11 sl . 12,. i... .'-HE OREGON DAILY " i ?; A a . JACSSOX rvlU-hed Tr7 evening (except Sunday) and every Sunday morning, at -, -r.....;.:.,; j-.'';--, , ,v-;'-:; :.--',-' WH etreeta, Portland, Oregon. , V WONDERS KEVER 7T IRST it was a concession to I !; Journalism by giving larger headings to its est news then it was an announcement of a de- crease In its subscription price; then it waa a bunch of colored pictures in a special pew Year edition, anotner case of swearing ahe'd ne'er-consent,. but consenting; theiTit waa the offer of a premium to subscribers in the sIe of "a talking machine," something ordinarily called " a" phonograph,' and finally ir'is "tKe arinouncemenf pf a voting contest as the result of which . popular young ladies in three states The Old Ladv of Alder street "pretty"? aplT gait" She-ia-actually-aittirig1 notice of what is going on about her; she Is realising that the world do movcx and that she can't keep still and still keep up with the procession. : If need be she actually resorts to the rouge pot, and otherwise primps -up in something little more modern than the fashions of the fall of '49. Soon ah will doubtless have a bean guess. ' ing contest to arouse the intellectual enthusiasm of her " readers and to bolster up a waning circulation which needs 'such hypodermics to stimulate it --iv :'u Jr- . Whereat thera is exceeding Joy Jq ; Portland. . Who would have dreamt it three brief years agone that the : Tall Towef would condescend to such, pitiful methods. The next step will be rouge et noirin the daily edition, screaming headlines fresh from the paintpot in the ahriekiest colors that can be concocted. - Nothing can atop her.- She has thrown conservatism to the dogs, taken to .roller skates and tha .toboggan and there are lurid streaks in the atmosphere that bespeak further ex-: hibitions of hysterical gayety in the immediate future.,, : . ..Watch her paint brush! ! Mr. Bryan has been made a datto of Mindanao. We feared something of this sort would- happen U he -stayed too long-over in the orient ; How can he claim,, after this, to be only one of the common people? , t - THE CZAR'S STRONG RIGHT ARM 'HY DOES NOT the revolution in Russia suc ceed? - With the widespread , revolt against, the Government of professors and students of the universities, of the professional classes, and of the artisans; with disaffection in the navy and ominous . discontent in the army; and with violent . outbreak among the peasantry against the " landlords and the agents of government, why is it impossible for the peo ple to organize such a resistance to the government as would compel the czar either to listen to the people's demands otio abdicate? ' . V. : ,T Doubtlesfl many reasons - may-be - given in answer. But the sufficient answer lies largely, in one word the Cossacks. When' an uprising in the cities is to be put down, a stern man is put in command, and the Cossacks are called in. When the emperor' life is in special dan ger, he adds a squadron of picked men from the Cos sacks to his bodyguard. And -we read the other, day tha Tolstoi had said in an interview that th oeasante at the 'present time' are a little more disposed to out- . break than heretofore, but that their uprisings do not amount to much,, for : "if they see . surrender. , r ...'..' - The world has repeatedly witnessed .a smalLpody of. well organized and has in compelling obedience to authority, ibis is es pecially true if the troops are reckless of their own lives and insensible to the sufferings, and deathofothersJJind ' were led by a man of like character with themselves. A squadron of such soldiers strikes terror in an unorganized ' multitude, and is feared even by well disciplined soldiers. Such a body are the Cossacks of the Russian army. ' Comparatively, the Cossack form a small part of the Russian army, yet they are of themselves not a small body, numbering ;when the army is on a . war . footing fabout 150,000 men. . They form separata organizations from tha rest of the troops, and stand upon a different footing. Physically they are splendid men, and are born soldiers, but of a peculiar type, of the frontier, free booting type. Their fathers were such before them, for generations, back to. the earliest times of the empire, to the tjm when the Mongols inundated central. Europe and threatened the extinction of all Christian power. ,The early Cossacka, dwelling as thcy-didon the south eastern borders of Central Europe, became the advance . guard of European civilization fn the task of driving "Turk and. Tartar back into Asia. First from necessity ' and later from preference they became soldiers, and sol diers of a. hardy, wild and reckless character. Unre lated by any close ties of kinship to the peoples on whose pordei Uiey lived, they-ww affected -toward them by ' few of. the common 'feelings that bring men into sym patby and fellowship. Originally independent, and tak ing pride in their independence, even after giving their 'allegiance to the czar they still were largely a detached people. Acknowledging allegiance to the czar, they yet r are not really of the Russian people, and have but little in common with them. After centuries they remain a detached soldier class, l Stern soldier the Cossacks from 7 the first were, and tifl are, ' Accustomed from the first . to find their -reward in the spoil of the vanquished, their , warfare is still characterized by the savage and hearties , cruelty of those who fight not for honor or love of coun ; try,' but for lust and booty. ' ...efivV;. C.-Xi "i It is these qualities that fit the Cossack f6r the service expected of them. .They are the strong right arm of the government in the suppression of all disorders arising , from the disaffection of the people. Bound by no close ties to the oppressed people, having no special grounds of. discontent of their own, born to war and insensible to .human suffering orJiumanaympathy, they do their work ; at the word of command ruthlessly and With an appalling - thoroughness.'1!.,r.'.'.',i4:-:Ji,,;,.':;. . ,. r. . And yet will it.alway be o with the Cossacks? ' Will they never become sensitive Ho human suffering and wrong, not accessible to feelings of kinship and sym pathy with the people on whose borders they dwell? Some among those who now feci only the terror of their presence or attack still think that eve their stern and -hard natures may yet become aecssibIiToumahappeaT. :t:Arready thpughtfnto uuiciiii nt Mjwg pians .ro aissoive Russian autocracy by; the powerful sympathy,- i nere -are those that sack mat guarce te door ot the peasant is not wholly inacces"b)e to approaches' of human kindness from Within that door. Tolstoi ftwo Cossacks" may yet be come the peasant's best friend. " TT" "v "',ri;y assasssBBSssaasassai .'"'".', ; Poultney BIgelow ha tirrd op the political animal , in Washington to such an extent that the country will now see quite a show." And one of the funny things about it is that they think it necessary to take Poult to " seriously. "'' - -'sv,.... i Tti Their Wive Along. rrota the Kansaa aty uW ' The '-e of Ame'rlon Is changing the t .. of traveling salesmen." said A. i i: "-y, chief clerk at the Baltl r t y.- "It Isn't so long ago that ..i. J saaa would have thought N ; I N D P N D N T . NB WS P PUBLISHED : BY JOURNAL ! PUBLISHING CO. CEASE. the modern spirit ol ' what bevy of the most will be sent to Ytl- Is" moderniring at a np and taking will be extended The proposed tributary country. This is what S having a pleasure, But these initial and the average Johns' path a rocky two Cossacks they ;m the singular power disciplined troops There ia very and it seems high reasonable basis the enmmunitv. s !; A Chicago jury three saloon keeper be sustained in the or at least none demanding such the spirit of the movements and '. . . and healthy Oregon. It urges effect an affront ple- of he-stata will tnis iron arm of the o i - . v solvent of hnmtffjThe-vef stnrwh6-ciirl pfOCared trthe" ititf lf believe that the Cos precisely the sort proudly pointed to product -r-yA you mad had yon asked him why he hadn't brought his wife. But an In creasing number of traveling men now bring their wives with' them on their long trips from east to -west. A man Will sometimes be away for eight or ten months at g ume, Mt Ws BOm u JOURNAL APJD It i-' ' ' ,.'.! ; ::. 1 1 iso, f. eutou The Journal Building, Fifth and Vam- , V ; '' W- !''?' .'. Vf 'i ' IRRIGATION IN BOISE VALLBY.A T. BOOTH, president of the chamber of i commerce of Boise City, perceiving clearly has been accomplished by irrigation arpund that town,' and looking at the prospects ahead, thinka it probable that within about twelve yeara Boise City will have a population of 100.000 and that the trior utary irrigated country win contain an equaiiy wcrcaicg population. jtiyL , '.. v - - . Up to a Yew years ago Borse was a comparativeTy' old Standstill towrt of 3,000 or 4,000 inhabitants, and the sur roundinaM cnuntrv was . oeoDled - principally' by a-few stockmen and mmeFTradyirwiif "40-privata -irrigation work, Boise ha grown to a eity of about 18,000, and the irrigated country 'produce a grekr volurflenof stuff. But -with the projected : scheme of reclamation carried out. aa thev undoubtedly will be, the present afea of irrigated land will be many times multiplied, ' will support tens of thousands of people, and will make Boise one of the largest interior town of the west The soil when irrigated is of ibe. utmost fertility and will produce an almost unlimited quantity of fruits, vegetables,-al falfa, grain and other broducts, of the very finest quaU ity. The region around Boiee has already grown into a great garden, spot, one of the fairest and healthiest on earth, and in a few years this area of farm and garden to very large proportion. - v reclamation strip is 60 miles in length, embrace 700,000 icres of land, and the -work-will cost approximately $10,000,000. ' No wonder Mr Booth sees very bright and busy times ahead for his city "and the . ,-;;: .; '-J--': - irrigation is doing for that region, not long ago almost a desert and what it will do to a per haps less extent in the Klamath Falls region, and on a smaller yet not a small acale in Umatilla county. The wonder is that irrigation on a farge acale in these locaU ities was hot carried on long ago. It is already working wonders or what to most people seem so and will work greater wonder. - - , . . THE TROUBLES OF ST. JOHNS. T, JOHNSIourJ'' nearest "municipal "neighbor, is continuous round of trouble, if not of and a hard time in settling down to steady and serene business, municipally. Ita council has all along been aadly Split over one question or another. There ia frequently some difficulty in getting a pew municipality started off on the right track smoothly, but St Johns has had more trouble than any new town we know of. -VV.' turmoils and mall tempests will pass. degree - of amoothnes and serenity will no doubt. succeed after a little, while. St. Johns is going to be a big manufacturing center, a great industrial focus. Its situation is peculiar, and we may add .peculiarly for tunate, now . that the new development era ha fairly dawned upon Qregon. There were large .questions pf river frontage, and vacation of streets, and methods of taxation and. means, of,-r even ue,h elides .perhaps..: some needless councilmanic wrangling, which have made St one; but everything will be arranged somehow by and by, and the peninsula-end city will set tle down,to the business of growing. -, y'V:'::' Just now the conflict in St Johns i over the' license question. So far no saloon ha been permitted there, but a majority pf the council some time ago decided to grant a license ito a new hotel company.. This aroused the temperance people who are. f igh ting aga inst a jaloon aa an adjunct to a hotel, or vice versa, and the hotel peo ple are up in arms because it is intimated that the council may grant other licenses also, which the hotel men say would be contrary to the bargain. So there is more liti gation in prospect for.the chy.:ZXXXl much serious work ahead for the citv time the people came together on some to work together for the upbuilding of ''': . t ;".' r ' '. .' : r. : r - : :':'. awarded "$17,500 .damaees against who sold liquor to a man whom they knew wa an habitual drunkard with a wife and five children; and who spent his earnings in the saloons and left them destitute. It is a righteous verdict and should higher courts. , DEVELOPMENT LEAGUE. REGON DEVELOPMENT LEAGUE sound ; good. . It i a voung organization, a recent in- ejUionojainffjrit!xi5tencctJherigh too toon, and in response condition an organization. It i in accord with time and in harmony with irresistible activities in re-discovered Oregon. . It has done good work and wilt do much more. United Oregon is its motto; united in purpose and effort to de velop Oregon, to have toon a far greater Oregon.'to pull all together to make jt so, each part working for itself and also for all other sections; to appreciate Oregon, stand by Oregon, speak for Oregon, advertise Oregon, have faith in Oregon, help make Oegon a it ought to become the, best all-around state in the union. In all this the Development league should be and will be -a very large and important factor. Union and harmony, energy and liberality, faith and work, should be and we believe are it main characteristics, : .',.--''. THE , BEST MEN POR 'CONGRESS. HE Washington Post hails the appointment of Senator Gearin a a reassurance of the sound condition of the publio sentiment of that the people. lot their own sake end men of the same stamp to congress. '. Only in that way can the state regain it prestige and anything short of that will not only be a reproach .upon the state but in upon the whole couqtry. s ' : The JcmrnaT"Bah eretoTore pointed outTh anheMa- be on trial before the country upon of men who should be sent to repre sent Oregon in congress. Are the men that have ao far announced themselves the very best? Irrespective of politics,' regardful alone of the state' best interests, the people of both district should give tnis subject tneir most earnest attention. They should rest satisfied with nothing short of representatives of high character and acquirements, men who are looked up to by their neigh bors and who, when "they go to Washington, may be a fine type of the best Oregon , - just wherever he happens to be. . Ifotels provide certain coartesles for the wives and the salesmen are availing them selves of them In larger numbers every year. Salesmen tell roe that they cover their territories mora thoroughly as result of tho nsw custom. They are not so anxious to get uaox home." SMALL CIANG3 ' The latest Chinaman to ntaka an argu ment against America' exclusion law Is Mr; Vf. , N aoodT) -t Hear the bubbling of the political pott A Pennsylvania man ia trying to a cur a divorce .xrom nia wire . on the ground that ah la an angel two days a week and devil 'for five. - Well. It might be worse. Why doeen't bo stay home the two day and at the club the -j-v : ; '' ;' 1 9 ' . v , i.' ' If you eaa't put up our umbrella, you can soak your overcoat. Keep the expenditures dowm .to the aa. tlmatea. - .;.. " e. e ' i A single Chlneiie shooting scrape is SiSSI AZ hWnder war.".. . . ..Why doean't the court ia-tha caao at Rogers . and Rockefeller : apply, the maxim, "Silence gives coneent" T Negrophoblat Tardaman baa broken out again with a lot of remarks that ain't SO, ' ,i :'.. -i .', v-v';'.'.; A Bealmg p north will be effectually prohibited when the seal are all gone. Get those bOU.au paldt ; V ! ,' New begin aavlng for next Chrlatmaa. e f ' . ......... Rather aoft than a hard -winter ao far- horoabouta.'j ...J, rKo danger of the truaU' atocka get ting off tho water wagon, --': It ' la uppoeed that tho street eom- mlMionor of Hades has received n lot of cheap paving material- lately. ,".;; -,-.'.;-" . The moat deadly poisons are sweet. The rival telephone comtanlea' have begun hell-o-lng at eachother.i--'-i Admiral Rojeatveaaky's claim that ho outroaneuvered Admiral Togo nt every point, and waa banco the real victor in the battle of the sea of Japan, equals the version of the mixer who said he licked tho Other fellow by holding him down by Inserting his nose between his antagonlat'a teeth. . . . - - Now a New York doctor ha 'dis covered that the use of -common salt In food Is very .dangerous. 'Probably he la too fresh. - ... f.77vv.'' '.y.; r V e e '-( ,fx-' 'i ::"t With reference to Rogers et alYTou can lead a horse to water but you can't maae htm artnx. But you ean put hint to hard work till he gets thirsty and maul htm If ha balka.' . - ..If yen -stick to the water wagon you ean't go akatlng. - . .., The Irrigator significantly remarks: "Who are we for? Waifc-uatU all the candidates are trotted out and then we will tall you. There are still several leading cltlsens to hear from.'! . Wouldn't it have been better to -send Roosevelt to ' tho . north pole - and let Walter Well man be acting president 3 OREGON SIDELIGHTS A West fall man has received a patent for "a bay-stacking machine. ,.. ." ' " ' i' e - e "(.'..' . - ". ' Many deer being killed . In Curry county. ..... . . e e , -. Myrtle Creek steadily .Improving. I 1 , e e , ,, , , - Rev. Mr. Householder has been brae lag th Methodist church this week to prevent Its toppling over should a gale strike It Myrtle Creek Mall, a House holder should bo good at this Job.- , - First prlnfleld bank now ' doing business. . . , -i'-i,.. ,.. Never were prospect more promis ing, aaya the Springfield News.. ' . - - . e e A r . , , , . A Coo county farmer get . rid of gophers by putting pitch In their hole and covering them with board. Pitch and timber are plentiful down there. . Manr mighty tree and soma fences blown down in Tillamook county last A John bay valley Wyandotte hen hatohed out ( chicks last year that all lived and sold for from 10 cents to- U.S each. 7. .....-., ,..".. Hop will be freely contracted this year, aaya th oarvai Btar. i , ;'r ;'. ;?7. Coleman Winn. ' th "Hermit of th Blues," wh'o lives It mile east of Weston, came out on enowshoes and re ported a depth of IH feet of snow at his cabin. On night th snowfall waa IH feet the greatest In Z0 years. , The Hurrleane ..Creek school directors hired a teacher at 14 a month and In a month on visiting th school ' volun tarily raised her wage to 15 a month. - - - ' e , e . .-. ,!. ;. Watrl Water V is t n ' ery." says t& Silver tk last Oregon la n. , , . 7 . "Raising cranberries mar become an other considerable Oregon industry. e e ,'! -,. H, '!.' 5, 1 Corvallis can collect no evty tax this year because the council forgot to maka a levy, iria gupposed-thsy will nil be roslsctsd. ':'vv..., , ' - " T.-j. ...-v ..ic- -.' .. i-;.V'A . Neighborhood telephone company Or ganised at Dufttr. ::.:-,.- imgin brtiftt. with new ertrte tight. "Albany wante i big 11 i. Astoria want 1 1 sseawiair Wheat outlook exeellsnt . around Athens.- - ;. "Waaco county's sheep number 115,00, only two band being scabby. : ( n . .: '' " - Ths Westfail correspondent of the Vale Orlano understands, that soma of that settlement's leading capitalists - have subscribed 11,000,00 for the purpose of building a coggsd railroad to th top Of Juniper mountain,, where they pro pose to erect aa observatory from whloh to admlr th moom - AyBonans man who wear a metal plat in bis mouth forgetfully took therein a swallow of hot coffee, which scalded hla mouth so badly that It wa feared he would choke to death and a doctor waa summoned, and hla -mouth and throat war very sore for days. BaanBeanWsesaweieekirsainBsai TII3 aJNDAY SCHOOL , .LESSON ' Br IL IX Jenkins. U IX '.Topic: "Ths Wise Men Find Jesus." T-Matthew ita-laV. . ., Ooldsn text "My son, give' pie thy oearc-wrTov, xxuis. v . ' Snttodnetton. Three years ago last July the .writer of these notes reached Cologne shortly before nightfall, and after an early din nar hurried ever to the great Dora which for years he had longed to revisit He saw by ths -brilliant illumination which streamed from its window that some fete of more than-usual impor tance waa in progress. . Dpoe entering the -wide .doors bo. ound tfe. Teat .In terior on reverberant choir, thousand of people joining in the saored service, while about Mis mighty building a robed and Jawelod proceaalon was wending Its wayy-varrylng -reuHHudlnous llghta-aad rearing high thro glittering , golden casketa. Then it was aesa that lh eity was oeiebreUag -the visit of. the Magi; ror it Is the. confident belief of the eitlsena of Cologns that the skulls of th throe wise men,' enshrined In Jeweled caskets, are deposited under their high altar. yCpon the day set aslds for th remembrance of that . visitation, " the cathedral is "crowded; th ecclesiastics arc clothed In their most gorgeous vest ments," and ths casksta are born amid th flaring of flambeaux and the swing ing of censers and th roll f organ, ths entire circuit of the great building. Not In that way but in some way, we would all like to honor th men Who cam a long and wearisome Journey to Bee a little child and to hall him as th expected king. The Jew always recog nised "the east" as th ancestral horn of hia rao and of mankind. He re vered that locality aa th seat of th oldest revelation. Kven tn It decadence, even when Its cities wer tn ruin and It empire a memory, he knew that it waa th serine: and font of science, art and? fetthv--...v-vr-?--r--;V; ..Vf'rs- In aver rao there are doubtless aouls feellug after God If haply they may find him; disturbed ' spirits, -conscious that they hava not discovered th secret of th almighty, but confident that It will yet be revealed. - Such an on waa we miner er in ranatta msumu. wno spent all hi weary life In seeking some knowledge of Ood which would comfort and strengthen hi heart and prepare hla soul for some new existence. , ..- j . To aom such seekers It is only tra dition which says they wars three la number Ood was pleased to reveal enough to lead them toward Jerusalem, s',. ,7'',. Tbm sVeanon v- .' . Veree . What with evident frank ness ths story of our .Lord's advent I toldl The- pise and - th- data are pointed -out with such specifications a must indicate locality . and , tlm per fectly to on familiar -with th land marks W can Imagine that In future ages JTVaahlngtDn 18QS.'1 would present a chronological . and. geographical prob lem to those who had never heard of th United guts or learned that dates wer. there reckoned from, th .birth of Jesus of Nssareth. Although ths mother of Jesus lived quit at th other end of Palestlns. . God's.' providence finds way to bring 4 - pass . the anolent prophecy that th Messiah should bea child of Bethlehem:. (Mlcab v: J ). "And what a contrast this vers presents be tween th careless and cruel king living at Jerusalem, snd th wise 'men who cam through such peril to see Jesus! Many horn- Heathen accept Ood, while many : children . of . Chrlstisn - parents wholly neglect him (Matt vlll:lv-ll). Vers . - Th authorities which "ar eltsd by Edershalm, Farrar and -others, regarding "evanescent sUrs," should be reat But w are told e little of the star of Bethlehem that w do not know Just when it-appeared or whether It waa formed, as on supposes, by an un usual conjunction of the planets, or aa others hold, by some heavenly mes senger sent, to act aa guide... But we believe that tha Ood ' who mad ths star yet control them (Pa. xlvii:4). Astronomy wis born In ths oast These Inhabitants of the. groat plain of cen tral Asia, war th nrat atudenta of the heaven. 1 Bom of them were ao deeply Impressed by th celestial lights, for which they could not account that they even "worshiped the . boats of heaven". (Acta vll;4). Thess . men, however, did not worship th star. ' The star led them to worship the Messiah. ' Vans . Report troubled Herod. Th coming 1 of Christ to any community troubles th wicked In It Religion as a philosophy never greatly disturbed any body, but religion embodied In a strong personality is sure tar "get on th nerve" of. Irreligious men. Herod was not afraid of Anna or Calaphaa, but he was uneasy at th thought of a babe specially endowed with th true spirit of Ood. A little lehlld; who Uvea Jot ', the Savior will do more to awaken the consclenc of a wicked man than a phil osopher who ha written I volume of mere argument The oity shared the! uneasiness of Ita king. Wickedness has a widespread root It Is said by those who have studied th conditions of Chi cago that S0.000 persons In that city live by vie. That 1 most likely aft under, estimate, sine about 7,06 keep saloons. When on come to add th prostitute, gamblsrs, thlsvea, fortune-teller and th rest it la easy to see what a vast army am has reedy to light In Its pay. 'Ysrss 4. A good many bad man be lieve la the scriptures. Herod had no doubt upon th matter of prophecy. He knew that there was a deep-seated confidence among the Jews that some day a Deliverer was to riss to vindicate their causs. And he believed that the advent of that Messiah wa foretold la th word of God. But Ilk many an other wicked maevhe had to aak some body els, whsre th text waa to be found. The thoroughly bad man la often aa ready to believe th Bible as the thoroughly good man. -Hia conacienc has verified many of ita most solemn admonition, r- - '. U:.::,-'j.'.x.. - I "Verse I. Th scribe . knew ..more about the geography of salvation than about Its character. 'It I on thing to know ths details of Blbls history and snothsr thing to Imbibe It spirit Some ministers and some Sunday school teacher, maxJ.be.HJ(e JuwrJbhrthey , know a great deal about Christ but do not know Christ -r Verse . Predictive prophecy I su pernatural That "Is probablr-on rea son why. many wish to prove that It does not exist. Ths New, Testament constantly appeals to th fulfillment of Old Testament prediction Verss 7. Herod did not propos to 1st the scribes 1st hi secret thought. He flattered them by couneeltng with them, but he plotted to carry cut hla Individ ual schemes without them, . Evil rulers will alwsya - fawn upon good men so long they can use them. But the moment th political bos has achieved hla purpose, he drops them. It takes, wis man to discern between th .defer, one a bad man pay religion- in pablle nd ths pnrposss h cherishes concern ing It In privet, .,..,, Verse , . Herod now believe himself to play a very deep gam. Hs will msks thess simple-minded enthusiasts from abroad unconscious agents of his malevolence. : H will onn their secret out of them before it can beootns public H who plotp murder la not going te atuKtl evs a i:. The word l.erod uses, "woinhl-j," wa that the oon fesslon of t e v men (v. ). had mad dnTD 1 on upon hi mind. It wa no n .1 a r or formal trlb ute which tey wod offer Whoever Ihis child wss, he . was not a common princeling. , Th mora Herod, was con vlnced of the mysterious character ef th babe, the more anxious he wa to kill It before 4t personality could be UISOIOS, Verss . Good men ar not suspi cious. They know themselves so well that tbey know ether but ill. They believed th king. There was nothing increoioi in hla professed purpose. And so they - went away grateful to. have louno. sympathy wita their purpose In high places. And to their -greater Joy, the sur which they had followed but lost reappeared and guided them toward th plaoe they sought -. , , Verse 1. It la not to be wonders at h. Tleltpra from Ujs. eaet-were guta to nave ood sien before them again. They bad doubtless expected, to iiiu ciij- sn mm - pvsr ui aovent praaicMlah. On tha ionUy,thayl"flx'!.ihUixs for. their nwn benefit at. lh Jv were recelveA by ths rlhsens-wlth-in. difference; by th learned men with cold curlosityr nd by-the. king by perhaps a little over-effusion. Thev could not understand it but tt waa very different xrom wnat tney naa thought to see. . vers 11. . Thsr 1 not a word said aa to any disappointment upon th part of - the wise men at th environment of th Child-King. Perhape what tbey naa seen or royalty at noma and In Jerusalem led them t feel that heaven's ehoaen must be quit unUk any earthly king they bad aver met and certainly unlike Herod. Their gift, valuable and emblematlo. such" as they would offer to any son of a king, they offered to this kohlld In a manger. And than satisfied. aitaougn a thousand problem remained 10 pe soivea. tney departed as a via. Ion directed them; and,- having played weir oner part upon the seen dron out of eight "Jesus was bora a babe, to become our strength? hs was bom tn th night to become our llghtj he was iaia in a manger, to neoom Our true riches; and be divested himself of alor wbo waa yet to alt upon the right hand Of the Father." , THE PLAY 4 A diamond 1 forever a diamond. No matter what th setting it 1 still a diamond, and aUU sparklea. It is un affected by what w call the "ravages" of age. So Modjeska'a subtle art, as th audience absorbed ft in ber Xady Macbeth last night will forevsr remain aa art V!r .-v': '.-. ' This may be your very last ocDortun- Ity to see Mod Je ska and, rsgardlee of th condition under which you se bsr, you owe It to yourself to do so. Ws hav corns to lovs her as ws de Pattt not for what ah ts doing ao much as for what ab ha dona.,' 7 . .... "Macbeth.", of courea. la alwava latarl eating. It - ta -on ' r th fw of Bbakespeare's play which th bard did not Intend chiefly a a "reading" play. It possesses aotlon. - The spirit of war, th dual,' th murder, th aleen-wslkln and all. tnaks it of much more eonse- qnence to t he -average play-goer than, tor - example, "The . Tempest" 'Which should be perueed la-front, of- the- do mes fireplace, as a weird fancy, "but never enacted. , j v.: . ..,(..- That waa a good turnout at tha War. uam laat evening to -follow the fin old woman in. what la perhaps her great est characterisation.' While ah -was on th a tag th hous. waa - apell-bounA But It. waa muoh of aa Individual affair, it musfb admitted. Tim was when "Macbeth" waa a two-men play. Under these auspice It belongs in th n woman t-laaa. This-Is not to say that th othsr players wsr unaeceptebl. It la merely measuring their standard by th almost Incomparable art , of Modjeeka. . v t. . , .. . . . ' , -, , Th . Polish . aetreea . has never been able to )oee ber foreign accent and, per. sonany, 4 am giaa or it. it glvee Lsuly. Macbeth, surrounded as ah ia by per fect Vngllsh, a peculiar faaclnatlon and Inspires th impressionist with th real' lam of bar remorseful character, whlch.1 for wlWIiitu. ..l excelled. Th madams' somnambulis tic scene last night wa aa cleanly out and evenly performed a ever it waa In years gon by, and her seen In the courtyard after the murder waa another triumph. She will remain aa actress she will remain In our memorts long after th final summons. . . - - , . Jul . Murry. under who .direction th present tour Is favorably progress ing, has provided a good aosnie produo Uoa and haa brought Into hla fold sev. era! old-tlm favorite to fill th Im portant roles. . Charles IX Herman, wh baa in hla day supported th most prominent of our ftegABpAfeftn actors. la th Msobath. and doea th role capi tally. William Haseltln Is a vary ac ceptable Macduff, and Wadsworth Har ris a aplendid Banquo. .1 -. Tonight Madam - ModJaka prsssnts "Much Ado About Nothing," appearing aa Beatrice, and tomorrow matinee the engagement conclude with Schiller's Mary Stuart."-, RACB WHITNET. ; Will Succeed Blackbnrn. . Trom Variou gouroes. ' Judce Thome H. Faynter was raised a poor boy on a farm la th mountain In Lewis county, te th eastern part of Kentucky. Now h la accounted on of the richest a wsll as ablest men of that Stat. After , having been . graduated from Center college, Danvllls, Ken tucky he studied law with Judge Oar land at Vanceburg. He was admitted to the bar In 17. Ia 17 he married Miss Uaal K. Pollock of Greenup, Ken tucky.. ' ' : ' :''h , since becoming chief -.Justice of the Kentucky court of appeals Judge Fayn ter baa abbreviated hi locxa some whir He I a dose friend of Governor Beck ham and wa put forward by Beckham to beat Senator J. C S. Blackburn. The canvas for the nomination was bitter, and Blackburn and. Governor Beokhem ssch Issued a card . denouncing the other. Senator Faynter haa been known aa a good political organiser. Jndae Favnter la tn bis ' Bftv-flfth ysarr-rofwiit ycaia lis-has-heena-i member er tn court 01 appeals- Hia preparation for the bar waa thorough ana accurate ana nis success in tne practice of his profession waa marked and Immediate. HS was admitted to th bar In 17 Snd opaned hi first er ne In " Greenup,' where he. soon . built np large- practice. He lived In Oreenup-until elected to the eourt of appeals. In 1T he ' waa appointed county attorney, and served until 17. when he ws elected to th same efflo. Which' he held until ltl. He was a member of.th Fifty-first congress and twice reelected, serving from IIS until IMS. It UK Judge Faynter was elected to th appellate oourt and re- .- .... ' - J elected tn 100. ;:.! 7 Wanted tha Uoncy... .. r From th Detroit Tr Ft. "Why don't you demand fte.00 tn atsad of ll.oeor' said tbs lawyer. "Oh, because," explained the lady of th breach of promts suit "then he might change hia mini eel want te marry ma," . ... , .. ;. J ' , VZTTZZ3 HIOM TH ' A 'rerawr' Ts tinlslhj Tied" Ballston, Or Jan. 10. To th Editor of The JoumaWMy sxparisno tn reg istering voter leads me to believe that th direct primary nominating law is a faro so far a th rural electors are concerned. At least when one in eighteen declare his political procllvl tls and the other seventeen asasrt that , thsy hav none and thereby debar , themselves from taking- part in the primary election, the scheme can scarce ly be called a howling success. . In fact th rural voter will be pretty general- , ly found asserting that hs may Just as ' well not sots at-all o far as any bene-"T" fit he cnay derive from governmental handling of affairs ia concerned. He Is , . convinced that cities and corporations xpne. Qi .ic .isjrmer ana.. laborer, in. . general. ;. i . . -- ',..- -Nor la thlrvlw to b wondsred at ---Over, since "de wsh" for th last 4 . years, legtslaUon har almost .r.uttsriyTt Ignored th farmer. . The national pol- ; Icy of taxaUon was. firat to "protect American manufactures," next to. pro- tect "American . labor," by which waa meant labor ngagad In manufactures and mines ths arm hand being -4g- norsd, Uiiffs on a few artloles like Sugar and wool being fixed to benent thoss wbo handle thess products after they leave the growers1 hands. But enough of specifying; audio It to say that th great agricultural class wh by their enormous exports saved th 1 nation's credit and paid cur grant na- -ttonal debr to foreigner, hava -been J robbed - right - and- left by- corporation . legislation, .wall th burden of 'local " taxation fall .mainly on th farmer, ' While rich men In cltlee escape. . What has been : tbs result? " The farmer, barely able to make a living. haa been, unable to fertilise, to drain or ' to apply capital to Improving th quality, of hla land, and w ar now confronted with Vast area of exhausted soil . that wilt n ' more rats-' paying crop of .wheat; -..and vth . American farmer is perforce compelled to turn r to the Canadian northwest for a virgin soil and a nsw teas of Ufa. W hav ' killed the goose that laid th golden ' egg. . The millions w ar now spend- r ing in a ruuie enort 10 reaeem in sic- uation by . watering deserts, mak a laughable and yet aad commentary on paat treatment of th tiller of th Boll by th powers that be In this great and glorioua ?) republic! ---! Bor ona I shall not wondr -it h present apathy of th farming class la th matter . of - political movements grown even more pronounced than at present . WAIXACB TAXES. - LEWIS AND CLARK At Fort Clltaie.-;t.-- Wi.J, . January 11. Our meat la now becoro- Ina scares! wa therefore determined to . Jerk It and Issue tt In small quantities. lastesd of dividing n among tne xour messes, and leaving to aeh th pare of. Its own provisions; . a pan by wnien much la lost in ooaseojueae -of th tm providence of the men. Two bunrs had been dispatched In th morning, and on of thenv Drew ye r. had before even ing killed seven elk. We should soasosiy be able xo subsist, were n aoi ir uie . exertion. C this most excellent hunter Th gam Is scarce and nothing Is now to be seen except elk, which for almost all th men ar very difficult to be pror eurad, but Drawyer, wh Is an off spring of a Canadian Frenchman and an In- die WOaHP. hs psssed hl-4if-4n-4h M woods, and unites, . in a woneerrui oe- -t gree, th dexterous 'aim -of tha frontier.. buntsmsQ with th intuitive sagacity of th Indian. In pursuing th faintest ' track through th forest. All our men. however, -hav Indeed become so expert .. with th rifle that we ar never under apprehension as to food; since, when--.' ever there Is tim of any kind we are - almost certain of procuring It t v-.-s-.. rwUinn Inr Mn-hanfa. Bv a majority of four to three the New York court of appeala haa decided V In Wright Vs. Hart 74 N. K. Rep. 404. that Laws N. TN lt. p. 114. ch. Ill,' regulating salee of storks of merchan- -dlee In bulk. Is unconstitutional.' Th5"' act provides that a sale of nay portion of a stock f merchandise tDsrwis , -than In th ordinary course of trad ta the regular and usual prosecution of -the seller's business, r ths sal of an entire stock of marchandl la bulk. . hall b fraudulent aa against lh cred itor of the seller, unices at least flvs dava before a sal a full and detailed . Inventorx-l aoade and. IhelFurchaaerj makes explicit inquiry 01 me "uf -1 to the name of creditors and notifls . them. It I held that this Is in conflict . with th New Tork constitution, article U sections 1. , and th federal consil- -tntinn. amendment 14. section 1. guar- anteelng -tha equal protection - of th , laws and forbidding , aepnveuon property without due proc of law. Th majority opinion was delivered by . Warner, ,J who, after analysing the 1 stetute, said: . "Ne one will hav th tsmarit ta assert that this drastlo and cumbersome statute la pot la- restraint - a th rishts of liberty- and xropenr a those term have been Judlcloualy de. . dared to hav been used in tbs reuerai , and stats constitutions." ale points out that the aimUar statute which exist in aom 10 other Jurisdictions hav prao. tloally all been passed since) 10. snd -aayat "Twsnty wrong can never mak on right - , Statute that ar passed .pro bona publico rarely aweep th country with such-lrrsistlbl mo mentum, whtl much fantaatlo lsglsls tlon ha resulted from organised cru sades upon leglelatures by tha advocates and oupportsra of Special classes.' Hslsht. J- wrote a concurring opinion, and Gray and Bartlstt H- concurred without opinion..- Venn," J., and Cullen, , C J., wrote dissenUng opinions, tn whloh , CBrlsn J. eoneurred. . ; ... , ! Tba llartUna Hava Ua Bat-i jlj-uu. yiri 'pane, "-i;'1 Camllle Ftaramarlon,-the aeteonomer, r taikin on - th ever-green subject or . . Mara,' declared -that -the- Inhabitawta of tbat planet are much more highly de-' reloped than th inhabttanta of the earth, than Whom It would be difficult ' to Imagine a less Intelligent humln , species, Inasmuch a, they do not know- how td control themeelvea..'; "t The Martian are a much older race . than the in habits nts of th earth, res rvsenUng what th lattee will be v-.. sral million year hence. Belief in their great . Intellectual , auperlorlty v . strengthens yearly with constantly in- creasing obssrvaUona, M. riartmarlon ..--.. Ma lawe 4tv arsumente da- supported his view by argumente de rived from - weii-anown pnystoai pne nomena In Mara. . .:. ,.:f-j-y' D , ' , ' 1 ' " 1 t - ' ' :' 1 '" ? " -; Mo Pull on Mara. ft ? : a , . From the Detroit News. . ' Further dlscovartee as to the elabc rate system of eanala on Mars lead 11 ' to believe that th transcontinental rati-' read have little laflaeae that,. : .1 v