, - , . , .- - -... - . ' "PORTLAND, . OREGON. 1. t.i: P. r . :. r- 1 t 4 1 i , ti it' -I ? 1 - T H E O RE:ONI AN C. JACKSON' rtihsntui err evening (swept Sunday." -every Sunday .niorning tt . . . etiaete, Portland, Cregoev SCHOLAR AUTHOR, ' STATESMAN, DIPLOMAT, - OENTLEMAN. -r 1Trzfr:t J OHN flAY, whd diH ;thiS-JnoriungwJlrrat'ln history, as a statesman f tirst-cias ability, i nere have been men of greater brains.- perJupaJmt-ilay a a public man and a private cKUenL yTS' grearticcci ' .' ! " ' ' . ' '- " : When irf 1860 Abraham Lincoln eksied pres? y t dent and faced the. awful, ordeal of civil -war, he . . lected, with the penetrating judgment characteristic of - him, two young men tor' private' secretarietJohn Hay f and John G. Nicdlay. ? To these young" menv 1w gava bis fullest confidence. v Some, young men would not ' C n,re imprd ; the opportunity of-thia-4, intimate ' : association- with-'America's greatest man, in Amer lea's greatest crisis., but ? young. . Hay did. . He H 1 was a well educated 'young man,, clean, clear-headed, 1 j honorably ambitious... -Besides performing hit official duties, he noted down- fromday: to, day, from hour o "7 hour, every ,acU6M and woid iif Tiesirfwit Lincoln, wjth. i- his approval, -and o yeara.later ie.and Nicolay gave to ,.' the, coiinfrf nd;jh ; Jw,6'rldT themost 'complete life of Lmcoln that was ever published. Tr.!v' Mr. Hay.wanever a politician pi .the vulgar aort, !.: He sjught and- "found distinction honorably, thought r fully," dtcentlyif dealyrsnheTrHMircKlhfy-waa I , elected president he appointed Mr. Hay minister to Eng- land, and later recalled him to make him secretary of state, josition that he has held with credit to himself , and honor to his country for about seven years. In ,th .important of which waa:liii.:addrua . Europe suggesting, and it might almost be said demand it ing,"" the- autonomy of China, its protection" from.u:dii .acctwn 'and spoliation. This oecufred Just after we had . . easily whipped Spain and freed Cuba, nd had become , world power" jn a new-nienser"Later," Mr. Hay,' the - ; "world now listening to and respecting him, insisted on r; the "open door" policy; in the orient, and it is undoubt- ; ; edly due partly; at leastto hia efforts " and diplomacy . . that Japan, now the only great and respectable power Vin that part of the world, his declared that there shall - be -an op9qift,Z -''' ,' Perhaps we give" Mr. Hay tod much credit, for be : hind the secretary of state is' always the president There ZX wasMclCinley, who declared fhatthe period,. of exclu- aion has passed"; there is Roosevelt, . whoi shirks no : ' responsibility on account of his cabinet appointees; but T V we -imagine that s great 'deal of this notable work, of ! which we can herein only indicate the tenor, was done on the intellectual initiative of John Hay. V In other words, the president, trusted htm, and in a ..large de- grte let him have his owrilway, AhcT fCwaa always a right way a high waylT :' -. i c . ; . . "... : : ... . - J. .We respect and honor--Jonii Hay. At his bfer we , bow, not with tear, .but with a thrill of pride, that auch Americans grew andlived and acfed."" v And after all the proper tributes to his memory as a TT'statesman and diplomat are written and uttered, we love, beyond and below and above all that, 4h maa who wrote who had it in his brain and soul to .write "Jim Blud soe" and "Little Breeches." ' Hay'a work "as a scholar, !v author, diplomat ' and statesman - may fade with the ' flight of ;:the" ' t'gea 'but .'rio generatfon o!.rriankinil twill forget that Jim Bludsoe held the nozzle, of. the Prai tie Bettigainst Jhe bank tittjhe last galoot got iihore; or that nothing bur angels saved "Little Breeches"' or - - fail t amile -and shed Trjrrpathetic teii"whentftfy , remember the" vi ru!&wv; i-:4&;"'r- - Well, I think that savinVa little T And DringinMiim.JtcJa-wn " T Is ldurne4 "sight . better busmessj . Than loafin-around-a- throne THE CANADIANS ARE AMONG US. EANTIME let as not forget who. also have day today, own observance of July 1 at ' here in such overwhelming numbers." But they will do thing right and thy will make such a showing that no one who participates or observe 4t is iikely soon to -forget The Canadian are something more than next - door-neighbortr for-manyof them" are' now "parrot us, while many others are in plain view from our back yard, - with, much the same InterestlTsoineTitrieroloaely-J . terblended that one can scarcely disentangle them, with a common heritage of language and many similar im pulses and aspirations. From the Straits-of Fuca on ward and upward our relations grow Many of our own citizens have, penetrated Canadian ter Htory and are there taking" up a tag a new leaven which we nope will Away up toward the Arctic circle $30,000 ROR A VOMAN-S T-v:-'-SOUL';:".-ir. By Mwv. ThesBM 1 , -Br the wtir of a wealthy friend out t', In California. '."Mrs. Luelnda Ganaon of ! Davanport. Iowa, finds that Bh la left j,, ..the Sinn r t30,00 on Condition that she -tWjl!a:lvLjhe LPrentreUlouabv Uefa and accept those ,p another church, "li tJpon this aoinewhat tempting- propd K altlon. Mrs. Oanson delivers herself as follows; ' ? "Thirty thousand dollars Is en tm- , mease sum to refuse. But I cannot tniae or chang-tnir my religious beliefs i' for any. amount of money,' - - I prssume the California friend. In ,; makln his will, was in an earliest frame j . C mind, and It would seem to be the ease that Mrs. Oanson Is taklne the " matter quite seriously; and yet, to many 7 people, th whol thin m appear to . f be tremendously f mnyv- "7 In 'tha-firw pla, the California man , was asklnr Mrs. Oanson to do the lm. A person can no more change hl - Teat belief, relleloun or otherwlap, than change his height, er the color f his eyes, r the tone of his voice. I say hi "real beliefs." 1 wnat la a rani belief? It is the i aneatal conviction that Is forced ' n r tha-weight of evidence. irm upon r rorccaopon one," X repeat. 1 , Toe can no more resist tha eonvictlon that Is supported by evidence than you ' n reatat seeing the eun or hearing the . 1 la strictly obligatory. ; On yott clearly aee certain facts, you 1 -., mir oongea to draw from .,, them a certain conclusion not only ciwinsion thajrntt , ajwx tahoasaj liut a, vr, thy: ie raTUcular conclusion that Is ti you y me nets, uc tb u r" belief about re. a, wr aoout polltlca. or about his- w aBoui. anything else. ? rf 1 already said, poal. - vejt lularest tt ta enough, ja PUBLISHED BY JOURNAL- PUBLISHING CO. , done much to bring erosress of the because there Is was undoubtedly retujried with good but oflhaVtceatraent nressions, which, thi will be the - garded himself in limits of what be THE MOST one of the most . to the powers -of spreading-and other jointly witKapan of the little news Tht drama, a w r A ACOMA. J - northwest xhildJ Treason that - - our Canadian friends but owing to, their home may not be city of its size in thi. a they have I Uf you go out closer and closer. new life and spread- benefit both races, the, relation! are any sensible person laugh out good and loud! ' ., '..".T i'.:, .' , It you are honest enough to organise a search foe-facts, and. having found them, have brain enough to see the force and bearing of the facta, the only thing you can possibly do la to believe the thing that is (oread upon you by th login ofthaoa. and, that belief you must-continue to hold until auch time . -by further "inrestlgattoa.: you shall obtain other evidence which shetr-torce you to accept a different view. You can briba. or persuade, or frighten man tntd pre tending to change his be liefs; but nothing -but facts, and the evidence that goes along, with them, can Actually change a conviction. -Of course it will be no "news" te sensible people to try here that not one person In a thousand, tha world over, haa such a thing as a real- belief. In the' overwhelming majority: of cases men end women "believe" because they are told to, or because ttMs fash ionable or profitable to do so. - Their belief la not something that they have worked r.uj: for themselves and reached through the unanswerable logic of fer4i, but !.rn,ethlne that the have . cei"te37r t iVen Tnr-gr4atdjiaumed7 at auKgeaimn or anotner. - Buehbcllaf " of rourstL lk liable to be "( hanged" at any time. If the bribe Is sufficiently Inviting, or the persua sion sufficiently honeyed, or the fright sufficiently frlghtfuirme -"belief will be given tip and another one "accepted." Personally, I am very sorry thst there are not more, real beliefs smong us' beliefs that represent . brain reeearch and au honest. desire after truth. - No matter what tha belief is, If it is a veal one. If It Is honest and sincere, if It has come to you after e long and faithful comparison of facts and weigh ing of evidences. It is a sacred posses sion, and you should treat It accord In! y. . , - mrn were, out u ihty wer, of ,h kind Juatjmentloned she did well In re fusing to belle them for money.- 'Tor whst shall it profit a man te gain the whole- world and lose hla ewn aouir that l to say; his self-respect Manv rrut aaula a- i. k- T Tto Journal BuJldJng, Fifth nd YmW3 ' . ,y. ' 1 brotherlv and ' intimate and the relations -there have about a better feeling everywhere. . .. We are now seeing the torerunners of those who are to come.- for Ih ere will be thousands I them during the fair.' They are coming here not only something to aee but because they wanVj to come. For this reason they will aU be doubly welcome.- Of those who .have already. come here all bare. report, not alone of what they saw which they received. Qf all the im- the fairwilMeave-ipon-Uie.tyisitors best - that everybody in Portland - re a sense as host and that within, the could do he made it comfortable for those who had honored. the. city "by coming here. . We hope the Canadians will come often and that what they find here will always and in all respect! more tnan meet their . highest expectations. y : : y - y -jTnT--Jr iv f 4 -'.y - -l . CONDITIONS OETTINQ WORSE IN RUSSIA., RECENT report are true, and oth- "TTing' l Incdnceivable in" th e preenr condition f- af fairs in Russia, then the world is confronted wttn extraordinary spectacle it has ever wit nessed in it topsy-turvey career. f The mutiny ol the sailor on a warship; its capture and it holding of great Russian city in terrified subjection for aeveral days, i sufficiently remarkable in itself, but when there is su peradded to thi the fact, as now seems probable, that intt nf .trilfinor ita colors and makihsf a craven aur- rHder-rWrthout striking a blow, the' mutinoua-piriH chips are joining tnjt ts ntgn lime that the government at t fetcrsDurg waa looKing out for Jteif, for1 there is likely to be omething doing in a wholealrway and that in hort order. ; "'.-' It iaasy-to-ataAla- prairia lire but once""well started it make little difference in the. final result whether the grass is wet or dry,' for it i likely, tc burn iUelf out un less the wind change or a counter fire stays its progress. Russia's problem is more complicated than thafTof an ordinary country but while it ha found much of iu strength in the past in the diversity of language and the racial antipathies of the people it may in the future find ha fatal dancer- in the aame ourcesRui ha- long occupied the center of the atage in the world i interest Dut no pari 10 cram oemg pyea wilt irouM-the-4rofountf'interest:;Uhhich the do mestic drama now in progress in Russia itself will be watched. In the far eastern wa the fate of one nation was at stake; Japan either stood or feirinthe outcome. But that feature of the contest was soon eliminated, for it early became apparent that Japan would be the victor in the war almost a certainly as it had been 10 years before in its fight with China. , But now the ahoe is on the other foot; it is the Russian government which, now seem trembling in the balance. It may perhaps be. too much to put the matter in just this way,-but that Russia is confronted by a crisis i manifest even upon the Jace permitted to trickle forth, to th"e world. have.aaid. ha now the -right of way as the most interesting of all questions before the-peo ple of the world and whatever .comes forth: will be read with, eagerness, backed always by the hope, that ou of It may come something that will better the condition of the NICE 8ISTER CITY?" . a , city ; of which., the whole Pacific is croud, and it haa every right and e acific can.be fuggested ior being proud of itself. In 1900 Tacoma, according to the federal census, had population in, roundV numbers, of 38,000.. It has plenty of evidence 'to how that now it haa a population of over 60,000. That i a pretty fauy growth -in five years nearly MOO - pet.xent::;:: iSlr,,:. ' Tacoma is in some respect an unique city. It claims to be a city in which there are more nice,' pleasant; comfortabler "elegant," eyetftuxurious homesrhan-any the world. It people take pride m a right to do, and ought to do.' to the fair in the eveningyou cannot fail, in looking across tne taxe rt w eteciric ngni legend:; "Watch Tacoma-growNow ; it ia an interesting-thing, really-taatch;city'grbwTher is a "whole-education in it And. .nowhere -the' world around haa ther beerH-moreinteresting, instructive, growth than in Tacoma- y ' -tm .': -y:J The "boosters" are all right Tacoma is all right It has a righMo "boost" and be "booated." The Tacoma people are all right. They own Portland today; and if there is anything they want that they don't see, let them ask for it and weJwiil dig it up for them. - : . Condemns Professional Lobbyists. ', . """-"From the New Torn Herald. ' - Governor Harrlck of Ohio has declared hie purpose to set on foot a movement for the eradication of professional lob bying In the legislative halls of Ohio. He eal'd: ? .J.U. "Lobbying la. a deadly poison In the wellspring of legislation. Jt la respon sible la the main for the low estimate In which our lsw-maklng bodies jire held by Tanr throughout the entire coon try. JTThe professional Jobbylstle a ttim Inal. By that I mean the man who of fers a fixed bribe to promote or restrict legislation. His' great crime 1 lea-la. the destruction ef the faith la the honesty of our cltisens and the honesty of man kind. r -. - ,' - . . "We must do more than arrest' we must exterminate the professional lob by. Other, communities have risen and eradicated this pernicious practice, and Ohio should move with no laggard step to do likewise.. As far ae It lies Within my power, I propose to net on foot this reform." - - , . '-" ': .' - , -Never Would Do'.'- From the Chicago Tribune. .Milkmaid the chairman nf tha legislative steering committee, -must not be allowed to become a law. In. its present "ahape." I -x ....'hy notr demanded Ih member that had charge of th bill. , "Its too plain and direct There Is only, one possible Interpretation of It and no possible way of evading It Read It sgaln yourself, man, and tell me, as a lawyer. If you think you could get a case out of It In a hundrdyeara.".. . . Killed by a Tick. From the Joseph Herald. The three-months-old child of Mr. and Mrs. John Nichols died last uriee Baturday. We understand that the little ne'e death -was caused by tick, whloh adhered to the body and Imply sucked th life-blood eway.w , - While preparing the child body for the casket the tick dropped to th floor: It was almost' an Inch In diameter. It seems strange that It should nee have been discovered before the death of tha jenutt. ... .. . jsWhhjVakBWhf SMALL CHANGE i";HervHune,',:;.;J ;:, "rf ' tv r Don't forget the Importance of good ru.,- 1 i, ,( (- Now, July, there's the falr-Mhe beat ever a. earth.. : , ;, . . . 'Oood-bye, June; w love you. . Come again -ntyear4.ii.4;.:v:- Don't overlook Chautauaua. " It will b better than ever. , . - ,...1..;.,. Break up-the big farms in the Wil- lamette valley.. That will help, j,-- -The lecturer may not knowt-H all, but some of them are worh Bstenlng to. Rulaeeda-ne4-ewMioh toxaak peace wUh Japan ae wtth Itaelf. , ; Mayor' "Weaver of Philadelphia.- eaye he is determined, to "tura ,M!rj rsscai out." .. Hello,- Lane 1 . - ;-yy -y ' There's one food thing the BepuWI eana have to study about whom to nom mate for governor. ; , Edmund Russell give a long aet ot rules on "How to Oet BU M a i-over. There'a one eure way, girl marry him. aimh - nnurt. haa : deolded that bat trimming not an art f Now let some wie Judge declare that wearing millinery 1 a disease. -ji,?-j ;.r,.-. Korth Tamhtll Record: r Some of the leading Republican paper are keeping up a wall because the Democrats have elected their candidate tor a number of the -moiit Important office tn the state. If "ft ofr them W9in4iak.egme. to look over the names of those -4n-dlctodL for various ttn- ' Jh officer- and -what party they- affUJ at"wUh,"it might paHlaU -thelfeelP Inge..,.'.- ;: i OREGON SIIEUGHtS Heps .won't be T Tamhlll abould,how up more." Mttch building- going onJnXa-arande. Vetch Ueomlng to he favorite erb "WreetoveClvlo ImprovenVent ae elety active, -j-; .-.'v-V. - "; Toreet Oreve la perhaps the leading dahlia town In the United Utev-r.. 4, "So busy was our visitor yterday that The DaTle Chronicle didn't- hav time o write here.", - v"i " " XTyoung-iMn - named Brewer- was drowned near Marlon last Saturday evening. 7 He" wa standing on a log In the mill pond when he euddenly fell Into the water and. did not rise to the urface. HI body waa recovered thr hours later. . . .'' .''':;;.r " 'Woodbum independents Colonel I. B. Eddy, land 'agent of the Harrlman lines, and Hon. a P Hoff. state commiaskraer of tabor; were 4n the eity Monday They were armed with axhandles and came to jee the edltor.bu heifiappene to be away apd escaped eevere "handUngr Harrlsburg Enterprise': Jt! t. ; Oore bee Just finished the legging contracts, above this city.end although he wse only engaged in-banking out he suc ceeded in putting over te,000 feet with one team since the middle of February. This record will hardly bebatn In this part of the country at least Mr. Oore only worked three horses,- and part of the time only twe men.-. ? V' -' Cooe Bay Newe: " On dsy lest week, when nearing Allegany, the passengers on the launch Marguerite nottoed the water, very muddy, and f ear were ex pressed that the splssh dsm of the Krusa "Bros. logging camp.' en the east fork, had given way. lter en It wae learned that the roily water wee caused by a number of the yung folks who were- in fcath!nf.rCaptaln Sawyers, of the Marguerite, says that he desires to make no comment whatever, but sin cerely hope that the health of th fish In the river haa not been affected. The American Leader fat Wireless. From July Success Magalne. ' The development of, wireless teleg raphy has lifted Into-world-wide 'promi nence the name ef Dr. Lee De Forest, who, et the ego of 32. haa taken rank as America e leading worker in the remark' able art of transmitting - telegraphic messages without wires. The system Invented by him. which is distinct in numeroue way from that of Marconi, Is In operation at wireless stations at New York, Jfewr Haven, Cape Hatteras, Charlestown and several other points on the Atlantic coast The United States navy has given hla ompany contracts for the etabllshment of stations at Pen eaoola. Key West. Panama, Porto Kloo and Cuba Several line of coast wise ; eteamere have recently been equipped with hi apparatus. The sys tem has been established by the United States signal corps between Cape Nome nnd St; Michael, in Alaska, where the toe and topography of the country render wire Impossible. . ' . - Leas than 1 years ago Dr. De Forest was a freshmen at Tale, beginning hie studies In the scientific school In 119. He was born at Council Bluffs, lows. In 1S7I, where hie father was a pastor. While still In knickerbockers he began to devote much of hla time to electrical experiments. His chief boyhood Interest wse to arrange batteries, and with these to run toy motors and telegraphic In struments, lie equipped his room with electric lights and bells. To qualify for the degree of doctor, of philosophy In his third year In the scientific school at Yale , he - wrote J a thesis on Hertslan waves. These being the medium of wireless communication, hie attention was-in this way turned to practical tel egraphy without wires, with which Mar oonl had - begun experimenting. De Forest developed his eyetem" along Inde pendent lines. V A He 1 a tireless worker."Enthusisra and hard work are the secrete of what ever I have achieved," he hes said. - "No one recognises the inherent limitations of wireless telegraphy more than one who has wrestled with the tremendous difficulties of Its development The path of experiment has-, been - devloue end filled with stubborn obstacles. But I trust I am conservative when I say that there is a great future that attends thlg, yOUBg SlWrrr-r, 'VTV-Kir-ir rn. lignum . Mow Times Have Changed 1 ' From th' Chicago Journel. V : 1 Joe Choate eaye Roosevelt would get ee many votes In England. In -proportion to the population, ae he got here last fall. There was a time, not so long ar. when a statement like that would have been enouah to damn aav a SCICSB fmnriri.j, - : . - : 1 , .. . 7 7 SUNDAY SCHOOL LES ; SON for' TOMORROW . - ... j. . B. -v yt. K. B. feaktaa, V. July t, H0S Topic: "SennacheriVe Jn - -vaslon" II Chroit xxxll:-. - Oolden text "With -u le Jehovah eur Ood tp help u. and t fight our bat tlee"i II Chrop."xxxll:t. ,' 77 .. : . Reponlv readlngt Pasl viy:l-Jt. -.-tieiatao' .;.. Returning to the study ofthe OJd Testament for 'the lAet al tv. h Pt the year, we hould remember te point reached In our previous studies,, since that conetltutee -our- new polal . of de parture. We had pursued the history or Israunder-tb aovereigntiee Of Saul, ..m aniomnn until occurred the division of the original etate under the boastful but weak Rehoboam, son , of urdamnn (I Klncs alL) Our course of study then followed -that-rtval kingdom which waa oet up by Jeroboam, pursu i tk.nnii tta troubled career. - we hn ranidiv it changed dynastlse king coming to the throne by-violence and perishing oft by assassination. Dur ing Its existence as a eiaw separate capitals, Sheehenr. Tlsrah. and Samaria. It waa at laat extinguished by fire and blood, and Ita people were car Tied ' awav beyond the Euphrates : by asavria ' disauDearing from history. Thst the land might not' revert to a wilderpeea for lack of tnhabttanta. the vlctorioue monarch- ent beek olontsta eollected-trom. all quarters 10 occupy th altas of its ruined, cities, end these. Intermingling with the scattered tami llee which had escaped slaughter and exile, constituted the mongrel popula tion of Samaria, whose his tor lo else their descendants occupy to this day. , The southern or Judaean kingdom, email aa it was and not eapable of great military exploits, by lte posseeslon of th temple, through the stability- of Its Davldle dynasty ana tne purer religion of Ita people lasted much longer. The mora religions laments In Isreel - de serted the northern kingdom long before Its fall and took up their abode in Ju dah, as. was notably true of the whole tribe of t.pritsts II Chron xl:l. 141. Neverthelasfc, ita kings were sometimes sensualists ana apostates, oniy live out of It successors of David being praised aa true to the faith of their ancestors. B Intermarriages (for reasons of pol icy), with the worst surrounding trlbee th Davldlo line wae grossly perverted, and under the bloody reign -of Jehoram and A thai la. daughter of Jesebel, the etate reached" the lowest depths. . There seemed a promise of betterment when the youthful end devout Heaeklah came to. the throne (II Chron. chs, nil, xxx. xxxi), - But dangers were threatening from the empire which had destroyel Samaria, and the lesson begins with the invasion of Palestine ny sennacnerib recounting hie threat to wipe out the existence f Judah ae the unnamed "king of Assyria" had wiped out. the northern kingdom (II Kings xvll:l- not long before. - ., - "s:.,. .,,;.Ih,essew,'--,1';-Verse . - Sennacherib marching weet ard. Impelled" by that luat of empire which is th eurse of kings, had cap tured city after city to the north, of Jerusalem and swept down the coast to MH4IW UWll..Wl.U.HyK. w t tid ing t-to , the relief - of Heaeklah. and waa now besieging the city of Lachlah, about S4 miles southwest of Jerusalem. Heaeklah, .knowing that Jerueelem wae the chief object of the expedition, was strengthening the Walls of th capital. laying waste the suburbs. 'end so far as was possible,- cutting off the water supplies from the surrounding country. It we at this Juncture Sennacherib sent the ineolent-message to all Judah that after he had taken tachteh.be would deyote hie attention to ehem. ' - - - Verse 10. HI, first question was a protest against. what some of their own number doubtless considered the folly of any, attempt at resistance. Tha pur port of his, proclamation wae - to sow dissension In Jerusalem iteelf. - . Vers 11., Sennacherib warns the peo ple that a siege mean to them, famine and thirst The king of, Assyria m very real and very near.. Who is this Jahovah upoiV'whom Heaeklah would teech them to' rely? - .-.TTT,..; ,. , Verse 1." 8tlU further to creaU, dis sension, Sennacherib take, occasion of the dissent which he knew prevailed in Judaea beceuee Heaeklah had destroyed the local sanctuarlee. . Without books and achools and eccleelaetlcal everelght the eatabllshment of altars and priests in rlvel. eltiee would soon have pro duced - Innumerable type of Judaism. It -was "to hold Israel true to Ita one revelation that' on central temple wee prescribed ' by the lew 'given- in the mount and the law which Heseklah would enforce. - But It bad doubtless deprived mny cities f the Importance which they had obtained by being the eeate of venerated shrines. V ClUsens from these cities had taken refuge in Jerusalem. Sennacherib would persuade them that the act of Heseklah which waa so galling to them wes an Insult to Jehovah himself.' : w Verse IS. - Each land boasted Its god aa did Palestine. -And yet each land In turn had fallen before the advance of hie terrible army. Had the little king dom f Judah- a mightier god to fight for It then Syria or Egypt f Thus in every age the enemies of the truth have sneered at th f eebtenee f that -"little flock" which expected greet defense from ' Ood. -"' :-r -: r ' , -f , ' Vsrse 14. The uninterrupted success of a growing empire appears "to the worldly-minded a valid argument for its Invulnerability. 80-st the breaking eat of the war In Manchuria everybody felt that the esar of all the Rueelac had in herited a power whlchAad demonstrated lte irresistible force. 'All history shows ue that "a great world power" la a feeble thing when th Almighty ; lifts up his hand- against It . .. r. - Verse 1. The fifteenth verse simply reiterates hie aneers end threats. In the succeeding verse It Is mad! plain that tha cause of Heseklah - Waa the' causa of Jehovah. VHe who nates a good man hate that good man'e Ood. The curses launched at Many a Heseklah In the pulpit today are Inspired lay hatred of that Sovereign Jehovah whose cause he Is eeeklng to the best of hie ebility te defend. - - Verse ... The same old Tight la going on today all around us. The "practical politician'' sneers at the reformers who preach thst a nation can only be strong as It la virtuous. They boast of their acquired wealth, aeof their dominance In counclla, legislatures and con creeses. It-Is money against conscience, and they remind ue that money haa won In many a fight They Insist that It will win p- every contest Oet on the winning aide, le their advice to the timid, the hesitating, the compromiser. ' -. ; .. Verse 1. The worst of ell is when the . church le advleed by those' who speak Its own language to surrender its historic worshlp.st tha command pf Its powerfulfoeo. There are si ways , de serter la-ths-etteroT s-cSnpl aid--Hr-ls nothing the deserted is so esger to spread abroad as defection. A minister who hasjost hla earn faith is seldom content to retire Into - Inconspicuous desuetude. He must prowl around th walls of the city which h ha himself forsaken, shouting up to lte defenders thet It le about; to be taken. It ia an unhappy hour for the holv eltv when it iJaattacked.bvb.ost among jwhonv gre mn-addrelng It tear' poirfu!!y be cauf "apeaklng the Jew'e languaae'of the defender. But Ood i able to - liver even from, auch foee aa these. Verse 1. , To the Assyrians the Oed of Israel was as be la to so -many to day, oaly on of-" the goda many and lorde many which men themselves have Invented. All religions were upon the same footing.. All god were entitled to- the seme reverence or eontempt There waa nothing supernatural about Jehovah, nothing - awe-lnaplrtng, Sbout hie temple, nothing redemptive In hi Interposition. Assyria had ridden rough shod over U the temples between the great river sad the great sea exeept mis one. and there le no reason t peHev but that thtv must go with th re. That, be ov-ramarked. .la .the belief of 8ennacherlb, but it wa not the creed of Heseklah. ' And the creed ot -Heseklah thst thte religion was divine In lte origin, ita form -and Its power; wee jus 'tilled by the results.' , 1 ' , - v.r. JO. 'Heseklah did not neglect the walls of his capita neither did he neglect prayer. He did not nimsatr see how Jehovah , waa to deliver blm. jjut Jehovah did. It is not our duty to understand the method, of ur deliver- enee, but It. le our privilege to look -for it. His prayers to Uoa were rar spore effective than hie tribute sent te pro pitiate an Implacable foe (II Kings vlU:14K' ..':, r C, t Verse 11. In the midst of ih boat of Assyria the judgment of Jehoveh fell. We are not told the means employed. A panto, a sudden outbreak of cholera, theee and other agencies have at various tlmse wrought similar disasters . in great oriental ' mob. - Their armies, laeklng In discipline and wholly Ignorant of " sanitation.- sometime -disappear- al most ss suddenly ae they rise. And the end bf the greet monarch waa to perish by the hende of his own sons in the temple of the god in whom, efter a,lt, be vainly trusted (II Klnge lx:lt). " j Verses 11,-Jt.i-What a day of rejoic ing it must have been to th delivered city. In their lsst extremity Ood had divinely Interposed. Such dangera have risen, still rise and will continue te threaten the church, but he who has de livered will deliver, and we. nay oaf ely trust in 'him.-'-- : LETTERS FROM -riPEOPLE- THE ''5-. '.'t Bresefls Bxpeetatlo. ; Portland. June lO. T the Editor of The JournalAa a ylaltor to your city end fair from-Brttteh ColumblCl-wtsh to tat that th exposition far exceeds my expectations. The advertisements which haye been sent out by . thefl? menegement r In my - opinion too modest. It is a magnificent expoeltlon of the resources of the great northwest fc All sort of rumors r In circulation In British Columbia regarding th n finished condition of the fair buildings, tha: ktB-h nricaa eharsad by hotels and restaurante,' and th large number of undesirable oharactere in tae city, no far ae I have been able to find out from a week'e residence In your city, there Is very little truth in theee report.'. I have not seen any evidences of extor tion, nor have I met any unaesiranie characters. "BlrdAf 1 a feather- flock together;' and It la.nol neeeaeary to frequent the regions where the vile con gregate. A reasonable amount of cau tion on the part, of visitors, le alt that Is' necessary to seoure safety. , w., aa. traMn-m lmsrTrsmm.-?- Whlnton"Cor. Nw ,Tork Sun; I President Rooeevett-rode 11 milee in n automobile yesterday., walked backH over the eame road for a .aiatenoe or J mile at a good gait ana tnen murneu to the White Hou In his own crrlage. Hi companions were Theodore Roose velt Jr., and two f the Utter school friend A secret eerrtce officer who accompanleduthem a part of the time on a bicycle and the rest of the.JInen foot aleo had some exercise; . i The president usually take hi long est walks in the rain. . The ekles were clear . vesteeday. . butft it wa one of the hottest day of th year In Washington, the thermometer reglsteruig from t to St dagreee In the a hade. The president and his fellow-pedestrlane wested no time In the ehade. They toft the, Whit Houee between s.and 4. dock' in the afternoon In an automobile, an -hour when the thermometer la usually rising Instead-of falling in waenington. ana mede quick run out through George town to the Conduit road and thenoe to the great falls --of-- h Potomac, -rt- The motor car was then sent beck to the city, and - the president - and hla companions. -started" to walk from thai falla The road lead along th Potomac river and the Chesapeake and Potomac canal, over the aqueduct that supplies the city of Washington with water, nassln over the famous Cabin John bridge, through Olen Echo, and thence to the north end of ' the Chain brldae. and It won this stretch of road which the president selected for his aft ernoon eaerclae. " ' . ' -' . , Electric care run from niVaahlngton UP the river as far as Cabin John bridge, and thes ears, aa well ee the ears in the city, were crowded with people who were trying to keep cool. It wee a warm day, the afternoon breeae having died., out by o'clock. Mr. Roosevelt and . hie young companlone had begun their walk at about t o'clock, but It was dark some time before they had covered the IS mile between the falls and Chain bridge. The president wore khaki rid ing trousers,1 a neglige shirt, heavy walking shore and a felt bet, and the boy were dressed for hot weather and rapid walking.- - ' . ''..,. . , i , j, Arrangements had been made to have th president's carriage meet the walk ing party at the Chain bridge, and the carriage wae there when Mr. Roosevelt and the boys arrived. They reached the White House shortly before t:S o'clock, and th president appeared to be tired es he stepped from the carriage and en tered the main door of the mansion, The family had dined nearly two hours before his arrival. - t - - . One Causa of Railroad Disasters.' From the Cleveland Plain Dealer. : There le too. much ground for th be lief that the appalling slaughter on American rallroade is due more to lax discipline thsn ' any lack- of me chanical -contrivance. - It. i . notorious that tlme and -again engineers, for ex. ample, have not been punished for dis regarding railway regulatlone and that managemente have winked et theee vio lations It they resulted in making time. Employee have been encouraged in tak Ing those chances which so often re sult - disastrously. Moreover, ; neither managera nor employee - are made te suffer by law for disaster demonstra bly due to negligence or disobedience. All the safety! appliances thst human ingenuity can devise will be. of no avail unless rail war mm In all noaltinna rwro to a stricter pergonal accountability than is the caee at present Submarines and to Spare, .. ' From the Mtnneepolla 'journal. Whether aubmarinea were used during tne right or not there are 'certainly a number of Russian ..submarines - there now. At eny rete, Ruiei haa mere eub- marlne t;n she Bad before the fighw-- it.r(MVlAiiw " nals. lavty: Mr. Samuel X. Mofftt, wrf Collier" for June 14. agait d "Legal Ethics," art Or among. tfh ay: '- ' . - ' -When It looked ae If the p Philadelphia were in a fair way their property from the rchbe best lawyer in town' 1 quot a Nw Tork pre dispatch wera 1 to work tying up the revolution legal tangle.' It was a brilliant 1 ef - counsel - fighting for -tbe-li( perpetuation of . the political K which the late Matthew Stanley made the most powerful in the State.' , .. v.: .- "Th mayor removed- th or who power had been used to br intimidate counclle Into voting ft steal. - Thereupon . en - able ' (t promptly- procured an Injunction t purpose wee to cause a ftelay that 1 enable the thlevee to get away their plunder before the handa e ewnere of the property could bjui When thi failed, the beaten plotie, one leet hope. ' Aa Mr. Paine leet week's Collier. cloud ot yers fluttered to them, end out t war councils wes evolved a der scheme to Impeach the Mayor.' , . . "How do the apologists ot legal explain these Incidents T If the 1 ha no more right than any.ptli . 1 to advise, assist or procure a p c commit a crimed. andk 'bia-pn -would not uphold him in- such ct why have not steps been taken f disbarment of the attorneys wv vised.-assisted anL procured, yi tempted theft of the Philadelphl works t In the. lists of the coma f Seventy and of Nine, ef the oral, the town meetings, and of, the sands of cltisens who united to r the purity ,f their government am serve the birthright of their cht you will find no name .of a Unit Improvement ompany -attorney-, - not that confirm the assertion when a corporation hires a man lawyer It hires him a a ojtlsen a 1 ". "No newspsper In , PhUadelnhla cept one despised organ of the 1 waa an accomplice In the attempt travel or the city. and. even that tool of the crlmlnala gave them o hglf-hearted aupport- No minister his Influence at their service, or c have done so without brandln hh with rnfarayr But when the ablest yers ' IB" the"eity ;eoll themaetvr merely to protect th bandits froi., Ishment but. to help -them to cot theln crimes, nobody wes surprlsM nobody expected to ees those la Incur sny professional penalties -i "The situation naturally recall elasslo colloquy Of Mr. Stevens: H "I asked . cne of Jolk'e conf. boodlere, once, whether. If he had 1 to do over again, he would boodle Tea,', he - answered thoughti but I would etudy law.' 1 . . 1 --Whyr-t asked. i- "8o ss I could take fees Instet bribes.' he said, without humor." j LEWIS - ANDCLARI En route Up the Missouri rivers Fort Mandan, pear the ait of Bienu North, Dakota, - Th p&rty, is now,n Jng th-BockUs...M - 1 " July l'-After" VWt fSt Captain Clark reached, our . camp in evening; Accompanied by his party 1 all. the baggage exoept tbaWeft at) slx-mlle stake, for which, they were fatigued to return. ''The route from lower-camp on Portage 'creek to t near Whltebear Island, having bben-i measured and examined bys. Cp aark, was aa follows:- 7 ; 1 From our camp opposite the last elderable Tepid to the entrance of 1 age creek south degrees east for t quarters of mil"; thence on a m south "1 degree "east for two 'a though for the canoes, the best r I to th left of this course and sti Portage one mUe and three qim from ita entmnce. avoiding in thi avcry steep hill which lies above t age creek; from this south lav weet for four miles, passing th 1 of drain or ravin which Mil i th Missouri below the great falls, 1 te the Willow run. which hae elwer plentiful supply of goood - water' 1 some timber: here the course tare south 41. degree west for. four s farther: then south SI degree thre miles, crossing at the beglnr of the course tne nead or dram falls Into the Missouri at the Croc falls and reaching an elevated pot the plain; from which south 41 del west On approaching the river en 1 course there la a long and gentle dee from the high plalih- after .which road turns a little to the right of course up the river to eror camp, whole portage le 44mllea.-r-: . At the ' Whltebear ca mp we were cupled - with the boar and -diggln pit ior the purpose of making son 1 Th day has been warm, and the qultoee ' troublesome. . W were I tunate- enough to observe equal tudss of the sun with saxtant, wl since our arrival here, we, have t prevented from doing by. flying ' ana siorms in in venins . . Four Dollars a Square Inch. From Publlo Oolnlort. ' - TfieTlittle plof of ground alTNJ Wall atreet New Tork, wa eold reo ly. Th are of the lot 1 abo' by I feet, yet the purchase price' I7S0.00. .Think ot It nearly $t aquar foot, nor than 14 a square ft Thle IB th most valuable land, i Worlds - Tetno on need infer 'tht can buy single square foot la district for so small a sum as I a little section like that would be more In proportion, 1 since ' Its ' could force any one who needed I mi out a .lot-to pay a much k ngure. The new owner of No. 1 . street can get, good returns on hi' vestment It Is now occupied by a i story building which . yields . 'n rentale IH per cent en ther value plot and by erecting a higher bui. much larger . income , ean-.be: ec When will New Tork real estate w reach, their llmltT "y y ' I5;V! Right Kind of Talk, r-.'TFrom 'the "Echo- New. '--,; 7 What la th u of th country J knooklng Portland T ; Put-yeurelt l place. ' Could you do any better, t wellT.Pertlend ts pulling eft the gn event that haa aver .occurred I" hlatorviof tha PaelAo coast' "u aome ' country myor- did at and v sidewalk, what of HT Now lat 1 - .w.hi Pm4Uii .m.A the fa all pull together. W cannot d", good that will come from it and us he good; " ;:. t .' .'' VK'r:"' TpuUr,;,'rt, - .'- 'I ' . From ' IJfa '".t'"' '.What ever became of Polly f "She Is getting a thoueaaev c: week an tha stave.' "dedael -Whotn-dli ht 1 I, - ' : f . '