Editorial Page of The Journal 1BBBa'B'B . . .. ..... i i. i i i ' an J 111 . I i sis-ass.xo. i i " T ,,1' ' 1 , . I THE JOURNAL C. B. iAtKSO.1... Publisher rlMb4 awry tn ll -"a' ta. ntik 4 ypiiilU rea, rnrtiaae. ( the MtofTta al Partlaaa. Or, fc tmwualaUDB laiowt IM Bull U Mnd-1M TELSPHONa MAIN TltS. All IwitoHa rrhftd hf Ihle aaaibar. the Ofxrator tix oprtipnt roe waat. Tll roBMO AnVBRTlSINO REPtCSBNTATITB VraeUne Belealn tlp-l : tag. Ukll. ' ' T v --- - .' BeWrlp't" Tnu hr mall W Mr" fa to Galled Sutee, r4 oe lUitco: - . DAILY ' - ' o ye Oat year, ......SO.OA I On ooata. SUNDAY - .130 I (me meat. ..., n.tTV ANDWKDAY "r ' ' Doing: good it the only cer tainly happy action of man' life Phillip Sidney. " " , THK RAILROAD COMMISSION. THE MEN selected for, railroad , commissioners, ; o far a tan ' be judged from their past rec ' ords, will be satisfactory to the people, '. and good work and results - may reasonably he expected of them, Mr. West hat been an exceedingly valuable servant of the state for four years past at land agent, in which capacity he has displayed much abil ity and complete faithfulness to public interests. . Mr. Aitchison was secre tary of the late tax commission, for whose excellent work he is largely to be credited, and fie was recommended by influential commercial interests. Mr Campbell was the choice of many lumbermen and shippers' of the Upper Willamette valley and southern Ore ( gon, nd is especially interested in the lumber industry, , Eastern Ore : gon, looking at the matter geograph ically, was fairly entitled to a com missioner, but so long as especially ' fit men are selected it makes no great difference where they hail from. The ; work , of these men will be arduous and important, and their responsibil ; tty grea t They will start out with the support of the public, and may ; be fairly expected to earn its confi dence, and it may be hoped that t if : they do ; well they will ' be elected next year, regardless of their politics. DISINGENUOUS PLEASE TROM RAILROAD circles come ' W arguments, pleas, and prognos A ' ticitions of dire disaster, on ac- ' . count of so-called anti-railroad legislation that has been enacted or is pending in various states. A sam ple circular of many being sent out nowadays to newspapers, and which tis entitled. "Is It Not Time to Let Up on the Railroads?"' says that "efforts are being made throughout the coun try to impose upon the companies ex- actions which will cripple tbeir ef ficiency and . very greatly decrease their, revenues. If the railroads are to continue to perform the service in the upbuilding of the country which .they have been performing for the ' last SO years, a reversal of the public attitude of hostility toward then is .absolutely essential." This, appeal quotes from Mr. J. J. Hill's1 organ, .,jlaerStaPuliPwneerrejhkh ays that "the condition of things emphasizes . the serious, need of de aisting from groundless attacks. and from making the tailroads the target ' ' for every crank and demagogue.". It is pleaded that while rates have gone down,' expenses have t greatly in creased, owing to the far greater cost of labor and materials; and an article -the- Manufacturers1-? Record ie quoted which predicts dire and whole alt disaster unless "press and peo ple now stand by the railroads and encourage them in every way possi ble to find the money needed." Other editorial expressions along the same line are reprinted, with a view of ha v. ing their views indorsed by the press generally. The press dispatches al most daily .contain dispatches to the - same effect emanating from railroad or sympathetic sources that it is.irn possible to double-track ' existing . roads or build new ones because the money for this purpose is not to be obtained; that capitalists will not in ' vest in railroads while ; the people manifest hostility toward them or . seek to regulate' and control them. A good deal of all this talk and of these 'representations is : based on false assumptions as to the people's attitude on one hand, and on the other hand completely, ignores the railroads' delinquencies,, disregard of public interests, and, criminal viola tions of law. ' It is said there was never such a prosperous time as dur ing the past 10 years, and the rail roads have shared their full portion of ' that prosperity. They have been de claring, great' dividends, and flying high in etork wars, and it sesms strange that Just now they should f nd themetvet unable to find money f-r urgently-needed railrosd expan sion. They say they cannot get money because of the people' hos tility, but the people art not hostile to them. The statement is made to frighten the people into an attitude of acquiescence in whatever the rail roads may ehoose to do, or not to do. They Jay the blame upon the people, and wrongfully accuse them of being led away by crailks and demagogues, and of unreasonable hostility, when the fact is that the people only de mand fair, decent treatment, and a reasonable regard for their rights and interests. The railroads' demand "a reversal of the public attitude," that is, that the people shall entirely let them alone, and enact no laws con cerning them, but what do the rail roads promise oh their part? Noth ing. Absolutely nothing except In ferentially, to go on as they, have been doing for the past 50 years. But this, even if there was anything bind ing in any promise they might make, is not enough, will not do at alU The people want and icquiie an advauCTd and entirely different conception, on the railroads' part of their moral and legal obligations to the public The people demand that territory shall not be partitioned among railroad nabobs and great regions of resourceful coun try left for years and decades in isola tion thatbuilding.and- equipment keep " pace ' with the country's growth; that dividends be not paid nor interest' charges laid, on a large percentage of "water" iri'stocks; that railroads stay Out of politics, and as far as possible out of Wall street; that rebates, discriminations and all unlawful conspiracies eease; and, finally, that rates-be adopted which will give the owners a fair, liberal in come on the actual capital invested, and not on fictitious capital. -This is not hostility to railroads; it is only hostility to unlawful or reprehensi ble and intolerable practices. "The people want railroads, of course, and more of them. They want the rail roads to prosper, so that they will be encouraged and enabled to serve the people well and keep step in progress with the country's growth. They are not such demagogues or such fools as to desire to cripple the railroads, but, on the contrary, want them to be strong and successful; but the abuses of their privileges and powers by the railroads have become simply intoler able, and the people are not going to be turned aside from their purpose to correct, regulate and control rail roads, by these lugubrious representa tions and veiled threats. ; The railroads in sending oat these circulars and concocting these dis patches assume that they are being persecuted, and they affect to cry for mercy, but they are not being per secuted at all; only being made to un derstand that they are public institu tions and must be conducted with re gard to public interests. This has come to be necessary because of the railroads' persistent disregard of pub lic interests and contempt for the peo ple's reasonable demands.. If nobody will invest in railroads when the peo ple have and exercise the right of con trol, so be it; then the people will have to go into the railroad business themselves, to avoid doing which they would be willing to be very liberal with present or other owners. But they; have learned by dear and pro tracted experience that public control is an absolute Tiecesiity.They can not make Mr, Harriman build more railroads in Oregon, but they can reg ulate the roads he has. We must be allowed to doubt the stories being sent out as the Unwill ingness of anybody to invest in rail roads under - regulative federal and state laws. Money may be withheld for a little while for the purpose of intimidation and coercion and er,tain great financial interests may threaten a . panic, but the country cannot be scared again as it was in 1896, when it .was ' already lean and troubled. There is paying work already for 75, 000 -miles-more railroad, 'according" to Hr. Hill, and the country will need 10,000 miles a year more besides this, and from some source the money to build these railroads and equip them sufficiently will be forthcoming, even if the people nationally or by states or both, have .to go into the railroad business. The sooner the railroad magnates drop this pretense of being persecuted and so rendered unable to do anything, and go to work to show the people that the railroads mean to do the right and necessary thing, the sooner will public criticism and meas ures of control of the railroads relax THE WILLAMETTE LOCKS. T HE SALEM STATESMAN and the Eugene Register have either willfully misrepresented : r. titteriv" mtsisicen ne Journal's' '"attitude on the "pro posed and expected efforts of Rep resentative Hawley to secure an sppropriation - for the Willamette locks. The Journal has repestedly stated Jhat-iMesired ucb ppropria tiiiend -believed that congress should make it, but expressed a doubt ss to whether, congress would depart from its usual practice to do so, and in view of that doubt we have urged that the state take hold of the job and so make sure of its being done. Anythiqg The Journal cad say or do to aid Representative Hawley in his efforts to secure the desired ap propriation . will be said and done. And since the legislature, if it acts on the matter at all, will doubtless do so along the line of the amended Jones bill, providing for a. conditional ap propriation, to be used conjointly with one to be made by congress if that can be secured, this paper is in favor of that measure rather .than of none. . , , The ' Journal is pulling -for open rivers and improved harbors, ' the Willamette river among them.' If the federal government will take hold of the Willamette locks matt&t agd free the river,. we shall be satisfied and very glad; if the government will join with the state and btur ln'f expense, we shall be contented ana . . . happy; but if the government will do nothing we do not believe in sitting down and doing nothing ourselves. Pass the amended Jones bill and let Mr. Hawley do his best. Senators Fulton and Bourne helping him, and provide means for accomplishing the desired purpose.-; Then if it be defi nitely ascertained that; the govern ment will do nothing, let another leg islature appropriate enough more to do the Work', meanwhile making all necessary., preliminary . preparations and movements. " ; ; DONT KILL THE BIRDS. HE PROTEST of the friends of songbirds against Jhe Jackson biltrallowing'Iruit growers to kill certain species of them, ought to be given respectful consider ation. People who have carefully and persistently studied the food habits of these birds say that they live chiefly on worms and insects that are fruit pests,' and therefdre do.the fruit rais ers a great deal more good than harm, and o far as we know this statement has not been disproved or even contradicted by any one well informed on the' subject Because a bird eats or injures a few cherries, berries or other specie of fruit, he is regarded as a destructive nuisance by many who have never considered the amount of good he does in de stroying orchard and garden pests. It. is probably true that if all birds could be banished from Rogue River valley the, fruit growers, there, in stead of, being benefited, would be very greatly damaged, and in two or three years would be willing to pay a good deal to get the birds back. They aee the comparatively little harm the birds do, but are not ob servant of the. great amount of good they do. Such, at least, is the confi dent opinion and assertion of those who have studied the habits of birds and- we have' no reason to believe that they are in error. . ' A NEEDED AMENDMENT. I T HAS been reported that Presi dent Roosevelt now approves and will lend his support to Senator La Follette's amendment to the railway rate regulation law authoriz ing the commission to ascertain the present vaiue-of railroadsTIt"wilI be remembered that when La Follette presented this amendment during" the last session he was the only Repub lican who voted for it, all the Dem ocrats voting with him. If tht report that' the president now favors this amendment be true, the vote may be different the next time it comes up, though there is no hope of its passage ar this lesslonv The necessity of such- a provision if rates are to be properly regulated is obvious. As Bryan' Commoner says: "It is not enough to stop re bates; while this puts all shippers on an- equal-foot ing -4teal!y-h;etpi-the railroads more than it does the gen eral public from extortionate rates, and this problem cannot be under taken" until we know how much of the present capitalization is real value and -how much is water. .The-first thing to be done is to separate the real from the fictitious. Senator Fulton distinctly and with' out equivocation asserted that Chief Forester Pinchot, from , the stand points of ornament of use, wss abso lutely without value to the govern ment, immediately after .which the senate increased ' Pinchot's salary $1,500 a year. A word of praise might have cost the chief forester his office. . ' -' ' Only two senators remain to be elected to make the next senate cm plte, One, Bacon of Georgia, cannot be elected till June, unless a special session of the legislature is called be fore, and the other case .is little Rhody, where a fight is still on be tween seversl trut millionaires. One would suppose from the As torian's prolonged roaring over the Port of Columbia bill that it was something greatly detrimental to As- toria, whereaa its passage would ben efit that city as well as Portland and the Columbia river region generally, Astoria is becoming too big and im portant a place to tie' down its inter ests to those of a little coterie of pilots whose record is open at times to severe criticism, to say the least ,' Mr. Bryan's Commoner is mistaken in classing Oregon ;-with the states whose senators are nominated . by conventions before being chosen by the people. Oregon has eliminated convention nominations. - The Com moner is also mistaken in saying that Washington submits senatorial can didates to a- vote of the people, though it may do so hereafter. ' , ' Perhaps the governor thinks that if he isn't good enough to appoint a railroad commission he won't do to help select the normal schools that are to go. Two-cent fare laws are being passed by many states. We dbn't ask for that in Oregon, but come' freight schedules need fixing. . - : Congress will not do its plain duty by the Philippines as long as , the sugar and tobacco trusts object The oeoole asked for and tried to get an anti-pass law, cot a compul sory pass law. --. -v;'.' Letters .From the People The Japanese Question. -Portland. Or., Feb. IT. Te the Editor the Journal: The people or the United States ar getting a fine return ton the sympathy end eld they extended the Japanese in their war with the Bus- lana. The lenaoa for Ainerloens is, al way stand for the supremacy of the whit rao. Never again should we take the side of a colored race eiralnat a whit people, ' The present attitude of tha Japanese on the California school question le help in millions of Ameri cans te rearh this conclusion, and to learn once for all that for the white man to descend to- equality with any of the colored races Is to fix in the mind of the colored man his superiority to the whits man. It never falls. It is en Inevitable consequence of differ ence of race. . - In any country where twe or more cf the five races are living together, on of the races will be the roaster, th other the servants. The law is abso lute, and all tb doctrinaire in the world cannot change It. In the Cnlted States the whit man is the master. If he do not choose to let Japanese children go to school with' his own, they cannot do- so. For the Japanese to assert the right to en ter schools where w do not want them. and to refuse to attend the schools we have prepared for them and pay for out of our own pockets, is the height of impudence. If we are cowardly enough to Ubmlt te such Insolence un der a threat of war, the American peo ple ar not what they once were. A a matter or wisdom, every siaie In this Pinion should hare law provid ing separate schools for th white and the colored races. Oregon should have such laws. We are different from the colored rare; they can't help it; neither can we. - Each race should be proud of itself and wllllag to remain distinct There will be crotests from those who trad with. Japan, but th dollar is not everything with all our people. Had those in authority stood firm at the beginning of this tempest In a teapot the Incident would already be r or got ten, but they saw fit to side with th Japa nese against their own countryman, and tried to coerce and bulldos eltlsens Into admitting th overgrown Japanese Into thslr primary schools, it is a black page In our diplomatic history. It la admitted that the people of California ar within their legal rights, and they have the backbone to stand to th last extreme for such right. Th blar of war will not scare them. Mil lions of good Americans are behind them. . They will fearlessly guard th right te control their -local affairs. - it. a Jiai " ' Public Need Sympathy. ; Oregon Mining Journal. The old Southern Paclflo surely has a hard row of stumps with wrecks, floods, landslide and "Other; jneidehU T of" "th kind occurring weekly, put iner is no call for the public to express Its sym pathy. In fact this same publio needs all ths sympathy that's lying areund loos, -for It has got to pay the bill for all of these losses. - During th past week th local freight rates have been advanced from 25 to SO oents- a hundred, without giving any no tice to th retailers. Bom or o.ur lo cal merchants were caught with large consignments ef freight en rout rrom northern points, having ordered them with the old tariff rat In view. "When th goods arrived they found that tb additional freight charge would eat up th profit on th goods, unless they entild Indue th consumers to pay th extra charge.' This sort -of thing le enough te make a man stop sawing wood and reflect that after all this glorious land of lib-' erty is several laps , behind the. old country in th matter of railrosd reg ulation, for In Fatherland, for instance, tbs omnipresent government not only huts out discrimination, but specifies th extent to which tbey may bleed th publio. . . , . . A Piano in Hie Lunge. Of all th musical curiosities that na ture has produced lately on of th odd est Is a man with a piano in his lunge A man named Pearson, residing in Washington, can, without sny undue effort send forth remarkable melodies which sound Ilk th muslo of a piano with a melodeon accompaniment Thi lung piano, as It has been termed by th owner. Is partly a girt or nature, but Pearson has cultlvsted th us of th extraordinary Instrument very care-t fully and thoroughly, until h Is sil to play several familiar tunes with won derful expression and technique. . Friends of Pearson say his services ar Invalu able when church fair, basaar and Country entertainment are hand. He makes en excellent barker, and his tuneful vole penetrates th furthermost corner of a meeting-house or tent.. He says that other people could perfect themselves la tbs same accomplishment If they tried H and praotloed it regu . ,'':;. '. " Great Red Men of ' History '. ' r 1 ' --. ..- ' By Rev. Thomas B, Gregory. ' ' OSCEOUa; THH SEMINOLB. Osceola, th celebrated Bamlnol chief, waa born on th Chattahoochee river, Ckorgla, in th year ISM. When 4 Vra old hi mother took . bln to Florida, where be vu destined to spend th rest of his short but stormy existence. When Osceola grew up to manhood b was th picture of physical perfeotlon. and his mind was as bright as his body waa strong and active. Than Osceola no more influential hlf ver lived. Among th Seminole his word was law, hla slightest wish being heeded with a devotion that bordered close onto veneration. ' Curing Osceola's short life h waa re sponsible for the, death of many a whit man. but there la nothing to show het he at first haled th paleface. It is true that from th beginning he .stood up manfully for tb Indians' rights and bitterly opposed all , attempts on. the t.art of the whites to cheat or oppress 1Uin?opi. but h seemed disposed to I live In peace with them, ana aouoness would have continued ln th same tram of mind but for a great personal wrong that was don him. - 4 In USS he paid a visit to Fort King, taking along with him hla wife, a fugi tive slave. Wbll at the fort hi wife was stolen from him and report had It that she was to be returned to slavery. The indignant chief called upon th United States agent at th fort, Osneral Thompson, and In demanding his wife addressed th agent In term that were not as amiable as they might have been. Naturally, under the circumstances, be waa In anything but an agreeable mood. Th agent got mad at th chief "in solencs" and ordered him. put In irons and thrown into prison. . it When Osoeola got out ef his irons he waa a full-fledged demon, thirsting for the white man's Blood. Ia a -little wbll he killed General Thompson and several other whit men outside tb fort, and so brought on ths second Bemlnol war. At th head of his Indians Oacaola tor more than two years contended with marvelous skill and energy against overwhelming odds, but f lnallyT on tbs twelfth of October, 1837. while holding a conference under a flag of truce with General Jesup, near St. Augustine, be waa seised and confined at Fort Moul trie, -South Carolina, where he died at th early age of St Of Osceola It le said that he waa aa brave as a lion, always a fair fighter, and Invariably the protector of women and children. A Financial Ballad. . V By William T. Kirk, - Twaa payday at the office, and John waa coming home, His loving wife wee waiting for him :-' .. thr; ; " The gaa man stood without and th butcher, short and stout 1. Armed with a meat hook, a were te have hie hare; -The milkman with hla bell, and tb laundryman ae well, Haunted the ball upon that fateful -: .- day, i ' " Before the break ef dawn John' n velope was gon,- . , ' And unto him hi Angelln did sayi CHORUS: ' "I'm yearning for my girlhood back rn "' sunny New Rochelle, -: Before them tales of wedded bllae you came around te tell, X never hav a set ef furs, nor a ne matlniy Tou'aln't no EL H. Harriman that ell Pv got to eayf - ; - ' II. '- : The poor young husband shuddered and mournfully h sigoea, . Wbll many a salty tear hla eye did blur: i - - But,' trying to be brave, after be bad bad hi have, "Thoy at their bumble sorappl. him and her. ' AlasI At break of dawn hie Angelina was gone Gone Uke his salary the preceding dav: . ' '- Pinned on hie only coat he saw this tiny not. Which onto him these tidings did . . convey; CHORUS: Tra yearning for my girlhood." te. Adeline Patti'g Birthday. Li Adeline Petti was born in Madrid, February IS, 1S41, of Italian parent After a professional training under her brother-in-law, Maurice Strakosoh. h mad her debut In New York, November 14. lSfit. Her first London appearance waa on May 14, 1841, and so favorabl was the Impression created that sne became at once th leading favorlt of th day. An idea or ner enormous earn ings may be had from the statement that she received nesrly 1400.000 for 14 concerts In th Argentln Republlo In 1888. Raron KOir i;eaereTroTii, w wnmji Mmi'Pattr was married" In 189 J. is hr third husband. In 1818 she waa mar ried to th Marqols d Caux, . from whom sha wss divorced. Her seflond husband was Slgnor Ernest Nloollnl, who died in 1898. By Ella Wheeler Wilcox. "How' do you keep your Illusions T" writes a friend who l In trouble, v I, too, have had my Illusions about -Hfw, but they hav flown before the hard. facts of reality." Just what people mean by thla) much- used word "illusions" I do not know. Each one sem to give it an inaiviauai significance. ' ; - Hone, courage.' happiness, love, friend ship, success, pleasure,' health, beauty, . . . . it usefulness, ram nave nnru m,m celled Illusions, separately and, collect- ,VMy friend ha known much of th Joy f life. . . - - . Sh ha alway possessed eomfoftahl mean, and for the greater part of her life has enjoyed wealth. She baa loved and been loved; Sh has talents which sh uses for her own pleasurs, and sh has traveled widely and known Interest ing people. Sh has helped rslaUv and friends. But now, that sickness and trouble have com to her door,. h thinks life ha lost He "Illusion." We may as well eay that th earth haa lost Its light because ws are passing through a tunnel on a train, .. - Th Illusion of the average mind. It seems to me. Is the Idea that nothing . . 1 . a m hum An ft fa VAfth dui gaiwiy m ....... while. That only when w laugh doe. ... V Dut 1 ther not a deeper experience gained through tear thaw through etsr nal smllesf . - . ' , Do w not ofttlme leara more of real value te our after live in a week ef sorrow than In a yeer of happiness T It ia an "illusion" to Imagine we are put en earth te do nothing but emus iOUrslves.r v ,,,.,.,;.,,.; - : 7 The Rell aii the. Unreal in Life ' : : Small Charigfe Vetoes ar strenuous. making legislative. Uf Butt girls won a strike No doubt they ere beauts. . e e -, Delma might find it easier te prov Thaw a victim of clgarettlty. . A Philadelphia man waa fined as for snoring and disturbing th town. e - Roosevelt's support of th subsidy bill does not make it a bit better. 7 . ' Senator Bailey ha discovered almost as many liar as President .Roosevelt has. - When w get pur foods and full weights, what will be th us of sky pUotsT ' , , Whther he could de the trick again la th question that may be bothering the mayor. - . ' - ' " - San Franoisce -is fighting flea and Naw'TJrWang mosqu: ha Its counoll. ' ,1 - , Now that Bohmlts has been pacified, th only on determined upon war Is Captain Hobson, , ,-..'-..' - Th baseball season wiU be with ua again, and then all our national, state and city troublee will be forgotten. e ,.....: -'. It "is good for th farmers when th wheat I snowed under, also when th same thing happens to aome politician. .. rl ' '" ' ' Peopl are disagreed as to whether Rockefeller" latest big gift was due to remorse or waa intended as a round about bribe. ... . . "', ''T." ' . e ., '- - .' A Kansas editor has substituted for the usual' railway time table th an nouncement: "Trains are du when you see tbe smoke" - , .; '- Women who persist in girding their bodies nearly in two at tb demand of fashion should . not complain if ma won't let them vote .: - - - ' "I waa a boy one,"' - said Senator Bevwrldg in advocating the child labor law. Some eenatora regard blm as only a troublesome kid yet- -:. ' Why not en antl-lbby bill! It needs oracklng in tbe head. Albany Democrat. Why do yon want te create orathlng te crack it in tb head? . e, . ' Delmaa thinks h ean prove that Thaw waa Insane for awhile and became san later, by the lawyers he hired at varioue times. . Hiring) Delmaa waa a proof of returned sanity. e v . j. A Republican paper elalm te hav ae unpublished poem of W. J. Bryan's, which it threaten to publish if he runs for president again. But maybe be wrote It when he waa very young. ' Essays py Bod Die Br William F. Kirk. , V . . FURSti--. Furs le nice warm coverings for ant muls swell ladles, thay ar en the anlmuls first than en' th swell la dles. Th anlmuls doant pay nothing for them, neither do th ladles i th anl muls ar born with th fur on them. A th ' ladle git them from thar bus band ta Among th anlmula which baa ale fur le th Silver Fox, th Sabot tb Otter wlch has a fur nice for Otter mobeel coats, th Pershun Lamb, eta. Once there was a -Silver Fox up North this Fox wanted to go te New Tork 4k see Fifth (Sth) Avenue, so It called a good Fairy aV the. Fairy eed Vary welt I wUl do what I ean for you, so in about a year the Silver Fox wee ded but It nice Fur was in New Tork 4k a Fairy was wearing it f There ere cum cheep Furs toe, suoh aa Coon Skin 4k Dog Skin, these Furs malk nice overcoats for-the Farmers who have te cum to town with a load of wood. But ' the Doge alnt vary eshalmed of thare Fur, beekaue it I better to be a Dog with hair on than a Silver Fox with hair oft. - - -1 :. e ' e ..'' V TEETH.' ' teeth is little sharp things wloh w us when we eat our dinner except for Soup, Tbey ere ef twe (?) kinds, upper teeth 4t lower teeth. Th upper teeth I th ones nearest to your hair 4k th lower teeth 1 th ones nearest tor ths ground except if you should stand on yur hed. ' . ' . Sum anlmuls havent got teeth, such as Hens, sum 'kind of Fish, Clams, Oysters. Angle Worms, eta . W ar sorry for such anlmuls, beekaus thay cant eat Candy. I will close with a pome about teeth, wlch I wrote myself TEETH- ' Tnverymouth thar shud b teeth Sum above 4k sum beneetb. Th sharpen t one is found In squlrls Or else In Uttei boy & guns. , I wish U peepul had- a few - ' 4k sumthlng for sed teeth te chew. Earth Is not a -vaudeville, nor ar ws ngaged by th Great Manager to do a continuous ong and dance - Earth Is a great school, and we are pupils, learning th lessons which will be of value throughout all eternity In successions of life to come. The lessons ' ere interspersed with musement. We hav our "rcse" end noon hours, our vacations, our play hours, our sports, games end dances. But always th Great Master remembers th higher purpose of our lives, end th bell is sounded for our return to th class. Th wis pupil goe gravely and know th lesson ar Important. That is why h la hi school to learn, to acquire knowledge te grow. Howevet, hard ths tasks, he must accept thsm and profit by them. .. t ..... e e - . The weak pupil ia the bn who weep and rebels agalnat hla cruel fat In hav Ing to return to hi leesons. ' He haa dwelt In the Illusion, that vacation and Ita amusements were ths purpose of life. The hard reality ef study Is painful. No one, no other pupil, he l sure, ever faced such difficult problems. 80 he goes complslnlns? and Unhappy through' th school eaaon, nd knows no more at the end of th term than at Its beginning. H ! "disillusioned." Th wla scholar meantime keep hla Illusion, because his Illusion is ths real ity: th sever study of school Is pleasure:' failgu bring lt own Trward, and In th anticipation of Increased pow. ere ther Is atlsfaction In th struggle With difficult lessons. . Never yet was a sorrow sent to a morJ tal oul tnat was not meant as a w son. th learning of which would lead to higher possibilities ef happlnesa here Oregon Sidelights An Eola man sold two brood sows for 1 10 each. ' Arteslaa wells will be sunk in Har ney valley. ...... e e Th Oakland brick and til plant will be enlarged. Roaeburg merchants- report business at high tid. Squawbarry bushes ar leafing out around Eugene Farmers are plowing in Una and Benton counties. i Th Burns Push club" will circulate a lot ef pamphlets. . . ' ... (,,.-.....''.-; Albany I fortunately so situated ae to always hav plenty of wood. Astoria business men'eaem to have waked up in good earnest at last . 'Many SUverton dogs have been pols-" id. soms VSluaoTe:rms-rha had refused sioo for. . . . Grant county has not many "Chinook" '' atockmsn. says th John Day Newa, hence loss of stock waa light .? e .. A Loran man killed a cougar with rocks, snd a Maroola man did the same trick with a base! stick and a dog. I www.,. -m wa WM. wnere iney nave m niacasmitn a nop ana a grange, says th Albany Journal. . '".- .1 v "- . - -. --' :- - Sllverton bide fair b 1 experience th -most prosperous parted in It history during th summer. All buildings ar occupied, and evera new ones ar te b built . - : i,- : . . -. : - - Twe town offloere of Tbe Dalles eol lected I14S in a short time to help a " man who ia in poor health and whose ; wife had died, leaving six children, the oldest 14.. . English vlolets ere blooming, the -daffodil plants ' have else- put forth flowers end from thla time forward th . peopl of Coo county will have flow er in profusion,- says the Myrtle Point Entarprie. . ....... .... n, . ,:..'...,..,..-.'.,.. A Lebanon man sold 1.00 bushels of potatoes for 81 a busheL He raised l.toe bushel on 18 acres, and a neigh- ' bor raised 1.800 bushels on eight aorea." but most of- thsm were sold for I csnts a busheL . . . ..'..- '-v ',: Of an Echo man who had been en a trip th Register says: "In Walla Walla h lost bis overcoat la North Taklma he loat hla religion. In Seattle he loat hla oravenette, and. finally... landed hom with a bat - - ..--- .' , . .';','(!;-,:.';; Without a blow being atnick. or aa V .Q v - v. . - J being used by at least two ef th r"" ttclpants, three Myrtle Point men wefe I taken up on th charge of disturbing the, peace and fined 810 each. , ' ' . ; ' - - .-' Juat before being married a Milton young man want to a Judge end eaked for time In which te pay the wedding . fee. a he did not hav th wsual prfce, and the accommodating efflolal granted his request endmade him happy. ..( f' e ' ,..'..... North Tamhtll Record t Thla beauti ful weather 1 stimulating the farmer Into making heroic efferte to nails vary moment end in taking observa tions over th valley on may see teams end men at work in evary dlrec- -tion. ., v.. ; ... ' - y ; . . Hubbard eorrespondane ef Woodbury , Independent: . It costs about five cents per hundred more now te and ealoa eta- to Portland than it -did three month ago, and goodness knows it cost enough then. Last year a man sent some potatoes to a small town tAtaa th west side, the rate being II cent a Thla last week th earn shipment took the small sum of 18 cant per hundred. Th rat on salt from San Francisco took a (0 par ton raise the first ef February. , ' , ,-' February 19 In HUtory., 1888 Miles Coverdale, first transla tor of th Bible, burled at St Bartholo mew's. ' " i88f-i-Sfr ""Henry- Savfl,"" mtnent- mathematician, died. 1788 British flag hoisted for first time . on island of Corsica. 1804 French army concentrated at . Bordeaux for Invasion of England.' ' 1880 Bread riou in Liverpool. " 1888 French spoliation bill vetoed by President Pierce. 1884 Hous ef Common voted te . uphold Gladstone' Egyptian policy. .1891 Egyptian defeated Osman Dig- -na at Tokar. 1891 Episcopal Jubilee ef Pope Lee XIII celebrated. --T--- , 189S Dynamite explosion ' In Jo-, hannasburg killed and injured 800 per sons. .. k . 1908- President Roosevelt refused te . reopen th Sampson-Schley controversy. '. or elsewhere Any other view ef sorrow and trouble la an "Illusion," . ..1;. , . -..rn I mean th Inevitable sorrows taf ', troubles which ar not of our own max- Ing. And surely those which are of our crestlon carry with them, Uke biasing headlines, their awn meaning. - ; .:.. .-' . 1 ,' The man who celebrates an event with 7 an- orgle wakes with a headache II ha lost tb "Ulualon" of th pre vious night, that ther waa Joy In being Intoxicated. But he Is Just so muck wiser for th future If he chooses te commit the lesson to heart.1 Ths man who risks hie fortune on the gambling table and loses bids adieu te another Illusion. In th stubborn fact of labor he may find th real meaning of life and Its best happiness If he Will. . , .' . . .. . f ' , J'TheM ia a pall over everything,", write my friend. "No outside pleasure ' seem possible again. I feel life I near Ing It end. tar happiness Is eon- ' earned." . 1 - Sh falls to understand that 'when w are shut In by a pall of sorrow It Is meant that we should look within eur own souls and find light. . 1 - And when v we see this light thea . will life glow with an "illusion" nv' before seen, or Imagined. ,V And after tb pall of sorrow Is lifted rue It almost Invariably is. In this ever, changing existence) that new "llluilon" wilh-lend He rdlaio-te every simple event, Snd enable the human hesrt te find unexpected Joy n a thousand ways,. .. down ths sloping path ef ths western bill te the sunset horlson. And beyond lie th great fact, where w shall look back and say, "It was all llluaiea Tme I the realltjrl" .- , , .. ,-r I