Editorial Page of The Journal THE JOURNAL am mopDst Mgwerartn. C JAOMOW mMtr raw mim ""vlte;1 every lU-dar mnrnlri. at TU Journal BolW- OreVeT at tka aotatnet at PertUad. Oweno. to liwinMra ibranck la walla ' cUh sailer. TELEPHONES. Sltnrlal Imi. aaloeea Offlw Mull. : Mala 300 roRsioN iDrnmtma BBPiaTar.NT.aTivn Vrerland BMjsala Spertel Adrerilalni invr 160 Naaaan treat. Ntw ora; Trlbua BslM ln(. (hlcafo. Secrlplk Term by mall to any addn Sb the tailed States. Canada or Meileo. DAILY. OB year fA.no 1 One month I SUNDAY. ae rear 41.00 I One month I DAILY AND SUNDAY. Oae rear fT.Oa One month. f True is the observation of Confucius, that we take greater pains to persuade oth ers that we are happy than endeavoring to think so our selves. Goldsmith. A LESSON OF THE STRIKE. AN ECONOMIC PACT that if of considerable importance to Portland has been made conspicuous by the results of the grainhandlers' strike. It is that this city can handle wheat for export with more facility and lower net cost than the work can be done at any port on the sound, and still pay 40 cents an hoar to grainhandlers, while their wages on the sound are but 30 cents. Than this showing nothing could be more direct and convincing of Port land's superiority as a port. The handling of grain over a dock Is like any other process requiring machinery largely a question of . mrrhaniral equipment There are other conditions, as convenience of location, switching, charges, and ar rangement of transportation facilities A Portland exporter who operates his own dock is authority for the state ment that payment of the increased wage to the grainhandlers adds but one and a half cents per ton to his cost of handling the wheat. This amount if a bagatelle, and will, he says, be absorbed by the dock, so that its effect will not be felt either by the shipper or the farmer. It fol lows that the only injury inflicted on Portland by the grainhandlers' troubles, has been the temporary Di version to sound ports of large ship ments of wheat that should and would have come to Portland for ex port. As to the grsinhandlers, their working season averages 200 days, and It 40 cents an hour they will earn $800 a year. The existence of a "grain ring" that dominates the export trade and controls Portland and sound dock has often been charged by Independ ent shippers and warehouse men. They say they have in time past been subjected to oppressive conditions. They were compelled to sell their ex port grain to members of the so called "ring," 0r leave it in their warehouses, as they were unable to secure independent facilities on the sound for cleaning, grading and stor ing the wheat How much ground there has been for these charges still remains to be proven, but certain fea tures of the present strike trouble point strongly to a confirmation. It appears indisputable that the con trolling factors in Pacific northwest grain trade dominate the dockage on the sound as well as on the Wil lamette river. It is a matter almost of indifference to them whether they export the grain from one or the other port Naturally, they favor the point of least resistance, and since ' the Portland grainhandlers have kicked up a muss, the men who are in control of the bulk of wheat ship ment are sending it to the sound. How long this diversion will con tinue is a matter of speculation. The stream may turn from the sound to Portland any day, and next week this city may be handling practically all export wheat that has remained in the interior warehouses or in transit. Should the sound grainhandlers, who are now going out tie up all dock age facilities at Tacoma and Seattle, Portland will again have a decided advantage. With one of this port's best wheat docks already opened, measures may be taken to provide more facilities, snd while the war ring elements are fighting oiu the grainhandlers' controversy on the sound, Portland will be shipping the wheat. The O. R. k N. company can, of course, be relied upon to as sist in every way possible to bring about this result, for it gets the haul 4) on every ton "of wheat that comes from eastern Washington and Ore gon to Portland, excepting the ton nags that passes over the Celilo port - age road. But aside from these transitory ' ' conditions, the time is near when the absolute supremacy of the Columbia rtver as a gram port will be demon strated and aatahUshad tor all time With the opening of the north bank line by the Hill companies, and com pletion of the jetty. Portland's un natural conditions that now influence traffic will disappear; no longer will the Hill roads fight for the doubtful favor of being permitted to lift the tonnage of the inland empire over the Cascade mountains to the sound. The products of s region comprising 250,000 square miles will follow the water- grade. THE HAPPY FAMILY PLATT. AS BETWEEN Senator Piatt and his wife there is, from all accounts, little margin for choice. That he is disreputable and debauched in private life as well ss in public life, ' and is devoid of moral principles in domestic as well as polit ical relations, may be easily believed. A man who for the better part of half a century has used what talents he had and during much of that time a high public station, merely to graft off the public, to wrong the people who honored him, to serve uncon scionable and extortionate corpora tions in violation of his oath of of fice and his plain duty, is none too good to practice conjugal infidelities or become morally delinquent to any extent short of subjecting himself to criminal prosecution and punish ment And if Mae Wood's story be true, and Whoever or whatever she is she is quite as credible as he, old Piatt ought to be behind prison bars instead of disgracing a seat in the senate. But let us not weep over the woes of Mrs. Piatt. It is not the amorous antics of the senile Lothario that prick the sensitive soul of her, but his temerity in exposing her own al leged marital misdoings and his craftiness in making arrangements whereby she will not get hi's money when he does the country the favor of departing this life. It is the mil lion that the comparatively young and volubly vixenish dame is jealous of, not the withered old human hulk she yoked.. herself with from wholly mercenary and selfish motives. Be ing a senator, he could gite her so cial standing. He was not very rich, bm had a million or so, which he probably promised her at his death, and she calculated that he could not live long. "Ha wanted a handsome woman," she says, "and he's got to pay for me" besides letting me have my own diversions, from slapping him to smiling on a lusty coachman In such a case disgust of decent peo ple balances the scales. Piatt got no more than he deserved in the hand some shrew, and if he con deprive her of his money at his death he will not treat her amiss. A DEMOCRATIC TEST. I If THE LEADTNO IWclVTn the current issue of Mr.. Bryan's Commoner, he repeats, substan tially, what he said in his attack on Mr. Sullivan of Illinois, saying: The Democratic candidate and the Democratic orgftn.ls.iUon must stand out boldly against corporate domination In oolitic. No man who Is financially connected with a corporation that 1 seeking privilege OUfht to art a a member of si polltloal organisation, because be oannot represent hi corporation nd the people at the same time. He can not serve the party while he Is seeking to promote the financial Interests of the corporation with which he is con nected. This may be accepted1 a axiomatic. It is the statement of an old-fashioned truth which none can dispute. It is imply a paraphrase otthe Bible decla ration that "He man con serve two mas ter." Upon wo almple a proposition there should be no dispute. Ah, is Senator Bailey sitting up and taking notice? And are a good many other professed Democrats to whom these remarks apply? Mr. Hughes, Republican candidate for governor of New York, while eulogizing President Roosevelt as the great Republican leader, does him self credit by not trying to ride into office on Roosevelt's coattails. He doesn't claim that the president is the issue, or that the Republican state ticket must be elected in order to support him, as has been done by other Republican candidates through out the country, but says that state issues are paramount and it is on them the election should turn. But ' issues" are badly mixed in New York, about the only one to get head or tail of being Hearst .Smator Piatt, in his suit for di vorce, will try to show that when he married he was not in fill possession of his senses. A confession of this sort, while efficacious in securing a separation from his wife, will in no way affect his standing as a leading member of the United States senate. Some periodicals are pitching into certain patent medicines because they contain alcohol. But this - is adver tising them, for alcohol just suits the average patent medicine consumer. The Salem Journal, whose accom plished editor has one eye on the I A Little Out THINGS PRINTED TO MAD WHILE YOU WATT. Where the Good Times Stay. I know d place Whar de good time stay: Look out. Trouble! Belter alt out de way! Dar.de winter bloom Lek de rose In May: Look out. Trouble! Better git out de wayl Hear de trumpet WowT f8f Hear de bras ban' playT Better ait out de way! Atlanta Constitution. Fifteenth Century Manners. The antiquary took down a small, fat volume, vellum-bound, with a brags clasp. "This is a -Book of Manner,'" he said. "It was printed In 1417. Here are a few extract." And he read: "Do not gnaw a bone, like a dog, nor suck the marrow out of a bona. "In peeling a pear, begin at the atalk; bult with an apple, begin at the top. "Do' not wipe the hand on the clotbee, nor suek them, but use the cloth. "When you drink, lift the oup in both hands; you mut not drink with one hand like a wagoner when he is greae las hi cartwheel. "Wipe your none end mouth when you heve drunk, and do not cough Into the cup. "Do not eat an apple all alone, but cut It in two, and give a neighbor a piece. "Do net us tyour own knife to -cut your meat If the host has set a knife of hi own at your place. "Do not spread butter on bread with your thumb." Odd Items From. Everywhere. Four million palm leaf hats are ex ported annually from Malaga, Spain, to New York. Alfred W. Norton, who has the dis tinction of being the oldest employe In term of service of any In the mill at Huntington, Was allowed a day off the other day at full pay, and might have taken more If he had wished, In order to celebrate, as It waa, September It, IMS, that he came from England to this country and entered the employ of Chapin a Gould, where he bos passed the last 40 years of his life. Swedish school children, under the guidance of their teachers, annually plant about 400.000 trees. An eagle measuring four feet from tip to tip swooped down on a clam bake being held at Highland lake, near Win ated. Connecticut, and sailed away with a lobster In It talon. The lobsters were in a pan ready to be put on the two, While the eegle waa devouring It prey In a tree a half mile away a shot ended Its life. With Kane, Nebraska and Okla homa producing 171,000,000 bushels of wheat this year, an enormoua flood of grain will pa through the Kansas City gateway. Ten million bushels will be used In Kansas City mills, the rest will be shipped out It Is estimated that 40, Q00 cars will pa through Kansas City. An Interesting incident connected with the Maine election was the ap pearance at the poll of Oreenleaf Far son of Ground Nut hill. It was the first time he has cost a vote since 18(4, when he voted for Abraham Lincoln. He ha lived a life of contented seclu sion. In Athen, Georgia, there la an oak collectorship and both ears to the ground, says that an aspirant for of fice should have something besides whiskers. We should like to hear from Colonel J. Ham Lewis on the subject, as the whiskerless gentleman from Salem may be prejudiced. In rushing the United States hos pital corps to the scene of his peace ful intervention, Mr. Roosevelt re lieves the situation and gives the lovers of levity S chance to smile grimly.' Mr. Roosevelt, in his speech at Harrisburg, wanly declined to discuss new and important subjects like re formed spelling, and stuck limpet to-rockwise to the old story: "If you don't vote for the Republican party the Democratic goblins'U get you." S. A. D. Puter says he "never would have gained the nerve to write a book if he bad not got into jail." This proves that he has the courage of his conviction. With the first sting of frost in the air the dispatches bring stories of miners who will never have a chance to learn better than light the fires with gisnt powder. Whenever you hear rich old men rail at their beautiful young wives, if you listen patiently you will catch the echo of a wail from New York: "Me, too." That effusion of George C. Brownell on the subject of Senator Hedges would sound sadly sweet set to the time of "Hsrkt From the Tomb, a Doleful Sound." Every Time that Fourth street franchise is mentioned, the city coun cil makes a noise like the rustle of railroad passes. Ryan, Belmont, McCarren, Parker, et al , wouldn't have to go far to get into the Republican party. Whatever may be said against hint, Hearst tells k good desl of truth." A Table Rock man ha too eld tree that will average If boo of apple each, and 1,700 young tree that will average two box each. He ha sold them for ss high so 14 a box. Hs will plant 4.000 more trees this talL of - trie Common tree at least ISO years old which bears the distinction of owning the lend upon which It stands Thl tree stand on land that formerly belonged to Colonel William H. Jackson. He waa so rond or the tree that when he died a deed was found that deeded the tree to Itself. A Chinese Prescription. The missionary held up a beautiful piece of Chine writing. "It is a Chineee medical prescrip tion." he said. "A friend of mine, Dr. Ping Cho, presented it to a woman who had swallowed an overdo of opium. I'll read it to you." The prescription, translated, follows: Z pair of salted Hoards, 1 male and t female. 1 os. ginseng root. f dried grasshoppers, I male and I fe male. 1 os. sweet potato atalk. 1 os. walnuts. H oe rattlesknak tall. I os. black date. V os. elm bark. H os. devil-fish claw. hi as. hartshorn. H os. birds' claws. H os. dried ginger. . v, os. old coffin noils. To these Ingredients, which It would take a day to assemble, two quart of water were to be added, and the whol waa to be boiled down to one half the quantity. The patient was to drink a small cupful everygjhalf hour. Politicians' and Other Bibles. "You bibliophiles talk about the 'Breeches' Bible, the 'Bug' Bible, the Politicians' Bible, the 'Vinegar' Bible and bo on what do those name meant "I'll tell you," the collector answered. Take, first, th 'Breeches' Bible. It 1 sa colled because a typographical error In It causes the garments made by Adam and Eve out of fig leaves to be termed breeches lnatead of aprons. "In the Vinegar' Bible of 1807 the word 'vineyard' Is misprinted "vinegar.' "Th -Printers' Bible, 1702. mokes the Psalmist soy: 'Printers have persecuted me without cause.' "The 'Religious' Bible, which was printed in 1187, puts 'religious' for 're bellious' in the fourth chapter, seven teenth verse, of Jeremiah Because ahe hath been religious sal th th Lord." "The 'Politician" Bible was published at Geneva, In IMS. It mokes the fa mous vers, 'Blessed ore ttie peace makers.' read, 'Blessed are the place makers. ' " Mouse Kills a Cat. - It Is not often that a mouse kills s oat Such a death, however, woe meted out loot month to a fine black eat In a Cope May hotel. The cat caught the mouse and began, sa cots will, to play with It, to tease it For some IS minutes this went on. And then, all of a sudden, the eat found herself struggling for life. In mouthing the mouse, without desiring to hurt It, she had Inadvertently half swallowed It. There It was, stuek In her throat, choking her to death. For three or four minute th cot choked ond gasped. Then it fall -over deed And the mouse, oddly enough, wo disgorged at th moment the cat died The mouee was olive. It lay On the floor a moment resting, then it Stole sway, after one triumphant look at the dead body of the cat which It had killed. Lett ers Saw Buck, Or., Oct. I. Editor of The Gurnel Deer Sur: I hov bin Informed tho not ottshly that Preaydent Rosy felt taken, on hie, slf the rapenybll- ty of tellln us feller el over the TJ. 8. and Sow Buck how to epel. Now. fer my port I think he la goin Jist a llttlo to fur in that w al he to go to scool an lurn spellln, riten, rlthmetlck. Jojrafy on ol other study; an now as we hov al got started rlt, the growln Jenerotion hud 4s th am, a t hay or no beter than we or. Ov cores thare In th tote ov district ov Culmby, where thay only got, fu scool houes on dont empty but a fu tochers thay want to git them chop as thay ban. It may be al rlt, but out In this (run try whore we hov big states ond scool houses to cory spond It la diffrunt. New I am presydnt and monger for to or 8 big consurns on hov to employ tU ritsrs at each plea, an thay al got fner scoolln befor this an thay wll al hov to quit and go to soool agin. Now, If this ant luked Into an som thln don you ;an bet we wil hav a feller thare when oongrls met agin that wll hav a fu remark to mok that wll stur em ol up eum, en he wU be rrum th Sow Buck dlatrlck, to, on wll hav the harty 'ouport ov th aguyooted cloa ov this dlstrick. Think It wod be a raud plan to put this pleas in yur paplr an send a markt copy ov It to Theador at Washlngtown, as thay got fre delivry rlt at the dor, an he can s for hi self how this Is efectln the run try at larjj; on then If he stll per sists in it hs cant oa he didnt hov fore warning. Yur fer Websttr Geo Wash ington an Saw Buck spellln. JOSIA TOMSON. Smokers Must Pay. Tobacco - user- and theatre-goers among the college students of Syracuse university must pay full tuition, ac cording to an edict Issued by-Chancellor Jamea ft. Da today, when the col lege opened for the fall term. , - "Young men who can afford to pay for needles luxuries and Indulgence, who can patronise the theatre, th pool room or other place of amusement, can afford to pay for their tuition and will receive no concession from the faculty. "Such student need not expect to be given scholarship. "A young man who smokes Is a fool, at least in that particular. Hs ought to take better care of his nerves snd present a cleaner exhibit of himself." sold Dr. Day. The bulldog was expelled from dor mitories and chapter houses two years ago. Last year student frequenting saloons or poolroom were threatened With expulsion. Nearly 1,000 free schol arship were given to needy student loot year and the number will be cut In half thl year. Two ol a Kind. From the Chicago Newer Her Father But. lr. you or not th sort of man I should like for a son-in-law Young man O, that's all right. You are not the Srt of man I should like for s father-in-law, but I'm not going to make your daughter miserable for lit by refusing W marry bar sa that account. A Little Nonsense Stung. From the New York Sua. "There Is a woman up In th front of th car that haan't paid, her fore," aald th conductor to the man In th back eat, "but I can't place har." "Perhapa I con give you a pointer, aid the helpful man. "Pick out th woman that keep trying to adjust her hatpin all the time. That' th lateot wrinkle In th female at resteer pirate. Reading her neighbor' newspaper and gasing mte ruturity ore out of data Everybody got on to those tricks. But the woman that beats her way has to do something to hide her guilt, so she riddles with her hatpin." Presently the conductor reported to hi adviser again. "That worked all right.'", he said "She owned up. She said you would pay for nor.-- "Me!" snorted the helpful man. "What nave I got to do with ItT" "Everything, apparently. She hap pened to look back and sold she knew you ond that It would be all right. There she 1 now. standing up and nod ding at you. Know her?" "T." sold the mon, weakly. "Sne i my wife." A Trifle High. The recent revival of interest In th modern development of our navy, which woe stimulated by the greet Labor day review at Oyster Bay. give point to the following anecdote told in the current Harper Weakly of Captain Jack Phil lip, who commanded the battleship Texas during the Spanish war. While the battleship were on blockade at San tiago. It waa customary to load ths six pounder guns every evening to protect against possible torpedo-boat attack. While th triggers were being eased down, one of the guns on the Massachu setts was accidentally discharged, th hot paaalng over the quarterdeck of the Texas, whieh waa - lying next In the blockading line. All the officer of the Texas ware on deck smoking and talking when the shot passed a few feet above their head. Almost before it struck th water a signal was started on the Texas from -it commanding officer. Contain Phillips, to the commanding officer of the Massachusetts. The signal was, "Good line, but a trifle high." Gave the Game Away. "A conductor come to me with o amll- Ing face th other day." related Mr. Wiggle. "He wanted to tell me efhat had happened on a tooting tramcar. It eeema that a middle-aged woman and her llty eon. a lad of year, got la the car, ana a soon as they were seated th woman took a half-crown out and hand ed tt to the youngster to pay the fare with. Th boy held the coin In hie small, fat hand, and examined It closely and oolemnly. The conductor appeared ror the far, and th youngster gave him th half-crown with owlish solem nity. Th money woo pocketed and the change put In the small extended hand. A oon os he got this change the boy laughed, wriggled In his seat and shout ed gleefully: "Oh. ma, he taken th bad half crown." Butler to the Court From th Pittsburg Pra An old lawyer In speaking recently about General Butler, said: " "Baa Butler waa a terror and torment of the Judges. On one occasion Judge Sanger, having been bullied and bad gered out of all patience, petulantly asked. "What does th counsel suppose I am on th bench fort" "Scratching hla head a minute, Butler replied: "'Well, I confess your honor's got me there." A Strapping Answer. John Ridglsy, secretary of the Amer ican embassy at London, was piloting soms American friends through ths mu seum at Hastings whan he observed on unhappy attendant wearing a military uniform, with a helmet from which a Chin-strap hung, at whom on Inquisitive tourist was firing oil manner of silly questions). The tourist's loot queatlon was, "Soy, what la that strap under your chin for?" The attendant sighed. "That strap la to rest my -Jaw when I get tired answer ing foolish questions," aald he. Lonely St. Helena. Th lonely lele of St Helena Is a kingdom In little with on Indifferent future which mey be summed up In one word, "Manganese," saya ths London Chroniole. There Is a governor, who receives 4,000 a year, besides H.OOO "table al lowance," and has a staff the principal officers of which take about $6,000 a year among them.' All this humsn ma chinery le required to secure the wel fare of a population numbering some 8,600 souls. . In foot, St. Helena's claim as a re sort for shipping ha almost disss-' peered, only 40 vessel having called there loot year, while the military gar rison of th "rock" ha been reduced to a mere handful. Still, the governor continues to pro duce on annual report of over 40 octavo pages A thrilling Item from this -document 1 th story of th Illness of ths printer and th gallant effort of his aaalatant who, with th aid of th post office clerk, managed to use up IS4 reams of paper! The only "bright exception" In the lugubrious report le the fact that some enterprising prospector from the eape succeeded In finding large deposits of Manganese ore, and the bop thus en gendered that a ecmpany may think It worth while to work them. Plowed Up Bryan Graves. George W. Ryder, a farmer of Bear'e Den, near Youngatown, Ohio, waa sued for plowing over the graves of the parent of William J. Bryan of Ne braska and others. The plaintiff la Mary Hrron. Ryder la charged with plowing ever the graves and using th headstone for walks In hla farm yard. In the campaign of lit, and while on another speaking tour through Ohio, Bryan stopped at Bear's Den and en deavored to locate the graves of hi parent. H sold he was posltlvs that they were buried st that piece, although he was unable to Identify the grave. He intended to remove the bodies in th future. The cemetery woe abandoned some year ago and finally disposed of at private sal, with th understanding. Mary Herron says, that the land waa to p left sacred to the dead. Ryder got tho land later and now propose to ralas wheat on It. The Little Treasure. From the Philadelphia Pre. "Fifteen-two snd a pair make four," Id McCall. who wa playing cribbaga with Popley. "Whet hove you in your crib?" " v " Ah"" replied Popley, absent-mlnded-ly, "just th cutest ittle ootsums toot sums gin ta the world." IE BIRDSEYE VIEWS TIMELY TOPICS SMALL CHANGE. Kickers should go ploy football. e e Insurgent In Texaa also, as Senator Bailey to his surprise has discovered, e e It le not believed that Bill Bryan la a lineal descendant of William th Silent. Geologically speaking. Pike peak isn't much older than when discovered by the Mlsaourlan. What th United State will do with Cuba depend on what th sugar and tobacco trusts soy. s General Funaton will take good core not to gat behind Toft. Though email, ha like te be een. e With the hops and prunes all har vested, old Jape Pluve eon turn loo whenever he'e ready. No foreign government ever lnter- venee In the United State' when th man elected le counted out. e A coachman seem to be a common favorite with young lady heiresses and rich old men young wive. The Atlanta Journal wonta all negroes disarmed. go they can't shoot bock when a mob la killing them. e e Why Fapa Smith ahould be bothered only when the 4 Id child wss born is not explained. Forty-three len't tt. , Itole suspected that the market fer Llptss) tees lo declining in this country. Sir Thomas I coming over again. No matter how many policemen are employed, there will always be the same demand from th department for more. 1 , A Connecticut man was srreeted for hooting a snake on Sunday. And he could prove, too, that It was not it t snake, We are not cruel, but would not be greatly pained to see sons husky fel low who won't work now going hungry next winter. ' e , Senator Fulton vouchee for Senator Bailey, bat perhapa thl exhibition of senatorial courtesy will not count for much down In Texas. v What ta the matter with Mr. Herri man? It boo been several day since he bought a railroad But perhapa he la busy cataloguing those he ho, e Hearst soya Hughes la th tool of the" "plunderbund." This word make rickety Jerome pretty mod. And he lo trying to manufacture on to beat it. e ' A statue of Jultu Caesar woo un veiled recently at Brown university. Not the late Julius Caesar of Portland, hut a atrenuous Roman who ha been dead "some time," end who once wrote bock home: "I got hare; 1 eised things up; 1 Rockefellered the roost." The Latest News REPORTED BY A. BENNETT, Robbltvlll has loyed down on blll bryon. Ho lo a dad one hear. But this la the fortunateet town what ewer was or ewer will be, for now we hav In our midst a grater man than blllbryan rrver darsd e be or ewer wl be. Add WSJSt 1 mors he Is rite here in our midst, a citizen of Rabbltvllle. He has cast his bred upon our water snd has lined with me to bring Rabbltvllle to the front. Hie nam is th Honorable Jeffereon Myer. one of th biggest snd braolast men In our country. See what he done fer the Lewis and Clark'Fair. See what a big man he la, and yet he has seen that Rabbltvllle Is the cpmlng metrop olis of the grot wast, and be has lined me to bring her to the front It le al most too good to be trew. When I waked up thla morning and begun to think about him a-comlng the day before I thought I must have dreemed it, so I dressed quick and went down to the drug store and there he stood throwing perscriptions into hts elf Jt Ilk on of u. aa he le. ' And a-paying for em two, for ha slnt busted you bet. He hae munney snd spends It like a prince as he le Lordy how we havef struck It! And me and him la going into business here. Jeff saya ths way Chamberlain 1 so popular I be cause he knows so many folks, and he meato up with em mostly through th lodges, go I says to Jeff eeys I less JIne ths Eagles soma aa Chamberlain, and I asked Jeff what them word, them lattln words. Is on ths stats seal, and Jeffs say them word I "Sh file with her own wing" and 1 say that I where Chamberlain 1 different, he alnt got no wing but he gets there Just the same, so lot be an Bogle. But Jeff ho more branee nor Tom Haliey has alfalfa, and he ssys says he, "No." Firm, Jest like that, "No." We won't borrer no Idsars from Cham berlain nor noboddy we will jest organ ate a order of our own, and sir hs pulled out of hi pocket a paper and he hod th hull thing all thought out end writ out! Hod jeet come hear loaded with ana of the greatest Ideara of this cen tury, mebbe of thl Jnrtlon, oma thlng that will make ths Msson and Odd Feller snd the K. P snd the Eagle and all of em lther roller In our teps or go out of business. It I th Coagulated Order of Rabbit, and we have elected the grand officer. Jeff being the Noble Surefoot Rabbit, me the Royal Longear Rabbit and Sim Dlpp la the Grand Furrier, the feler what handle th doeaky. We have no more member but ue three, end we dont wont any until w git our ldears all going, and then we will otart out on th trail and -bold roundups all ovsr ths oountry. We pay stnsll dew snd big benefit to all siek snd disabled rab bi ta, and to th wlddere of diseased rab bit, and above Oil we look after the polytlrk and voting proclivities of U rabbit, for w think there alnt any doubt but what we oan elect Noble Sure foot Rabbit governor when Chamberlain gtts tired of being governor. In fact that le what we are aiming at, to make Jff governor and thua bring Rabblt vllle to the front, and his race wll be as awlft a a rabbit's and dont you for get it, and If anything should happen to him, why the honora will fell onto me! Think of that? Alnt our plan wall laldT Do yea think them Eagle can bold a condl te us! Do you think m e OREOON SIDELIGHTS. A great number of sheep haa been old In Wallowa county. Polk county Is taking th lead la breeding fine sncep and hogs. e . s Th spplea from on orchard near Grant pas will bring 14.000. -' A Lincoln county man is experimenting- in raising sgnanig, which I worth tt a pound. . A young Perdue girl named Furlong shot and klrled a doer less than a fur long distant. Three big steere escaped from a ear of a moving train in Umatilla county and took to th hill. At the loweet eetlmat 10,000 bushels of prunes were lost In ths vicinity of Conby, says tho Tribune. .., ..A .4 :. 1 -'Si'vfV Th volume of trad In Dayton la enormous, saya th Optimist Tlmee were never oo prosperous. e e Will th g P. train never arrive on time? querlea Hie Albany Democrat. Yea, some time, on some time. e e A Polk oounty man's no waa broken In thro place and he scarcely no (re formed version) how It happened. Though Wallowa county 1 legally "dry" there an four gallon house Jong th line of railroad construction. A Bend mon has shot 10 hswks within a few week, wo. of them measuring from tip ta tip 4t lnchee, one 10 and one 42. The lumbar Industry In Polk county is developing rapidly and will become immense if M asportation foclUUes are afforded. llore students iron outside counties were enrolled at Dallas college on th first day thia year than were in attend ance altogether loot year. y v Tillamook Headlight: There le an unusually large run- of salmon In the bay this ssason, and the fish being un usually large the fishermen ere doing a land office business. Bat suppose Tillamook had a railroad, the fisher men on the bay would be strictly In it. e e - lnatead of raising only gram as here tofore, a farmer near Dayton will next year put out 10 acres of hope, five acre of berries, a email orchard, end will purchase at least 10 good cow and a cream separator. With a combina tion of thl kind a farmer haa a cinch on prosperity for th rest of his life, saya th Optimist. e The owner of a SO-acre hopyord near Dayton haa dried over 10,000 pound of hop. An average of 70 pickers has been employed for, three weeks. He has paid ovsr $1700 for help In addition to 11,000 for cultivation. If he get ?0 cent for the crop he will clear 17.700. He ho sold low oo . 4, and oven t cent, but never contracta From Rablntville OF THE DALLES OPTIMIST. there I o bigger mon thon the Hon orable Jefferson Myers. Noble Surefoot of the Coagulated Order of Rabbits, spoken of mostly aa th C. O. of R. of Robbltvlll. in th great otate of Ore ew And Jeff wtH tort on the -trait-pretty soon, and In th mean time we will get our rabbit' feet reddy and any body wonting to line the order must writ to Jeff Myer at Portland and ha will send you a rabbit' foot which make you a member protemporarlum until Jeff can get around to hold a roundup and regularly corral you. But remember and write Honorable Jeff My ers, Portland, for we alnt got no post office hear as te yet. Do not delay but Write st once for a emblem and be a booster for Rabbltvllle. Honorable Jefferson Myers. Noble Surefoot of the Coagulated Order of Rabbits, who Is now permanently in our midst as one of ue, hoe token, the par lour aweet of rooms at the Bunco House until such time aa he can erect a man stem of his own. The ylty drug store will on Monday next from the hour of I in the afternoon on til ten of the clock at nlte, serve perecriptlons fre and give a oyster with each prescription, to all get with out munney and without price, the Hon orable Jefferson Myera being the gent who foots the bill. And mebbe you think we dont love ewery red hare on the1 Honorable Jefferson's bold hesd! Ws hove a letter from Lisa Butterbot torn asking If the Honorable Jefferson Myers is a married man. For the benefit of Mi Butterbottom ad all other folks who wants to mash our new oltlsen we bag to remark that In dew time there . will arrive In Rabbitvtll a Mrs Honorable Jeffereon Myer .and a moll but Interesting collection of young Honorable Mooter and Misses of th Honorable house of Myera We hop that Is spacVffic enuff for Miss Butter bottom and all other. Now my trend and feller citizens w folk of eBabbirVlll must berry our difference and gat together for th good of our beloved town and bring her to (he front. We nead a postofflce s'nd we must have s postofflce to win out. No town vvr yet got to be a reel metropoll that dlddent have no post office. Heartofor we hava stood In each other' weigh, but now w must forget our individual differences and pull as one man for the grate town In which we live and reelde. We all wanted to be poetmaster. but we cant all be 'it" aa ws hsvs found out. So Jest let us sit tend aald and furget our t rubbles and ambitions and t will take the office, and at a tremendjue sacrifice, ond oil will b lovely. Jtoi 1 fool our all good cltlssns will see that thl l th way for u9to get a postofflce and to promote liarmony. Al who do not agree te this compromise of our trubblee is enemies to our town. Another Difficulty. From the Wsshtngton Star "I suppose that when you discover the north pole you will regard your labors as completed?" "No," answered the Arctic - explorer. The hardest 'port will be yet to com. We'D have to Had seme way of getting home again."