. r f-o 1 - . .. , - ' HE ORE a. jac -jt bll ' -1 cvrr er-lr? (except THE tin.VOAD MUST I tolerate any unreasonable , position to the building of tne necessary pnage of the Hill railroads across the Willamette river... The "Portland & Seattle" road must get into this cityf by means of bridae. and kridge built where it will serve rernWientIy3haQaT1r.oad' "inks that the bridge should be built, if there is any prac tical choice of points, where it will be the least obstruc tion to river commerce, and so far It it- not clear to teHjljfgadthat thc proposed Swan island bridge wdl "oe more objectionable than one ; buWIsewliere. r 'l he Hill people apparently want to do and mean to do the fair thing; they propose to build a bridge with an ample draw,' one much wider than any other in' the city, and ti deepen and widen the channel so, as to fender the bridge as. little of an obstruction at possible, and mora than 'this, it seems, cannot reasonably be asked or ex pected. -XiA..-.-.i;v :"'. i- ' ? Vv" Wg all understand why the IUrrlman people and in terests, including the river , pilots, oppose the bridge at this point,' as doubtless they Would oppose it equally at any other point,, and they are hot' to be , blamed for, thia, for the Hill road they look upon as an invader of their territory.and, a trespasser; but while the people wish.no injury to the Harriman lines or interests,! they will not stand fon prolonged opposition to he entrance of the Hill road to this city; . r;T. 7 5 TT'" -'V The bridge must be built where the railroad fan use -. it advantageously foe a vast olume of traffic, and aome point suitable for that purpose must be decided oivand opposition must be borne down by . an overwhelming weight 'of public opinion, which, after all, finally rules all public: officials.- . ;t r. r-:s -:; v-t .. v. The interests of theriver. traffic. mutt be protected as much as.' possible,' .of course but one more bridge will not hurt veryj much, and the bridge is a necessity.' ; Op , position 'to it "at the point' selected should be based only on strong, clear grounds, and pq on rival interests. Let in tlie new road; build the bridge. " v " , f , , ' "' ' a ' ,t'".---Vi' Senator Burton 'peeked into, the senate chamber long enough to be sect), ad that he could draw his mileage, j Hermann actually 'spent part of a dayMif the house, and to will have1 no rjrouble in drawing his.: Now the two listingu-'eJ -statesmen can go where they please land enjoy 4bmetoM. i .. .'. :' '' - ' O 1 i .-v.-N'V; PRIMARY NOMINATIONS. 5 - ' 1 N ONE -AND PERHAPS INTWjj? Kansas con gres " sional districts this year the Republican candidates will be nominated by a direct primary vote, as can ci3afesT6r ft presentatlve and "others will be in'Oregbn, and the Topeka Capital ask why this should not be tried on state officers (nd United States senator. The plan of. direct nominations is being discussed and considered' in several states; and is gaining in popular favor.' Min nesota has a sort of half-way primary law1; thc Iowa leg islature ii considering a law similar to Oregon's ' and will probably pass it; in some southern states the primary system is in operation as to the election of United States senators, and quite generally throughout the country the people are casting about for meant for. breaking away from the old boss-ruled, tlate'-making- convention system, The; primary nomination-la wiaon trial in Oregon, and the results of our primary and general elections next rpring will be watched with great interes(Lthroughout "thecounlry7The1awrsHtb some 'extent experimental, . and it will probably be found that tome changes in it are desirable, but the people -will never revert to the old system, whatever defects may appear in the new. It should be given a fair, honest, thorough, trial, and the results should be, at they are sure to be, carefully noted , and studied... -V--. 7 ryc,. f...-r . .- .The greatest disappointment so far apparent is in the failure in some instances of the best men, really deiir able men, to 'come forward as candidates. This it par ticularly the case in this congressional district as to Re publican candidates for representative in congress, , but there is still time for some better material to appear than has shown up so far" ' ' . ' " :vVv . When Mayor Lane wrote hit open letter' to the people of Portland showing that young girla were -beinsr de bauched at Richards' "hotel," which was hit moving im pulse in authorizing a raid, the only word of commenda tion that came from the Oreeonian wat that it contained a sentence 287 words long. : But the Dublic had no doubt f the mayor's meaning nor can there the public s approval of hit act - Now board hat determined that franchises as the public strongly demands, the' out with insinuations that it is the the executive board to keep out new public utility cor porations. It is a poor compliment to the mayor and his executive board to say that their motives are at least as far above suspicion as the Oregon isn't which paper na never yet undertaken a ngnt out tor motives to en tirely telfith at to be perfectly apparent to every eitiaen ot rortiana who had sense enough rained. rr. K? . ' 'r " THE N. P.-S BIO BUSINESS. - THE NORTHERN PACIFIC'S recent annuat re port showed that great railroad to be in a tplen . , did condition, and to be doing: a far larger Vol ume of business than ever before, so that Mr. . Kill can well afford to hint if not specifically to promise, as he has done several times during the past year, that rates would.,from time: to time be reduced in the future, at hey have- been in the pist. -.'" ; ,,;. ., ,- A gratifying feature of thia report not only to the peo ple of the state of Washington', but to those of Oregon also, it the proportion of business handled in our neigh bor state. With a total mileage of 5,676 miles, the northern-Pacific hat 1,533 miles bf track in Washington. This is 27 per cent of-itt entire mileage, With grott earnings of $50,771,070 for the whole lystem, its earnings in Whington were $14,132,504, or nearly 28 per cent of -the-totatTo-aboot thnmegrihi"TeceTpts from passengers and freight Ja Washington have exceeded the average for the entire system.'. The average receipts for carrying passengers per mile were 2426 cents, -while for f whole fosd the average wa 2,23i; centsOn freight '..-...ington paid the company 79 xf a cent per ton .::s, while the system at a whole collected only v832 of j cent. The lines, in Washington carried a dispropor tionately large share -both ' of passengers and freight C i of 5,14251 fare-paying passengers on the whole - ' Ilotr They Voted, : . TVom the Xanaa City Star. at nappeaed In Ohio and New Tork I Pennsylvania and Maryland and lr r etatee on alactloa day recall e one e bout of the Uncle Cheater. Tbemaa " . : . . ' re a hot municipal easte't r ' 1 1 Toeka. On the dry of the Cheeteeyw" i -l lean ' a mrf the nolle, - fer ath . rr'y ktsf v z. ..: ; j aa.4, ay-, GO N 'D A I L Y ' PUBLISHED 4 BY JOURNAL . PUBLtSHINQ CO. 8unday) and evsry Cc-fay moraiaf, t COMB IN. or purely eelfUh op- He will toon have Over the natural j partf -of-Qreyont' tnorougniy, ana. a state in which tled the reading judge on the bench marked hit conduct paper. was. written who get together xWaordinaTy-Tuc 'And so town lic and no matter years, of persistence prominent business be any mistake of that the executive must be paid for, Oregonian comes real purpose of to come in when it ; PRANCE, doubtful, is none preaching hie eldest son, exclaimed. In that eomleal. quavering voice- which no body but George W. Peek' could ever quite Imltatet , .. t - Dolph. gd down quick to the eaoond ward; the fellers down there are voting Juet aa they pieaae." ; , r . , ..... ; "e"""eaeBaaBealanaBnnastwiW- ? ; "Unci JoeV nomeapnn. ; Prom the Philadelphia Preae. ' ' "Give honor te whom honor le due." raid Cpeajtec Caaaea reosntly. "1 regret : JOU R. N AL no.; r. cabbou. The) Journal Building, FtTi and Tn line, the Washington oassenger's numbered 2,117429, Out of 1J.036780 tons of revenue-producing freight for the system, the Washington lines carried 5,234,190 tone. Of course, a large part of this traffic, both passenger and freight, wat interstate business. No wonder; in the face of this showing, that Mr. Hill it in lore with Washington, and appreciative of itt great resourcei and rapid development, nor that, knowing Ore gon to be an equally resourceful State, he at last broke t - '.r-n. - . loose from me trauic arrangemem uciwcm ciiireu.nir the division of territory agreement, and invaded Oregon. a terminus in Portland, and we may and best route, but will invadeoiheilSi He Bwdaritmdl We ractfic northwest tnat uregon u or can oe muo gooo to do business at Washington. ? ; . -, THE CASE AOAINST TOWN TOPICS. HE REVELATIONS being itiade' in the libel stiit unwisely brought by Town Topics against the editor of Collier's Weekly, 'hat somewhat star public of the country. To know that a wat one of itt chief etockholdert and that b htlped to-engineer the-MaekmaHtng schemes, to learn that many wealthy men of the country had been lit erally held np to keep certain tcurrilout articles out of the paper, that others had paid heavy tributes to' be granted Immunity, has come like a shock to the innocent public r- - VJJ ).s i'iL ' " '' But after all it it but a logical outcome of the methods emnlovecT in the eublication of this weekly newspaper. Town Tbpict was by far the ablest paper in its' class. It was read by hundreds .'who would not touch a Police Gazette and it waa infinitely worse because, it wat more insiduous and very much more attractive. Its purpose was to exploit society. 1 From cover to cover it was filled with racy stories. . Itt publisher waa Colonel Mann, in ventor of the Mann boudoir ear, a person of genuine talent who. would have made a success in life in almost any direction he had chosen had he devoted himself to his 'work with the tame enthusiasm and energy tljat of thit paper. He gathered about him a staff of brilliant writers.' He paid well and his with the brilliancy-of the degenerates Parisian papers of the tame data and character. For years he had thriven." So tecurely did he teem to be anchored that he could, do with impunity many things which, attempted at first would have brought j his , enterprise to , sudden ruin. 'Hundreds of people feared. him. He stopped. thdrt at nothing that would 'force a dirty dollar to his till. Emboldened by his success be' came to Vegard the wealthy at hit natural prey. . At length he went too far. - Collier's Weekly made an exoosurc of the Colonel's methods.' Havinar met with whicHTad been brought against him he essayed one against the editor Of Collier's.- - But that gentleman wat strongly for tified. When the case wat called into court he had a cloud of witnesses to demonstrate the truth not only of what he had laid, but to go far and away beyond any thing that the average newspaper reader had suspected. lopict stands pilloried before the pub what the immediate outcome of the trial, it it absolutely. Certain that its day of, terrorism andj blackmail' is over. Mann and hit associates after in their courses at last caught them selves in a web of their own weaving and the public will help them from-the jumping off place which they have now reached in their spectacular careers. .- ':'T - 7-v TTT-V. '.' . 1 v., -V:." Senate Boss Aldrich has already marled and, showed his teeth in opposition to any railway regulation measure. and the big fight will'soon be on in earnest " A split in. the Republican party in consequence teemt inevitable. PORTLAND-ALASKA STEAMSHIP LINBL - ' HE PROSPEfir fof a ateamship line to Alaska , brightens, and may toon be expected to assume ' a definite shape The special committee of the chamber of commerce appointed to investigate the proj ect has apparently been diligently active in securing in formation and data upon which to base itt report, and everything looks favorable for decided action inthat direction in the near future. . i . ::, "s , . ) :, . : Not a week passes without additional testimony from men of Alaska to the effect that di rect trade with Portland la desired, and can without doubt be made profitable to our merchants, and in a lit tle while if not at the very first 'to a steamship line en-fi-affins? in it. " The Alaska oeoole are tired of beinsr re stricted to one town in which to purchase their supplies, and in consequence thereof have been imposed upon in various ways.' They will deal where they can do best,- if they have the choice of two or more towns, but having had long experience with Seattle they are generally "pre disposed in Portland's favor, and on equal terms would give thit city the preference. , . v. ; "j ',. - That Portland ; merchants can furnish tuppliet as cheaply at Seattle merchants can it certain, and that thit city hat at good a chance td do business with the north western points in Alaska Nome, St Michaels, Copper River, etc, is undisputed. ' As to Southeastern Alaska we are at a disadvantage, but possibly even some of that trade could be secured. There should be no cessation of effort until a Portland-Alaska steamship line, put on to etay becomes a reality.. . ,''.., :,., St.. ,'' CASTRO AND UNCLE SAM. HE UNITED STATES would better go rather tlow m jumping in. to aid France in itt threat ened chastisement of Castro. It seems quite probable that the Venesuelan dictator, ; whatever his faults and provocations, has been imposed upon a good deal by alleged creditort and by trust-backed ayndicatet, and that if all the truth were known he has a good deal of excuse for being indignant if not impudent -. . What France does, so long at it does not violate tne Monroe doctrine, if anybody knows just what that is, which is of our business, but the United States has enough . affairs prjts ownjo attend to. without 4itclu ing in 1o aid any( European nation that gelt into a quar rel with a South American atate. Castro appeart to be pretty well able to look -out for himself, but if he is -not he will hare to take the consequences. - On the other hand, if France ia determined to punish hhn, and can do so without "running afoul of the. Monroe doctrine, it should do so without any assistance from Uncle Sam. 4 Acting as a South American policeman in the interests of Europe should be beneath hit dignity, at it it. cer tainly out of the line of hit proper business. . ' " te nay that a mistaken lmpreeeion has gone out about ear aomeepun hanev woven aalt Inetaad of being the gift of an admiring constituent It Is a pres ent from a kind of lady -fn" South Carolina whom I have never aeon." ' ' The present was transmitted through Representative Aiken of South Carolina, with a note to the speaker, saying that If be wore It he would "have the beet tult of clothes In the house. Mr. Aiken also baa a eult Which he wear a, made from the sane material. f v SMALL CIIAKGi Better be eareful with the btg attck, Teddy. !.! ' ' , '" Mo tax law -fa arar right , ' y i- e.. v Vf still adviaa readers net to plant garden yet - - rf - r( ('.' -If m w 'I- ttdge Oary mt Chleage ear a wife la luxury. . vrell. a good wife ts the beat luxury a mere male nan eaa In dulge; la. v, ,Lr v, ,;;v? - .(-'..';, Oet ready for winter next spring. Portland needa to . kill Ita hog. At- panyTJeuiuci atrWby- tb Inaular-Huia- berT WblcaT . WJMT , ------ - Over' tB.0tl looks good to The Jour nal and ita boat cf frlenda, ; ;' la these crucial tunea where In thun der la Max ryaehtt -'.- v Bote afurpnr aaya ha ean't name a log catcher. Wall, nobody exoept aome rascal wants nun to.. -. , :" j?-' : .- r, ' ,: .-.;. ;;-.v .:(-,.'- The election to a high office of such a man as Gqvernor Folk la worth an Ineatlmable' amount not to be measured w delUfe, to the eouuUy.' 1 ., , ; right the fruit pasta' te a nntsh. 6f eoura the Willamette valley "eanJ ralae better applet, and muat . Now that the' Llberaja of England have woa a great victory, what are' they going to a With UT Nothing. , . The Sunday Journal la also ateadlly crawling up; nothing equal to It In Ore gon.'. ' .1 , -,i ,. -. "' . ,. v- ,v ,; It Caatro has to pay he prepeaea that France shell pay a lot of eoeta. - v -The mayor did indite rather a long and Involved ' aentenoa. But the good stuff waa boiling out of him. Everybody knows what he meant.: A ' We hope Mayor SfeClellan' will be good, but doubt If he can ever gat rid of the Tammany brand and etench. Peer old - New Tork with far worse thaa senator.'" 'vr.-; ' -v'.-' Bomehow we can't help having a aua- picion of ,a grown-up man who elans hlmaelf rwllLT Bettr "Bill." ; - Bring, landless people and uninhabited landa together.:--!- r r-1;;.. ,v. e. e . . ...... "TOev.fTfie weather, ytw ahouMj al- ways keep a . goodly atom or -auo- hi ne la your soul.'' - 75 v. : - ' ; 4 ;r ,....-, " ' ... Wanted The right kind 6f a. Repub lican candidate for representative . la eongress from this district , If Roosevelt Is a Red Man Bryan la a Datto 00 there. - - -. . ... t - . When ' BUI ' LAchner - reoresenta - Ore? gon In the Second district, C, A. Johns occupies the exeoutive cbairK J. H. Alt kin of Huntington holds the state treas ury sack, tbs millennial day win have arrove, 'arrived, -arrlven,- as it were, or words to that effect remarkavthe Halnea Record. . -,.-. "" ; vs. ' 1 't, - The atatehood blU la having a monkey and1 parrot time. Members of eongreea are the monkeys and parrots. OREGON SIDELIGHTS Electric line to Bngens, too, of course and te other places, 1 Salem will only be a central ganglion, never a terminus. :..:.' '1 tfi. f '';'''" .'V' '''' '' A Eugene man Is wearing a pair of hoots which he. baa wore mora er leaa for IS years. They were made la Kugene and have been half soled only once. Perhsps he greased them and aet them away la a dark eloeet most ef the time. -'. .. ,. .... .!' v, eve Albany did npV escape the Beautiful snow, enough-falling o etep on, remarks the Democrat, i'- f"9 Baker City He this great for (ti water for trnge for mining purpe. "But eay. Isn't year Plenty of Plenty of water aker county will be the greatest n northwest by the end of another sumer. - Squaw Creek (Crook county) Irriga tion company preparing te Irrigate 1S,- 00t acre. e e ' , v Prinevllle baa a Williamson Quartet" V: " '.- t- .A h-' A f.i '. ' go many cases of typhoid fever In Eugene prompts a doctor of that town to advise boiling to minutes all well water -need, ,- A ,'".' ''Because he was fined for obstruct ing a street a Marahfleld Ironworks pro prietor three tena to move to North Bend. - '-'J- a f '.r ., prinevllle people made up a pnrae of tits to eend.a young man away, for treatment for aP'nal trouble. , : . '. - e , . ,'':;;:,; Amity "MethodlsU held aa all-day meeting one day last week. - H. H. Vincent of Presoott Washing ton, waa in Condon last week and bought at carload of mules la this region paying on an average of $1T per head. Mr. Vincent . usee them on , his extensive wheat ranch at the above place, where he. farms S.000 acres and where last year he raised 18,000 sack ef wheat - -, : -;. ' '.j v. ';'; : .'' ! herinM ntyTla tout .W bVJus money in thejreeeury and baa a lew tax levy. , f. -: ., ,y t . Mens pay. Oood hena, at least do, aaye the Corvallla Times. .Thirty three of that sort of the J, B. Irvine yard have produced III eggs In the laet 10 days, a average of nearly 11 egge per day, worth IK.Il. Thle may be fair for winter time, but II egga a day would have been three times aa good. . ' . .,..,,-,...:.. - e A Marahfleld paper fills nearly two pagee with an aeceunt of a mlxup at a hotel cauaed by a drunken lodger. ....... r ;, - . O '' 0 ,..,-- :; ' "Jack Roll feu out of a tree," aaye the Pine Creek correspondent of - the Poeail Journal. . Why didn't Jack roll out? "v -" -- ; ' '-.' .'' . . . ,,- .. - e 1 e r . : .., i Port" Orford Tribune: ' It la amusing to hear all the ehallow harbors on the- coast crying 'out, worse than Prohibi tionists, for "more water." port Orford stands placidly en her 7t0 feet," and bidet her time, , , t3- -K. xwi..wi.w mm9 -' , ,v .:, ra, rers axl its vmtwmt.-'y. Seattle, Jan. 10. To the Editor of "n.e Journal la a Ions artlule tat anpee-d In The Journal on January 10, !!, football men of the Unlveralty el Ore gon were practically charged aa being guilty of drinking,, gambling and . pro fanity. The general athletlo policy of the nmveralty was -also attacked and serious oharges . of professionalism la athletics laid at Ita door. I do not know whe wrote the article, but I do know that with few exceptions, ale - charges. so far as they relate to the University Of Oregon,"are absolutely groundless. , J agree with that writer that too much time .was. g4 ean to ootbalt-the . CUr fornla trip being the moot marked Inr stance..- Bat as both California- and lefasBil lu make tlie uiu te Rugens or-PorlUnd, mi ulhsr ariania-1 ment eould be . made than .that both samaa be tla red In California as was done, Berkeley on Thursday and Stan ford on the following : Tueeoay. con trary to the general opinion, the foot ball men are themselves opposed te long tripe and would be only too glad to have a season s schedule of home games. An effort la being made to have one of the California gamee played -In Ore gon next aeason and unless suoh ar rangements ean be made but one game, with either Stanford or Berkeley, will be played. ; The football aeason, of the University of Oregon was ahorter than eoaat and I . am positive that ne more time was given to football than la any other coast Institution. 1st faet muon less -than In most others. This Is not saying that too much -time was not given to the game, however, la all, the colleges. ..it , ' The charge that men were encouraged to enter the university for the purpose of playing on the football team la abso lutely falae. It Is the boast or the unl veralty that the men on her" .athletlo team are aonaftde etudente In good standing. . I am acquainted with the football men and conditions In Wash Ington, Oregon, California and Nevada and I eaa' say positively that po insti tutlon la .any af theee etatee le freer from professionalism la football thaa the University ef Oregon, war In any other la a higher standard of scholar ship required. - r- i -, j.- - - In regard to the charges of drinking, gambling and profanity I tnnst say that tne accuaer waa . grossly ignorant 01 etudent conditions end ' college affairs, for against no institution could such a charge be made with lees I truth. Dur ing the years I have been actively to ter se ted in football, aa Player and eoach. have never seen or known a etudent body of men whose. habits were better or whose general moral ' plane higher. . It was one of the first things observed when I look up my worn with the men at Eugene and on several occasions during the season. I congratu lated President Campbell . and other lembare r,t tha facUltyQB thS high moral standard maintained and lived UP to by the entire student body. X am not now connected In any way with the ' university, but I know - the athletlo and general student affaire -of the university are of unusually high standard and that the afore-mentioned article. In so far aa It related to the university, waa wholly unwarranted. Tours truly. BRUCE C. SHORTS. ,. Manhood ef Portland. Jan. te. To the Editor The Journal The interesting article In your columns on great fortunes suggests that one elde of the case has been over looked, a ad that is the- character ot the Industries which have piled up aucn enormous wealth for the mea who owa and control them. They are without ex ception such enterprises as Stl Trthe member of society have an interest In and are known as public ut lilt lea, or they are such nuetaeeaes aa have formed en alliance with aome such utility, usually the utility of transportation. That le to say that In a-bread- aense theee public utilities belong to the peo ple of the nation and to their descend ante lr democracy is, anything more than a name. - ' Even without 4 Socialist - resolution the nation could 'take possession of the railroads and operate them aa has been done la between SO and 0 nations ot the world. Oermsny to an Instance of a nation Where the government, though far from a democracy, has eome. aa a writer In the December Atlantlo aaye, to be the great barmonlser and arbitrator between conflicting Interacts. . And this view of the function of government la He turn, haa f oroad into the very center of political life a demand which , In other ' eonntrtee ta - more commonly based on moral and economic grounds ths demand for social justice. - Te eome ' back to the United States, It muat . be 'admitted that the people have been Insensible, to the dangers of such accumulations of . wealth and power. ' If we own Mr government- end we certainly ean own it and control it lr we win we can regulate or we can own and operate all ef our great public utllltlea. - Then aome fine day: when we are wtlllns- to take the trouble to under stand the laws' of taxation we can com pel great accumulations of wealth to pay their due proportion -of . taxes ta place of the present - system., There would be ebsolutely nothing to prevent (when that .day comes), without a hint of revolution or a surrender to Social ism, the taxing of the eetatee of deceased minlonalree to ouch a point? that no one heir should tnheritxmere than 11,000,- 00. ' . ' , '-.' ,-' ' , ; " v ' There la also another polhti Which we have recently seen Illustrated In fregon and,, according to report New Tork Is seeing It Illustrated In ths case of Its United States senators, and that la the power of public opinion upon men in high position. ' If condemnation la uni versal no man ean stand against it - The ingenuity of pian can devise no punish ment like It It drlea up the blood; It wlthere alt social pleasure; it destroys the desire for life, and death mercifully ends a career, that a man's contempora ries have judged to be a dishonor. There are lote of faults In the American re public) but there are aome compensating qualltlea which will lavs us for a time, anyway, from being owned and exploit ed as slaves of millionaires. Alarmist talsHabvwt out desllni botiaii the lack of that quality which Emerson preached perhape hie finest sermon upon. "Trust -thyeetfr -every heart ' vibrate! to that iron string. '- Accept the-f place the divine 'Providence . has- found - tot you, the society of you a oon temporaries, the connection of events.' Great men have always done so, and confided them selves childlike te the genius- of their age, betraying their perception that the Eternal waa stirring at their hearts, working through their hands, predomi nating In all their being. And we are now men, and muat accept In the high est mind the same transcendent - des tiny; and not pinched In a corner, not cowards fleeing before a revolution, but redeemers and benefactors, pious as pirants to be noble clay under the Al mighty effort; let us advance on chaos and the dark."- - And again Emerson "says: , . - '' - -- I "Let a man, then, know hie worth, and keep thingo under hie feet tet him not keep or steal, or skulk up and rtown with the air of a ebarlty boy, a bastard or aa Interloper la the world which ex-i "1 '.JiL Z Jt the man In ; the a Inc. nf no worth in himself which eo. e. mds to ths foroe which built a tower or acu'-tured a marble god. feels poor wbea he looks on theee. To him a palace, a sta r a costly book have an alien 1 -d "-'ing air, much 11 xe a rr ec jags, a I aeem to sap Uke th (, r 'h are you, -irf Tea ta. y ase all L" , a ore for a notice, pe.ltlon sra to ' ,s untitle -at they wlJl eome out a4 t e i sion." Mow doee that compare with the closing words of the article on the mil ltonalreaf '. . f - . ; ;- - u Temenber how Euro-e ' cringed to Mr. Morgan at his last visit with em perora seeking his favor and princes waiting at hla door. A real ring? Why, we p radically have tne o taem al ready." .... . .'.'" ,'' ' 1 : ' - And yet It" ta aur proud -no: eg-that we are American eltlsens, ,and that ear government le the one deacrlbed by Lin- coin la bis Oettysburtr speech. C SOR.C J - Jar THACHER.-- t.raUiy poi lliT Conamlai CysUaL W Portland, Or.. Jan, 29. To the Editor or xne .journal 1 ne iniroauauon through Secretary Root's Influence ef Senator Lodge'a new consular bill- No. I.ttl has caused considerable discus sion. - That bill was not passed In Its entirety, but left the senate, neverthe less, , for the house with Important nhangea. which wnauesttonably will passed this session, and xnl vastly benefit the Paolfle eoaat Aa an Amer ican consular officer for elx years In Europe, paaeing from the lb west eonsu lar grade to the higher grade In that ed scans aaporloaoe' In that period, and accordingly two years ago I pointed out Ita defects In a arti cle copied ia Washington (IV C) news papers, entitled "Flaws In the Consular Office"; hanoa I venture now to explain the previalons of the new eonaular but. aa amended by and as It passed the sen ate a few days ago. ' - 4- , 1 , Heretofore - the V United State had TIT . separata consular . astabllshmenta. over 10 per cent ef which are operated now by forelgnera who nave never vis ited America, and thia 10 per cent ef consular offices are controlled by Amer loan-bora dtlsena, who. are consuls and consuls-general, and who by law (aa It now stands, HOC) are authorised to di vide the consular fees so collected, with the so-called Amertoaa eonaular agents. who are nearly all forelgnera, Including vice-consuls and deputy consuls totally Ignorant of United States artalre and manufactures, and are paid out of con sular feea collected by Uncle Sam's gov ernment Nevertheleea there la an an nual deficiency la the service that for ths fiscal year ending July 1. 10$, was 1144.111 ahort bf the consular receipts, which were l,TSS,Sts, while tne oon eular exnenditures that year wer tl.tll.m. It to against paying thia de ficiency yearly which the house appro priations committee complains that Is called a deficiency appropriation oui. Secretary of State - Boot finding the eonaular fee ayatem was a mistake, as also the appointment of M per sent of consular officers pure - forelgnera as end dividing same -by law wtta4 American consuls .of higher rank; deter mined to abolish the whole ayatem, and If neealble at the tame . time abolish the ottronage tof senators and repre sentatives of -nominating consular offi cers to the president for vacancies; ha had Senator 1odge introduce senate blU l.ttl, Upon which Secretary Root haa been examinee by seta me senate and house committees. How well he has succeeded, although the civil service rules and examinations clauses were stricken entirely out of the bill Ty the senate.' may be seen by an analysis I have made of thia new consular bill as It passed the senate. and la now in the house. - - . Section 1 The consular system Is delegated to the president to reorganise the earn in terma or tnat act aa fol lows: - - .': . : ' -rx Sections I and 1: That tt eoYisula- general ahall be divided In alx claases and, excepting two at London aad lftver- pool with 1 lx. wo salaries oaen, tne others shall receive salaries varying from 11,000 to $1,800 each, and abso lutely prohibited from taking any reee; that S7t oonsuls shall receive 18.000 to fleet aalariea, to be divided Into seven separate grades or classes, also prohibited from taking face, who, with their vice and 'deputy consuls, whose latter salaries ara 1 1.000 a year and up ward, muat be American clttseno. In cluding theiy elerks ia consulates. -" Section 4. with la one year after tas sere of the act the prealdent shall classify all consul a tea-general and con sulates, namely, the tzi authorised ay the new law. and may change saani thereafter or create pew consulates-general and con aula tea Section a. That Immediately after be has done eo the tnoumbents In offioe shall, be aasla-ned by the nreeldent on fixed aalariea to aha Various classes tor grade aa nearly aa posslbla In eeoerd with their duties, conditions and com pensation of the offices they now bold. but only hold earns aa American etU- sena. - - .. -- - ...... . .. , . Section a. That a consul-general or consul may pe transferred by the presi dent's - order (without - consent bf the senate) In the same class from one place te another or to higher gradss. . ; Sections T, I. and it have been stricken out by the swats committee on foreign relatione because they relate to civil service examinations and modus operandi of appointments, and Instead tnereor tne system now in - operation (January te, ltot) Shall be retained. which from consular regulations, sec tion It, page it, now in force, shows future appointments will be , made In following order and selection: ' ' "Any vacancy In a consulate or Com mercial agency, now or hereafter exist ing, the salary of which la not more than $2,600, nor leas than- $1,000. ahall be filled 1, . - ... 'First, oy a transfer or promotion frsia soms other position under the depart ment of state 0 a character tending to gratify the Incumbent for, the position to oe xuiea: or, : !,,,. "Second, by appointment of a naraon not under the department of etate now. but having previouely eerved thereunder to. ue eausraction in - a eonaular ca pacity tending to qualify him for the position to be filled; or, - -.. "Third, by the appointment of a peraon who, having furnished - the customary waw sx hwwti responsiouity and capaolty and eelected by the president for examination, ia found after such ex amination to be-cjualtfteeWer-'the -position." Thia examination Is now made by three consular off leer e i named, by Secretary Boot'..---"- - SectionT 11 ereatea five ineeeotors- general of eonsulaua at a . salary of SD.eee, wua-ranjcr or oonsuls-general, ehoeen from the consular servtee, terie epect every consular office, abroad, with power to suspend consular officers for $0 da ye where rulee are violated. Section It. Ne person not an Ameri can citlsen ehall fill any position where the salary la above $1,000 a year. Section It prohibits offleere of any grade being interacted In any business whatever within the limits of their con sular jurisdiction, nor shall they or any officer or olerk practice aa a lawyer, and must gtv bonds not to do so nor receive any fee or reward. ' Section 14 authorises every' consular offices to take oat he M ft norlal acts at feea to the U. J t l-v-emment preeerlbed by te ('' -Section la, reee for windier, up aa- TK3 UIJITED STATE3 ''3-- C2NATE V W-:r- ty v. Th iu B. Oregory, ; Ha per ng to 1 ok fp a cpy of John Stuart k..il'a "I. ire antaUve Govern ment ths oler any, I opened It at random, when my eye fell upon hla ": deservedly famous - tribute to the. old . toman senate ths senate of the re- , publlo the senate of the daya when . Rome was in the glory of her vigorous and nnoorrupted. manhood I - . , , Mill's eompllmsnt to ths senate ' of ' Rome thrilled me through, sad through, 11 ret with pleasure and then with ehame :. for I eould not help thinking ef aa other senate, ones great like that et ;. republican Roma, but now fast falling . ' into -decay. 1- ;v ' -- - - What an Illustrious body, the United Steasenars-- unue waat . 111 '-b'r' The senate of Clay, Calhuun andr Webster, ot Silas Wright and Thomas H. Benton, of Nathaniel Macon and the Bayards what prestige It had. how ''' mightily did It command the respect at the whole .world! t , '""-j "('f What intejieetual giants our senators' ' were In those daya; and better atlll, ; what eplendld chara tiers they were able . to show I How proud the country waa ; of them, ; and how ' grandly . did the -country trust theml .- - - 1 ' ' j" - Nothing mean or unpatriotic, nothing. . crooked or dark ever came near- tkeir ' behdo or hearta Their Integrity was - as stanch as their intallaota w llant and the people, knew, that with them the national honor waa absolute., ' . ly safe end the Jiatlonal safety per- vV fectly secure,-- - - ' ' But "how the mighty have fall en" I In ? the eeats ef ta Intellectual gtanta and Incorruptible patriots of the olden time What manlklna'are aittlngt -. -'''.; Now and then. It ta true, a senator v goes to Washington who Is worthy af '.' the high place to which be is elected. but In far too many Instancea ths seats ' ef the mighty are being sued by mem " ' who are both mentally and morally up.-," j fit for membership ia the most com- - - - -v, mandlng deliberative body on earth.' . , f Speaking of the - Roman . senate, 'It w - should be known to every Intelligent .V:, ,. American that that lllustrioua body , never, even at the height or Ita glory, ; v , , presided over a domain Has that which .. belongs to the United States of today. ; Ths United Btataa or America is a much bigger fact that even many Amer loaas think; .and It le a shame that we - ' cannot In every lnatanoe, nave big ; ... men te represent ne In. pur national . . senata - . : ' , . -j. -V -,- ; Such men are pieotirui enougn in tnia - - country, and we should have pride and patriotism enough ta see te It thai none .' . but men of commanding, brain power ' and Incorruptible manhood are aent to ... ,.; renreeent ua In ear moot important ana . - most honorable deliberative assembly. At Port aatsop.'f -. : r " :r t-r January We dtopatcnad Howard-t and Werner ta the , camp ef the aalt . , makers for a eupply of salt The mm f . eathe garrison are baally employed in dreeelng elk skins for clothing. . They ' have great difficulty, from th waat of -bralna with which te soften th skins, J We have no soap to eupply thia def I- -ctency, nor, can we procure ashes ta . , make lye. None of th plnea we used : : for fuel afforda ashee; alngular as It .. may aeem, the greenwood. U..cpMumedJ wlthoat a residuum. .. - , . t - ; - - -: ' New Woman at Sulphur. , Av - 1 ' -MProm the Kansas City Journal.- Suhhur baa on woman who believes ; In soratchlng matches, according to the ' time-honored custom employed by ,hef . mala contemporaries, aad after witness- : Ing 'an exhibition af her proweee th - editor of the Sulphur Journal takes ref-. '. uge lathe Bible and relieve his feelings ,, In the following -vein: "In this ths thirty-fifth year of our reign, even her in th city of Sulphur, hath it first been given unto ue to' be-' T hold th edifying spectacle of a woman scratching a match even as a man , acratcheth. VarUyl Verily t Though -'' our daya .b many and laden with wis- : . dom these ' days of ths new woman -1 transformeth th machinery of our bet : fry Into merry-go-round. But. the edU- tor nsmeth ne aamee, for he of ex- : ,"' perienoed mind provoketh not the wrath ., -et woman." . -.,t -. , ..-.' , Si'.y'i'. pinkelaptoleTS.).-; .S-V-.'v Many matrimonial matches vaa etrurg mltould kindling der fires of love.. Der maa dot likes ta do all der talk ing alvaya.onuma mlt a gootteady 11s- Der man dot la wrapped up In himself ' alvaye dlnka he ta a varm baby. . , Man vante but leedle her below, una .- rot leedle .he get is ehenerally In der.. , . neck. . Dv DINKEUBPIEL. -. Per. George V. Hobert ';''.: tatea of deceased ettlsens abroad and;..' t acting as trustee by consular off icsrs shall go to .the United - SUtee - alone, v . whether feea are official or non-official, " Including depoelUone, commissions, ete '- . except consular" agenta. The latter are .:' v' to be appointed as heretofore, but by? ; : v secretary of state only, whose corapen- nation shall be by feea up to the max I- ' , r mum of 11,000 a year ana n-- more, and surplus beyond same to go to the United States treasury and to aorta other.. x:t .;';-;- ' .i. ' ' : section l. rnwiaini w ii pn oi fees for certification 0 lnvolcea, and re peals sectlone $18 and MM f the re vised statutes.' j SecUea 17. That consular officers shall all use adhesive stsmpe te be sup plied by secretary of state and to be affixed on all documents, and no consu lar act shall be valid In the- United States without such stamps are affixed and paid, for Into the United States treasury. - , " wiLimAat ttiuiu. 170 Worcester buildings t--;- . r The Woman ana the Telepaena. Portland,-Or r JawlJT-tiir'EaiTPrfC ot The Journal I read the article of ; CPM. Moore, dated January 1$, In reply v ta my- letter af-Jaauary-a I. aav wot so much - surprised that the editor did- ' not sign my namctn full., as he knows men do not cars to become popular as a . , ' rula I have never been married and -don't think X ever will be if I keep my."' " riabt mind: one thing sure, if I . was I would pot need to have a brick house : ' to fall on ray heed to get my eyes open,-t for I know what hundrede of women' have done and, very true, a habit once " formed la hard t break. I have dealt 1 , with the public most all my life and 1 -have seen lots of things that some " --' -would not believe, while others wouldn't'.'. ' want to believe. One half of the world -doea not know what the other half la -doing because they are not In the post- -tlon where they cah see. I know there - 1 '. are a few good women living yet There ' le no one on earth whrepecte a good , -Christian woman more than I do. A good woman ean do more good to men- kind than a good man, and It la a poor - V rule that doea not work both weye. " .-... . . a. a ti n,