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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1907)
.1 a"U T 1 I , ' " I TFLIC ;TrT 1T3 VI A T, I ar won or we rate or increase in si oj are timeiy ana represent true ror leB war Is a contradiction In - J V. . i consumption. The aggregate acreage condition of affairs, even if they terms.:; War " being ? "hen,' these AH INDEPBNDKNT' KBW8PAPBB. C. 8. Jackeoa. In. 1871; was, 111,750,000, i and In chime Jn with the fuel dealers' "pre- fentlemfcn caa't make it heavenly. ..,.,pnbiibti 1891.462.320.000. These were years ent interests. There is plenty of wood, but men Unless Schmltt Is a strong Chris- rnhiiibMt nminc eept ssndar) ana I during which vast areas In India, . - .rr"rTTf'r2!.Uiii.. l-AraKia-T-. najtrallav am ' CIHorla I rnnimt lunrnpiiro tr, , It ... mh tl fil... v. w.. it. v.i,.a -a 1 1 r. .t th. tfft .t Porti.nd. or. far wre being brought tinder cultlva- to haul it next fall, when it will be he is to remain mayor will cawiiirirSrXa trnM tbroacb tb mails cocmi-ci- tion. Since 1900 with the exhaus- needed. The supply of coal is abun- make it so. . , - Tn ' Mary and Martha, Kip- Bluer. , - '-, .. . . . I .... . I ' -....'. I u--. ..... ,j . . - Hiirv upon ins cowmrajy I "... .." . . . . ... . : . .' ' 1 .............. I I S The Sons of Mary and Martta and; Some Other Things " Small Change Ttt iDnnimuuilil 117. '; .. I ' . r . " - r- I - lit dMrtm)to mchcd tw tbu nmniMt. wi I consumption has more than doubled owners and the, railroads not enough rat opera lor in oepartmCDt 70a want. Mta Kiim.. lit a hall Tha artist In vlrtua of his ethical yrapathlea, can touch upon tb Tloa ot Erery flay the murderous reYOlTer had th honor to have been 'reviewed by I to communicate) bis Indignation to hla I A Va.T.TivM th -at f increase in production, to meet the demand can beecured, scores its victims. It ought to be put n t 'the Ores onian'a ink brigada. The tt"&: VJlw in? 'SAiS least, jyw SUU. quit. vnn,ce..arlly that rlSnca ' roRfilON Viland-Revtifamlit AnM(sil y" ivibaa" Boiidinc otauo: re now P"10"611 reachea,"na even 11 eyeryooay orders his next anharrlntlna Tar.. . nail in anv addreai I "" ; iuu .m I , ta tbe t'olt'd States, Canada or Mexico. ftt h was unabla upon , a first readln. ! to determine whether It was Intended aa Tha stories of East Indian Ufa make ice repulsive at evrry turn. xuven Mulvsney,' truculent, melancholy, loyal to friend and wlfa and very tender neath the coarseness, finds the after 1 Are there roaas enough for yoaf ; Suits quite popular the yaar round dlvoroa cults. . jAwoM ipthaw. alaortaa-ea j, that of June weddlna,.ir ""- "'- -a-xir , . e . ,.ThhnJ?,, ar 'B ' baautlful ? than tha flowers. , ' Portland la provlna Its rlrht tn Its name of Boea City. ' Make la a holiday week-end; the rlgh , kind of pleasure paya. It 4s not believed that Joaquin. Mll- .pae year., One rar.. . One rear.. To see the happiness of so many la satlra or not. h. ic.am. . -.j'-..i. . i . 1 . . - a ." vast :iv arcAlArateil 1 rat. Rvl-IDie out in very earlv orders and do I ronrroimteil rMMn u itaoif wnitv. I that since "icinllnr navar inra uv. .w mm' ao.th...-.l vanus P.' ThompsonP. R. S., of their utmost to get them filled, there more than the cost of the fiesta : , ,,n 'om 'tau ori.ncaUon of 1''?' nth .to Wgwough. London, asserts in' Harper's Weekly will be ' a greater , scarcity of fuel -,":V! , j 1 ; r.uioV of M taTh. -.i " Women and moat notably in At I - Tha rule of tha people la vary annoy- r ....nv,.! lng jhouio or me ni w iniiuciyoiy iiib; w mvmw ur, j. r, organs. . .1 . SUNDAY. ...... .12.30 I One tnoeth mttV ANfi snvriAV. ,,.....f7M ( Ona noo(b.M....$ 63 Zeno said to one who was more desirous to talk than to listen: "Young man, nature has given us two ears, and -but one tongue, in order that we may hear twice as much as we "speak." The Stoics. ' that : a '1 world's wheat; shortage is next : winter; than there was last actually imminent, and-that it will winter. be reached within a little more than But won't the situation become three years. The problem that '.- the worse and worse year after ; yeart world will then face, will be to may be asked. "Sufficient unto the , either';, reduce the per, capita con- day" we might answer, but that sumption by substitution of other! would be only another way of saying foods, or increase the fertility of that we cannot tell. It looks that the lands by iartiflclal means, and way, and yet conditions may change raise the yield per acre above its ," to render the supply of fuel, flohmlts next term mar be a longer one than the one ha ras elected for. Many pitchers and email palls will also get a Sunday rest hereafter. ' :- . . . a a .'. . 1 But ' though ' tha rose la queen, she - - I ' I . . - I " W m . vut. IBUnUH.T ! MUIU BlDrifll 1 III FAK I II K J i i.n inn aw f r am a . . . a mt... v.'..- ji i j , ,. . . - i . - - . . present average. Ail increase in the particularly coal, more accessible .r;,;::," r or plainly ana awiruy. AGAIN THE MURDEROUS RE- PrIce ' whMt- nd corresponding and available to the people.' In fact, tellect. , th. progressiva, actlva. up-to-" "t.tudy0 wunVilub?" whH,;? Jr?!VlWW VOLVER. v ' , I increase in the value Ol Wheat-pro-1 mey ougm io pwn.,11, or at least aate jvomen who have something to doj Kipling la a very Isrg subject for a .. as continual and Jnalatent as Is his dudnr land, will ba tha obvious re- control 11 so as to protect inemseives " W""L' ana someeuo as weu as 1 r""V '.Z ' : I appeal xor an arutooracy or woraers . 1. . . - I intellectual ralma- ha . l'""v" c K ' REYNOLDS klllMit a men Unit a .t.-tiinv from a shortaM. .. w.w"ecwai reaima. tne Jealous, : , . : " " . .-v-..--vfc, . .AV woman to tha exception. weaneBaay wnn a revolver. 1 arises from contemplation ot tne xajchuj, mo ajiuauon may improve wnr nn..n k m. " . . . . i." - . .. . . .1 N V I .. . I . " ""- to wnat extent, if at all, he question, and whether or not Mr. as soon as rauroaas are Duilt to show their Jewels and The way to develop Oregon Is to has outgrown, or an adulatory tribute to close, our eves and take a sten back. M.b. : t.l-. m I some decadent fetich. :, The Sons of I ward from the mire, of our own desires. werv or Pa Mjy n Martha is. therefore, "a frank There was never a more effective aer- aoout It every day. 7: , ' 7T .rv i "S rtai - aernse of oiaea Blvery."jmoi upon the rileness of treachery and ' -. "..,' I Further Quotation la unneceusarv to I the futility of tha search, for treasure ! 11 ' 3 - V ' I vrovi the writer's inability to under-1 through broken laws. In none of Klp- npi T 1 ''XI, tt T . I tond anything of Kipllng'a. It is in- linra atoriea. fascinating as alt of them Lh a I am mi a A nm a I iw uovious rraaona mat in e are, ana unpleasantly truinrut as many A1C ICiilUlla VV CM TTI H Tl I average lournallatln orltln ahnuM h v.. i. th. , I llttla nultiif. a V.ITa I .iiji . . 1 1 1 1 j . I I txn tha nnl lrtvlv lnwft. ft. Mn. om, luriuiminf, n is mrs io nna one so decay" wnicn rioats upon me wttiaing, "vw. . , devoid of common sense and ao hardy fetid mire in Baudelaire and others of . ' -.. . .' t . . a"i..2 'advance oplnlona upon matters hla kind. In and through all of Kip- .The district attorney whose Jurlsdlo- whioh he acknowledges are beyond his ling's, work runs the thread of moral tl0 Includes Clackamas county to yet Men talk of woman ea devour! fcv wn"Pnension. 10 interpret itipung MaW and In none of the boreeome old nra rom. , , ?avn 01 women as devoured tyi to a man who considers Don Juan 'a Rtind arhani atnru. u th hreakinvl ' - . East Oregonian. Yes but one-cent fare would be more popular. , " The birth of an 18-pound girt 1n ChNj cago is reported, Thinn, or oar feet 2 ' By Ella Wheeler "Wilcox. ' (Copyright. 1807. by American-Journal. examiner, i i ine service or tne.atrona ror tne weaiciwnen ens nes crown up. . . : i irom a writer or-admitted authority. iu. v.ii, , i.. a . .v.. i ,. . - , t' I :.:; K- C K.' Chesterton, a not too kindfy l"':;. ylm -ii"" .KI - : . . .1 " I. : ( ' : ' to dres. and Wp. ?. !: . wSS n.ss.ry for" the bringing "forth rnehln'ra?.1 SST hE equipages and ,tely than of the arte of wan, And ha Oi1". JS" ... l". tiful than the .children. ,t v,; . llnnav la Mm. I main rnntantlnn I. vital mnA mlmlila "w" """a "".'.( ,., . was excusable for the homl-f Thompson be correct In his predlc- local coal fields, but the outlook is u"nine n another jeaiouay to ram- main contention is vital and valuable. Raiuiror iibor a0en; i - - i . i rtsinT Fttaet af . m a . i r.vetrvininsr in mi i irsrw in rna sanas inari.. . - wae a court ana jury, wm aeciae, tlon as to the time when consump- lr a wiaer amerence oeiween ae- :mai;4ItV " f.,:ni , " : " V " everything dependa' upon obedience. Haht to i v. in but it mav be said in advance that firm will rar-h and naa. nrnrlur-tlrtn. mand and SUDDlv until then. Onr .m!.!?? -i"!.Th!?T? Parfectly epicurean corner; 'StV1" lB. - I - ' . . . i - i w .ww mm m nuuia Liia.L it ihbii im nn irraiDDnumi Til ftit'n. Avrrr. . . . -i.ft.-j. i r or an mose wno it was a deed to be regretted by all it is likely that many millions now Population is increasing, while tlm- scarcely worth taking Into considers. the rtartlAa MinMnitil anit ftv avlotv I hh-- m V .),..... that Im.lber la derrAaainar and atata rnal huatlon. . ' ' u v V J .wiwy Ulillfi ITUf V yvaCllVil Vt . IU, ftM- w wmm vvu. In general. .To say tbe least, It waslportant crisis in the world's his- H untouched, and the mills are cut not a. legal punlshpaent of th Tic-1 tory. -:'j 1Kl :t' . V 'yt-J t,n ' Ie8S "labwood than last-year. tlm, even if the suspicions of Rey- i . t ISo it looks like a fuel famine next nolds were well founded, - . CATCH-'AS CATCH CAN RAIL- winter. The wise man will prepare where men have made the way with aweat and submission. We may fling ouraelvea Into a hammock ln a lit or I . - - - - . 4 the net-maker did not make tha ham. P1".. wh. Willingly bear and gladly moclr In a tit rii.in. a a ar ineir nroois ne reserves tne lenaer - ; The homicide came naturally into the man's mind because he always went "armed." In a picture printed in The Journal yesterday he is rep resented ln company with a revol ver, his constant pet companion. t ;f He prided himself ROAD TIME TABLES. for it this summer. When we meet a woman of intelli gence and culture who is not a mere aociety doll and find" her exhibiting the So far' from preaching th?t""i?aold denied the paraaltlo women ua-lv anit HBhnmt-- 4.-7 f.0..-?'1!.!? .5cilin'.-1-1 v f0.1"1?! I and effeminate. Daraeitro men. , w. .re .hocked and pained, so unusual !!?U-A, JiL ut7viSLi,J.I .wlStWhVtoato "I! Tet W d' KKr" Sk-Sr JoendT -rk of Joy , in service la atorm anj e ' : . v i ' i ne uniiea eiaies wiu not ao 10 war duforrdie to lrS;m.j:r ' . ., S --e ' t : Lovers are blind to each other'e faults, but ln many caaea they search for them after marriage with magnifying atand or go.' ao- cording to the order given i for every man who' does hla duty aa he seea It given him to do) for "the mothers of s UCH of the public as has occa-pTHEY-NEED -PROTECTION slon to , travel . will view with unreserved approval the pro- her now and then. It to a curious thing that a woi3a" I who -Seekav tv ba i iiamiiii.i..,j I .. - - . IT nllaft. .. . ft. . .. ak.. m urea ana la nartionia- ).,, tt.. v..i: v '.""" ."--."- of her eowna. vMi. anJ ,..."-(V,". t P"mism tqst can oeiong ting coats is aa military aa any body.' bo mucn ror . r. unesierion. e. . . . stress, In spite of all hardship and through all discouragement, that one ' Many acres of strawberries - were ' planted around Grants Pass last spring anil manv mnra will Ka nlantail. aa thav are proving profitable. .- " . '' ' '"'X- ' L ' One. subject that The Hague confer ence might profitably consider le how to posal of the : railway commls- on , being slon to require ( in ; Oregon a train ' handy with a gun," which was all I service that serves. Traffic condt ' riirht vh'fl ; HArrlnr na an Indian scout, but no more belongs to his life in a civilized city than his scout's duties do.' He was always " prepared to shoot on any provocation that seemed ' to him sufficient, re- -; gardless of the law or of other peo ple's rights or feelings, 'As soon as his jealousy became . active ' be to- sorted to his gun.' 'x n " :J:. where ,r one crime is prevented '.with a revolver, 109 are committed ' by its nse. It is a thing belonging , to ; savage, not civilized 51f e," One man dead,- his wife a widow, another woman J possibly Innocent, accused of a great wrong, "and ' her husband - held for murder all on account of a revolver, in consequence of the revolver habit. This is only one of . ,- uiauj utaes, uu uj no means one 'of the f worst, occurring : daily, i in ".which (his mischievous and; murder- ' 'ous little weapon, almost invariably used by men unfit to possess it, is made an instrument of crime, sor ' row,' suffering, disgrace and death. , - Under such circumstances it ought ' to be outlawed. Tbe men Jit to have ' ' a revolver dont want one."; It is al ; most invariably used for 4 bad pur - pose and with disastrous or damag- lng effect It ought not longer to be : tolerated ln a civilized community. iioj uuv uo exactly me D6SI Nothlnar draw, tha fan. ,t... a. I1" weaxest. Me pri : thing, for the country in Jf W SSrSfr i . ' "u "'?ln 0 ""m the com- Itr at hand for tha respects, but: his purposes are pinion o jeSiSS?y. and only to those the responsibility of the the lowest;, the stronaest to weakest. He preaches the neces- i to oo tne work that ccept the responsibil ity at hand for the simple reason that it is there to he done - and accepted Hons have come to the pass where 00I and in some points at least it ii; calmly consideMd en,eI,8B th,n "Keep ye the law be swift in ait obed- a tlmeard is about as effective as . nndoubtedly on the right ,h.' aS!!;. whit he'h.wrrt tl. Tl.e"dtpHnV St a Chinese alphabet in determining track. This is especially the case .he SMaV "PTrtiht, o'r bg?ZiJl kc,tbfflf,?nS;V when trains will ome and go. The with regard to coal lands. The forest 425 .i9 nuestlon nf whan a daatlnaflnn will reserve policy has been carried too harmed by Vthls. She is. on the cT 2. v'.6"??.' l! .: "E'B"?" -t6hi? --w wHvaa , - - I W a aftm, a ., I X U aU 1 IZI LIIFI TJ CUniBII I1U I be reached is no longer a question rar DUt ftas been-in part corrected, all cur own Poe-ibilitiea for charnj and of schedule, but of luck. 4 The man The whole business is a complicated to study her and to! in tne interior wno heaas tor Port-1 "uu a i"cy arouses savagely mA flor ooa poini. iaii t. ov .-v, a- conflictirte- lntro. Tt i.'.t.A.. i..LLi, i. a matter of mere physical auu ivt uo nuag ouuw tB IIOUIO lu -v-. .ua9 -"-J w IlllSIll BS WeiJ Oe Unhappy I a . 'vrinllnaVa aatlra la AlrZ.iL A land in the city in the rear end of terests rather , than the whole peo- flo,wrJ! .. ., . . it., . . . I r- "".r." am v iMchia tha nmaaanaaa fif mnra t tia i nuan wh no nnr rinar liira , v. . I . a t - ... . . ... v. ... , White - Horses we have a trumpet call that thrills, but to my mind, the Bell Buoy is the moat thrilling and Inspir ing of all that he hae written. It ought to stir even the cowardly pessimist to some faint scorn of himself. Its Jovoua delight In work for work's sake with no weak craving for gratitude or praise and Ita splendid scorn of the mercenary and the aeeker for piaoe and adulation la beyond description a gloriously spir ited tning. ..,'-. - . .t : East and West may never meet , but they have been drawn closer together through Kipling's work.. We see the "Soul of. all the East" a paloabla. it'uvfc vl H cioan. . . . . . . . , . . aane overruling power, We are not here S-T'iXS 10 question wny. out xo ao- me worn set " . . V T.. ' Vi. ...r... il ". for us. striving to reach the Ideal state Poem "n1 mo,lt entle of aatlrea, Kama- of "Interdependence absolute, foreseen, H lvea ua the dreamy, eld-world ordained, decreed." - . v 7" atmosphere and- sympathy, which al- .. Tha naaa m at aarafnat vnn rnuMW I uioua uiiuciaiuiuiiia, ui u in cannot fail to be atirred by it In the! protect our battleships from destruction the Fourth of J,uly celebration. In p,b mai, are representea in con orders to take proper precautions etress. ; The president stands for the against-the change of seasons n people's Interests, but it is . difficult his journey,1 It is a wise passenger for him to move in afty direction who' carries both summer and 'win- without favoring "some special -in ter clothing in his grip and a fan terests as against others. The Den- hy8s"ca1dbe?u?f oV. hAaTISTX and furs in his pocket. . ver convention is principally a con- diocry. whx;e our own great worth when we aean one anariria : -AU J'auty. all brllllancy. all success make the great fountain of these quail ties seem the more Inexhaustible. They yiw iivm . ana now DSCK to It, And it 1. ours it we choose to draw from it nuiaya we eu ourselves tnat we are tie folk" for whom he begs our tolera tion. We Christiana' who lump three rourths of the world under the op problous name of 'heathen." . ." - To feel the pathos of the child stories (ao much greater for the lack of em phasis upon it), -or the heartbreak In that wonderful love atory "Without COMING OF A WORLD'S WHEAT SHORTAGE. W HEN WILL the wheat-eating population of ' the world catch up with . wheat pro duction, and wipe out the v ; surplus? When that comes to pass, and the fields are no longer able to - supply the demand for wheat; how , Is the world to be fed, and what con ' ditlons will arise? ' t ' There are those who claim that as early as the end of,the year 1910 ' consumption , will overtake produc- tlon, and that, thereafter therir will ' be a constantly growing shortage, '. Their argument Is as follows: The - final limit of the expansion of wheat ; areas is almoBt reached. The cereal 'is only produced in the temperate sone, and nearly all the lands : adapted to its production have al ready been brought into cultivation. 'The growth of towns and the turn x lng of land formerly used for wheat growing to other uses as a result of .' " urban growth is a well known factor . arrestive of production. By reason of, superior mental and physical vigor, wheat-eating races dominate non, wheat-eating peoples, , which tends to bring more and mor-iflll- v lions into wheat consumption. , ' The total area of available lands, including Siberia, is 240,000,000 acres, : and at the average yield, which is 12 46 bushels, Is capable ot producing 3,0 00,0 00,000 bushels an nually.' Each wheat-eater consumes 4H bushels a a ; year, Including 0.6 . bushels for seed, which leaves the utmost number that the world can feed at . 6 6 6, 0 0 0,0 0 0 "persons. . Th e number of consumers in 1871 was 871,000,000. and In 1891, 472.000, 000. In 1911 It will be 603.700,-1 000; In 1921, 171.000,000; In 1941, 819.000,000, and. In 7,1951, : 693,. 000,000. ' ' t " v S'-f ' 'The Increase la the acreage falls The roads, ' particularly hr the hetween different special in- Willamette valley, have become so terests. What the different kinds of ( ' a - . congested with traffic that the mak- Jana grabbers need Is a law, If one lng of time is not flxed.by schedule wore, possible, that would permit regulations, but momentary skill ; or them to rob the people and divide luck in dodging delayed trains and tn "Polls equitably among them eluding wrecks. Trains are about "elves, something in the nature of as regular in their movements as a th protective tariff law, and make Central American , revolution, and tn,s "Pecies of robbery, like protec- less frequently on time. The service tton ,a "principle ; of our govern- Is and has been-for months, so out ment." They will rob the people of of gear on the Southern Pacific that most of the public lands that are to find a train actually on time gives left, and the .timber and coal, all occasion for comment. right, but , they cannot do so with That the public should have en- admirable and serene peace among dured the condition so long and so themselves, as the tariff robbers do. patiently, is the surprising feature, l is too bad that some law cannot This is especially true in view of the protect all of them together ln their fact that the cause of the delays is robberies, and so establish a great a significant token that delays are national policy that a grand old unnecessary. This cause is the" con- Party could stand pat on and point gestlon of traffic that overburdens t0 with pride, as something that pro- the roadbed, overtaxes the eauin- tects American labor. ment and ' overloads the business, forcing trains to fall behind time. If the delays are nqt the result of effort to save every possible dime out of , the business regardless of how the public fares, what is It? If It is not a legitimate cause for the SUPPRESSING THE HOBO. OME of the railroad managers are going to cooperate with the national board of charities and corrections to get rid of Interference of the railroad commls- the tramps along railroad lines. This S slon to be invoked, what is? SHORTAGE OF FUEL. A' D VANCE REPORTS of crops, and of visible or probable sup piles for the near future of other necessaries, are always liable to be more or less tinged with self-interest on the part of people who give out the reports. It is in evitable that people who have things to sell will do what they can to boost the price, while those who have to buy will seek to depress the price. "We are all bulls or bears to the extent of our opportunity. Usu ally, however, there is not much chance for prolonged deception to any great extent. The press of the country "keep the .'people too well informed. 1 ; ' Fuel Is a substance about which is a good schemet There is no occa slon for the existence of a healthy hobo in the country, and if he won't work in any other way he ought to be made to work for the public. Idle ness is not per se a crime, nor is a habit of traveling, but the lusty hobos do considerable mischief, and are on the whole' a national hut sance. To .see them loafing and bumming when on every hand peo pie are calling aloud for labor and offering good wages is an aggrava tion that justifies stern measures of represslon-ef the genus hobo. Among other reasons given for putting .forth efforts to this end it is said that a large proportion of the people killed on the railroads are of this class of travelers, but perhaps this argument was intended as irony. However, the hobo who Is physically well able to work , should . be suppressed. A healthy bum is out ot time and futility of work because his puling In fancy Is denied hia demand to "know why and whither." ; . The wail of the pessimist who makes hla naiilmtam' an aviiaa fnr aalf.fnriiilftr. ence snd irresponsibility has ' always Benefit of Oergy," one must have had been that of the cult of Byron, Jnau some griefs and muet have lived, not and Leopard!:-"We ara jaundiced, there marely existed; or have been born with fore and the world Is not altogether the geniua which made it possible for evil." And ' . Heine. ' Baudelaire . and Kipling at IS to divine "the hell of self. Maupassant have go"n farther into the queetloning provided for thoae who mire, and repeat and emphasise the lie, have lost a child and believe that with merely Jealou . Better "11 it by" thi e?Jl. .ESSl. LS ?ALM t.IV1 "5rPOT J?" Kill name And nitr it Ait Kw th. I iniruuajm-sj xinvins viuasu vvary i"Bi' w. amTcut -; euu vm. n,i. UltiTi?" Sif." ??i b..tn root."- moral law and ateeoed ouraelvea In sen. I those Who ITiave borne or loaf are ntlnue to "follow after ffaiu-V i2?,Pt- -wallty. searching for pleasure, and hav- pt-.rced by tbe tender mystery of Life Is a mistake I The Personal debt to KiDlin from I wllah' burrowing fnto the banks f yX:$lf; bgrudg, anyone auch k2"? V i2f? 7l?mSl"'& -.2? W bJSt 'and a Beauty attracts, but never hnirta tha I oonciusion nas lea, in an ages, to tneioy rerraining rrom over-much praise orr Injury In. time of. peace.... : '" ;" .... ",, ' The Woman's club at Omaha has .memorlallsea the city 1 council against the appearance in dry goods store win dows of artificial limbs clsd In hosiery. Either these displays ought to be sup pressed or the manufacturers of figures should be required to make better look ing 'limbs." , ' Oregon Sidelights Merrill la to nave a gun club. r it . . e . . v. t It la Predicted that the region around Bend will beoome a good fruit country. An Albany man picked flZB worth of strawberries from hla patch In one day. ,; e e , ' .Though Seaside went wet, the open gambling gamea and slot machines have been suppressed. , ..-, , t .. e e . ' a v Angora goats will be used to clear land of sagebrush, mansanlta and Junta per around Bend. . . , ' One strawberry, near Independence waa 7 lnohea In circumference, and many others were, nearly aa large. - ' :r ' , i ..);':..")'.' r.-.,'t,, Mr. Bath, proprietor of the Bandon Recorder, rune a clean paper. Bo did Mr.- Wash, for a long time editor of the Dallas Itemlser. .,'. K e e ' : ; :.. '- power canal of the Gold Hill Canal i Dll out of commission, says the Gold Hill result their entire system was placed worth-VhH, obserVr MleY madhou.e or th. Th.: delightful Jungle books .nd th, SP Th.-watSVaa'o'Sf th. qualities, . iwsi e-u... . . IZ"17 SL'KSSL Inf.,"" canar hundreds of carp were found In V i :rt. in n,Ti ina tirirucKQ Ul wan- l . i - i - - . z -- i ,-: a. a a we nave an seen the daszlfnar hanntvl ... . ... . vK pririieai 01 wnn- I . h nonla. lth. k i "rr"t-.. ",,.ln? P88.1"! Tha moralltv nr fnnnnratltv Af .' a riorinar with Vim anl Tma thrnuarh la. I POOlS. without brain or hrt ;"?,.";;: The morality r imraorauty or a ahada. whii. tk .i 4.u izi " . "i 1 writer denends unon the bias he rives charm kept her Tanks of iSSlrers ln.lour aympathiea. , If that bias la toward creasing. "or rana 01 aanurera in-j evll the pjcture. atory or poem la 1m- We have all seen the face thought I moral, if toward gooa it is moral, beautiful It fir. tl" i;5c.r.?.in5u"M There is no subject which a areat ar became familiar with ita utter lack of rt may not deal with In auch a way as mean ng, and we havi aeen th tari to Influence for good those who eon- without beauty ot "feature f arow lSt2 template It. If his own soul be atrlv- radiant charm T by acquatatanS , ? in Pur,t nU "and will be guided Therefore when we Tar !.Uti,. aright. - Compare the art of classic the first Impulse of Jealousv whv nnt Paganism In Its prime and In Its decs, set the , counteracting vibrations at dnc- In th flr,t w nav nud f, work? Why not talk with ourselves and ure" represented with such purity of say: "All the beauty In the universe conception and auch grace and refine-. i mine lr I keep my thought beauti. I ment in execution a to excite admtra ful. I ara now what I made mvaair I t,0n and, reverence. . In the last we have In a fACiinaa lltf. T " I laa , tha Wrtvrt JMf features and mv m ....l....! wnicn shall attract all eves if I kun I women and ;. children or both sexes every beautiful . mmittv oii. i C I deoicted in a way that desrades hu. soul. The first step is to be generous manlty below the level of the brute, toward othere; to praise freely and fear. No excellence In style or execution can leesly acknowledge the charms of other redeem, from the Just stigma -of vile women. For- tha iiarllaat .v.l. . u . nan ant work which In contention and human mind are envy and Jealousy." I treatment la-Immoral. The Pompetlan h. Z,i!rm2 "I of treatment should Snlow,, when twe , find ourselves unwilling to see others succeed In our mental realm. The musician, tha writ., v. , . ft. I .. . . V V , lUg VIHL, the business man, the actor, all will ?? 1reatr,1.ln tnelr respective realms lL.i-ey xS?1! nerouely applaud their rivals. NO man Or Woman .na. .... anvfhln. -.i.I ao. , ui unuiner. moral abyss la equalled by the modem school of decadents who, exhausted in their search for pleasure, have reached the same state where "On-that Pagan world disgust - , - And secret loathing fell. , dia and to make the acquaintance ofl e -. e ; . that, delightfully .garrulous and kindly HtVfi'tS,'! Junior , clerk for the Reclamation aer- old lady the Bahlba and that "fearful man" Hurree Babu la to be under Mat ing obligation. -. ... Oh, friend of all the world! Master of much maglo and dispenser of never tiring delights! More than any that came before have you the right to the name you have given Kim. 1 For far more than any other have you made us to know the oneness of all the great and wonderful world of every day and the goodnesa underlying all the evil; the delicacy beneath the coarseness and the tenderness under the grossness of the common sailor, soldier and laborer a well as under the harder crust of the man or the world! .Love of little rhll. dren la . woven : In " end out and all throuah your work! - Your creed la th creed of the bravest who are always the tenderest and of the lovlnr who ara alwaya and everywhere the darlpg! For vice. Among those entering for such examination were Miss Currin and Miss Hogue of Klamath Falls, says the Re- fublican. The result of the examlna Ion was received Saturday and it waa found that theee two young ladles se cured the highest average In the United States, Miss Currin being first and Miss Hogue second. ; - . A Klamath county "lava bed" sheep raiser is enthusiastic over the future prosperity that awaits the sheep man of this country. He declares a good band of aheep are more valuable than a gold mine and urges extensive branching out in this line of livestock, and that the thousands of acres of range . ln the lava beds which are practically use less for other stock than sheep will keep thousands of head more than are now your faults .we are gratefuUfor do being ranged thereon. they pot make you all the more one of ust a xauiiy. very. imoerTect neoni. strivlnax like yourself, toward a sane and clean ideal which uplifts the soul and makes the commonest laborer's tool tho equal or ine artist s orusni Will Ileney Get Herriu? Heney get W. ; T. It is difficult ta make any close cal culatlon, because, unlike grain , or Place now in this country. Make him fruit, it Is not an annually growingiwork at breaking rocks for public A. iS i .i .u anumor. . , i wm Heney get w. iierrWT ,11 as rlvalry.trUth tbert u no thing Caliban Ruefs confession shall bring lo Each soul Is a nnrt At tk. bir tha men eauallv venal, eaually yet each part has its own particular ahamelesr, and mors dangerous, in that place, power, and purpose. they pretend to stand for higher things, The only thing for each one to do wno bought this boss and hie mayor is to make himself so perfect that he asy to Wirchase then he will, by ' preai wnoie without 1ai I Dreaaing xne ancient -coas 01 nonor or mar ana neips to beautify tbe great among thieves, have performed, for Ine human' fabric. , : , sake of a lighter sentence, a service to . rou are the thing you have made that public which he ; no more thinks yourself Jn other lives. .'-v..s , . " of really servinr now than he has In J starteQ as a divine atom and the past Of the great band of looters, you have taken on layers-of materiality. Herrin is easily first In ability and i?? l- rnaka the divine atom shine creative mastery of men and materials 'ough the material layere will you toward any . Harrimanlo end. Patrick 5ISJr,ibeautlful tf'ted and won- Calhoun of the United Railways is. of rpK-l i. iw , . .. secondary consideration, but with others mi5 .1 uw?.rk fo1 yott k'P I" of the "higher world" more delervlng W;,"11, e.LHme ?u ,t0 decry of Punishment than the weak and ln- best intent. l'aX?.J"?-I-?wa. iD ocnmiw aarnmistrsuon .wnon iny forMrj "in 7k. yvB,la, or Dnnea."r as cnier attorney or tne Boutn- xorwara in tne work of self-daveinn. I m r,,ii . i... i.a .ti.. It is the work i W.k i- 2 ul boai of Calffornia,.. Whether dock prlvi- and aeain ,?n?n it lf"? aain trains were wanted, his was the power ana again until it s accomplished. . I that ttia nia ..ti..i. .een ousv. mow.. . . I v".r ?"--.. rv- -.. ...v.. . . . " . - ... i nrianaa , rvt aTMatna, tpaia Improvement made could', be but that J?!" ?are tht what you believe laid? no' it j vw eoi x, am mereiT niarniv varinnH i j - . - sense of criticism I. I n'8. power was ie in tne iransaci on. petty Jealouar viaihi. . aii ---1 1 which must nrst sareguara his inter JB10usy, vistoie to all eyes tav i k;. . i.. rx. your own. This Date In History. lS7?If fnav V.AnmrA TTT crop in the sense that they are. The supply Is ample, practically unlim ited, but two things render the sup ply mostly unavailable lack of suf- fleleptly cheap labor and lack of transportation facilities. Everybody can, see and understand, especially since the experience of . last winter, that a fuel shortage is probable, if not . inevitable, . hence , the repeated warnings to people to provide' their next winter's supply as soon as pos- roads if nothing else. Ifsn't it childish for those eminent gentlemen at . The Hague to try to agree to "lessen tbe horrors of war?" What - would they have -a nice, , pleasant, . smiling, ; harmless, picnic war? If there .is to be ..war, why not. make it, as horrible as pos sible, so that it, shall be the sooner over , and serve as a frightful preven tive of succeeding wars? . A. hor- 1675 First etona UM m a cathedral In London. ' " " . 1812 . Wnlllnartnn ii Joseph of EnaTn at VlttnWf.. . ' . isia isaac Toucey of Connecticut be-lBW"y enoug-n ueniocraiic vow-i to oeat came attorney-a-eneral of tha .TTnit- I BelL the Democratio candidate, who. ests before it could become a law. Dem ocrats, Republicans, socialists -were all the same to him, provided he could pur chase-them. Hearsts presidential dele gates had free passage three years ago on the Harrlman lines. Again last autumn, after he ; had nominated his tool GUlett for aovernor on the i Re. publican ticket, he was friendly to the Hearst candidate. Langdon, who drew pwrsnns Kluaa ; by Yokohama and Ti an oklo. States. lan24iPedaB MtM the Hunger. eii5ir?5ri",,il?an Charles 'JB. LitUe- Many earthquake at Japan. 1898 Thirty, seven" ; spectators U?tWlpAlb,foUnnCh,n- f'the Bfltl8h .t1DK?T'fpJ?.b,'cn "ational convention at Philadelphia nominated- McKinley and Roosevelt, n ... . , .... , ,( 1903 Great strike of textile ' opera tives at Lowell. Mass.. ended. . 190B Rlc-ht iwranna bm.j ?i Twentieth Century limited train in onto. . 1908 United States Herrin foresaw, would not be eontrolla ble. While the city , was yet smoking, Herrin began to buy special privileges. Ruef once had the ambition to get Her rln's position, which, to hia mind, was the summit of greatness. Wow , that Ruef is down he promises to drag Her rin, with whom he did a quiet business In large sums, down with him. Let us hope eo. They deserve a eommon fate. li:! " 1 ' . ' '" ' ' ' ' ' ' . '"' Vr Tho Glorious Climate.' ' . From the Los Angeles Times. ' A middle-aged Yankee, six feet tall and weighing 110 pounds, came to Cali fornia 40 years ago (with the half of one lung. - When he died last week he weighed 280 pounds and the ' autopsy showed that ha had arrown flva haw Appreciated Portland's Roses. Prairie City Miner: This month will be known and recognised among the lo cal hiatorlans as "shivering June." Shak ing, shivering and chattering df teeth have distinguished June, 1907, from all Its predecessors. Strange to ssy, noth ing as yet has suffered from the cold L - I t . . , . . i snsp except. 'numanity 'ana woon-piiee. From a Special Dispatch to Omaha Bee, j Cropa and verdure of all description are ' Magnificent . ana cordial receptions nourishing and despite -shivering junej nave been met everywhere by the Oma-1 n". v vv" """" , ; ha-Boosters. but none approaching that in a lengthy communloaUon ' to Ita. tendered by the hospitable men and eorder Froman of Linn county a Spokane women of Portland, for the women con- JS.'1??' X?rS2i SSmJS. i.iv,,,,.. v. .u . a earning the location, and probable value tribute to the crowning event of the f certain land in Linn countv. . Con- excursion by literally filling the special eluding, the letter says; . "No doubt your r- train with roses. Never has any train, "me is very valuable nut it wm wm not avan that a' -.M.. a. ' ... " you a couple of minutes to give us the not even that of a president, been deoo- , information n : tha nnio rated more lavishly and , beautifully I two-cent stamp will pay you at the rate than that of the boosting special, and $, eents an hour for thetime lost' letter in his collection of curiosities. words are not adequate to describe the floral garlanded cars of the Omahans. It was a rose carnival for tha slonists In "The Rose City, where roses abound everywhere, even to the street hedges.. . . j-, -s .'(-v:.;v';:; :.Vi;' ' . sr"-;-:;'.tf.''f."'f:''T'. ' On irrlving; at:: the train the excur- sionista were astounded at the changes wrought ' by tha ' women ; during ; their absence In decorating the train with roses, Hundreds of thousands of roses were used, festooned from everv corner and nook of the cars, even to . the bell rope. Solid ropes six Inches ln diameter of pink roses made the dining car a bower of beauty, and fragrance, long festoons being strung from end to end. While every cranny of the car. seats and tables were covered with pink roses and " carnations. Each car had a har mony- color scheme and the compart ments were 1 solid banks of flowers. even the floors and aisles of every car beinar strewn with flowers, v The blue velvet upholstery and mahogany finish of one car set off with bouquets and fes toons of cink and deen roses, whila tha green sleeper wsi decorated with white and yellow roses and apple blossoms The ; observation -car was elaborately cared for by thousands of rose of all colors and the rear end of the train was-fittingly finished with an Immense oouquet ot targe American Beauties. It is the consensus of the Roosters' Opinions that the cltezens of Portland a-ave one of the moat sincere and lnh. orate welcomes and entertainments yet received and praises ofthe treatment received are on the Hps and in the hearts of everv Omahan. Indicative of , tha lavish use ol roses, the decorations Were not . connnea to the cars arone, but to the coats and iuarafa-e of the travelers and even to the night robe of one Boost er whloh was hanging at large in his stateroom and was covered with brisrht "An East Side Bank;. for East :;;trjrM" Side People." ' . '7 Every That you deposit In the savings department of this Bank com mences to work for you the first month following - ana contiMies to araw interest at ine rate oti ' 4 per cent as long as It remains In the savings department of this institution. ' - ' ' - bon't be afraid to start a bank ' account because you cannot start With a -large one. r- The depositor who has an ac count of $1.00 Is treated' with the eame jcourtesy aa our largest de positors ' receive. .v , . - . We pay 4 per cent Intereat and compound It twloe each yean , the commercial: savings bank. ; snroTT auro txizaju atb. ,George' W. Bates.;.. ..President J. & Birrel t, ..... .Cashier oi the lock canal for rename, . luocs. ' a roses. - ' -.