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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (July 19, 1905)
.u ft V , P6HTLAMD. " OREGON,: V. T H E :O RE GX) N D A I LT . . i ; , . . . ;:5 . y-A N . CCMCKMN ' PubkWMtf y.avwnJn ; (MMpI Bwadr ) i : rwy Bunday inonrihg at Th ;t TV 'a. 4,' V AilliWAtfLI AHlli Vl - U A-LM6ST - EVERY -PORTION- of-OregQO-Ji-Iin-AtereVng from physical point of view, as well hil. - To minv the' : tiirom any railroad are the more. interesting, though if i . . , ... J. ' Jk b n a. I.U , tl-a ' ll-nt, .4 ht"ftllll ' yesourceiui tms 1 no gooK" . tut n-netrat them.' :'''.: " : 'r . .' " . Coos county, whose particular day this is at the fatr, Is both very interesting and very resourceful. It it not , so Cnureiy isolated iroro in ifuoi "; county, ior tt ass " nivai, h&hw,7 , side, a distance, of nearly 50 miles, and two harbors that vessels can enter, '.one of them in a large bay, and -- having a considerable volume of commerce, principally with San Francisco. ; Its surface eastward rises toward ' the Coast range; lies" ou their, western' sloped an aver- r -e :i.. ; ibh- It.ii for-the most oart very ' Bg V ll,fl ... " ' - '' heavily timbered, there being millions upon millions ot M nf mnrhmtililt timber, 'including the celebrated 'myrtle; found nowhere else in the country. ' It has two large streams, Coos and COwwlle fivers, with numerous - branches and other creeks, putting directly into the sea. ' It has a large aggregate area of clear upland exceuentiy aaapiea to dairying, im; : hops. It has extensive coal . mines that" have - been : " profitably worked. for many years. ' It has a ahipyard, . c.i nt ntlirr jiela have been built.' It has large lumber mills, a woolen mill and some other manufactories, v It has a mild, moist climate, but ' j by no means always moist. It has rich soiL "It has tto railroad. To; get there one. must go by sea,' or, take a long stage Vida over ..the. Coastrange. y.r ' , -V Coot county , has enterprising people. An examina r", tion of its building and exhibit prove tha7But where ' thera is one person m CooS county there should be 10 within a few yeara. It needs people, therefore a railroad. . It needs a railroad, therefore people. Neither can be ( very much longer; delayed.; And when it gets one rail- ,'road.it will probably get.twa '.' ' '.' -"TWeTorgorio TnentionTish. " Fish in Mk tea, fish in Ihe bay; fish fn the streams. Uneountable1rambers of ;flsh that would be luxuries in the cities, but that no body cares to catch because it doesn't pay. And game rin the foothills, too. ' And now the hillsides show black , In Uie innyKDt wim wnuiv" ' , i " rvr tAm- with the Vast andeiant-fosts-for-herT . KrfTTtn'fa1Jcrown. and the sea murously or thunderously her sinuous stretch , of tha 'great continent's edge; bathed in the long winter mists, facing iit summer the king of day. disappearing in kalei ""doscopic glories; rich enough in natural resources for a principality; buxom' and joughly beautiful,. big patch of lavish nature but little adorned, lies Coos, one of the rhost inviting counties not only in Oregon, but in tha . . ... ........... USitea OIBies, waning iur jnj ufis. , ' ; ; .. , The enterprise displayed by Cppa county In erecting a separate building at the exposition and collecting such . I a fine exhibit should not fail of due reward, nor will it. Thousands of visitors' will remember' Cobs and many of them cannot long resist the temptation to win from her - some .fraction of the treasures, which OPPORTUNITIES. A -MONO the ordinancea that are not being , en-. --AA foTxTtrtial-Ksfwhkh pppcart in .-the , Oregonian, we were . pained to note an titter . absence of the ordinance providing . for , fire escapes. That should .be of peculiar interest to -the Oregonian for the reason that the edifice which it has. the proud privilege of partly occupying is not adorned with any . that nothing but extreme modesty restrained- the Ore gohian from heading tha list of ordinances, on the books but unenforced, which it published, with that providing for fire escapes on business buildings, and it-is for this reason The Journal comes to the rescue and proclaims the fact which the public will be delighted to know. Assuming such high conception of the law we feel as eured that once it discovers .that the ordinance demands -ftrt escapes npon' its buildings it will straightway pro- vide them, in the meantime publicly apologizing for hav ing overlooked its obvious duty. .Indeed it is possible it may go even further and turn in the Oregonian assess- . tnent, at a utuc nigner ric man f tinnlrf 1n1lar. .tnt - perfect good faith in theone-gallu.sampaignhrough whica it is now adding to tne gayety THE BONES OF JONES. E ARE NOT denying that arrive at large expense and with-great cere mony in this country from France are hot - v those ot tne late or not very jate jonn raui joucs. ' ' W are willino' tr raneecte and sunoose. that thev are. : .AVe don't really care whether they are . no difference so long as it is taken for v are. , . ; . ' :' But -what tends to arouse suspicion that the bones '.-; may be Smith's or Brown's or Thompson's, and to cause . people to give voice to that suspicion, is the persistency , S with which "proofs" are thrust upon the public, which was not clamoring for proofs, beyond the atatements . 'of Ambassador Porter and French and other authorities. If they were satisfied, or said they were, . But they must continue to publish , "proofs." And such prooisl. Item: The bones correspond -exactly to Jones size and height. But how many thousand skele "i tons would do the same? And nobody saw Jones' skele ' ton when he was. alive, to measure it precisely. Item . The bones were found, in a coffin resembling' those in ' which Jones was buried. How many thousand dead men . were buried in similar" coffins? Item: An autopsy (!) .howedthat4htnan-of th bones ease. which carried off Hero Jones. sonui in aiiiv nciB" u oi'.c nu uui icu in a similar coffin, die of the same disease? This "proof ask us to 1. . .. If thia sort of "proof is kept up " "; ''Speed of h Man of Kearney. ' rrom the v8an Francisco Chronicle. ' Beveral of them Were lined up In front Of th counter t the California hotel, dlecueslna tootracersj,.: After, th sprint Idk qualities of world famous racers had bee it defended with much warmth and everybody entire In tb discussion had reached the - poiat where b- Insisted ; upon barking JUa opinion with, a welf Income, they submitted tb whol ajne. tlon t Lynn Austin, who ued to be a amou prlntert In hi tint. ? . "AVell, J'll tell you." . aald - Auatln. ' aauarlna: off fon the encounter wfth a . eerleua look. rThafMteat runner I ever i mw in my llf waa a fellow In Kearney. - Nebraska. He used to 'run wwh th boaa company, and he wes .certainly a predtsy- .Did you ever - hunt pralii dosT Well, a pratri do baa o.muli ..ee4 that after you've landed a chara of buckshot In hi rttat he ht rerrled ln by hi wn momentum and falls st hi hole, for which reason no on . INDIPINDBNT MXWIPAPIR PUBUSHED BY JOURNAL PUBUSHINO CO. Hmtt Portland, Oregon against our will to "come out" W the side of. the Pa risians, who are laughing at the whole affair, and saying that it if extremely improbable that bones', remained so weir .preserved during nearly "areentury, -and .that the. bones over which so great a. ceremony has been and is to be made are. those of somx unknown, and obscure Frenchman who died a few years, ago. W don't pub licly adopt this theory; we are willing even to, hurrah for-Jones' bones; but no more proof, anV please your honors.' ' ' --i-'v '; 1 ' ..Let it not be supposed that w are speaking in any spirit of derogation, or, "with flippancy of John Paul Jones, the live man,' the sailor, the admiral, tha brave and" suctessful fighter for the young United Statea-in 1812-14. We yield to none in admiration ot ; and re spect for Jiim and his memory as a national hero;; but we confess to" no great degree of emotional enthusiasm over a collection of bones, even ifthey were once the framework-for the tenement of John Paul Jones', soul. Theyre not John Paul Jones. He only passed through and "will pot pass1 this way again.". Who cares for the husk when the kernel has been extracted? "Great Caesar dead and turned to clay may stop a hole, to keep the wind away" that is, not Great Caesar, but his bones. Why not?., r v ; ;,y-'Vu" ' ' Vi .' -;- v'f ' ?. PORTLAND READY WITH THE OTHERS, i " wvywsr , regions far away wv.. .-...., bottom land ano HERE IS. advertising i the ffinit Mining aueeessea century ago, since when tht indomitable, native, of that state has challenged -every form of industrial problem successfully. Butte received Jts impetus from remark able copper mines, and npon the crest of this wave has flourished the fame of Montana to the world. Seattle awoke from the sleep of the just "when the first Alaska boom struck' town, eince which eventful day( the erst ... ... . more until Seattle'a shadow , was enveloping . the city, when it surted with the yelp, Watch Tacoma Crow," nit -the world Is watching in wondering surprise. Spo- kane toncetved tri northwestminff ont a iewcars-ag -wnica. iiuc readily accorded by every one' now. And Portland .may forever laving mur- prone oy tncir cximpic -v . ' . . : With more of nature's wealth around her and within, our aueenlv state and city have never claimed . their Own. Oregon has has fallen behind m the population race; rortiana naa superior shipping facilities to those of Puget sound.'yet has permitted new traffic, which required new effort and new thought to bo drawn elsewhere. ' lS ,' ' Oregon (laajust awakened also. The lengthening shadows of business' rivals, reaching further and further toward Portland,', has alarmed her substantial citizens' In the first moments of awakening the nation beholds the greatest bf .western fairs as the handiwork of the young giant It so much is the product of first effort the nation is eager in expectation of the finish.. Every community is ready to hear th announcement o( great things here. A deeper bar, an unobstructed river, im mense reclamation worksrextended tailways and a mul titude of new settlers are the realizations. ' But they WuW WWuTttpiredranoTBur people must launch" as a unit upon still more extended voyages. All together, with one spirit and , eternally demanding - first recognition, the contest .-Will' be easy.".' r l - ' she displays. BOY MAN AND ' nortation. Indiana, to town, were overtaken by a furious storm and ran into a tarn by the roadside was at the. height of its raging and the lightning flashed vividly and the thunder crashed as if the doom of the world, had come, a man-child was. born The. husband and father ran to the nearest house for aid, which was speedily and plentifully supplied. ' Motherly and sisterly on hay in a manger, jv,vw, vi evidence of its the night in comparative comfort. ' r . ' That frenzied CorelliHrrtme of that a second child 01 ine nations, the bones soon to place. ,': ' ot not, for it makes iJSfetrihe career some people with birth may result in granted that they v;-, . ' ' its parents have to travel they can ride on the cars. ' ; THE,, SPIRIT OF THE FAIR. - f that was enough. The reason, of it to the spirit of the died f the same tlis Did nobody else of visitors will catch in Omaha and there work well here. . we shall be tempted, for everybody to ever succeeded In Capturing th cares of the animal after shootln1 him. This fellow down at Kearney, Nebraska, waa th only fellow that ever suoceeded In beating a prairie dog to hi hoi." "What -ever became of hlmt" said one of th Interested listeners. V . t ; "Well, t'U tell you. lie was out hunt ing prairie dogs en day. lie cot bead on- a prairie do, aent a charge of buckshot after him and then started to grab th dog. Just as he waa stooping to grab th dog th charge of buckahot caught np with him and the calve of hi legs, were riddled with shot , It crippled him up pretty badly, and he couldn't run after that---j ; 1 . - . , ,:, America's Heart, the. Pocket . '"' From th Rprtngfleld Republican. ' It la when th pocket I touched that things-begin te etle, W might have gone on kicking and abusing th Chi nes to th end of time but for th la. tltution' of a " retaliatory, boycott in J O U R N A L JNO.P. Journg. Building, Ftfth aid VamhO close relationship between energetic and progress. Perhaps even closer - r of retrogression for lethargy. West- n.rihd,itrn historv. teems with examples. bred the California spirit . a Jna.U I A.nl.',H m 1 0 m mrA . Vntie-Vtitage-tias-tnsisiu utmmwHwyvmtu " - 1 winning them. Tacoma's, dream of destiny ws n6thing uture--aaeatetajndLl5hampion of I a greater area than Washington, but' BORN IN A BARN. HIS WIFE, too poor to buy trans- while iournevinsr afoot near Columbus. the home of her parents lit a distant for shelter.. There, while the storm bands soon provided aTed of blankets and quilts, laid and there the mother and babe spent writer -of rasping romances. Marie her books some r years agd predicted would be born in s manger, or under the same surroundings as those attending the birth of the babe, Jesus, , and her admirers and a great many other! will regard this incident aa a fulfillment of her prophecy, .There is no foundation in reason for such a conclusion, for Cofellf was, only indulging ' in one of her super-religions extravaganzas, and 1 many a child has been born, if not in a barn, in as strange and poor a ;' ' ' . ' 1 - -.; ; : of this youngster will be watched by interest, and the strangeness of its sufficient donations so that next time AN. OMAHA. MAN coming here to see the fights .says that a stranger casually dropping m would . never know that this waa a world's fair city. all is that so little concession is made fair. ' True, at night there are num ber of the downtown streets specially lighted, but dur ing the day; there is an almost utter absence of decora tions. This is true enough of the business section, but by no means ao true as it is of the residence sections. His suggestion is that flags and bunting be thrown out everywhere and on all classes of buildings not to keep-itTip-for wierspedaf dayrhurforall the time the exposition lasts, so that the local people as well as the the fair spirit - The plan worked wel is no good reason why it should not The concession is at least slight enough be able to make it. V .-. ," . China against American goods. Then our bualneas Interests concerned In th export trad to the orient suddenly fall under th dominion of humanitarian Im pulse and appeal to th president, and he becomes equally stirred and turn to th secretary in cbarg of Immigra tion stations, who at one tak atepa to soften tn administration 01 tne ex elusion law. What la now don la some thing which ought ,to have been done wltbout waiting for th compulsion of immediate and presslig considerations or puainea interest. Whht Men Negro's Pallbearer. From tha Bhepherdstown Register. Robert Ford, on of th most widely known colored men In thl county, died on Sunday at hi horn In thl place. In th S7th year of his ege No colored msn In th "community 'was. held In higher esteem than he and at his funeral on Tuesday afternoon, whit asea served as pallbearers. ' . . ' m - - ' SMALL CHANGE j ' Hill might not hav felt about losing that annual David B. vrv badly SS.S00 rtalnr tea, but whan In addition to that-Orovar Clavaland was alvan a Job In tha Equltabla eonearn, ha na doubt (aala tbat Inault has baan aaaca to in jury, . , , ,,. .; ' ;, . ..r ;. atr'lBanaparta. tha naw aacratary et tha nary, has an unusually larsa flie plaoamcnL ; Ha , welcha .nearly fOO pounds, 4 -r---. i- t- r'- Tha univaraal taatlrooay of visitor la that Portland ta not robblne than tn tha matter of price (or accommoda tions, but Is traatlnr tham vary nlcaly. ; ; .... a-. a . J. ,"v. .. V Indianapolis BUr: " W would Ilk to think that thera la no mora graft in tha country than formerly: tbat we near ao much about It nowadays becauae aa arouaad publlo conscience la buntlns down tha grafter. . . But than there la aot of It-.--;;,. . J..i y- Hrhat with battle between hundrada of people of all ' colors on "San Juan Hill." and wild waatern horaaa braaklDg Into1 tenement houae and fllnsln yohll dren around and kicking the furniture to pieces, downatalra and upstalra. "New Tork 1 aettlne quit lively, even wild and wooly, ., the day. ' . - ; ;. e. r t , . Death from heat In Portland In 10 yeara, ; prostration. 1. ' Franslad weather back east , -, i '.7 " :;';- " . ' w.v, !-.,, It Ja, harder work for graftera, but they can work harder. ; :. 'Th devil take no vacation. , Wber 1 th man who aald tha fair eouldn't b mad to aucced? 1. . 'H31orloua,', .ay they all-thl Orecon weather.. -. . . V i - . . When doctor dlaarra'' tha patient utter, aoraeUmea. f .-. - -. , : , . i. . . . . ' . a ,r ;y , The ' should-b erlralnal ' Idiot t that rocka a boat has been board from again. - ' . , . . I lie aysiem no more mrra ijpe vr m - .h .f'Vfll! .V "ttln ''fuT!r,,,lc'ttntvTV ? . ,b.u."J porarlly at toast. Th most profitable henar on record are thoa of a Wisconsin man. They. scratched up 11,100 In graanbacka. . Unci Buaaell Baa VoubU think Secretary Root I insane.. . ) If -you can't tak a vacation at th seashore you can console yourself with th reflection that there la no reason for your doing ao, a far aa Portland's climate is concrnd. -1 Champ Clark says all th Democrat hav to do Is to wait H was careful not to ay. how long. . . "- ' ' - . ' f f - 2 ; All th big grafter seem to hav been et In on the Bqultable. x The aenaral and admiral are all for a big army and navy, even In time of peace. Thl give them mor apparent importanc. - . - , ...t:' : And a few year ago Senator Dpw wanted to be president, and would hav been elected If h had been nominated. ,T ' -- ' . Doubtleas Senator Tom Flatt feel greatly shocked. ' -' - 'y OREGON SIDELIGHTS Creeks ot Washington county are be ing -stocked with trout . , . .... .':'.",-.-.... J . Bine th gambler wer rooted, Pen dleton ha prospered 'mor than ever. Harvest early and abundant In Sher man county. . '. .'; j, ; Crop good around Drain. -t . .,; ' '.'" ' r-' Most Oregon people r at work, yet a good many find Mm to go fishing, J ' ' Fish In th Molalla being killed with dynamite by mlscreanta, who ought to b caught If possible. , A WUholt farmer protect hi aheep from wolvea by a scarecrow. 1 ' a e . . . . Th hoplle 'eouldn't do It ' i '' ' "i ' ' 4 : ,. e e , i' Not a larg branch eut from a Royal Ann cherry tree near - Hlllaboro had clinging to It mor than S00 beautiful and larga cbeniea . , . i -. , - Marveat hand needed for Gilliam county' bumper crop. . - -. . .... ' . , ., ''' ; - ';' . - ' Aatoria's Push .club haa been reha bilitated. - ....-v,." i. v ,'.' Never before sine the flrat eettle- ment of Powder valley hav tha crop looked ao Well. Ther are . hundreds of acres of barley that r expected to yield from IS to 100 nuahela par acre. Hay la th flneat ever and th whol country presents the appearance f farmer' a paradise. Oregon tream wer scarcely ever so low. .. Mrs. Mary Callahan had an ualuoky day; her boy about 11 year old broke hi arm In climbing over a fence. Sllets correspondence of Toledo Reporter. How about th boy! s ',.'i.,:",.,,j ' .. Th Condon Glob, think th gang of stock rustler and sheep shooter of eastern - Oregon hare been entirely broken up.- ' . ; '. , 1 , ., ' ' 'An Independence man ha discovered a . new way of dealing . with hopllce, which. If it I effeetlve, will do away with th necessity of boiling quassia chips and whal oil eoap. In burning lose and brush on the outskirts of hi yard he observed that amok blown Into th hopyard had th effect of driving out or killing the, lice. But Isn't thl mor troublesome and axpenatv la most cases than spraying T t . 1 t Municipal leagus orgsnlsed la Grants PSSS. : - . ' Perhaps that Corvallls' man who hss been twice. lined ISO for selling liquor, end paid a lot of eoate, besides , at torney's fees, some 1200 la all, will now turn hi attention to some lawful eecu patlon. ;;, v; ........ " Blng cherrle ralaed near Weston are aa larg a a plum and taste like fruit from Paradise. Soma pressntsd to ths Leader measure t inch In circumfer ence, and are an average sample of th product 01 ion tree. . . , . - . . e . ; ," - Recent hot 'westhei'v." prevented 'a bumper wheat crop tn Umatilla county. 9 r:" XT CarreV 9. asvtew ,v. - Thar waa a time whan man thought himself "ao important a part of creation that h would not listen to clno when It told blm that th rth on which h lived waa only a satellite of th un. That suteraent outraged his sense of his own dignity. , Had not theology as sured him that he was th favorlt crea ture of the Almightythough eomewbat under a cloud for bad oonduot.-- But eclence haa email regard for per sonal dignity and at last man .had to acknowledge that science waa right and that th earth truly la a very email af fair, hardly a epeck in Mi eye of tb mighty bun. which light It Indiffer ently aa a great beacon, ehootlng it ray over th ocean. hln upon a be wildered Insect circling in it glare. Then aelf-sufflclent man invented a naw fable to magnify hi imaginary Im portance. , Since he had to reoognis tne supremacy of tn aun over tne ena be persuaded himself that th sun must be far greater than any of the stars. How otharwlaa could It bav bean hon ored with tha duty of making daylight, for. man t So theology got it aecond wind, and dignity waa restored to th fa vorite of the-Almighty. - ' But alaal science, which never rests. for progress i Us very nature, lifted an other curtain in th cosmos, and present ly msn found himself pushed again from his fancied throne. He had to confee that th itin hold but a patty rank among th stare, that thousand of th orb glittering In th deep of apace are incomparably it uperiora, ana tnst u th whol solar aystera war auddenly snuffed out ot xUtence th ' universe would not know that It had suffered any losa.- : ' - Yet even rhi 1 not th end or tnenu- mllUtlon which science la inflicting upon self -conceited man. , At least he thought. th solar system represents tb universal type, ana it an tnoaa aiar are i they must be attended by eatelllte world built npon the plan of this on. One more h was mlstakaa. Again his Ideal, growing out ot th overweening ot hi ' own ' importance, na been ehattered. On of th latest ,dle eovesie -of scleno la that th sun and It eystem no more form a type for th I forms a type for th forest giant aur roundlng it For many rear. ,aa tela- scope Increased In power, th hop grew that aom time w should b aoie to e planeU.attaodlng-tha-atare But ln stead ot obedient little pUnete like th earth, what w are really beginning to detect among th a tare I a set of snna, pair. ' quadrillea, groups, clusters- many. Involved in marvelous wreaths ox glowing nebulosity. ' What man once vainly imagmea or in bun, that th dull earth waa It master. proves to be, in a sense, tru ox aom nt the mat auna of distance SDaca. A most notable example has reeently been discovered among th tar of Pegasus. Th star numbered In our chart gs tn that oonstellatlon 1 a binary aun. - Its two component together exceed our aun aboat 11 time in milt - On of them 1 10O time as bright, aa Its companion. and yet ttat faint companion I roach th mor massive of tb two. tt weighs a much aa save aun Ilk our, while th other weigh only a much a four. In. thl case, then, th body that give th least light sways with It gravita tion a neighbor which, la .a 100 times brighter. nr--'r,'.-- .v ' "' And- this is -not the only smown m- slann nf ths hind., la -the great quad rupl system of Castor it appear that th fslnteet star of th set I th gravi tational master of Its ' comrades. Th wonderful vsrlsbl Algol baa a perfectly dark and opaque companion almost as larce aa lUelf.. The' brilliant Blriu ha an attendant half aa massive a tt aelf, though 10.000 times lea bright So man- trail adjust ni laees again to fit ths facta But In th end ha need feel no humiliation, but rather exulta tion, becauee he ha sufficient Intelli gence to get even an Inkling of th In comprehensible truth. He haa belittled himself often enough by playing tn riy upon th wheel by imagining that he and his petty affair , eon tltut th cyno sure of th supernal powers. . Science Is teaching him to Hnd his- true dignity In th unprejudiced search for knowl edge, i .. ,. , : .: ::.--, .;. ' S ,: . r . . Mr. Jerome , Pays Hia Respecta. : Kansas City Dlspstch New Tork Herald. - District Attorney Jerome of New Tork. in th course of an . Interview concerning various sublecta, expreesed thia AnlnlAB nf John D. Rockefeller I can't ssy that I e any pasaiiN between Rockefeller and Jesua Christ if I may say that with reverence. 1 hav not any particular feeling against men who succeed. -1 "Rockefeller did in th main, only what every crossroad merchant tries to do drive his rival out of buelneea HI methods bay always been immoral, but rarely Illegal. When they hav been illecal they hav been at their worst Mr main nlalnt against such men la In the demoralising inriuenc . or ineir method In debauching legislatures and th Judiciary. I . can't imagine the Savior at th head of th Standard Oil, that' ur." ; -Mr.' Jerome then turned hi attanuon to Jam Hasan Hyde, of whom he said: "Oh f Hyde's lust s young fool. He ta a fair aamnl of th second generation. His fsther was a grest msn. or course Hyde could aot get Into publlo Ufa It' as hard for a wealthy man to get Into publlo llf In America aa It waa for a camel to gst through the-needle's eye. The - American people : do not worship wealth at all." ' ;...... Of Roossvslt Mr. Jerome had this te ssv! : ;." ' ': V- Roo'sevwltt Th American people Ilk a masterful and honeat leader and will follow him till hell f reese over. -if r. Baptiam' In "Raaaisu S ., ; -: From' th Nw Tork American. V Confession Is enjoined In th Russian ohurxh. fcnt it la not nerformed aa sat- taf action offered to God. ; . - . i , No candidate for holy order win r ordained until he la married. This, f course, refers to th seoular clergy. Tb monasuo order must, o ceiioaiee.- j widower priest may remarry, but he must first renounce his ordera A curl ous Inconsistency 1 that no priest as long as hi wife I alive can attain to a bishopric, becsjua all bishop must be unmarried. "' iT"- ;"V In th Eucharist th priest receives tha breed and wins eeoarately. whereas the laity receive bothj elements mixed together, from a spoon, standing. - The sacrament is -also administered to in fants, but they rscelvthe win only, lest they reject the bread. . . Baptiam I a most elaborate ceremony, and take 40 day before It 1 complete. It Inolude triple Immersion, the chrism, snd tonsur of th Infant' hair Jo th shape of a croaa The aacrament Of unction differ from tne similar sacra ment In th Roman Cathollo church, be ing, a It is, administered even to those who are slightly unwell, whereas ths church nf Rom only glvee It In srtlculo mortis, or when there 1 no chance of recovery. Th services In th Russian church ara most elaborate. . This 1 evident OUR EARTH AND .. .THE SUN : from th fact that th ritual and r r vice oooupy 10 folio velum -a tirv, 1 cer formed at least three time dally, and th greater pars of th service varte every day In the year and every part ot every year except in th com munion office. ' Th average nay of a parish priest l about I1.20O. Bishop hav about 12.100. and a metropolitan. ,who correspond to a primate, 16,000 par annum. There are no state endowment, th income being derived from collections and fees, for no priest will perform even th moat trifling office without payment. ;- Th Russian clergy hav no social standing; a better class Russian, would not eat at the same table with hi par ish Driest: in faot. they occupy th place our clergy occupied about aay, tha four teenth century. ''' Sermons are rarely' preached In the Russian church. Thera are hooka of homilies from which th clergy may read, but these homllte ara so very lengthy, ornate and elaborate that the people refua to llaten to them. A a rula tha, clergyman are too Ignorant to compos their own aarmona, and, even If they do compos them they must first be sent to tb oonsl story for ap proval, because the government la de termined to stamp out heresy. Th con sistory are in no hurry .to rtur 4h sermons, and often weeka or. mor may pass befor they 'do so, consequently tb clergy, aa a rule, leave preaching severely alone. .' l.:t- ? ALWAYS BE koDEST t . :' ; Bv Beatrie Falsfaa. (Copyright, UUS, by W. a. Bearit) : ' Girls., befor you ' complain of men taring at you and trying to flirt with you, don't you think It would be a good Idea to try a llttl lf-exarr Ration and sea If you haven't given them aom encouragement 0. .: . Nine time out of ten you will d that th eirl who la alwaya being spoken to In the street 1 a good deal to blame. I one knew a alrl who never went out but what she cam hem with - a tale of how this man had apoksn to her, that man "had stared at her and some other man . next insuueu nor in om way or' othr. ' - : v On day I walked down Fifth ave nue with her! and after that I never wondered l -hr etorle. . 1 If ever men received encouragement. th men who looked at her did. It may hav been that aha did it un consciously, but ah mad eye at every Qian w met Then, whsn th man returned th glanc with Interest ah waa Indignant. Of course ther. ar aosens or eoious men msbher they r called wh can not resist ogling every woman tney meet no matter how Scant tb encour agement' they receive. v . But the msn ar in tn minority. If you walk along the street as a modest well-behaved girl should, at tending to your own buslneee, you wUl hav llttl trouble from tb men. - A nrettv. neatly-gowned girl will al ways attract a certain amount of at- tentioa. -- ; ,' ; , " r- Man will, of course, look at her. But if ah I modest In hsr demeanor their admiration will be moat respectfuL . A man can tell at a glanc th girl with whom he may tak libertle and tb girl who would aot permit it H may laugh and flirt. with tha for. mr, but h will have no respect for her; and attention without:' respect mean nothing. at alt ' - '.. .'. - Whsn a man wants to meet -a girt n will And ' aom prop,' legitimate Way or81ng-ao-. r": If his ad ra ration Ta ox tn ngnt sort he will not car to becom aequalntad through flirtation without aa Introduo tion. ).-- . --' " .-" '" i If a man a attentions become unpleas ant when you ar walking la th a treat or riding on ,th subway or levated, move quietly sway from him. H will quickly see that his atten tion ar unwelcome and tire of th one aided nni v But when , you gas si mm witn a baby star of Innocene; . don't blame him If a conclude that n may . - You don't gas into tha eyes or rery Strang woman you meet. -Why, -then, bhould yott-gaaaT at strann menf ' " .. ' It look bold, girl, and It give men a poor opinion nf yon.- - v -. Thar 1 nothing mor charming than a modest mannered young girl. . Hold yourself with dignity and mod' sty. and h admiration, and attention that com to you wil b4 all of th right klnd' r-. ' - x: . -; -Z; ,- I hav seen a girl pass a group of young mn and make eyea at them as she passed. . - . -. ; -.. -. They smiled at . her and winked at each other. .v'; - ' ? 1 - ;-. " How would you Ilk thatf v Men will treat 4 girl according to bar wn standard. r. 1 , ' -. If ah behaves Iherself they will Show hsr all reepeot; If sh doesn't they won't -t. --v'-'t;.1' . - ; Bo - you see .it la . all ' in your own hand. ', Enroute'up th Missouri Jiver. In th foothlU of th Rockt. , , ' tain -Clark -passed th remains of sev- brush, which seemed to hav been de- observed that th pin tree had been Stripped or ineir nam idoui xne same season, which our Indian woman wmya v.- A In .)., lA.Ahialn th sap snd the soft psrt of th wood ana vara zor iwu, . abui u tiw, aw met herd of elk and killed two-of them, but such was th want of wood In ths neighborhood that h wa unable to product enough to make A Are, and he wa therefor obliged to substitute buffalo chips with which he cooked bl breakfast Thsy then resumsd thsir course along am old Indian read. 'In valley watered by a larg creek, both pf wmch axtena consiaerauie o Into th mountain; , thl they croaaed . tfmlmA aver a in . uui in. mountainous country covered with sharp fragments or Hint roca; tnnse snd out their feet very much, .but wer .-i , lu. iHhiMnm. than th brtckly pesr of ths open plains, whtoh L . . a ahmuliat that It Is Impossible to avoid them, and th h the nlerce a double sol of dressed deer skin, tns beet resource-against mem "'-"' buffalo bid in prehranfc At night 1. ... .1... much fatlsrued. iney reavu mw - -- , , fc- havlag aaaed- -two mounUln In th course of th. day and having iraveieo S miles. CspUln Clark' nrst smploy- . ii.l.i..' k , waa to extract men n iiniii " , - . vi. fMt the briars, which he found 11 In number. . ' In th meantime we proceeded on very .. . 1. l. ,.i, mMtn to In WSll, I I1I7UB U I'l- --w. ww m,.mm aa wa advance Th current ha -AI..4 iwu. -.trans- during th day and obetructed by om. rapid, which ar not. however, much broken by rocks, snd re perfectly safe: the river ";P its aencrai wio.a ' j . LEWIS AND '; ' LARK YCU CJLZJ ILWJZ YCU?. Owij luc:; : . v' -l Fy rv. XL trtmn. i ' Read just ona bor,4 If vmi li v.. . 'int I th time to read more Tvlar'a "Amhrn. pology." and you will find yourself quite uiseounaniea or tne a eat, ay delusion. - ne wnoie siery or men on thia globe, rom the dim and miserable bealnnln aown to th present. moment ?1 the account not of human weakness, but of numan power; tne etory not of a realst- tese rate- inat does wlta us ss it nleaaea. but Of the wonderful human brain and win, wmcn laugh at desUny and defy at wnn th first, taint rays of history sr turned pnto th human creature he appears la .a most pitiable llsbt testimony rendered by the early atone age. wnen ma a and th cave bear, and the great woolly rhinoceros, and th atlll greater mastodon were competing for the mastery pf the habitable parts of tb artb, - t 7'-.- . It looked gloomy for the man'.. He wa ' ignoranu h : bad next to no weapons. - Beneath the clouds through which th thunders' bellowed and th lightning flashed , he trembled ltk a "guilty thing afraid," . ..,. Hungry,, half-clad, a physical weakling In comparison with th great brutea around blm,-. with nothing but hi club ss against tb powsrful natural weapon of , hi giantlike adveraarles, ths odds sgalnst him seemed to. b inaurmount ablet :.- ..';. Vi ; i- But aarth' youngeet child waa full of "grit" H stood hi ground... He Invented new weaaona new means of defense and offense, and presently h I had th monstsrs about him at a de cided disadvantage. , . v By and by bs tamed th brute and mad them eerve him. HI superstition slowly mad way for reason and self- confidence; ror , the cool, level-needed thinking which; waa to giv him tb victory. , . - -.- Next h tsckied tn aarth, and mad It giv him bread, fruits, clothing. , . Then he .looked up toward th high has vena, wlier th thunder had roared that mad him tremble, where th light- , nlng had flashed that struck terror to ' his eoul and he found out that ther wa no need 'of being afraid, that he , waa greater than th elements that bad affrighted him. ' . s.. . And h reached forth bis hand aim tamed thoa awful element, even aa h had tamed th beast of th field. 1 Science was bo ml And science sound- - d th deakh. knell of th ancient fear.l When sclanes cam tne old superstition about "sternal destiny". bowed Its hasty' adlu and flsd. Mas waa free!' Mind, had conquered' matter! .Will power, had triumphed over the supposed necessity Inhering in nat-' ural Iswi - , - . Mind! Will! these ars the sovereign facts, and Whsn the thing speak ths opposition trembles and gets out of ith war 1 i ' ' And .whet Is trus of tb far Is sousliy : tru Of th Individual. With the Indi vidual.-a with th race, th euprem thing la mind, will, tb assertion of the , self. :. ... " i c Th greatest of psychologist knew perfectly well what he wa about when h mad on of hi characters exclaim; "It la not in our eura. but in ourselves, that we ar underlings. ' ,r - - From th eonnlng-tower , of. mind let th commands be thundered snd the. ship gqe straight on against, all, th wlnda snd waves of destiny! FateT Tea. ther Is a fats ths rsti that I decreed by th omnipotent wiu, in gott-llXS-reasnnt n A th greatest. ma one declares. each one of a may exclslm: "All power In havn and earth is rolna . Ha .Wants to Know. , rrom tn Ari Mrn'Edltor Win vou nleasa. in your next Issue? -teiTrns how old a man Ties ( w N w orasr um nm caa an ana wm, when b chooaes, tbat 1 If h pay hi . bUla that he contract, and If It I th custom tn thia part df tha country to do aa bualnea men raqulra For my part I . think they ar non compos menu. P. Bw Pleas look It w and eee what th law ta and cbarg to th account of .. . THE WRITER. ' .I.h v 4. iw7 .' ttkm Mfnm4 statutes treads; ' "Any msn over 1U year of age, of h'oree sense' snd good teeth and who nays hi subscription in advance, la entitled to all th right. . titles snd privileges ,of any j American citisen not born In Missouri.- yarda. For - mor - thaav Itvmilee we went along the numeroue bsttds of tb : rivr, and then reached two 'small !--..., u ta.ll.. k.vn.4 whtrll 1m . a imuwi w.. mall erwk la 4 bend to th letU &bov ' a miU Island on tha right alda of tha awaaA eAsalfcJ ahAIlt 1A AlATsa. rVr f w w wa gwpaavaw-M p - 7 it aa . SkiisiitasuatsmN MlB slntl s Willi am illuuuvi-aiwaiM - ball wmcn taaiaa ior aa nour, uu. s-t j aw... i kl. aaswnflnastT Vsalla V tusj aiiv w - - through which wa ara passtna;, tha haat la at moat uwuppt rumv wuwi- wa.S. aw -llnaa nf wKab IrtftV tODsl Of WfJ UUM1U amgaaaaaayw ws a-w - aW. baAi is, g-aa 4aa aa wavam SM S1 Pi tgl 1 lad WltlT a vuw of tha inowr Thesa mountaina a. a.s a- .d.. ensammtr. nsaff1JlIlV g)SAT wRVir gaa " . " ' v.risw. with1 llttla eoDMi ot Plna. tedaiv- ana ueisam m. . , . . A mil and a nair oeyona ni tha rook aporoacbr th river on both ...... . 'miMl aubllm' and extraordinary peeiaci. ' ror ... k. iu . uniandlinilir t from th water' dg to th height of naariyr 1100 ft v They r com poenu vi . , 1.1..1. -..i,. r tta Visas but from It j. . ... frag- iiiniw.cmi'i . . - . . . ' . ,1.. nnn,r Hart to tHft mams we wj'K"- -ww .a . flint of a ysuowisn w . ..M K. imaelned mor ' tremendous thsn ths frowning darkns of these rocas, - woion pruiv -' ta.tan.r, ua with destruction. . . m ... .....a. talrf,K mm m ' Th river, ox ... ------ to hv forcsd its , chanoel' down this oiia . . . . . . . . ,ht Anrlnsr tha whol dla- tnc h wtr I very -deep? even at ... Ik. Mta., ihta. mllea tne eciges. - - - . . , taA, . .nOK 'HHDBUL DUB If I f. ,w Ui.fl r v im ,w - " ' ' ---- . - - . . ... takini., . m.ta foil 1 A itfina ne- ysruta, in wu.u -- - tween tna water ana ura wwiiiii,F- pendiculsr of th mountain; , th con vulsion of th passage must navs been terrible, slrtc at Its outlet ther sr vast. column of rook torn from th mountain ... Mw-mmA AH Bath aides) Of.th voiua mm . . . . - - - river; the trophlesi aa It were,' of tha Vlotory. Deverai nn aprioee oi . Mh..m. nt the, rnolc. and eottv I rum niw ........ - . tribute to. increase th river, which ha. pow a strong currant, ou very mriun-ately-w ar able to overcome It with: to use either th oord or ths pols. W &knl 4a pa n mm. tlma aftae wvn wuiii" . - - - , dirk, .not being abl to find .a apot , . .... .1. . ,a . anam,, nn. hut it lengtn, aooui iva ami " a m i a in ik. Milrii, nr tha river -wa mt with a spot on th left side, where we procuren pieny iiant wwe idu pitch Plna ' Thl extraordinary range, ot rocks we called th Gates of the. Rocky moUiftalna. '. W had mads II miles, snd Vi miles from th antra nc of th gate. Th mountains ara higher today than they were yesterday, tva aata unit blshoma. a few antelone and beaver, . but a I nee entering th mountain have found no bnffaloa; th otter are, however, in great 'plenty; th mosquitoes hav become less ,VHlta soma than thy. were, , ' .' 1 ' 'i'.'Y i