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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (May 26, 1905)
1 . I -r- "v-tty- -' 11 r X .V - -.1- i - a'K! FRIDAY. MAY 23, " I ! - Portland,' oregon, 4- -' f r . . i , . A. ' ' . . - ' . - 1 5 ? 4' -TH E- OR-EGO.ND-A:rMJJ.UR ,Ati4N D -N & NT at W.aVJ. A PSR-. C. . JACKSON FUBI4SHED . BY JOURNAL PUBLISHING CO. -- --T-mr i j II-- i JNO. P. CAKROU. Published very nine (wept Sunday) and, very Suiuly rooiy-tttS JounuqBundinc, Fifth and Vamhfll IHK fJUESnuN AT ISSUE. T I HESTROXG FEATtTEK of Hie mayor's -candt- dacy is it weakness of should be. All, or al- -niost all of certain "clas'ses," or interests, are for film Without their nractinrlHr solid support he could not bcLxlcctcd. Ntrwrthpe'"inlerests,' and thejjelejvliaJ "stand for themjiaul-4edntrTna"tryr worthy men per sonally, are as a "whole in opposition to the moral senti ment of the cityTjieXaj--aosrwn, nriy an Iv4er-aTnriHer5usiness of most of them, 'White legitimate, the source of- a-largc-propor.tinh of frirne.somrnitted. -Athe case now stands, the mayor, while the candidate of :r part :y71s m aSiore : important "sense, "and peculiarly" arid especially, the candidate of the liquor dealer and their " immediate allies in both' directions." Of thts fact there U im guest ion: nobody disputes itA ' ' ' :. A. Th.. naramoiint-ouestion on June 5 then will be: Perhaps th president wa'' ohkrged transportation on' hie bear . hides. . ...Lawfon, haa been writing a year, and announce that he la hearfng th point. ticket is non-oarusan ana wa jramcu ,wiiuuis p.uivyT if- ou have- nothina- elaa to do. of selecting men ot known mtegntxJkaa-"aTcier, .woo; . The mayor is especially-and "as matters have turned Mf. clcctcjLj-flM J.arlragrrTnettutict with tidciity to - ' chiefly-the candidate of td.tictetlJi interests. The nornineei On tharticket for Flegel, R. K. Steele and JJr B.A.t"row.n. tne can didates for ward councilman are: First ward, T. J..Coft cannoii; second ward, H.- W. Wallace; .(against Larry Sullivan); tb ird ward, L. L.-Paget; fourth ward, John CorkishT fifth ward, W. Y. Masters sixth ward, H. W. Parker; seventh ward, Samuel Morrow; eighth ward, M. A. Raymond: ninth ward,:S.P. Ander$6n;.ienth. ward. YrT. Vaughn. -fhmtld these element b-sUongex in. the cityof Portland than all the elements that naturauy srana in. opposiwviir relected.'as against a man in me prime 01 mwno, aianus ;' for all interests andpeople, under' the law,-alike?, Thil is the question to decide and t is the only question. - '-;::',"' "V.l": ':: A-. THE QUESTION QFCHARGES. i JllT. , " GREAT MA Ny-tastern people have- made their plans or are making them,tO come to the Lewis -nd Clark exposition. Many others are thinking ir in r hTTilvrTiot veC finally decided. With most of them, numbering many thousands ihjqestion of cost iitliehiHorlant one. They want to know in advance Wit what it will cosfrrhe two chief items of expensi 1 are railroad, fariBnjJccommodationTtrPortland. rbtheseeTeTmownow what the railrbads'will charge them. .The other chief item for they know pretty well 4hat visits- to the fair wiircosti-is what they are study- Inflr about and -wishing to learn, about and be, assured ot. ; -A great proportion of these people wish to make a con siderable stay. If the cost is not too mucn tney may stay month or two in Portland and in making trips'ld othef points in the northwest.. It is a longnjljiew-triiLJarJ -them, and they don t want to make it merely to siay-iw " or three days and go back and see nothing but a glimpse otthe-lair, : I't f ot the fair that they, want to ee so much - as th e country, the-r Pacif icj: north westrO regon, i- Portland. ' ----- Now theTreater-proportiott-of" these-peoplewhose AsTjjIim areunot-yet d'efinintely:niadet Snd eve n mariyuvho have decided to come, but'.whbse stay is indefinite, will J wait till late in the summer for two reasons: That fs a comparatively lull time with them; and to hear reports front those who came earlier as to the cost ot accommo' - lations here." Let the report go abroad during June that -vtsito,riS-are -being overcharged, that-fkes of accommo- dations are exorbitant, and it wiiL ceter-tnany tnousanas Parties to a strike seldom Accept good advloe.' nelfliha1'." yranlt S. ISertnetlV'U. 1L Meneice and v.. U. Shafferi were also indorsed by the liquor men. The rea- cAti iA tk n n ! if"r neon -iri'irthIPt-ldateS--ie ceived the indorsement of the nquOf jnteusts is because j t need t or -anybodyj they are expected to be subservient to those interests in the- event of their election, JTbey-will bcec?o1soTthe Good citizens who prise theweware andlhe good name pijjur-Uy-mnstTiee" folt that thetie'xt council is not thS creature of the saloons. Among the candidates who are to 'the field are men of honesty and independence and there ji-no dearth of material-fo- ouncil which shall be above suspicion. f-Vork 1 ot 7B hours jt day It nseeaeary A comoact. viirbrous oraianwation 4S -behind the can didates who received the" indorsement of the liquoj; deal ers. If these candidates are tb be" defeated,' decent ch' iztna-muat, unite. their .Stjej.gtjtndinust vote together. The citizens ticket gives opportunity to ao inis. inm All-of-these-4nen-are believed to be honest, incor ruptible and free from he influence of the salbbris. A such, they should have the support pf every vote does not wish to see t whiskey Trmruling-thecity coun cil. VtaBee'iW8ftd by the liquor deal ers are not the only undesirable'candidaterfor city bun ci,o loyal itiaen of Portland will escape a sense of shame-if such men a. Larry Sullivan and Georgeoren son are elected. John P. Sharkey, Fred Merrill and D. T. Sherrelt ht veHLserved-jnlbTpresenlLCOtinCil and-none of them his made a record' which "entitles him to re election. rraEAtXROXEfr THROUGH - Jxomeommg- latcf-m -the-sumfnerrand others from tayH ! ; 7- . a .l. f .u. ..... I - t- jing .long, It ins ifryai injury ui inc in, iu uic (icaur injury oi Portland and all Oregon. We believe that no such, report will be well, founded - there are always peopte who would grumble at any price; but it is exceedingly important that reasonable and ex- ' periertced p,eople.,whp a , willing to Jay fair-prices, - should make nb such report We thirik the situation is such that any one -who would try to overcharge would 7 : .- be the loser, for there would be! plenty of other places w here charges' would bt reasonable; but everybody hav ". ing accommodations for visitors, ought to consider it a '" positive duty to-his city, state.a1hii region, especially dur ing the earlier period of the fair to. exact only reasonable prices LttJVO-eJl-fonnded "reports of .extortion go .--abroad. It would injure beyond calculation, smallchanGe- .'A . week J. rom.AodayJLLl Only 1 days mora of campalcnlni. ., ' ' -Th Aueeiaaa always win before tho hsttle. " tot make all reaJyu Oresonlana will turn out anyway, It It daea rain. , , " Secretary -Taft la lightly, considered. a nao not: to b ""The "standpatters couldn't get a, Taft to att.-or4ha lld.. 2 L,-- : la . there no legal way back In. Jail again m T-nn-r cr-ks aw-r, Fr-nt ' atr-t f-lL M-rr-a-n. str-t. br-dge, g-mbl-ra tr-stl ... Tom Lawaon la a continual puisle. perhaps because ha Is a comblnslloit of bull and bear. . The professional ganAtlexia-vafealng, aaya an exchange VTfCy doesn't be bluff? We're aorry for you. Miss May, be- eauaa you have to leave before the fair opens, .T . .Trt The school children of Chicago seem to be about as big fools aa the grown people. ' " - ZZ' L- If - aTTcertaln - "vote".-elect 'a mayor, will he not neceasarily be obligated to HiaCelementT . . , j - An aatronomer aaya Mars has a mild and delightful climate,. Hello,- Mars; game tiers In Oregon. Governor-Folk aaya Mleinnrlana are obeying the laws. But can he aee all of them alt tha timet .-1. hope that - the etreete will not pernmnently -continue to be more torn.up thaw' Improved. - "Men ar only boya grown tallilAd boya- are men In mlnlaturer Wltneas achoolboya of Chicago on a atrlke. -NoW, Professor . Wollaber. you have on June 1 a chance to become a popular here, or an object of malediction. - ' The eagle's acream won't be heard In the vicinity of the place -whereTom Lawaon -makes " hla - Fourth - of Jury epeech. -r -. --j "' " ,' HE HAD A REAL KICK COMING. 'E FEEL SURE that every one with bowels of of compassion will heartily agree with Coun cilman Rumelin in the deft and ladylike crit- .'. icism which he makes qf an editorial article in the Ore gonian. In the.course of a letter to that great and good but someV'hat. jtoggle-jointed newspaper. he says: "In v your editorial o today'entitled 'Special Interests and the "T" City,' "you say I escaped conviction through a hung jury. ' - At the majority of the jury were for acquittal I would -bareptefcrred theexpfessioti bjrrlttmg jury." ." ' " We venture to reiterate that, there is no man who , prices his home ties, whose heart throbs with patriotic impulse, who favors alUthat is' highest and holiest in Llife and government," but will be in hearty accord with toun:ilman Rumelin itv the severe bnt-gentlemanly-rc A buke which he administers to the Oregonian. That a ewpapff which makes-preUna'O" to- knowledgeot the niceties of construction, tjjat is prone to make del icate, distinctions' in the shades of meanings of words, that affects to be a purist in its style, that attempts to raise blisters on the hide f those, guiltyf verbal in felicities or anachronisms, should itself be guilty of such-a faux pas is' so amazing that we feel assured the public? will rise in mass to tender the assurances of its distinguished consideration to Councilman Rumelin, the tfticrowned-king of local word carpenters. "Escaped conviction THROUGH a hung jury!" Ye gods and little fishes""lKiw could it have been guilty of such barbarism ..Avhcir'.'the handier,.; more easily-written -and infinitely ' preferable BY would have expressed the sense not. al ne ! with superior felicity but wjth the air-tight accurcv to: ' wnicii appertains to a gnat's heel.' Ve are surprised and --gratified I that" Councilman "Rumelin under the stress , , of such extreme prqvocatibn, should have jstrained his l-!Tridignat5bn" within such pure andJqftboundsf-Thcre was only .one. tUmif-mnredcadly and more infelicitous ",c"wliich thcregoirian could have said and that was that .A' Councilman Rumelin had been ACQUITTED of the 11 charge of bribery either by or through .ji hung jurytBut , even that'claim, gifted word-artist tholigh he be, Council- tnan Rumelin himself would have found disallowed infthe Ah'ghcsf courts of verbal equity whefe he has-now dc tervedly won a. place, not to mention the criminal courts iJf" Multnomah county where he likewise has found a . place .perhaps' equally conspicuous but -doubtless much --- Jes-to- h'tr likingr- ; ' J, - ...'..;; 3 -- THE VITAL NEED OF GOOD COUNCILMEN.. IFTllE VOTERS of Portland would not see the nixt city-souncil the mere puppet of the liquor interests. r i they must see to it that honest and' independent : cbitncilmen arc elected. An honest council is asyjtlljt -eressary-Trrn-bonRtajW. nt ion has t been. a much' absorbed by the mayoralty cpntest , that -rr-there is grave danger fhat unfit and tinsrrupulons men " will get into the councils The liquor dealers will make j : juifty effort to control the r.ext council. They have ; named the men of their choice among the candidates' and neither, money uor labor will be- soared to rleVf -thfin " "Four of the five Reptiblicatr nominees for councifmeiiaf Jrger-J JA, brkeyya!l Kcllalier. John Annand and Thomas' Grsy were m the; notnrioiw "red ticket" of " the Jiquof dealers in the primsrtev . Five of the Reliub- - Iko ward ngmincewRobert A. Trcslon. iienry A. HEOPENING of the Lewis and Clarlc exposition, the beginning of the jand fraud tf'als (perhaps; and the Portland Trity election, are ainhterestitig and4mporUntxveiiU t occur the first "week 4n-JtJnerbttt another event ot greaterimportanceoan.evcn tne cx posltibn, considering - ultimate results, will occur June 3 the formal opening toHiaffic" of the portage railroad between The Dalles and Celilo. . . ... ! At last at last the great Columbia will be! in a "great measure open, not fully yet for some; year, tiot until, the canal ls roader-but aufficientlyMoreguUteAfreight traffic in a considerable degree from large portions of t,he great inland empire to Portland, jraeticallyrOrHhe-aea.ir: :,Up in the Clearwater valley so long bottled up and tiom are already under , way for the. gathering of .thef meet" t pnahing at fui; apeeaairjeadn.t products Ot tnat fegionj-csreais, iruiis, umoer, uvcsiock, minerals, etc., v be delivered at the portage and trans ferred by the new state railroad to an independent Vessel that will convey these products to -i Portland, thus ac complishing their transfer from Lewiston to a deep water harbor without touching the established -transportation lines of paying ..exorbitant -rates to enrich New jfork nabobs . - ' - : ' ' t.. . ' " This, considering thesitnation that has existed here since "the country was settled and production began, is irulyTrsigrrifieantriniporUnt tndjeyen a wonderful event and the people of the inland empire did tne work val iantly. A:' ,' .. '.. . - - ': - I The pasage of this cargo will be the first great object lesson showing he value "of an open, or even a semi opened river, for though the people of the Clearwater valley are yet in bondage, until they can get their prod ucts, hauled by rail to Lewiston and brought down the rm and whether the Northern Pacific can still pre vent this remains to be seen this transaction' will dem onstrate the value of an openjiveras a freight regulator for all traffic that can reach points On the river anywhere between Celilo and Lewiston : This is now-the next great problem, and large local cjmunitie-must-4ielp-to-aolve-t-themseIves-i-a--the peoplebf the Clearwater valley are trying to do. . " HE HAS SEEN IT FOR HIMSELF. ArWORTHlNGTONVgenerarmanager of the r T . XT A C I Cr 1 1 1. in Orffon TiaTTerved-sTOhaTteTingciOTrr r..VrT 1J;B., rnM nnf rf.,. it tL . :'- . . .. I lines that in justice to himself he could not refuse it. Mr. Worthington is one of the great operating men in the railroad world of America and has won his spurs by patient work, from messenger to president The entire business community regrets his departure, not only be cause of the personal regard they feel for; him, but from1 the fact that they know as an operator he was reaching a thorough understanding of existing conditions and that is all important. No railroad man with ideas and con victions could fail to see that the complaints made by the people of this state at the failure of the railroad com panies to ""furnish" necessary transportation facilities are iust. No operating man could view the long haul over Ctsrp gr?dtl iff'" .""r-l'vel mithnnt, a, ghwddee a such economic waste and violation of all the ruleaf TaiP stra roading. W hnre-flo doubt that before this he has made recom mendations which may result in ' good hereafter.: Mr. Worthington's gain is a distinct loss to Portland, but it is hoped with practical unanimity that his j mantle will fall on Mr. O'Brien, the efficient superintendent, who can take up atonce the work where Mr. Vorthington leaves it off. . '-- . :.' r- '. There are iany unenviable positions which a man may Occupy but surely none mofe despicable" than that of the dog in the manger who, himself unable to cat hay, will not alio Wjhosewhajcaaia eat jtli-Thercia i. possibility that the streetcar system of ttm city may be sold to a syndicate of eastern investors. If -the sale is made, and jt js be'yoqd doub the bsf business proposition of the sort that is now.reachable in the United States, there will be turned loose among citizens of this community cash capital of $4,fXX),000; may be more. That amount of local idre capital must seek investment and (lifre is the place whar-it will ba -in vested. Tbere-4ot an interestnotTt .business. 'flnd' not an -individual in. this whple city of Portland who would not be benefited by it. ; And yet up in the Tall Tower sits the dog in the maiiger who is ready to favor anything, to go back on anything, to de nounce anything and everything in the attempt to cre ate uncertainty in theminds of those who are here rep resenting the prospective purchasers."- The "spectacle is not a pretty ope for Portland or the world; it is not a pretty one for humanity to gare at but; fortunately for Portland, its day of influence bas'gone forever and its day. of usefulness, wxcept insofar ,as it serves aV an I ...mmI iti ranMlv fiearin'or A rii ..' the mouth of the Columbia and Port land before the . Lewta and Clark falf close.. - Z- i'lii' J1rf t fatal auto accident In Portland lif-but there wfH-.be:iore. -Th autoa are now ncceealty, but. their driver ahoutd Invariably, ba careful. Not all of them will be. J OREGON SIDELIGHTS Th vote for mayor of Corvallla waa :oi to zoo. . Many caterpillar on tree a and bushe around Hlllsboro. Union la th shipping point for a vaat amount or produce. , A farmer near Dallaa In planting 2S acres or potatoea. Bom new large hopyards Perrydal and Amity. - around Wallowa conntyta another region thatDnrr-work t don tefor forty. badly needs a railroad. -tttoo-ToK"irra1n- In Tamhill county better than ror yeara. Th cleaning up of Dayton I en in earnest, aaya th Herald. Two firms will cur and frees sal mon In Marahfleld thle aeaaon. Corvallla broiler eight week old netted Io.zb per doien In Portland." - ' - I ' Jackionvfll aae no newapaper, but of course one win eoon batarted ther. Many people In and around New-berg have put out new strawberry bed thle piing. ' - A paint manufacturing company." with capital stock of 1209,000 ha been formed In L,an county. , . !- nge thing In Jackson county; more people attended th Fa ml era' In atltute. than th clrcua. The hop crop will be light In some localities according to report. But ther are alwaya such prediction. Lafayette 1 awakening from a deep plumber, aa th cltiaena are looking Into the bright future Instead of the gloomy tTrnWtlH-IndUnaheld ' 'great f ea si In honor of the late White Bull,. and divided up hi property according to thelr: cuatomc . .. . t When ah Aatorla man 1 mlaslnc. every one' flrat Impulse In to count the women In town, to e If onel ahort, says th Aatorlan. . .. , - Ajr:. A new club In The Pa Ilea la 'called the Bwastjka club. Don't Judge It by lta name,' however', It la composed of young Sunday school people. -" AID ONLY -THOSE WfiO CLIMB" er.. hn finally snnniincird thft t" xoula arreat three- men. . il h .thcriraLiiACfl. th.. cberlfi dJcJrd tnai tne rir waa or inonuii tor th peraona who had started It had gained admleaton through a broken wln-dow-a'heytoid-beea employ--" " the New Tork World. " Ajndrew Caruegte;tnan Interview with a .London newiDDt man, -JtnaKea inta bold. htjt hhr an tltheaie llenryjtpj mffrrrn'oTrarielMmauC acliiiiue "t ueed to conjrlbut w nouaing arhettia.' -aid Tdr. Carnegie, "but the raaa th houae were intended -for didn't occupy them, - Educate th; people, TbeyJU. do the reaj.- themaeivea." Mr. Phlooa. boyhood companion and llfelon friend of Andrew Carnegie.. ar- gnearon-Ttieotnerna narthat men ahoutd tx wll noneea, well Tra na irwinnn alcknea and dieeaae, and," thua: condi tioned, allowed to get their own educi lion. . x In defending hla faith In Ubrarle a agalnat model tenementa, Mr. Carnegie aid: '" '' A library redulrea th .recipieat-.! read and atudy. H baome-inore en aibl andjlaer-ln th aocUl acale. tf -X-llave little faith In benefiting peo- ole who do not benefit themaeivea. xou cannot boost a man up the ladder unleaa he doe aome of th climbing nimaeir. If people read thay ivIH-w-'"rnr to-- better-th condition under which they- live. In other wordarrh only way to improve the aubmerged tenth Is to Improve thalr taatea ana naoua. ... . . It la a aueatlon-or. in suomergea tenth va.Jtha awimmtng tenth, and mora can be done by .helping; them-who help tnemaeivea.' In further diculng hi chem for th bttrment of humanity by -du- catlna It. Mr. Carnegi went-into tne aubject of hie new penalon achem for J teacher. H aaldr r -"I hava lv-rTremendou - amount of thought to-thl great quetlon.-arid have coma to th conclualon-that the leaat -rewarded -faU -prof eaalona la that of th teacher In our American higher education. Institutions New York Citygeneroualy, and very -wleely, pro vides retiring penaaona Tor xeacnera in her public achoola. Very few .of our collegea are able to do ao. - The cqn se quence ar grievous- " "Able men hesi tate to adopt -teaching a-a -career, and many .old " professor 'who plao ahould be ocenpiedLby younger men can not be retired." -- Next Mr. Carnegie talked of books and llbrartes-CurtPUBly enough.. IhatLTerri day th Liverpool newspaper reported a rather atormy. meeting or me Birxen- head corporation, whlchteracoeptlng 1 " net the flrf reUngrabont tha aito. steal cotton -waat from th iUUtlmere Sl Ohio shop, which wast waa of a pe culiar kind, and oould not ba found any wher else in the neighborhood. Th oil wun wmcn inia waai " " . t.inn.l mt 1 - - ' - ... -- n.rt n ... -" -- ---- . i ,h, thev have nivir lavkl hnt nm . . ....v-. nw,njra in kiik i - - . 1 - - , - I III . u UO.. UUAlUKWU - v." - - - , town. In a beer bottl found In an ad joining field remained ome of that oil. the nrlnta f lKreer-61f ferent alaea of feerl . . . i were found In th sort ground, one aet going tT" tl raciory. th-other" fuming from It. Whoever the three menrwere; the shrriff knew they wer patrona of a certain ealoon, for the beer bottl in which- the oil was carried - bore th label or a wtern brewer, whoae product waa for aal in only on place In Frederick. - - Ho mad Inqulrle at th saloon, and ImftmuI that three discharged employ L.,h aammm.ImA amu there- before Hii.iu..v..r-.v - - - ..... i .. !.., n t h m r rm on nr tnem oarriea m buiiu i ww,, .-. -wuv h v, . -. on man in m tnouaano remains, single becaune he . could not win th girl h flrat loved. -V.-..:. - -- --- " .'-: . Naturally, If girl - after girt refuse i him, he grow a trifle dlscouragedV-but" th, man In .whom; aome". woman cgnnot. f wd a" qua llty tp adore la rare. A'8oheyjY..dlaagre4a'v6'lheyTi said the man or. minions, .inn mi- me smile. It is a matter of cours wun me that people dlBput about ttea. You knouLiadabsQluteljL..ftotblngrto U-i dtrtrmr-herr donotthlnk thet therej with the Stratford alte. about-which .ny detective In New York whoj such a hullabaloo hiid beon ralBe!.-1 " - j..' -, the sheriff of rrederlck-,1 didn't va-knoW" wher It. waa.... If matter . entirely for th -communities, though I alwaya welcome a dispute of thla kind, for It ahowa m that great Interest I being taken In the library. I am always deeply Interested when I learn earnest publio men get warm upon thla aubject In their respective locall- tlaa Even when It la' said, a one man exclaimed at Birkenhead, that your gifts tend to pauperlie the. peopleTy "Dld b sylhatT"Di tie. reallyTIf I thought libraries could- pauperise the people I'd get out fthbuslnesa I retiulre the eommuntty to .furatah "The stte aua malntaiinh lihrary by taxa-tionlJk.ny- naibl man-ranae how abaurd uch statement I. . On th building at WashlngtomJhey havaan graved th word,- Th People'. Uni versity.' ' When - President .Roosevelt opened It he ald h liked Mr. Carnegie' plana because th community waj pot pauperised every cltlsen had to pay hla ahara by taxation."" -: .. "But why alwaya libraries? Why not money for better housea, better aanlta tlon, better social conditions Look how much there la to be done."--r- "I have given far more for other things -than f or-libra rie. When you give people a library they have to do th reat of the work Tor themselves. Work la th great aecret Of all progress. i Nothing for nothing- la trie watchword of tha library. A library requlrea the recipient to read and study. Ha be cornea mora aensible and rlaes In the so cial cale." 'Then had Mr. Carnegi heard that Mr. Pink, who ha charge ot the free library at Cambridge, had declared that no man read book after he had paaaed forty." "I don't think that 1 correct," Mr. srla answered. "It Is lust about aa true aa the statement tfiat all a man' "You know,-Mr. Carnegie, ther ar people who assert that all theae bene factions ar eecretly intended by you a movement by which your money may be perpetuated. " people think. Th city of 'Pittsburg refused my nrt oner or a . library. any building to be called by my name. When people see fit to use it It 1 hot worth making a fusa about. People who make such allegation are th aort of people who Ilk that aort of thing. They are not worth heeding. I never offer money for Ubrarle. I only glv th money whan I am asked for It. "But, apart front all that, I don't worry about whether or no I am for gotten after death. ' You know1 my views on wealth.- A long aa I am spared I shall try to put It to th teat possible u.--rTlmwlll -tell -whether - or-no-t have exerciaed a wise discretion." "And what about th etatement you tin i gunned to har made to the effect that you Intended to die worth no more than a dollarT" "I never. Jialtf anything ao foolish." , Beversl Independence ramblers have been fined tiOO eacTi and 4the Pallas Itemlser say aome,, In that , town de serve the same medicine. . . ' " Waaco la making good progress In lta purification and aanltatlon. Hewers ge will aoon b supplied, then pure water comes, . after - that electrla- lights and power. i . I . ; , . A former gsmblfr Of Tendleton aaya that three man there stockmen and farmer "blew In" I12.00S. against the tinhorn games during th past few monins, . . . , ". Frederick, Md., Correspondence of the Philadelphia Record. For once the "science of deduction," propounded and practiced by Conaiv Doyle a rineriocK. woimes,, naa worked out to perfection. Throughout the country there ar thousands of' ama teur "specialists In crlm".. who have tried to apply th wisdom of tha mar velous Baker street detective, only-to get Into trouble or to become the butts of -ridicule. But -Sheriff Young of "this county-f Irmly believe In the Sherlock Holme Idea, and ha proved hla. faith by hla works. The result 1 that the "Mystery of th Broken Window'-' In the pixnt of th Ox FVer Brush com pany I solved, -and thre men,, are In jail charged with having et fir tojhft place . i : ' . This factory is on the outskirts nr tne factory and entirely familiar with th teri.ai la utifl pim-iMtBsistta; ct tl bona? jy iieMsh Saeae, They 7Itved iwot-faxif rom the factory, because ha could not mat tKaie-Irl ha becauaa they bad found ""Jff wantednd asLothjj would ig.i .; - ti .n, fnwi tha Baltimore I , - " -- T t-.. jie la insi moat rare or ail curiosities a man who never loved but one woman, "I "w quit aware that numerous -married men will raise-their eyes Vlr- woman. - That, however, 1 a matter Which eon-i eerna ua not at alL The married-man" can look fta--hi--e.wn affairs, and If inJ mioa-aarr8J5perauade ni wire tnat ana la . i no wne woman, ao mum me mini him.,-- ..' - ji Thev -wars seen later coming asrayfroni tho part of the ttfWiTTh which waa the factory, but without th bundle, which waa supposed to contain tbe waate and th beer bottle. . V . Tb prlnuiofjth fee showed ..tbt two of the men hd worn-hoea jrerl much run down at iha-beel. whne the aharpt--BHrrk"Thnca ted that tha thlre had new ahoes. . Th herlff then learned from a. local dealer that on of th u pected men had rvently bought a pair f-ttoea H obtained, an exactjdupll. cat of the pair purchaaed. and they fitted the sharply defined tracka. Ha thought It waa about time; to act, and bo -i placed two ;of the men under arrest, andltieT'tainMcated the third. After that, Juat to cinch th. eaae, he took them out to the factory, gat and asked them tif thry'-wonW eewiwai there thumbs.wiUiihe marks whlclv PPra on th gate. Th Imprint dorreaponded exactly with' th configuration ot-th line of a thumb of on of th men. They admitted that they had all gone through th gate. ' . .. - . ... "AndT-bylha-way-aald the- aherlf r, "I might as well tett yeuhat you ran away' from that factory Ilk Sara HUI i7n n,t lenow-thatr' they aaked. r' Because." be "answered. the -tracka leading" away from thg-WoraB did nut how much of the heela. and a man whnrhTun fat goe on-thejballaof his -feet. LEWIS AND CLARK En-rout up tha JAlaaourl. rfver Jrom Fort Mandan (near the il of B'"-! rsr)pr(K;,t your affection, marck. N.D.)".to th -Rocky mountains. ZMay J.-r W proceeded on at an ssriy hour by mean "of th towlln. Ualng bur oar merely In paaalng'the river, to take sd""ge of tha beat-bahkaTber acBOwaeajce-Ty anylow grouada on the rlvertJ.hhlll,blng high and In many, placea pressing on both aide to th yerge-fJP!llMlI5ir:xk:ba given place to rery- aof t aandstone, which seems to be waahed away fast" by. th rlver.andbelng thrown .Into th river Tender It navigation mor diffl cult than It waa yeaterday; abov thla aandaton. and toward tha aummlta of th hill, a hard freeaton of a yellowish brown color ahowa Itaelf In aeveral atraU et unequal thickness, frequently overlaid or tncrusted by a thin stratum of limestone, .which eemto bformd of concreted shells. At eight and a quarter mllea we came to-the mouth Of the creek on th north, SO yards wide, with' aom runnlngwater and a rocky bed; we called It Wlndaor creek, after on of tha party. Four and three qar ter mile beyond tht w cam to an other creek In a bend to th north, which la 20 .yarda wide, with a hand some little trara-Of-wateri-ther 1. however, no timber on either side of th river, except a fw pines of th hills. Her w saw- for th first time line we left th Mandans aeveral oft-ahelled turtlesvlhough. this may -ba owing rather to thr-aeaiton of "th year than to any cftrclty of-tha animal. "It wa her that, after aacendlng tha highest aum mlta of th hill or the north aid of the river,- Captain Lwl-first caught a distant view of the Rocky mountaina. nT-normoved a partfcT yZwbati thrTJblect xf all cur bopes. and the r- wtxd of all our ambition.. On both side of th river,-and-atjio great dlataruc from Ifrha-ounUlnC-ToTrowed "It course; abov theae, at the distance of 60 miles from ua, an Irregular range of mountaina spread themselves from west to northwest from hi position. To the north of these a few elevated polnta, the most remarkable of which bore north t degree weat, appeared abov th horl on, and a th aun ahone oh the enow of their summit he obtained a clear and aatlBfaotory View of thos moun tain wjhlch close on tb Missouri th passage to th Pacific ).-. , . -- . j Four and a half mile beyond this creek we cam to th upper point of a mall aand lalandrAt-theLd'Btanc ot five mile, between high bluffs, we paaswd a very difficult rapid, reaching quit situs the river, where tits water la deep, th channel narrow, the gravel obstructing it on each alder w bad great' difficulty in ascending It, al though we used both the rope and tha pole and doubled the crews. This 1 the most considerable rapid on the Mis souri, and In fact the only place where there 1 a sudden descent; a w wer laboring over them, a female elk with Its fawn swam down through the waves, Whliih ran very high, and obtained for th place th name qf Elk rapid. Just abov them t i a email low ground of cottonwood trees, where, at 22 4 mlle. wa fixed our encampment, and were Joined by. CapiaiiLLewls. who had. been on th hills duVlnc the afterntion. I j. Tha country ha now .become 'desert and barren; tire -appearance of oal, burnt earth, pumlcestone, aalta - and quarts continue aa yesterdays but there Us no timber, except-the thinly scaf ftcred pine and spruce on the tummlti ot the hlur or along th ldea, The only animals w have obaerved ar th elk! the bighorn and the hare, common In thla country. In th - plain wher w lie are two Indian cablna made of atlcka, trtty whrtr Brbrar rrcWs-rnadr f durln)r th, ,rt few day w have mnua. 1 Near it ar the Wrecks of thLMaas A,ha , , mnua. Near Baltimore V Ohio-railroad and aeveral repair ahona. ' 'Th factory property Is Inclosed. by a high fence, with a gate at the front, r ' Fire waa discovered In th brim h -back department, which occupies one cornet of tha rambling two-atory frame ibulld Ing known aa the works. By the aid n an automatic sprinkling device and th local fir companies th blase waa ex tinguished without doing much damage. The aherlff waa called upon to Inves, Hast. He looked over tha ground and. after swearing in a deputy to enact the jirol et Vt. Wstson, U faithful chronl-.. timber on th river.- X J A From th Kansas Cijy Journal. . Hamilton count i doesn't propose, to be buncoed any lbngar. ' For year It has paid a bounty on coyote scalp. Ad Jotnlna; countless never paid a bounty, and Blunter for ioo mile around would tsk their coyote scalps to Hamilton and get bounty. Hamilton baa got tired of furnishing ."Incantlve" : for the do s truet lon of , eoyotea and hss rescinded ths'icalp bounty crderi' A A ' ; IS H Ojapiw OM E NZ , PROPOSE? premises, otherwise they would ribt hav I - X awrio Talrtaa. ,. .... known that the moat tnflammabla-ma-f OnCtacbelor-r-b' ,-n so may b said to hv arrlred rryearJ"6f dl- TTettmicWjrtirTtttrTi - Mao la by nature a gregartoua, com-".-" panlon-lovlng creature, and when he ' can't get the flrat ; girl h . want h r philosophically wait for th wound to heal and then one mor goes forth -wooing. . , - No. Blr BachelorA the broken-hearted ; . pie won't do. at a.11, . - -t--- Men- hav died ' and worm hav . ; TharTaci is riilly demonstrated by soma of th married men we aee. -. I-know on miserable little nothing of a man. who look a though he had noLlhe aplrlt of a mouse nor th bark- bono of a caterpillar, and yet hhr wife, a flne-fooklng. clever 'woman, gaae at " him aa though-her were, a mixture of Apollo, Lothario. Napoleon and Pterpont Morgan all blended In one. Why." tha.veryfect-of .th lndlvldual-r-admiration they would control ahould be . enough to artT-moetmew to.ma,trrmony.. Isn't It bewer to befklng dvejr a' cosy -. Uttl domestic kingdom then, free- -lance, roving aimlessly about; with no greater Interest In life than aelfT -- Many a man hae undoubtedly . been madavcyntrat through the "failure of ... aom woman tor liver up"to tilg Ideal 'of '" cr. . Butthat la partly his own fault,' a " he - hae. probably Invested, her- with nu merous"VTrteagbCTl6ef tiorTioaaess. - .. Womenj are not goddesses, but Jrs everyday-human" eliHtar-yj-thejr--waat to b treated aa jiuch. ' , Alha difference -between a man and woman I that when a mv'i -idol falls-. Off bar. pedataiUeJl!!riaoarlietaa Irretrievably damaged.-and- no Ipnger- r ta ba worahlpodV-whlle-a woihaa plcka-Sr up her fallen Idol, looks him over car-: -rully and, metaphorically apeak1na.lfinds'' that while hla no Is damaged hla ear r attll quite beautiful, and the wor- ' hlping oe on from a different point of view. : "' v -- There la n ua In being dlehearlened or- dljcouraaed beoauae - the woman, whom you ha v aet. rour 'heart doea not- - ,.Tuer. ar . million of other women juat aa charming ana- lovable. . . u- rr Thank goodneaarthe3lcerlrVrcrip 1 on that never falli ' , ' Jf you ar alBgTrjIJU.ieqE.eexnsn pi" It la everv rnan' duty to marry an help rear a famity of son and dangmF ter who will do him and their country eredt No doubt at oreaent'the bachelor feela that h Is ' getting muclnoilUsf illfJ . , through being1 unfettered and gbl -to llv hla man and fancy dictate. - But th dy I ur to coraexwhen h will regret hi loatopportuirltle and would glv much for. a eomfortabl horn and amoving, mlnlatertng hand. It fin to ba -young nd gay and Irresponsible, but If forlorn to be old and aad and lonely, and that'a just what you' will be It .you travel life'a Journey alone, " v r .. .. .. k '. ' .' BlfOBMOVS aTaTW OKD XBTTI. From Nw York Journal of Commeroi- Nw bond, laauea alnc January 1 hav been enormously heavy.. A care ful compilation made by thla -Journal how-tht- th-gro " amount laaued . -alnc that dat. a period of 4H months, la H.e7,000. Of thla ' Bum about 2S5.t24,00 - waa for 'refunding, or , merger purposes, leaving 'the net amount Of bond representing new capital laaued during that- period at- the-ueuat aum-f tSS2.tit.000. .Petalla ar not available for a compa'riaon" with Ilk period of previous year, but tha probabilities are that - th abov ar record-breaking figure. , . .. . . . - Ofhe gros Issues.' tt2t.STt.t3t,' no less than t7,84t,000 wer railroad Issues snd tH0.tl2.t3t Industrlsl bonds. . To explijiJthmagni.tud.-fthelond. Issue during the four end one half month et th preaent year It ahould be -remarked that for ra llroadaa lone? the -total' waa t37,OO0.000 larger than for tha entire 12 . montha ended December tl, " 1904, when th laauea aggregated t4t0 000,000. A wag aaldln theae.colnmna- last December, -the revival of birslnea prosperity has been taken advantage of for floating new Issues, many of ... them for refunding purposes or. the taking up of notea A much larger pro portion, however, thn - might be up posed haa been for betterment and lm- ' provementa .While it I Impossible to sbsolutely differentiate in ach Issue the amountfpr Mf undllng purpoaeaand matlon haa been reached. Although th bond market haa shown remarkable abeorblng power within th past month, thar hav been .Indications that th market for bonda ha brepm temporarily, glutted, -"- partloularly for -Issues not trlctly flrt claaa Bonda which becaua of th collateral, behind them ar llttb mor than stock. nd . Issue made by lea wll-known roads -for new construction, have not found , ready buyera.r In aom eaae . bonda hav been offered at too high ..a., rat. preventing what might otherwise hsv been quick borptlon. , , ; ... . ' TO IIU MADIBOW BOVAKal OABBfe From tha Nw York Vorld. -A-If MadlaoirBquar gardn can ba Sold A at a reasonable figure th stockholders --" -will build a-nw- piae of amuacment ' further uptown nd probably In the vicinity of Columbu rrlole. . j,-.-. -The majority -of vthi stockholders favor the aal. They want a 1 oca r low mora convenient to th amusement lov ing publltv In-tha new- bulMtng-thre will be no theatre and no concert hall" a in.th old garden.- The' expense of maintaining th new building will be less knd the profits greater. The garden, which for yeara has been a whit elephant on th hands of the stockholder, made tlO.OOO last year over all expenses. The gross earnina for th year, were about t250,0OO. Th only attraction which failed to pay were 1 th Dua concert of last summer, which caused loss of tl.ttO, Th management of th garden. It waa -announced, haa filled all It dates from . September 1 to Msy 1 next, but hss no . attraction for1 th coming summer-- months, . , ' .' , . . ..-. .. . :: - I: '. - -v. ....... ,. "tf- .1 -.---f- ( 1