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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 16, 1905)
1 rCTlAKD. OREGON.' 'I ' IHE OREGON DAILY a & jaoxsos Pubttobd every evening. (esxpt ; . t- - ' THB MQRNXNO MOSSBACK I ftE mature and mossbscky "1 j an : industrious not; to y desperate euort to J:inir nKci-riKsra TliMt.ioi a llmo tint Innir VVHtn i 1 ' ' " xaga-vln it was perfectly Indifferent whether men took . th paper or not 'It knew that if men '.wanted the i telegraphic newt with a reasonable 'degree of freshness , 'there was only one place to go and that was to the 'Oregonian because it was the only aity paper, printed ; here. Hence it. printed what it. ; ' wanted and did just as it pleased in - public , But the monopoly once destroyed it stands in : - the same relations to the public as any other newspaper, v. Proof of this U furnished in this appended letter from ? Rer. J. Edward Blair,: pastor of the. First Presbyterian . : church at Clatskame, who wrote to certain statements and inquiries ' - cuage: "Mrs. Blair in my absence 'ing had a tilt with' an agent of the Oregonian. ' He is ' 'taking orders (or trying to) at 13 tents pec -week and giving- as inducement four maps for premiums, The ; wife told him we took The Journal. Then he wanted ...to argue thfe"cTse and she gave him our opinion of the j. Oregonian the principal objection being its opposition to the things considered sacred by. the church people. , He replied that Mr. Scott had changed around and joined v' the church.--When asked what church he replied, the First Presbyterian church, that Dr. Hill had brought him around. ,, Would you mind telling me if this is the case? If the editor has come, to see in harmony with . Twelfth and Alder I am certainly very happy to learn it" : From all of which it is evident that the OretfSflian Is ot overlooking any chance to get subscribers. : V V . SOME PROGRESS TOWARDS PEACE. ' "" ; ' t HE envoys are making considerable progress at I ) Portsmouth, justifying the hope that they may ; ;; 4 finally come to an agreement, though the points of greatest difficulty are being postponed till the lest . UJmportant.onet.art.otttof Jhewy,. , ;', :X : , Russia has conceded Japanese paramountcy in Korea; with the proviso that the. Korean reigning family, shall nominally retain hi position; has agreed to the surrender to Japan of Port Arthur, Dalny and contiguous territory, 1 and that the Russo-Chinese railroad south of Harbin, through Manchuria, shall be made over to China, which , "- nation, it is supposed, will in recompense supply a por tion of Japan's indemnity; and both Russia and Japan 1 are to keep their armies out of Manchuria. . '; X ": Agreement on ; these i points simplifies matters very much, even if agreement on alj points is not yet rendered certain thereby. - Both parties teem to be 'willing to make concessions in a sincere effort to attain peace. 'Japan on its part consents to af least a semblance of a native Korean government, and does not claim southern ..-Manchuria, except a strip along the coast nor the Man-, churian" railroad," for itself. Russia' on its part agrees to give op the southern Manchurian ports and railroad, , and , tpt,wduwfcpm that province---and this- time it w'M have to keep its promise.; ; ' ; --The tug of ; the x peace-war wilf come over. Sakhalin, Vladivostok, an indemnity, and the restriction of Russia's Japanese claim for indemnity will be moderate! to such trpbfnt at Rutsia tkn'ic'cept.?:'1:-";' fx ; :'-...'".;Yi -, Doubtless; Japan, will have to and expect 16 tomewhat . modify its terms as at first, proposed, and if. Witte, i apite of his brave talk, will go far. to make peace terms and stop the war in which there is small chance o( Rus ; tia winning either victories or credit ' " -Y " k . It is yet far too early to make any positive prediction!, but it certainly looks more like peace than it did a week ' ago. .'The dove of peace seems' hopeful of a friendly ' reception at Portsmouth. : . . , -y. TOO MUCH TAGGART, F WHAT . CONSEQUENCE thes,e Taggarta, more than any other couple who hive had similar experiences and get into a divorce court?.' Why should the disgusting, details -of ; jMrR Taggart's inebriety and carousals with many differ ;. : nt men be sent broadcast over the country, any more . than like conduction the part of Mrs. Tim Titmouse? " According to the other side's evidence she got drunk , , at every opportunity, and was grossly familiar with any- body in uniform that came along, but why should her ; ' mbnormalties be blazoned to the world as highly impor - tant news? iAs for . poor old rum-soaked Taggart the . . : less taid of him the better. TDoubtIcss the case is given '.' prominence because he is an army officer and because - v -X other army officers are involved in the scandal. In to far ? F as it indicates a tendency in the army to much the worse Wtjor the army. There have lately been many .scandals V,."tpringing from the same sourcemuch dirty linen being .washed in the courts. The public it growing tired of it " ,: ; at a spectacle and irritated with it as evidence of low . ideals. The army owes a duty to Itself as well a the country. It should not tolerate conditions which breed 'I ults and the good1 men and women should sternly X et Jkcir faces against it.: As for the Taggarts and the . rest of their ilk, the shoulder straps simply serve to :X emphasize their shortcomings and make plainly evident , u that they are out of place in the employment of Uncle v Sam if they have any claims whatever upon decent '"society. - FALSE. AND SLANDEROUS. I HE PENDLETON Tribune. i"; tn "efforts that have been A' to close saloons on Sundays ibling. makes these curious remarks: J ;'The west is the west. Wettern not, like the Older towns of the '-not reached the stages of the east Churches are - not to strong. ; Culture is confined to the few. The 7 foundations for maintaining the structures of high morality are not yet laid. The frog of civic .govern ment it yet in the tadpole stage end-requires the tail to sustain existence. But the west is growing. - It it getting better every day. Conditions may trm. V times stir the sensitive hearts of but to the westerner, whose heart west and who knowt conditions penod(to tpe present time, we are We cannot help wondering if the ' f published these remarke was not ynen nc taw mem in coia pnm. nnq h ne was not, we safe greatly nustakenir a" majority oL his readerswefe .. a.L.Mai Af dim mtA inHiartlsinf One thing about, these 'statements ' X Poisoned Flour. li China. ' , Prom united Bute Consul - Andtraon, ..: Amoy, China. . - - ' Th trad In t oretga flour from Amoy Into th interior of China and In Amoy i Hlf wui disappear for aom time to If the evil effects of a moat un . fnrtunata oearrnc cannot be over- t oaea. - gomewber between ti AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED BY JOURNAL . PUBLISHING CO. Sunday) and every ' 8unday morntag v., strta, Portland, Oregon. at . AFTER SUB- . -$ , '--' Oregonian. Js making of similar size churches. .There haps there is not blance as one culture; money wanted and when it its relations with the ' But the most "the foundations What shall be a friend in Portland couched in this lan from home this morn' lished in a town there it not even morality can rest spectacle civic than this against What sort of these to go forth it in the embryo But let tit be iviliced for there, dressed so well with the For mere thaa apanese. - Chips gut thought iron power of the first Uncle sam is one we arcr to remain admiral who lashed or Importance - tfe offs flagship. ( .1.. E commentinr , nnn made in that town and nnnr oam. communities are east. Education ha the eastern bred, and soul is in the from the border doing well. man who wrote and T ta;f:e aMai MrlM ashamed of himself (Lnrh In nnrhnwi are helnfut. beneficial, nraiaeworthv. tTM, r-rr- i - tiP Viin that justifies such pun, and 49 people have died aa th result of eating products of flour tent to Amoy In a certain shipment front Hong kong, and th natives In th Interior as well aa la Amoy have almoat altogether caaa to we the product All aorta of rumors nav Deen apread broadcast and antl-f orelga agiUuoa baa received great lmptu x-k,x, JOURNAL . no. v. damou The Journal BuUdinf, Fifth and Yamhill h feeling is their falsity; -There are as many educated and as well educated people in proportion to population in the west as in the east even more. The percentage of illiteracy in Oregon is lower than in almost any state in the union. We have just as good schools as towns back east have, and as many and as good is also as much tru . culture. Per auite so much affectation and dissem may find in some centers of so-called is not yet worshiped quite so much as it it on the Atlantic, coast; but of genuine, healthy.de velooment the Vest askt no favort of the east - -,v,' outrageous statements quoted are that for the structures of high morality are hot yet laldTand that "the frog of civic government is yet in the tadpole stage and requires the tail to sustain existence" whatever that may mean. thought or said of a newspaper pub of 6,000 inhabitants, one nearly 40 years old, in a prosperous' agricultural country, that declares a foundation yet laid upon which and that such a thing as decent, re government does not yet exist? , Verily, in frontier towns where such conditions prevailed as are hinted at by the Tribune men have been drummed or ridden out of town, if not treated worse, for less offenses the community. ... , representattont concerning Pendleton are to the worIdx;That education religion and -culture are but slightly and -feebly developed, that morality it entirely wanting, and that civil government state. ' What eastern or for that matter western man except some gambler or other criminal would go near Pendleton if he supposed these represen tations were true? We of the west mostly know they are false, but some of the "educated and "cultured" people of the east if any of them were to chance upon this wonderful production, knight not - . . as lenient as we can. The writer was trying to excuse a wide-open town in respect of gambling and seven-days-a-weck and 24-hours-a-day saloons. It war a. hard proposition, and abler newspapers than the Tribune have tried and . failed to make it decent and tasteful 4c- the public.-- - i r-.-r f - LUSTER TO PORTSMOUTH'S FAME. . ; HIRTYtFlVE years ago today , the eyes of the world were turned towards Portsmouth, New Hampshire, just as they are this afternoon, in the uniform of the navy he loved flag wrapped around him the same flag that he had raised over New Orleans -and Mobile lay the body of Admiral David Glasgow Farragut ,. a hundred years, Portsmouth hat been well knowrOo Anieriani. And now at long as history lasts, the town' will be, known to the Russians and the that were the terrors Of the seas to all fotmen-t)fhenewboraTTp-ublicere"iannchtd 'from Portsmouth ways; sailors who had; never heard the word "defeat" were born in Portsmouth homes. ; At what place could the, old teaman' have passed hit last days, more - enjoyably' than' in the I town so rich in historic memories memories of the wooden navy, which Farra could never conquer. One day shortly to llieiBloop-f'warDale that was, lying in, the navy yard.- The admiral tottered at he walked about the decks. ; A quartermaster helped -hit former commander across the gangway. ShadnTg- h!!f"eyes,-the admiral looked back at the dismantled sloop and sadly remarked, "This is the last time that I shall ever tread the deck of a man-of-war." A few days later, August. 14, 1870, he died, at the house of Rear-Admiral. Pennock aged 69 years. .--v : , ; ;r ? .; . :;:-A'-. Today, American statesmen, aay that we are a world rank; they tell us, that the navy of nc navy 01 .at1 But if pirit of th4 ring of hit ot the very strongest atloat a power on the teat, the spirit himself high in the rigging flagship, when the battle, raged most fiercely, the spirit of the commander who wrote, "I am going into Mobile bay this morning if "God is my leader, as I hope he. is," must live and burn in the hearts and souls of those who man the guns and those Who feed the furnaces. : " Portsmouth thould be doubly, interesting to M. Witte, for Farragut was a friend of Russia. When the admiral visited Russia after the civil war, the war fleets of the czar assembled to welcome him,- and from the yards of the flagship floated thit signal: "Let us remember the glorious examples of Farragut and his followers at New Orleans and Mobile." ' .f M . ',, But the Russians ' did not remember, and now their greatest statesman is' attempting to' make peace ' at a price almost appalling with a nation well-nigh unknown the day the welcoming signals floated from the Roman THE TRANS-MISSISSIPPI" REGION. VERY--YEAR-the-fiTnr-MissIslpprrfibhOft the country a, term coined east of that river ' becomes relatively more important It. it the more' interesting half of the country in that it is yet susceptible of more, development thartf the eastern half. It is the country west 'of the Mississippi that chiefly invites settlement and the ntk-ot increased utilization of hitherto or uncultivated .and as "to a large aggregate area barren soil.;; It it on thfs"ide the Mississippi that irrigation will reclaim tent of milliont of actet of land. It is in thit half of the country that nearly all the great forests lie, and that all itt gold, silver and copper fcre produced. It contains the greatest wheat and corn states, raises most of the livestock, has the highest mountains, the broadest prairies, the freshest air,' the freest .men and woinen.:-' ,.;' ) ''''.""''- ' Not so many , years ago the trans-Mississippi, region was considered a howling wilderness, except for a few large soots. Now multitudes of eastern people have learned that from many points of view it is the healthier, richer and better portion of the country, and the one offering more' opportunities to the average young man or woman of health,-strength and tpir.it f 4 . . , ' ThePacific coast -region it the finest, fairest, most comfortable and delightful portion of the great trans Mississippi region. Girt by tea and mountains, it is free from interior drawbacks.1 Soil' rich; climate mild; re sources great; opportunities numberless it is fitting that the trans-Mississippi congress should meet here fn Portland, the chief city of a large segment "of the vast . avun, vvot i(iuiii .-if f ' This organisation has done1 much good, and will do - . . . 1 nc spirit wnico animates ne icaum wmCTw - - twwt Its members "deserve ;warm welcome and cordial sup- Garrett A. Hobart to Wed. ! from th Tork tVorld. . The engegemeot la announced of If las Carolina Frre Briggs. daughter of Mr. and Mra. . Frank P. Brtgga of Auburn, Maine, and granddaughter f Senator William P. Fry, to Garrett A." Hobart of Pnteraoa, New Jeraoy, aoa Of tba lat Vloe-Preeident Hobart. SMALL CHANGS .... . , ii i it; "It" hat a hard time trying to rata. . . . , . . That Teastta. if deeidad , en, might bring It rain.. L Witte It atxttar flthtar than Xurepat- kin or -Bojeatvenaky. '' Hyda. the cmftlnt x-covernmtnt erop 'tatlatlolan; la troublad with ear bunclea, but they are not en hit con science. r. . " ; ! : ;.-. Shontt la back in New York from Panama. Stevens la axpocted to ahow up on the hxt ateamcr. Shonts ptayad mora lhan XI hours. Afur long eotriUUon -'the '"Small Chant" man ha a thought of an original exproaalon In -connection with tb ln- tartat and activity beginning to bo man Heated In Oragon with rafaraneo to the nxt aut -campaign, and "country change ar welcome to ua it without credit: "The political pot 1 beginning tO boll.".. ' --" .i':-:-. If they , won't build railroads, gat them built anyway. There ar war. On ef woman's riffhta la to oppoa woman auffrag. C ,- , ,1 . -.7 .- Har; Tacoma blow. '' '.'i,v v-. -' -s V'.'.; Moat weddings ar atlll "very pretty, A publication it entitled The Weatarn Ladv- Perhepe the western woman la considered ; unworthy of notlc. . Everybody on returning horn report! the fair .to be abov expectations. .; . Unel Chauneey Isn't talking at auch aa formerly.- . ; s : .., ' : . .-. It It about time' for Emperor Bill to break out again aomewhere. "Be careful about - handling money," aay a doctor. A good - many people don t need thla advlc 1 ..V It 1 reported that graft la th army ha bea dieoovered.- . It must have been a long time inc uncle Bam gave the army a glanc.- r - -Taft will earry th Philippine. Whn Root will make Labrador solid. , ' . Franc gets a decision for on thir teenth of Ita claim agalnat Veneauela probably about right ,;' .;.r, Th old aenatora ar planning . to alt down on La Follette, but he mar make It a warm Beat for them. ' If tineer and Tmnat" th battle at Portsmouth la th nobleat on of all. A- government that lmpriaona A.maa Ilk Henry -nklew tea for exnreaalng an honest opinion need much enlight enment and . - ,, - i , , How many did you 'get? 1 i". Portland la today headquarter (tor quit a -patch- at -coqritry all this tid -X: good, bright femal. between It and t years of age, can gat a position aa waltreee," read a notlc In the Mod- ford Southern Oregonian. It la aup- poaed a young woman la meaat - !, - y .-X : ' "A Waaco county ' aheepherder et a gun trap for a bear; thinking. he heard It go off In th night h want out and sprung th trap himself, losing two fin. gar. J. l .; Vi.,,; " vil J. . ..... '- .' i Th three - principal need .of 'La Orand. taya th Chronicle, ar a grav ity water aupply, a sewerage ayateit and met era for every on.ualng city Average crept In Lak county.-Bang dry and aheep feed acare. , . . i More nn wanted on tk Columbia river Mty. , - . ; vv. ' x Many farmer will move Into Pendle ton to tend their children to school. Hand aoarc In th country; hobo pUnttful In th town. k ' New town in northern Lak county- Christmas Lake City, . , .. i s " e . e .' ' ... :. ? ambler lnft Condon. ' . -, - Condon Timea: , There ar til bache lors over tl, and 111 malda over II in thla prosperous county. How all thaa bachalora ar going to get Ivea la a kind of a puaal. Th ladies of mar riageable age ought to be able to make good selection from the aurplua of mar riageable man.t An . "introduction bu reau" In. thla region might do a thriving bnlneaJ..,):'i,J... '-'v-! Ai'Wood rlvr cattl ranch of .IOt acre ha been sold for about 160,009. Merrill, Klamath county, la to have $i,t00 choolhoua. i , , ' .... 'XX'-Xi-..- ' v'; ; Fin crop 1 Pwdr river valley.- - Springfield la ona of th busiest towns in Lane county nowadays. - It ia not booming, but la steadily and constantly growing. All linea of business ar get ting better every day. Everybody has plenty of work and money it flowing froely, aayt.th Nw. '. . .- . r. . .'.",;:' .--i , .Ontario expect, to becom quite a railroad canter." , ,. ', - Hop must be picked clean thla year, aay grower. - Plckera take notice. ,,. : r - j..rr. e----. ..-.u. Th ' Heppnar branch train on the O. R. A N. now carrle a Jap "pilot" on th rear end of th train to dlecover any Ore whlcn may d atartea oy park from th nglna. Thee fires Intten ranii eotialderabl damage to - - - v iiry- aa wII"atto e 4,rrmrSPrty adjoining th t, crops track. Last Thursday evening, after th train lrt Ion, th erw wa obliged to xA tlnguleh three nre .before It reached Iteppner. yJ X '", A'man'nearPrlnevilla raised 41 tons of ry bay on lght acrea. ; :.,; : r A man near Spray wtn dsm the John tay river, and thus aecure wateri which ha thlnka will increase hit ZOt acres f land lit an acre In value. , . w I all to b. too. -i,-.'. ..,.:' . , v S'm.w. i. in. i. j I. t"asfcoase4B Ti:i?vE WAS1 GRAFT LONG ACO , : From the Chleaao Trlfcune, w'aa worae than thla in th good old days. . Graft, Ulnted money, vulgar eommarciallam ell flourished in thoaa rare day whan Oeorge . -waetilngtoa waved hia residential acepter. , . "That was th age of graft not tkla Today wa ar comparatively pur. What tew blemishes mar our current I ecord can be and will be obliterated." -- Thla, in effect, la the belisf of Prof. Francla W. Bhepardaon, of tb Unlver tty of Chicago, an authority on United State history, and on of th f oremost historians of th- country. He ia the leading man In th history department of th tnatltution. and t t aaid to be elated for tha headahip of th depart ment, which la now' vacant. ' HI viewa were expressed yesterday In an address on "Graft" at a gathering of Junior and aenlor atudenta. ' . - v Peter FaneulL aa w all know, built Faneull hall, which we hiatoriana- hav termed th cradle of liberty,' " declared Dr. Bhepardaon.-- "Now there Is on rec ord a( letter written by Peter which bow that ha wa engaged in th liquor business. It ahow he waa not what wa would call aa honeet liquor merchant U made hia money In an Illegal war namely, by beating th government. Tins raot la brought out clearly in tn tot ter. Therefore It can be said that fH' neull hall waa founded on tainted money. "There 1 also proof that on of the! men who signed th declaration or in dependence waa Indicted for amuggllng. jMst who It waa I cannot nam now, but It I certain that on ot th coun try' moat illustrious men, whoaa name la almoat aa familiar aa that, of Goorge Washington, was guilty of Illicit trad ing.-- -i . - - "Throughout tha colonies and later In th thirteen original atatea ther war many publlo men who engaged in prac tices that were not legal or legitimate. It la a well knows fact that ten years after th nation waa founded on of our beat aenatora waa indicted for accepting bribe. "Today we hear nothing but . graft graft graft .' There, seems to be graft in Milwaukee, St. Lou la, Philadelphia, and apparently everywhere. .We hav heard of th case of Depew, Milch ell, and Burton. - It aeema aa If this war th age of graft Tbla ia a mistake. Despite th fact that almoat vry day new example ar brought to light I firmly , believe th country la no wore than It used to be.- I doubt If it la aa bad aa It used to be, comparatively, of coureeV' v i .- -t-- ;. - '.- "Another popular cry of tha day teems to be that w ar engulfed In aa age of commercialism. I hesitate to bellewe this. It la true that wa ar commer cially Inclined, but not yet ar w en tirely given over to money-making. Take. for example, Ilibu Root. Me gav up probably th beat law practice in th country-to accept a position in whloh ther la little money. la comparison or th time. I would Ilk to mention hi case m along with that of George Wash ington, who refused to accept remunera tion for hia eervicee as president ' "It la true w ar far from being what srt Ahould JCA-lBut-w: have a, aura fiu tura. What detect ther .ar now, I believe, can be remedied. It la up to the present generation of college youths to straighten ua out When they becom mature I believe w , shall hav less to complain- of." ?-;';-. '' ' v Prefer-th Simple life..- I ' From th Aahland Record. ' ' Wealth and all th luxuries wealth can ' bring though now ln: their graap cannot lure David Brlgga and hia family from their simple home upon tb alope of th Siaklyou mAuntalns. southern Jo. aephln county. : Th Brlgga family, though wealthy by their teat summer' atrik and good fortune, hav no desire for city tumult and , grime,' or 'fin rai ment and tyllsh turnout. They are supremely content In th freedom ef tha mountain, ; tb genuine freedom that waa i all their own befor Bay Brlgga tumbled acroaa tha great pile of gold that made them wealthy In a day. ' With th arrival of aummer, th fam ily ha left-the mountain hem and mad a camp ton placer claJm upon tha ridge. of th Siaklyou near .the original claim. From their .teat they look otf acroaa th grandest array of mountain, glittering - peak and plne-whlskered range th west afford, fl wouldn't give thla for tha grandest mansion ever bailt" the elder Brlgga declared a taw daya ago," aa he sat tn tha . tent door and swept hia hand out over th vaat domain all hia own. . The aun waa set ting and all th surrounding mountain peaks Preston. Tennant, Grayback and Bhaata were crowned In brilliant splen dor. Over th sputtering cam pf ire built of seasoned snow brush and dead pin Mrs, Brlgga cook th meal a, and the family that can . writ It check for thousands alta happy' apd contented about tha almpl board., v- ' . r -. . Juat once Ray Brlggt ventured down to the city. It waa In Portland, while tha- raeea'were In course, and on visit to th track and a meeting with -tr-trio of "sharps" waa sufficient Ho convince him' all the more thoroughly that the mountain and th people ot th moun tain ar the ' beat tha i world affords. So th aummer will be a pent on tha claim and In the same dear old way. What China Gave Japan to End War. 'From th tie Tork American. "I Following tha war between Japan and China a treaty of peace waa algned on April IT. lit i, LI Hung Chang and Li Chlng' Fong representing China and Count I te -and Vlecc-ont Mutstt -representing Japan. ' r . By tha treaty China'' VV ' Recognised th Independence of Korea. Ceded to -Japan part tt Manchuria In th Llao and Talu river countries. ;. - Ceded Formosa and th Pescadores. " - Gave to Japan extenslv commercial right and privilege. v . Agreed to pay a war Indemnity of toa, tOe.tOO taels. , v-,-.,-. .' , . Russia. Franc and Germany protested agalnat tha cession of th Liao Tung peninsula after tha treaty .had been rati fied. Japan waa told she must surren der Manchuria or fight again. Runsla. In particular wa peremptory ' In her de mand. . Japan, weakeend by th war, waa forced to give In, and ' Manchuria remained a field for th larger wat oper ations now drawing to a close. Again It will become a subject of peec dis cussion. This time Japan wilt fix the terme. . - rir -.' ' 'r' v ' 71' Mo,DigonUn,MV Hanover. Pa Cor. Philadelphia Inquirer; ' The reaurvay of th hlatorlo Maaon and Dixon Una haa been completed by th corps employed Jointly by th states of Pennsylvania and Maryland. . When the leglaiaturea of th tw etates decided not to allow the famous boundary line to disappear so far', aa visible sign of it location war eon cerned, they undertook . a (work , that proved vary difficult and tedious.. The surveyors were obliged t .out a path' through th mountains, and they found many of th old marker and crowa jftasestaaaaaseeaiaew tone tu , 'ael. In Adams county ona atone waa uod aa a doorstep In a dwell ing, anoi.. r a church; some were do ing dutja- In k oveu and other were lyloaTmlle from their original place. All war recovered. althouah- not with out vigorous ctjectldnon th part of th pereon who were using them. - Th work of reestablishing tha Una waa very carefully don,- and tb old ton posts aet along ita course aftet Charles frisson and Jeremiah Plxou marked It out tn ITSI were reset In aolld cement bases, and Iron posts war sub stltuted In place where th old posts hav 0lappaard. - ' 1 EVERY MOHNING GOOD ; TO THE, GOOD Every, morning la a good morning to on who la foaling well, says Medical Talk. Thar la no auch thing aa bad weather. . There are no bluo -Mondaya or gloomy Sunday a to any on who it ll.in. Ih. vlK mnw a im .... Th good cheer of health, combined wltn a pure III, serves to' turn every morning into a good morning and every evening Into a good evening. - Tba best way to wish any on gooo morning or good evening I to set befor them the example of right living, ror it i through right living that good morn Ing and good evening com. , . -v It la of no ua to aay grae over badly cooked meal. Th grace will mot make It agree with th atorasch. There la no use to aay good morning and good evening unleaa w . do th thing that make good morning and good evening. It la. indeed, a good morning ror any on who baa dona an honeet daya labor at aom userul employment, ana nae found eight hour of ound and refresh ing aleep. Ot couraa, it I a good morn ing when one does thst There I on thing that la needed, and that la to get right or to become aojuated to nature. , W 11k th weather when we ar ad Justed to th condition about ua. There 1 nothing wrong with the weatner. -rne blam la with ourselvea. , Tn anaemic, nervoua woman h udders at tba tduch of tb aprlng: aephyra whlqh would be, re freshing and grateful to tn neaitny par son. Th constant fear ot draughts re peated dread of exposure to cold or heat ar symptom of bad health. - If wa would behave ouraelvea wall aa the weather does ther would be no cause for complaint It la refreshing to com Into tb presence of a man r woman who can honestly aay gooa t morning. good afternoon, good evening wh can aay It tn auch a way that you feel that taey mean 11, " - - , aaoa reennaa ar eontagiou. An ex cesa of vitality la catching.. Good humor, that bubble over, that cannot be restrained even in tba presence ef un congenial .company, la wholesome and haslthfuL . , ' .t .. Lota of rood, red blood I conducive to good manners.' to good morals and good - morning. -Any - person who caa honestly sav good morning haa. had a fairly decent aleep tha night befor. A hearty good morning la a certificate ot self-restraint and a clear conscience. Th devote of aensuous plaaaur haa rs relyth. bnttJUih.t:.to y good, morning. Tner ar no gooa mornings for him.. Dissipation haa soured th at moapber and poisoned th aunrtae-for him. If h says good morning at all ha Ilea. It la merer? a perrunetory remsra. Hi languid manner and ley toucn poaethe-TaTtehooff Ctfvei ad ViUi4 Wtldl 'rand momma f " ' 1 Good morning I th aqur f good behavior. Th prie one pay for a real good morning la good i day'a work, flood sleep, early to bed. up early la the rnomlntV-then Indeed It is a good morn. lag. v - - j . r "'" , ' Every morning It a good morning to such persons. They hav paid th prls for it ana ar ontiuea xo n. Charged Against EqulUble TJlrectors. From the New Tork American. ' Attorney-General Mayer in hit com plaint ehargea that th Equitable direct or permitted the fund bf th policy- bolder to be waateo. loat. aireciea o lmnrooer uses and applied to profiting themaeiveg ana there in tn xouowiag waye: "- ' . - By depositing in a merger with the National Bank of tha United State l.0 share of toek of th Weatern National bank, worth. 170. for 111 a nar. mi at one ahows a loss of over tMOt.000. . Rt advanclna to agent on rumsy se curity of renewal accounts over tl. 000- 000, a large pan or -wnica ia unoouct Ibl. ' :- Br falsifying annual report -to tn public and to th insurance department; by carrying mora than 11.000,000 of this aa loana to subsidiary trust companies. and by falling to ahow H aa a liability. By keeping many minion 01 ooiiara unlnveeted on deposit in trust eompantea In which they were individually mter eeted when it ought to have been- in vested In Intereet-bearing securltlea. Bv-naylng xceeelve aalarlea to offi cial and .unwarranted um to attor ney. ..... . : X f y . Unkindett Cut of AIL -f .yx Chicago Dispatch New Tork American. Adrian Conatantlne Anson, by the grae of th plain people of Chicago city clerk of th municipal corporation and keeper of ita aeel, though at on tlmo captain of th Chicago baseball ' team, haa Issued a stern flat agalnat ttnd anc at local baseball gamea on tb part of employe or me orrioa. .... Any attach or tn eity eierk's de partment who forsakes hia work to wit- ness th American national pastime shall be fined. Bnch In effect la th solemn ukase recently promulgated by th for mer captain, to behold wnoa prowess at 1 the bat ' thousands hav - played hooky," ribbed to tha boa and other wise proved recreant to exacting duty. And to ahow that ne meant lust ex actly what he ald Clark Anaon created a senstaion In the elty haa by "docking" John Mahoney lit of hi last month'a pay. for absenting himself to see the performaaoes of tn wmt son and th Chicago Natlonala. Mr. Mahoney ia an old-time "fan." and for year haa been servitor ef th publlo In th - city recorder' office, and that ha should be thu punlehed for hi devotion to th great sport of which hi chief haa for year been deemed th patron ia a mat ter for ad eoramiseratlon among his fallow employes. , ,-; . , v . --rTl 11 ') 1 """ : ' ) -. .; ' ; Racetrack Gambling. ; t f ; ' v ' From th Catholic Sentinel.' Xi ' Th gambler, hav fallen out among themaelvea with th result that ther ts bllng haa been Judicially determined to be contrary to law, it is to be hoped that the authorities will perform their plain duty and aee that gambling It not resumed. . ', , .' ' -' Rare track gambling hr- perhaps the moat harmful of all th prevalent modes of gambling. Not only la thla gambling harmful In Itself, but It 1 doubly harm ful on account of th disreputable else that follows : th racing circuit, Th moat iniquitous of th human, bird of prey seem to be attracted b the rac; track. f ' , , . jc j:: : t.- ct lewis , - . -4-. -ft In th Rocky mountains. -'August It Aa neither our-party nor the Indiana had anything to eat. Cap-' tain Lewis sent two of 1 hi hunter ahead this morning to procur some provisional at tha same time ha re queated Cameahwait to' prevent hia ' young men from going out lest by their noise they might alarm th gam. But thla meaaura immediately revived their suspicions It now began -to be ho-' lleved that these men wer aerit forward In order to apprise th enemy of their coming, and aa Captain Lwla waa fear ful of exciting any further uneasiness ' be mad no objection on eelng a small party pf Indiana go on each aid ef tb valley under pretense of hunting, but In ' reall(ty to watch, tha movements f our two men. Even thla precaution, how- i very- did not quiet th alarms of th Indiana, a considerable part of whom 1 returned homo, leaving only If .men and ' three women. .,- " ' "." ' , , . After th hunters had been an hour. Captain Lewis again mounted wna on or tn Indiana behind him. and th whole party aet out; but Juat aa they passed through th narrows thev ' saw on of the- spies coming back at ', run apeea acroaa tn plain. Tha -chief atopped and seemed -uneasy,,' tba whole . band were moved with fresh aueplcluna, ;' and Captain Lewis himself -waa" muck ''.' disconcerted, lest by some unfortunate accident aome of their enemies might . have perhapa etreggted that way. Th '. young Indian had scarcely breath to aay a few words as he earn up, when 'the whole party dashed forward ks fast aa "' tbalr horeea could carry them; and Cap tain Lewi, astonished at thla rnbve ment waa borne alonr for nearly a mile ' befor h learned that on ot the whit -men bad killed a deer.. 1 "Wnen'they reached, the place wher Drwyf had -thrown out the lnteatlnea," they H dls- -mounted lrt confusion and ran tumbling . over each other Ilk famished dogsi each tore away whatever part he could, and ' inatantly began to oat It; aome had th ' liver, aom Jiad th kidney a, , In abort no part on which w ar aoeuaiomed V to look with disgust aaoaped them-'. Captain Lewla - now had .the .deer - aklnned, and after reserving, a quarter of , it gav tha rest of th animal to , th-chief to be divided among then In- ' dlana, who Immediately devoured neauriy th whole of It without cooktngi -Drew--.: yer toon - afterwarda . brought in - two ' more deer. . .7 .. t v-- 4 Aa thev war now approaching -tha '. pile where they had been told by Cap tain Lewis they - would see th whit man. th chief insisted on- halting; they all dismounted and Cameahwait; ' with great ceremony,. and a If for ornament, ' put tlppeta or skins round" the neck., of our party,' similar to those worn by themselves. As this was obviously in- " tended to dlsgula tha white, men. Cap- - -tain Lewla put hi cocked hat and lea ther bn tha head of tha chief. . But great to th disappointment tb party waa not met af th. expected meeting place, ', The Indiana wera reatleaa, and It was with much trouble that they war kept with led liberal exchangee for their borees; - but what waa atlll more aeduotlve, ! had told them. that en of their. coun trywomen, who had been taken, vslth . th Mlonetareea,. accompanied thw, party - tb report of our having with s-eaan . perfectly black,-whoae hate-Waa-MIort . -and UBly.tTbl-last aecocar had ex cited a great degree of cartooltyt'iand - they eeeraed more desirous of seeing thla monster than or obtaining the moat fa- . vorable, barter Tor therr horsea. -': . ; via the meantime w had set out-after .; breakfast and although we proceeded ' with more ease than we dldfyeaterdar. ' . the river waa still so rapid and ahatlow "'" aa to oblige u to drag the large canoea - during th greater part ' of the -day. For th first even rn He the river formed a band-to the. right so as to ' ' make our advance only three mile in a ; atralght Una. Th stream ia narrow, - : crooked, small and shallow, with, high- ;. . landa occasionally pn - th - tanks, , ami -strewed with islands, fduc of which v ar opposite each other.' . . ' ' Near thla place w left th. valley to which wa gave the nam f Service-' . berry valley, from - tb abundance of '- that fruit now rip wnicn ia. found in It In tb coure of the four follow- ing mile w - passed several mora la-. ' landaand bayous on each aide of th rlverandtraaehed a high cliff on the ; ', right Two and . a half mile beyond ; j this th cliff approadh on both.aldea and form a very considerable rapid near, the entrance of a bold running stream . oa th left Th water waa very cold and th rapid had been frequent and troublesome. - On ascending ' an emi nence Captain Clark saw th' fork of a river' and Bent the -hunter Tip.- They ' must hav left It only a Short time '" befor Captain Lewla'. arrival. Fronjli the top of thl eminence he could dis cover only three treed througU tha ' whole country, nor wa there along tha-i, aides of the cllfrV they had passed In th course of the day any timber ex- r. cept a few email pines; th low ground ,t wer supplied with willow currant y bushes . and - servlceberrlea. . : After ad vancing half a mile farther we. came t . th lower point of an Island .near.jth it middle of the river and about the.cen. jv ter of th valley: hr w halted for , th' night only four mile by , '.and. though It "by water, below the, point v hm Pantaln Lewis lay. Although we ' ad made only 14 miles, the labor, ot the day had fatigued ana exnausiea them very much. . . We collected -some " -email willow brshfor. aflre jsnd. laf dowa"to eleepi 1 . - -- , j . The Development League's Prtgrt am. ' From th Salem ' Journal. . . The next development convention. . to , be held in Bugn. hou!d pot,sirtrv .. from 1U program or holding r. .wn- t man and hi Oregon managers to a. Una AtrTnt from what haa pre- vailed for the paat 2t yaara.VTha.4lb " rallty haa ail been on ' relations of tn peopie wra wiw -.. i- poratlont.. -: .' - 'Z ?. " " " ' 1 The.-: true development- . of . Oregon , means a Juat relation between .th fteo-. ', pi and tha corporations an equal sliAr- , r . . hnHiMi- of taxation tnd ' transportation and contraction. -. . j That i tn purpw "Tr - mint orcantaatlona, and they ,-are in earnest and aincera in th 1M1 e Oiat .i. Afcvalnn la to -deVtloD. and not to talk about it aeveral JJ f r; ..: . .1 l " . 1 j v I She Wanted to See. Y't . ' . . 1, From, th Argonaut 1 A woman cycled up to a butchefg shop and west In with a .smiling face. "1 want you to -cut' me off It pound; of beef, pleaaa." , Twenty-five,!. poundkr "Tee. please." . It waa a big Job and .7 whan ha, bad finished he asked .her whether ah would tak ,lt or hsva It , aent home. - "Oh, I don't want to buy tt'. v ah explained; "yo a, my doctor tells, m I hav loat 25 pounds , of flesh through cyellag tnd . I wanted, to ke what it looked like la.' a lump. Thank you so much. V t.