Si :,Ci s A' " " ii Editorial Page of The Journal THE JOURNAL a B. JACK SOW... .pabllahar faklMwe' iwr evealeg mat Saadar) - - cnrw4. nnu... ar Tiia Journal nan- , Inc. TttxM tat ytmbia streeta PnrtlaeA, . vtfiuaj ka mMm at Portland. Or- T1CLEPH0KB MAIS TITS. AO JtvMrfBmta rarh4 by tkte aambarv.. the tfntat torn eeertnat yo wot. T.U yORKIS ADVIBT181NQ UKrBKSeNTATl V t tartar a-Itosjaaio iwiaj iinnmni V ; lit haeaaa nntt, We Tack) Trlkuae Ball ' tag. Cam. '. , ' ' BubeerlMla Tama by aiatl ta any eddreaa hi tka balif4 Btataa. CaaadA a Msslesr ....... DAILY . - Oaa year..... ....SB 00 OM swats....... I M ,,' . SCNDAt Oaa Tea ..SZ.S0 t Oaa swath..,. ...f . DAILT AND SCNDAT Oaa yeee..l ST.S I Oaa twata. ...J.tSM ' Tbcrt la no true potency, re- member, but that of hripr-tretrt true ambition but ambition to f saveRuskln. ' '' - ' ' V THE GOVERNOR'S VETOES. Tff jrOSTFT-4hagovemoi:4veJ mioci win oe curaiany . ap proved by the people. The ' legislature left' its work in rather a bad mess, and some of the vetoes were only of duplicate bills. or such as were already on the stat ute books. The veto of the. Johnson road improvement bill will be the one most ' generally t regretted, ' for it opened up a prospect of getting good roads such "ss the state never had before! But the probable cost, $200, 000, the governor thotfght too much frt addition to -the-other-beavy-appro-4 priitions, . end be. found some other objectionable features in the bill. As to. whether he did wisely or no in ' this instance there will be a wide dif ference of honest opinion.' ,; thtii, thit tn tht, average layman eeems reasonable, but -that he vetoed, was that of placing public , employes in the same position as pri vate, citizens in the matter of gar nishment of their wagea for debt. It may well be argued that there is no good, aound reason why this should not b the law, but the supreme court took a contrary view of the matter,! and declared a similar bill of the pre- vious legislature unconstitutional, and unless this bill was such as toncon folrm to the court's opinion it waa a waste of time and effort to pass it The oil! was of minor importance, and of none to most people, I The bill appropriating money for the support of . the Monmouth and DraiQ Normal schools, after it had "been practically agreed on all handa - to drop two schools, was one that deserved the governor's excoriation, , especially . in consideration of the manner in which the Drain amend ment was declared passed in the house! when as a matter of fact, it waa not legally passed. The law could not have been . sustained if it . had been taken into the courts, and doubtless the secretary of state and state treasurer would have refused to issue, or pay warrants for those schools if the governor had signed it. So the best thing to do with the .abortive thing was to kill it with a veto and put it out of its misery. v" The strictures ' of ' the governor with .,: regard to the . flat salary bill for the state printer, beginning in 1911, were also fully merited. The people have demanded a flat salary for that official for many years, and - there was no excuse for postponing the granting of that demand for four years. ', Another legislature will meet in the meantime, in 1909; and as the governor says it wilt be its province T, to ct-V It could repeal this law if- t choose, and enact" another, and as , this, bill is. not operative for four years it has no jlac among the statutes. It was only passed as a thin, sham pretense to carry out the people's demand, while not doing so, " The governor Tgives " su f ficient rea sons for vetoing the other bills Jhat be killed, and altogether he hat-done a -very good job with his little Veto ax. If anybody is "in : a hole" . it seems to be the legislature, and a good many members will find them' selves unable to get out xf the hole next year if they should try fof re election. . '. . WISE LEGISLATION." AN ENACTMENT at the late session for which there is full Justification, is the 'measure "?if creating twi' (Commissioners 6f the. supreme court s It is a provision that will give speedier adjudication f causes to litigants, and redeem jthe court from tha - overworked condi tions that have long surrounded it. Oregon, hes passed from that por tion where three justices are longer able in dispose of the causes that rraih the court of last resort. Ad- ance in wealth and multiplication of etcrprisfs hav for; consjvence cars cf larger importance and more varied character: wider ra,nge of eutl"ritirs must - ba -explored and t!.e'Iir' of time hs greatly ..in- cirtied t!t list" of decisions that must be examined ia arriving at a de termination of the- equities. Indeed, Oregon long since ceased t be three-judge state and has expanded into the broader scope of a fivej-Judge state as is evidenced by ttie fact that the court has pending before it at this time a sufficient number of cases to occupy three justices every work ing day for a full year to come. It is a condition that called for a remedy, for the state owes it to the citizen to af ford him speedy adjudication of cases at bar, to the end that worldly affairs may move on with cvlerity and pre cision incident to highly civilized life. The two commissioners-, added to the ' working, force will ..enable the court to dispose of a much greater volume of business, and that will be complete compensation for the com' paratively trivial sum the commission f Will "COST,.1"' The new provision -is further commended by the personnel of the men whom the governor has called to administer if'., ' OUR - NORTHERN NEIGHBOR. r NKRECENT sperchrSir-Viifred Laurier, the premier of Canada, declared: "The nineteenth cen tury belonged to the United States; the twentieth century belongs to Canada.1 This is hyperbole, but it. is true that Canada is a country with a great future," and the policy of the United States has resulted in advanc ing Canada's interesta and prospects at the expense of our own. ' The High tariff wall which we have stubbornly and iatuously maintained ,b?ween this country and our northern neigh hot has been injurious to a certain extent to both countries, but Canada ie getting into a position where it can more nearly taka care of herself. and cares less about reciprocity. Our high tarnt pSTrcy.tJH sent hundred of thousands of our people and hun dreds of millions of our capital across the border, to our loss and Canada's gain, and the movement has but fair ly begun. . 1 " , ' ' - ; Canada is potentially a very re sourceful and Jfich country, and is just awakening to ah active realiza tion of that fact. Discovery of gold in the Yukon country" waa one eye- opener. More recent discoveries of inexhaustible coal beds' were far more important atill. But even richer in potential wealth than Canada's min erals are her great expanses of fer tile agricultural lands. . . .. . Of the 171,000,000 acrea of prairie land in the western - provinces only 5,000,000 are now under cultivation. Only one-fifth of Manitoba, and one- tenth of Alberta and British 'Colum bia, are occupied.' Manitoba ia the smallest of the wheat ' producing provinces, and yet if all its land were onder cultivation it is estimated that it would 'produce half as much wheat as the whole United States.' ' ' Canada's mineral wealth has scarce ly been touched yet. It consists jiot only of gold, but of copper, nickel and cobalt-silver, while the coal beds, both west . and . east of the. Rocky mountains, are the greatest in the world, as far as known. It is esti mated that a coal field just cast of the mountains, only 40 miles from the national boundary, and 500 miles wide, will yield 10,000,000 tons of coal a year for 7,000 years. . Considering her minerals, her for ests, her wheat lands, why should not Canada' believe that this is her cen tury to grow? To be, sure, she will remain the "Sister of" the Snows"; the climate,' except along the Pacific coast, ia" severe; but thi will not de ter multitudes of hardy" people from wresting wealth from her soil, for ests and mineral fields. Canada already haS . three trans continental railroads and another' is in course of construction!" Our pessi mistic lecturer, Mr. J. J. Hill, did not overlook -that field. When a- direct rail and water route is established via Hudson's bay to Europe, it will be 1.50Q miles shorter (hair, via New York. . ; - The present parliament has passed an intermediate tariff law. It ia in tended to' be retaliatory if desired, or will allow of reciprocity. It can be put into effect by an order in council. TThere is therefore still a chance for our government to estab lish greatly beneficial reciprocity in trade with Ca'nada, but under the present standpat policy there is no hope of this being done,- , Time was, and that recently, when Canada desired reciprocity, freer trade, very much, but our govern ment was then, as now, too much under the influence of political dema gogues and grafters, and run in the interest of American trusts, and tio reciprocity that the trusts objected to would be entertained; but now Can ada doesn't care much for the help which reciprocity would have' given her. Canada has discovered thst she is a young giant, and. can stand and walk alone, with such help as 'our fool laws drjve to her aid. - Canada an never even approxi- J mate the United States in population. wealth and greatness, because of Its situation ao far north, but it yctan become a, - great country, and its growth during the next half century will be a large factor in tha current history of the world's development aa-aaa1aa,aMaaiaaaaaaaaaa H - PEOPLE HELPED BUILD THE - RAILROADS. T MIGHT be well for railroad 1 presidents and for the people as well to remember that it was the people's land and money that helped very largely to build the rail roads a free gift, in return for which they only ask fair treatment on the part of the ostensible owners of the railroads. It is apparently assumed that the railroads .were all builf fly certain great captains of industry or Ho- leonsoMinaneZfJvho try owes a great debt , of gratitude, besidea much . of a more substantial nature; that the country owes its de velopment to the railroads created fey Gould, Stanford, Huntington, Van- derbilt, Cassatt, Villard, Hill, Harri man-and-othra. Bui-BKKf-4h men made great fortunes out of rail roads, which in fact tha people large ly paid for, either in gifts of land, bonuses, o small stock subscriptions. The fact is that tha earlier rail roads of the country were not built by a few rich men, but by a multi tude of .poor men, an army of sub scribers to the stock, when there was a risk in such investments. Besides, vast areas of land were giyen by the people, and for more than a 1 gen eration they paid taxes to, help build those roads. The builder and sup posed financiers were merely pro moters who turned themselves later into officers and magnates, handling the people's lands and money at enor mous percentages-of profit Mr. Hill was ta a great f itrnf in rtrrptinn A writer in the Boston Transcript saya that between $700,000,000 and $800,000,000 has been contributed to railroad building by federal, state and municipal governments, most of it prior to 1870, and this does not take into account the vast land grants now , worth billions ; of dollars. He estimates thar half the cost of the 47,252 miles of railroad constructed prior to 1870 was contributed by the people, most of whom got in return only what advantages' the railroads gave. And most of the other half waa subscribed, by - comparatively poor people. ; - , ". .The people are not regretting that these gifts and investments were made, -and would have no cause to revert to thero . if those who " came into possession of the railroads had kept faith with the people in the matter of rates, extensions, taxes, snd sale of the lands to settlers. The people helped' buTld the earlier rail roads so as to develop the country, and they and', subsequent railroads did undoubtedly help greatly, to do thisg but the interests of. the people have been too much subordinated to those of railroad officers, stock man ipulators, magnates and would-be monopolists. Hence the people every where are assuming control or the power to regulate the railroads, and they will see to it that these great business arteries are run hereafter more in their interest and with ' a greater recognition of their rights. The bill creating a new land dis trict in Alaska, with headquarters at Nome, has passed both houses, and T. Cader Powell, a Portland embez zler and political corruptionist, who, if he had been given . his deserts, would have served a term in prison instead of in a federal office-will be the receiver of the new district for which he will receive a salary of $1,500 jn addition to his salary as marshaitThe president knows Pow ell's record and seems to approve of it by increasing., his.- emoluments, which fact 'must be an excuse for some people's doubts of the presi dent's sincerity in Insisting on put ting only honest men in office. Mae Wood, whose alias old Senator Piatt thinks is Nemesis, is going to show him up if she can as not only her husband "by ,rights," but as a tinner of "the deepest dye." Doubt less, the aged reprobate could show that Mrs. Mae never sprouted any angel' wings, but that woutd be im material, incompetent, -impertinent and irrelevant - ' ' ' i '.-. l; ..'; Mr. Harriman continue to be gar rulous on matters that the public knows 'all about; on the points that might be of interest to the interstate commerce commission, Mr. ; Hsrri man is the great national clam. The Russian generals are proving conclusively - that, the only officer who did not run away from. the Jap anese battlefields are there yet Now Chief Engineer Stevenr fol lows Shonts, aa Shonts Sid Wallace, into retirement, perhaps also having been offered a larger salary, and -: : :)-' .) ::. Major Gothalls, or Coetala, or Goit- ell or Gotitall, or some such name, has been appointed. He is an army man, aiTa while he- may be competent would consider it unprofessional to do anything fn a hurry. But if Jie doesn't last longer than the others, he won't have time to make a tart The Benevolent and Social Order of", Poxy Engineers Who; Have Sloughed the Panama Canal Job ia the latest of the secret societies. A man must have, held the position at least IS days before he is eligible to membership. .,, , , ... .. r ' j.-mi...,. . T.i ao anno m air ouiicuiues. a mn- land tnan is to pay hia wife 90 -pefjlheatre. not on the street or at home. cent of ms earnings, and she is to uppon lao lamny, inciuaing mm self. But whst can be want with that ltt-petvientl It probably will be the opinion of the courts, as well as of the gover nor, that the speaker of the house cannot pass a bill by declaring that 30 ia a majority of 60. The most careful scrutiny of the list of leaders in the Roosevelt Third Term league, faila to discover the name of Vice-President Fairbanks. The late Senator Piatt- voted to permit Mr Smoot, to retain his seat in congress. , ; y '' Its the Fault .fth ' People From tha New York World, t-.; At last an explanation haa been found for tha difficulties under which tha railroads have been laboring. Mr. K. K. Harri man, who aata up to be. something of a railroad man. aaya: . "It la tha fault of the people who u tha rallroada. Tha factlitlea of the rati- raada hays Ineraaaad In In tha laat alx years than haa tha vol ume of buslnesa. .Tha percentage of tn- oraa In eara and power haa ' been greater than the .Increase of buslneaa. Tha bualness publlo has not kept pace with tha railroads. Inatead of Increas ing the facilities ' whereby they could handle their buslneaa batter they have fallen back on tha railroads as conven ient plaoes wherela to store their goods and materials. " It la tha people a fault They ahlp their freight according to the needa of trade Instead of according to tha con venience .of ' tha railroads. Why, tha farmers out west have waited until af ter it waa harvested to ahlp their grain. Instead of rushing It to the markat be fore It waa planted. Shippera have ac tually tied up trafflo all over tha coun try by atorlnr eonalgnmenta af good a In tha railroads' superfluous cars. In stead Of hauling them thouaanda of ,mils in their own 'delivery wagon. Of com the people are to blame. If only paasengera had -tha foresight, where thera la going to be a collision, io select eom other train, they would help keep down the railroads' casualties and damage aulte and Incidentally aav their own live and Umba. Th passen ger. Ilk th ahlppeV. ar groaaly In efficient In their management of th great railroad ayatam. In Justice to himself and other rail road authorities, Mr. Harrlman ahould lnalst upon an Immediate investigation by th Interstate commerce commission of th people 'who us th rallroada. When t out of t engineers on th La it Rhor on an official teat run past th uanger algnals it must b apparent to everybody that th publlo doea not max regular Inspections and enfore th rulea. Whan tha people pll up freight faster than th rallroada move it it must b plain to th dullest mind that th bualness publlo haa fallen be hind th railroad In Increasing Ita fa cilities. It la Jilgh time for th rall roada to Start - a political agitation against an Incompetent people. , Letters Froih the Peop - Immortality and Humanity, v Salem, Feb. fl.To th Editor of Th Journal "Student" in your issu of February 1 says: ..""Tour Salem corre spondent. J. R., .thinks th question ought to be Battled by a cloud of wit nesses." How doe "Student" know that "J. B." think aa h "Student") asserts T . I merely intended to sug gest that a great company of unlm peachable wltneaae ought to hava aome weight wltb aa Intelligent and honest Investigator Into th truth or falsity of the proposition that death does not and alt and that th so-called dead can and do communlcat intelligently with th ao-called living. . I am Impressed that "Broaenv not- only toylnar- with thla momentoua que tlon. HI flippant - almost eneerlng fe ranee to hypothetical crowds of Im mortals "flitting baeit ana rortn Be tween th two states bf existence ilk a weaver's shuttle from side to Bid," In dicate tha ttifler rather than th seri ous inquirer in real search for a vast and vital truth. No witness nor cloud of witnesses. however veracious, can settle one for alt tor othera, thla question of th sges, "If a man die ahall ha liv agalnT" But any man and all man of ordinary sense and earnest purpoa ran prove the problem and aettle the matter for him self or themselv beyond a doubt and for all time, if "Studnt" Is, on of th class just named, and wlll Send m hi address, 1 can and will suggest to him a lln of thought and procedure that will furnish to him all th proof h pro fesses to crav. If this entirely un selfish proposition meat with bis dis pleasure then I'v nothing mora to say to him. : . . J. R. Tha Helpful Side. .' Newberg, Or.. Fb. J. To th Editor of Th Journal I wish to tell you how much I enjoy reading "On th Trail of th Airierlean Mlaalonary." Will you al low rrfe to auggeat that you have many reader who Ilk to read of aomeon helping Someone 1. quit aa well a they . Ilk to look on th other side of th plotur. so strongly In evidence In th average paper t So many of the headline and front pages ar all Shadows, showing ua men anil woman with depraved,. abnormal appetites, ally you b helped to rontlnu to glv us something mora Uplifting. i A J1KAUXH, , wlth7tanding hi. denial of th. aame.-lBfn -1VBh .RlmB ,ra- Should the StaBc Realistic? ' Bf CoQUalln Alna. - ' , Tha queatloa whathor raaJlam belongs en tha ataaa has oftan bean diacusaeO. To ma thera la nothing (rand or beau tiful which doea not bear tha stamp of natura, but actlnar is an art. and tha Idea of art la to reproduce natura tn a noblar and mora beautiful form. If natura la repreaented on tha stage In Ita raw and original form tha affect will nearly aJwaya be poor, a fact which la eaally explained' and understood. - . One max do everything- poaalble ta produce scenery Which la atriklngly eloaa to nature, spend fortunes on cur rent properties and eoautnraa, ana on will after all only have a stage on iwnicn a aot - -r Tb. t. .i.. ,h. t. In If on ahould produce on th stag thing aa they happen on th street or in on' home without th slightest change, th result would b th same a If you took a llfe-slse flgur and placed It on thefop oiTS hliS column th impression of life sis would P gone. . . ,. Th stag la even a stage, and on must remejnber this fact.- . .. Lot aa taka on Inatanc th vole. Were I to us my vole on th stag Just as I do In my room I would neither be heard nor understood. 1 - It 1 one.tblng-taxonvra-4avv-room only a few feet long and wide and quit another to do th aam thing In an lm raena thee tre where thouaanda of peo ple ar listening to you. every-one of whom haa tha right to demand that you speak loug enough for him to hear. To produce th aam effect with nSy vote aa I do Inside th four walls of my room I must us much - more strength and pronoune th worda much more distinctly. If I want to b under stood I must us Intonation that ar not neceasary at home, but which ar absolutely necessary la order that th audience may understand. - . On this point there moat b an under standing or agreement between audleno and actor. When th millu th stage a small world In ltsalf la set and Illuminated; when th great apparatus of wings, scenery and actor Is ready, th world which appeara to the audience must be wrapped In th veil of Illusion, I ahall not take up th detail of thla understanding between audleno and stage, because thla a a technical que- tlon which aeinanasT5t , specially studied. . I shall only touch on point Aa- th theatre, muat do Its part to produc th necessary- Illusion on th audience It must also taka Into consideration tha eharacfts; and natur of thla audlenc. Th dejhande of a Paris audlenc and an audlenc of aavagea, of course, differ widely.. An audlenc of children is eas ily satisfied, aa wer also th audiences at the time of Shakespeare. Today everything la very much dif ferent.. It la a rul which art Itself lays ' down that th character on th stag must be painted, o to apeak, with stronger, more contraaty color than In real life, but th demands aa to how to produc th natural effect change with th tint. . f f Our ancestors, who war mora nrlml tlv. demanded that their actor roll their eye 'and atraln their voloes, whll wev mora refined and exacting,-consider these means coarae and trot of place. W hat exaggeration and hollow tirades. - - e e Tht aetor muat produc an Illusion by being true to nature, at th aam time keeping In mind that th whole 1 only an illusion: he must keep within certain boundaries, - must ' possess great taste and delicacy of feeling. -- -- "Buf my atern critics will Bay, la It then, after alt th purpose and ob ject of the stag to amuse th audlenceT If ao, w might aa well ataga what In America Is known aa a leg show." " - To thla I object - Not that I object to beautiful worn eh on th stag, when thy further th objects of art and not rmerely produce) sensuous and - voluptu- ous effect. On th other side, I do not forget tha good old rule. "Castlgat rldendo mores," which I will defend at all times and places. ' For thla la really so. Th stag chae Uaea and flogs th evils of Its times, but under a smiling maak. If wa leave out of th above quotation th word "rldendo" th stag become a penance, a punishment A box In a theatre la not a judicial bench!. Stars moralists say that men. and women, too, for that matter, often look at tha church aa a theatre, where they go to be entertained, but I have nvr heard anybody say that people go to tha theatre for religious edification. - My readera will understand that I us th word "rldendo" In Ita broadest form, not merely th pleasure of tha-aenaea, laughing or amlltng, but th general feeling of enjoyment, and well being, produoed by a mixture of Illusion and reality. This mixture continually changes, according to th character of tb play, and tha enjoyment of which I speak 1 th peculiar enjoyment which only real art can produce. ... ' Most eountrl which nava'dled have' plr -perished Ilk that And by the Irony of. fata tha power of th Caesars cam to an and far away from Rom. After it had 'existed for' centurlea the Roman empire became so vast and un wieldy that It bad to b divided Into two th Empire of th West and tha Empire of th East' Th capital of the former . waa Roma, aaya Pearson'a Weekly, ' ' ' , ' Tha, Em plr of th West became ao weak at last that It could make no tand against Ita enemies. Roma wsa acked by th barbarians, and event ually became, not th capital of a vast empire, but th city of th Popes, over which th pontiff reigned a king. Th temporal "power of tha popes lasted till 1170, whll the capital of Italy waa first Turin and then Milan. Finally, tha city wa tsken without a real fight by th soldiers of tha King of Italy. Tha Empire of the Eaat had Its capi tal at Constantinople. For centurlea It waeMhe greatest power In th world. But It became honeycombed with vie and enervated with pride and luxury. Also it grew old, and weak. Than, In 142Z. th Turk mad a tigerish spring on Constantinople, and took it by storm. Tha last of th Greek emperor died word In hand, and hia descendants sra living In England .today, in -very hum ble altuatlona. ', Egypt, once ao powerful and famous under tha Pharaohs, waa conquered by Rom, and waa afterwards awamped by th Moslems. Th rrescent wa 'su preme In th land of th Nil, and thS aforetime haughty Egyptians were Slavea for a thousand years. ' Th Great Moghul used to relga Jn India. Ia, the daya of Qua Elisabeth -r--;- r " - How Great" Nations Have Died .7-'-- . Small Change Fin weather Uwwura up th trash. .'. . . . . . I And th troubl la, aome of 'em hold Wi" v., Th houa of lords la also standing Pat yt - .''...,.: ...... Th legislature la still being dls) cusd. , .,. -. . - , ' e .- ;..v , - If that Thaw jury should not S rea ch, horrors! a .''.' More mi for Ireland; It ta to have a legiaiatur. . . , ... . . I Th weather seems to hint that tha baseball aeaaoa la behind time. ,. ' .-. , - . : Probably on troubl ' war1 that tha fool mother was jaaloua of Evaryn. . " . . v. ' - No really good cltisen Wtll fall to clean up hi own premises at least, ; . ' ''-: t- ' a .a'-v .. "', ' Of course. Shaw gravitated to New Tor BaJhaJigBajBa-avlruat company. , .. - e .;.. Th ' Texaa - legislature exonerated Bailey, but didn't extinguish th smell of petroleum. , , ---'; - '..'f;- - .." If hogs realised how valuable they are, they could be excused for trying to put on Styl. - It look Ilka aome towns will never be wld open again unless they hav a big earthquake,. i :' ; ' A reporter say Evelyn haa a mobile face. So w see from th 471 pictur lately published. ,: . , a.- e .-.; ; - f. Hermann la a back number, sure nough; few ear anything about hia trial la Washington. ' - -' '' a ,:..v' -, , '.. " '' ' It la rumored In atmospheric elrclea that th bird ar contemplating aeon oarj for th governor. ; ,"" ; ..' ' i .'-w "'..v' ' It ia reported that Abe Ruef may actually be brought to trial next month, butthg report lg. not cradtted. If a man read tha Bible, it la not a aura sign that h la religious; ha may b hunting quotations for a speech.. - s - .' . e ' - ',. A woman, being asked if aha knew much about husbandry, said aha ought to; aha had been married flv time. - e , i , - A sUnd-pat paper aaya thr are few men who would give t3t.S0S.000 to t cause of education. Wall, now, that's so. ':-.'- , -.... i . .. . .. , A good many Chicago people think Its present mayor' aervloea. notwithstand ing hia renomlnatlon, ar nearly Dunn. . ""'''..';;.''.-.. Aft anV rata ttanHmaa la ..t 1. A anything ha haa done only a little regretful that lie eaat do more of the am sort of business. .:; . . -" If a elvll engineer wants to get an Immena salary, all ha haa ta do Is to get an appointment first aa chief en gineer of th Panama can I. e . Now th Smoot eaa Is aver, wasn't tt really rldlculoua to try to ouat him from tha nat and not make a mo tion to get rid of Piatt and DepewT : Mrs. La aaya man haa been of very llttl aooount- sine -th-tlm- of Adam. She thinks h hasn't-amounted ta Adam. But what good was he be fore? ..'..... . ' Some Qneer People. . If a peraon , wer confined 'to on text book, th beat on to ho would be a dictionary, sine It give an Inkling of every art aclenc or profes sion known to mankind. A atudy of tha dictionary la alwaya interesting and Instructive, and a almpi turning of ita pages Will acquaint ua with many thlnga of which wa hava never previous ly heard. Notlo what fund of in formation la contained In th following definition: - . . Amphlaclan ar th poopl who In habit th tropica, who sbadowa tn an part of the year ar cast t th north and. In tha other ta tha aouth, accord ing aa th bub- ia north or aouth of their senlth. The Antlsciane are the lnhabltante of tha earth living on different sldea of th equator, whoa ahadowa at noon are eaat In contrary directions. Thoa living north of th equator are an tlsclana to thoa living aouth of that line, and vie versa. Th shadows on on aid ar eaat toward tha north and upon th other toward tha aouth. - -. Tha Aaclana ar tha people who live In a land where, at a certain time of each year, they hav no ahadowa at noon. . AU th lnhabltante of tha tor rid sons at Aaclana. thay ; having a vertical sua- twice a year. '' Tb Perleclana ar th Inhabitants of tha polar circle, whose shadows, during som portion of th summer, muat In th course of th day move ' entirely around and fall toward,,. every point of tha compaea. th Moghul or emperor of Dalht as ha waa aoraetlmea called was e power ful that ha thought It a Vast conde scension on his part to recelv an em bassy from the maiden queen. ' But aa time went on the great rsjaha, or trib utary kings, rebelled against tha Mog huls. . India was rent asunder by th wara between rival rajaha. This gave th European a chance. . , , Franc at first held th upper hand, and nearly conquered the land. But then England drova Fraqce back, and seised the Empire -of th Great Mog hul for herself. Tha heir of tb Mog hul. by th way, still -enjoys a pen sion given by th British government as a compensation for tha throne lost by his ancestors. .- ' -' 1 - Poland used to "occupy a big plac on tha map of Europe. At en time it waa much " larger and stronger than Russia. The tsar -of iRnewia and tha emperor of Austria Were onjy tooglat m oe on gooa term wirn tn King or Poland, and , thr wa no king of Prussia In thos day. . robl adventurers from all parts of th world flocked to th Polish capital at Warsaw, esger to serve in tha Pol ish armies." Th Duke of Monmouth, son of our King Cileries II, thought of doing this. y. , ... But Poland perished through her own faulta and follies." Tha mas of th common peopla war slaves In all but nam. Ther wer not allowed to move from one part of the country to an other without leave;' they could not own a foot of land, and they could never be sure that they might not b sold by th great noble tnay served to a new master., Hence the nobles and tba people never stood together In times of danger or disaster. , , ' j Oregon Sidelights ' '",,?" - The Echo band will purchase. taflt worth of Instrument, ; - ' - i' . ' ' ' . - Y Som work horse are selling for ttOI In Linn and Marlon counties. ' ( ' : - "Th Orana Valley Journal haa com lout aa a dally, xt Inches in alia. . ' , r - Th Kastf ra Oregon Poultry Assoc!-, tlon baa been organlifiPln Bakar coua- Xr: I . .f Myrtl ' Point aoolallsU will enter tain tha . publlowith song at their meeting. . ' .; Thi Albinjr Btrald know a good thing; tt eoplea th "Slddjlghtr dally, without credit -. " ' - Th new tlt.600 fruit cannery at Fire water will glv employment during tu 1 aeaaon to 171 people. '. . . .. . .... . - a a S People on Coo Bay are planning ta buy ardredger and run It independently of the governmentrmachliie. -aJ r - a .... A tne eounty man aay and haa - proved it' by hia own experience that there la money in raising Royal Anna cherrlea thar. - ". Whan th Toncalla Courier suspended it had only nine subscribers, yet had , beea publishing land - notice ... aa a "' - , "newnpapar of general circulation." A poor dear that eame'down from tha ' hill tn aearch of food last weak waa J . killed by a man on Mill creek near Th .' Da Ilea, and ha was fined tf Served .. him. right. ; , . - . j. v ....', -):,.' ; Mra. Martin tUler of Daytoa la th J only actively engaged woman hop grow er in Oregon. Mr. Miliar and bar hus- band each have a hop yard, but ah doea . , her own work... ., ; -,.- v. ...... (. r A miner in th Quartsburg district -aaya ha make $7 or IS a day by just . kicking hia fact around over th hill -and. cleaning up his boots when be C9.iii home at nl ghfc , Z ; .--' V - v Th Irrtgon Irrigator aaya that dl- , v ' tors who rail at Portland ahould turn'." shoemakers; they could gat their brla- ; . tie by simply reaching around t th ' back of their ack. . --7-rrrr-- -. '.,.-.-. .,iV . w ' Th .stork haa been hovering ovr Kent aud tMully all wlntar, y-th- Recorder. W hav ben awakened from' our slumber at all hour by our phone ringing for th doctor. . ' A . sure sign of a prosperous year. ' , ', " ' . : Y'' ''j-r Referring to th deep Snd excellent harbor at the mouth of tha ITmpqua river, th Coos Bay News aaya: Thla in Itself will lnsur th Vmpqua th ter minus of a transcontinental lln, and a . big city will b baUt at Wlncheater bay. . i- . : v. v -' : '.Activity 1 to be seen 'on vry 'aid , In Huntington. Surveyors are at work everywhere and preparations ar being made for the laying of alx mora mllea of track la tha Huntington yard a - No vacant honaes ar to be found In th whole town and from IS to 14 families ar residing in ears. , - ',,V-''--v A Springfield man has sued; anither to recover a dog. or ISO, Ita alleged value, and 125 .damage, claiming, to hav bought th beast In California, but tha defendant baa served notice to take th deposition of II or IT wltneaae In Michigan and other at Medford and Roseburg, so that It will b a costly If not a valuable dog. . . t - ;' Pebruary 28 ia History. 1144 Abel P. Upanur. secretary of ,' , state, and other prominent publlo men, killed by th bunting of a gun on th ' ateamar Princeton. msr-Emigraat ship Flortdlan wrecked Xa. aff English coast: 100 Uvea lost. 1854 Bourke - Cochran, orator and i atatesman, born. 11(1 Territorial government.' estab- . lished In Colorado. ,. 188S Alphons d tjimbartln, French ' poet and statesman, died. Born 17. 1171 Bland silver bIQ passed over vet of President Hay. " T" 100 Relief of LAdysmlth. 1 ' 1108 Beginning of tha battle of Muk den, Manchuria. . ' ' No Pangs in Starving. Novelist writs a let of nonaena about tha panga of hunger and tb ax- tram Buffering that accompanies starv ation. , It la all poppycock. Any healthy . person, with a normal appatlt. af tar missing two or thra meal, la aa- nun- " gry a ti ever get, aaya tha Outing Magailna. After awhile ther Is a aene of weakness that grows on one, and thla Inoreaaea with tha daya. Then oomea a. deslra for a great deal of sleepr a sort of laaaltud that 1a not unpleas ant, and thla dealr become mar pro nounced aa th weakness grow. The. nd ia alwaya ta sleep.- There la no keeping awake until th hour of death. Poland waa a big country but It waa divided against Itself! ana Ruaaln' Pruasia, and Austria combined were mare powerful. Thy all thre loin- hands, and each took a large ahara o' Poland In 1771. . That waa tha "First Partition of Poland." Tha Poles sun- mttted tamely," for they wrs still di vided. . :'.;i . . '... In 17t th trio 'of-robbers made a! aecond awoop. ' Onl--th ghost of Po land waa left .Another rear h tha ' nd of the-, tragedy... Th last rent-, nanta of Poland wer awal lowed up by 1 Russia,. Prussia and Austria. Th fat of th repubHo of Venice la on of th most dramatic In all history. -For hundred of years the City of th Lagoons waa on of th most power I statea In th world. - Ita dngea ranked aa the eqnalS of th proudest kings. It alliance waaf coveted by the great est, powers. Its 'government was one of . sheer terrorism, . Th - dog waa . hardly mor than a, splendid 'figure head. ..All real power rested 1 tn th hAnds'of th dreaded Council of Tea and th Secret Thre. Th latter war , a trio of living mysteries, and - war known by nam to practically no one in- Venice. - . ' e e e t ' . - 4 " '.'.' i Sometimes a man was ens of the . Secret Three, snd hi own wlf and children never dreamad It Their most dreaded servants wer masked mute If a Venetian, n matter haw high hi rank, was denounced by th Council of Ten or th Secret Thre he knew h ws pB better than a dead man. ; Ho the government Qf Venice was a ter ror to its awn people-end 4(e outside world. Then Napoleon earn upon th ',' aoen, aad "th Uos of St. AUrk licked , u uu-.. - ;