"'IT-.- rOHTLAND, ' OREGON. THE O R E 1 V i , .' k' iacxo Pvblkh rvvr oinf (ttcept 'SiuxUfy and every Sunday morning u )-, :, '''' ". - "V'. ; ; PORTLAND' AND THE OME of our, journalistic friends .of Oregon Juve i complained during the. past Lewis and Clark exposition . towns and localities, because it drew money to Portland that should and otherwise would' have' been'spent", at ' home, Not, only were the 'people of Smithville and ' ; vicinity, say taxed to provide funds for the fafr, but they have had to withhold expenditures with home mer . chants in order to attend the fair. And a-few newspa- pers have become so worried about this alleged state V of 'affairs that they have railed bitterly at" Portland, ; saying that1. "Portland wants everything," that . Fortiana '" .is a leech on th'e rest of the state, that Portland i$ '.: great hog,- and so on; .; - .v" - , We think our newspaper friends 1 : view will change their time 'after . It were to be held, had to be everybody will concede that Portland is the only place ; in which it could have been, held. : also acknowledges that" it has beeit t ment not merely for Portland but for all Oregon. It '- will help as nothing else could have' done, as no other ? sort and no amount of advertising could have done, to .- iucrease the population of - Oregon and bring about its . rapid development. . Portland could " 'i benefits if it would. Portland will : state and tributary region grows. ' ment and prosperity of all this region, for only by this means can it grow and prosper. believes that the fair will benefit " and of the northwest. .This benefit may not be apparent 'in remote localities very soon, but will be ultimately, and '. 'is clearly apparent even now, as far away at Douglas : and Jackson counties. - , '.' It should be remembered, too, that' Portland people .not only paid oyer one fourth of the appropriation made ' by the legislature, but themselves amountr thus-paymg fir all at least ;J irridney raised inOregon for this ; .may get a little: of this money back, but they did not t . . . ' . 1 ' 1 . -, A J , expect to ao so wnen tney coniriDiuca u. . '- And has the fair been worth nothing to the tens of , - thousands of Oregon people who have visited it? Was it not really worth all the money it cost to come and 'see it? 'Even the criticising editors were here, and were pleased' tnd benefited by it. Who would miss ' having ieeii it if.he could get his money back? - -4 v "As to the drain of money from interior1 points to Portland on account of the fair, we think that will work no permanent injury to anybody. We have heard of no business failures on that account. Probably less .money has been spent "at home" on account of the fair, but all this and much more will be regained in the .months and years to come in consequence of the. increased develop ment of all parts 'of the state. ': - , , But at any rate the fair is over, and pur cpmplaining y, brethren can scold Portland for drawing people here on that account no longer. We hope all the interior city and country people who have visited the fair are pleased witli their investment, and that they have money left or j ill aoon get more with which to trade at home. ' -- . ii , .- ,i- I v We wanfappwjrpriations and there is do way we.carr , get, tfieni so' welf as through our accredited representa . v' jtives in cjngrsa.- We had toirj we ftaVe one. ,' The Re- "publican peace conference favored the appropriations,iut . it was clammily silent on the question of getting the .'' '.representation to. which, wea're entitled , in; congress. ' This may have been one of its ways of attaining or main taining peace. " . (-;.,,. ' .... . . ... sa , I '"'. i; ' . u - t . ' ; i IT HAS BEEN A GREAT SUCCESS. ' . ': fvT'i':. " Vi' TkONIGHT the great exposition. will end, and Port ' land and Oregon can truthfully announce to the . world that jt. has been a great success. The at Indance will have been over 2,500,000, which is a million - more than conservative estimates before the fair opened, " and half a million more than the most sanguine friends of the enterprise expected. ' The. result financially has been better than any one expected, and subscribers to the ' -corporation stock will be refunded a percentage of their contributions. - '. 1 ' r; ' But what is betterstill, the "show' has been a good - vnty It has been.f better one than it was thought could . be presented here, and the universal comment upon it ' has been favorable; " Everybody was delighted with it, especially placed; as.-ft was- on so peculiarly fitting and i-srely beautiful - a, site Tens of thousands of people ' . from eastern and middle western states have been de lighted with the exposition and have formed a new J and favorable impression of Oregon. The government, with only,' a very moderate appropriation, made an ex hibit that has been a delight and an education to hun , . dreds of thousands of people, and many states have joined with Oregon in making exhibits and entertaining ' multitudes of guests. - If is not too much to say .that ,T considering 'the amount of roopejr used and the com- . parative sparseness of the population of thir region, it has . been the most successful exposition ever held in this country. . ; " : ' ' With few exceptions, chief of which was last night's -fire, everything: "passed off pleasantly." Two. other small fires were the only other untoward incidents. The crowds . . - Ferdinand Ward Again. , Oeneaae, N. T., Cor. Naw Tork Press. . .- His-debta outlawed and his attempt to . obtain the cuatody of hla son. to whom . money was left In trust having failed, , Ferdinand Ward, the erstwhile "Napo . . leoa f Finance,' whoaa corrupt prae . tlcaa aa a member of tha brokerage firm ; of Oranf Ward Co. -brought ruin and death to General U. 8. Grant haa filed ault In Manhattaa againat the estate of hla first wife to recover S50.000, which, he ae r a. he only placed In her hands for aafa keeping prior to the auapenalon of the firm. . v ' - "Aa an instance of pure, unqualified nerve," said a banker here today, "this it tha rarest thing I ever heard of." ' : Ward was convicted and aerved aev- aral years In Sing Sing for his deeds Is connection with the brokerage firm. When in prison hla f irat wife died. Mrs ' Ward left the remnant of bar property, .- ' SIS. 900, to, her eon, the Internet to be paid him -until ha was II years old, and 4 ' then tha principal. In caae of the eon'' death' one half of tha principal wae ta . ro to Ward. A guardian was appointed ly tha court for the child.. When Ward waa released from jail ho tried to ob tain -pqsaeaelOB of tha child. .A aympa. thetia appeal waa unaucceeeful. an at tempt to kidnap him failed, and the Wat proceedings,' it. la k said.; came to nauaht. ' Ward? first' earns into' prominence In r ii s rlalng Wall' street broker. In I the firm of Grant Ward was -nd,-ejrtd Into this General Grant put -i urge auia of money In tha nope ot 'ng hla sa ta gat start In tha ,1. U. R, Grant Jr., and Ward were active partners, while. 17. 8. Grant I Jme p. Flab; president of the Ma. , 1: 5, war apecial partners. Ths .GON DA I L Y AN INDIPSNDENf 'nIWSPAPIK PUBLISHED BY-ij0UlJJlL PUBLISHING Ca '.-..' r streets, . r-oruano, urecon. STATE. brawl occurred ' All Oregon, few weeks that the, was an injury to their purpose. , . . , Have it to say fair. - ..: r': -' 1 who have taken this awhile. The fair, If LL THE held somewhere, and Almost everybody a great advertise be duplicated or deeply deplore. Missouri, all one of the aUtes not absorD - tnese grow only as' the It seeks the develop Portland hopes and all parts of the state this year in our 'Missouri and ties. The Lewis , , . souri as did most In Oregon's early raised nearly an equal - 65 -per-eent-ot-the purpose. True they happened sooner, tion in the fact joyed them during . The day might and there is some U! Multnomah county trebled. - The' law full cash valuation; comolies with the sets down.' ; is IS mills, as it as it was last year; 000,000 rather than ply to all other lished some of compared with really not so far express regret, If we have now having heard so T draught joltiest oilots at Astoria Organs called the would be unsafe moreihan 24 feet real management of the buaineaa waa in tha hands of Ward, who waa known at tha time aa tha sportleat beat dressed and most lavish spender in the city. Grant A Ward suddenly failed In 1SI4, dragging down with them the Marine bank and causing tha auapenalon of .sev eral other banks. In the general panlo that followed the firm of Grant It Ward had a deficit of $11,000,000. The failure brought ' about ' tha ' loaa of General Grant's - entire 1 fortune and ' that oi Jamaa D. Flan. Before tha failure, how ever. Ward had intimated some 150.000 to hla wife, and that alone, was saved from tho wreck. Up until thia yaar, with millions of debts hanging over hla head, Ward waa. In the eyea of the law, a bankrupt An property that he poaaeaaed might be at. tached. Kow that tha period of bank ruptcy and tha outlawry of debts have expired, ' Ward ' almoet Immediately at tempt! to recover the money which he gave to hla wife., ' -. . J.' : Boomerang Effect.. . From tha Minneapolis. Journal. T. C Piatt who died politically re cently, sajra he la againat Governor Hlg gins for a second term. T. C. muet be careful. 'Thia la perhapa the flrat return ahowlng that the governor ought to be re-elected. . ' - - An Irresistible Force". From the Philadelphia Record. '. According to Immigration statlatlca, mora than 10,000 young and blooming Irlah maidens Uodd in New Tork last rir. That, la a feminine force before which the moot fanatical natlvlsts will be apt to 4uaUr . - JO U RNA L no. . oiuou Tbi Jogrpl Building, rift and Yamhill y - ..- .. ; . , in attendance were invariably well behaved. Scarcely a during the whole life of the show. - and Portland in particular, have a right to feel proud of the splendid success of the Lewis and Gark fair. And the people of Portland, at least, should once more manifest their appreciation of it and give the city a little additional glory by turning out this after noon and this evening. Go out tonight and see the ex position die, not in pain and sorrow, but in pride and glory, as a thing that has splendidly-achieved a noble v ' ; ; ? . that yoq attended the jast day of the OREGON SYMPATHIZES WITH MISSOURI. PEOPLE of the Oregon country will sympathize with Missouri in the destruction of her fine building and art gallery at the exposi tion last night. While the loss of the building at this time," as the fair is just about to close, is not a very serious matter, the loss of the works of art, that cannot replaced, is one which the owners will - . Oregonians will remember, has been that has taken a. great interest and an active part in the exposition. It has taken, as was proper and natural,, a greater interest and a more active part than' any other state except Oregon's immediate neigh bor states. The world s greatest exposition was held in Missouri's metropolis last year and .Oregon participated liberally in that and Missouri has cordially reciprocated exposition. ... .. . . , . .. ; Oregon are linked together by peculiar and Clark exposition started from Mis of the esrly immigrants to this region. days, if not now, Missourians pre dominated, and many of them were prominent in build ing and developing the new state. So in a certain sense Oregoirconsidert Missouri its mother state, and keenly regrets her loss. ' ' . But, as is usual in case of any calamity, H can be said that it might have been worse. That is, the disaster would have been more deplorable if it had occurred earlier. The building had almost completely served the purposes of its erection, and while the loss by destruc? tion of the works of art is as heavy now as if it had the owners may find a little consola that many thousands of people hart en- the past few months. ' , . have been worse on its weather side consolation in that. . SETTING A BAD EXAMPLE. NION COUNTY cut its assessment in two; it was $12,000,000 and it reduced it to $6,000,000, largely through the influence of a railroad tax agent Most other counties have followed the example set by In this county the assessment was says property must be: assessed at its the assessor does his duty when he law and there hi responsibility -ceases Thia does not imply that lie may not nave been mistaken in some of his estimate; be doubtless was, but, this is a detail which doesn't alter the principle which;-the law ''.: f '' , It looks a great. deal, better to say that .our. tax levy will be. this year,. instead of 40 mills, that our assessed valuation is 51 5U, $50,000,000. This same rule will ap counties. Once we statistics are pub these counties 'which are now putting in a low valuation will get. the sort of advertising they are entitled to. They will be assigned to an inferior list some of- their, sister counties which are advanced, and there will be none to except themselves. . heard the last of the Taggarts, horse, foot and dragoons, this will, be our' compensation for much about them in the recent past THEY DID NT KNOW. HE IMAUM clearing the bar with a 26 feet and a seven-foot tide is one of the object lessons that the so-called bar have lately experienced. A few words of reasonable criticism which The Journal recently of fered because of their recommendation to the captain of the Imaum not to load below 24 feet drew forth, the most virulent reply from the pilots and one of their News.. "If the depth is 28, surely it to attempt to take out.a Vessel drawing The Journal may entertain a different, opinion but, thank God, The Journal is not piloting the ships in and out of the Columbia river." 1 . Everything hinged on the "if." But there was more than 28 feet, hence it was safe to load deeper, just as the Imaum did, and that ship went safely over the bar. All of which proved that the bar pilots and the journalistic seadoga at . Astoria didn't, know wjiat they were talking about which will create no shocking sensation wherever either is known. ' , ' .. .." I ' ' . -i. : Ducbeaa Visita Betting' Ring. ." From the New. Tork World. . The Duchess of Marlborough attended the opening of the autumn meeting at Belmont Park yesterday,' and after the sixth race made a tour of the race track under the direction of August .Belmont, visiting the betting ring, where a few bookmakers. In shirt sleeves, were sUl paying out beta. The duchesa sat In a box with Mrs. Lawrence Townsend. wife of the ralnla ter to Belgium, " and Mlaa To wnaend. Comparatively . few . raoe-goera recog nised her. Apparently she haa recovered completely fjora the ear trouble which waa recently treated In a hospital. ' As this was the first really publio ap pearance of the ducheea, friends went to her box, and it soon became the moat popular one In the tier. - Upon visiting the betting ring the ducheea 'bad to dodge automobllea scur rying in alt dlrectlona. On Inspecting the-Tlng, which was littered with pro grama and badges, she asked Mr. Bel mont: "How many men take beta heref -. Mr. Belmont eald often aa many aa 110 bookmakers. The duchess and Mrs. and Mlsa Townaend then returned to Hemp stead. ' , "Dying" Pearla. From the London Truth.' Tha late Madame Thiers bequeathed a pearl necklace valued at ' the date of the bequest at 100,000 franca 1 It la un der a glass case, which ,1a let down every averting Into a cellar. The pearls are found to bo "dying" that la to nay, losing their orteat for want of contact pnw tns oumaa sun. 1 SMALL CHANGS Burying ths hatehat ia about the hard est job aver undertaken. v . It will ba ovar J.50S.000,' , V, a a i ., t .'. t - . How much will Frank Baker, ex-atata printer at 126.000' a yaar, bat on bar monyT . (-,.,.:.. , Oo tontcht ' - '. . ' 1 a a - t. . The big farea-comady at tha Kmplra theatre la ovar. Ita Itka will not ba aeen again. - - . a a v ,. T . Last day and night of tha big shew. A Walla WalU paper haada a aoelaty Item: "A Harmonloua Weddtna." Why don't the Republican facttona "get mar- ri4-" . : '. ,; llast night; don't mtsa it f a a Touna- man. don't go to eoncraei: be come a lira insurance preeiaenu- - The beef packers are atlll out of JalL :- . . ;. . Frank Davey has" a fine aenaa ot humor; he must have been iaughing "up hla alaeve ' au tha time. , The eaar should bring" about .peace In hla own country before poalng aa an advlaer of the world.' What does the fellow know, any way? - n The Eaat - Bids Enterprise Is doing a fine work for that part of tha city. and should be liberally supported. If It hadn't been for the women we name no - names ma rair wouia nave been a failure. , - . . ..... . Walk or ride, but go tonight ' . . e a ..." ".' -, Wa can almost hear Roosevelt laugh at thoae inane resolutions. . . . . ' a ; , - According to the Oregonlaa, tha Re publican party is eternally saved by the damnation of-Senator Mitchell. This 1 "burying the hatchet" ' : a a ' If you don't go you will regret it , .... -. . e e -See the fireworks tonight . e , e Oh! the moon shines hrlght upon the Wabash, where the natives live upon the new mown hay, and they're fighting like Bam Hill to win the railroad, en the banka of the Wabash, far away. New Tork Herald. And 'way out on the banks of the Columbia and Willamette, too. . ; . Convicted yett V , ' ' " .. ., e e Get a move on toward tha fair. . ' . s e ' '','''...'".. Hello, Philadelphia: 3 Better eradicate the "party", microbe. . ' ' ' . e . e v : : ,. ; Open till midnight ' , V .. a e . ' ' . Phlladelnhla North American: ! The mistake that bank clerk In Wall street made waa in not contributing the Slal,- 000 he stole to a campaign runa, ... .-. ;.' . e . a ; , - : .," t , There'll be'loU of noise. .. . . , ; . " : .j "a - e :,t; ' .Washington Times: 'If we men really do take to corse ta. -we might Juat as well go tha whole dlatanee and praetloe putting our handa at our walata and stretching our necks like chickens tak ing a drink. . ' "; 1 OREGON SIDELIGHTS Alba Correspondence East Oregonlaa: A large number of people from this neighborhood have visited the fair at Portland and all have reported, that the money wass well spent ... . e ' . t .'.,.. A ftO gold piece of the minting of 1150 brought 2l in Corvallla. -.a e . :' - Dalles Chronicle: A new departure Is being tested on O. R. N. dining car No. BOS, where Superintendent Pryat haa Installed white help, cooks and waiters both being white men. Bo far it haa proven moat satisfactory, and it la likely all other cars will be similarly equipped. ' i e " e "' : "Electric lines" la aloganup tho val ,e'". ,'.. ..-.'-. Farmers around Milton have erected a warehouse holding 120,000 bushels of wheat - ' . a a At Falls City Its pupils, and mora coming.. . ." u , .; y . A hundred thousand forest trees! That la the mark aet by Irrlgon for the fall of 101 and the spring or io; or the nest alx months. . And that wo wur reach and over, says the Irrigator. . a a Three men are employed at the broom factory in Athena, and they have to work early and late to keep up with orders on band. , - , . . a - . . Epldemio of tonsllltls in' Tha Bailee.' a a Boseburg Review: The railroad sur veying crew has passed Blkton and Is Investigating the feasibility of the pass un Binders oreea witn a view or tun neling through to Paradise creek. This would shorten the route about three mil a a. beeldea avoiding Brown's hllL one of the moat difficult problems ts contend with on the entire route. , . ... a a . .. . .. : Lumber in great demand around Alba, Umatilla) county; mill running full bust v . . ' - - '''..'-" Coyotes, have become . so numerous and destructive to goats, lambs, chick ens, etc, in Drain and vicinity that the farmers and stockmen nave called a meeting for October 14, to organise d coyote club, and the Nonpareil says It is likely the Club will arrange to pay a bounty on acalpa. ; v . - e - . North Yamhill Record: H. C. Gist Is qsilte poorly. i - ... . New courthouse in Tlllsmook. Biggest run of aalmon ever" in Tilla mook bay.-" 1 '.;.' ...... The watermelon belt In Oregon lies near Dallea city. .About one third of the crop, 27 carloada, ware ahlpped this eeaaon by three men of Dry Hollow. Tha Chronicle saya: "An -overstocked market haa cauaed the demand to de crease, and while the average price re ealvaii in other years la between ITS and tltO a car, this year 112 to tU was realised and this Is saying nothing of the cantaloupes, which crop is increas ing annually. J a. a 1 Condon reel estate moving,. l SUNDAY " SCHOOL LES SON for Tomorrow ' By H. D. Jenkins. D. D. October II, 10I Toplo: "Returning rrona captivity," xara 1:1-11. Golden text "Jehovah hath done great things for ua, whereof we are glad." Pa. vxxvt:!. nVaponslve readings ' Paalma exxvt caxvii, cxxviu. , 1 ' Zatrodaetion. . .r ' .' The decree of Cyrus giving the Jews permlaalon to return to their own land iraa iaaued In the first year or his aole reign, All the Jews were permitted to go back but no one was obliged to do so, . In consequence, while many availed themselves joyfully of this privilege. there were a conelderable number that declined to change. It waa now TO yeara since the fall of tha capital city. Only a few of thoae who had lived in Judaea aurvived. Many of the people nan engagea in proritaoie buaineaa In Babylonia. Many had became bound to i no community social as well as by financial ties. They had maintained schools and erected houses of . worship in the land of their exile. The way to Palestine waa long and arid, and what certainty was there that all they might be able to accumulate would not in a few years be snatched from them again by some of the powerful neighbors atlll threatening their borders? ...... .. Nevertheless, the more religious and the more. patrlotlo did not hesitate to undertake the 1 toilsome ' journey. An enumeration was made of those who ac cepted the king's permission to return, and it was found that not less than 42.110 freemen were in the column who with their families would make prob ably 160,000 souls. Perhaps no people ' ever- exiated In whoaa breaata patriotism haa been so mighty a force aa has been the ease with the Jews. They nave not had a king of their own for nearly tt centu ries. They have not had a land of their own for 10 centuries. Tet there is nothing which so greatly excites them today aa the possibility of reestablish ing their race In the home of their an cestors. , Every year their representa tive men meet to dleousa plans and to consider poeslbllltiea and to cheer one another with the hope of a new reatora- tlon. . . The prophets of Israel said of Aa- syrla that God would out down that na tion aa a cedar of Lebanon la cut down. It Is well known that the oonlfera never spring up anew from their stumps. But of Judah it was said the nation should be eut down like aa oak or a vine, which alwaya renews Itself from Its ' unde stroyed roots. How . wonderfully both tneee- prophecies have been fulfilled. It Is no wonder that historians speak- ot the Jew as "the miracle of history." Without a Jand. without an army, with out a temple, the Jewa today consti tute tha power behind more than one tnrone. ' They control the press of half the capitate of Europe.- Their future la likely to be aa wonderful aa their past . v '" Th ftossoa. : ': i Verae 1. By tho preaching of Eseklel and by the godly life of - Daniel, Je hovah had been preparing hla people for a worthy return. Jeremiah, while ex horting the captivea to build thans homea and rear themselves families' in the land of their captivity, had clearly foretold -their reeatabllshment in Pales tine at the close of a deHnlto period (Jer. tirlty was at last, fulfilled. The peo ple had been chastened. Falsa teachera had been dlacredlted. Idolatry, with all Ua ejnspeaksbls moral pollutions, had been forever renounced. ' No atrange altar was ever again to be erected in Jerusalem by a- son of Judah. Cyrus had hla own purposes to subserve by the move now contemplated, but back of his intent was tho divine decree. Verse t. Boastful of having subdued the whole earth, it la probable -that Cy rue felt some-apprehension still as to .1 the future conduct of the nations to the west Nothing could bo more useful, to him than to have sitting at "the gate way of tho nations" a people bound to his throne by ties of grateful remem brance. To make the return, eo useful to him from a political standpoint at tractive to tho Jewa from a religious aspect Cyrus announces the return aa designed to reestabllan tneir -national worahlp in ita old home. He makes no promise of rebuilding their walls, hut he lays the emphasis upon the restoration of that temple which was the embodi ment of the Jewish religion and the alga of the Jewiah hope. Verse I. The wording of the procla mation waa a dlatinct appeal to the re ligious feel Inge of the people. Cyrua realised, without doubt that there was "no money In it" for tha returning cap tivea. They mua be prepared to endure .many hardships and to encounter not a few dangers, but with these eaptives the religious Instinct waa peculiarly atrong. They were asked to go back, not to re build their ruined markets for it would take more than one generation to reatora their trade hut to rebuild that temple whoee destruction had been mourned aa the moat dreadful blow aver suffered by any nation. Verse 4. The king, moreover, to show his Interest in this movement, directs the native neighbors of any returning Jew to aid him by contributing to his substance. Many might be seriously in clined to throw obstacles In the way of this return, since it would take out of the community a large class of Indus trious eltlsens and families whose trade it would be an object to retain. - Cyrus, knowing this, enjoins a general co operation upon the part 1 of . hla Babylonian subjects. ' Veree S. It should be remembered that the kingdom of Judah conalats of the original two tribes (I. Klnga xll:21) and a large number of Levi tea who had deserted Israel when Jeroboam set up a rival religion there (L Kings xll:2S-ll and IL Chron. xi:s, 12, 12, 14). As waa fit the religious orders took the leed In this movement for the restoration of the temple. Even when a church has be come corrupt aa a whole, there will be found "a great company of the priests" quick to respond to thtf'fSfll for any reformation. It was so In tha flrat days of tha Christian church (Acts vl:T) and It Was so In the period of ths Protestant reformation. Verse 0. .Those returning did 'not minimise their task. . They prepared for it with scrupulous care. It would be months. It might be years, before the abandoned fields of Palestine would suf fice for . their support Or the ruined markets be re-established. Sacrifice was aa necessary 'as enthuslaam. Verse T. It is quite probable . that Cyrus had heard af Belahassar's laat feaat and that he knew how In the pop ular belief the all of the dynaaty of Nebuehadneasar waa associated with In dignity offered tha sacred .vessels which had been takes; from the temple. He waa more than ' willing to part with treasures whoee possession had brought no good fortune to his predecessors.. -- Verse . The Greeks used to say that 'The mills -of the goda grind slow, ' , But they grind exceeding small." There has come a turn In the affaire of states. The "sun-worshipper." Mlth- redath, returns by careful count to Tarubhabel,' "Born-ln-Babylon" (crttnn. ra 1:11; JEsra tha vessels whose loaa was to the pious Jew tho heaviest of all loeaea. The restoration ot the temple furniture, moat eoetlgr and ea cred, would be coneldered by the Jew an obligation - to rebuild the temple, where alone It eould be rightly repoaed. Verses -lt We have first the tele of the mora Important vessels, and then the total., including minor ones not specified in the first verses. It is the tendency of every popular abrlno to ac cumulate vast stores of gold, silver and gems. For mora than 100 yeara the temple had - received offerings ' from pious and grateful worshippers. -Al though wicked rulers had made now add then a raid upon the aaored treasury, tha temple wealth was still enormous at the time of Jeruaalem'a fait The loot", waa preserved at first . out of pride, and later. It may be auppoaed, out of superstitious fear,-. Muohr enay have been lost but much remained. Npt like - the exodua from Egypt la haste and fear and want waa thia re turn from Babylon. f Jahovah had given hla aervanta favor in the sight ot the king...? They were accompanied part of the way by armed aacorta, to protect mens rrom the bands or roooera which infeated tha deeert 'and who - would quickly know of the great treaaurea the Jews carried back with them. Their beat families,, their moat, devout teach era, their most patrlotlo eltlsens were In tha number retu'rnlnc "With aonea and everlasting Joy upon their hedds" they went forth from the land of their captivity. - A new life was opening be fore them, and the dawn ot that new day waa beautiful with all algna of Mromiee. Many of the paalma which commemorated the Joyful event are to be found in the aacred wrltlnga (see especially Ps. 114). Judah was not per footed but Judah waa purified. - With unflinching pertinacity she clung here after to her monotheistic fslth. that faith which she was to - give' to the world. She might make a burden of her Sababths, but aha never egaln Ignored them. And In every age there were to be found devout-Simeons and Annaa waiting for tha further redemption of larael (Luke 11:21-21). Mountalna were being laid low and .valleya were being nlled up for the coming of the Messiah. And ho in whoaa hand lie the hearts ot klnga, ' waa overturning thrones and powers until one should eome whose right It Is to reign TEsek. xxt:!T). On tho Bnaks"rivsr. , October 14. The wind was high from the southwest during the evening; this morning It changtd to the weat and the weather became very cold until about It o'clock, when it shifted to the south west and continued in that quartet during tho reat of tha day. We aet out early, and after passing soma swift water,- reached at 2 H miles a rock (Monumental) ot a very singular ap pearance! It waa altuatad on a point to the left "at aomo dlatanee from the ascending country, waa very, high and large and res m bled in ahapa the hull of a ahlp. At five milea we paaaed a rapid; -at eight another and a amall Island on the right We haltea a mile and a half below for the purpose of ex amining a much larger and more danger. oua rapid than thoae we had yet paaaed. It was three miles in length and very difficult- to navigate. Wa had scarcely set out .when three of the canoea atuck faat in. endeavoring to avoid the roc as in tha channel: soon after,. In passing two small, rocky islands, one of the canoea atruck a rock, but waa prevented from upaettlng, and fortunately wa all arrived -isafe af (he lower end of the raplda. Here wa dined; we then pro ceeded and soon reachedHknether (Pine- tree) rapid on both aides of the river, which waa divided by an Island. As wo were descending It one of the boats ' waa driven croaawlaa against a rock in tha middle of the current The orew attempted to get her off, but the wavea dashed over her and . she soon filled; they got out on the rock and held her above water, with great ex ertlon, till another canoe was unloaded and sent to her relief, but they could not prevent a great deal of her baggage from floating down the stream. Aa soon os shs waa lightened she waa hurried down tho channel, leaving the crew on tho- rock. They were brought off by thereat of the party; tho canoe and nearly all that had been washed overboard was recovered. The chief loss wss the bedding of two men. a to ma hawk and some amall articles. - But all -he reat were wet and though- by dry lng tho powder we were able to savs It all the loose packages of which were in this boat yet we- loot all the roots and other provisions, which -were spoiled by the water. In order to diminish the loss aa far as was in our power, we naitea xor tne nignt on an laiand and exposed everything to dry. . . - On landing wa found some split tlm- ner ror nouees. wmcn the Indiana had very securely covered with stonea, and alao a place where they had deposited their flah. We had hitherto abstained scrupulously from taking anything be longing to. tho Indiana, but on this oc casion we were compelled to depart from thia rule, and, as there waa no timber to be found., in any direction for fire wood and no owner appeared from whom it could be purchaaed, we used a part of these split planks, bearing in. mind our obligation, to repay -the proprietor whenever we should discover him. Ths only game we observed were geese and ducks, of the latter we killed some. In cluding a few blue-winged teal (Quer queduladlsoorsK. Our . Journey waa it miles In length. A Limit for Sky-Scrapera. From a New Tork -Letter. .. Tho announcement recently that a so. story building In thia city was con templated set archltecta and , buildera talking of .the poaslblllties of such an enterprise. Many peraons believe that law should be passed llmltlna? t height of buildings here. Otherwlee, they think, the buildings may grow so tall that they will topple over and cause dire calamity. Both the laws of physlf a Knu iiunca nve already set a natural limit to the height of tall bUlldlnga, which will be mora potent than all the laws eapable of being devised by man. The one great law that will In th. ... ture keep down the height of buildings ta that "It wm not pay" to put up any bulldlnga higher than some of the tall est now In existence, because experience has shown already that soma of the tall, eat have exceeded the point where "cap. Ital gets Its greatest returns on the amount of the Inveatment The tendency In the last year has been to ferine the number of atorles of skyscrapers Inataad of increaalng the height- A result ot thia tendency to reduce will be that in tho next decade there Will be a revulalon from the 10 and 22-atory buildings, and the tendency of tha times will be to keep the roof down to the twentieth story or theresbout . ... At to tht Self-Made Man. , " From the New Tork Tribune. Professor Nathaniel Butler of the tTnl veralty of Chicago says the self-made man's sucoess Is due only to unusual ability. "As success Itself, rightly con sidered. .Is an unusual, thing. , the self made man If there la suoh a. person seems to stand a fairly good show . LEWIS AND CLARK II- '. . ii .'--H LETTERS FROM.. THE Tha Mi Portland, Oct It. To the Editor of Tha Journal The name was not given In honor of the owner of the land on which- U now stands, for; O. P. Lent did not own the land or plat the town of, Lents. Neither did he name it What ho did do was to settle In this county tt years ago and make a home in a wil derness where he raised a large respect able family, where bis latqhstting waa -out to welcome the weary and distressed and no one waa ever turned from hla ' door. Here the mlnieter on his round found a welcome, the teacher stayed who taught in tho little schoolhouse Father Lent's energy had provided and on whose land it waa built. Here tha needy came to receive the help only a thrifty, honaat man could give. If any were aick. or born, or . dead. Mother Lent with heart and hand, waa there. even beyond the limit of her natural' atrength. She taught the Sunday achool and waa a friend to alL - Until Mr. Leat.aiul -lfl!urlaL Af Currlnsvllle by their united efforts got . a mall route granted, the settlers from Portland to the Cascade mountains had sw 10 me city of Portland for their mail, and . When tha offices were named the department at Washington ehoee to call one Currlnavllle and one -Lents, although It might, have been Lenta Mill had not the poatofflce people heen given to favoring brevity in nam lng. A member of the Lent family waa tha flrat DOatmlatreaa anf tha effinm Was kept about five years aa an uaom. - vaoaaiioo to the neighbors at her real, dance,, and when Mr. Knott wished to start the store at Lents and took the office there waa about 11.10 due, which was about the monthly pay for all the ears and worry of a daily mall. The Lent family aaaa mora h ..v.r.l him. dred dollars than any other family to- wnru in motor . Una. Ha alan . raira toward tha Woodstock motor Una . and vii.reuti ana cnarmes, tne Baby farm among others. Multnomah county can thanks him- for many of her good wnen tne Foeter road . from Lents' to the Powell valiav waa t k. cleared of forest-trees, tha Lent famiiv n StetAA b aa ... ... . . ana an me rest ot the neigh- wwrs uDscrioea ioo. Then, as no ons would try to do tha work tor un amall a sum, a Lent did it for them., . "so no piace to bury our- dead. Lent organised the Multnomah Cemetery company, and opened a cemetery, which contalna the only free burial plot near Portland except the poor farm. When ' there waa no aalary. he aerved as school clerk for years. The first year there waa any pay In It another took hla place. Ha was chiefly Instrumental In organising ths Evenlna? Star finnt. Which mat for nearly a year at hla ' house for want of a halt It Is now the largest, grange tn tha state. The atate grange owea Its life to his personal and financial aid at tha crisis of Its career. For o.ver SO yeara the name of Lenta haa been a landmark of Multnomah county and no- one ever thought - of changing it until a few newcomers and real eatate men thought ' it would help their buaineaa to wipe out a few old landmarks. Aa waa eald. -Old man Lent .waa a pretty good man. but he la dead and doea not owa any property hero now, i and Mt Soott la so much more UD-to-date." . . - " v Of course Lent Is a back number. When he eettlpd here he. paid ltd a aack for flour aind crossing the Willam ette in -a skiff, carried it It milea on bis. back. How many people here .now know the hardships of thoae old pioneer. ,4 aaver . until mi eaiwr or in uregoman bought a tract of land on the mountain aide about a mile and a half of Lents, there, waa no Mt Soott Then as he had aubscrlbed very liberally to the new motor line, the car was named Mt Scott aa It waa the expectation at that time to extend the line up the hill; which expectation - failed owing to tha financial crlala of 'St. Ton are naming your schools, etc to retain the old pioneer namea, aa tha Ladd. Kelly, Hawthorne and others. Father Lent waa a pioneer with them. who waa In his way and with his means quits aa publio aplrltad aa they. . He eut the flrat stone at Kelly Butte which ever went into the city of Portland, to build ita new JalL This stons is now in the custom house. - Why wlpe his name off tha map becauee he, like tho others, haa gone to cur flnaa endT ,. A EUBSUUDICH. Portland, Oct. 10. To tho Editor of The Journal The atate will destroy the incentive aa well aa the individuality, energy and Independence of tha indi vidual, to the hurt of - ambition and exertion, is tha" argument againat Socialism, but no reason why is given aa to change of composition or differ ence of state from now. that ao much la presumed to be lost now supposed to be had. Were it done tha logic of It might bo better understood. Ia the state of something more than the people, or government the enactment and enforce ment of law? Socialism would make every one a unit of atate" and govern ment having share and authority, through their corporate organisation Into a governing body, whoaa laws will be the government Equal Interest and riaht will make, tha formulated social sense of publio opinion the law. How can there bo so muoh ioat in this, the greatest exercise of the , hlgheet fu no tion of atate and government Strange the fight of ages for self-government of their labor and control, of their Indus tries, ss they , would ' have in equal ownership - and management through Socialism, should result so badly for (he people! What better public control of publle utilities can there be, and what of a more social nature man tnoae of common need and necessity? By all meana let Socialism' bring thia about that all 'may profit by their labor and none without C. W. SAUNDERS. Second of Twin Tnnnele Opened. From- the New Tork Times. - . ' ' The second of the twin tunnels con necting New York and Jersey City wss opened yesterday afternoon, Tha flrat was opened more than a year ago. Wal ter O. Oakman, brealdent of the Hudson companies "was the first to step- from the second tube to tne new I or it sid.. At about the aams time two dogs, pets of the human beavera who, with the aid of science,- compressed alr, . pick and ahovel, have fought their way under the river bed. leaped through the opening. Then came the dlrectora and President William O. McAdoo of the New Tork at Jersey Tunnel company. The opening la at the snot where the old Hudson River Tunnel company quit work 20 years ago after a cave-in In which 14 men lost their lives. It may be a year, and It may be longer,'- before cars are running under the river bed front New Jersef to New York. 'r Hop Iff True From the New Tork Tribune. Secretary Wilson of the department of agriculture predlcta that meat dairy products and poultry wilt be cheaper next winter. The city householder will hope with all fervor that thia prophecy aoesn t -spring a -lesx. ' V !' J Y. I! f ..