Editorial OF i HE JOURNAL 1 . r Page THE JOURNAL V.. .AM INOKf XMDKKT . ggWerArna, . a JACSOa".... ea :. e wereies. tw ik - - aft TW Joamal VMM ?lsa.ri.ia sa VssAUl wrlv . o. to .IreMmleslae itawk.W .H Secaae-atasS WIW, ...,...... ' ' .-. ,. . nLxraoxis. ' -v - rOUEia ADVSRT1S1NU B1PEWBHTATIT1 Vrle-ftaJuta BiwHal Tsrriing -""I1 ' ISO Maewa nmt, lie XerSI Xrtbaae SallS- ' ts, Caloese. ' - . BaBserlpttaa Twos hT 'MO tea" 'S the V'aMe States. C1 or Metkei : rear..,.. ....Km 1 Ob aetata....... ' ... ; .. - arsnAT. Hnu.....,..HW I Om swore.......! DAILY AND SUNDAT. - ,'. ' tne rr.l.......tT.0O I One aoeUl , W are never made eo ridic-, uloua by the qualities) we have ai by thoM we affect to have Rocbefoucald. x's : ? A PRIMARY LAW FAULT. -ik JOMINATIONS FOR state of fXI ficers of Texas were recent ly made under a direct pri- - roary nominating law similar to that in operation' in Oregon, and one ob jection that has been urged against it is the cost , of seeking, not to say securing, a nomination at the pri- - xntries.. Of the four Democrats who . sought to become the candidate for . ' governor it is said that the successful one spent in this effort $13,000, and the other three less amounts, but each 'more than $5,000. To obviate this manifestly : objectionable feature of the law it bas been proposed, and the idea is mectlngwith considerable -favor, to reducednr number of mem- , bers of the legislature and raise their , salaries, and impose ; on them . the duty of electing state officers.. There is very little likelihood,' however, of such a radical and even dangerous proposition being carried out. I the v objection mentioned can be obviated at all, it. must be by some . other .. . method'-!li yV-": --- i'-TsT: -T. j . As the law works now, a . man cannot become a 'candidate without the - expenditure : ' of ., considerable money, though he has but a small chance of winning out, and the. man who spends the mos money, though in quite a legitimate way, stands the best chance of securing the nomina tion, whether he be the . best man -r nAf ' l-httr:-:. ? The nomination of United States senator in Oregon last spring is illus- iraiivv oi ini regreiiiDie oui so jar as yet appears unavoidable feature of the law. Mr.. Bourne spent, quite legitimately- and honorably J we , as sume, a very large amount of money. Others couIdnot -afford to do this. Without that expenditure it is ex - tremely doubtful whether Mr. Bourne would have been nomirjaied, . We 'ate ' not saying whether or not in this case the best man among the candidates secured the nomination; but it surely will not always happen that the man who spends the most money is the best man or the one that, if expendi tures of the several candidates had k been . equal, . would have received a ; plurality of Votes. . ";. Perhaps .a partial solution of the " 'difficulty may be found in limitation of expenditures, a strict accounting ' thereof and their payment by the ; state though against this strong ob jections might be made. . i-v The primary law, 'we are sure, has ' ome to stay, but in Uml respect, and . perhaps in some others, it, may need f amendment, if any of its wise legis lative friends can devise any way to t v improve it . ; FOREST RESERVES. ENATOR HEYUBRN stands at one extreme of the forest re- ! : . t r rr . - ,,chot at the other. Pinchot hat prob- ; . ably modified his views and restrained ..nis rererve-creating desires somewhat during the past' two of three years, ; j so bat he is now comparatively "safe .' and sant," but everybody familiar with the facts knows that the reserve Impolicy, ccnvirtfd"1nto a Jbobby rjdderj ' ,V by enthusiastic extremists, has been a source of much tril and great frauds, There have been those with . influence . and : authority who would ' sacrifice almost everything else in or der .to ereste great western forest reserves, but there has been some modification of this intemperate seal, and it may be assumed that hereafter there will be less cause (or complaint and inviting basis. for fraud than m the past Mr. Pinchot bas actually been out west several times now, and is better informed than when be pic tured to himself all the timbered mountains of the far west a series of forest reserves, ;; ',, -. r Senator Heyburn's ' violent opposi tion to forest reserves, on the other ' hand, is intemperate, unreasonable and foolish. He goes to such ex tremes, be becomes so angry and of tensive, that be defeats his own pur- -ss and (Jomi sgakit bira frt thai might be sympathetically open , to calm, candid arguments against the creation of so many and so large re serres, -V'.V' ', - That the forest reserve policy is a good one few will now attempt t6 dis pute; the only . debatable questions now are: To what-extent should it be pursued? How can it best be car ried out so as to do the most good to the greatest number now and here after, to injure as few people as pot sible, and to prevent its becoming, as it has too often been in the past, a means of wholesale - land-grabbing and land' frauds? . , . ' z The : government has made some great mistakes ; in carrying out -its good intentions . in .. this matter; it plunged into it without consideration of immediate consequences, either as to injuries to individual settlers or as to possibilities ; opened up to . land fraud sharks, but the forest reserve policy in conception and intent is a I good one, is, one vital to the inter ests of the great majority of western people and of the whole country, and Senator- Heyburn's violent and viru lent attacka on it will be in vain. SAN FRANCISCO. ' i : N THE wake of San Vrancisco's great and overwhelming disas ter or April 18 last has come; a train of consequent lesser afflictions, enough tpwearout the patience of very saints and to discourage all but the most stalwart hearts. Temporar ily a good deal of the city's commerce was transferred to other ports, Svhere fractions of it will remain permasient ly. ' The cleaning up of the City; and reducing chaos, physical, financial and industrial,- to a semblance iofv order, to say nothing of plans for and the beginnings of rebuilding, , were her culean tasks. These were no more than fairly begun when strikes oo' curred, transportation was delayed, and industrial wheels were clogged in various ways. Prices of necessaries, and with v them wages, soared into figures unheard of anywhere before except in some mining -camp-orat some point far remote from centers of civilization and means of produc tion and transportation. Then came the strike of the streetcar men, com pelling the city for nearly two weeks to walk or expensively and perhaps uncomfortably ride in "whatever , ve hicles could be secured. . In brief, after beirig pretty well wiped out by fire,'an Francisoo bas had .con tinuous series of other troubles, enoughto discourage anybody but San. Franciscans.- r. -.; , , . But time and labor and money and faith will eventually bring everything around right Normal conditions will after awhile be restored, industry will resume its steady gait, prices . will gradually , fall to reasonable figures, and surely if slowly the great work ofjbuilding a better and more beau tiful San Francisco will go on. . This will take many years, but boys of today' may yet live to point back to the awful calamity of April 18, 1906, as "a blessing in disguise," V . I W'i,'' I 1 I 1 ) 1 TS f-' T': ; vv To people . whose knowledge "of California politics is a little more in timate than that, to be gained Jrom the; World almanac, 'the statement that Abe Ruef and W. F. Herria are engeged in a deadly struggle against each other is cause for convulsive laughter. Mr. Ruef is as necessary to Mr. 'Herria as gum shoes and mask and jimmy are to a burglar, and Mr. Herrin is to the political life of Mr. Ruef what water-isto a fish. Ruef and Herrin fighting! Nay, nay; the honest people of California will not get their dues' for some, time yet A citizen of Portland, on whose fsce the westering sun of life starts the perspiration as he mends, cleans and presses clothes and writes son nets, is authority for the statement that he does both with equal facility and pleasure. He is to be, congratu lated on his ability to do something so useful, ana find enjoyment in it In his lifetime Marshall Field ws reputed to be the heaviest individual taxpayer in the United States, -and now it is said that he paid Uxes OA less than one tenth the value vof bis nropertv. and vet some neovle im agine this to be a squsre-deajunttx The Proctor marble quarry has elected the senator's son governor, but by a plurality , so small that it indicates that Vermont Republican ism is tired of being considered, part of the family's-business assets." ' It Js snnounced that early; next month President Roosevelt is going to make a few speeches He-rnust be fairly suffering to do so; he has been unprecedented quiet this sum mer, - ! '- : . , - There it no gnmihoe method in Bryan's style pf campaigning. ,-c ' We bad every confidence in"the last cashiec wha( looted the bank. A Little Out THINGS PRINTED TO v-t. "j Whaler Pluck. t3 4 A'wimlar from Nantucket town "7T" He hd tha wort o luck; H Mllad far south around the Born, But not whale he struck. , y- Tkree rr crulaad, north, eest and Prom sole te torrid son. ' . , And when ha laid his course for borne tie d neither oil nor bona. . Tat m he salted around Brant Point ". Ha aat hla pennant hlcb, ' And whan ha tied up te the wharf , ' ,He luatlljr did eryi f - ( r We've come home elean as we want out .And wa didn't ralee whale, An' we aJn't sot a bar! 9' lie. ' ' .But we've had a damned rine au." - i 'f,h V'- Shorteninf. ; Vv-' i Boapr water, -'.the same as ell. -Will calm the wavea. . : . v 1 In Germany suicides among - school children era sadly frequent. - . Tea la so immoderately uaea in Ire land that it often causes Insanity. China's national hyras U so Ions that It takes four hours to render lfc ,, statistics snow that 4S par eent or EbiKlish-speaklnc man use oaths habit ually : ....:.-. ., Farmers, by emnar their cows ' hat water, may increase the yield of milk by one-third. , . . The Scots, whoso flower la the thistle. have for their Instrument the batplpo. A harsh, uaoouth people. - , Franco, ute land or uo my. has sor Its Instrument the French horn. Spain's instrument la the ' srultar. Italy's is the mandolin, Wales and Ire land share the - narp. between. them. China, baa the tom-tom. ' Oermany has the cornet. America has tho banjo, A Meaning f "Bridge. The word brldxe Is a, eorruptioa of the word ttrlteh. which was tho name by which : brldse whlat . wea f lrat known. The first work in Knrllsh deecrlblnf the ramo was entitled "Bin too. or Russian WhlstSj-Jaaaai. tn his . "Playlnr rds and Gamins," tells us that it was a pamphlet of only four pares, and no place of printing or publication was mentioned. It sum out In HIS. From the title of thla work wo aot tho name "blritch whist," -and , soon afterward "bridge whist," until now we .call It -bridge." As "to tho met nice of the Word, several persona who. played , the say the directors. A little less con fidence and something' of the work for which the directors get paid would save ' depositors' money ; and .Veep cashiers honest Soma children having - a loaded shotgun "to "play with, a 3-year-old among them was killed, whic,h will cause its parents sorrow, of course but certainly -should, cause them no surprise ',' , :. i If Palma is going to 'put down that revolution, as he has professed that he could and would, it seems as if if were high time he was getting a visible move on toward doing scv Frdnv the stories one reads' one is forced to the conclusion ; that Mr. Hearst baa sought to convince of the necessity of his nomination for presi dent everybody Jbut the people. ,"". 'It is really difficult to believe that Mr.- Harriman, controlling 60 per cent of the stock of a concern, could be bunkoed by any transaction respect ing, if -'r-v-:;':1 :T:-r::.t" i,7 Jeif Davis will be the next sen ator rom Arkansas, and there is . a very small prospect that as such ne will, be' either useful or ornamental ; The Sheridan . a total wreck, the-l Boston nearly wrecked; which vessel of the navy will make the usual trio of victims? t ; '.v:v Y tetters J...' ' . .'Bryan and the Yoopla,.' ; Medford, Or.. Sept... To the Editor of The Journal The Oregonlaa of Au gust 19. la its leading editorial, says In part: . - .., "Mr. Bryan returns to his native land a man who has stood before kings. - Oraat nobles hav welcomed hla to their pal aces;' great scholars have admitted him to the shrines of thair learned re searches; great thinkers have exchanged thoughts with him. He has atudled the Institutions of Europe and drawn from their merits and defects leaaona which ha will heseaftar expound to his coun trymen. He has tried and . condemned the .ancient civilisation or China, - ho has contemplated the immemorial aoe rows of India and pondered the silent mystery of the - pyramids 'and ' the sphinx. . . . He returns to be met with a greeting eucn aa nations reserve for their heroes, and saviors. - The me tropolis of America makes holiday to welcome the great oommontr te his na tive land." i . ; . ' -- 1 ' According to press dispatches. Bryan was greeted at Madison Square Garden by 20.000 people, composed largely, of distinguished persons from all parts of the United .States, and when he spoke "applause greeted hla . ovary 1 aentenoe, and his first appearance ' called forth pandemonium which .shook the building for eight minutes." Also, It Is said. "outside tho garden hundreds ' of thou sands blocked the streets for hours watt' lag to catch a glimpse of the Mebraa- It will also be recalled that the Inter parliamentary union, which was com posed of great men from all the leading nations of (he world, listened with great respect to Mr. Bryan, who was but aa tavtted visitor, and that this same body unanimously adopted his noted arbitra tion resolution. Millions of people have read -his letters descriptive of his trip around tho world, and ho has twloe re ceived ' tho -greatest popular vote - for president of the nation ever aoeof ded a Dcmoorat, although some Democrats have been-sleeted to that office. Tat toward the wlndup of this same editorial the erudite editor of the Ore smUas aarst "Hrt Brrea baa lUKe ap- of 'the Common READ 'WHILE YOU WAIT. game long; before this work was pub' lianed have cemmunloated to-tba- tu flay Review their experiences, among which they mention that the word blrltch" meant "no trumps," . v. . ..i-L Honor to a Woman. A remarkable' epitaph' la en a tomb stone in Brighton churchyard In &na land. It reads: "In memory of Phoebe Heaael. 'who waa born at Stepney In the year 1711. fihe served for many1 year aa private aoiaier in tne u;n regi ment of foot in different parte of Eh). rope, and In the year 174S fought under the command of the Duke or Cumber land at the battle of Fontenoy, where aha received a bayonet' wound In her arm.' Her long lite, whloh commenced In the time of 3ueen Anne, extended to ma reign or George iv.br whose am- nlf icence aha received comfort and sup port in her latter vaara. She died at Brighton, where she had tons resided. uecemper 11, 1111. aged IDS years." . Parish Cerk'a Tombstone, ; ' -': ', From tho Indon Tribune. In- connection with a tombatona in Eocleeail (Torks) churchyard, on which la inscribed the word. "Over," story la 101 a weii worth recording. ' Tho grave la that of aa eld oariah dark ones connected with the church, who waa also an ardent cricketer and generally officiated aa umpire for the village team. One hot Sunday morning, while the clergyman waa delivering hla sermon, tne Old clerk, who aat at hla desk at the foot of tho pulpit, went to sleep. The sermon having come to an and, every one waited for the clerk to say -Amen!" but, waking up at that mo ment and having evidently been dream. lng of tho match of the-preceding day, he bawled out la his ; loudest tones, weri-, , . ,. ; , ,-....'. '" f . '.! . '.!', :'V t ' ,'. .; .Baby, ' :', :J '' ; " From the Philadelphia Press. '. Father'a rival In mother's love. A-orylng-wvlI you only aggravate by putung down. - , i, A native of au countries, who sneaks tne language, or none. a. mite of a thing that reaulrea a migiy lot of attention. .'-.- The maglo span by which the rods iraaaiorm e nouso into a homo. A pleasure to two, ta nuisance to every oiner oooy ana a necessity to the world. - A mlnUtnr Atlas that bears the whole world of wedded Joys and cares on its little shoulders. , , . . parent power to think to the purpose oa social question . His remedies ara far fetched and Impractical. - His expedients aavor..ofauperfiolaUty, The social strains- and excesses which may rend the world asunder In the next decade or two seem to -him mere surface troubles which. can . be remedied by an orotund phrase. Nothing .tUuatratea the eaaen tlal ahalloweesa of Mr. Bryan's reason ing better than what ho has to say about trusts. ... Mr.' Bryan Is a bread pill which the ouaeka lq c antral of the Demooratlo party wish to admin ister to tha country to quiet He reat lessnsas." -- : . ' . ., The editor of the Ore r on fan la 'rlsht as usual) he Is 4 great thinker and rea. sonsr. . mk Bryan la essentially, shal low, merely a bread pill. - Every person who Is entertained or edified by a shal low and Impractical aaan must jf neces sity be himself wanting in intellect; therefore the kings, nobles, great schol ars" and great thinkers who have wel comed Mr.' Bryan and "exchanged thoughts" with him are, a lot of Imbe ofes. And what shall be said of thoae degenerate European Institutions which Mr. Bryan bas atudled, alnoa he has re turned "to expound to his own country men" such shallow and superficial IdaasT ABd the representatives of the six great eat nations of the earth composing the Interparliamentary anion must be fools or they would not have' been Influenced by Mr. Bryan's apeeeh. ' And tho hun dreds of thousands of people who at "Ui metropolis or America" greeted Mr. Bryan In a manner "such as nations re serve for their heroes and saviors" were evidently an aggregation of .howling a pea. . What . consummate, awe-struck as sea the American, voters are, anyway! .. .... v.. :-. ..PHIBBO. feritisb Poltcy-Holdere Left from tha London MaiL j The report of ' the select : committee of, the house of lords on foreign Insur ance companies appeared .oa Saturday and la a very disappointing document, since the members of the committee appear to have looked at the Issue be fore thorn only from tho Insurance com pany director's point of view and not from the policy-holder's standpoint - la commenting upon the American insurance scandals, soma months-ago, we drew attention to the need of In creasing the amount whloh foreign com panies , should bo required to deposit or Invest In England aa a security for tne snuaa poiioy-noiaer. Both Oer many and France insist that any for eign company - which doea business In German or French territory shall Invest aa amount proportionate to tha policies issued in uerman or French aecorltlea. This is a bualneaallke regulation and one which should certainly be enforced la England, especially now ' that we know the manner In which ' the policy holders' Interests have been disregarded by certain of the' American companies te' the past. - - .';-. : ' The lords' ' committee proaoanoea against such a scheme on the' ground that It might expoae British Insurance companies doing business abroad to- re taliatory treatment This la not a' very convincing argument, nor is It clear why England should not take those measures to protect her subjects whloh have been adopted by foreign govern ments. The eo remittee, however, does recommend skat the deposit of 410,000, which foreign insurance companies as well as British have now to make with tho accountant-general, -should not be allowed to be .withdrawn, and that fuller account snouia ne furnished to the government by foreign oompanles. For such small mercies we must be grate ful, ,but it would be wise and politic to require foreign companiea to invest in England up to If or 10 per cent of the amount oc, premiums annually re ceived. . - , Simplon Subway la Ventilated. From the' SO Louis Poet-Dispatch. For seven years work on what may well be considered one of the greateet trlunfphe of. mod era engineering has been eerrlad oa unceasingly. The fa mous Simplon tunnel is now sn accom plished fact - The work has eoat over lS.SOO.SOO, One terminus of the tunnel la at Brieg, In the Shone valley, and the ether as leelle. Is Italy. It consists of .two tunnels, only one of whloh will at present be used for trains, the second serving the purpose 'of a - ventilating shaft through which 1.100 cublo feet of air can be passed every second, bring ing the temperature down te II degrees laorenheit, . - r--- ' , A Little N onsense A Leg Worth Mora' Than a Man, Jesse James, tb noted outlaw's son. Is, at tha age of 10, one of the moat talented and respected lawyers or Kt aaa City. : . In a claims case that he recently-won, Mr. James told aa amusing story. ' "There was a woman," he aald, "whose huaband waa killed In a railway accident. The railroad, to avoid ault gave her 16.000 damages, - "Tha sum satisfied the woman.- but a month or two afterward, taking Up-a newspaper, aha read about a man who hod lost hla leg in tho same accident and behold, thla man' waa given by the company damages te the amount - of "It ' made : the woman mad. She hastened at once to the ' office of the railway's claim adjuster. She said bit- terly " . ' - - - - . " 'How is this? . Hsre you give a man I7.I0S for the loss of hla leg, while you only gave me 18,000 for the loss of my husband.' : '"The claim -adjuster ad lied amiably and said la a soothing voice: -Maoam, tne reason is quite piain. The fT. toe won't provide the poor man with a new leg, whereas with your tS.000 you can easily get a new hus band, and perhaps a better one.' "'. Warren and Beveridge.. . Vs Senator Warren of Wyoming was pleading with tears In hs eyes for the cow during the closing 1 hours of the senate. Tha question of sending the agricultural appropriation bill with the meat Inspection amendment to confer ence waa being discussed, and Warren put In a few words for the cattlemen, says the Sen Francisoo CalL - - Senator Beveridge, anxious to get the bill to conference, was trying to hurry Warren along. He aaked Warren to say something about putting labels. OU the cans .packed by the packers. ' Uut, said warren, the senator in sist that I shall hurry through. Will the senator withdraw his Intimation that I shall hurry T" . .- - , ,.- 1 believe that I shall stick to my intimation," Beveridge replied. "" l -Then. said -Warren." "I win "comply ment him and I wlll say thatI hav the utmost confldenoe In the senator's ability to Yush the can' and to bring In the proper measure wherewith we can find . both can and contsata Ho can "rush the can' as he pleases and Z will undertake to follow him." : 1;:: A . Hard Knock. - - -R. C. Seaver," the r famous - tennis champion, described at a dinner in Bos ton a ma ten wherein, navmg been in bad form, ho was beaten by a poor player. 4-; - ";. "When I saw . myself, defeated,"- aald Mr. Seaver,-"Iwas much taken aback, and' when my opponent flushed . with vlotory, laughed In my face tauntingly. confess that I wss mad. - - "I was as 'mad as a stock broker at my acquaintance whom a tramp called on the other day. .. , '.v Y Boaa,' said tho tramp;. 'ray clothes Is fair fallln' off my bactfTou haven't got such a thing as a pair f , old pants you might give me, hovs . you' "No.', said the broker. haughtily, .1 don't keep my wardrobe In my office.' " 'Where do you live, thenT said the tramp. Til take your address and call In the morning for that, old pair you've got on.'- ; .' '." -' ..i.." 'Helping in Church. A Scottish-parish minister met the laird's gamekeeper one day. and said to him. ..'"Why is It. Davidson, that I never see you In church r ' "Well, sir," replied Davidson, "I don t want to hurt "the attendance." -' -- -r "Hurt the attendance? , What do you mean?" aaked the minister. In surprise "Well, you sea. sir, replied the game keeper, "there are about a doaen men In the parish that go to enurcn wnen I'm not there, and would. go poaching If I wentito church." 'V Medical Uaea of Many Fruits. That fruit la a wholesome article of diet Is, of course, a . generally accepted fact, but the Important place which It takes through th medicinal eTrect it exerts upon the entire system has only recently becom well known. Th me chanical effect ta net direct, but the fruit encourages the natural functions by which the several remedial processes which they aid are brought about. - Tha fruits which come under th head of laxative are the -orange, figs, tama rinds, prunes, mulberries, dates, nec tarines and pluma Th astringents. pomegranates, cranberries, blackberries, sumach berries, dewberries, raspberries, barberries, quinces, pears, wild cherries and mediate. The diuretic ara goose berries, red and white currants, pump kins and melons, j Lemons, lime and apple are stomach sedatives. Taken In the morning early aa orange acts very decidedly as a laxative, somatlmea to a purgative, and may be generally railed on. Pomegranates are very astringent and relieve sor throat sad uvula The oark 01 tne root, in tne form of a deooctlon, Is a good anthel mintic Firs, spilt open, form an ex cellent poultice for bolls and small ab eesses." 'Strawberries aad lemons, lo cally applied, . are of some service in the removal of tartar from the teeth. : Annies are correctives useful In nau sea, and even seasickness. Thsy Imme diately relieve the nausea due to amok lng. Bitter almonds contain hydae eyanlo add, and are useful In a simple cough; but they frequently produce a sort of nettle -rash. - Th persimmon is palatable when' rip, but th green fruit la highly- astringent, containing mucn tannin, , v r'rr .,-."'.".' '.. --iWTZ . ' Frostbitten In August ' '.'".(. Iv" From the Denver Republican. , v One of the moat amesleg experiences that haa ever befallen an eastern man In Colorado befell C. H. Oraham of Chi cago, Sunday, oa the vtop of the conti nental divide n th Moffat road, whan he had his feet frostbitten after hsvrng spent two and a half hours walking around on th bug drifts of perpetual snow. -" . ' ' Mr. Oraham and a f rlend ' Douglas Budd, a passsnger conductor running out of Des Moines, Iowa, went to the crest of the divide on the morning train and stopped off at Corona, where there la aa Intermission of tw and a .half hour before th train back t Denver arrives. ------1 - f. -. . - - .The two men were greatly Interested In the snow at'tha top of the divide and spent the-entlre time shoveling It about to ascertain th depth of th drift. Mr. Budd decided after apendlng an hour On the snow that h was getting eold feet, and went to th station, but Mr. Graham, persevered la the work of Investigation. He wore, low shoes, and as a result of his perambulation, over the snow his feet and lower limbs were thoroughly ehllled. V. After he got on the trsln he was at tacked" with excruciating pains In bis legs, afld' on arriving In Denver went to the office 0' Dr. H. H. Martin. In the Cooper block, wca pronounced his case on of Troetmte and appiiea tne tomary remsdlea, . . r- - - v. 09 xcf TIMELY TOPICS SMALL CHANCX C .1 Tha is a back "numbsr now," until his trial. e e 'Streetcar conductors surely earn-all they get' ' . e e : Evidently Purer would like to change nis hotel. ettensland has dancad; now let! him pay- the fiddler. - . ... -" s. .- Raise so many good apples that they will oe cheaper. ' ' : . ... :. '-. sre r ueer intimates that he lan t a sure standpatter. O welt" the f Democrats would hav had a rw anyway. , -IS v. .. . ' The show of Salem next week will be worth going to see, . There Is room at the top, but the wind blowe strong there. " t-- ... ; ,- . -er a-' i. Now Bryan can eat roasting ears and drink cream from th Jersey cow. . . ,,V' ' ' :' A man must be hard up for a Job who wants to be a policemen in Bussts, Thoae Rainier bank robbers should be fined, for not observing Labor day. ' ; ,';i t-. -r ' e : .V( '.., Teddy seems disposed . t . hedge a little on his speJling referm splurge That naval ' review is another thing that we wouldq'twalk ver.LOOt.mllea to see. . - . If It doesn't rain next week a great many Oregon people will be happily It haa often been demonstrated that a man can talx too much and too long or nia owa gooo. A good many bank examiners 'don't direct and ' some bank examiners don't know how to examine, ;- .- - r ' W. V? V a-.' . '4: ,- h-.t Oans may he Nelson's superior as a pugilist, but he must not expect , any recognition .of social equality. Vice-President Fairbanks Is becoming qulU a "mixer.' , He may need all the votes he can get, and even mora. ' ' - . v, e. e .-; '.. -' t t Oay Parse la' about the Ust nlaeeHn the world In which one would have ex pected to see a Sunday law enforced. .'..: '' ' e e '. '; .;' - Boy burglars, highwaymen and' mur derers are becoming alarmingly numer ous. - What. If anything, can be done about kt e - A man who never eaa of win change his mind la about a stand-off for oaa who changes his mind whenever be hears a new suggestion. ,.'. . . . . . W live lit hopes of seeing them yet. Those alectrlo roads up the Willamette; Or, . aoeent corrected, . some , will say If road aren't soon built upth valley - - vtruiamena , Tte Smile TLat BTJQHrCANDERSOlUAyNEV . . , . , . fOopyright, ISO, by W. E. BearsL) -" We hav heard and read much rela tive to th smile that won't com off. ' - But hav you ever aeon the man with the em He that wouldn't stay onT . The man who has th 'smile Ilk th old wolf la Little Red Riding HoodT The smile that I th result of antici pating the repast that shall hav been enjoyed when L1U1 Red Riding Hood la all eaten up? ' - - . - Sometimes you see th- smile that won't stay on on the face of a beggar on the street who, when asking you for a dim, has a blessing ready If you give and a curs If you don't happen to give a coin . of the republic , Into , the out stretched hand.' . .'i; :: Sometimes yea sed It . when som feller - - with a get-rloh-qulck-scheme comes around .and you fall to nibble at the seductive promises that .he has to snake,. ' ; ' "'1. i'..-'.- .t Sometime you see It, when, after a partloularry fine dinner, and you hav "tipped", th welter liberally, and than as yon turn away you hear 'htm say: "Mr. E. Z. Marque, up la SI. has turned a half dollar my way." -. - . - Sometime you see It an the face 'of som long-faced, bewhlakered old hip poorite who has made his money shav ing on notes, renting his property for Immoral purposes, compelling widows to disgorge th last penny oa th mort gage and interest. Tou so th smile that won't stay on when . In prayer meeting he "thank God that he la aot as other men are." ' And ' down deep in your heart you say, "Thank God all other men are not as he la" :. Th smll that won't stay on usually Is fastened to a faoa that Is made to go with the heart of a grouoh, the con science of an India rubber man'a'nd the brain that is cheered only by the ellnk, chink of dollars dropping Into hi cof fers, ground out In the mm of oppres sion and rounded in th mold of deceit It's a good thlrfg for men living in this busy workaday world that the ma jority of "them ar blessed With that euaUsT' whloh the phreaoioglsts eall "ability to read human nature." Other wise the smile that won't stay en would be as readily taken to warm the cockles of th heart aa the emrle that won't come off.-' - '' ' ' , v , .. . " . W love the man who, ta the exuber ance of good nature levee everybody. We despise themaa who wears th smll of th hypoorlt simply for ths sake of gain.. i The Boy and the Bears. z':i '-' Pistol River Correspondence t Gold . -.'. .. Beach Globe..,. . ... . ,-. ': Quite an excltemeatat Davidson pfaoe the ether evening while eating sapper the little boy started te the barn .for his sorse . to go and get the cows, all of a sudden he came a puffin and blow ing to the door and opened It- and said oh X. mamma I beard something la the bushes th old bear Jumped up and grabed the first thing that she got bsi hand on It waa a gun and the big cub grabed a butcher knife, and the eub grabed a . twenty two away went fol lowing the little boy th old bear kept aaylng where I It and th big eub had Ita butcher knife drawn ready to sub the -animal so th ether eub held It twenty two ready to shoot It eould not of shot that animal If It had been ready J te eaten, has tog aaa aaa mUUas te ";;'v Monmouth is oiling its streets, - ' ' - Many, vicious hobos hav- congregated In Drain. ... . , ----. v '.-,-; e . e - . .' '. '. ... : '. .The feasle crop In Clackamas county , is also goodj , ,'., ' .', e ' Dry-land farming becomes more' suc cessful every year. -, -.,::- v,- , .: e""e ; A lemon growing on a tree near Ma- -MlaavUle meaaurea lttxl3H Inche,, - . ... e .e.,, . An average of four carloads a day of prunes are being shipped from Mlltoa, ' ...';'-' ' e": e -ji ....: ( Great quantities of fruit will go te waat ir various parts of western Ore- 'i' ' ' . ; ' e - a -f .: . . A good deal of real estate in Hood River and the adjacent valley Is Chang-' lng hands, ' -. '," : .' a.e '.-".,:-' r'-'.; , -, , A Douglas eounty 1-year-old chad ranbarerooted Into hot ashes and ' burned off some of Its toes. , .'. I.-,.'. ',,'. :-.. .e- ..1 ; V- .' .' V. .' " The trouble with a good many men Is thst thsy want to work somebody, . Instead of working for somebody. .'..;' 5 is .v'.-.-','.-; t; 1 '' V'. rC For many years af arm on th foot hill aaat of Milton has averaged over " so ousneis or wheat an acres thle year -II bushels. : '-..'.' j. v , A farmer near Springwater In Clacka. mas eounty harvested IT bushels of . . wheat an acre. end. a neighbor II bush- . ' els of oat an acre.-..., . ; , - The people who -are pleading for wormy apples for the poor are prob ably those who are too lasy or stingy vt spray ineir. tree. . .....,.'. M. C Wire, a methodiat minister, a son of the earn calling, and two other live Wires. . kHjed U deer In - the Cow Creek canyon country. . ::j..B ";.TTiJ.-.,i,-,B:.. A eat died In Milton 'that had Uved with a family for Itryeara, and was a full grown animal and In poaaeealoa of : th premises when bought by th pre. - ent owners. , , . . j .,.., ..-...,.,.: Th Vale Orlano says: -rs "Business men who do not advertise and oltieena s who are not subscribers for their home psper will hereafter be Ignored In our columns. rhyr-dead,' anyhow."--'; " A " Crook countr ' "girl ' "paddled a' neighbor boy of IS, whoae father had her arrested Tor assault and battery. -Th Justice- fined her l and : at once remitted the Ana It's not easy for a man to punish a sweet slxteener. ,? ;'.';..- - ; e. e. -tT j--..-. When at Provolt, , writes a oorre- spondent of Grants Pasa Courier; look .- at the beautiful green- flelde of waving alfalfa and clover and - the, thandln -. stalks at corn and the sparkling, rippling ; water running to and fro. And 1 the strong and lofty farmers of the nation -we must oall to protect the soil : from. .' destruction. So now, let u John So-, gether aa one great mighty power and tight the peat rebellion. . : , -, -j . Won't Stay On " We honor th man who can trudae through ' life" with th load 'of a sick ' wife, deformed children and business misfortune on his heart, aad yet have a Good Samaritan smll -for other worse off than himself. ' , . ' . , - -, Ws have no respect for the man who smiles only when gold I being heaped : to. himself, or whsn other hearts are ' ta trouble and sorrow., -. ,.f r - . ,' W . honor the man V who eaa ' smile . when tha winds of misfortune hav .' driven th bark of his hope Into the -stralu of adversity, aad who. through , all, sen hope for the day when "the ' south winds will blow softly and bring him to bis desired haven." .. . ' We do not ear to be seen walking down street with the man who rejoices that a San Francisoo disaster will .. enable him to make money. out of th ' unfortunate victim In , the strickeal Oltr.-')T '"ir r-;-,-.,-;;' 1.. ; ...v Veritable ghouls, preying In the grave- yard, of dead hopes, are the majority of men wh smile at another's adversity.- -la the cold, gray ashes of every dead hop there may always be found a trace " of th gold that lured th unfortunate , Victim of. dead hope to hla untimely grave, and these Inhuman looters of ' dead hopes rejoice and smll only when v . they v find the gold that the .other missed. These ar ith men who hav - . th smile that won't stay on, . ' Ton have read of the murdering gaisi , rotlng bands that Infested Italy In the ' -early part of th nineteenth century, -How thsy seised their vlotlm from be hind and strangled him to death. Not better ar th garroter of modern llf. . who for th sake of adding gold ta their ill-gotten store rob widows and orphans, - and with unholy Joy smile at the moan ( ' and the groan of those they have robbed ' ' and betrayed. Th. smll that won't ' tay ea Is born tin a 'Corrupt heart, nourished by deceit and fed by th bread of satisfaction, baked Jn the ovens . et robbery, murder and Ilea Beware of th man with th smll that won't stay-on- It may appear brilliant and " seductive, but It Is the brilliancy of the lurid flames of th pit at which Ms -soul Is warmed, and Its seductiveness Is the seductiveness of th leech that Is , continually crying, "Give, give, giver i.i' Avoid 'as you would ' a pestilence, - a viper, the maa Who smiles only at th , victory of , evil, th tear of tha widow ahd the bitter cry of th children whoa life he ha blasted. v ' shoot In the twenty tw she was scared so bad that eh oouldn,t hav shot If she wanted to, so tha; llttl boy aald see It and th old bear said where iu up there th little boy kept' saying so the old bear saw It at last and found out that It was a hog rooting all that you eould see of the bog . was Ita tall and whsn tha eld bear found that It was a hog she Just began to laugh and laugh and than the other two cubs be gan, to laugh th llttl boy said mamma I thought a panther. ' ,..... The old bear and her big cub was dlglng potatoes and yeuoug-4ifcear ' th eld bear growl and the .aue.iuid say don't growl so for I am srwful tired so' ant, X the. old bear would say they kept on dlgmg potatoes till they, dug foar -big sacks of potatoes how Is that tor the old bear and the eubs foe te da ta one day, ...-. ., ,,--., ;