ntt'iW'- ' 1- C" n ' " - ; ..,0o.' 'I f ' i T H E OR E G i .O A N v s jacuqs V- PablWMd mn nwlw (mmM Sunday) and .every.. Sunday mornin 1 - - MR.-JIARDT SHOULD ITHOTJT any reference , sonal honor or honesty fair management for its' move him from the committee or TT7 vv there was a stupendous scandal following the distribu t tion of medals to the exhibitors and it is manifest to everybody that a good deal of wort was done that will i , not bear the full light of day, . In this direction the man l "agersVrf the faif should see io it that Portland's skirt! I are kept clean. That much Is owed - i jnc lair iiscii ana uc pcopic oi futiunu uu urt(u ; f 'who have so heartily contributed in cash to Make the fair success. : ; I i The journal has nothing against Mr. Hardt personally; if $t doesn't even know him, but in th position which he 5 occupies he can practically "dictate the award! that 'are ,;,? made. Occupying such a position if there was nothing , else to be said except that he had had the bad taste to ' . accept a money testimonial from some of the exhibitors, , that -of itself would b enough to cause his removal from the' position' which he occupies But in addition to this nunora have followed Mr. Hardt from other expositions ' and while it appear that they have been disproves, -f sundrypther rumors Itave begun to float about Portland. It may jbe tree that there ! no foundation for them but .7 once they'are started a man in thsj position occupied by ' Mr. Hardt is obliged to make explanations and when this point ii' reached it is bad fpr "the fair anil fokMr. Hardt ' r Under all the circumstances the thing for Mr. Hardt to . dp is to resign and the thing" ,for,the management is to 'accept his resignation and appoint in bis place some ; Qualified local man who will remain here and receive the Justification or condemnation 'that his actions may 'i-call ' forth. f?i?j, ,:. There should be no shadow of suspicion about the awards.:, No matter how honest the may be, so long as : ' Mr, Hardt holds his present position there will be ap - .' parent justification for whatever 'may be said against ' them. " .-. '-.:;' .r ;:-;:V";. t; " Vc." "iV'GOLD.'AND SILVER OP 1904. "v HE FINAL ESTIMATE of ( " . L . . rami. lor ui proauciion oi I,: '., United States during the shows an output of $80,723,200 in gold and $33,515,938 in , silver, these figures being an increased production of $7,131,500 of gold and 3,486,000 ounces of silver, as com '. pared with 1903. The increase in the production of gold was due chiefly 'to California, Colorado and Alaska. ' The largest gain was made by California, which produced about $3,p00,000 more than in the previous ' year, and a arger?'fnount than in any year since the sixties. The v principal gain came from dredging operations, which are Vfcxpected toshow'a further increase this year. Dredg ing is pw' considered second in importance to4he cyaide"proceSi in. new mftiing' methods introduced , ,:within the past .10 years, .. . - ,.. .v .K-;fiV.-"' V Colorado led in gold, with $24,395,800, and was a close ': second to .Montana in silver with $8,312,328. California ' was second in gpld, with $19,109,600? Alaska sent out $9,30400; South Dakota i was fourth with $7,024,600; ; Montana next-with . $5,097,800; Nevada followed with $40700; -Utah was next with $4,215,000, and Arizona next with" $3,343,900. The only other states producing . over a million in gold last year, according to this es timate were Idaho, $103700, and Oregon, $1309,900. In silver Montana led with $8,47298; Colorado followed and Utah was a close third with $740,894, and Idaho . fourth -with: $4,529,916V-- . zz?-- t If thifse estimates are po nearer correct as to other ' states than with respect to'Oregon, they are not worth much. Nobody capable of judging places Oregon's old production for last year at less than twice the amount of V. this estimate and some would confidently assert that it ; was three times that amount, - . . "PRINCIPLES" t ' ' ' '.. jt ey't:-. AND U HE NEXT congressional campaign," remarks apromiflentRepubIican aspirant, "should be conducted without personalities, but on prin- ;. ciples." Sy- j, ,":,'. Memory recalls some such statement made hitherto. J fact, as we reflect, ."Principles, not men," has been a "slogan ever since we can remember, and probably . has , been in vogue ever since the days of the continental '"cohgresa.'! Bat while' the idea that" the thing to be ac .' , complished is more important than fhe instrument of its accomplishment Js a good and true one, it will not do to rlan.ioo jnuch jpa. professed partyj'principlci," and over? look the qnalifications of candidates. . v '. ' - .'. : In fact, -it may. be said that in. American politics just now the maxim should be turned right around, and be made, to read: "Get the right kind of men; the prin--:- ciples will then take care of themselves.". - l - , "What are the Republican party'a "principles," or the ''Democratic party's, as applied to current and oncoming affairs? The,' main 'Republican " party principle" is "Protection to American industry and labdr," and on this it has constructed a vicious and inimical tariff law, that ' protects the trusts at the expense of the people. The Pearl for Muu Roosevelt .', Manila Correspondence New Te-rk Sun. i I--. News from the southern islands shows that Secretary Taft and his party are ' , having . a srrt ' reception. - Particulars of thstr welcome' to the dominions ot the ' nulUn of SulU have been received here. : i.Ths young sultan was so taken with the ; enthusiasm shown. by Miss Alice Roose- velt that he Invited her to remain for " ever. '.. The president's daushte thanked his majestr. but told him. that much as she was enjoying her visit to his - islands, she would be obliged to reUra , to her family. The sultan's formal reception to the vparty took place last Friday In m, field ' outside the walls of Jolo. The American party was escorted thither by a, bat-'fallcm-of the -Twentieth Infantry, a aquiulmn of the Fourteenth cavalry mnd the Twsnty-eia-hth' buttery of field ertlllery. In the field cnudlly at-ttv-ed Keeros had assembled, hundreds of . them mounted on decorated pontes. , The sulun ef Bulev dressed in 4 .nhivhby frock coat attended by ills mln latere anA aocempanied by armed am hnilla, bearers, rode ante the s.retia and " greeted Secreury Taft. The congrees ' men and ladles of the party Joetled one a not bar 1 their aaxlaty to hake hands with his majesty. For two hours the Americans were entertained with-a, pro gram ot native sports, including A spear ennee and a bull fight They were then taken for drive . througk exaujalte coonanut areves.': f , ' , la tie evening there was a bail at tfcs ' ' ', . ". i - " '. i . .. . ON DAILY JOURNAL I NDtPINDKNT NKW8PAPBR v "K' iJ V ' V' ' .. : '. W-'" J ;. PU5H?HEE BY. JOURNAL 4 PUBUSHINO CO, ' satsste, roruesn, Oregon. RESIGN. i whatever t the per 1 mnermev." inH thrrc vrn re. of Ih B. Hardt the own sake should re- awards, in at. jlouis soman and Jacksonian to the core. t .' The fact is that each person may of circumstances by the managers to the Republican "principles as versa? Senator : Senator Tom public nfan more B cause he opposed the director of the tl.. . president in? Is goia sna silver in tne calendar year 1904. former assertion was on entirely any subject he is supposes that the The president MEN. taking a fence or Army club The sultan attended It ar rayed In golden and bejeweled eoat and attended by 100 , armed - retainer The monarch, through bis prime minis ter, presented a pink ' pearl to Hiss Roosevelt and a, - saddle . to ." Becretary Taft The chief dattos also gave pres ents. Miss Roosevelt receiving 'from them ' three pearls ' and a decorated saddle and Secretary Taft a collection of hoi os and whips. ' The party sailed at daylight on Bat erday and arrived at Malabang at day light the net morn trig. Becretary Taft Miss Roosevelt and the Misses Board man and McMillan, accompanied by sev eral congressmen, went by trail to the town ot Illgan and arrived at noon, after an interesting trip. All the party are welL-.( , -a ' v..- '" "'' ' -Jt .? .1 m i ii i in n a " Law In" Chinook, Waahington. From the Astoria News-Herald. An Interesting story i comes from Chinook. Some time. ago Sam Olaen. a Chinook trapper, waa arrested by the Oregon authorities for violation of the closed season laws. If If declared that when be wsi taken before a Waahing ton. Justice of the peace that official waa Intoxicated and so helpless that be fell Into the river while going from a launch. 'It Is also stated that Olsea waa fined lie, although the minimum One provided by law is 160. and the statement baa been made that the 111 was never collected, ' , . - -y , no. t. (Uimou TIM Journal Baildtag, Fifth and Tenant. Democratic party's 'principles" are "Adherence to the principles of Jefferson and Jackson" and "Sound De- j ... , Any one of. 10,000 Republican voters in Oregon who might like to go to congress is overflowing with prin ciples." And you couldn't scare up a Democrat eigibje to the office whp wouldn't swear that e avss Jeffer- "principles' are very broad things, and apply them to a given situation or set just as he-pleases and in many ways Cleveland is a man of principle; so is j Bryan; they diametrically disagree in operation. Who shall say that standpatter is. not as much possessed of the Republican tariff reformer ot vice La Follette is a man of principles, jeer- tainly, but so is Folk, one a Republican, the other a Democrat. ' ""v " ' - - T ' rr"T"77"Jr?r Piatt fairly Warnates Republican "prin ciples, as he understands them. Oregon never had a overflowing with "principles" than our friend Binger Hermann.; Senator Gorman could, lay down pemocratic "principles" almost ex cathedra, and keep one eye on a tariff bill in congress and another on the sugar ticker at the same time. '''';'-' ..'"'', ''r'--' No, Brother, to speak plainly, this talk about "prin ciples," as the term is ordinarily used by' campaigners in a contest between political parties, is chiefly balderdash. Of all the aspirants for congress ' that will be in the field, one has' just about as many and as good "prin ciples," using the word in its claptrap sense, as it is mostly used in the jargon of partisan orators, as another. What this state needs for these positions is Men. Men that are capable. Men. that can be trusted, i Men that are more than honest, that are sincere; hat are more yet, utterly faithful to the people; more yet, that are pos sessed of a high degree of moral courage. " " . 1 Elect such men, and as we remarked before,' the prin ciples you prate about so much will take care of them selves.. ' ''' :: ts' . . '. : ; v..-'-'"-: ! i-l ' CHARACTERISTIC ATTACKS. ECAUSE SENATOR HEYBURN of Idaho chose to differ at some points with the government's , forest reserve policy, or to be more specific, be the withdrawal of. so great a propor tion of Idaho for forest reserves, fhe Oregoman lam poons him as if he were a convicted land, thief and says that he has "queered himself with the national adminis tration." : :. , .A - If this were true, what sort of light 'would it put the no senator to have an opinion on any .US a . . suDjecs, even regaraing sometning toucning nis. state heavily, contrary to that of the president ?. And if he has. an honest opposing Opinion is he to be therefore "queered," whatever that may" mean? Is the president the kind of a man to show spite and malice toward a senator on this account? ' ' . " Senator ' Hey burn recently denied the Oregonian's to the same effect, and stated that he friendly term, with toe president, but tbe. urcgoman persists tn Its false assertions, thereby nofonly making Senator Heyburn out a liar, but insult ing the president at welL a-:r.:-r .: All this' Is 'characteristic of .the Oregonian, All that is necessary to incur its abuse Is to differ with it, to hold any other .opinion than it, on politics, religion or any thing else.- It judges the president by itself, and as sumes that if a senator ventures to differ with, him on therefore "queered." But nojbody else president is so narrow a man as this. would probably cheerfully admit, that he could learn something .yet about forest reserves, at least iif particular cases, , and that he would be pleased to have any interested senator present his views, and would consider them carefully. Nobody supposes that the president has "queered" Senator Heyburn on this account i tit f- -t . ; r ) I I . .- .. . . NO RIGHT ; TO BE -RECKLESS.'' f ; HE PRESIDENT' has no right to be reckless of I his person, as, 'he apparently. is..vTh chances . ; may be many tp one that no fatal accident will happen in taking a long) hunting trip into the wilds of the Rocky mountains, or going down in a submarine vessel, or riding around New York and other cities where another great national .' tragedy might easily occur in spite of all precautions or. riding on. horseback -or- in an automobile at breakneck speed near Washington in one instance he was thrown from his horse while in going to New Orleans while yel low fever is prevalent there; but in all these and other of his performances there is , considerable risk, more than any president should take. ..' Prident.,RooseTeltia., under special obligations to exercise due care in this respect . He was elected by a great popular majority because the people wanted him to. continue as president, and by a far greater majority they, would vote to-keep him there now, He has done the country some excellent and appreciated service, but it is ' not" over; along some lines it is scarcely begun; and he owes it to the people to take no unnecessary chances of personal peril. A fatal accident to the president 'would' be a great na tional calamity, for in his place would step very dif ferent type 'of man, one whd while" patriotic according to his lights, and not unworthy of respect, would not in alt probability carry out the policies which render Roosevelt especially valuable to the people. The presi dent is not careful enough of his own life. . . Drawbacka to Deep-Sea Flehing. ; : ' From the North Bend Harbor. , DeeR-eaa fishing as a business must be monotonous work, but for a day's outing It Is all right It requires an artistic hand and scientific knowledge to catch deep-sea fish. Ton find a place on the ocean that looks as If It might have fish down below. Tou drop overboard a pound of lead and a lot of hooks and let the line reel off -till it strikes the bottom. Then you-lift the line about two feet and wait Tou can smoke or go to slespand after' an hour or two you Imagine you have somethlpa on ths end ot your line. Tou have, it is ths pound of lead. Tou have held the line so long that your arm has lost-Its sense of weight . , Yon are sure ' that by this time you have hooke'd." something and you begin to haul in. About half way up you stop end listen. You begin to think the fish got off the hook. You know he had been on, for you felt him., So you keep on hauling to see if the bait is all right It Is. The bead fisherman swears that he never had such luck and moves ths boat ever to another spot. This le how It works the first, time you go. . It la to Laugh. ;-''.',' From the Kansas City Times. Cb,lna has decided to demand a largf Indemnity from Russia and Japan 'for damage done in Manchuria during the war. If China isn't careful it wju make even the stoical Xomura laugh. , SMALL CHANGS A lot of Republican politicians have been visiting Portland, pertly to see the fair and partly to get their resors ground V . ' , e e - . The bulging Question with the fair sex Hoopsklrta or ,no hoopskuts. i ' . k , . e . e '; i .'.,.-': . Shouldn't the city have a special box ordinance attorney t ' . .e eJ.. '- ;. '-"; People In a legally prohibition town should make life' troublesome for a man who persists In selling liquor (here. There are plenty of places where liquor selling la legal. - The Rldden-Rader-Elllott-et at church quarrel at Vancouver la another really unimportant affair that the general pub lic Is not Interested In. - . . ! .e . e .,.;:: - -j ' The Philadelphia Item, a high tariff ring, grafters' organ on all occasions, says: "The mayor, under the teaching of hla Democratic counsel, has become an obstructionist and Is pandering to the interests of the free trade party." But Mayor Weaver will not mind such drlveL : There's one thing to be said In favor of Uncle Russell 8age: he wasn't mixed up with the life insurance eompames. -Mr. Bryan is really going; to aUrt aeon. ;. .. , - .-, i: A Russian woman poisoned four hus bands. Pity Hoch hadn't , run. across her early In .hla career. . 4 . '.Just one .week. y Everybody go next Saturday but the police and nremen. - Judge Geynor concluded that If he ran for mayor of.Jew Tork be would be a loser.- ;- .....i..e. . . -:.:.-.:t: 'Not a word heard about Rockefeller today.';:. . :t - : '- u ' . ' ''' ,':r ' : ' ' v. ' Beuitable affaire are .new ' In euch shape that Mr. Cleveland can go duck shooting whatever shape that may be. "Who ever knew of a Democratic com- roll teem an asking tor campaign fundaT , -J , ,-' ,-: .e -e ,'.. Hope down; beer going dowaV". (Orig inal; copyright applied for.) . , The W. C. T. V. having complained that President RoosereU reoelved a case of beer, he explains, it Is reported, that ho returned the case.' Not .to be re filled, we hope. -. i. ; " The stock ahow lg "lmmenae. -; . ;v, . e ' a . - - , '.'.;; ,'.' One thing for Portland to be thank ful for no political campaign on. Ge anyway 'next Saturday,' but have an umbrella ready. - PmhaMv Kw ' this ' time nana of the council knows anything about the box ordinance. . . e e v . The Russians will be allowed te hold political meetings, provided they don't say anything ag in tne government. : 1a eraather bureau measurer has as certained that Mt Whitney Is iOS test hleher than Mt Rainier it yen are elsewhere, but Mt Tacoma If you are among Tacomans. - - OREGON SIDELIGHTS A farm near Burns, where grain has never been raised tUl Utely. yielded SO bushels ef wheat end IS bushels of bar ley an acre. ?.- . . '-'.,'-. t -...; : ' " " ' About f ,000 people around Milton- are Interested I a water-rtght eult. Between Burns and Harney City, where three years ago there was noth ing but a sagebrush plain, there la now a continuous wheat field. "The grain baa been raised by dry farming aystem and runs about St bushels ,to the acre. Eucene Guard: Eugene l Oregon's educational center, a city ot high moral standing, and ths proposed prissring exhibition advertised here should be given a knockout blow. If this contest la not a farce, It should be prohibited, and If It Is a farce It should not receive Support of the Eugene public " . A Corvallla man recolvad one order for 11 doien Chinese phsaaanta at ft! a dosen. . . . ..'!' ,,...; Gold Beach Qlobei The Coos county people has pity-on us poor thirst suf fering mortals m the prohibition, county of Curry. But oh how different with our neighbors on the South. Our visi tors from Del Norte alwaya have some thing along, but never offer even a word of sympathy. Surely it baa been a eheap lot and not the average eltlssn that has corns this way as representatives of the great State of California. If so we are frank, to admit that they, do not eom pre. well with the average. Citlsen of our own. dear Oregon. : ' - Second strawberries In Xane4 county good. Willamette Valley Development league at Eugene next week. Watermelon shipments from Grants Paee about over. rv - ,. No ease of contagious disease now In Astoria, but the city ' physician warns parents to be careful. .,.. . ' e a ..' -, ''.' .. . Many houses being built In Astoria. ' Ttrnwnavllla naonle kl'rklna ahnut train service leave there at I a. m. and ar rive in fortiano at suppsr time. . ' . ... ' . e e j .;..', v Albany college a good Institution of Its class. , ' 'i t Salem doesn't need a state fair this year to prosper. , . ..... " ' -.' r : ' Tenth grade added to Harrlsburi sobooL . ' ' . '.,).., . v, .. An old Indian, who was a witness be fore Judge Galloway in Yamhill county, after testifying, rsmarked to ths Judge, whom he hsd known as well ae his father, for years: That's the God's truth. Bill." And the . genial Judge didn't try to stop the laughter yhat fol- ,vwvfc .... .... , j .... ....... . . .. . . e e . ( . Many drant county cattle. Instead of being. fed on Butter creek, Umatilla county, through the winter, as formerly, will be fed In Malheur county, where alfalfa hay raised on recently Irrigated land een be bought In large quantities treat tl to Ji per ton,. SUNDAY SCHOOL 1X3 " CON for TCODmiOW By H. D. Jenkins. D. D. Sept It. ISO! Topic: Review ef the intra quarter. Oolden text Jehovah la thy keeper realms cxxl:l. Responsive reading Psalms exxt. tmtrodaotioal During the paat It weeks we have gone over the etory of Judah'a fall, env bracing some account of those prophets who kept alive the faith and revived the courage of her people In that fateful period. - It Is hard- for' us to under stand the feelings of a people who saw their national existence threatened with uiukuuq, sinca to an American, ex pension or territory and increase of power seem to be the order of nature. It la not difficult to be ODtlmistla when our national domain broadens, our national wealth Increases, , and our churches keep paos with the progress of the reoVhUo. - But what must It have been in the daye of which we have been reading, when great families were running out and. the aurvlvors of fam ilies once noted . for their - Diet v.. htd beoome Infamous for their vices T ? We can not too greatly honor the men" who attempted to stay this downfall of the nation. We should aoqualnt oursslvee with the" conditions asalnst which they had te contend. . We do not give te Jo- sum ana Isaiah and Eseklel and Daniel their due unless we try to put ourselves in tneir place and seek to realise how dark their skies, how few their helpers. and except tor their faith tn God, how nopeiesa tne ruture or their race. . But with a tenacity and courage which were born of trust they proclaimed every where that the Lord Jehovah had bis purposes to fulfill through the eeed ot Abraham, and that a remnant should be saved and In God s own time the 'greater than Solomon' appear. Lesson 1. (II Chronicles xxxtl :-!! With the coming of Hexeklah to the throne we enter Upon the first chap ter of the "decline and fall" of Davld'e dynasty. - His heirs still occupied his throne although not many of them had brought honor to his name. But the line aurvtved, - while In . the northern kingdom usurper after - usurper had aelsed the' scepter, reigning by. the eword and perishing by the spear. Bat In Hesekiah the people of JDdah' appeared for a. time to have found one who in herited something of David's eouraga and faith. The sun of the nation waion had , seemed near Its setting, returned part way back toward Its aenifh. and ths day which apaprently had drawn near lte close, was by grace prolonged.' Lesson . Isaiah xxxvlll:ll). The king had sought counsel not of courtiers and sycophants, but ef a man whe spoke 'the' truth-without" tear and tn love. ' The king waa strong so long as he leaned upon the advice of the prophet; and the prophet In hla prayers, carried , before . Qod the fate of the threatened nation and . Its discouraged ruler. He in whose hands re the fates of kings and peoples, . steyedfhe. fall of Judan for a little season. ',- .. Lesson . (Isaiah 1H:U; 4111:11). In midst of hla visions of good and ill Isaiah has the picture of Ose who obaU be strangely enarred but dUlusly bean1 ttfut We have a picture which waa not drawn! from David and not fulfilled In Josiah. Who wea it" to bet 1 t The best of 7udah'e klnge. suffered with hla-people but not fo hls, people. But here Is One.' supreme In the divine favor yet suffering at the hands of men. And. -this Ignominious death; was. to be precedent te a world-wide conquest This beloved ' of heaven ahould suffer without complaint as a lamb Is led un resisting te the shambles; he ahould be numbered with the wicked end yet make hla grave with the rton. What a strange confusion ef Ideas; what an Impossible conjunction of - experience The Jew baa never te thle day found any one in the history of his people who could ful fill thle prediction; end the Christian only One Jesus, the Son of David, ths Child ot . Bethlehem, . the', Prophet ol Nacareth. ;)'. ". Lesson 4. .'(Isaiah lv:Mt): .But lag- Ian aaes Still further. In a time of overturning, -God's mercy .la aot wholly withdrawn. . . On the contrary, now la the midst .of gathering shadows the prophet sees the promise of a brighter day.. To a people far gone In Iniquity he reveals a forgiving grace in words which exceed la tendemeee the tender- est passages ef the psalms. Just when we should have expected the .thunders of Slnal to . roll . anew With, deepened reverberations, we- . see - the receding cloud, a bow-la the heavens. Like a tender parent who grows more patient and forbearing and merciful as the prodi gal grows more headstrong, so Jehovah reveals himself In the prophecies of Isa iah yearning most after hie . children when hie children have leaat deserved hie grace. - ---- ;- '-- Lesson vs. (II Cbron. xxxlil:Ml). Row slight was the betterment of the state under the reform Instituted by Hexeklah, re eee in thecareer.of Mansssen, son or Hesekiah, -who, in stead of Imitating his father'a virtues, returned te the wicked practices ot his grandfather. - Nor waa he eecret about it He erected In the most conspicuous places the most depraved symbols of the heathen cult He even Insulted ths God ef his ancestors by placing in the temple which Solomon had so solemnly dedi cated to Jehovah, altars to the gods -of the. east gods whose rltea were de basing, eruet obscene and superstitious. He eeeme te have assiduously sought for msthods by which to publish his contempt for virtue and his hatred of all that had made his nation first among the peoples of the earth. Then, aa with a thunder clap, the old enemy ot Judah swspt down upon him, and he waa car ried away a helpless, miserable,' abject prisoner, showing hla wretchedness In the court of Assyria. He had a full opportunity to see in Bsbylon what the gods wsre like whom he had foolishly wished hla people to adopt It some times seems almost a pity that those who spurn and hate and spit upon ths Bible could not be for a little while forced to live li a community where there wae no Bible. Lsseon S. (II Chron. xxxlv:l-lt) and lesson . 7 (II Chron. xxxlv:14-18). The eun breaks through the evening clouds once more, end In the reign of Josiah we seem to have the dial again turned back. There, were a few good men In Judah atilt and When opportunity waa given they came to the front In the temple the Book of the Law waa found, and in Its perusal the yojmg king- la deeply moved. He dues not for a mo ment doubt lte admonitions. , He recog nised the fact that the kings of Judah and many ol her rich princes had pro voked the wrath of a Just Judge. IS his distress . he took counsel of that aplsltually minded woman, Huldah. who gavei to htm a gracious assursnce that while the hurt of Judah was mortal, the end would not come In his day. Lesson (Jeremiah xxxvt:t!-l!. But under hts successor the fatal plunge Is no longer delayed. The word of God which Josiah reverenced. Jeholachin de liberately mutilates and then commits to the flame a Life returns te the side ef eelf-tndulrenoe. We can see the grave l"os of the older men as they realise ut this aotlon ef Jeholachin means. They know that It portends the return of all the unmentionable vires of the. east a debased court, a corrupt govern ment, and a . national career sure to bring down upon the tend the Judg ment or the Almighty. I Lesson (Jeremiah xxxvlil:l-ll). The fury of the king does not stop the mouth of the brave prophet Zedeklah, now upon the throne, seems toi have hesitated Vo proceed to extremes, but like Pilate in a later day. would waah his hands while permitting . violence which It waa hie duty to arrest Jere miah, through the machinations of his loss, is oast into a noisome prison with tne Dejier that a raw hours would eur- nce to extinguish the light of life and silence the brave words of a prophet who, like John Knox late, "never feared the face of man." In alt hla contest with the court Jeremiah stood for his country and his God. He waa not one who loved to criticise, but he wee one who would not hesitate to speak. Mean while the catastrophe which the prophet had foreseen waa hastening te its crash. Lesson 10 (II Chron. xxxvl:ll-ll). Twice the king of Babylon laid siege to Jerusalem. , It wag not the wish of Nebuehadnessar to lay waste the coun try or to kill off the inhabitants. Hs believed that the present ills of the people were duo to the vices of the king and the folly of hie advisers. Hs would remove the ruler and the pa trician . families , who , constituted hie court But . ths policy which - ha had used In dealing - with - Jeholachin (II Kings xxlv:lJ) he abandoned la deal ing with zedeklah . (II .Kings xxv;U) He threw down the walla and destroyed the rates of ths City. He carried to hla capital all that he could use . In his grsat public works, and it wag there that the mighty prophet Eseklel (Les son II Esek. xlvIIU-U), and the great administrator, Daniel (Lesson It Dan. I:l-S0), rose to honor and fame. In these darkest daya the pure gold ot their character ehone forth They, at every- cost to themselves, kept the fire of faith alive. ' They -Insisted that Je hovah would yet In some way to be revealed, restore them or thetr ehll dren or their children's children ta the land of thetr fathers. - And with the brave worde and noble deeds' of these sons of the captivity the lessons of the- quarter come te their, close.. Dur ing these three months we have seen how little noble birth counts without nobility of Ufa and we have also seen how Impossible It le for an adverse fate to crush the spirit or destroy the in fluence or a really great hearts RUSSIA IS STILL "A' WORLD POWER ' ' From the Waahington Poet : Ih -defeat ef Russia In the war with Japan does net evidence that Russia le not a first class power, nor that she would not be formidable tn a war -with a people In reach of her. ' Japan waa thousands of miles away and fought at her own door. Russia waa unprepared, and expected It to be a contest of that old-feshtonsd diplomacy front which the skillful est liar emerges victor, japan was prepared and had been resolved for yeara that when the claah came It ahould be a. real, war f rom which- theoom-j be tent emerged with vtotory that had the better army In the neld and the better- navy on the eea. And thue It wai that Russia, waa beaten before She got ready to fights t fa . n .W r ; J t i .... it waa history repeating rtseir it was the. Rome of Crassua contending with the Parthlans; it waa Charles of Bur gundy at war. with the Swiss: It was George ni crossing the ocean to con quer Englishmen; it waa Napoleon the Great sending his finest troops under his bravest marshals to find defeat and death in miserable and despised Spain. Scores of exsmplee might be cited, and. notably, the expedition of Aldblsdes to Syracuse. . England a recent nght with the Boere waa an exception to the gen eral rule, and It waa a very costly busi ness. But neither the German nor the Brit ish csblnst thinks Russia other than a first class power. All she neede la more money and more civilisation, both of which are attainable, to be a very ugly enemy to either England or Germany, or to both ef them. England and Ger many know this; Germany ta not dis mantling any fortresses on the Russian frontier, and " Kitchener is preparing India for the long expected assault of Russia - . v Meanwhile all the cabinets ef Chris tendom might find food for meditation in the declaration of Count Okuma. the leader of the progressionist party of Japan, as follows, to-saitl "Manchuria must be restored to China when we heve pulled out the roots of ell ' future trouble.". - - :" - ' - ' -' That Is what Russia said two yeara ago. That le what the fight was about That la what we any of the Philippines that we will get out ef there as soos aa we can - make - these Immune-to trouble Who- la te be the Judge In the case of the Philippines? We ere, ot course. . Who Is te be the Judge in the case of ManehurtaT Japan, ef course. And as Btr Andrew Aguecheek -re marked about the duel, Christendom will i Japan - damned ere it challenges Japan'a Manchurian ' policy, whatever it may be. I y M- . - '.;-- - To s New Bsbjr. ' S. W. Glllllan In Baltimore . American. Ltttle kicking, cuddling thing, . . Tou don't cry you only elngt ? .4 " Blinking eyee and stubby nose, ', , .... Month that mocks the budding rose, Down fair hair, peach blows for bands Ah-h-h-hl Of all the. "baby grands"' ' Any one could wish' to see, - You're the finest one for met Skin aa soft aa velvet. ' -' . ' God (when yoe were only His) -" Touched you on the eheek and Chin, Where he touched the dimples in, Cresses on your wrists as though 7 " Strings were faetened 'round them SO We could tie you tight and keep v j. You from leaving while we sleep, " ';' Once I tried to look at yon ' From a strangers point of view; - Yon were red and wrinkled; then I Just loved, and looked again; . What I saw was not the eame; In my eyee the blessed flame , Of a father's love consumed Faults to stranger's eyee Illumed. v' . Little squirming, cuddling thing! Ere you shed each angel wing. Did they tell you you were cent ' . With a cargo of content . . To a home down here below ' v Where they hungered for you set txf you know, you flawless pearl, How we love our baby glrti Where Her Kick Cam Iru . ' From the Philadelphia Ledger. A West Virginia woman, whose hus band sloped with the tilred girt declare mat she is not complaining because f his absence, but to be robbed of a good servant when Mary Ann la so much of e problem le A horse ef another ooler, r ; vnrrij THS ZZ7V HOTEL IN TH2; WOULD? '. From ths London Kitnnia T If ana excenta th H hw.iM. Unf a Lucerne, which eannnt h. ,nnnuu by sny rrval In any country, the-aver) age English hotel is more luxuriously and tastefully furnished than the aver) age .foreign, hotel. But unfortunate! one cagnot lunoh off aaddlebag loungei or dine on alabaster pUIars. The fooJ supplied by the palaces which line thJ coasts of our island la abominably bad. Roma DMnU , h.r. am . n. . v. . ... i. J are accustomed ta good cooking Id thel own names, out wno reel it a matter o patriotism to, put up with the garbag wuic-n ta aervea up unaer pretentlou names: thuv think' n th n,iiah imi a national Institution which must keel us tan up in tne presence or foreigners But Why do the foralaaara. rh l,av HO SUCh motlVSa tA aiiataln thai,. mr tyrdom.' suffer the ordinary hotel man ager and his menus T WU. the numbs wi i rancu ana utrmia Tisitors in OU seaside hoeels la small, and 'being la 1 minority In a enuntrv akAu Kriill they tare honeatlv afraid of the An nn hi.- . I , .". Sue American tourlata '. stick to th e towns, which absorb the best loo in the country . Th m,lw4t k guests la the holiday hotels era draw irom ins ncn Shopkeeper class.; 'Abroad K Is a verv different atiwJ Everybody in and about a foreign hotel mm tne neaa waiter down to the unde coo as, taxes an interest and a pride li nis ousinesa.- , in a' British hotel th servanU sesm ashamed of being caugh mlmsteiing to the creature eemforta o others, and evsn ths Gelrmaaia IUllans catch ovsr here the surly, list less air of English cooks and watt.rJ How sweet la the aalle a manger of th) lorein noxeu Its' lone French- wtonnwd and Us faint odor of fried butter anl vaniuai - - i. . .... .. v.,-. ... . ... France' le the country ef culinary ex iremes; there the' cooking Is elthei very good or very bad. The Idea tha the humblest French inn will orodun an appetising dish ta a myth. Wa hat- had some -of the most nauseous aa well m some or the most exquisite meals : France; and outside the large town a French hotel, unlees it is in tha of receiving English and American vis 'tors, will have sanitary arrangement euch aa those described by Arthu Young In the eighteenth century.' " Of the hotels in the United Statee ! omy remstns to he said that they ar four time as expensive as Rritiai hotels and In every point excent tha ef eervlce four times ae good. The dol tar goes almost exacUy as far es th. shilling,'' That Is to say. yon" par elan dollars, I e.. tS shillings, for, a' rood on the fourth floor ef an America hotel, accommodation . for which yt would pay eight shillings A day m thl country. - Attendance In the shape of gettlm your bell anawered. hot water brough or boots cleaned,' le elmply non-exlst eat In aa American hotel. But In cltlr like New York, Chicago, Boston en even remote towna like Denver, th cooking ef the restaurants and th- quality of the food are as good ae yoi would get In Perie. The linen - an the sanitary arrangements of America i noteis leave nothing to be desired. "Unquestionably the worst hotels "U the world are those In the east in- In die, or Singapore,' Hongkong and Shang liai. - v-.' .tv v '- ; '.'' ' Having ran' ever nearly -the whol world we ere ef opinion that Ahcbee hotel in which the- fastidious travel can hang up hla hat la the Oriental Pal aee ,at Yok-chama. Near' ths f?nlutnhla river. ' ''"" September 21 The chiefs and rwar! rlors were all assembled this momlnsf and we explained to them where ' w4 came from, the obiecto.of our visiting tnent and our pacinc intentions toward all the Indians. This, being conveyed by signs, might not have been perfect! 4 comprehended, but appeared to give per feet eatlsfaction. We now gave a meda to two of the chiefs, a shirt tn addltlor to the medal already . received b? Twisted-Hair, and delivered a. flag am a handkerchief for the grand 'chief ot his return.. To these were added knife, a handkerchief and a small plec4 of tobacoo for each chief. The Inbsbl tants did not give ue eny provision! gratuitously.'- We therefore purchaeed a' quantity of nsh. berries (chiefly red haws) and roots, and in the arternooi went en te the second village. TheM Twisted-Hair Introduced ue - Into hH own tent which consisted, however, oi nothing snore than . pine bueh.es ,anl bark, and gave us some dried aalmoH boiled.- We eontlnued our purchsse and obtained aa much provisions as oui horses could carry. In their . preean weak condition, ae tar as the river. Th men exchanged a few old canlstera foi dressed elkskina, of which tbey.mad ahlrts: srreat "crowda of natlveaar around us all night but we hav noi yet missed anything except a knife and few other articiee stolen yesterday from a shot pouch. At dark ws hsd K hard wind from the southwest nccom panted with rain, which lasted half arl hour, but in the morning tne weatneo waa fair, ...... ;,'.. i. :., ;..4 ;.' . . . Baker and the Primary , Law. From the WoOdburn Independent (Rep.) State Chairman Frank C Baker kindly consents to give the direct primary at ! trial tta InMniataa that this law! will not be" In existence after one trial J But will the trial be fair If euch meni as Chairman Baker bold a formal meet Ins- of erstwhile Republican leadersj under the gules of a love feast and seek to blind the people with recommenda-i tlona as to candidates?.. Whst will bf accomplished by thle proposed lvj feastr The fsct of the mstter Is that) Baker and others through - the dlrecd primary will soon, be out of power, Thel people will not only choose their noml-l neee for office, but win select the com -I mltteemen, who will tsks charge of the organisation. This la the real cause fori worry on the part or- riaxer, wno ha mads a political error In not cheering1 for the direct primary and In asklna- ths leaders to assemble. HA ae well a a Senator Fulton, has made a grave mis tske in not submitting without suhtsr-l fugs to the will of the people. - Tbeyl gain nothing in masmg tne people, inn fatuated wltn the eireot primary policy, mad. and they wtlL lnAlme, learn that the people are filled to overflowing Wlthl resentment at the recent action. -. i'Vl fV Cindld Vlgw., From the Eugene State Journal. Two two-legged brutes named Nel-I son and Brltt pounded each other is. rounds last Saturday In San Francisco.) te gratify beastly curiosity in a greet crowd of people ef low Instincte and to ke money . for v tbsmseivea. Nelson won In the eighteenth round. About 1 11.000 -was paid to see this beastly show, when tii eoiild not have been re alised to see anything decent or useful. LEWIS AND CLARK 1 .- 1- 1 I