3 CATUrJDAY. OCTOBER 21. l-3. PORTLAND. OREGON. 3 EelnlioiiicJ ..Page: 9;;' jiZo1' Jeraal c ,B9 T HE OREGON DAILY . AN t 1 A ft. JACKM' 'published w7 maigc'(wi)i 8undar d overy Sunday mornlnf at "HANDCLASP OF LEWISTON ;T T WAS A GREAT DAY t Lewiston yesterday, not only foe. that, city but fof - the ' ; men who were there. -ot because were were iu. that e-Uv. but because or the ' 'Mffnifieance of the visit, the motive . the purpose behind it. ? v' . tv,. k-i,;. thin is an nnen river, all . jston to the sea. Lewiston sits at navigation. Portland sits at the head M-Tninr vessfla. Thev have a common imercsi. intjr should and will work together in a common cause, for a . result equally beneficial to both and to all points and all the country .between. . . '. Next, lower and reasonable freight rates. This is really the maul object of the open river. It is imma . terial whether the river carries much of the produce and merchandise or not Once open, it, will regulate rail rates, for. if the railroads arc not reaso'hable the people i.mi - .! rnmhiiH-ihcforehand ' to support ' therif. It is an era of combination. The people cannot combine as completely and effectively as the railroads t Van hnt ih nn do this much. Ex-Governor Moore i'Wted. the case very lucidly yesterday at Walla Walla. . r There is another point acquaintanceship, fraternity, realization of common interest less local selfishness,, a nf mir eat region, more "five and take" " i-as against a spirit of all take and no give among us ; jsll of hs of the Columbia river region. Such visits and Vontact and eomtrmnig. . will bear .respect. -rtfj -1 ' , f As to Lewiston," it occupies vantage ground. .It is fo--innately located. It Jus a great and resourceful region 4 behind it. With the present prospect ahead, it will grow ..into a large interior city. Its citieens are wideawake, .progressive enterprising. ' They not only talk, but do. 'MVC ttUUUl HVl lllb W1J VI .U WllV TWVMfc .there rejoices in the trip, and would not have missed it . for twice the expense in time and money, ,',ni hun- -lreds of other. Portland men would like to have gone. Many of them should go. A man who doesn't know "something of that great country by actual observation js scarcely fit to do a large business in "Portland. . ' There should be more such trips to the interior. And ftve think there will be. They, will do Portland business jnen good. "Let us all pull together. But to do so let ais get better acquainted and become more fraternal. Mr. Havemeyer, head of the sugar trust, says Phil ippine sugar can be delivered in this country at one cent ' pound. 'Bring it in. Sugar for 80-odd million people "at one cent a pound would be' a sweet blessing. But we doubt not that the trust would somehow make us pay 'about five cents a pound for it. AN EAST AND WEST OREGON HE JOURNAL has repeatedly predicted the building of an east and west snn'anil tfitvtncrh a ' naaa in tains connecting with the Union .Pacific or some .other transcontinental system, and having Portland as its .main terminus. When such a road would be built or 'by whom was not predicted, nor i ' will be built comparatively soon we have no doubt $ Recent persistent rumors are that Mr.' Harriman will secure the CorviILis & Eastern and build from Idanha, 'its eastera. te'rtnmus, to Ontario, thus controlling the traffic of; central as well as. of northern Oregon. To A road will certainly be built through ' Umatilla "and Morrow counties to the Heppner coal ' fields the Sumpter valley road would push forward, and the Wal lowa valley be connected by rail with.th O. R. & N. branch at Elgin. All these roads are. almost certainties within a fiw vpiri and will ffiv rattrrn and. central . Oregon the opportunity to develop so , Then there is the great Klamath . region that should and probably will northern and westward as wen as a soutnern and west ward outlet. While the Columbia river valley and gorge will always be the favorite route for all traffic 4,111, I r f la ISllSISV S11, Vll . ren win live to see two ana possibly If Mr. Harriman should build from Idanha to Ontario, Yaauina would be one western terminus, and Portland another, for as all roads led to Rome all railroads enter ing the Willamette valley would lead ' to Portland. Yaquina bay and harbor have not been favored much by the. government engineers, but could : be improved so that, a certain class and amount of commerce could, be accommodated there; but the bulk of the traffic, would .'seek' this port :.;-fi i.W. ; "v,"--" ' ";, One need believe only fraction of the rumors afloat, but it is evident'that an'era of railroad building in Ore con is at hand, and no one need he aurnriaed if hefore a : year, passes the trans-Oregon road been off irikllv announced a derided ... Workingmen frequently make presents' to corporation . officials, but we never heard of reciprocity on the part of the high-salaried officials. ' -, . '"'.",' ,; ' ' ' ' . '', THE OVERWORKED CANAL TnE'PANAMA canal board of engineers has been : down to the isthmus on a pleasure jtrip, and re , ,; turned to Washington yesterday for another long rest. The members .'are' real tired, not of doing anything, of course, but because they have no idea of what to do or' when anything but drawing salaries will be done. This they attend to with scrupulous prompti tude and regularity, General Davis, chairman ot the board, is reported as The Fair t Benefit. , From the Malheur Oanette. . - There U aome discussion th days as to whether the Lawls and Clark ax-, position at Portland ha bean a benefit to the. atata, of Oregon. , One exchange auggeata that it has been the means of . draining every locality In this state of nil tho surplus money. The writer does not take Into consideration the fact that It has boea the means of bringing Into this state a great amount of money. He dnea not reco lime the fact that xnoney . from all aver rhe world has been put la circulation within the Oregon bounda ries , He simply thinks that Portland lone has' been benefited and the rest of the state has suffered. Nothing eould 1 more absurd. What little money each Individual has spent upon his trlpa will not be mimed. If they had not rone to Portland, they would have spent i .a same amount In a vacation aome- . here el a. As It Is they have 'saved their money for this trip, which has also n wr rad for their usual summer vaca' lion. It la unreasonable to assume that every part of the state has not been ten' "fed.; Thousands of eastern people l.ave become acquainted with the re sources sud opportunities of this stats tNOIPXNDBNT NEWSPAPER V ' ' ; PUBLISHES BY JOURNAL' PUBLISHING CCV AND PORTLAND, saying: "So far - Tourscore roruina of type. , It returns prejudice or big's to me." ' I that prompted it and Certainly. No .' - the way from Lew the head of river of navigation for action are the only against a sea level General Davis Mr. Rockefeller, love him, concluded rise in the- price of if they did. ; ' good iruu in tins H ERE IS A great many, Get asmall Of course there But the small other there may be But if you have Then small farmers cmes man iney can RAILROAD. railroad across Ore- the t?rafte mmin- well as his hands.. now, but that it win pay. There on 10 acres, and Electric roads cities are filling sume what they long denied them. and Lake county have some day a WHERE' I 11V V.IIV( V(11V enhance ignomy by stealing from the. widow and the orphan. But even this depth of shame has not stayed the greedy hands of McCurdys, McCalls and Hydes. Conscience does not prick when they admit graft and tnree roaas across fraud. Effrontery tan grounds work first mentioned has unnn. ' BOARD. go. up and "mix" in a friendly way with those cheery, energetic, . wideawake, big-hearted, liberal, progressive people of the great inland empire. There are none be ter in .the land. ' . and will settle In our mldat Thousands or., others who heretofore had no thoughts of coming west will, during many years to come, gradually 'give up their eastern homes and come to Oregon. Thousands of others, who have alwaye looked upon the west ss a seml-clvlllsed country, will be so favorably Impressed that they will tell their neighbors, who never came to Portland, of the true state of affairs and many of them will be In duced to vlalt Oregon In the future. The great benefits to the aUtea can hardly be overestimated. It has been the great est advertisement that could have been conceived, the expense of which has been comparatively nothing. ' - - ' i m i i ... "Turn the Rascals Out!" . From the Charleston News and Courier. John A. McCall and Oeorg W, Per kins hsve avowed themselves politicians ss well ss Insurance men. In politics there Is a good oldtampa1ga ery which rises from the mouths of the people whenever the trust of the people has been betrayed. John A. McCall and Oeorge W. Perkins must have heard the slogan, "Turn the rascals out!" it Justlca-ls done, they will hear It again, shouted by: every policy-holder In the New York Life from Maine to Mexico. J O URN A L no. V. 0A0 The Journal Bulldinc. ih and Yamhffl as I am aware, neither the board nor ny individual member of it has expressed any opinion as to the type of the canal, that js favored. .The board is not in possession of all the facts bearing on the question to this city entirely iree from any respecting that type, so far as known ' - - - f.v ' member of the board knows anything about the canal, and so has no prejudices. The board will carefully avoid finding out anything about the canal, or the plans or prospects therefor, lest any facts that might indiscreetly be thrust Hipon it should arouse prej udice in some direction or other in the mind of some member of the board. Utter ignorance and absolute in means of avoiding prejudice for or canal, r does hint that some conclusion on some point maybe reached in the course of a few weeks, but we trust that he was not seriously in earnest in this statement. The health of the members of the board is very precious to the country; Washington is not an agreeable place in winter, and that.' season is now ap proaching; and the proper thing to do is for the board to take a vacation till spring. The government should fur nish the members ship, and let them go to France, and along the Mediterranean, to rest " Better no canal than to overwork these intensely industrious and patriotic gentlemen. -' ; " '- having discovered how the people that they wouldn't kick at another oil. ,It wouldn't dp them any good " ' A LITTLE FREE ADVICE.. BIT of good advice, if it is free, to a a large proportion, of young men:1 farm. ' mast be some quite large farms. The. wheat raiser in eastern Oregon needs a large farm, for -he let half of it be fallow every other year.., The dairyman on a considerable scale cannot carry on his businesson a few acres of ground. farm is the ideal farm for -the averace young man of moderate means. There is less risk with it, there is more comfort on it, and one year with an as much profit from it. children, boys growing tip? ' Very well, save a little each year and when they are grown send or advise them to go farther back and get a less valuable, piece of land than yours will be by that time. can do well much farther from the now.. - .- There is opportunity within a radius of 20 miles of Portland for hundreds more small farmers. - Indeed, they are needed. And with land utilized for all it is worth they can all do well. Look at the prices we city people have to pay for everything. - ' But look you, the small farmer can't loaf. He must be not only industrious but intelligent He must be cun ning to take every advantage of, soil, climate, seasons, opportunities. He need not work very hard all the time, but' he must use his eyes and ears and brain .as Then the small farm of good ground are men who have become forehanded even less. - ' ' s ., are to be built. The, country and the up. the number. of people who con do not produce win increase rapidly. lney all have to eat Get a small farm,. young man, and make the most ofTtrF6rIhSny .pf you we guarantee that it is goqfl advice. - Somebody in nearly every one of the larger western Oregon towns, backed by eastern capital, is going to build electric railroads all over western Oregon. It won't all be talk always, either. WAS THE COMMISSIONER? NSURANCE OFFICIALS who betray their trust are i more culpable than the thief. Having all the vil lainy of one who violates a fiduciary office, they grows as they justify,, on huraanitar-t that the world despises. But) stronger than public indignation is public sur prise. New f York has a lawful insurance commissioner. His duties were strictly prescribed by the . law creating the office,, and his powers plenary when protecting the policy-holder. ,, He learned nothing of the insurance crimes until knowledge was forced before him by other officials. He is not' the man who presses investigation when cause is revealed, and is the last to believe that the sacred insurance fund which he , is legally sworn to guard has been robbed. Private" trusts are violated only by scoundrels, but the man who takes public office with a sworn duty to perform and with public faith strong iij him, is the deepest dyed law breaker. New York is illustrating to the world again that the people must protect themselves at all times. - Eternal vigilance is no more the price of liberty than it is of success in business. - Men who rob the insurance fund and officers who connive at the crime, prove that selfish ness is hopelessly constitutional, and there is no safety when one or many human, beings are given absolute power. .. , .'.''" It ought to do, and must do, Portland men Brood to Prophesied Roosevelt's Greatness. . From ' Success Msgaslne. More entertaining. perhaps, ' and equally Interesting, are the anecdotes which sre told about our president by the Minkwlts family.. Frau Fischer dis tinctly recollects that once she prophe sied the future greatness of young Teddy. She says: "One day I had a conversa tion with Mrs. Roosevelt who said to me, 'I wonder what la gdtng to become of my Teddyr I replied- rYou need not be anxious about him.' He 'will surely be one day a great professor, or, who knows, he may become even president of the - United States.' : Mrs. Roosevelt rebuked me. Shs said such a thing was Impossible, and asked how I could have struck upon such an absurdity. But perhaps on account of my Impulsive re mark, I have since continually watched Theodore Roosevelt's career and have al ways been glsd when he has mads a step forward In the world." . A Chance to Make It Unanimous. From the St Louts Post-Dispatch. -If tha high tariff IS causing us to build factories In Europe, perhaps Eu rope will presently be enthuslaatlo evsr it, too. . . , ... SMALL CHAX " I The people are with, the f "ijent on the ranroaa regui-uon quesuua ana m railroad members of congress will maae o ow is e e Don't forget or fall te patronise home Industries. . : . e. e Within the past month the Oregonlan, by needlessly arousing against Port land the direct or reflected animosity of. the whole stats, haa dons this city millions of dollars' wortn 01 damage. : ... . e ' a .... -. , ' Oregon will have more railroad mile age a year rrom now, ana stilt more coming. .. - - -"By George! I've had a good time.' said the president on leaving Raleigh. Now. can't somebody start a discussion as to whether or not "By- Oeorge",-Is profanity T ' MeCurdy won't resign, but a good many policy holders will, if they can play even. ,. Another football fatality. Good start Joslah Qulncy, former mayor of Bos ton, Is engaged to marry Miss Mary Honey. He needed a sweetener. . e .". Could it have been Ida Tarbell who was going to help Pat Crowe abduct Rockefeller? , ,v . , e e But there Is no need of a' woman .car rying a rattrap In her pocket If she has any pocket . , And It's Ivins, is ItT Ivlnsf" Says the New York copper, "Hlvlns!" '. Minister. Barrett Is off to Colombia. He will scarcely get back for his winter vacation before Christmas. ' , - ; ., e i, e ,,,..' ' . The tour of the Prince of Wales snd his retinue will cost the British people 1 1.000. 000. That would last Teddy a life time, U he traveled nearly all the tune. ' Judging by his remarks down south, It may be Inferred that If Roosevelt had been a young man In 'SI he would have been a confederate soldier. "Puget sound Is ahead" referring to wheat and flour exports' Is a caption of an editorial In the Tacoma Ledger. That always Interesting and estimable paper should publish and copyright Its exclusive and private arithmetics. There might be a fortune in It , A Rainier door mill shipped a carload of Its product last week to Illinois, two carloads to Chicago, two to St Paul and one to Winnipeg. Perfect autumn weather In Irrlgon. ' '. . : , The Irrlgon Fruit company will buy a carload of seed potatoes as tha season for planting there le earlier than In al most any other part of the country, and seed potatoes cannot be obtained early enough la the spring. : - . Off 13 acres of river bottom land two miles above Springfield S. M. Douglas picked 28,001 pounds of bops, making 144 bales, an average ot 2,323 pounds to the acre, though several hundred hills were planted only last year and did not bear.. , . '. - e ,. Work on excavation . for , Tillamook courthouse begun. - . ..' A Sandlake, Tillamook county, 'man raised over 200 bushels of onions on a quarter of n acre of land. . : A Sandlake potato weighed J pounds snd 13 ounces snd measured ISM inches long and 10K Inches around. - . New brick building In Cottage Grove. ,, - ",' ';'... , The- Cottage Grove Presbyterian church, U. 8. A., and the Cumberland Presbyterian church have unltedi . e e - Big lime deposits around Baker City, e e Rural Northwest: Interest In the sub ject of local and county fairs seems to be growing some In Oregon. It Is a good sign. The county fair as an educa tional feature holds much the earns relation to the state fair as the district school to ths state university. . Fishing oh ths Coqullls river Is better than It haa been for many years. All the canneries are In operation, running both night and day, but In spits of this faot fney are unable to handle the product e Corv allls Times: The outside coet of the Benton exhibit Is'lMOO and may not exceed f 1.700. Of the amount taOO will be refunded by the fair people, re ducing the limit to ft, 200 or tl.100, which will be still further reduced by the amount of the prise. .'.' Corvallls la bound to get plenty of good water. e More fait wheat will be sown In Umatilla county thaq ever .-before. Much of It is already up and growing. ' - ''a e .. Seven thousand head of beef cattle, purchased In nearly every eastern Ore gon county, will be fed by R. N. Stan field bn his Butter creek alfalfa ranches this season. . , Independence Enterprise: Peter Kurre brought to town this week Baldwin ap ples measuring 12 to Inches In circum ference. They are perfectly sound, of good color and would be hard to dupli cate in any climate.. With the proper attention to trees no one need pass up Polk county for fins apples. ' . e . e V' ' Denny pheasants, scarce up tbe valley, a e . . ; e e happy : Farmers all after rain. again sunshine The Steele market Is Improving, says ths Burns Times-Herald. i . e -.. . " Burns Times-Herald:' The hoodoo Is broken and our local cattlemen may look forward to better times. Next sea son must ses them making preparations early and in some way stop ths report at railroad polnta that there are no cattle in Harney county.. Why, bless yout one third of the cattle In the state- of Oregon ars within ths borders of Harney county. Strange that we should have no beef. . , Burns 4a to have a town clock, and the fund amounts to 1120 already. . Bums Times 'Herald enlarged. Pros jf---- - - OREGON SIDELIGHTS ' ; perity. - .( , , J SUNDAY SCHOOL LES SON for TOMORROW By H. D. Jenkins, D. D. October 22. 19 06 Topic: . "Rebuilding the Temple" Esra 111:10) to lv:. Golden Text Tbe temple of God Is holy, snd such are ye.-I Cor. 111:17. Responsive. Reading- Psalm exxat u Zatrodaotloa. The long and . . dangeroue Journey whosa InceDtfon waa noted in our ore- vious lesson 'was at last successfully accomplished. To move 160,000 persons In one mass 100 miles through a region much of which Is desert Is a tremendous undertaking. Ws may well believe that only those most patriotic and moat de vout were willing to undertake It "The return was probably begun in March and ended In July. The people cam back to a site rather than to a city. In leas than 10 years, old soldiers of the civil wsr returning te Gettysburg or Peters burg found It; difficult to locate the camps onoe so familiar to them. But Jerusalem had lain In heaps for many years. The royal gardens and pleasant parka had run Into riotous confusion. Upon the ' fragments of the prostrate walls great trees were growing. It was the luxuriance - of a Versailles turned Into the desolation of a Hadrian's villa. To restore a state Is sometimes more difficult than to erect one. The rights of the emancipated cap tives did not extend over any great extent of territory. To the north, the ancient limits of Judea ran about 26 miles. Bethlehem, five miles south of Jerusalem, marked the limit of their possible occupation In that direction.' East and west they controlled a strip about 20 miles wide. . : This narrow ' section was surrounded upon all sides by hostlls tribes or clans, far from being well pleased to aee the authority of Judah re-established. - There waa no time to be lost The people could; pray without a temple, but not without an altar eould they, offer the Levltlcal sacrifices. .The first labor waa therefore devoted to the restoration of this sacred object . What the cross haa ever been to the Christian, the altar waa to the Jew (ch. 111:2). The first feaat they eould keep In tbe midst of the ruined city waa the feast of taber nacles, the great national Thanksgiving, celebrated every year In the autumn. Soon they were able to offer dally 'sac rifices (ch. ill:), which event was marked as a re-birth of their, nation. In - the meanwhile they hired, expert builders from Tyre end Joppa (ch. 111:7) to hasten their reconstructions. And Just so soon as they had' begun to feel themselves reasonably secure, they set to work to rebuild the temple Itself as best they might from their present resources. The temple, not the palace, waa their symbol of national unity. They had existed as a .people centuries before they ever had a king. Their return was a religious, not a political, renaissance. ' 1 . , The Xesson. Verse 10. Back of the great altar had formerly stood the temple proper, the visible abode of tbe Invisible Jehovah. Although the structure In Its completed form embraced vast colonnadsa, beauti ful porches and wide courts, the second temple Itself was upon foundatlona only 0 feet square (11 Chron. 111:3).. The "Holy House was Intended- to e a re plica In marble of the "tent" which Is rael used throughout Its years or wan dering In the wilderness of Slnal. . To lay the first stones In- the restored tem ple, the priests, clothed In their pre scribed garments and carrying the sa cred vessels which were used In dlvlno, service, were present So far aa their poverty permitted they fulfilled their function with beauty and Impressive ness. However simple our worship may be, there le no excuse for Its being care less or slovenly or devoid of spiritual dignity. ... : - Verse 11.' From the first singing has always been prominent In the worship of the Bible. The fame of the Jewish psalms had reached Babylon before the Jews were taken there captive (Psalm cxxxvll:!, 4).- No other religion haa ever been so Identified with tbe art and prac tice of music. To Increase Its volums snd add to Its effect and to preserve that unison, upon which so much de pend, the elnglng of the temple , waa alwaya accompanied by Instruments. And It should be ndted that the- first hymns sung In ths courts of the rising temple were hymns of praise. Amid the ruins they praised Jehovah Just as the Pllarlm Fathers amid ths storms of their first New England winter- praised God. Faithfui servants of the Lord find In any environment reasons for a doxol on. """- ' ' Veres 12. But It was naturally- an hour of conflicting emotions. The older men by this time, If not before, realised that they would never, see snother Jerusalem equal to the old. They re joiced for their deliverance,; but they wept for scenes wnicn not even peni tence could restore. ' The life of the na tion was not wholly lost, but It waa Irreparably marred. Like Esau, they learned that there are stains tears them selves will not wssh away (Heb. xli:l-17). No generation may excuse Its own sins upon the ground that "ail will coma out right in tne ena. Apostate kings and debauched priests and lying prophets naa wrougnt a ole aster which might be mitigated but which could never be undone. J "i Verse 13. The new temple was larger than the old (Esra vi:3; I Kings vi:2 but not so beautiful, nor so rich; and It was aa yet without theose sacred sssoclattons which bad made the first dear. Happily the hearts ot the young take cheerful views ot ,ine wnoie oay when the morning la fair, and the shout ere were Justified In this case, since the second temple was never associated with such depraved scenes as was ths first under the corrupt dominance of certain of the Idolatrous. Upon our most Joy ful experiences some shadow may tall. but we should not refuse when mourn- Inc oar losses to recognise our blessings. We ought never to permit our remln- iscenses to shed such prolusion or tears as to drown our hopes. Verse 1. No person has had vary serious experience of life who has not discovered that eoma Svll Is always present with all good '(Job I: ). No prophet ever lifts up his voice In re buke or warning butthat aome adver-' eary immediately rises from the pnr to discredit him If possible. Say what tha poet may, "Truth crushed to earth must rise again," and again and again before "the eternal years of God are here." Every John the Baptist will cause eome Herod to discover himself; and every Savonarola eome Francesco da Puglla. Build up tha walls ot the ruined city if there Is courage In your heart but know that the moment you lift a stone from the mass of ruins some enemy ot Jehovah will shake his spear. -Verse - t. The enemies most to be dreaded are those who wish to retard the work of God's people by "helping" it The Immediate neighbors of ths returned Jewe were the descendants of the colonists whom Essar-haddon, king of Assur II Xlngs xvll:!4) had conveyed to the land. True religion haa Ita bit terest foes In false religion, and pagan turn la not 'so much to be dreaded as a corrupt Christianity. f These pseudo Jews, for purposes of their own, wished to be acknowledged as eo-rellglonlsts, but at heart they had no sympathy with the great work, undertaken by Zerubba- bel. ,i Verse 3. There Is strength in union, but weakneaa In more aggregation. Re ligious which differ In their fundamen tal conceptions of God and man cannot amicably Join In divine , service. Zer- ubbabel understood this. ." Ths attempt to form a conglomerate . of all creeds had cost Judah Ita capital once. Ita present ieadere did nofproposS to repeat that disastrous experiment 'In their very first attempts to retrieve , their disasters. Happily there was no war rant In their commission from the king for accepting) such doubtrul auxiliaries. Verse 4. There probably always has been, and for we aught can see, always will be, . a class of religionists whose chief conception of duty le to prevent somebody slse from getting on. They have no settled belief, no positive creed, no definite aim themselves. - They will Join any body seemingly prosperous! but ir tueir seir-love is burt by a declina tion of their alliance, they become re sentful, implacable, diabolical. Verse 6. These Imported tribes had a certain standing at the Babylonian courtatnce they were blood, relatives of the people of Mesopotamia. Doubt less ths policy of Cryus had been ques tioned by many of bis nobles, and to this dissatisfied .element these Samaritans would' make direct appeal.. Tbe most competent sovereign lacks a good deal of being omniscient It would have been; difficult to discover among Intelli gent Eutopeana a man who knew so little of the conditions of Russia when the war broke oat with. Japan! as tbe csar of alVRusta. Everything conspired to make the task before the returned Jews ' one of unusual difficulty. The policy of the king waa confessedly an experiment It waa considered sure to fall.. The enemies of the Jews had the confidence of powerful princes as no Jew eould hope to possess ths same. One obstacle was no sooner removed than another waa- brought In. Hopea blos somed only to be blasted. But no night waa ever yet so dark but that, soms servant of God eould be found ready to stand guard throughout Its hours of blackness despairing not so long aa duty waa plain. ' -.u ' ' By Ella Wheeler Wilcox. fropjrlrht, 1906, by W. R. Hearst) It is claimed by the average American that our publio schools ars wonderful places for children to obtain the founda tion of an education, but one who listens to the conversation of eight tenthe of the pupils who have graduated from our publio schools will be led to wonder why so many Important bricks are missing In this foundation. . Almost any child In higher classes of these schools can tell you the source of the large rlvera and bound all the states and give the snswer to problems in ;el geora. . . - . Many of them will recite the rules governing correct speech, but not one In 16 will be sble to speak threa sentences correctly without the Interpolation of slip-shod or ungrammatloai phrases. Here are a few of the unpardonable expressions which are to be heard on all sldea and In all localities from the lips of children In public schools and even In high schools in America: v "Have came.' "I seen It" "I done It" "He done It" "I ain't got nothln' " "I ain't golnV "Haa went',' , . v Listen to the conversation of the next bevy of school children you encounter snd you will hear all these, expressions and a score more as objectionable. Yet it is possible these very sneakers have carried oil the prises on examination day ror excellence in grammar. It always sounds most Inconsistent when children who murder the English language In evjry sentence state the fact that they attend "grammar school." There Is absolutely no excuse for any teacher who sends out such scholars after even one term of Instruction. The first matter of Importance In edu cation Is decently correct language. If the teacher makes this fact suffi ciently Impressive every day of the school year the children will understand the necessity of applying the rulee they learn to the language they use. Every schoolroom ought 'to contain a large bulletin board with sentences like those quoted . above, written In large letters and headed, the "Unpardonable etne of speech." . , No day should pass without a few words of comment from the teacher re garding the vulgarity and ofTenslveness of such expressions, and the glaring hallmark of Ignorance which tbey carry. Many of the children hear these phrases at home, but the Influence of the school should be strong enough to overcome this example. It would be, did each teacher do his duty. .... ... When children go forth Into the world to take part In the activities of life they do not offend tthelr fellow creatures if they happen to be somewhat ignorant regarding geographical boundaries; no one Is annoyed If they left school with but a poor -comprehension of higher mathematics, and If they are faulty In the knowledge of anatomy no one of their associates will suffer ' In conse quence. : ' . J?ut the msn or woman who goee forth among his kind using .ungrammatlcal and vulgax and ignorant language does offend his associates and wrongs them by his bad example. People who have never been given the Sdvsntages of school and who have been such slaves of circumstance that tbey could not even enjoy the association of those who gave the example of correct speech are excusable for altps In utter ance, but no graduate of a public school, is excusable, end no teacher In these' schools Is entitled to the position unless he makee grammatical language the most Important part of his Instruction to the children under hie Influence. Absolute perfection In diction le not expected of any school child. ' Stilted or pedantic language is to be avoided, but the application of the rulee govern ing double negatives and past , parti ciples, and other simple lews which mean the avoidance of the commonest and most painful mistakes In speech should be made of tha utmost Impor tance In our schools. ' , At present these mattere seem of the last and least consideration witk teach ers or pupils. If we are to Judge by the language used by the graduates ef our public institutions of learning. ' Insurance 'vs. . Savings ' Banks. From Everybody's Magaslne. ; la the last flscst year ths Increase in the deposits of ths savings banks In the stats of New York-was more than ! 000,000. In the last six months It wss 163.000,000. "Very gratifying," the wise one eaya. Yes; .very Instructive ' too. Did the Equitable exposures turn a lot of money Into tha eavlnge banks? Those Institutions In New York state have the care of more than 31262, 000,000. They take good care of It. They don't waste it, speculste In it. eteal It. In short! they are managed as Insurance com- n 1 COMMON ERRORS OF V SPEECH panlea ought to he. JOURNEY OF LEWIS I AND CLARK ; 2y-s, On the -Columbia. , " -, October 21 The morning was cool and the wind was from the southwest , At 6H miles ws passed a small Island; lVa further, another In the middle of the river, which haa aome rapid water near Ita head, and opposite Its lower ex tremity eight cabina of Indians on tbe right side. We landed near them to breakfast, but such la the scarcity of wood that last night we had- not been . able to collect anything except- willows, not more than barely sufficient to qpok our supper, and this morning we eould not find enough even to prepare break fast .The Indiana - received as with great kindness and examined everything they saw with great attention.? In their appearance and employments, as well aa In their language, they do not differ from-those higher up the river. The dress Is nearly tbe same, that of the men consisting of nothing but a short robe of deer or goat skin, while the women wear only a piece of dressed skin, fall ing from the neck so aa to cover ths front of the body ee low as the waist , iivu aiouna ms way ana passing between the legs, over which a short robe of deer or antelope skin le occasionally thrown; Hero we aaw two blankets of scarlet and one of blue cloth, and also, a Bailor's round Jacket; but we only obtained a few pounds of roots and some fish, for which we of course paid them.. Anions' other thin., ,,k. served some aoorna, the fruit of the white oak. . These they used as food. althei ram n mmmtA nM A I n -. . i . informed us that, they were procured from the Indians who live near , the Great Falla, Thla place they designate ur m Tirr niirfirnnniv nriiidaai mt it by the Indians snd highly, expressive, th wrnvA Tli. ' . V. I U - so aa to make It perfectly represent the sound of a distant cataract After breakfast we resumed our Journey, and In the course of three mites passed a rapid (Owyhee), where large rocks were strewn seross the river, snd at tha hesd of which on the right shore were two the purpose ot exsmlning It as we al- wava do whan nv-tnM la tn h ap prehended, and send around by land all those who cannot swim. Five (T) miles further Is another (Rock creek) rapid. formed by large rocks. projecting from . each side, above which were five huts of inuur.na vn mi nam siue, occopiea, lis those we had- already Seen, In drying fish. One mile below thla la the lower point of an Island close to the right side, opposite which on that shore are two Indian huts. On the left side of the ' river at thla place are Immense piles ot rocks, which seem to have slipped from the cliffs under which they lie. They continue till, spreading still further Into the river, at the distance of a mile from the Island, they occasion a very danger ous rapid (Squally hook), a little below I which on tbe right side are Ave huts. r or many roues tne river is- now- nar row and obstructed with very large rocks thrown Into Its channel; the hlUs continue high snd covered, ss Is very rarely the- case,' with a few low pine trees on their tops. -Between three and four "miles below the last rapid occurs . a' second (Indian), which la also dlffl-cult-end three miles below It is a amall liver, which seems to rise In the open plains to the southwest and falls In on the left It la 40 yarda wide at Its mouth, but .dischargee- only small quantity of water. We gave It tha name of Lepage's - river, ' from (Baptists) Lepsge, one of oar oompihy. Near thla , little river (now known as' the 'John ! Day) and Immediately below it we had to encounter a new Tapld. ' This river wes crowded In every 'di rection with rocks snd small rocky isianda, tne passage crooked and dirn cult and for two miles we were obliged row channels and betasen the huge rocks. ' At the end of this rapid are-four huts of Indians on the right end two miles below five more huts on the same side. Hers- we landed and passed the night, after making 33 milts. - The in habitants bf these huts explained to ub mat may w;erv toe reunions oi wlDie who llvs st ths great falls. They ap pear to be of the eame nation with those we have seen above; Indeed, they resem ble In everything except that their lan guage, although the same, " .has some words different They 'have all pierced noeea. These people did not however, ' receive us with the sams cordiality to ' which we have been accustomed. They are poor; but we. were able to purchase from them some wood to make a fire for supper, of which they have little, and which they say they bring from the great falla. Tbe hills In this neighbor hood are high and rugged, end a few scattered treee, either email pine or scrubby white oak. are occasionally seen ' on them. From the last rapids we also observed the conical mountain toward ' in buui weak, wnicn lot Anaisns bbt is not -far. to the left of 'he great falls. From Its vicinity to that place we called It the Tlmm 'or Falla - mountain. - The country through which we passed Is fur- nlshed with several fine springs, which rise either high up the eldee of the hills ' or else In the river meadows, snd dis charge themselves Into the Columbia.. We could not hWp remarking that al most universally the fishing establish ments . of ths Indians, ' both on the-- Columbia and f the waters of Lewis river, are on the right -bank. On inquiry we were led to believe that the reason may be found In their fear of the Snake Indians, between whom snd themselves, considering tha wariixe temper or I net peopie, ana meir peaceful hablta. Its very natural that the latter should be anxious to interpose so good a barrier. These Indians are described as residing on a great river to the soutn, snd always at war wun tne people of this neighborhood. One of our chiefs pointed out todsy a spot bn the left where, not many yeare ago, a great ' battle waa fought In which many num bers of both nations were killed. We were egreeably surprised this evening ' by a present of some very good beer, made out of the remains of bread, com posed of the pashecoquamash, part of tha stores we had Isld In at the bead of the Kooskooskee, and which by fre quent'' exposure becomes sour and molded. . . . Another Meanest -Man. ' . .. " From the Minneapolis Journal. ' A . well-to-do Chicago real estate owner came Into a hardware etore in that elty and asked tha proprietor fdr a pound of nails. The email package wae made up and life prloe, a nickel, handed to the merchant, when the customer i ssked if the purchsss cpuld bs sent to his house, which waa In a distant part of the city. The merchant asssnted, and calling an, errand boy. handed him the parcel with the nickel he had Just re ceived for It and said: "Here, Johnny, take the car and take thla parcel out to -Mr. Blink's house." -wniu bbiu ovRioiDri are you going to give the boy the nickel to take the parcel outf "Why. certainly," said the merchant 1 wouldn't think of asking htm to wslk so far." " " "Well." eaid the meanest man In Chi-' eago. "if you would Just as soon glvs me the I eents I will tske It out mr- self'-. ., ... ) , . - t : .v ,