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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (June 10, 1906)
ruz c:.zco:jcu:;DAV"jou.:jAL. Portland. Sunday v morning, june io. uca. ' .. ,l I I l i ,11 ii i , ii 'aassaasaBaEg-asssawsaai a V itTv; . ' Scalps I Sag I W I I ii y i ewTx m. i . ' v - ci : a- W IfAIMI J ' "V , . . . . . - . d a . i , ; - ' ' " TTTJTvV J I J, m mm ''V ,- J FRim CAMPBELL r J .A -' " V ' A! n l -in 1 1 ii 3" w-t A y 4.- . WWlr "- . ' It i II 1 I w'Jf 1Y)S 1 V r4 DVS:ND EDITH BOTTOM (TWINS P. C STONB WSS I 1 ij' i"- . 0 : ' , I j v V . JO- J : -., TVv' . ; ' ill ' y f" ' MJ i . . r ' ' ' - ; . . ., - ty. - ft; . S : j..:.: : - - . ; r ft. W r- ft ):; .11. ijEZ Aim susraRTf - k. taw jr i. . .... f r't TA77T TTR ...... -'n&r- w ORVII CUF0J9O HftKROWS VJK TH OMS WALTON S'.-: ; V 1 v .a . 1 'lilt ) y- ..In V s s.I y'.-.-V1;,,) M J, DODGLAiS JUSTQN KEHNB LflVELLB 6ILLBTTB LONG ,wEDSONP. SHEPF2VRD V 1 t ( -f-r HE prettiest babies in Oregon .nTVasHngton "are legionT Trre is hardly a big townJn"the two states that largenumber of babies have been entered-4nTheJourna s contesucompared wttfl?jne nurnoer tnat ucea .trie judges I has not its handsome boy or girl whose' parents' believe it Twill get one of the beautiful prizes offered by The last year. Every child in Oregon and Washington under 6 years of age is eligible ior thts contestThe prizes ar -X . y ' , , . J - i n fu : . . t . JT. i t ' l-well worth eompet ng for. The first is a deposit of $20 to the credit of. the winning child in a sayings bank, three. Sunday Journals Today another page of pretty children is printed and the readers of The Journal can WXrwill get beautiful silver cups. The money if left Jo drawerestL.wilUeach a..gcxdly some 4dea-43f-the-taskthe judges will have-inrpickingmt the four-whaarexntitled lQlhe cash deposit and silver cupspretticst.jJab9ein -Oreg6nandTvshmgton'reaches"rnaiTiageable age. The silver cups will be prized heirlooms for Some Of the babies whose portraits are reproducedjare exposition."children.: They to6k prizes at the Portland fair many generations. 3end the photographs of your pretty children to the. Baby Contest Editor, The Sunday Journal, ' . . j it ' J .Li 1 ii ' Ti.-a. t.'IJ 1 '.. . ' - . . r i lij ..... (T-i . . . . . I j . .. . T . ntk ,fi.. ..,l,;,.t. . i. ntiArtli Tst year ana ineir parenui aie paiiimiaiiy piuuu ui iiiai jjui uiaiij'v.iiiTaicu nave uccn lkjiu suivc idai. sumnici roriianu, wuxi ine names ana agcsitnu parcnis auurcss. x uc iuihi. hukjvu j "'. "- fiwivjjiaiia and they and many others who were not able to go to the exposition have been photographed, with the result that a very . wilt be received. NobKs and Corners o! Aipcrican History--Thoihas Paine, the Patriot 'r By Rv. Thoma B. Oretory. . ASK the avarac tnan yon meat , on the atroct who Thomaa Paine waa and the anawar will probahlr bai "Oh, haa tha fellow who wrote that dirty, acurrtloua -Dook. entitled The A(a of Reaaon.' " That la m much a a tha rank and fllo cif tha people . of thta country know . about the' man who waa tha friend of Waahtnaton. and who, neit to Waahlnt ton, waa the heart and aoul of tha atruffle for American Independence. , It la qulta true that Thomaa palna wrata ttmk Palled "The Ate of Rea aofi.'! a,.wdrk, by the way, that lanot liajf ao radical ad naJijr lb booaa that are belnaT written Ihea day by Chrlatlan mlnletera. . .. . Inatead of betnir a "dirty, acorrtloua dwk,' nuw.y.r, i nw akb ok r .on , la a calm, dlcnlfled, ' judicial erltlclanA upon tha Bible, and Ita author, la lieu of having , been a blatant athalat and wholeaale unbeliever, declared hla faith In tha following word: -. - -- -. ' "l believe la one Ood, and no mora. The world la my country, and to da good my religion." But it la of Palna tha patriot that I wlah to apeak.. 'Tha ordinary run of Americana, - even" of native- Americana, ara altogether Unmindful 'of tha fat that Talno rendered to tha cauaa of tha atruggllng , colonlea the aarrlcaa tot which wa can' never ba too grateful-1-aervlcea without which, poaalbly,1 tha United 'Statea might never have taken their produ place among- tha natlona of tha earth. . r""i . Thomaa Palna waa bora of Cjuake'r parents In Thetford, .' England, In the yea 1717, and In 1774. at tha age of IT, eame to America, bearing a letter of Introduction. and commendation from tha great Franklin, who doubtlaaa aaw In tha man tha elementa of ueefulneaa to tha colonlee. Into tha etrogtie which aoon after began between -the colonlee and Great Britain Palna threw hlmaclf heart and aoul. aaklng no recompense, axpactlng SO award,r ' In January, 177. els montha before the old Liberty bell of Philadelphia rang out to tha "world and to tha In habitants thereof" the tldtnga of the Immortal Declaration, Palna publlahed hla eoul-etlrrlng book entitled "Common Senae," In which ha ahowed In plain, straightforward worda the folly of fur ther patlena with Brltleh tyranny and the-.crying neceaalty of an immediate separation from tha mother country. , In hla pamphlet ba told tha American people that they were foola not to sea that separation waa a foregone conclu sion by tha vary logic of the situation: that It wm lni accordance with tha eter nal fttneas of thtnga that America should ba f)r IndapaadtAt saUon, p& that tha aooner they set about tha aev erance of the tlea that bound them to England tha better. "Common Benae" waa printed by the thousands of copies, and wherever It went It a routed men Ilka a bugla call, put courage Into timid hearts and woke up the colonials from "Massachusetts to Oeorgia. . ' ' ' Waahlngton hailed Palna as tha atandheat friend of liberty, anjrto-trts dying day waa not alow In expreealng Me profound gratitude for :the power ful Influence that tha author of "Com mon Sanaa" had brought to bear, with out money and without price, upon tha mind of the American public. Later on. In tha darkeat hour of tha American canee. when about all eave Waahlngton hlmaelf were on tha eve of despair, Paine wrote tha ringing aerlea of pamphleta' kbowa a "Ta C rials," .'.V 'r:V:y-'-.: ; a round of hot shot that woke up the people everywhere and, together with Washington's sublime polee and faith fulness, saved tha day to liberty and to man! S. . . "These ara tha tlmea that try men'a aoula!" exclaimed Palna in tha flrat number of "The Crisis" and then with an eloquence that haa been ' aeldom equaled In this world ha went on In pamplilea after, pamphlet to enow tha people how neceaaary .lt waa that they ahould brace themselves for tha atrug gle. and out of their very deapalr. to pluck the oourage of victory. In '1717 Palna returned to England, and upon tb breaking out of the French revolution went to Franco to cast hla lot with the people In their battle for liberty araiflst I-ouls and hla deepotlam. Nurrowlr escaping . the guillotine In Tarla, he f nt back) to England, from which country ha aalled for America In 1103. dying In New Tork In ISO, at the rtpe old aga of 72. . Where are tha monuments In thla country to Thomaa Pain the patriot T - la It not about time that tha Ameri can people had- begun to attest their appreciation of what thla man did for tha establishment of fta place among tha natlona of tha earth f Obesity aa Ailaasat, Fatness la a disease, according to tha ruling of a- London police Jni'-. A patent medicine eompery ait i Bailing flesh-reducInT r ' ' revenue tmp b"' ' the law rci"'- ti ' prletary r- i f ment or A' triat or defsn l