince as sometime bestow present . Which are handed down for several suoeesslv gen erations before their use. This 'pound or the ou or spikenard. Ilk th attar of rosea distilled in Hindustan, waa worth a fortune la market where such lux uries were old. . With th lavish lm pulse of affection, ahe broke th neatly xiaac -tnet enclosed th sard and stowed it upon the head (Matthew) and feet of her lord. - She qould have don no mora had he been an emperor and ah a subject queen. It wis aa aet that could not be hid. for immediately Its per- lume permeated au the dwelling and an nounced that something extraordinary had taken place. Met-rwhile Mary had used her own lock as a rviett to refresh th weary feet of her beloved master. It wag an not. of homage sig nificant of " it age and environment. Moat of th acta by which any people express affection ar arbitrary, as, for example, to the cultured phi ns man, our shaking hand ia considered the height or the ridiculous. ; This act of Mary pressed an Impulse and an affection Which would la ur country and In our age adopt other modes of expression: but w understand her feeling - and Christ blessed her for th deed. . . Vera 4. Judas had doubtless to feel that this life of prayer preaching was not what ha had joined th llttl band to experience, Undoubt edly this Jesus ot Nasareth posse supernatural powers, put why not use them for the enrichment of his follow ers instead of for the: relief of' beg gars T -. .- -. - - vera s. Log naxxar maa neror an slnoe, Judas would cover a mean spirit with a pretentious rob. It Is a derll lab, thing to suggest,, a baa purpo for a generous act. Verse sv It is a common excuse for stlnaineaa that th cause to which ether giv la not s noble or lofty as th one to which we would give. Foreign missions are not o worthy es home missions, and home , missions not so worthy a hospitals, and hospitals not to b mentioned . in th earns breath with soup house; and so on t tha- sod of th Ignoble chapter. , It la bad enough to be mean, but worse to try ao lie out of Mri " ' ' i ., .. Terse T, Happily' for us, Jesus is upon th sld of th impulsive, not upoa the side or th -erltlcel. To do not object to people spending something for th' proper and decent Interment Of a dead body, do you T Very welL This will da for my funeraL ' Charge it p to that." Jesus waa not la th mood for further argument with a man of Jndaa' spirit. But we ought to remem ber also that these word of Jesus Justify vs In some expression of our omotione which has not an eoonomle eye. . The church or nod should be beau tiful as well as uaefUL The monument to a parent or a child is not a waste of money even, though it doe bring In rent Thrift I hot th only grace, and tha anrabwomsht Who toils month to beryVts tcrijj, is not frowned btm fcy k vox - . rr t, r-e never 13 ta ti day Ut tf o urtualty to do r d to tha aeedr. Eouutleas lianra ht was known to all to daughter of want la Bethany, th refuree for th old, th slek and tha Indigent ar built by thoss who pour out their love for Christ In building beautiful house of worship and ending missionaries to ontrL Africa, In fact, no nation not dlswJietlvaly Cartatiaa haa aver eatabllahed large and permanent relief toe , it children ot want. Vers ft. The best advertisement of a -orasent x Saviour Is .a, risen sinner, -Oood win needs no bush." ,la.an old proverb, A man may make a minion dollars by "bluing th town," but he cannot "get up a revival" by aay wuch sdvertisement.' it take a savea snaa. Where lasaru was. Jesus did not need to sar anything. Th man who sat be side him wag evldenoe of hla power and purpose. It require God aa truly io raise up a soul "dead in trespass and etna,' es to rata up a body three days burled. Bad wa not seen tne nrt ooa we would find It difficult to ballev la It possibility. But wa have seen It and w rajoioe ia the witness which Jesus haa In oar own dav to hi DO WOT. Verse 10. , The men who say that If Jeeus ware only preached a he ought to bo preached, thousand would crowd th church oa, do not seem to have read history, especially gospel history, to much advantage. When a man hatea reHaion. ha hata lta best features. Be hatea th evidence that he cannot deny. Th Boxers put .the missionaries to death not because they did not under stand them but because they did un derstand them. They understood them to be holy men, and "they hated noiy men.- Nothing rouses such fury among wicked men as a raVtval among good men. They ar friendly to th church until it does something in anst Than they would away with It. Th drinking and dnnk-maninsT eiemema in amrm tried to kill the reformed John B. Gough ( year age, not because they doubted hla being saved but because they knew be was saved. -Versa 11. Nevertheless, if th gospel be th saver ef death to some, tt i the sweetness f Ufe to others. Th Jw waa aakad to determine hi own atti tude toward th Meiaa; nut uh at titude one chosen, fixed and determined character.- And nothing wins so many diastoles to th Lord a tha risible evi dence tjjatt-n no aav,- . , i; (The expedition la now en route up tha Missouri river from Fort Maadau and bound for the headwaters la t Rocky mountain. 1. . Vi.:-f - April IS W proceeded under , a the breesa from th south, and clear, pleas ant weather. At seven miles we reached tha lower point of an Island, in a bend to th south, which 1 two miles in length. Captain Clark, who . went about nine miles northward from the river, reached th higher grounds, which. Ilk those w bav seen, ar level plain without Urn bar; her he observed - a ' number of drains, which- descending from the bills. pursue a northeast course, and prob ably empty Into the Mouse river. branch of th Asslnlbola. which, from Indian accounts, approaches very near to the Missouri at this place. .Like all the rivulets of ., this neighborhood. , these drains ware so strongly impregnated with mineral emit, that they are not fit to drink. Ba .saw also tha- remain ef several earns of Ass! nl bo Ins. Ths, low grounds oa both sides ot the river are ex tensive, rich and level, in a little pond oa th north wa hear, for th first time thai oa the eroaaaag at iroga, wnten exactly resembles that of th small frog In th Unied Sates; there are also in the plains grant-quantities of geese, and many of th grouse, ar prairie hen, a far as words can represent It. ia eook. cook, cook. ee. ooo, coo, th first part of which both male and female use when flying; the mala, ton, drum with his wings whan be flies In . th sam way, though not ao loud, aa the pheasant j they appear ta be mating. . Som i deer, elk and goats war tn th low grounds, and .but falo en th sand beanbea, but they war uncommonly shy; w also saw a black bear and two whit ones. , At IS miles we passed en -the north side of a small creek JO yards wide. Which w called Ooatpen creek, from a park ar enclosure for the purpose f catching that animal which thorn who went up th ereek found, and which w presume to have been left by the Asslnl botns. Its watar ia Impregnated with mineral salts, and the country through which Uptown oonslsts af wide gad very fertile plains, but without any tree. - W encamped at the distance of Si anile on a sand point to th south; era passed la th veiung a rook in the middle of the river, th channel of which, little above our earns, is oonflned within M yards. OPPOBT U SUXJJUi AS v ; From tha Pilot Rock Robot. ' The total Investments by Pendleton people in th Mexican town of Jallaea are estimated at several thousand dol lar and mostly by men who have never seery th sun-parched dun on which theSTown ef Jallsoo is to be founded. Thousands of dollar have been with drawn from'tb legitimate channel of trade in Pendleton and squandered in wildcat mining schemes and real eatat boom outside f this county. r; - - Thoa who hav . remained .'home looked after their farming Interests and tended their, flocks. . Investing their money In Pendleton or Umatilla county property, are tha wsl-tovdo cttissn of th county today. . I. - We cannot recall th name ef one who has .bettered his conditio by leaving thia county. We can name tO .who left this county worth ItO.SOO to 1100,000 who are now practically broke. Prom three to five hundred thousand dollar waa withdrawn from Pendleton and in vested la Port Town send and Tacoma property every dollar' of which was lost. Pendleton contributed it quota to million that responded to th cry ef Klondike, and to a invested in the ex ploitation ot the precious metal and th genera development of our northern neighbor. We do not know ef any prof its on lnvtstment un there being real ised by Umatilla count eltlssn. Later on the Sumpter mining boom truck Pendleton with full fore.' Now It 1 Alberta, Canada, and Jaliaco. Msg. loo, and both these places are drawing heavily on the brawn, brain and finan cial resources of th county. Tet the vital forces of the county were never more buoyant. . Crona continue aood. 10S ner Mnf ttt tittle lamb com forth annually to sua themselves on -the 'sward, land and stock vaiues hav aa upper .tendency and th constant drain of the accumu lating funds of th county by those en gaged In outsld Investments Is scarcely noticeable. That "distance lends achantmfnt te the view," ie abundantly ahown tn th restlesanes of many of the good people Of this county som going to where snow is found ftv feet deep, other to th home of the eeatlpede and taran tula. --'..'.,.-'... r v Tom I thansht von were on tha wa ter wagon. i . . Dick I was. But Msb elaces al ways make me dissy. end X fell ofc I ' ; . .' ' . 1 Ijcwib ancl Clark . aMvMa :" .. Detroit Pre Press. .. , arraer-- irssOJggs, - Toledo, Oa, April LftWTo tna Editor ef .The Journal Por a number of month X hav been a constant reader of your excellent paper, with aa Increasing oonfldeno In your ability, and purpose to give your ieadar tha best th press could afford. - ' Your plan for th. best possible -won-, Alt Ion la city, state and general govern ment is certainly to be commended by vary citiaen loyal to th right, and w ar rejoicing at th fruit an- already manifest, la tha stir, among the "dry bones Go on with the good work, un til the right shall prevail. - , Tour reports of the splendid work Of the evangaUatle servios gave great Sat isfaction to your reader her, and doubtless sjav encouragement to the workers a wall as carrying th truth, to very many who could neither see nor hear tha faithful men of God while uttering their burning messages. ' Tb antagonism to th work was hot , an unusual thing, for whenever th Holy Spirit prompt lnfut man to leave the ranks of sin and follow Jeaus, the enemy of ail good, through hla chosen ' agents, hinders so far as be Can the work and i workers, . . . The work the devil does Is no sur prtea, but - the agencies h choose is another thing altogether. -' .' . ' Wh would think that the editor of the Oiegoalaa would car whether Dr. Toy wonderful expedenoa by being -told to maa would in any way hurt tha eauae of parity, sobriety and .truth er not? :- v .' . . Th trouble was, the dvl feared he might loee his power ever eome of bl -slaves, and so he chase lb "great dafljT -to protect hi ranks, , . .. . " I have read vary earafully the eom-v muni cations touching the evangeliatio ' work, both pro and eon, and I have now before m your Uau ot th 10th last, in which Rev.- W. P. Small has hi aay as touching eotu part at th teaching. and the tosehar. . v ., Whan aa attack Is mad by en who ' . cAalma to be a follower of Jesus, It Is . . much more difficult to understand.' Mr. Small aaya, as touching the doc- -trin of future punishment: "Where ' our friends and loved note with th ma- ' Jority of -the human - race muat go." ' Now, I would be glad if Mr, Small will . giv th name 'of any man anywaere ' who vr mad such statement ia any pulpit. ' The protostant church teachea , nothing of tha sort. '- More " than half . the race i tn infancy and ao are saved and aafe. v . . . . -- I hav' never . heara such statement" from any pulpit anywhere, and seriously '.. doubt aa-to his ever hearing such at,, any tim. . ", .-... " - ;- : r H say again: "Nor did tha men .' wh preached this doctrine -bellav it.". He not only maksa th preachers hypo- . crltas, but willful liars. Not vary char- ' , Itabla, I tak it, and t am sur that if , anyone should charge - Mr. Small with being either a hypocrite or a liar ha " would tak It a a gilevoa inaait.-Seh unkind attacks can only .do barm, for there ar weak one who ar trying for a batter Ufa, and to destroy th eonfl- v deno ef on ef than llttl ones tn th - en wh may bav led them to librlat- ta to turn them back from the right way, , and perhap destroy tha souV , '. -, If Mr. BmaU' statements of doctrine , are . true, ao far as tbe future 1 cob- i7 corned, what dlf fereno eaa it. make aa 1 ; to liars and hypocritaaf They are Just V aa sure of beavea aad haplnoss a ar ue .gooo am pious. - . j ,j Wa are- enjoying - The Journal very much aad , so long aa It rings out so clearly along th lines ef right, you can count na la the- family ot readers. , , f- '." aTew Abowa th Beemaraatst ; Portland. April 14 To th Editor ef ' The. Journal ! notloa that a move haa .:. ' been made not onlyby the city author!- . - , ties but by th ladles of the city to try and hav the city la general cleaned ' ; up and placed In a healthy oondltlon. This ia proper ' and right and they '' should bav the support of every good eltlssn, aad as I consider myself a good eitlsen and a wall-wisher of the city, I . wish to call th attention of thoa good people to th fact that they should ealL, ox xae resiaurania in inia city. partially th eheap one, and take a general observation ef their : kitchen " and they will see th dirtiest places en earth, -..'j , t. ... -. k I am aa eld restaurant maa and re cently earn from tb east. - I hav ao tntanaon or going into buslnees here, . but naturally I pay some . attention to 4 matters of thia kind, as I hav spent many rears tn th bwsmesa. . X have traveled ever a large portion ef' this country and haw been tn many cities. but to toll yen th truth, I hav never sn as dirty and unhealthy kitchens in my lire as you will and in som or ' tb restaurants In this city, ' maA you will Bad som ef thanf right tn the heart " of your city. , It a sham and a dla- , grae that they are permitted to remain in such condition. Diseases of ell kinds eome from such filth. - - , A' . - mMMmmm. aiA1 ' . PorOand. April II. To th Editor 'ef The Journal I desire to ' say n few words in regard to the recent appoint ment of th tt new nolle officers In thia elty. X waa one of the candidate for a star, "hut was turned down be cause I am over it years of sge. . Bow ever, I had the notion that a man who a been a. good soiaur - snouid also prov a good policeman, I have served in Uncle Sam's army both as a private' and non-com missioned .offlcer.but it ims I . am not good: enough to be a member of the . Portland polio- force. Since reading the piece In last Sunday' Journal I am wondering if I am not . fully as ltgtbl as the great majority. If ther enforce th civil service rut . against ona man, why sot against allT At least I can show a clean record, but - that -' seems to be of minor im portance in th selection ef polic of- '' Beers.' v, t, 8TON& i :, . a comffOaf aWtro. . , Prom th Roasburg PlalndeaUr. Thar should be oms substantial re course for the man or woman "who Is kmn,h( In fj AAtirt fla some etvfll .mia. snd who without Justification is slan dered, maligned and -Vilified by some young, bansy-ieggea, weasei-eyea, lantern-Jawed, putty-headed upstart of a lawyer, who mistakes abuse for argu ment and his profession ss a license to drag th character and tha good name .. of respectable people In tha ratr. If a few self-respecting people who fall vic tims to such outrageous treatment ' would at tha first opportunity thereafter matte a few Indents with a two-year-old club on the aoft cranluma of such smart . Alecks, a more sane custom might soon be lnasgurated. . ZeVrt or.,', , i., : -.. ; prom Punch, .'-.'. General Kuropatkln has , been suc ceeded by .General Llnlevlch: As aa Anglo-German gentleman . told us the -other day, "Only a vch er a Visard can ears the Biisslsna" - ' pay fos th casket la which bar '.'. .' , t..,.,r;.. i-U , :si .... .-. v , v - - " 4 y. r:-',Uivi: :