IMII-Cd- Editorial Page of l he Journal THEJOURNAL ' INDBPCKDBNT KgWSFAFnn. & .. JACK).'.. .FabUehef PebllaheS w'BlB (tl4 BBT) SB , everr uixlaj BMtrBlnf, at To Journal Bolld m. JhfU n4 JiauAia. atresia. tNaUaad, ItAt et t)M mtofaew at ForMeed, Ore. (na, or transmWaam -Unnus.h.Ja : aeeoaa-clsea iattc. . TKIJCFHONES. IMttorlal M.'.'iiTw r.. .i ."77. . . -J"1" Bualotas OfOoa. ......... m Ft) REICH A0VBRTIS1K0 HPEWENTATIT1 Vnelamt-Reajamla Syel aeVertlelag Afraer, ' l.Vi Kuaau untt. Tisw Xorki Ttlsoss balld' - Inf. Chirac. - . - - ' " " Bntiarrtntkai- Tm-m 'nr Ball to MKT .am tbe Laiiad Steiaa, Canada of in-ilcol Cm year..... ...S3 06 I Om awMtk.......$ J" ..-..4 ,.OKDiI. , '. ,'!'.' " On rMt,....... HW I Oae Bt .. JB . r t fPAJLT AW IUKDAI. -Om year....... ,17.00 ) Oa taoatk.. If yon cannot - do kind dedapukjr Undword; If J r ra cannot' speak- a "kind , word, think a kind thought Cbannlng. '. ' ' ..:-r':'r ; 'Ij'-i. OP COURSE. - F COURSE Harvey Scott de nies that he ni bribed to support the blanket street railway franchises by the promise that Jack Matthews1 would tnake him 1 , United States senator. y Perhaps it will now be in order for Mr. .Scptt to ' deny once more that he was a sen ." ' atorial candidate. Perhaps we shall ". hear again aa we did in 1903 that the editor "asked no member of the legis lature to rote for him nor any one else to support him and that he did "absolutely ' nothing ' to bring in- : tluence' in his behalf, from any .. quarter." ' ' ..! - V-1' ,-".''?.. ' ' And bye . the , bye, Is there no Brownell who can come to Mr. Scott's aid in the. present sore emergency? : "Now is the .time. If you can help .: me it will be appreciated." ;, - Mr. Scott alleges that he was in Europe "during most of the time" .', when the blanket franchises were put through the council. , But how does an alibi help Mr. Scott's case? It is a well known fact that it was on the ad vice of his. political "managers" that the editor absented himself in order "' to give color to the pretense that he 'wa-not--senatorial candiditer-For months before the legislature met, the policy of the Ofegonian was shaped wholly with the view of ensuring his election. . Powerful support: could be gained by "standing in" on the fran . chise deal, and the Oregonian "stood in." What possible difference does it make whether Matthews made the - deal wkh Scott m th his "managers"? ; That the deal was made does not. admit of doubt or de nial, for all Oregon kho wsTthaf when Mr. Scott at last came out in the open near the close of the legislative ses- ; eion, Matthews was at his back with all the votes he could control. ' ! ' Apropos of the pretense that the Oregonian.waa.the. innocendupe of the "franchise mongers" and had no knowledge of the objections urged against granting- the , franchises be fore the new charter had become ef fective, it is worthy of note that the reports of . the council proceedings, published .In the., Ore soman's news columns, give the lie to such an as- ! sertion. ' Elsewhere In this issue will be found some significant extracts 'from these reports, which Mr. Scott will do well to read before proceeding further with his own defense. ' , TROUBLESOME BOYS. -TIHIS IS the time of year when . I the troublesome boy is much i'-i n evidence. By the way, comparatively ew girls are trouble some. Mr. Carroll O. Pearce, super, intendent of the public 'schools of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, said recently that "the trail of Oie troublesome boy i; too often leads away from the school room door and has passed by short ;.. cut into and too often ended in some . tangled thicket" This Is too often true of boys not only of the gram- v snar school age but of those out of high 'school and even college, and ; standing on the threshold of a busi ness career. The "thickets" are all ' 'right to get into if they are entered to be cleared, .and the underlying -swamp-drained,bur'rhe)rarea bad thing to be lost in. . .'V The trail of tens of thousands of , boys leads to the tangled thickets of - idleness,' of dissipation, of various .form of viciousness - and vulgarity, . , jbf smartness smacking of immorality, - of precociousness bordering on crim ' , )nality '-": ; ' ; . ;'" . i A boy must play some, we know, iiutNhe-ahould for the-main-part -do . something gainful and useful. Every ' body expects a boy to be somewhat ' troublesome,, else he' would not be a boy: but he mutt early team partly to . repsy for the trouble he-causey for ,- his "wear and tear, by doing some thing beneficial to himself and others. We know of few sorrier sight than t ig. ttoot, healthy boy taking a long, U.'e tacation, One curse of this country is the pampering of many of its boys. '.' . As soon as a' youth becomes in oculated with the notion that it is gentlemanly and "au fait" to be idle, he is spoiled for a future good citizen. And the uneducated and unrefined youth who starts out. with the idea of working "as" little as 7 possibleronly enough barely to exist in comparative comforlTi"a menace to the republic. All countries that maintain a large idle population occupy a low, polit ical social, moral and intellectual plane. Only by sustained effort - do men rise and grow and thrive.: There may be idle rich, so through inher itance, but the average boy, fortun ately, cannot be so, ' ' The voluntary idleness of the rich and the enforced idleness of the poor are equally a menacing evil There are "trouble some boys" of, both sorts, and with out good guidince jhere will be more of them, headed for "tangled thick ets." . 7 . Work in school is well, but other work for the average boy is equally necessary. .The busy boy, usefully employed and interested and en couraged in his work, ; is ' not the troublesome boy." . Boys, head for the broad prairies, the lovely valleys, the magnificent forests, not for the ."tangled thick- etc overspreading noisome" swamps unless ' to conquer them remem bering" always that Only honest, faith ful work wins. : v AN EDITORIAL "FIT." HE EDITORIAITmTthe New r' York Sun of which so much notice has been taken was in part as follows: . . - '. "Tha Bun eraves irmlaion to pre sent Ita humble servta to the suprame powers at Oytr Br-to Meaara. Pl4t and Dapaw, - to the naw and austere hlerarohr of OdeU and ' aaaooiataa, to one Frank Wayland Blfclna, tha puta tive arovarnor of the state of New fork, and to all tha aober-mtnded and aelf- respecting Republicans to whose con fidence It can apDeal. and with all def erence And reapeot, eubmlte: "The next aovernor of tha state of New Tor will be a Democrat ' "The next governor of tha state of New York will be tha next president of tha united State," . . The Sun is rabidly Republican, and an especial organ of protection, the trusts and monopoly, yet it seeks to be, editorially sensational, becomes hysterlcsl, and is a kicker along any line it pleases whenever it takes a no tion. It is "out" with Piatt, Odell and Governor Higgins, who are try ing to' form ; an alliance to run the party in New York," hence" this ebul lition. ' 1 ; '' .V v ' ., -- ' Hearst will probably be the Demo cratic candidate for governor of New York, but as ha would b bolted by a large number of conservative Demo crats, his election is by no means sure, and if he should be elected governor it is still less probable that he would be the next president of the United States. The Sun was merely "throw ing a' fit and trying to scare some people, though its prediction is with- iirthe Tangef possibilities. ' . THREE emperors and' '. .-land. ,'.: PO- T HE HEARTS of ; William of Germany and Francis ' Joseph ef-Autfi are fluttering in Sympathy with the perturbed cardiac organ of Nicholas of Russia, partic ularly on account of Poland, which may wriggle out of the grasp of the three monarchs if the "proletariat of Russia should get the upper hand of the government. .1 From the imperial point of view. whatever menaces a throne In one country indirectly menaces every throne. The spirit of revolution is contagious. In overawing the poor, underfed proletariat of Poland, may notWilliam- and Francis Joseph reckon without due consideration of their own 1 proletarian hosis?From their" point' of' view, whatever men aces liberty in one country indirectly menaces liberty everywhere. If the German and Austrian emperors are with Nicholas, -why -shipuld not . the people of Germany and Austria-Hun gary be in sympathy with the peopled of Russia and of Poland? Inter- imperial concord and concert should naturally produce fraternal feeling smoTig the people. And Poland will furnish the crux of tlie-sltuationr If irheTJls it la under the heels of these monarchs in order to maintain the "balance of power. But it may yet serve" to unbalance power. n- :- "' The - statement - which"; the packers are so fond of seeing in print to the effect that conditions in the industry in other countries are just as horrify ing a they-are here may afford them consolation, but, doe not give the common people . any remedy for ptomaine poisoning. ' .v . ; ', The-ciar should get- himself -to a monastery ; that is the only ptopef place for him. ; . . It i found after all , that Alfred B.eit'i fortune a..YaiUj;v. overei- ;" . :-'-. A Little Out THINGS PRINTED TO RE Question. of the' Hour.' We're all awere that Anna Held Exaetly what John Draw, But what we'd Ilka to know Is just -' How much eoln Kyrlo Bellew. Does Herkett cut tha lea ha Old? Ioea Tony Paator prayt If you can't anawer thea perhaps.. Our old . friend Edna May. ' ( Xoea tJUlan Ruaaall through her lines T Is Cleey Loftua U11T - ' ,,. , Is Bothern cold by nature, and When Prlmroaa did 'he faUT ' la Mnfleld traot-ablet If ao, - Can ha be called a plott . ' Would Qoodwln be a bad One It'":,, OHletta hlmT - Maybe not. But ail theea queatlons simple are . Compared with tbla, to. ma: Waa Meyerbeer a relative '' Of Mr. Beerbohm Treet , $10,000,000 to Save HalT l Mne. rrom' the Kanaaa City 8Ur: The Atehlaon. Tooeka A Santa Fa railroad la apendlng f 10.000,000 to aava alx and seven tentha mllaa.' An army of men and' machinery are working day and mani to eompieta tna new ueien cut-oft between Texleo, New Mexico, on the Pecos valley line of tha Santa, Fa. and Rio Puerco, SO mllea eaat of Al buquerque, New Mexico. Tha length of the main Una to Emporia la 114 mllea, while by the cut-oft it will be lot.l miles. . - v .t . It 1 aaked why thla Vaat axpandlr ture of money if tha distance saved la only 4.7 mllea T Aa a matter of faet tha Santa Fa la really spending thla money for tha purpoae of avoiding half a mil between Albuquerque. New Mexico," and La Junta," Colorado. Tha 'other t.i mllea aaved la not material. It la tha 1000 feet difference In altitude between the Raton mountain, tha hlgheat point on tha preaent line, and the Abo paaa, tha hlgheat point on the proposed cut off, that Is really material., : What Niagara Costa' .Ua.L.-. H. W. Buck, an engineer writing for the-Outlook,-makes out that w have an expenalv luxury In- Niagara f alia. Tha total hydraulic energy of tha falla, says Mr. Buck, would represent about 1,600,000 horaepower. To gen erate on horsepower eontlnuoualy for a year by a ateam angina require about 11 tons of ooai. " To generate, therefore, eontlnuoualy 1,500,000 horaepower by steam would re quire about SO.000,000 tons of eoal per year.- J . to srnerte aleetno power by steam with tiie most modern steam plant coat not Jaa than 150 a horaepower a year, alloeVing for fixed charges and operat ing expenses. Niagara power can be generated and aold in large quantities for lis a vear leaa than la poaalbl from th uaa of eoal and tha ateam engine. Bryan on Money and tne Trusts SO-CALLED LONDON INTERVIEW." ' Here la th so-called "London Inter- view with W. J. Bryan, with which Bom of hla 'Supersensitive opponent ar finding a good deal of -fault As Mr. Bryan sent the meaaage to the whole people, th feelings of. on or two editor on th- supject will not worry th great eommoner: "William J. Bryan, having read th AUrloaa newapapcra, consented today to discus question raised slnoe he again became prominent as a presiden tial possibility. H said " 1 notice that I am now described by some as a eonaervatlva. In one sns I always have been a conservative. The Democ ratio policies are conservative la that they embody old principles ap plied to new conditions. " if however, by the word conserva tive they mean that I have changed my position on any publlo question or moderated my opposition to corporate waiting for them. Z ant more radical than t I waa te 111! and have nothing to withdraw on economic questions which have bean under discussion. " Th only question w discussed In 1114 upon whtcn there haa been any apparent change Is th stiver question, and that haa not been a change In th advocates ef .blmetallam, but In con- dltlona. I believe in "blmetallam, and I believe that th reetoratlon of ailver would bring etlll further prosperity, be sides restoring par Sin . exchange be tween gold and allver-uaing countries; but 4 1 recognise, as do all - other bl- metallata whom I have met abroad, that the unexpected and unprecedented in crease in gold production haa for the preaent removed the silver question as an laaue. - " "While th money question haa waned - In Importance other queatlons have been forging to the front On th new queatlons many will act with ua who wer against us 'on th money question, for, notwithstanding th dla- timated. and that instead of possess ing $150,000,000, the poor man had but a beggarly $60,000,000. It it not unlikely that Mr. Beit made this gall ing discovery himself, and that the fear of . dying in poverty accelerated his speed on the long journey where neither purse nor sjrip is needed. r The Republican leader have con cluded to stand pat They will not have to do so very long till Illinois, Wisconsin, Iowa, Nebraska and other hitherto solidly Republican states will be going Democratic. ' Now Thaw has a notion to play in sane in reality. At - any rate, ' if he should not be electrocuted, he should be shut up for about 50 years and forgotten. . . .. . Every year, from one cause or an other, there is some .loss of crops, yet they average up well . at last, al ways, a they will this yean - 1 Judge Fraier has stirred the official animals up "to beat the band." It is well; a good many of them were a sleep, --- . - . Mr. Hoge of Medford is better; Dr. Heney attending. , I i i i i - So tu at can bi aicertaintd or ua va , ' : - 'j of tlie Common 1 i AD WHILE YOU WAIT. From the above It 'will b seen that If all tha hydraullo energy of the falls were utilised for power purpoaea there would Tult to the country an annual saving of fit a horaepower for MOO, 000 horaepower. or f 113.1500,000, and in addition there would be an annual sav ing in ooal oonauroptlon of 60,000,000 tons. , :., . . ' ; . . ' . ,. . ' ' . More Southern Spindlea; From, Birmingham (Ala.) . Age-Herald, While 110,000 aplndlea were added or contracted for 4n aouthern -mill In the flrat quarter of the preaent calendar year, the aeoond quarter did better, for It brought out - announcementa that cover 117,000 aplndlea. At thla rata of Increase tha year promisee to show an inereaa in aoutnm spindles approaoh ing a million. North Carolina's enters tie la aasllv nrat ,in jir, ner additions in April. May and June aggregating v 157.110 spindles and l.tTO looms. South Caro lina, oomea next' with 101,104 spindles and 1.771 loom, and Georgia follows witn ,ag apinaiee ana i looms. MlaslssloDl added during the second quarter 1.000 aplndlea and Virginia In stalled 4.011 spindles. ,. , How Much People Eat. . From the Boston Tranacript In finding a unit for-th food-eon sumlng power of each family It la as sumed aa generally tru thatt- Huabanda consume ilka amount of food. The wife eonsnmea f par oant . aa mucn aa tne nuabana. child from U to 14 " year- of age consumes so per cent aa much food aa th pueband. A child from 7 to 10 years of age con sumes 74 per eent aa much food aa the huaband.- . A child from 4 to 4 year of age con sumes 40 per eent as much food aa the huaband. Jhtldrenefril'"yeare or age and over are considered aa adulta so far as the consumption of food la concerned. . An Electricity Thief. . "Electricity thtevea crop np now and then," said an electrician. "Our - laat a man who had lighted hi whole houae with stolen electricity for fix montha. "Next door to this man waa a big fac tory that uaed 1.400 lights a night The man bored a hole through a partition. inaerted a wire, tapped th factory's current and helped hlmaelf bountifully to illumination. 'W lost nothing. The factory paid. of coura. for th electricity . atolen from It The theft wasn't discovered till some time after th thief had moved away." , . euaalon of that question, millions (Old not understand It and, wer frightened into opposition. - r-rJ,W-Tannot--xpet -th support ef any on wno is interested la taking ad' vantage of the people either through trusts or through any other illegitimate rorm or Dunnes a. our efforts should be to distinguish - between 'those cor porations which - are' leal tl mat and uius aggnganon of wealth which are organised for purposes of publlo plun der, and appeal for support to thos only who are willing to have the gov ernment protect each person tn th en joyment of his own earnings. - " "The newspapers have been trying to create friction between what they can "old mends" and "new friends" la politics. Those are friends who are or It Ing toward a common and. and each campaign brings to some extent a new alignment. In 1114 the party lost uy-Democrats -and was recruited by a great many who had been Republicans up to that tuna, and w welcomed them. In ltoo some earn back who war against us In 1114. and w did not ahut the door agalnat them. "1 hav4 no Idea that th party will require ticket of admission in th eomlng campaign. Usually parties ar difference ar not empbaalsed If there is sincere agreement on present Issues. I do not know that we eaa find a better plan than the Bible plan which admlta the eleventh hour corner to a place in th vineyard and to share th reward with thos who began earlier. - If tha differences between the sin cere and the pretended friends of re form cannot be discovered before, they will become apparent When the platform la written; for. If preaent Indication count for anything, that platform is likely to be so plain tbst no one can mistake It. and so strong that no enemv of Democratic principles will b drawn to th party."' derstood, nobody who ' has testified in the Hartje case has as yet told the truth.'' Yet some inkling of truth may be inferred. -r- ; ' It should not be forgotten that the Russians over whose cabled woes we are atked to shed the salt vintage of ouf sorrow are the same who find their, chief relaxation, in murdering Jews. , ; :V ' There ace no real newspapers in Russia, no inch thing as liberty of the press, though this was guaranteed by- the -exar.-r A- country withoutl free press ripe for revolution. t( Russell Sage gave his wealth to charity, some of the unfortunates whom he sent to the poorhouse will get little of their own again. We have our troubles in this big republic, but how would you like to be a Russisnf-- ' 1! T' . .Those wails over. lost opportunities evidently emanate from the Oregon ian talking machine department . Emperor William had bettef be careful or he will burn his fingers. A Coos county stream Is named Catch ing ereek, perhaps becaua it is a1 good one tn whicn t eatch fish, A tittle. Nonsense it la aeea eeelAad that Back I that Back Smith et mmwi. sm au xnomi la the aeat a tori .a tot th aneea el Correius seat hla eolnam la the seeaad eooiaat, and ebetk bare keea .fonraroad An Inherited Musical Taste. r George Bernard Bhaw, the Irish play right, haa a good deal of eontamot for aoieotisia. -W - told scientist rin" too Wgh honor," he wrote recently to an Amerl can admirer.. "Wi take them too muoh onJ faith. W bellev vry aelentlflo aasertloa. no matter how incredible it may be. . " .-. , ' "And how Incredible, hew preposter ous muoh of this eoientlflo talk is) There heredity, or inatanc.- I have sees doobs on heredity that wer about as logloal aa th remark of an old woman whose - daughter played th piano. f . - ti -. - " Tour daughter nlara wlL' a lady said te hr. .- - " Tea.' - the old woman replied, "ah aoes nave a nae touoh. and It's no won' der, for she loves the piano, and never tire or it Te a, ahe's a great taat for music, but then that's only natural. for her grandfather had his skull frac tured with a cornet at a picnic'" According to Hoyle. 'There la an enterprising ' dealer la men's shoes In Boston who, at one time, was aceustomed to display sticking out Of -each pair of shoes in hla windows three new 11 bill a.- The accompanying aeoouncement uaed to read something like this: "Three of a kind beat two pauV on one occasion a bright young man undertook to get the better of th dealer. Entering the store, he said to tha pro prietor, Tou aell ahoes according to the rules of poker, I see." Tea.'" waa the reply. 1 wear sis No. aald the bright young man; "wrap me up two pairs of them.1 When he had received the shoes h tendered In payment therefor 11. rtraon me," aald the proprietor, "but tnoae ahoes come to IS." -7-Not according to Hoyle." aald the bright young man, with a triumphant grin, "three of a kind beat two pair." Very true " rea ponded the suave pro prietor, "but they don't beat four ntnae. Six dollars, plea." . , . Small Riak, From Harper' Weekly. Ones while maklna-a tialltleal eanvaaal of Missouri, th Hon. Champ Clark bnelfopeka Capital. Rather a halrreetorer. vening found himself obliged to aocept , . e . ; ; the hoapltallty- of a blackamlth's house. When Mr. Clark arose th next morn ing h observed that th hou stood on th bank of a deep, swift stream. In fact, th stream really flowed through the back yard of th black smith's place. On the bank ther were! at least 10 or II children at play. -Madam." said Mr. Clark to the smith's wife, ' "are you not afraid to allow your children to play so near-a treacherous stream Ilk thatr . "Wa-,don't -mind," waa th laconic reply.' . 'But madam," persisted : Mr. Clark. appalled, "I should think you would llv In constant dread laat one of your little one would be drowned. "No," responded the woman, "we've only lost four or five that .way," .. trrrr Dumas : and ; the Count Alexander Dumas found' In his mall on day th following not, signed by a French count J "Sin I have the honor to propose our collaboration of a drama. Tour name will appear beelde mine. -Tou will eompoae th drama, and I will bear all th xpcoee of th flrat production. Tou will receive th pecuniary benefits, lor I only work for glory." : -j Pumas sent the following answer: "Sir: I am not tn th habit of har. neaalng a hors and an aa to my car riage. I regret, therefore, that I cannot accept your amlabl proposition. Th count, in bis turn, wrote: "Sir: Tour note refusing to loin ms In literary work Is at hand. ' Of course you are at perfect liberty to refuss-so advantageous an offer, but I forbid yourl calling me a horse la the future." They Had Mleaed Him.: An Englishman who" had his .doubts about "Irish wit" asked a friend, aecua tomed to go to Ireland yearly on fishing trips, if he had ever met any not ape- llr prepared fur th EnallsiriBaTket. Am Iwa going down to th fishing station on th morning or my arrival, he answered, "an old fellow came along the road who, on a former visit, had don m aeveral little services. 'And how is Michael r I called, approaching blm. 'Sure, It'a Mr. 1 exclaimed my friend, recognising me. 'And how hav things been with you line I saw you last. Michael r Without a moment' hesitation he answered. "Shure, th cork' screw's got rusty alnc your honor was nerei : Deathleaa. ' . ' By Lowell Otus Reea. Thews of the dauntless Norman knight blood of the Baxon than. Bye Of the hlllman, eagle wise, scanning th far-off plain. Mind of th gentle Puritan, stern In his single thought . This was th blood of the Pioneer, this . was the Argonaut .'.,"..:.-,. Out on the hills of the Sunset Land, out by the western gate. . Builded a city to laat for eye, under the ' hand of Fate; .'....,..-.' . Thla waa the Temple of Destiny, out of th Future brought: This waa th. lasting monument ralaed ft : oy me jargonaui. , .j, Borrow may eome te the western land,' - ruin may stalk the town. '. a Blackening all of the beauty there, fling- ' Ing the temples down; Courage! for-though Desolation spreads, - bringing th der to naught. --- Btm In the mldat of tha ruin dwells the . soul of the Argonaut. , , Gambling a Religloua Duty. , Annlsalonary lay beside a camp fire ef birch logs In the Maine woods, smok ing1 a black elgar and watching hla gulda grill trout.' 1- -r-rr- ' 1 Speaking of gambling." the mlsaion- ary said, "I know of a sect that regards It as a . religious duty, like fasting or prayer. ': . - "This ect Is the Hindoos. They, one day in each year, gamble like" mad from sunrise till sunset The day Is the fes tival of the lamps, a day sacred to Lak ahan, goddess of wealth. A tremen dous lot of money changes hands In Lakahun's honor. . ; "All this gambling Is dene te test the financial success -that - writ -attend "on each person throughout the yesr. If a gambler loses, he knows a year of hard luck la ahead et him. If he wins, he knows he may expect a twelvemonth of prosperity. t . . -r . , - "Strange to aay a good deal of cheat ing accompanies this religious . gam Wing." . - " , RIRDSEYE VIEWS J- cf TIMELY. TOPICS SMALL CHANGE. - ) -'When hay Is plentiful And cheap, get I mora eowa. a e " iL Dirt la flying In Oregon now when th wind blows.- ." -v ' ' . .. - .. - - -e e : V-, - :: The hop contract habit la a bad en for th growers.' It was a successful Bruin hunt but he still lives td' roar. w Genuine Maud Mullers are In demand in the bar and grain fields. Why are some weddings very pretty. wnue ouers are only pretty 7 ipeaklnc ef reforms, why not raise a demand for longer batbtubet - - . e ve "...i,'"" It takes aa Immense amount ef talk and paper to build a railroad Poetry about meadows and new-mown hayt doasn t harvest the hay crop. The aim of the fool with a gun who Uhought It wasn't loaded is alwaya good. Grandpa Rockefeller I only if, and don't see why he shouldn't slso live to Soma hopgrowers who remember last rear think that 11 cent la not an un lucky price. . '. . . i- . .... . . .. .. ' -v , While Juh want wet, her slater. July, To .reform th weather, want fervently Weeds and ' grass should 'b' out throughout the cl(y "now, before they go. to seed or spread a flre.'"-- .V If. as 'she says she IsV Madam Tlnglay la 1.110 years old. sh ean't expect many men really to tall In love with her. r ' - - -' .. e , .,.-.' , v" It paya in towna of aeveral thousand Inhabitants to pave the streets, and aev eral Oregon cities are finding thla out Bryan says he ' hasn't changed. If that is true, Bryan need a haircut We really, believe that this gnra- tlon will not pass away till thos eleo- trle railroads up th valley are built. I - -. ; a e-'.- - v, ;. Mrs Leii Carter, who owns up to only 11 years, is said to hav a aon aged 14. . What a real young mother abe was. - . Tremble, tremble, little esaf, HowI wonder what you are, -There upon your throne so high. Monkeying with destiny. . e '"..;' ; Nobody will ever know whether tTncl Ruaaall Bag got aTedoctlon la" the fare acrosa the styg or not. but th cnances are inn na - man i. " On ratlrlm from tha Gardiner Oasatta. MUa Dolly Refty wrote- a llttl poem, beginning. n -blow you a kiss." But unfortunately for ua th wind was In the north. ". - '' - Letters From tlie Pcople on Topics ofl-Current Interest ' trafair to sQkeraaaa Oouaty, Wasco. Or July 11. Te th Editor of Th Journal In your lssu of July 10 appear an interview with-W. U. Martin of Baa Francisco la which h says: - "Th farmers of Buwrman county ar much aiacouraged-and many are figuring on moving to other parte. Es pecially Is mis true OI some oeoaus of th fact that tn eonaitions wnion prevailed thla year were also true last vear." . No statement eouid wen ne -more un fair or ' misleading. The fact 1 that while Sherman county did not have a flrst-claaa crop Jaat year ndwM.Miral a poor crop this year, where our farm ers own tneir land tney are rar irom bankruptcy, and a very large majority of them ar in mucn batter circum stance than la th ease with it out 100 farming communities, and their assets ar more than abundant to meet their liabilities. -Ther la much good wheat in th eounty and - should Mr. Martin attempt to buy land in Sher man county he would find that h would hav to pay th farmers quits aa much per acre and find land as hard to buy as it was beror in terriDi rauures he speaka of. ' . Mr. Martin automooiisa aoout it hours In Sherman, county and talked chiefly, probably entirely, te the tenants of the Eaateru Oregon Land Company, who have probably loat money this year, and many of whom are tired of renting land anyhow. . Tbeee : eastern Oregon Land company tenants are the only dis satisfied farmers In Sherman county with the exception of that small minor ity that are never satlafled. No eounty In the north wee t, even with the com plete failures of which Mr. Martin prattles, can show a better satlafled or more prosperous lot of land ownara than Sherman county, nor can any farming community . show better results from thalr farm a. Mr. Martin must remem ber that th Eastern Oregon Land com- nanv does not own all of Sherman county, and before he predicts a depopu lation of this section he should consult land owners outalde of the stockholders of the Eastern Oregon Lend company. Tours truly. J . , J. W. ALLEN... The Bridge etlsaaee, - Portland. July 11. to the Editor of Th Journal I note from time to time In your fearleas paper attempts to .im prove conditions in Portland, and . In Interesting Josephine Letter. It may be recalled that the Barrss memoirs, jmbllshedri years Ago, pre tended tor cast ssperslons upon ths mari tal relatione of Napoleon and Josephine during the period of the consulate, when theae relations hsd been generally be lieved -by histoTisng-te "bs -most " eon- genial and loving. A hitherto unpub lished letter written by the wife ef the flrat consul will shortly be offered for sal In Parts. It Is dated "Saint Cloud, I lira Brumal r. an XI" (November lla.llOJlt It4 charseter -certainly re fute aome of Barrae' moat startling accusations. The text is as follows: "All my troubles hav disappeared In reading your dear, touching letter, which I full ef sweet expressions ef your ten derness for me,". How kind It Is ef you to give up so much 'of yoer time for your Jeeepbinel Xf yea only knew, you. nn . OREOON SIDELIGHTS. - - ' Barley yielded about SO bushels n acre) around Helix.' J- ;. ... . . . u: ,.,.. . , ,n -.-fcTt---:- . Logan . berries have proved ' profitable in many localitlea. , - j ; , . - . . i e -v - ' ' . .. v ' ''Help! Help! wanted by Condon farm ers." - Bay the Times. . (. t ' . e . . 1 :.' "' Hobsonvllle In Tillamook county is to hav a 71,900-feet-a-day mtli';. v. . ,.5. ;"y.;.-.'- 4 . , : .;v , jVv": ' Butter - creek correspondence of. Berv Nws; W are sUU kUllng rattlesnakes. :: ;V-?r--'' Nearly ovary young lady going to th aeastda takes a dog. saya a Balem paper. '. .-' r ee . .- A Balem editor haa been 'out raking and pitching hay; b doean't aay how much. , '-. ' - "e . e- .,. "; lv: ,.' .; Manr McMlnnvllle-people are ta an outing by living mostly in tsnts on their premises. " f ?.' Benton county farmer haa a .tree that, through grafting producaa n va lietles of fruits and nuts., - , . , The Coqulll Sentinel grlev because that town went dry, yet announcea Its own enlargement and Improvement on account of increased business. i' '-; : . . . ' . - .. ... . Illinois wallay 1s one of th chief hog raising seotlona of Josephine eounty -and - th farmer of ' that valley keep larg number of hogs, many of them thoroughbreds.. .- . 5 ... , t . i .' . . Gold Beach Glob: Thla country beats the world . for apples, plums, - prunes, cherries, to. All w need her to make, this one of the wealthy countlea. If not the moat wealthy. Is to get alt th avail-' abl land into fruit. . A team hitched to a hayraka and driven by- a woman ran away - near -Haines, and sh was thrown, and had -har collar bona broken. It might have been cheaper for her husband to hire I "n. niayb n eouiant Umatilla haa the record for growing th earlieat and largest potato In th northwest says ' th ' Register. - They were raised In th whit sand and -without Irrigation. ' They also hav a very fine flavor surpassing- all othare that ar raised In th wat r ' ,''..'" '' V; '!'. :t'A , A large number of campers from -the Willamette valley are enjoying a sum mers outing In various parts of Coos county. Bom ar living at th ea shore, other hav pitched their tents 1n th mountains and , numbers are camped along th various streams: V . .' . e e . ... . .. ,:. . ;.. - Haines Reoord: Last week it Just seemed Ilk Via entire community had assumed an air of "innocuous desue-L. tuda." v words to that effect No on eemed willing to be born, to commit matrimony or suicide or go fishing. But; after the Reoord had gone to press John Ingram's wood pile caught -ftre, hla lit tle daughter, Myrtle, drank fly poison and ther waa a narrew escap from a' serious conflagration In th , most densely populated block In .th dense ly populated elty of Haines. - . general I find that Tha Journal gets : what It goes after. An exception, how ever, and, one which vitally interests Irvingtoa and other parts of the big. eaat slds Is the agitation agalnat keep ing the ttrldge drawe open unneces sarily. Tour failure . to succeed.-- a remedying this' disagreeable state of affairs I lay not to Tha Journal . but to th lnnat stupidity of the bridge leaders, which no amount Of agitation' can help. - Testerday afternoon I nottoed an ex- ' ample of .th way these fellows, the , brldg tenders, block trafflo . unneces sarily. The IrVlngton car was stopped itaacllje-l:li la answer tu aTwhlatl of the Spenoer. The Spencer' slid through In a hurry but the bridge didn't swing to. - Whyt Because down th river the Vulcan, a amall ateam ar, waa dragging Itself along with' a big. raft In tow. r ". ' Ther was plently of time to close the draw, let the ears pass and thea open It again for the Vulcan and her unwieldy tow to go through. . This , would not have delayed the rartboat at all and It would- have aaved three min utes, for th car waa delayed five, when -It might have passed" te ' two. Three minutes isn't. a great deal but the east aide people are too busy to loss any tim at alL . .. v . IRVINQTON. i'v I'.'''.','1' v - Beautify the atkyila.' ;. v v Portland, July 14. To th Editor et, The Journal I would like to call at tention . to- .one thing which - would beautify our elty a great deal.'- I do not know how feasible it would be but -if there Va aoms way to fell th dead ; trees on the skyline of the hills sur- rounding Portland it would ba a great Improvement.: - From the different points Where th outlln of the hills Is' seen the beauty of th trees Is spoiled by a lot ef ugly dead tree and bar sticks which give the hills a desolate - and neglected appearance. We perhaps do not notice thin but - It la mucn com mented on - by . strangers. . The cost could not be very great aa the trees oould be left lying on the ground. ' Of course we eannot expect all the prop-., erty owners owning ekyltne land to do this but Some might, and a way b de vised to complete the work, either , by- getting permission to do io from th others and' paying for ' coat by- sub scription or other methods.- Perhaps some of your readers ean suggest some thing.. T. W. HINDMAR8H. would be pleaeed with yourself at being able to give so great a joy to th wife ' you Jove. A letter la- the portrait of the soul, and I press this one agalnat my heart It does me so much rood I . I shall keep it forever, end it will be my consolation during your absence, . my . . guide when I am near-you. for I wiahi io be la your eye always the good and tender Josephine, who thinks solely ef your happiness. - If a spaam of Joy reach your soul, or If a momentary sad- neas trouble you, let It be la th heart of your friend that your happiness and your, aorrows find reflection. That you Should not hare a aentlment-that t " not ehare Is my desire I subordinate everything to the wish te please you and make you happy. Adieu, Bonaparte. 1 shall not forget "the laat words of your letter, which have en tered my heart and are deeply graven there. Tea. my dealrs IS alee to please ., and love or rather adnre you. ",VV ' " -Jouzpaanv