O RE TH E rAN c s. jacioow : U PUBLISHEEL-BY-JOURNAL- PUBLISHING COr Published ira; evening ( except Sunday ) - and every Sunday tnoralag At I WHY. THEY WERE i LITTHIS RElTERAXEDn4- wnu L "...weepin. nd.wningr. and ",-the part of the Orefewnian spuming and cavorting and howling ".til":" and muddy diatribes aboat the election of certain Demo crats to office in Oregon, in Multnomah courtly, and in ':-Portland, are a distinct, direct, undeserved, malicious and J ..malignant insult to the people, the electorate, who tie ,i,rw Jiberately put the men in office, who are" glad they did rT-"sohcTdid wfsebMn doing so, who have no apologies to . , .' male to anybody, on earth, nor to their own con- R ' sciences, for having' done so, and who would under the f i same" conditions do the same thing over again tomorrow, ' ' - next weeky next month or next year. ; . . " V' t fndeed iJow that the bittle is over and the'people begin 7', ""to get a'pefspective "of it they realize that nothing better 7;0i6tUd-hsve happened Portland."' There is a new test of 7" : V - . publia service ,heraf ter to be applied. - It is. no longer "r7Twhar special interest has anofficial served or how faith fully has ' he-obeyed the command of a party machine, V but how well and faithfully has he served the people ind obeyed his oath of office. No" man jnowjleels safe ,7.r. in lublic.offtce on any other basis. .He has. been taught the lesson that. Weighed against efficient service, mere ""party name will not carry him throtigh.i To haveim ' "pressed this lesson is worth everything. Hereafter the .,,pf freeholder -Tnust look to the voters and not to party for . . approval, the character and quality of the-public service . . will be raised, and the sense of individual responsibility will be vastly increased. - v.- -- v -77 --'-"7'. - Xhe dial of progress, caonot, be turned ba"ck by the Tcaterwauling's'of the Oregonian.: Portland has taken the , step deliberately and everything that it has gained it will -r--Jteepr The-menwho- have: beerr "elected "toroff ice" may themselves say whether they are to be continued there - and tbis, too.'.itrespective of whether they are Democrats or Republicans. , . They know the test and they must either meet it or fall by the wayside. They are now -;7l mdre likely tt meet it than' ever before and the result tP 77;-' the people will be a standard of government that 'they will have every reason to be proud of, if the men elected ' are gifted with the intelligence which should be theirs. A VIEW THAT WILL NOT V jTN. ITS .LAST ISSUE the Liberal, the organ, of .the I -Brewers' and Wholesale Liquor Dealers' associa t'yoot said :t...- ' fzA,r":" ':'' :s '-:. - f - Perhaps the most Striking thing in connection with : ' the Portland municipal campaign which closes todayc was the reception given to Mayor, Williams' utter- 7 ance in" which, he denounced some of the yellow i preachers "as "liars -and scoundrels.". .The statement was made hefore in audience in-Albina- composed 7 V of about 400 citizens..- It was received with' the most '7 - - , tuirfultuonr"Bpplausc of any statement of the erttireT -" vv; campaign. - - Manyof the audience- stood" up and v cheered frantically, andlrwao several tainiites before the applause subsided. ' A philosopher can-draw but one eonclusion from this occurrence, and hat is-tht ...y.i7r there is in put; body politic today 7cause they are' preachers The '. -f of the citizens of that part 'of Portland. They were .' - lirgely working men and' small merchants gathered, "7--- frontlhe surrounding precincts which are peopled by ' the great middle-class, which forms the bone and , ' 77 7 smew, of - this country. j I Mhejr had applauded. the mayor's utterance merely to the extent that they . . i.. applauded his other statements from time to time, no : .1. comment could be made legitimately. But. it was, 7 a. the happening was significant. ' ..--;.! 7;. We think the-Liberal . ws mistaken in the men who Vfranticallheered'' the statementjuotejdilsjRjthc 7V .I; estimate that "a verylarge proriortion of citizens are op- posed to "preachers because are preachers.",; There "7" are some such citizens', butthe proportion of them antdng 7' ; "workingmen and small merchants,"- the great middle '..7-lass which forms the bone and sinew of the country, ' is smalL There may be many of them very good citizens , whojre not much in sympathy with the theology of the preachers but when it comes to the morality which they ..'.-preach and the civic righteousness for which they stand 7hey arein heartyand thorough actord - and work shoulder to 'shoulder with them to realize their hopes "and meet their ideals. .. Why it should be considered more disgraceful in Portland to have port a ticket than i t" have-ihe who-onstanty violate the laws is not now so apparent j-afcm--tor have-been -few-yearrago. No-class-of our citizens have stood forward more courageously in at. "tain higher and better things in Portland than have these same preachers and to no class is ine resuii 01 incrcas- in gty better government more largely due. They have . labored along thellines of better citizenship and they 177 have been tireless" in their demand for it' That their 4abors haver not been without effect is rery apparent to . those who will see and fortunate indeed is it for Port land that it is so.. , - ' STREET FIGHTS KILL MORE THAN DUELS B Tottior Jt OoSai. HE duel la one of tbe most Im T portant questions of modern -' tclly, for lt-ia a question of Ufa or death. It Is true that a majority of the duelrleworde-ln eountrlea -where dueling 1 --which are actuallytoughr"do not- re , suit In the death of any of the duellats. but It Is equally true that when two . men stand facing one another with a ' ptotol or a sword in their hand both have, the Intention (the tight, at least) ---. of killing or -wounding- his Tpponent.4.u:h having a good-a chance as the That Is why I. say that tbe duel. Is a question of life or death. In some countries, precisely . those -that are considered "the advance guard. " or "Civilisation and progress the United - States, of America and Great Britain dueling ls forbldded by law. People - do not light there as tn France. , ' Both America and England claim that their system Is far better than the rrench, do, notv think Oj ; Our duels are stupid Ad barbarous. I admit; but what about the'Kngllsh and American street fights? ' . -The United States and England havs ; ' been able to suppress dueling, but t'7 have not beeir and will never be abW to : suppress fighting. In France, In Bptfln, In Germany, la Austria one seldom sees ' " two well dressed men punching one an - other in the street, while the speetacle 1 te oimnr,rtTOriir Ijondon; Liverpool, Chicago, and New Tork. lt, us now Judge th duel from a practical point of view, without entering - Into .p'bUeeophioat-considerations ss to G O N D A I L Y INDEPBNDEN' NEWSPAPER . streets, -oniana, uregon. . ELECTED. HE APPOINTMENT of C gnashing - ! . teeth - on ., I . secretary all this Turning and all these splenetic HOLD WATER. v!ry -large pro- iJ . There nrn more than it audience Jtth a. -mtJLAr, hn nws m u mtim mm - - - . . the preachers sup with the standard keepers of 4ow-divesneverto let It be urhrn ht Its being or not being mors proper than to flght.wlth the list s. A majority of thtm, as I have said before. Have no fatal results, and but a few end In the shooting or stabbing of one of the contenders. On 1 the. other hand most of the street fights In which weapons are used result in death. - Criminal statistics, show that the number of well bred people killed every year In personal encounters In the United States and Great Britain Is -much larcer than the number of those slain In regular duels with pistols, sabers or allowed. The reason that the duelists must submit to certain regulations which It sen the brutality of the fight, and at the same time make it fairer, as the two Bdverearlei-re-fUced on even terms, other, while In fights llksihose In vogue In the United. States a fid England ths victor latBlwsys the stronger or ths one lwhQ.eUuciuaia , nret-Jdow-ot-llrad. the first shot. With these facts In view, we must admit that the duel as barbarous as it Hw is not so brutal, and that it Is far more honorable than the free-hand nght. ' -It Is erroneous to think that the mia alon of the seconds of an "affair of honor" Is limited to arrange the condi tions of the meeting and make the ad versaries fight. As a matter of fact, their flrsfjluty is to exhaust all honorable means In order to 'prevent the encounter; and only when the offense has been too deep, of when by one reason or the other all peaceful settlement - Is Impossible da they permit the fluel to take place. And ereo then Ihflr. Intervention Is a most convenient one, foe they make the con ditions of the duel such that the danger to the two adversaries is. In a majority of cases, reduced by 19 per cent. X havs fought many, duels myptlt, J O URN A:L .ft Journal Bufldlnc. Fifth and Yamhill arles JBonaparti as of the navy, wit the probable design of transfcrrinn- him in the near future to the department of justice, was another- hard blow to "the thick-and-thint always-regular," hidebound, standpat, ma chine element of the Republican party,- which has been jnjthe saddle "so long: It was ahifd Jolt for thenv'Not, as has been erroneously reported! that Mr, Bonaparte 1s not a..Republican. -His that,.anfl onejof the best of Re publicans, In the best sense. - Hew reformer,-however, as the president is strongly inclined to be, and he be lieves in reforming his party .outiside.of it if he cannot do so inside of it. lie is for hohesty, straightforward ness, strict accountability, devotiojn to duty, and against grafting, boodling crookedness incompetency, skuldug gery and rascality in the Republican party; and if the. party shields and stands for thest things,; as it so fre quently has done, he believes in getting outside where he can get a good range and focus and taking some ef fective shots at thrascalr--But hjtnever ceased to be a Republican, for all that. 7 A mail like that would be nauseated-with disgust "to read thej pleas that have been made for the past" two weeks in this city for party reg ularity.in a jnunictpal election when his- party- was-in. alliance with the gamblers, and the dives of the "north end"- :. - - ' -v :-".' ' - 7:, - Mr. Bonaparte could not well be a Democrat n Mary larid," where : the Democratic "party Is absolutely dom. inaied by a Republican in everything except in name Gormani, Thi boss of the Democratic party in Mary land poses as a Democrat sndiStands in with the trusts. He1i'for tariff for revenue only in theory, and votes and-works-foe-high protection-ior-the-sugar-trust. He serves : the eorporationr and speeiaMn.terestsJusfrthe same as does.Elkins or Spooner. Of course a man like Bonaparte .ws not tehipted-ta become a Maryland Demo crat. , - . ' ; -.'- -.' - . '--:v- -. - ,- Mr. Bonaparte is best known as a civil service re former. But he Js more than a doctrinaire or a dreamtr, as his recent work in convicting thieves Machen arid Beavers and the Goffs shows. H is a first-rate lawyer, a keen mart of practical affairs. Whether he has excep tional administrative ability is not known; he has had no experience in this line; but the' president is not likely to be deceived in him injbia respects Morton Jia4hisort of ability, but jthat he was appointed ffter his record as of. the Santa Fe railroad, was a mys- teyrand-s-mistakrTjThe-tippointmenVBonaparte-ts a correction of the mistake, and at the same time is in the nature fa efiance to' the-hitherto reigning congres sional Republican oligarchy, - 7 - .-Though a Republican, retaining his right to bolt at any time, he thinks it right' and necessary, Mr. , Bona partehas never been Identified with the Republican party of Maryland, which is; if possible," even rottener than Gorman's Democratic party. But he, has for 25 years been a man above the party leaders in character, and who Compels their respect, - --.. - ; ; ' - -; ' 7 GET IN THE; PORTLAND BANDWAGON. ORTLAND has many advantages, but it can have ' fnnrjninf itinre.' ! .... '. v- -.-'. are'lbts bf ways to make Portland mean does already to merchants of the great nf fhe gfMt inUnd-tmBirS ana inf people throughput, the broad expanse 01 yncie, oams domain. ; ....-.:. '. ' , ' . - 7 J ""'7.-' - ''- - -, PortlandrJ.hould7fahout:ior-Portland'5 carry-a,nd send the news to .the four corners of the earth! Port landers Should "stand together," pull together, for Port land. Talk Portland! Beat it into the heads of every man who has a doubt concerning anything relating to Portland. " It is time for Portland to "awake I -'-AdVerfise Portland-jnade- products.--. Do -it - wisely, persistently," consistently; keep everlastingly at it! vt. - .'-I....;.. - Kfartr trrvttiinr trninir nut nf ... m w r . . r r Huns m lii.iivvi " - . j . b n - . j 1 j lXorilandJoanewayiarmgany-jcaaaBtF Jaw no-, .nd thro observe mat roruana is on int j)..jdc iniumsuii..j "That's' the way to get there! - - Portland-made products "are the best in the world" and the multitude can be made to believe it if we shout long and often enough. In .thus, working, acting, hus tling we can aid Portland's manufacturers, jobbers and business intereta-'inaecu'ririg '" wider' "distribtttioa joi their products and goods. - , The Jotirna'l will never grow tired working for. PorN land and the people who make Portland, for in helping to make a greater and better city here it is making a broader and more fruitful field for it to work in, so up 6f Portland and "by frnal" pultfoaownT": I CtouTicilman-Sharkeytnafnly-howsgo6d judgment !" hill fcltti fniin ih 'ftrrnrTtju council. - On that score it would be a give and take prop osition, Sharkey giving a certificate of character to those members who most need it and taking one in return which he himself sorely needs But it is not very likely that that certificate, even if given, will pass current with the people who have read and observed what has been going on in the council and made note of where Sharkey's finger got into, the pie. J . yet I am not an advocate of dueling. Far from-this, I am strongly -against duela and fights bf every kind. But men will alwsys fight, for such is their nature, .and, considering that It Is not possible to mske them better In this re spect, ws must, at least, regulate their rights. 7 7'' - : . No Great Woman Poet? Alfred Austin, at the unveiling of a bust of Mrs. Browning. Though the quality and range of her genius were deep.- generous amdwdr, Elisabeth Barrett Browning cannot be described, If language is te be used ac ourately, as occupying a place among the poets Justly designated great. In no tongue hitherto has any female writer, attained to that -supreme posi tion, and wer this ths appropriate mo ment, which It Is not. It would perhaps be poanlble. to explain why no woman la likely yert0..dg. soNot-a. few-fa-male writers ars in effect In the front rank of novelists. But prose-'fbmanf is one thing and poetry quite another. and there Is a chasm between them; norl does the circumstance of novels being) in tnis age more popular than poetry affect in any degree the Inherent and Immutable difference. Elisabeth Bar rett Browning was, "Aurora Leigh" notwithstanding, essentially and almost exclusively a lyrical poet. It would be eaay to add almost Indefinitely to illus trations Of her being' one of those who "learn In suffering what they teach in song," not one of the greater poets who pass through that experience but end by -getting beyond It. . . - " .Taft Doea .Talk. - v 1 J From the New Tork American. . Secretsry Taft la not much of a hunter, but he Is establishing guile a reputation tog tsmarksjnsj-shijy - 'small chahge' They all "voted tor Lane now. Don't hunt for a job from Hunt. ' After July 1 Portland will straighten up. , . Dr.. Harry Lane will be' mayor. - He la built Jthatwy,.J i-..., , - . ' ' ' . . Our governor, caught a thief In .the act now tberet Teddy. . Ths ipachlne was undoubtedly blown Into smithereens. Ths Oregonian .howls aad walls; the people hurrah, . " Still the people-keep gaining ground Next time' they will get a council but the one Just elected may do fretty well, PtYe.thenLa chance. . .' .The Oregonian "has nothing more to say." I There are. times. Inueed, when "nothing becomes" a newspaper, as well as a man, like "modest stillness and hu mility." . y , V'.4s- V-.: Dr. IWoodrow Wilson, president' of Princeton university, . a man of world wide reputation, aaks: "W.here ars our young men golngT" Why, to the Lewis and Clark exposition, of course; and take their best girls with them. .. .. Preachers -can undoubtedly get into politics If they want to.. There Is no ground for an Injunction' against their doing so, any more than there' Is ground for - an 7 injunction '" against saloon-' Keepers. Everybody get Into politics; tftat's right 1 J OREGON SIDELIGHTS j Oregon will show up gil right Hater. Brownavllle has- a fine. Juvenile bandT Bad outlook for- hops around .Silver-1 ion. ... -k , -- """ 'v" , "' - . Rainier mineral soap factory succeed, lng well. : . . . .-- , . n. . - : .' . ; i ' - . crop, .a, over iae eounty where crops grow. - Dayton -voted unanimously for 11.000 water bonds. t :' , . Mount Hood la pluming herself and getting, ready. . - - -- - . ........ f Tlephn-ronrXakevtwrld" Bly, 41 muea, prooanie. . .., . Grading on the Sumpter valley rail road extension In progress. Terrible times among the Oregon ma chine politicians good sign. . Frost killed most .of Laks county's fruit pretty high up there. Union eounty In the near future expects- to- have the best rosda ' tn Oregon. "Will Polk get the blue ribbon again? Linn, Umatilla and several -other coun ties doubt It. - For several "days ' an 'average of 'J6 carloads a. day of sheep-were shipped from Heppner. ' ... Xlhinv wonrtr it it tm htm .nnn.l. t - . . 0 for John Jj. Sullivan. By th way, Albany. Is wet, Isn't ltt Mr. Coward and family, have arrived In Mulheur county from -Canada, but his name probably does not. Indicate his nature." . " "' ' ' . r A Myrtle Creek woman slipped and fell on a waahtub, breaking some ribs. Another proof that a washtub is s bad thing In a house. i . - . . . 1 a rsu or a Mearorajnan.irom. !,, knocked Ioo a lot of teth and cracked his skull, and yet he will prob ably recover. - ' t .. A - Jackson county yealrlfng lamb Sheared 10 pounds. How ;nany such lambs, with wool at 27 cents a. pound, would a man have to own to be able to come to ths fair! - - A-Hlllsboro-doctor"Whd"ls""hoted. for the number of his accouchement cases notifies the publlo that he would be pjeased to be. sdvtsed of theseevemsJJt, t,,.,,,,. uf luborthst about three mgnthS In sdvsnas. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Morse of Dallas, who sre both over SO yearn of age, lately received a letter" written by'Mrs. 8. P. heirs over SSfyears old. The letter Is. written plainly, snd In a styls show ing thst the lady- still retalna her fac ulties. 1 - The Independence West Side Enter prise Issued Tuesday a fine Illustrated special edition, -on- heavy book paper, and containing a great deal of Informa tion about" that town. Polk county and the central part of the Willamette val ley. This paper deserves many thou sands of circulation outside of Its reg ular subscribers. . '- East Oregonian: A. Kunkel has Just rsturned from Grand Ronde valley, where tie" delivered and started In oper ation the monster steam plowing, out fit brought here by him. . The .outfit "consisted of a" 0-horsepower engine snd eight plows, catting lit Inches per furrow, and. valued at $5,100. ,It was sold to a company of Grand Rnnde val ley peoile and Is. now at work on the Hardy Hnrrell farm, eight miles ' from La Grande intfte'lower Cove district North Bend Recall: The North Bend shingle mill Is having a good demand for Its products. Manager Allen states that 1,000,000 Shingles will be shipped south on. this trip of the Ciarlna and that In order to meet the demand for shingles It will be necessary to. run day and night, snd that a night crew would be put on, soon The mill Is now manu facturing about 76.000 shingles dally and the output wilt be doubled by a night shift. -There are now awaiting shipment about 1.200,000 shingles. ..'"v.? 7 Needs a Railroad. . From the Wallowa County Democrat. Wallowa . county dieeds a railroad, needs it badly, but the chances are It will never get It as long as the people are Willing to remain bottled up and pay tribute both coming and going. The cttlsens of this county should unite and Join hands With Lewlston and build an electric road through Paradise snd down the Orsnd Ronde and get into communication -with : the" open- river. This Is no Idle'dream. nor an effusion of hot air. It la something easily wlthrn the grssp of the people -of this country and Its benefits are so apparent and so numerous that It la uaelesa te mention v 4 thttav FOOLISH AMBITIONS By Dorothy Sts. The most curious freak, of the mod ern evolution of woman la to be found In . her yearning to disport herself in masculine fields, and her contempt for her own province.- - .- -'All woman's envy is of men. "All her ambition Is to do like men. Most of her prpgrea has been-alonsT masculine lines. There sre more good business woman thaa there are good cooks." Women exalt everything masculine, and deprecate everything feminine. They act as If their sea was a disgrace, as well aa a handicap..- . It given a -choice between , a good husband and a career,- the majority? girls would unhesitatingly - choose - the career. . - : r- . The women that-other women glorify la not ths good housekeeper and the good wife and mother, but:, the woman who has explored darkest Africa, or atruck gold in the Klondike, or runs a big factory, or does something else thst has heretofore been done by-men only. ,..7,, w-v.. '.- ... ..,.-7.-.. : '' If you want to flatter a Woman writer ydu can bunch all possible compliments Into one by telling her that ' ahe has a virile style. '.' . '.-.-.. .: . . If you jrant to please' the woman mu sician you've only to .say. that;she has a masculine touch. ' ' . When a woman thiri. about choosing soma occupation - at which te make her living, she picks out the most man nish Job within the range of her vis ton. - -.'- i- .. - , This admiration and envy of masculine prerogatives and perquislteg amounts to almost a feminine mania, and it explains as nothing else why woman's progress Is so-slow. - -; . - : 1 --' - . " She la not developing along the lines of least resistance, but ahe Is fighting all! the. obstacles that nature and sex. ae well aa clroumstancea, have put In her nath.. - - - - -: . .'.- " It Is a. atrange thing that women have- never seemed to have grasped the fact that there is a nscessity for diversity of labor, and that the-world needs-woman's work Just as much as It needs man's;, and the mora reminme U ts-the better it-la. - I vnmh, r;in. to do a man's work in a man's way is alwayajnore or less a failure, but when she' puts, her sex into it and does a man's werk In a woman's-way she gives it -value.-1 v' On their own ground men can always excel --women, and" women are foolish te compete with thentr instead of Stick ing to their own particular line. If takes aT course In physical instruc tion and higher mathematics to enable a. woman to throw a rock .as straight as a little freckle-faced street gamin does bv intuition." but when it comes to putting lne, pin thst will hold things together and not stick into e. vital part of ones anatomy, any girl enua can do what "an Edison or a Santos Dumont . . ; X . . cannoi no. f N A woman writer attempting write fronaa man's point of view-Is indulging In a series of guesses, nur sne pecomes convincing when she Interprets ' for us the essentially f emtnlner the innen thoughts and emotloha of .a woman's heart, and tbe. things of the world as th.tf trvnlc I0.1 woman's aves. The same thing is true of sll art. The best pictures that womertjiave, painted rtrninmrn anwa subtle feminine quallty.too Illusive sna ;m Unrlble for a man to have graspea. The best aetressea are those whose nortravals df character are most mark ndly-saturated with their sex, and this Is true whether it la the fierce tigress fury of a -Sarah Bernhardt, or the airy grace -Of girlhood ox Maufle Laam s. They are greatest when-they are moat womanly. . -5 v . - it is,-of couree, easy to see why women have envied men, and have been anxious to "emulate them. It haa been because men have been successful. 1 t - wen - ha vt been the money makers. Men have ruled the world, and so woman who needed " to make money and wanted to have some Influence have felt that this was only .tohe achieved by imltatlngjhose wno had already ar rived. - " . . uiiim women have crowded Into all sorts of masculine occupations, while their own particular Industries are neg lactad - - This lanost unfortunate for the mas worker and the woman worker. Tt . Is a ereat waste, for It forces women to throw away an inherited aptl haa come down to them through count less generations of their foremothers. It is a great financial mistake, be- cause women are; never ao-suoeessiut Ths financial Independence of woman and - the induetrlal emancipation , of woman are movementa that will go for-ward-Instead of backward. They have No woman who has known the Joy of owning her own pocketbook la ever going" to give it ip. and ee .h-nueetlon or wnere sne irau ' - Important ons. f ': - - Noon and High Noon." " From ths London Chronicle. Borne explanation for the confusion In people's minds as o the right definition of afternoon msy be found In the old confusion between .noon snd midday. Noon, of course, was originally at I o'clock In ths afternoon If the i-'burH- be permitted the hour" when .th monks said their nones" or noon song. Ths reasonthat it was put back to 12 o'clock may He In the fact that the monks were not allowed to eat their dinner-until aftsr they had said nones;, for In time MieyantlclpateLJthaaerVlce-and their dinner, by ssylng nnnes immediately af ter the midday service, and that Is prob ably bow midday came to be called noon. In the old almanacs noon Is generally marked at .midday and high noon as at S. Nouns of Multitude. From the Boston Herald. To the devoted friend of chorus girls, lobster or angel, birds are birds, accom paniment of bottles. He Is seldom wise In the terminology of this special branch of natural history.- Nor -are all the more staid, true epicures who cannoi enuure feminine distraction at table wholly sure about the nouns of muiuiuae. inus we heard lately at the Porphyry this question raised: "You apeak of a covey of partridge, a bevy of quail, a, flock of plover, a eover of woodcock; not what la the word for a collection of sniper There wss .a Jong and painful silence. No one dared te confess ignorance until one- murmured In his corner, "wisp." Is "wisp" the proper technical wordT In the old "Book of St. Albans" 14M) there. Is a long list-of nouns f multi tude and In it mention la made of walk of antpea.; ,Furtherm6re. we read "a congregation." not "a . flock" of plover and "a fll."'not "a cover" of woodcock. It would be interesting to know if snr of these quaint old terms Isxlst enyhere today la JUg country., Does any one speak of a gas'Sle'of geese.7 a muster of peacocks, a nye.of pheas ants, a clowder. bf cats, a dale of turkeyat-r Some of the words are truly poetical, as a murmuration of starlings, an exaltation of larks, a watch of night ingales. -a 'charm" Of goldfinches; and a shrewdness of spee and a labor of moles have a peculiar fitness. '. . LEWIS : AND CLARK ; Ea route up the Missouri rivet from Fort Mandan, near the site of Bismarck, North Dakota. The party. J. now, near- Ing the Rocky mountains. - - f -June I. It continued to' . rain mod arately all last night and -the morning waa ciouay tui about 1 o'clock, when n ciearea orr ana became a fine day. They breakfasted about sunrise and then proceeded down the" river in the same way as they had done yesterday except that the traveling waa some what better, as they had not so often to wade, though they passed some, very dangerous bluffs.. Ths only tlmbsr to be found Is in ths low grounds, which are occasionally on. the river, aad these are the haunts of Innumerable birds. who, when the sun began to shine, sang very- aeugntruuy. . Among these blrdi they distinguished the brown thrush, robin, turtledove, linnet, goldfinch, the large and small blackbird, the wren and some others. - -As they came along the whole of the party waa of the opinion that this river was the tue Missouri; . but Captain Lewis, being fully persuaded that tt was neither the main stream nor that which It would ba advisable to asoend, gave It the hams of Maria's rlvar. - Aftsr traveling all day they reached the camp at o'clock In ths afternoon and found Captain Clark and the party very anx ious for their safety, aa they stayed two days-longer than - had been expected. and as Captain Clark ''had returned at ths appointed "time; It waa feared that they had met. with some accident-. . - Captain Clark. - on. setting out with five men on the 4th,. went seven miles on a couras south IS degrees west to a spring; thence he went aouth 10 de grees west for eight miles) to the river, where waa an island, from which he pro ceeded In a course north 4( degrees west, and approached the river at the distance of three,-frv -and lt-Jhtles.-t which-place they encamped in an old Indian., lodge made of sticks and bark. In crossing the plains they-observed .several herds of buffaloes,, some mule- deer, antelopes and wolves. The river is rapid and closely hemmed in by high bluffs crowded with bars of gravel, with little, timber on the low grounds and none en the highlands. Near-ths-eamp this evening a white bear attacked one of the "men. "whose gun.: happening to be wet, Would not go off; he instantly mads toward a tree, hut was ao pur sued thst aa he ascended he struck the bear with his foot Thr bear, not being able to climb, waited until he should be fosced to come down, and aa ths rest of the party were separated from him by a perpendicular cliff of roc ICS, which they (could not asoend, it - waa not In their power to give him any assistance. Fortunately, however, at last the bear became frightened at their crls snd fir ing, and released the man. " In the after noon it rained, and during thenlght there fell both rain and snow,' and . in . the morning.- J - ----- June, t the hill te the southeast were Mv,rAt rltK ihaw. nd tit ln nnntln ued. " They proceeded on inaCQuxss nor.th-tfr deireesWet, near the river severat-mllel.tlll-e.t--dlstanee-oIl miles they resched ta ridge, from the top fof which., on the north side, they eould -plainly' discern a mountain to the south and west at a" great distance, covered with snow. -""A high ridge projecting from the mountains to the southeast ap proaches the river ij the southeast aide, forming some cliffs of dark, hard atone. They also saw that the river ran for a great distance west pf south, with a rapid current from which, aa well as its continuing of the eama width and depth. Captain Clark thought it useless to advance any further, and therefore returned: across -the lever T'W In a' di rection of north SO degrees east, and reached -at a distance of 10 miles the little river which Is already mentioned as falling Into the north fork and to which they gave the name of Tanay river, from the great quantity of. that herb growing on Its banka. .Here they dined and then proceeded on a few miles by a place where the Tansy breaka through a high ridge on Its north side, and encamped. . . .,The next day, the sth, the weather was cold, raw and cloudy, with a high northeast wind. -They set out earl down" the Tansy, whose low grounds resemble precisely, except aa to extent, those of the Missouri before it branches, containing a great proportion of a spe eles of otton wood with a leaf Jlkethai of llie-WTlfroerry: After halting at II o'clock for dinner, they ascended the plain, and at I o'clock reached the camp through the rain, which had fallen without Intermission alnos noon. Dur ing his absence the party,, had been occupied in dressing skins and, being able to rest themselves, were nearly freed from their lame and swollen feet All this night and the whole of the fol lowing day, the7th. It rained, the wind being from the Southwest off the moun tains. Tet the rivers are falling, and the thermometer 40 degrees above- aero. The rain continued till ths next day, the sth, at 10 o'clock, when it cleared off and the weather became fin", the wind high from the southwest .The rivers at the point have now fallen six Inches since our arrival, and this morning the water of the south fork became of a reddish brown color," while the north branch continued of its ususl whitish appearanoe. The mountains to thr south are covered -stlth sriow. - A Timely Fourth of July Hint. In about four weeks we ahall reach another Fourth of July, and parents might give a little forethought to the present method of celebrating the day, says-the Ladles' Home Journal. Why must we go on, year after year,, and mak the day practically a day of teri rer and what Is lnflnltely-worso, a day of deaths and casualties? Each year a longer list of . killing, maiming and burning confronts us.- Taks sueh sin gle list as this, silmmlng,up one year's deatha and injuries! -, - Died of lockjaw caused by Injuries. 40s Died from other Injuries......... 40 Totally blinded .................. 10 Number who lost one eye , i.. 76 Arms and tegs lost, .., 64 Number who lost fingers , 174 Number otherwise injured .,..,...1,170 Total number of casualties la the United States . . ... . .. ........ 4.4t - ,7..; '.' Only :One.-:: '7' From the Columbus' Dispatch. The Bachelor Say What you pleass, but I don't bsiteve there was ever a man thst could else up a women, - The Benedict My brother can.' The Bachelor Ha! How do you The Benedict Because he Is a ladles' tailor, . ' DINKELSPIEL'S ADVICE' r i?"7TO TOGO ' By Oeorgs T. Sober. (Coeyrlibt, . ISOS, by tbe aawrlcss-Joarael. XxanUauc.) r t Dead Togle:1 Please oxcooe me dot X wrote you dese few lines, but I haf been through aeferal vara mlneself und I hafyUneased. howjeaejrtt-tror aTiero 10 100 qer wrong road una valK uu 'eggapec tan tly Into der cold storage de partment of der public's est.lmationmsnt in er twtnxltng or a glass eye. - Dot is der resson I vould visit to gif you a few points on 'der ettyket of being a hero v(oh I haf studied f rom opserva- tionment in dls country. Brafe Togle: ...Ven you set home in Toklo or Yokelhoma or Communlpaw or vm refer It is, keep der face closed, more eggspeclally in der region of der. mouth. because der moment a nero begins to Speak somebody will misconstruction vot he says und get him talking politlca ven he only meant to say "Wis gehta. airettyr - Clefer Togle: Doan't nefer talk mit a ambitious reporter unless you haf baseball mask ofcr der face und a not- ' qulto netting of er der vocabulary, be cause if you. only say to him "Outen morgen!" you vlll find it ln-dsr paper tomorrow a column lnterfsw In vlch you haf declsloned to run for mikado on der Demmykrltlo tlaaet -'.-. - . ;..Ooot Togle: Van you arrive' at der: depot In your home town you vlll find lined up in front of Oer baggage room abould aigsty-sef en young ladles ill mit delr lips puckeratloned up In der .most . klsstfled mannerbut doan't do iU Toglel - Friend Toxlsi -'Resist der awful temn- tatlonlng to go down der line and plant burning kisses on "der, front teeth of dese beautiful maidens. . because after plainting dese '.kisses der harvest vlll be der long graas of oblivion, und 'you vlll find yourself rushing madly through I der co si lo papera trying to bite der fair ladles dareln. . Smart Togle: . Ven you meet dls awful situation, as mset Jt . ypu vlll, sneer ehently-at der puckeratloned Hps und" repeat ofer und ofer dot olt proferb vlch aaVs It, "Osculation Is der thief of repu tation." Den mlt a haughty glance at der lady kissing bugs chump quickly .into.', your- glnrlckeyshaw 'umfr-ggllop- svlftly. home to der luffBng arms of your ylfe. IC der kissing bugettaa should, .follow, you to der -sacred pre-' clncts of der home circle send your- mudder-in-law ould mit der broomstick. und may a kind heaven help dem-dot cannot run fbst enough. . Belofed Togle: Now comes It Die atvlce I glf you from der heart-Doan'd ; let any committee presentation 70U mlt a house, because der publlo -'likes to. .honor a hero by glflng him eomedlng ' eggapenslvs und den dishonor him after vsrds by vatchlng vot her does mlt it Noble Togle: Dare vas only two vays a hero can remain a hero in dls strange vorld of ours. Vun vay Is to die yust after he has heroed, und der, udder way la to get tn a glsss case und stay' dare- but he must - buy der glass caae him self. UnbeatableToete::Ven der nubile" gets a chair of choy from der intogsl- oatlon -of- yoursucress-deyvlU " surely" I rush up te you mlt der. plans and specifications of a fine bungalow mlt hot und cold gas and running servants, but ven der do so yust place der left hand In der apex of der veatcoat boosum ani say to aera roil a- com imiw m i.f lamps: "I t'ank- you. public. fnr dls - uhaaer'oslty. liurTrvoiud prefer dot-voa keeo der bungalow und I vlll keep my. bwn leedle flat on 108th street because I know der chanltor, und he neferatealav der milk." K4MTnU' Dennhllea nnA ntinllca vas ungrateful.. Vile der chag of .choy - lasts dey like to glf a hero more den Is eamelng to him, but after der chag of choyivaree.jBdenoiieeaer-Bitter - morning after. Ven dey vase up mlt der head full mit - third-rail microbes - und - der tongue like a curry-comb, und dey vni keep aaylng to dmselfs: "Vy dlt I glf dot hero auch a nice hogse, becauae now I forgst yust vot kind of heroine he done to deserf It" Mein tleber Togle: A wold der klBatng- I bugettss und doan'd pay any attention to der honae committee und maybe you vlll be able to hero yourself to der bit ter end. I haf nefer been a hero mine- self, Togle, mlt der eggsceptlon or vun afternoon ven I sunk a armored cruiser cook In our kitchen after she' had--1 svallowed a bottle of vodka und vas heoibardlns- der. aaa stove mlt our best set of China dishes, but I luff all der" heroes, und if any leedle advice of mine eould help a hero to Keep busy at aer chob of herolng 1 vould be pleased und tickled Internally. Tours mlt luff. INKELSPIEL, Per Oeorge V. Hobart Got the Better of Genera); Butler. "ins JJoSl6n"Herald. 1 1 urn During hla boyhood Benjamin F. But. ler was a frequent visitor in the town of. Nottingham. Now Hampshire,- where - sn unci resided, and among the. many stories related of him la one concerning hla examination of Pat Murphy, a local character. ...--'.----' , Tiro Dolan had been aecused of sell ing -Hrr-en4 4hMroeoutton - sum' mnnul Pat (A teatlfv in the ease. ' Nfl n . - t.k -M , aw T.. .1 XML WWB . . IHIII.WII .IIU Uhl.r ,f. endeavored to make htm admit that he had delivered liquor to the defendant -Butler asked: "Did you ever take any freight from the railroad office and deliver to Tim Dolan r' Tls, sor." -"Part of this freight wss a barrel. wasn t itr- . .. "Yls, sor." ' . ! 'i. 'Pst what was in that barreir - "I -d on't - now,- sor ! - --- "Don't knowl Wasn't ths barrel marked?" i,. . "Tie, sor." . " , ' " ' ' ' . "Then how dare you tell 'the court that you 'don't know what was In itr' "Because, sor, the barrel was marked Tim Dolan on one end and bourbon whis key on the 'other. How the devil did 1 know which yas in HT" . t The Gift of Gardens. - '' .;L., Lord Bacon. . Ood Almighty first planted a garden! and. Indeed. It Is the purest of human; pleasures, 11 is ins greatest ' refreshment to the spirits of . marwwtthout .whleh - bulldtnga . and palaces sre but gross - handiwork; -and a rnsfT shall ever see that when ages grow to civility and ele gancy, men come to build stately, sooner than to garden finely; aa If gardening were the greatest perfection. I do hold It. In the royal order of gardens there Atiht tn he s-ardena fnr all th mnntha ' of beauty may be then In aeason. - : ', Where Butler Drew the Line. .7 . . 'From the Boston Herald. . ' . On one occasion when In congress General Benjamin F. Butler rose In his" place and Intimated that the -member who occupied the floor was transgres sing the limits nf the debate. ' "Whv, general," said the jnembet re proachfully, "you divided your time with roe." - . ; -1 know I did." rejoined Butler arrlmlv- "hut I didn't diVlde eternity with you,'', .. i "'. .: - i -' '7