THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, FRIDAY EVENING, JUNE 3, . lCGTi THE JOURNAL AN INDKf ENUKNT NEWSPAPER. C. S. Jk-n.. .Ftibllahft TobMnhM arery Tnlnf (cseept Bandar etm-j imidT uwnlnir. t Th Jnnrnal Build- tna. rifll Had lan.lilll atraeta. rortUnd. Ot. Vntorod at the nnafnfflfle at Portland, Of., for tranamlaaloa turutifli tl mall a aacood-claea miliar, ' .,r , " v ., j -- ' ' TKLEPIIONB MAIN TITS. . All denartnaBte rMCliM tiy tfchi ramhar. the eparator b department ye wast. FoHKlUN AUVgBTlSINtf EKPKESKNIATI V B Vrevland nmlamtn KnaHnf Adrerthlns Afencr, r Bran.lr HotMlnir. 825 Fifth stanae, Jiew a lofkj Trltmne Bulkltn. Ctilfaitft. ; - ; Bnnacrlnttoa Tarma b mall to an address la tl Lolted Elate. Canada, of Mexico. , CM faar... .',.1,. $11 00 I On BJWta. .....$ -80 UMAr. . - ..; v On nu........ .t2M I On month. ,...!.$ 3S i- - . DAILY AND SUNDAT.,. ;,-... . . On fear-.... 17.50 I On tnontb........ OS v Prejudice corrupts the taste, 1 mm iv y w jiugiuoui, la all the 'concerns of life. r Racine. 1 ; "j ':VrSx'(':''r A DEVELOPMENT LEAGUE ' THEME. 1 trackmen say they are so poor that manufacturer to make a good flnan they cannot afford to strike, as they clal showing entirely removes the Jn muBt . work constantly to exist. A centlve for one manufacturer to turn picture is given of an Iowa man and out as ' good material as his co ra ft Is wife and seven children, who was petltor." : f : . ; v' ' t ';,' discharged because he sought to grf Thus the American people are not anad vance In wages, over $1.25 pet j only paying , an enormously exorbi day. Many pictures are printed I taut profit on rails (as well as other showing broken and defective rails, steel manufactures), but' are getting Small Change r - WAS emlanUyflttln.lor waterways to have been a topic before the Willamette 'Valley development . league at Cottage Grove. There Is no doubt but that a crisis Is on In the transportation of the country. A stage Jn develop ment has been reached In which It Is physically Impossible for the rail roads to handle the business. The increase., in. the .volume , of produc tions seeking marleta and the de mand for. them to be moved, have become stupendous. ' The lumber tonnage seeking outlet from Oregon by rail for the month of July, IS 06, exceeded that of the "month of June, 1905,, by 129 per cent. It leaped from .22,000,000 tons to 72,000,000 tons, requiring an additional 826 cars to move it. The transportation requirements for the northern two- thirds of the Interior of this country have doubled in the past 10 years, : while In the same period the trans portation facilities increased but one-eighth. Similar conditions , ap plying to all lines and extending to every section; present transportation problems beyond the powers of the railroads to adequately and satisfac torily meet. There are not shops to build cars enough to - meet the re quirements. There are not locomo tives enough to draw the cars, even were the cars available. There Is not trackage enough, nor sidings enough. There are not enough FEDERAL COURTS AND STATE mlnals.; There Is not enough avail- , T , 1 auie laoor 10 mine ana manufacture ' A Minneapolis - doctor says kissing roust go. Aiui it ooaa by ravor. Nobody ' knows whether ; San Fran' Cisco Jiae two .mayors or. more, , Of course the undertakers are an eiv ceptionaliy cheerful lot of man. Y 1 -1. MS V.... . , , a... .1 I V . ,, . ii.i - il.. .,n. W. ... -m I. ;ll IwmH w won wuv nun l "no ouu uau iuuuiuuus vu uiei iouo vunv launo ueeiructiva Vi. yrvyi Ul Oordons to pay advarUalng rates. Missouri Pacific, and it'ia aald other ertv and loss of life. i ' i , . ' ' . -' ;' ' a. e.i m...i c e.v.i. I coean'i n w amount to n viivc, viiuin a otuwau t mucn thaa day to become an I Li .D. demands of th trnrkmwn am tnr 12 I aafd tin nna neoBBlnn! "I Irnnw nnsl. I ' . -', ' . v-.. if- i...,....ij.':.i. 'mJ Moat amlnent man ara en eloaer ae- wt u DiRUfc-uuui uuj, buu jui uiuioi uioi; vuai uugiauu cauuui yruaucii quainttnc round to cave been over- trackmen. The Trackman reprints I pig iron at actual cost for, less than!1" V ': e'A.' A figures from the Interstate commerce! $11.60 per; ton, and cannot put It I The crop failure prophete have only inmm !! a nrta ,- In I Intft fool ll W laea'tka.. If KA I ?.'. ' : . lo PfaUCl UOl th frmr Year a frnm, rt 10n( I nr tnn. mab-lnir nn'.nnat nf 110 1 : ' " " .v . .' -r?ivv" " T" :in,'(.(.. i luiiuoiio, lucn Btic tu iu tuuuu; ivu tut iBtin. . rvo vuu uinte isuai ominoua. , uan it Da poaaioia mat '17. it. 22,884 4erallments, causing a prop- for $12 per ton.".; Yet. the steel ru rMUnT. . , erty loss of $19,484,025, and killing trust, that nndersells English manu lUneia Adiaj stavanaon u atm aiiva. ii , ,, . I .v j -i. een ' " " "' """u iivn vwyiv ouu luuiiug i,ii. iiawiuicio auivou auvut ttv yor iuu i again who anyDoay. , ' .! . There- is no reason to doubt the has for yearg charged American I ; r - ' ' statements made by this organ of a I consumers $28 per ton, ft prof It, ac-1 trncle Jim Hill, but everybody can't be class, of, underpaid 4 workmen. Its cording to Mr. Schwab, of $16 per I n(1 "nyiM , ; , illustrations are corroborative of its ton, or 1 S3 1-3 'per cent, or about " Aa Enaiish lord la to marry a MIm text, and ghow a most wanton reck- 40 per cent above wlat English rails ftr0Z1 bLC n?V delop lessness of human life on the part of j i that would not break) could be laid 1 .. 1 the railroad managerg.; For the poor Mown for in, New York: But even niV 4"" K-bJuot rails-they ao-ot--'.Altogether,:. toJtpMalnfiaMi; cK!ll!LJW!rJ nSf11 .to B":bim loy t.t. V 11. . i A. . I MnMf. V . . A J.I I, Jt - ' 1 umuio, uctsuao iue aieei trust msKHi I """"'"I " wahjui oi a ie w aui-r i. . the Jewelers .are not ualns i or diamond, seepa soaring, II IflOOS IJ , , r s IE HISllIIG Bright Boys and Girls Enter in Journal Educational Contest Every Day, STJBSCEIPTIOJJ" BOOKS HAVE BEEN MAILED In the contnst. Among theno af , la are Influential people In Eurwiih. ; X intlclpBtee the pleasure of visit- ; CStJ From these ahe has aseurancea of aur port In the contnst. Among theao I rrienda Etie a ln- thfae friends during the conteat and fei'la sure that they will atora up votes for her. - Hilda Brandt enters The Journal con teat to provide a tneAna of further phoollng, after ahe hna finished the Portland High school cotire. She will strive with all her might to aecure a cash, purse which will pay . her way i through the state university, Contest Manager Can Be Found at Office of Newspaper Foor, Hours Bach Day Score Will Be Printed Shortly. poor rails ' and the tariff prohibits I lar a ton, the, American people are u"t"e0'ota "ri" the railroads from buying rails else- swindled, out of tens of millions of j "V , c where.' But In regard to rotten ties dollars annually by this single Item Nobody dies ef heat erostratloa in ana pauper wages mere is less ex-id toe outrageous lann law. , oca. nest summer climate in toe coun- -- .. - - I . - ... . . . . . ' 1 tnr . cuse, when one reads -of the enor-l comer'g weekly, which auotei the - , ' v inniit inmiiii timinH r. thm nil. I bKota " atafemsnf n SxtiwaK'a Th war In Central America, threai. v D, . " "1,-. tn hMnm. .. . run us ana ., me Bright and ambitious boys and girls are enlisting In the Journal's educa tional contest. . ,:'..:,.:, ' Several complaints have been reoelved that subscription receipt books prom ised contestants have not arrived. These books have been sent out to all the ywnr'lJo-opiromisatsd-DrnBcheWiir by themselves. They should be In the postofflee awaiting every contestant be fore ths issue of the Journal contain Ing this notice, is published.- , . ; - v ecfipt pooag ... were ., dispatched - as fourth-olaaa mall mattn nnin.i i M jArgs.envelopea bearing the addreaa of tu wournai on -me corner, con teatante THE SCII01ARSIIIPS So far as at present made up, the scholarships to be awarded at the end of the conteat are presented be low. More achoola may be added as the contest progresses and the num ber of determined contestants mul tiply. -.,; ....... ' III - X, 1 ! ' ., . A Xhe rerfunied Gown. Ever-changeable Dams Fashion has sprung a fiew aurprlae on her devotees. Hill Military Academy for boya. Port land.-Oregon. . i iwo acnoiaranipa; one acnoiarsnip v. . . . - " . .. '.' with kA.. ,,inn i...nHrv mA u1 n "ad persuaded them that other items' amountlna to 1500. Another 1 Is no longer good form to allow the acholarahlp aa a separate prise for tut- person to emanate scents which may ba' tlon and noon meal, value 1W). v distasteful to others, eomea th. . St Mary's Institute, Beaverton. Ore- whlni, ; which la gon. One scholarship In academic oe-l..,'. .u , : . partment. Including lessons on any In- nwa with, an appropriate odor. - strument; also board, room, etc. Value I There ara all aorta of possibilities In : 8210. this Idea, as, for lnatanoe, If one follows fit . Helen's Hall. day. and ' boarding this fad to the extreme, one's mood s fPJ5k2! Jl,r,i-dJ,n.?.l..,ri: m,y "Med In one's dress, so that SBaasjs viwm n viiwakt sAsBFf lag noon meats. have the moat casual observer mi. Whitman College, Walla Walla, Wash. of course, too. It reauire that ona . i mm v,ra.,iY.wi, vt anouia nave no otner business on hand Scholarship In OUtsldai thai rltv ahnnM colossal ; fortunes I Q notes Mr. John Blgelow as describ-1 Fourth of July celebration in an Amar- j masters for the books. Toung -people In piy . .V,tnV. . n..u ... ...VI.. x.i lna)in,AaoHn..t town. of them. Think of an American citl- by which a good share of the prop- Portland and Viclnltr mar . atmlv In e e ' - - ' I person at the elreulatfnn danirtmant .t BO rar. the Ban Francisco eartnaaalce I ine journal wnere hooka and othar sun. ham rttt tmn ithftfvul In flnhmlts .nil I nlia will ht fMrnl.h m.A . renin these days supporting a family! erty of eighty millions of people Is I Ruef, nor has Orchard confessed tol If out of town contestants have not and rearing children on, $1.25 per Practically confiscated forUhe ben- M ' - . eytttth' W:! A man ef 60 can scarcely be ex-1 should notify the conteat mana;er ; by day though Jn this part of the coun- eflt of , the three' or four . millions pected to be so eager about the Fourth I ,tt,' to that effect and a receipt book try wages of trackmen are higher I WCo participate in the profits of such of July celebration as the young Amer-1 will be sent tmt by the first post IIi.ti iki. ... I cnnflacottftn e' e ' Omim((a I lean of II or ' - I Srabaorlntiona Almn MmmtwmiL. umu nuv o r nig uiai i icu uictt. I - -- -.. v , , A , . ivmuuu i v a) e v f 1 . m : f. i . . . t-ivievuun ... a e But the American railroad managers tor the sake of protection is a dogma Th more one reads Dr. wiiay'e re .. .. . ... i . t.,, , - . . , I marks about food, the more one is con- are altogether too niggardly with M" a republic fit only for a highway strained to believe that he lives in a boarding-house. , ,t . . . e e . - , ' ;1 respect to keeping their tracks in nun, a fool or a drnnkard." And The conteat manae-er ni ha Von nil at The Journal of flea on week days be- . .,... ....... '." . . .. r fut thato. axpreaslng m :pA,..Ul. year, value $120. ate scent. repair and duly watched, as Is done I yet the eighty million people not only ' it looks as if Portland. Tillamook and ,1 "I a fl -UwmaHlara a - haal haait i aa. In Europe. ; Dividends are every-(stand It, but half of them somehow I prtved of a railroad for two years or ininir. ' nmn , ana lira or . travelers i ramer vaaueiv Denevn in it. aa mm. nothing. To -compel , railroads : to thing , that In . some . mysterious, spend a great deal more money in round-about ' way benefits them. this way would no doubt cause rallrj Really, aren't we "easjr marks"? ; .'. road men to cry . but that they wer V'" ' 1 : '." - - 13 ' - ' being persecuted, but this should not , V PLENTY OF COAL.' Drevent the lawmaker from cnlns-1 ''' ahead; and passing laws requiring nTHEREm ARB People who every supposed. thlB to be done and so Drotectlnit I "ie -wnne predict , that the It Is hinted that Colonel Hofer ex-1 peota the granges to help make Mm governor, " He knowa mora about farm-1 ing than Horace Greeley did,' " t ... ,- ." a , t-.-s-:'....; "Senator Dick refused to talk ba- cauae he- had nothing to say," reports an eastern paper. That little tinhorn politician must be wiser than we had NOMINA TE A FAVORITE mM - . . a. . a. a. . ... . 1 vr snTerai, yon uk n you nominate more than one, select your nominees , ' from" different localities. 0:. r ,';-'-. Cut This Oat and Kail to TH JOtrMTAX, OXTUUrz, OS, At Oao. Willamette University. Salem. OregonTj 'lying un to "them, for, indeed: only the Twa acholarahlDa One in either oolleae ul" fashionable woman has time, now- or preparatory department, value $50; ;aayf 'or moods, nor are they worth the other ' In tha muslo department Sn,1'l"rtlon by other people unless bar value $100 ravora ara of moment. , . Delia Collet Tlall. firon. Bchol- ..B,"tLl!!l!!j1J. ."e fad. as. told , ihin i, iih.V.;.m . Mihta a. V" u" ""las jrom me wona or 7 partment value t$S to $50. I The fashionable woman Inatead. of Portland ' Academy. Portland. Oreaon. I odoptlna one Derfume and ciinsinr Day scholarship In either college or I that at all times and seasons,. now has : academic department good for Onech gown perfumed with an appropri " iter sown or BDanUh laaa -oaor 01 etiipose 'h arou&es aur- inn rnmi n.. : . - . McMlnnvills Colleira. McMInnvllle. I Hap prn.h .itn. Oreiron. Two . scholarships. One In an odor of Pftrlaian vinlt . t .n..bZ . either aeademlo or college department of tha lighter moods and suggests arace value $50: one In the department of and delicate taata. When she walks music, value $0. - Ifor health, she wears a Scotch tweed . Paclflo University, Forest Orove, Ore- Lnevt which breathes faintly of -,. arahlp In the academy or college, value Sf wna. and Is intended to repre- ' ibo. una scnoiarsnip xor agin witn l 1 - u uruinsa. linn vu, tuiiici to tna oriental nouse gowns and klmonna nna la In K. mM.a f. 'Irir of scenta Hera ws hava all the sweet entrancing odors of the Mra. Walter Bead. Portland, Oregon. f,U2Sn 5S"nt,nJf Teacher of vole and atagtng. Lessons 2' f.'Vi tS';r.wIc,l. to tha value of $100. , " " , d Un dorabU Mnorl IrxrmZisxxMB oxxooir joxtekai, pobtxaitd, obxoov, I nominate tha following as suitable to enter your conteat for aeholarahina the people as much as possible from .WW fa' uppiy.wiii.hecome these constantly recurring railroad " exhauBtel n comparatively horrors. Where one person is in- Bnort "Pace 01 "me, hut , these are terested in large railroad dividends "hort-alghted pessimists, men who thousand are Interested in safe naTe woea neitnor ; widely nor travel and right treatment', of em ployes and the general public. iron into . locomotives, . cars . and tracks to handle the enormous busi ness. There is not labor enough to build the trackage, were the; Iron available. What is more, the swift growth of population, the Intensifi cation of methods and the appllca- , tlon of science, all vastly multipli cative of production, will tend to further complicate a problem already harassing in the difficulties it pre- . sents. ; ! , i It Is a moment when the 0' vant turn naturally to water trans portation as a' means for delivering the country from its glutted traffic The streams that, after all, afford the cheapest of all transportation, add to that virtue the even greater one that they; cannot be overtaxed. They have no car shortages, 10 lack of tracks, no Inadequacy of terminals ; when once man .has, done his duty by clearing them Of obstructions. We of Oregon, blessed as we are -with a Columbia and a Willamette, shall be signally false to ourselves and those to' follow us if we do not Improve and utilize these natural highways. DIVIDENDS VERSUS DEATH. -' .:;';:'-.-V r''aaBSBaBaaaaBaBaf)-i V; . i y tjiim TRACKMAN, a periodical i published byr the - National ' - Union of Railroad Trackmen at Fort Scott, Kansas, In a recent issue made an expose of the criminal negligence of railroads with respect rto defective rails and ties that, if true, should ? lead t to a far more searching Investigation than has yet , been made, and to measures for the protection of -, the ' public , against such deadly material as appears to be In use. The facts set forth,' with accompanying Illustrations, by the Trackman relate almost entirely to the Missouri Pacific railroad, but If this road is thus culpable it may be presumed that others are so also, as all the railroads obtain most of their rails from I the same source, the United States Steel corporation, alias the steel trust. 'T 'r? , The executive committee ' of the out of reach on (account of cost of production and transportation. I ; According to a bulletin of the United States geological Burvey, it' Is estimated that , 12,644 square miles 17400 acres! In Alaska are underlain by coal-bear-J a-ajEDERAL JUDGE M'PHERSONJ " ootv accessible will be attain li?ot Missouri held recently : that j able and under a new ' "economic X ' - the federal courts had Jurisdic tion to pass on state'" laws for the regulation ' of ; railroads. The new two-cent fare law was . under consideration, and , Judge McPherson took the question out of the hands of the state courts, where it had also been raised, and decided to test the law by a three-months' trial of two cent fares, after 'which he will de cide whether the rate is reasonable or not. He intimated that he thought this rate too low, but will put It Into operation If he can for three months and study the result and de termine whether the rate shall atand or not' Leaving aside " the prob ability that no Judge can be sure of deciding right on such a test, It is not apparent where Judge McPher son ; finds authority for assuming Jurisdiction in such a case.i Thls Is a state law, operative only within the state, and has nothing to do With interstate commerce, yet hls federal Judge proposes "to regulate the; - whole ' matter entirely. Inde pendent of the state courts and all other state authorities. In Minne sota the questlon ; was raised as to the right of the state to regulate railroads at all, which may be a proper question for a federal court to decide, but this question was not In , Issue 1 In the Missouri casei and Judge McPherson assumed,. that the state had such authority. s Whence, tnen, comes his right to take charge of the matter to the" exclusion of the state authorities? ; It5 would seem a proper occasion for the state courts respectfully but firmly to remark to Judge McPherson: "Ton attend to your , business,' and we will attend to ours." ' ; ' Oregon Sidelights . 'Bandon will, have electric lights by oepiemDer. . Albany college Is carrying on a Bum mer normal scnoot. . v (! ; - '' Tha 4 hop crop In Marlon county is coming aiong vary niceiy. Out cf 600 voters only to voted In ths urants fass scnool election. ' While a Baker county man was driv ing, bis horse was killed by lightning. ..,--" ; . " " e a . Dufur baa a fine and amnle ' water regime that is eoming will not be KKiiV- u u Inor pajr" ""'""a,",""""aaaBaaaBiBMMaMaMaa ' STAXB i'w':' AOl isOatZta Fame ef Bokeol m ..:J mM"mJ ' w OoUaga Wanted, y '':-'.'-Vv-':;'vvv:':';re; 7; V':"':'-,'-r:- -':"::' :-':'J':'. v. ;y'' ",V I -I deeply. The coal, in gome: locali ties or small ) countries as t Eng land, 'may become exhausted In the course of a few hundred or even a few scofo years, but; there are inex- hanstlble quantities f elsewhere that' (Any young parson between tha aces. of 10 and 10 bavin arood character ul I cngioie xo enter tms eontesvi ...... .vj",.f.w V. - Whose Permanent Address ls..,,., ,...,,, ........ '" V... ..... Whose Telephone (If any) m.4Al...'.tt..,..'..l,C...t(i.,, east, franrlpant orange flower water, sandalwood, almond and spicee. ; It becomes. the duty of the lady's in mt a to sea 1 inn eacn gown and petti coat la perfumed In the approved and appropriate atvle before it la im . for the lady, and all the little accoutre ments are supposed to be In harmony. ,"' It Is not ao atated in tha aahlm notes, but it la ta ha nmnmul h. the stenoarapher who la employed In a business house win aim clinging odor of tobacco amok, and that the Cook will continue tn hrina inm the room which her zreaenoe graoea, the mingled odors of cabbage and onions. It wlll, probably, be quite appropriate for the nurse to bear with .- . f estlon of soar, and toilet powder and or the doctor's assistant to wear a falnt fragrance of Iodoform. Am I aaid. Ita rmaalhlllHaa ... ..A- . less. - ,-T"r ...;..;;:'-- It ;-' .;: . Art, Not Manufacture, 1 Gerome'e Ivory and bronse status Ta Bellone" is a work of art and not a man ufacture of Ivory ar.d metal, as the col-' lector of the port and the board of gen eral appraisers classified It in determlni Ing ths rate, of duty to ba levied on it Judge Hough of New York who listened to the appeal of the Importers and the present owners. Tiffany & Ctf. didn't at tempt to conceal his impatience when Haines is a rain conslderlna tha ouea- Al .... . .. .. . T . tion 01 cnanging 11s name 10 Ataaiuin aprings. j - -n t .4 A Clem, Gilliam county, farmer, ax- pecia za ousneis 01 wneai an acre from a...M 1 A A m n. .ni 1.tA M an A I lmn.IV a' K.Im.,Ia . ' L I A ..Ll..l tT.I..,, . -. . . fi.,.i.. . . . . . Av.aw m 1 lu ..... v. mem.. . vu ... . u.l. ui. ljljii .i. inu.lL'. . uu.ru. m.ai.Huii uiiilvu dlklk . r i i. i n r i . i irir between i and $ o'clock in the after-1 room, ate., in Herrtck Hall, $150. . j ney r J.. Osgood - Nichols sought as bis Paclflo Collag Newberg. Oregon. One r.u Yh.AoT.,J.upK.r ."" ivvnMx scholarshin in either ooll nr Intdaanv ln.t.h".r conclusion that the statue was noon. He will ba glad to ' mast con- i testant. and their, friend, and to ad- 'f'or one hool 1 year? $.o7.V 1.,? 1 5J aut' M uu t.JX Myer. 141-Alder-street Port- u Is inconceivable," said ' Judge lY,t.0r2F0?- ' "wbo larshlp good for Hough, In revereing tha declaion of tha 71 hours Instruction In drawina. Oil lannralaem. "that lh. nama or water color palnUng. or pastel, his standing as an artist should not ba Holmes Business oollege, Portland. Known to any man at all familiar with: viae them as to how to proceed to earn the- valuable awards offered In : this contest. .-..; - The buaineaa office, of The Journal Is open to receive aubsorlptlons at any lime. -ineaa auoacripuona may v 1 .T- Ing rocks that Is, rockB that prob- for making cement is reported found frtaioi ni make a scholarship one year, value $100; S.r.,.tB!,tih..cUf",'fictni! .w .,i.i v.near Gold Hill. V I the of flee f or tnernl 1 lone academic or civil service scholar- Propsr and is sustained by thisveourt. ably contain coal seams and .that , N. . I , it y not ba possible, In 'tha short I l'P. one year, $100: choice of either aSo Jl i"iy,.tV.only 1? per-cent,-not period of the -conteat for boys ana .-"uirat.rc.B4 or enoixnana acnoiaranips, v,;;,,,. r . . u.. " ..VL girls seeking scholarships to personally Ha months, $(0; night oours any. da- J5S3nS a iraAriri;.rI-l.nl?i,t wait upon everyone of tha $0,000 jpat-btmt M 4v;V, J Krm,.U,l.!.r1. 5lV 5 1.2S 8 square miles contain workable , Fraewater and Milton fruit will be 1 i .M .,vt... it"' ?"? "-r in tjuaiuy ana a .UB.uo o miiwuuui- Digger crop man aver Derore. ous to tertiary and in composition! . . ' . ' I A Tabairlav man .iiff.kl.fl.ltl. from anthracite Of good A quality cer In tha face and helnleal waa left through high-grade semi-bituminous10 " unattenaea and alone. Bieara ana coxing coais ana orainary Lime will soon f made In large TFl mm AlriVSt V aat aMIaVfais aa Hundreds of square miles of tern-j creamery in Prinevilie la almost an aa- torv thlefclv nnrWloM with 1 it "ur. iact. 01 tne j,ioo required to - 1 install tna Dlant. nearlv all.haa been as yet untouched In Canada, not very pledged. 4 e ' fir from the boundary line. There Linn county newspapers are natur. ... .vf..i.. .n.i -1. n lAlly crcwlnt over the fact that , two rone of Tha Journal and tha mora than I Behnke- Walker 160,000 readers or tnis newspaper; oui 1 Portland. Orea-on. ptf natrnn Ini raaner mfl v ehAAia I fn. it M..,k. Business coll ere. ;,n..A VJ... J. .'-::. ' . .. s7Wiff sinrii-ilsiyaihf-.si I ii la -. a A . rSM .trmK.Cr 5 tha . da,Wr? which "la paper accounts which will ba publiahed. bineA oouraa value $81; one scholar- bronsaT The blade of ' the? dun? i, it Nearlr avenr day theae columns will shin tnr a mntitha ai... m9a.i,l.i yr:, '"z.?.Vt.i Vr contelnrticle-s about contesUnta. j what ,i T scholarship for 'mWh. either held on" tha"1".? t'Trm lS"of "alumin? HE BIGGEST BUNCO SCHEME ON EARTH. : HAT "easy marks" the Amer ican people are, to be sure, to, go on ' year .after year, and one quadrennial term trackmen's union,'; in an . "address to after another, submitting patiently the public press and people,"' charges! to -. the .'enormous plunder of the W that "the railway tracks, as a rule, are In a notoriously bad condition, causing almost hourly wrecks," and that railway companies do not em ploy more than one half men enough to properly keep the tracks In repair. Tho nverage wage paid track la l wrs, it Is asserted, la less than 11.25 per day, no more than It was ;0 years apo. Not only are bad rails i I, but many rails are broken be . ; -9 not properly supported with t millions of rotten" or decayed 1 being,1 la uso. Tracks Are not , c'.'.'t c'tt orda.' The steel trust,., and many others, authorized by the present tariff law, and that,'! too, wheni ' as has been pretty well established, the trust. In Its greed to make big divi dends, is ! turning out brittle rails that break, and cause - the loss of many lives. '4 A prominent railroad man recently), aaid: yThei real rea son for the deplerafclo condition of rails furnished for nse'on American roads is the cupidity of the manufac turer (the ;steel trust) in placing quantity aboye quailty: The lack of cfigetltjon, and .the'deaire of the In three or four Widely separated ,n Oregon, aa shown in The Journal's nominees in the contest localities, and may be others, and only: one of them has been at all developed. - Various . countries ; of fed her to bis hogs, and as a result he nauiea on 1 dean nogs, and several more were expectea to aie. , $ - South -America contain coal, as well as China. Siberia and other Aslatlo countries. . s Instead - of worrying about the scarcity of coal some 'hundreds of thousands of years hence, heads that assume to b reservoirs of much wisdom would better be telling us how to make the coal as free as pos sible, to the people, and prevent; it being monopolized by a few race- robbers. Lid . on in Portland. From tha Lot Angeles Herald. ? Portland, the Oregon metropolis. r' ports having passed through a distress' ing ordeal last Sunday. For tha first time the experiment of a dry Sunday was tried, as a conaeauenca ws read that Just. before the closing hour at 1 o'clock Sunday morning there was a ivi iiiicu . tiiiciimri vi'n 1 if t na anminn drought by drinking all they could lay related. "One .man, running to get 'into a. iwuun iiniurs me aoors were closed, f11 and broke hla , lee.'W-Anrf rin.11. "Street cars to nearby towna whara ih. "3 J" "S1 V wer" neayuy patronized all day Sunday. - , " , . Quite a contrast between the situa tion thus depicted In Portland and that which characterized Ios AjurelesX a the aame time. Los Angeles has just 200 saloons, one to everv l.Enn nt la tlon. approximately. Everv one of these saloons Is closed "as tio-ht aa a drum every Sunday, a . practice that has prevailed since Los Anreles ' at tained real city proportions. There la no outruah to other, towns - on Sunday' ir too" guzziing- purposes, simply because these towns generally have no saloons and ths rare exceDttona atrletl observe the Sunday closing practice. Xjo Angeles, in fact, ts a temperate ciiy. 4.ne aaioon Dusmeaa nere la con ducted Under more rigorous regulations than ere enforced In any other - large American -city, -.Loa Angelea oppoaes prohibition, . but sjpporta temperance. The people of this community futly'rec ognixe the evils of liquor drinking, buti they also fully understand tha prac ticability of prohibition, and hence are satisfied with stringent rsgulaUon of tbe salpma, .- .. j. .... i contest, were raised in that county. One of a' Butte Creek man's cows ata part of a stick of giant powder which poisoned her. He then cut ber up and 7 ... . . , . 1 ...I. vir In ahnrthanl fo thT credit Sf .wry conteilant up Il-h. advertlsinaf and Unmans whohas been ?2 th .5ff. fidlcITIL it . -. - "!!$ woY ot Tiffany Co. for $0 every contestant to hurry subscriptions International Correspondence Schools C ah tit. artist p winaow ana to the office of The' Journal so that a I of Soranton. Pa.. Portland aa-anev. Two I ' b. . . a. .v. good showing can be mads at the be-1 scholarships; choice of $100 tuition In I '','"." ' d ' ginning. ,-. I any of the numerous or helpful Home Iteclpes. ' eaa is ov Ainmu 1 courses eacept language course or , Bananaa With rmnn n,i, k..!...' -V J. r Percy Head, one of the Albany souraes in locomotive running; another .... rta mt " K . " ,1 ' - ,t.. f haa writt.n a I scholarshin In the same to tha value nt Peel ana cut two Pieces length letter to Carl Sbelton, one of last year"a $0.? ; ?I wise. J Place on a service plats sprinkled ' contestants, in which he indicates that j International Conservatory of Music. J wltB confectioners' sugar, and place w' J""?" " a, Bviivii u l.. . 1 ; , oas,. manager, recino coast di-tnaiz a lemon beside it, also a teaspoon- : Behnke-Walker Business college, . no I vision, Portland, Oreaon. ' , Three schol- s,i . ein. mv. 1 a hava 1 thai, I , the winners to hava mat tan nwt . mnfrnv ' anta ' the . contest.-! a ..kin.. Read is not afraid ot Shelton himself, choice of any " of - the five different 0ver th ru,t whlch 41 then aUn w,th eunnoalnar that "the omhanr boy" Oflenueaaa iirh tkl. la forlt. aach hit hln Alnnal la tha . - ill V. vi. .l.l I :. - ' ,. . I""T. -7-r L l"". I ..... " ;.T. " xymr " " ';.- . 1 nanieiy, piano, - oraan, vioun, manaouni ". Jacksonville, the oldest town and once tha metropolis of southern Oregon and ami ins coumy aeai 01 jacuson county, naa Deen wiinout a newspaper ror about three years until recently and should appreciate its new paper, the Post, e , e The time comes every summer In Cart aye:--.,-i---.-.---f -'-a and guitar; scholarships include sheet Cauliflower. Next time cauliflower "That Read boy has BIng-r to win rouslc, all Instructions and tha stringed cooked, try addinsr half milk to the one of tha best what uiv You near Instruments, If stringed Instrument water, Tha vegetable will coma ; out a fellow talk like that nd he makes C0Urses are selected; beautifully white and have a mucii thlnn mm hla . I bet m marbles I - . I rlrhai- flavor than whan nnnlrul I. " r . . .. . . .. ....... 1 rifAn v-vn.i MAiiAM tia.ii.mII 1 : ....... - -- ... ..u.. . on Keaa or Albany xor no a noi airaia. 1 sl" ?JZ?r ' wT, ' Tr ,.1. "ri7 .-a aione. .- caujmower thua cooked, and sheiton, by tna way, naa a gooa po-1 TJZltZ fink , " "nu areasea with drawn butter, pepper, salt sltlon in the officea of Melef & Frank's typewriting, value 100.- . and A dash of lemon iuioa makes a very department store. - This position as I Portland Business collegs, Portland, palatable dish. well aa the qualification for the work I Oregon, A, P. Armstrong, , principal. Roast of Lamb. Make holes In the Lakevlew: says the Xbtamlner. when tha came to him on account of his work I Four acholarshlria. aa follows; One for sides of a lea of lamb and stuff with married men must either wear alt the last year in The Journal scholarship 1 12 months In combined course, .value bits of onion and chopped peppers, then. ooniesb ... s 1 iiuv, ona ror v months , in combined roaai in me reguinr manner, it s flir- m hh.i, Tiin, and siava - - 1 course, value itK' nn for I mnnthi in I ferent and unusually tastr. - . . : . . 1 I Mmhliuul nnnran. -value S7A nna fni A Individual Shortcake. Make A'tflAl aSX; nrSon beclrne Impatient month shorthand or business course. ' V"" " pu?h., using more of Gardiner - Oregon J??meh'P,VeIi; value $60. , butter than usual, and bake In small to go to Lwork gathering subscriptions I I"iup " . " . .. . individual shanea. Sweeten ami ornaH clothea they have or hide tha surplus to prevent . their, wives from trading mem 10 me zaniax xnaians xor oasicete. Brownsville has been underaroiner great development the past year, Many feopia are coming in ana new maue rles are being established. Shipments ox lumoer ana products are rapidly in creasing. The city is a moral and tern perance town. y This Date in History. 1401 Klna- - Henrv VIIT hf Kna-lan1 1 Dorn ai ureenwicn. . for The Journal that her , nama , had contest honors, ana . . i i . . . . UWK ana ntir teller iu ujuuw ui iiwd- ,iv. vu, w iiivuuib ness and business tact - She concludes I or bookkeeping, $S0 with the assurance: "I will stick,, dig I CaDltal Business eolleae. Salem. -Ore won aa sne learnea ,oaa wiyr xsuamess cqiiege, Jr-oruana. ,h. f,.,.t k. n.. an in .h .v,.7 ' been propqsed fori pregpn. Two schoiarships: . ona com- niacinr mora of the fruit on ton. SnlrTn. ' " 7!r2l!-',iefi?U??a "Ua"Ii?k with powdered sugar when serving. 1 bWUif-V AJ UIMIU I , . .1. . , aa , - , ' ti.yvIJ w5a.. QWvtfl benefits to be derived by entering the i7 - of Prance, born. pled May contest Hilda was born at Gardiner. '1784-Mme Thibet first female aero. fJy?n!SJJlJllr'li Dog With an Income. . d4 ve '.untH -theia good for 10 There Is en Independent ' do contest and will thank my friends for I nn.h-i nnin. i. .m.,. .n,rin.ni lr,i TMm.ii, an annuitv , a . - J ' .'.). I . au -lia a aawa wvawa 4UVltll I uaa.a aav i ..-- mm. mm . Hflli M mj ' V JV U .'i'.rj. n At n.i. ii.v, t value $ig. -, payaoia xor su yeara. its nai Mlsa Hilda Brandt the little llsrnt-1 . -. . ..... .. I b.i. ..a ii. lii. . ho,i. mairt." of The Journal contest. Is Oregon conservatory or Muslo, Fort-1 -"t, "..".l ..V,, ""u'X' ,.7. , another or tna "eany ones' io aee in i"i vivh. jnoumiwuii m vv in IIS 1784 Mme. Thibet first female aero naut, made ascent In Paris. - r wr 1835 Charles Mathews, famous Eng- nsn comeaian, aiea. uorn ivu. -1830 Lyman . J. Oaee. American panaer ana nnancier, oorn. IS miles from the Pacific ocean, which I stannimnnhiA mnran vaina ti nn ritofabthyebSe!" KA year'oV sof?im Western Academy of " Music, Elocu- hir?n fhe litttS Vlrt ay oent- moved on-and Dramatio Art W. M. Rasmus, to 1 Mihon ''irfttbrrai prlnclpat Portland, Oregon. One echoK tnellghthSuSa'kpe'r. ?At thl- pSS i"h'P,' hj? f -E,R1 ,olln' vtwtvt vt m (a, A At Mlaa G. A. Rous of Cardiff, who left 187,82$ at her death.: She ordered that il$ vAft.l ukAiiM ha nalil ha. h.i a. , Eugene Business colleaa, Euaene. Ore- rare of the animal. ' gon. .One scholarship In commercial or , i, aaaax ' U868 William L. t Courtleigh, Amert tV,7d "lnt : ths T arUr nart 'of her mandolin, elocution, can actor, born. - d,,: - , .J-i t.:t. JhTldhood - ' . atle art, v.-Jua $300. oi. ; l!.:5.t?-! -nHlldTVas i ll i years old her Holmes-Flanders P Sofia, Bulgaria, for conspiring against me government. : ; t. - -): 1892 Twelfth na.rlia.mant : of J Cluaan Victoria dissolved. -.-''' ' - i - 1898 Semi-centennial of Wisconsin as a state celebrated at Milwaukee. 1 904 Steamer Nor aa - lost of f tha Bcottisn coast and 640 persons perished. 1905 John D. Rockefeller gave $1,000,000 ' to the endowment fund , of xaia university. - n . - i . The Greatest Thing. The greatest thing is yet to be done; I contest highly recommended by one of we nave conauared diata.noa.wa aaii i her rormer leacnera. Mr. hub ion. me vrinciDai ot ina ronsmouin acnooi. flllda Is how a student of ths third year at the West Portland H!h school wnere sne is f a ravorue. witn notn teachers and fellow students. This alrl arasoa every opportunity ror aovanee- meni propoaea oy ner motner. . Bnei entered 'a W. C. U. silver medal father died, leaving? , haf mother with four smaller children them Hilda to pro vide for. is The other children were boys, the youngest being only ona year old. Soon , arter ner bereavement, Mrs. Brandt moved to ; University Park, foruano, wnera, wim lupernuman ." I huudln Portland forta she has endeavored to educate her ??.'iaIDr:ira"lav2: Ave children. Greatly to the satiarac. tion of her mother, Hilda has always done well in acnooi work. Klghly jveoommended. Private school. Port iana .una scnoiarsnip gooa ror one years special university preparation. one year's normal courae, or practical Enallsh course for one and ona half years, valued at lloo. Oregon ' Law college. Commonwealth Oreron. Scholar ship in the first two years of the course. value $160. , There Are Others! In air. But the greatest triumph must still be won,- . : - - ... - The greatest alorv Is still to share. We bave risen high, ws : are full of ... Drtde. But the great achievement awaits us yei; We have still to V J'"J-.; lea rn' to 1a satisfied I oratorical contest when ,12 . veafa old. WlthAnl lh. Ihlni.. ha w. l .n ..nn V; .n.l I". I I - Hilda haa'r a-Cbicag Reoord-BariJd. The young woman In fact, enters the I Don't Imagine, toy boyf jt you throw up That tha firm that employes you will faiL , That ' the whole of flee force . In their . anguish will sob - --. And the senior partner turn tala Tou are highly efficient and active and bright . ..... T . IT1I 1. . OU 7VU - aa;, A III UUWliAllia UUUUI you: -. . ( i-J But the chances of all this is Incredibly sugni. There are plenty of others without, you. voicago nswa, i o y "An East Side Bank for East ' . Bids People. " . ' Independent Women Ara those who have bank ac counts of their own.'- , V Nowadays, women carry bank accounts just the: same as men, paying all bills by check. This -overcomes the necessity : of keeping money in the house or carrying It on the person, and a check la a receipt that is never questioned. .. s We invite accounts of all slsea ''from 'women and accord them tha most careful snd courteous' treat ment at all times. THE COMMERCIAL SAVINGS BANK xxroTT Airs wrxz.iA.us ate. manv friends in her former noma a well aa m net present ona. I George W. J. & Blrrel. Bates. .-, .President Cashier ' V-