THE JOURNAL I yk AM tNDKPENDENT WgPAPa.' .' 0. "g, jM-ttOB.... to. Sy ceUlftBMfttVPrj development ' s and clearance ..ofJiimber; fr. commercial i purposes. . - , AW'y ' ,..r....P'" .Thera la much vboaBting of . a new ludicrous; and the guarding of jhia premises-as It he, were the crar and the. country were full of anarchist!, all the more Pmbu ri7 wing wit anf "jr baying arrived, a square deal era, I What a picture the old man pre- ' Vrit .i4 hiii Portiwd, a time when corporations aa well as sents, to Te sure; for the richest man Eatwvd at tee poatofflca at Pwtiaad. Of., far c.7E; rerjcpnnNR main TtTS. ? 4 4U Beiwrtroanta Tacna W this mtee. ;; tha Optra tor tha tprtmft yon want. rOKBitiN ADVkaTlSINO KKPHBSENTATI VR VMlnHKailinh hnarlal AilTartlatng AnFT, ., 'Braaawlr Belldh). gM fifth a resile. Ntw -.' Tort; Trteqae Bolldtn, Oilcaga. . SabecrHtttoa Taron hy mail to aa? address .'H W unitaa BUtea, tanaaa or awpa , .., DAILY. - '-. One yaaf. ........ 5.00 I Ooa moat ;; (, . SUNDAY. - ; One tsar... 2.B0 1 Ona month J" - DAILY AND 8UNDAI. : One' year......... 67.B0 I Ooa month 1v. ' ' r ';" iCttcn CO rrom pie ' Favors an. Income Tax. Dairy. Or, June I-To the Editor or The Journal1 J5eg to differ with The Individuals are to be 'required tolln the world or nearly so; a strict 'obey the laws and claim successfully J church member and amateur lecturer journal in .its-estimate of the justice only What belongs to them.' Well, Ion morals, virtues and piety, a man land desirability of the income tax as a Be; Oife of NietzscliVa kiYe3 ,Saycrfl, LlllCk ange J we shall see. Hera is a great test case. If the people -cannot win it, and that without many years' delay, a ortfl or the other of the ways sug gested, then these boasts and claims will be proven to be largely only delusive "hot air." ,r:f pur remedies oft In our : aelves do He, which we as crlbe .to' heaven. Shakespeare. .1 .80 .1 M .OB V m I rr rrXl i - i A BIG CRAFT MELCJN. CH has been said of the re cent action of the Adams Ex press company in cutting up a nice,' big melon amounting before whom millions metaphorically prostrate themselves in vicarious worship of their, god mammon, this colossgl figure In the business, finan cial, moral and religious worlds skulking and, dodging and sneaking off Into some guarded retreat lest he be what? Not dynamited, or shot, or tortured, or even arrested for crime, - but merely subpoenaed as a witness In a civil case that he. probably would say he knew nothing about v :' By Arthur Brisbane.' An old grandmother told a small boy mat tae Hardest word in the language was a word of two lettera-"No. Perhaps our readers remember Jan ll torial about this word fNo" ahd-the old grandmother's advice. ;: Out Of a mil lion men more than nine 'hundred and measure to equalise the "burdens of gov ernment upon the people. " Contrary to The Journal's View of. the matter, the principle, , of the income tax baa been sustained by all of. the . distinguished writers on , political eoonomy, and has Uinety-nlne thousand are anable to say When that editorial was published, the Rev. J. R. Henry, of the Seventh Street M. JB. church. New York City, wrote, asking that we publish another eSltorlal on the word 'Tea" Hera is the editorial that the reverend A GREAT TEST CASE, ' T WII I. Iha A SI m- 9t tlMAaAatt av. I " ' . a . ' V 7 l,st,but,on- ot Kreat Profits by I r:-7v- I public-service corporatlons-of in as fArnar tirrt- nnl f notmno nt 4V. nv. tion comply wUVitf contracU companT but t0 taxpayerB s far as may be done now. and L.-..ii. i. ' v (cuviaii. ii tutu a curuurauun 13 ' tell;. Jtt land to actual settlera at , $2.50 an acre, or forfeit them to ' the government Any ordinary law i yer can Invent nch: excuses, and hnnV up numerous . precedents that appear to and perhaps really do I sustain their contention, and trained V and resourceful railroad attorteys not . can or course Derog the main issue t and switch the discusBion off on a , multitude of side lines running into Impenetrable thickets of legal leger demain and bottomless swamps. But U the government -the ; executive, menu of Europe republics aa well aa monarchies. Adams Smith eays:' "The aubjecu of every state ought to contribute to the support of the govern ment, as nearly as possible, in propor tion to their respective abilities: that Is, in proportion to the revenue which gentleman asks fori rBpecuVB1y enjoy unaer the pro- Editorials an other things written tection of the state, , In the observation I It is an amusing spectacle, from 5 J-'t.' I iSl !? JX' 24,000,000, or 200 per cent onJ one point of view, a pltlful one from I taxation."---'. u-v ; -V what would you aayf Think that over pltal stock ot $,000,000. This another to see so great a man so Tha tacome tax U the only one which of "hiS column. " r" comes up to this requirement Tariff A famous and extremely crasy Oer- ' w .iwu iio uunaumpiion. ana aa man pniioaopner. iNictsacne, wrote aDout the poor consume moat or their earn- men Whom lie caHed the "Yea1 Sayera.1 ings, and far more in proportion than The world is. divided .Into "yes aayera," tne rich and the well-to-do, its burdens who form a very small class, and others uiun uaHTiir u ill in in.m inirMi I wnn in.r..i a, .avmv "vm ' ,n.nfi up virw ov mrA .! i S' up?n Ul0M wt" are moat able to most of their lives saying. "I don't HE NEW mayor and Chief Of bear them. The most distinguished know." or "I am afraid not"'' ' - Biaiesmen in America have years ago I You can often tell by looking at a piacya tnemseives on record in favor of man's face whether or not ha knows how uw income tax. jonn B Herman of Ohio to say "yes" and mean It, uovjanu in ma senate mat: - "The least Inquisitorial of all (Uxes) is the income tax. There- never was so Just a tax levied as the Income tax. There is no objection that can- be urgea against uie income tax that I was a rich, Juicy" feed for the few easily made afraid stockholders of that corporation, and should be like other similar GAMBLING IN. SPOKANE. T police of Spokane are making life burdensome for the gam blers of that city, where they to be allowed to make such enor- have always carried on their busi ness on a large scale and flourished like green bay trees. There is a state law In Washington against moua profits as this, why should it not be taxed accordingly? We pre sume this corporation pays taxes on only a few thousand dollars. It Is a gambling, but in Spokane the games creature of the law, yet is apparently above the law, as an individual Is were carried on nevertheless, under the subterfuge of "social clubs," and under the late city administration a This same express company not number of regular gambling Joints very long ago made a distribution were opened up and ran openly and of 112.000.000. "making 136.000.000 in full blast. Mayor Moore has The face of the "ves sayer" is the strong face, and it belongs to the man mat goes aneaa ana stays anean. Some men are born able to sar "yea' or "no" at the right time. Others die without knowlnar how. and atlll others cannot point to In every other tax. J learn how through bitter experience. Sentiments of what is lust and right It is the power to say "yar' that gives itiauu us inn a man ougnt to pay taxes 1 a man courage or pernaps it expresses according to Income, and In no other courage. W. ' I W I 1 .1 1 , ' M ' . i iuu mow now me cniia ana tne Senators Morton -of Indiana. nf I rrnwn man n r A fnvr BMlrln miAatlAna Wisconsin, Voorhees of Indiana. Roger of themselves, of others and of des Q. Mills of Texas and many others are tiny. - -. on record aa expressing similar aentl-l And as we question fate, or destiny. man lb. cut id journal tniuxa tills or experience, so conditions around us " oi tax is nam to coneot because I question ua. it is "provocative ofperjury and whole-) 'Can you sole tax-dodging." With ail of my rev-1 tiny. Luck; erence for The Journal s sense of rights- "Yes control yourself V asks Dea Lucky the man who can answer that It has gained inTpmfits Within adopted a different policy, has that this is an argument against the have been knocked aown?" is another fr ,, n4 i i. rranTilfid with th vil an! nrnm!ii income tax. Are not the ordinary as- question. You can tell by his face the a lew years, and It is only one of grappiea wun me evil, ana promises aeetm(nu of state and county taxes sort of man that can aay "yes" tnith- fivm .ImtU.I. ' I to nnnrPB It AffMtna11v urn has haan alike "nrovooative of nriurv"T TCvarv. I fully the legislature and the Judicial de- . X. v HZl Z a c i Zl r-;:v"r""'toowrihaeuaUvery Db you ever t-ttmmrh one whoie 7 -ur-j na me juaiciai ae- companjeg that have the territory done in Portland, Seattle and other state and county are honeycombed with day without aaklnr yourself some quea- of the United States parceled out cities. He is doing so there, as of- among them. Like the coal mining companies, partments throughout, equally and nnitadly will stick fixedly to the - single main Issue, and insist upon the - one dearly. ; Positively right only more they ftre BUD8ldlary t0 "lfl !v h, PPer re8u,t'that certain rallrbad . corporations; and .Pe0i?? "tFlWng f0r' re m-intalned pifrely for the pur- mbe-atta r. pose of working a species of graft. Everybody,- including president. The Bmall fry railroad stockholders members of congress,' air Judges, all ra mA tn .v. .m.n ItT1! Dd U thJ people know dends, comparatively, so that these never v? anything; that he Should theseltlon that Implies doubt of yourself T ficlals did here, in response to public sentiment and public demand. Com mending this . policy, the 'Spokane Spokesman-Review says The people of Spokane want none of the old-time conditions. They can no longer be deluded with the sophistry that gamblers help to make good tlm?s. They know that the rambler H ome an dD , that "the 'railroad corporation has aot performed .its) contract, has wil fully and persistently and Insolently : Tlolated and repudiated. it contract jwith the government and thatin , consequence, y both 'at common law And under the statutes. lt has there fore long ago forfeited these lands. What the government ought there fore to do as if matter ft"Iaw is as clear as the sun at noonday ih a cloudless sky-hat is, forfeit these lands, take them absolutely away : from this rf corporation, y and give them back . to the people, to whom they belong and to .whom they' have belonged for a third of a cenutry past" "Thia is what a strict appll- enormous "melons ' can be cut up by the few big railroad fish that are stockholders in the express com panies. Thus not only are the pat rons of the express companies great ly; Overcharged, bu the small fry, their weakness in this respect, are good cituens., if the gambling houses take a part of the weekly income of a wage- earner, that wage-earner necessarily is a parasite,' supported by other people's industry. They all know that If a little army or gamDiers is permitted to gain a foothold, every one of those gamblers will have ' to be supported by Indus trious wage-earners, who. aside from perjury and tax-dodxinx. taxeS be abolished tweauu of that faytf I apprehend not. "This government has too muct important business on. hand to spend Its time trying to bolster up the morality of men who cannet be trusted to swear to their incomes," said Mr. Bryan on one occasion. And again: Instead Of abandoning lust measures for fear somebody will nerture hlmanlf. l.. . v.- - ,.jr ,zr.. j .C.J v vU.u. cim , boju men I mntt 1n . ,, it anyone perjure nimseir we can treat " , mm line any other felon and punish him for his perjury." But The Journal thinks such a tax is -repressive of individual enterorlse Z T y"v " vuriI -uy eoiors. The axtamnnn nratlAna ... ....i- v How often do you ask yourself wheth er life ia worth, while --'v'T' v'.H , How often do you ask 'whether it Is worth while to go on struggling., try ing to do your duty; 'trying to Veep up. courage, trying to face repeated disap pointments? : , L- i . ; !!Vslwi? ' Tou wjll fight more easily and Win more quickly If you can teach yourself to nyTttV. 1.:''.!S.:x..'i1Ja;Ij!;V,;v Always the small demon of doubt Is hovering around, trying to persuade you that you cannot win the race, that it laJments him on his industry, .w kh. a. ,a- : - I industrious. avrv V wi Wg waaaaxs. vi waetwj vn UaSTVJ gl W 9, - 1 fair chance. , , ; ; -r; Oyster Bay won't even celebrate the Always the desire to stop, to give up Fourth.. . Has the : president turned the effort, keeps asking you Whether it ",U"T A: a v. ," ' is all worth the trouble. : ' It is not always tha richest- people Tour salvation la in the word "yes," who can get the most enjoyment out of h i .'.atiii chtiiy up where ralrbanka ls.when.be Stands .up. :,V 4".., , V I ha rinaan'ft IIIta mi.i. . ...v . xnree ory Sundays in suooesslon, and not a drouth fatality yet.. ' -.( ' .a, (.:,..:', j'r-. .y-. Secretary ' Taf t nh tn have , tha ' stomach for a hard presidential fight A -defender of thr mosquito eompli- bo is eatan : said vigorously and meant absolutely Here - la a cateohlam for the 'ires la vacation. v. . 111 tti - 1 ma is ina nannv aaaann mr tna mmjm, vn u mail wuu w.4 vuvvw. il I i . , , T . vaii Aan 14 V,., I,..,) mnA 1 I Old OnOUXh tO KO tO School, but not Old with conviction, you will Be one of the u 10 jora moon. hitman halnira that nn,h tha wnrM f nl,, I i:. ' T. ' J e wrg oj uevewimii nuraiimr uno f nil 1 , n ooi piimt nooKeietier, or any. awei win power. -. tor not wanting, to go to Lnw . If others have borne up under disap- cago at this time of year, polntment, can you bear upT Tea v a a - ' f If men and women were l)rave enough BeatUe is to take another census, per. to deal with the hard discouragements nana on tha -RVuirth t. 1. .1.- of other days, can you not fight against population will be 117.000. the easier conditions of today T. Tea. e a - ' Is it not clear in your mind that no ' n..t if ,vv ,, '' man Is beaten until he admits that he B!Af a"? but Mark Twsln said la beatenT Tea. .r7V 11 -.V0"0 Has not every good man been downl ' The process-servers ought , to let Orandpa Rockefeller get out of his oel- ln the depths, and baa he not risen be-' cause ne rerused to stay aowtiT yea. If you can say 'yes" to every ques- tloner who doubts your'courage, if you nean it whenever you question your own mind aa to your stay er power, you will win. The world is full of weak, vacillating creatures. More tnan hair or ua crv before we are hurt, and nine tenths of us know,' lar on the Fourth' of July, at least. The mlerophoblsts will try la vain to atop kissing entirely at this time of year, especially by moonlight. .. a a A Denver woman bought a doien cucumbers and declared that she "could howl when we are hurt a little. or1'? JuSWandht M d, A.nd.'h9 toW th weakness and foretells his failure. Join the limited organization of "Tea Bayers." Is fighting worth while T Is honor worth while? Does the good men win la the endT Is it worth while for me to trv where arrested for selling $S,000. others have failed? imaginary ties to E.H. Ham . To these and all such Questions learn to answer "Tes" promptly and with sin cerity. Tou will not fall, for every- tning is in tne will. . . - rcss By Beatrice. Fairfax. There is no doubt about it, clothes do make an Immense amount of dl f fer tile, mass, of the railroad stockhold era are swindled. The express graft is on a par with the terminal graft ind the private car graft.' It ought to be suppressed, JAPAN'S NAVAL ACTIVITY. T" HE HAGUE conference will not check the , activity of any na tlon in building warships, Japan is the most eager of anv. cauon or. ine ,iaw would require, with the ooBsIhla excentlon f riAr. fltlrl 'wttattaafa f ' bia A n.s4 " a t A Ia 1 u uuuv., uui wnai- many,; in increasing its naval .even If this corporation had been Utrength. It was only 11 years ago ueiu to us contract as an private that, in conseauence of the war with citizens who acquire public lands China, Japan's great navy yards at J are held to theirs,; this would have Kure were established, but now they Mow,wll ago ana wouia nap- employ 80,000 men, capable of pea yex..-ir amitn or Brown or building warships equal to any - Jonea does not strictly comply with afloat. It s only within the. past ,ttW U,B iarier section is lanen two years that Japan has been work from him and may be appropriated !ng on a very large scale to buljd py any waWhful entryman. But for up a flrst-class navy, its apparent ft aa tWrd """" over PWPoae being to make itself able to J.000,000 acres of ian4 in Oregon cope with any power on the sea ex-baye-been held by this corporation cepfYEngland. There are under con- , ana 11 grantors , after, having been station at present two first-class th0U8and tlnje" .over, battleships of 19,000 tons each, four ,Whyt Because we have ,hd ;a gov- first-class armored cruisers of from ernment of. by and for the corpora- U,M to 13.000 tons, three cruisers tiong. Instead of a government of, of 2,Wiia each, and other minor by and for the people. The South- vessekhe two battleships are said em Pacific corporation can violate to be eftch' equal to the Dreadnaught . its contract and defy the law for 40 ,n tlghtlng capacltjr. ""u "W BO yu conBe- Japan's merchant marine is also . ,T . V conirary De er- making great strides forward, owing . T " u"ureuB 01 mons to the paternal policy of the govern aI" . nnliavai tiiAiiati VIa ... a . I ? vlvU6u vuiojjuBfy vioia- meat, and amounts now to nearly a A pretty, becoming gown will make a woman sparkle quite gay)y, and the same woman dressed in dowdy, uabe- that Is needed and should have aa full coming clothes will be dull and unlnter- f.fuf n.d PTUy a P"'bl ?. country estlng. The knowledge that sha la look like this." I very much doubt the wis- ,n. h h v . dom op hint Ira at thia nrinninia t ln er best helps her to act her beet other words, if a man has accumulated I Tlia hadly dressed woman on enter- riches, no matter how, he should not be I ins; a crowded room feels as though aha taxed according aa the Door are taxed. I ... . . for fear that he wlU put his money iri WU"'Q 10 "ln ,Bl eorn,r a his. pocket and stop his efforts to ac-1 main unseen. The well-dressed woman cumulate atlll more riches. On the same does not care who looks at her. and. principle why not remove all taxes from therafnr 1. rar 1... i.. 4V, the riph !) Mirmi th man .n wau tnereiore. is lar less self-oonscious than with their hands the men who do the ner badly dressed sister. work of the world to pay all the taxes, By well dressed I do not mean ex- has so much laa to anenfl with tha science are not the ooor. who. as Senator "avagantly dressed. I mean simply nowe saia, aireaay pay 10, zu or so umiw Docomingiy ana suit- per cent more taxes in proportio whl tha 7 ? rise above the.. ituatlon and - rr:r: .v: .vr ao not care a wnit that thev are iimm. ne morgan, me utouias in pro- innhlv riraaH hi, ih. ,,;.. 7. portion to their net Incomes, ss justice i"? yiov natv Ain?h- rV.f hmt2 requires, because It might put a stop 0e!j! ah.hAA th9r " to their enterprises of robbink and Dlun- no,J!a?.n..w.h.ir b. Bn"ld ?k daring the people! Let the poor, with lZ.S2J?Zmw . Vt worf? thaaweat at their facea " nav th tara. at .lar to ,nak the most Of herself, grocer, the butcher, the clothier, the dry goods merchant,, the restaurant proprietor, the cigar dealer and the bualness men generally, Economically. If a city like Spokane had to -support 100 or 200 gamblers. It could better afford to pension them and maintain them In idleness than allow them to conduct their demoralising games. The argument Is not new, but Is well put, and the wonder Is that so many people in so many towns imagined so long that public gambling was a sign of prosperity That Is in accordance with the idea a?duno 2n?.can ,am .her i "a that men generally cannot helD them- selves, but that they must depend upon If her hair la straight and it is more becoming to her to wear it fluffy and curly; then she lauite Justified In curt the bounty and generoua impulses of V1?,.,?!! i5 h. ,-i,.H wakih i a k. nTn,. 4.... lng and fluffing it. - - tm inn uiwuim iur a, numiy iu try ana dress to her "style," Not one woman In a doaen can afford to be orlg- more in accord with the principle of equality before the law, for the taxes to be laid "in proportion to their respec tive abilities," as Adam Smith B&ys? I think It better far to have no privileged class in this country. Let riches bear its Just share of the burdens of govern- inal in dress. Naturally, there are cer tain styles that suit her more than others, out the moment she strives for the picturesque she strikes a false note. and tended to Dut money In rlronla. nient, and there will be less poverlty Not Ion- ago I dined at a large and buu teuueu to put money in circuia-1, n.,.in. anA .tnhrin..,mnn well-known' olub. There were a ar-at tlon. Often, wheri people look back the poor; and the justice of our laws Jauy women tnembers and most of ...... . . ! will Doweriu iv anneal to ina natnotiam I n Buuiiuaouiy misiieuiuiua. Upon BOmetning long endured. Or and mn lmnnl.M f.r men aOarvwhara Also they dressed to the oart or to what nracticpd undnr thn delnslnn that- It and of all conditions. We cannot hope I mey oonaiaerea tne part, practicea unaer tne aeiusion mat It to have a erfect gov.rnmAnt, but we The result was distressful. Badly- was best or necessary, they wonder can go a long way toward having a made Empire gowns hung limp and lani Ready for Fourtk By Wex Jones. Blow the fife and beat the. drums, The nation's 'glorious birthday comes. Land of the brave, home of the free. Won't we celebrate! Hully gee! We've been ready a week or. more; Mother's laid In a double store Arnica, bandages, oil and lotions. Plaster and puis, and soothing potions Everywhere that a fellow turns Me trips on something that's good for burns. Mother says with pride that we Are the readiest patriots you could see. Father's bought crutches and wooden les-a. Some of his children must lose their pegs. But legs are trifles, says dad. says he, When lost in tha r&iiaa a HkA.tJ I Ana ax ror a ringer, ear or eye. They re nothing at all on the Fourth of Grandad is ready, too, you bet. wun evervthlna- that lr- .. . I A cute little monument, all to the good. To place o'er the one whose happy lot , He's Old. Ia a-randal hut .,. ..... i. -'- . v, un mesminn 01 July. Bfowt Vi bang the drum, Light the fuse and let er come! A New Jersey man has sent word that he wants to marry a Seattle girl. But Seattle girls can usually catoh bigger fish than herring. a a a eaiirorni raiiroaa ciera naa been worth of man. - But he was only Imitating the boss on a smau scale. e a Perhaps 60,000,000 bushels of around six-bits wheat $45,000,000 worth in the Pacific northwest this year; there's one factor of prosperity. a Mr. J, J. Hill alludes to "the fool newspapers." They are not fools enough to get possession of several big railroads and go broke and lie awake nights fearing to starve to death. a A Virginia woman sued a man for damages on the ground that he Insulted her by paying her streetcar fare. Why doesn t some male friend of the woman kill the scoundrel and become a popu lar hero? a a Acoordlng to aPendleton paper, a prominent cltlsen of tnat town traveled over a large part of the United States and Canada and stopped only twice. It would be Interesting to know by what means he traveled. how they could have remained blind so long. We will not say that gamblers are on the same plane as highwaymen and burglars from a legal or even a moral point of view, but economically they are precisely like these other classes who act on the theory that the world owes them a good living. is- wav toward havlnr a maae empire xowns nunx limp ana lanx just one by imposing taxes on Just and I around them and some of the styles in righteous principles such as the income I hair dressing were absurd. Every tax represents. A BUll-Born BooroJet. (From the Harney County News. Frank Davey, Editor.) A boom has been started In Portland, according to the Oregonlan news col umns, the aim of which is to nominate Fred W. Mulkey for United States sen ator to succeed Senator. Fulton. The Republican politicians of Portland are In billion tons' displacement, . an in ROCKEFELLER DODGING I AGAIN. tlon of law, while 10,000,000 Smiths, urown ana - Jones thepeople crease of OTer OMOo tons for 836 , must obey the law strictly and have .hlp. wlthln three yearf. ror ten uy voice in tne government. nft tha wa, - wltll PM. . rTU. a 1 ar a,av , vw ms - -n va VUIUO)) t. ?Ueafne crement of taeae Japan prepared assiduously for the u- WWWU8B lo xne -people. - Not war with Russia, and now it seems " ay.equuaDle aoes " to be preparing for another war. TS . v 8 corporatlon- Wnt Japan indeed needs to be prepared S'fa."f",Va .?Dt 18 40 Uke bck against Russia, but war with any . men. to actual set- other great power would be suicidal. : hp wuuci cAiBting laws and put the : inoney In fhe public treasury, where Jt belongs. It is not Justice for a few, people to get tracts of land worth all the way from $10 to 50 an acre for $2.60 an acre. . Strict Justice' would reauire a sale of the lands at their market value, and if the government desired to be gen : erons with the Southern Pacific it tould 'paylt ,the $2.50 per acre, which ;-lt might have received for the lands.'' More than this, even from the broadest view of the case, it phould not' receive.: . But-since people are applying for the lands and attempting to jnake the company sell thm at the stip ulated price, . thera wlll.be no great objection on the part of the people iTPner&Hy to r this , being - done;; for what Is wanted mora than the money tliat the people really ought to re t -clve is the opening up of the lands T HE SPECTACLE ofvJohn D. Rockefeller dodging the federal process servers is most edify ing. It may be that Mr. Rocke feller knows or would tell nothing of value to the government, even if he did go to Chicago and take the witness stand; it may be taken for granted in advance that he. would not remember, or that he knows nothing of the matter, and that if he did he would on the advice of counsel decline to testify; or that at Ihe very worst if he did testify tO-lanything that the government wants to know he and the corpora tion involved would be immune from any unpleasant consequences." This makes It Is queer that a man like Leslie mighty poor position to boom anybody M. Shaw, who is so absurdly "off" u8t now for an fflc involving sup as to imagine; that he stands a chance J? 5rom h ,nt'r! ?ntny U , , . . T tempt on their part -to dictate the selec to become president, can get a Job tlon of a local pet will be resented. Mr. at an Immonaa aalarv It wmiM ll"ey is jioi tne ngni Kina or sen- at an immense salary, it would atoriai timber to bes:in with. He la & ... . . . seem tnat a man wno couia De so egregiously mistaken about himself could not earn much. Somebody has discovered that Governor John A. Johnson is Colonel Watterson's candidate for the Demo cratic nomination for president But the veteran editor has not confirmed this. Besides, his man had a mus tache; has Johnson? Revision of the tariff is to be post poned till after the national elec tion. Then G. p. P. leaders will say, if that party is successful, that the country has indorced the existing tariff, and it is wise to let well enough alone. Harrlman has loaned some money to the Alton railroad. It wasn't loaning exactly when Harrlman got a lot of money out of the Alton. great big pampered doll baby, fit for tne aauiation or tne coarisn aristocratic drawing-room and not cut out for do ing big things of a. statesmajiiu Char acter. Besides, If Senator FuTtoivcon tinues in the splendid course whlcfrSm has been following in congress, he will ba entitled tn another term and tha spirit of American fairness ought to looks, give it to him. Portland has one sen ator, has the governor, the treasurer of state, the state printer, the superin tendent of public instruction, the col lector of customs, the collector of in ternal revenue, the United States mar shal and about everything worth having Indeed much more than its geograph ical share of the political- fruit hence there is no reason for allowins- it to hog the whole thing. The people of the y to this latest Mulkey Into a place for which be has neither claim nor fitness. woman had dressed to her ideal, regard less oz wnat suited ner. The every-day styles when not ex treme or exaggerated are most becom ing to .tne every-day woman. Personally I am fond of extreme aim. pliclty In dress because I know that elaborate things took out of plaoe on me. but I must confess to a feeling of great eaijijTacuon in wearing a gown witn train. ' With that train dragging after me I reel equal to any social emergency. Man should be the last one to crlti else woman for her love for pretty clothes. Every woman knows that a man is far more likely to notice her If she is becomingly and smartly gowned than if she Is dowdy. He may not realise that she is well-dressed, but he does realise that she is looking her best. It Is the most natural thing In the woria mat woman snouia aesire to rind favor In man's eyes, and fundamentally ner lining lor pretty ciotnes rests on tne aesire to piease mm. So don't be harsh In your judgment. gentlemen. Remember that a new gown makes a bright spot in a hard-working woman s lire, it is to your interest to keep your wives contented and pretty In jon t do gruaing witn tne money There is this advantage about Sen ator Knox: He could undoubtedly carry Pennsylvania. bis dodging of process servers, big retreat into the country I ?Wik' last year, from it si ..!f4jS' r-fevt-- , " 4 terrltoriea ind 21 -foreign- eoui Popular Education, ryoni the" St. Ix)Uls Globe-Democrat : Among the graduating essays at the Tuskegee institute this year are some on brick work, feeding cattle, hot beds, rotation' of crops and cooking. This system of education seems to be popu lar, as 3,000 pupils' were enrolled, at states and eountrleg.tr, Should the People Elect? FrOm the Milton Eagle. Some of our exchanges are again threshing out the statement No; 1 prop osition. This question was pretty thor oughly discussed during the last cam paign and very few newspapers now adays, we believe, will have the temer ity to openly oppose It Ta ua thA matter annaara tA raanlva Itself Into a queatlon of belief. Thoso I t0 tne U"'ted States, wno Deneve tnat a majority or the ' voters of the state should have the right to choose their representatives in the United States will favor state ment No. 1. Those who would prefer to have their representatives chosen by professional that will help them to be so. Today in History. )S40 De Soto entered Alabama terri tory. 1776 Continental Congress adopted resolution of Independence. 1812 Captain David Porter, TT. S. N sailed on an expedition against - the British. - 18S3 Reaping machines first nubliely exhibited in Hamilton county, New York. 1864 Congress chartered the North ern Pacific Railroad company. 1881 President Oarfield assasalnated at Washington by Charles Guiteau. 1S0 House of representative passed the Lodge force bill. 1891 City Treasurer Bardsley Of Philadelphia sentenced to 16 years' 1m prlsonment. . 1893--Lieutenant Peary's expedition lert New York ror the Arctic regions. 1897 Strike of coal, miners in Ohlo, d West Virginia. Pennsylvania an 1901 Cornell won the Intercollegiate coat raee-at 1'oughneepsie. 18DJ uuoa ceded two navai stations politicians will oppose it The Pendleton Tribune is one of the few papers which are opposing it but in the case of Editor Oeer it is possible that a personal element enters into the controversy. - . . It 1s popularly believed that our gen ial ex-governor has senatorial aspira tions, in, which case we would commend his Judgment in pre erring to take his chances of controlling a majority of the legislature to trusting bis hopes on the whim of an ungrateful people, forgetful of past Xavora, . - .. . , ., . Would Better Come Alone. From the Woodburn Independent No man in the east who purposes coming to Oregon- to acquire land in the famous Wllllamette valley should watt for special railroad rates. He should not come with a crowd, but quietly and alone. It would profit him" to pay the full railroad passenger rate and avoid too much -publicity until he had made his selection. The man who puts In probably 150 more than tha one who pays the settler's rate, and. quietly comes in and looks around, finds a bet ter farm" bargain than he who - comes in a crowded" excursion train and Is plainly labeled as a homeseeker. Noth ing Is gained waiting for cheap railroad rates, ;.n...-y. .-r--; . j Portland at Her Best, From the Pendleton Cast Oregonlan. rne people of Oregon never before saw the city of Portland at such a good advantage or In such a pleasant mood s during the rose show and fiesta of the past week. Not even the Lewis and Clark fair gave the metropolis such a spirit of Joyousness, such , an abandoned air of Jollity and good cheer. This spirit was everywhere. It was not confined to those participating in the actual events of the fiesta, but it was noticeable in the business houses, in the offices, in tha people on the streets, in the crowds gathered every where for fun and companionship. Los Angeles and Pasadena can no longer monopolise the flower carnival spirit. Portland has outstripped them Tn the first attempt" for .Portland pro duced and wnre har Ann V. fid n? 8hlp ,n carloads from hundreds i "-way. ens wore no borrowed glory, flaunted no Allan i-nin t ...... a Portland show throughout' It was a product of Portland soil, the conoeptlon of Portland people and carried out In Portlands own unique wayi . And tO CrOwh tha flaata tf,... . the noise and song of virile growth and expansion rlnalna- Haariv ently above the din of the carnival. In the heart of the big city, everywhere are rising steel buildings, six, eight ten stories in height On every street i tne Sign Of lmnrovamant 1T.... u. t " w7 . commercial expansion. Portland is rrowtna- aa i.. Bhe Is filling out har vMaanr.. 1..- Dl.. J 'li'y -..ci.u mi- t . D" 1 " "feeling some or the most substantial and. oostlv hniMir... .i.. oia structures, which were magnificent in their day, are glv- Ina nt... i t .... B --w tuwru Duiiamgs, twice, three times aa larva . u AjAlI.ry new aiding is filled to the limit as soon as completed. There Is s, f. 'lnl room anywhere. For these reasons, the people of Ore gon never saw Portland at such a great a n a vi witr uiar. i irtv ri tv inaai new confidence cv. oJo-aa'. J.i;".u mtv.Hnn s... ,ew III- C3etting Back to Grandpa's House. ? r";c" Seymour Keller. A,Iather be t0 grandpa's house Than anv nlac t in..- For grandpa says I am his boy And grandma loves me so. Vnn K.FeTtMIl0Wn. t?..grranJP' bOUSO IOU bet I'll malca thlno. v... Th.. won,t be no one then to say Now, sonny, stop that drum.'! I'll go barefooted in the grass ..And J U8t 1 Please; 1 U.,?ad,d,le Jn mu1 puddles and climb the biggest trees; 11LB,,dA down on 018 fanlstera, 1 11 shin ut ev'rv door; I won't be scolded when I track Up grandma's kitchen floor. - Wh,?,nJt down to grandpa's house 1 11 be a boy again. Folks ain't afraid of freckles there, Jr. botn"r 'bout the rain. I"!..lde Worses bareback and 111 walk on ev'r-o- rsnMi. . .' No one'll scold me when i' tear "7 pantsgee, that's Immense! I A rather be to grandpa's Jiouse- Because I havTuch fun! - -And I'll h awful sorry when i - Vacation tlma la rinna . , V HI soon b down to grandpa's boiso, -And be a boy once, more, ! Where I Woh't get no scolding when A tracg up grandma's ttoor,i; vf : - Oregon SiJeKgLts Lots of paint Is being used In afeaarlde . a , .- FIva mill whistles are heard in Wniev- mlna. a Newport baa Improved considerably lately. , a a ( Coqullle Is to hata a boot and shoe factory, a a a The prune prospect ia very promising In Linn. a a The Radium Springs sanitarium will be rebuilt. There are seven miles of aid tracks In Ontario. ' a a Powder River valley win have tha biggest crop ever. Antelope will give a big barbecue dinner on the Fourth. a a A Eugene man picked 18 gallons of cherries from one tree. a a A Marion county man claims to hare billygoats that climb trees and brows on the leaves. a a Seaside Is Just entering the most prosperous and busy season It has ever known, says the Signal. a a "Dam Fourth of July Celebration," Is a Hermiston Herald headline. But this is not profanity; the celebration la to be held at a dam. a a A Benton county roan with a four horse team hauling a ton of cream all went over a grade. One horse was killed, another injured and tha cream In.t a a It begins to look as If Hepprier will have to open her own coal mines for her winter s ruei supply, says una Times. There is uttie prospect or getting it rrom any otner source. as In a few rears lands of the lower Umatilla country will be the garden of the northwest, says the- Echo Register, We have the climate and the soil and the water will soon bring labor and capital together. Fifty-eight' dwelling houses hava been built in Dallas since January 1, says the Observer; 10 are now In process of con struction; strangers are coming to town every day. inquiring for houses, and seeking places to locate; the sawmills ar asking vainly for more men; every incoming freight train brings s-long line of empty cars and every outgoing train draws those cars away, loaded, v "An East Side Bank Side People." for East Ladies' Savings , Accounts Statistics' show that woman are carrying bank accounts today more than ever before. They have, discovered that this is the safest -and most practical way of saving -money. This bank has special facilities for carrying women's accounts. Checking acaonnta and saving ao . counts of ail alses are invited. Savings accounts draw Interest at the rate or 4 per cent compounded semi-annually on amounts of 61.00 ana up. ;- i Nib Commercial. Savings Bank XVOTX aUrx WIXtlAKg ' ATB. Oeorge W. Bates. .President ") .. h .Barrel, j , , . 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