The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, July 28, 1907, Page 8, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    1T0EIAL EOTliOdEIi"
L r
ED
THE JOURNAL
i AM INDIPIKDBNT NIWoTAPIB.
Pobllstiea' Tery evening ereept Bandar) fend
vary sanaay ajarsinf , at Te journal noiia
uu
r-rT Inc. ftflh and YanUU
.Pnuiiihw the woolen goods Its people consume
But tn order to encourage these
streets. Porltand. . I """'"- v " up ina BUU
r.,.A ., ,s. .rf!.4 Or for ' woy- . muu.n m. uo
(rmMBiadoa tbrouk um mail mco4-cUm velopment, the people should buy
I vji cjuu nvuma Kooas aireaay mane
TELBPHONB MAIN TITS.
AH iuutfMMli MkMl k. tfcta nnmher.
. riii tba oprntnr the department r want, too. The made-ln-Oregon Idea should
roKBion ADVCRTI9INQ RBPRESENTATiTi be kept to the front.
Vreelaea' lUnlamlti Snectiil AArertlstnf Asency.
Brauwlra Bultnlnf, 230 Fifth (Twat, Me
lark ; Tribune Building. Chicago.
Saberrlpfloa Terma by mall to an? address
la lae United State. Canada or Mexico.
DAILT.
1 One fear. ...... .Ifi. ixi I One noota I .50
81 NDA Y.
One fear 2.M I one month ...I .91
DAILT AND HUNDAT.
Ob fear f 7 AO I Od month $ 48
there should be more such mills in velt, Is dead against it. The Repub- Because they are not pacified by
other counties also. Oregon ought Mean party will also declare for tariff trades and giTen office that they are
to manufacture a large proportion of revision, but nobody can depend on not fit for or opportunities somehow
POLITICAL PARTIES.
G
'V-
Nor loTe the life, nor hate;
but whilst thou llvest, lire
well. Milton.
DEFEAT AWAITS THE DIS
LOYAL CANDIDATE.
W
HAT IS wanted in Oregon is
a candidate for senator with
penetration enough to see
the handwriting on the wall
: Defeat, swift and sure, stares in the
face the candidate who proposes to
Ignore or abridge any part of the
OVBRNOR CHAMBERLAIN
having made a remark to the
effect that President Roosevelt
was a good deal of a Democrat,
and that on most propositions he and
Bryan were in agreement, there has
been a good deal of effort put forth
in certain Quarters to refute the
statement and to show that the Dem
ocratic and Republican parties are as
wide apart and divided by as deep a
chasm as ever, and that Roosevelt
and , Bryan are equally separated.
The assumption that Roosevelt is a
typical Republican leader Is as yet
unwarranted. On some points he
may pass for a Republican; on others
he is nearer a Democrat, and in ac
cord with Bryan.
In nearly all he has done in the
case of the People versus the Inter-
Oregon primary law. For the man
who. defends and upholds that law Rosvelt has gone against the
la Its every part, victory will be as VoWcj. practices, purposes and prln
clpal leaders of his party. He Is
ppenly or secretly opposed by a large
proportion of the leaders, and many
others are following and hurrahing
for him merely because they see he
Is popular, with no genuine sympathy
with his boasted policies.
The arguments adduced to show
any professions or promises It makes, to graft. If the assumed faot be
that If kept would effect reforms, on correct, this is the reason. But it
this subject.
How many men who were Demo
crats 40, 30, 20, even 10 years ago,
are Republicans, at least Roosevelt,
temDorarv Republicans now? Mil
ls only an assumption. The reelec
tion of Chamberlain is not much evl
dence, for he would probably have
beaten any" Republican that a con
.ventlon . could have nominated
lions. How many men who during Withycombe ran as well as anybody
the last few years have been Repub- would. And the same may be said
Means may If certain things happen of Dr. Lane. This is so partly be-
or others don't happen become Dem- cause the people of all parties liked
ocrats, at loast temporarily? Per- their first administrations and partly
haps millions. Yet people are asked because the people care less about
to consider the Resolutions of 1798. party than they did formerly.
Issues arlHe with and are shaped by But however that may be, the pec
new events and conditions. Parties pie are not going to give up the
may for the most part change places, direct primary law very easily at the
as they have In fact changed names, behest of the politicians and the or
Voters will look forward, rather than gans. The Republican party is likely
backward.
N
BIRTHRIGHT.
h
ATURE CANNOT do all. She
placed Portland at the gateway
of the Paclflo northwest, and
gave her prodigally of oppor
tunity. With mountain ranges she
fenced in 250,000 square miles of
magnificent territory, and made
Portland the true route of egress to
the sea and the world. With natural
to be beaten sure enough if Its lead
ers persist In the apparent purpose
of some of them to get rid of this
law and substitute the old system.
NEW DEPARTURE IN LIFE IN
SURANCE.
r
HE OUTCOME of a current e
periment in life insurance will
be watched with interest. The
scene is In Massachusetts,
where the savings banks are here-
barrlers, she made rival cities almost after t0 do th(J fe ln.urance, under
strict supervision by the state.
tudes of Republicans opposed to or
dissatisfied with the tariff, while
usually a Democrat elected to con
gress goes over to protection ir
thereby he can keep in office or
i
feather his nest. On this issue, then.
the Republican party Is split in two,
aure and swift.
The lesson of Mr. Bourne is too
recent and too remarkable tb have
been forgotten. But one asset, and
one alone, Is responsible for his spec-
:l i rtacnlar and wholly unexpected eleva
; ' . tlon to the senatorshlp. In every
. . thing but one he was a senatorial
' S Impossibility. No man, anywhere or that th w0 Parties sre Inherently
at any time, ever entered a senatorial and necessarily as different and an
s race mor completely handicapped, tagonlstic as black and white are
' He had been notoriously disloyal to mouldy with bourbonlsm. There is
; his party in Oregon, and every Re- enough truth in them to serve as a
; publican knew it. He had been a foundation for sophistry, but the fact
, ' 5 leading figure in the most notorious Pty " become a good deal
legislative hold-up that had ever of a humbug.
.taken place In Oregon. He was one There is no great national issue
. : ' 'of the last of men from the stand- today npon which the people are
'point of character and reputed cal- abarply divided Into two -opposing
jtber to whom the people of the state an1 nostile hosts, the white and the
: would have turned as desirable sen- "lack, the sheep and the goats, as
'atorlal timber. These, and many na Den represented. If there Is
. 'other embarrassing handicaps, made nr "ich le it Is that of protec-
Ythls candidacy almost a hopeless on- tlon, and as to that we find multi
dertaklng.
' v , But he won. He won, and has since
In many ways, redeemed the reputa
- tlon that was so charred and tar
. , nished when he appeared on the horl
.ron as a senatorial candidate. He
won. and his caDltal chamDlonshin
of statement number one in the Ore- and th Democratlc P11? ,8 ,nfeflted
eon nrlmarv law was th. shibboleth w,tb tra,torB ana waraa
v. v, ,v. State Rights: Admit that the
luai cava aaaixi tiwiui. a u uio j v i
r motest districts of Oreeon h. carried trend of Repubcan party sentiment,
the campaign for direct election of following Hamiltonian theories, is
. senator, and hi. answer came back "wara a strongly centramea gov
In the election returns. Everywhere ernment. while the historic Demo-
there was a ready response to his cra" a' uowing jenersons, is
, appeals for loyalty to the law by men tnat the fe(leral government should
.' who are tired of legislative selection conf,ne lt8elf Btr,ctly to the excise
of senator, tired of rowdyism and of delegated powers; but, while some
.'triot at Salem, tired of bossism and Incidents and events are arousing
, machines, tired of the swagger and aiBCUBS,on alon tn,B ,,ne- tnere ,B aB
t stmt of politicians, and thev turned no lBBue Between tne "parties,
the eeale in his favor, Just as they We take H tnat not only most Dem-
wlll turn it again for the next de- cratB- Dnt moBl "epuDiicans. are op
f.nder of f h nrlmiirr Irw POed to the nullification of a state
What does this fragment of the law bT a federal Jude'B Injunction
. past mean? Does not history, espe- A" t0 federal control of ""roads and
daily political history, repeat Itself? Pther colorations doing an inter-
Are not the oeoole bent on direct "is is a Kooseveit,
election, and a purified senate at not aB Tet a Republican, policy; It Is
Washington? a PeoP1'1 Policy; and Bryan, a typi
cal, np-to-date Democrat, would, it
I A M 11 M A V. J L .
WOOLEN MILLS NEEDED. coniro1 IBlu, rlU0r uU uv
the government acquire, own ana
ALLOW A COUNTY'S wool operate the trunk railroads.
clip this year amounted, ac- Except In misty, sophistical, ab
cordlng to one of the local stract, academical theory, where,
papers, to 1.600.000 Dounds: then. Is the" party issue here? There
W
naccesslble to this northwestern em
pire of products and plenty. She
seamed this vast stretch of territory
with two great water coun.es, and
made Portland their objective point,
the natural destination and freight
depot for all the enormous volume of
products that the region may yield.
She made a law of gravity under
which heavy burdens cannot be
profitably dragged over mountain
chains, and by that token destined
the vast volume of products from
this Imperial region to flow by gentle
decline to the city whose site la at
this gateway of nature. It Is a con
dltlon that lays Incomparable oppor
tunity and prestige at the feet of
Portland.
But It is not the end. Esau lost
his birthright. Opportunity is an
asset only when Joined to effort.
Portland has a part to play in this
original plan of destiny. In con
templation of what nature has done
for her, Portland has encouragement
to do things, and It ought to em
bolden her people to action. Her
prestige is not a reason for idleness,
but for effort. The territory of which
she is nature's gateway must be
helped and husbanded. Growth of
one is the growth of the other, and
the hope of each is self-help. The
key to the future majesty of both Is
the rivers that are so Interwoven
with the prestige of Portland and
the future of the tributary region.
Yet, In spite of 60 years of settle
ment, in spite of a traffic congested
and blocked by lack of facilities of
transportation, In spite of the stu
pendously increased volume of prod
ucts that must come down through
the Cascade gorge and find distribu
tion in Portland or go elsewhere. In
spite of the fact that every rival city
Is straining to outstrip Portland In
the race for commercial supremacy,
these magnificent rivers are still ob
structed, still but a slender part of
the potential asset Into which they
can be developed. Shall these rivers
be opened and navigated, or shall we
lose our birthright?
Few fields of endeavor offer
greater opportunity for reform. The
thousands who have paid their sav
lngs Into mushroom Insurance con
cerns only to see them vanish like
the mists In the morning, are in evi
dence. The millions of money of
policy-holders, dissipated by mon-
archs of frenzied insurance in po
litical debauchery are tell-tale his
tory. The far lower rates at which
raternal societies carry risks and
pay losses are suggestive testimony.
The costly palaces and feudal man
sions or insurance kings are lllumln
also have a right to a share in It, I
to the "unearned Increment."
It is at least doubtful if the
owners of real estate should be al
lowed thus to tie it up for a century,
and from generation to generation.
Sentence Sermon
n u.nn w Cods.
Sympathy Is tho cement of socUty,
e
Ths home is ths haart of ths nation.
e a
m . . .. . . . . tuui wm vvu wiu vw v "
uswou .JBlCui. wVk iu -nU ntdi dp plowlnf t0 turn
genuure. wnen a man is aeaa noiunaer m wesas.
is notning, nas no rignts, ana me rne 0nlr ood thtnss we keep ar
law can do what It pleases with we pass aionr
property mat was his, hut wnicn, ex- -rfa, fundament dimity of humanity
cept for the law, Is nobody's as soon " UB aivinuy.
as me Dreatn leaves his body. There- Folks who sing off the key always
fore tha law should nrTnt th tvtn no,r'
. . . " -
up or landed estates for generations The really careful man knows what
to come, and should take a goodly car" aa a "ra
traction or a large estate in return There can be recreation la the in
for the privileges the people gave n th to reret
tne man wno acquired it. And the a man often f lnde himself when he
state should moreover see that es
tates thus entailed are duly taxed,
in accordance with their value.
The assessors for the next 99 years
ill know about what the Plttock
block should be taxed, and also, if
an Income tax law should be passed.
what to tax the Plttock heirs.
looks misfortune In the face.
a e
Our own Uvea are robbed of sweet-
neaa by bitter thoughts of others.
e e
Ton never will develon rood In ' any
ao ions aa you see no g-ooa in mem.
e e
The moat Imnortant Dart of our an
vlronment we really carry within us.
e
Tou never will burn a hole tn stn by
concentrating- your piety on Sunday.
No man la worth much to society until
It seems to observers like quite
an amusing comedy that is being en- h l"1 t mke the moat of hlmaeif.
." The rellrlon that noea not work for
counties, wnitner senator Fulton sanitation nas mtie hope or reaming
hied himself to overtake Secretary
Garfield. ex-Senator Mulkev hasten-L n'" no use pryin to the Father In
i n en van wnn vou ara nrAJurinflr un ra.zn
ia doi-iooi on me trail or iruiton. im on artn.
flftf. L a a . - I
iut ex-aiiorx-ierm senator scored The safety of a little rellrlon Ilea In
finely the other aremlnr tnHin. e raoi tnat lr it la real it
- I root tnil trnw
cabinet visits the Pacific northwest
the only one who has retained his
position since the beginning of Mc-
atlng explanation of how and where Klnley's administration. Secretary
there might be retrenchment. Forty Wilson appears to have been a very
ill take
root and trow
to a report, on an occasion when
Senator Fulton was prevented by 111- L ?Acbottt?h.0obS
ness from appearing at a meeting, wvoivea.
Dnt Mr. Mulkey and State Senator There la something wrong when ap
Beach arrived Just in time to be the iJoVo
recipients of the people's adulation
Which Fulton exneeted. Th .on . . .wa?n ? church pute aa much enerry
" i into reaiisinr ner maaia aa ana now
atorlal contest promises considerable dMS lnt0 picturing- them the world will
gaiety. -
without doubt, the man whon whole
character Ilea In the clnthaa he hnva tnr
Ana tin i anotner member of tne nim1 Ior eunaaya aucceeaa in ciotn-
ing a mig-nty poor aoul.
AS
ermon ior Tod
ay
w
Llfe'a Profit,
By Henry F. Cone.
"What shall It profit a man If he galil
the whole world and lose his own aoulf .
Matt. xvl:tl. " .
HEN a man wished te evade the
eonsequencea of a practical ap-
plldatlon of religion to oonduet ,
he called It aa affair of the
ouL By the soul k chose to "
mean some hidden, mysterious. Impal
pable and Immortal part of man, some
thing that neither ate nor drank, suf
fered nor died. )
The objeqt of religion was supposed
to be the saving of this soul In order
that it might pass from the present
chrysalis ahell in which It Is hidden and
bloasom Into the beauty and clear iden
tity of another life. What wonder that
rellrlon found no relation to dally liv
ing when Ha purpose was the prepara
tion of a mvaterloui unknown for a
future and Imaginary home.
Ia thla what the great teacher means
when, having pictured the folly of liv
ing for posaesslons alone, he aaks this
striking queatlon on the profit and val
ues of life? New distinction cornea to
his worda when we lay aside our tradi
tional significance and make thla word
soul read, aa It should elmple life
what will a man rive in azahavnra fop
hl life? .
The bualneaa of Ufa la m-n fit iTVtlii
least but the largest. The great liaTSL
the master of llvlnr teaches la on hdWX:
iu uiui me moat or lire. Tne questions "
of relative values must come to every
man. No day dawns twice and It Is a
matter of no small moment whether we
are living each on to the best advan
T T? .1 r i
x-rccrs rrom tne f eopie
Not His First Narrow Escape.
Portland. July IS. To the Editor of
per cent as the expense account for competent, faithful and useful pub- ils Journal In noting the many Inol-
conductlng fire Insurance, and a He officer, and the country has
combination so strong that it is one reaped and will reap continually
of the most powerful trusts on earth, much benefit from his admlnlstra-
exactlng rates to match its will, tlon of the department of agrlcul
opens a field for men who pay the ture. Oregon will give him a cor-
blll to think about.' It raises the dial welcome.
question If vast benefit to the coun
try might not come through a more "All you know at McMInnvflle,
scientific adjustment between the and all you know at Eugene, about
companies and their business affairs, the streets of Portland you learn
and between the companies and the from the statements of the Oregon
public. I lan," says that paper to the McMlnn
The whole subject is so Important vMe News-Reporter. Now will you
and the business so intimately and country clodhoppers keep quiet. Not
widely associated with human affairs one of you has ever been to Port-
that it Is strange a greater public land, or If so didn't know a street
Inspection and control has not been from a barn door. And you never
applied. In delving Into insurance, saw or heard of The Oregon Journal,
the old Bay State has grappled a more copies of which are taken In
problem that has overcoat the coun- your towns than of the Oregonlan.
try many millions of dollars, and to Shut "P. you yahoos
tare.
We com Dare thai returns nf aiiv tiwrn
Uvea with the profits that others are
making. Each man gets the things for
which he Uvea. What are thai wnrth
While things and, tn the Infinite account
ing, yea, in the balancing of the books
that la going on every day. what are the
aaaeta and reserves unon which we m
depend?
It la a good thlnr to alt down in miint
once In a while and look over the books
What of all tblnrs that ro on our mn.
counts can we truly call our ownT Not
in mmgs we possess, but the things
we enjoy, not those to which our namea
may be attached but those that perma
nently enter our lives, add In some way
'u uomuniu njr una ennon cnaraeter.
How llUJe of all for which w strive
and give oWaelves, of all that wa count
the gain of life, remains If we strike
from the account the things we cannot
assimilate. We seem as hungry men In
a desert, palpfully gathering diamonds
for a dinner. That alone ia profitable
to the life which becomea part of the
real aelf, the essential life.
Measured by thla standard a new or
der and new values are established
aorhng men; the rich man still may be
rich or he may appear poor, indeed,
while the poor may be rich; but neithet
the poverty of the one nor the wealth
of the other Is determined by aught
outside himself.
Let a man appraise himself In this
manner and new content will take ths
place of old comDlalnlnrs while naw u.
plratlons displace old unworthy ambi
tions. We see that it is the life and not
the lot that is determinative? that
pacltles of love, enjoyment, service and
sociability may make the life hold more
than many another that seems to be
burled beneath the wealth outside it
We have been wont to boast In this
country that every man had an equal
opportunity to rise in affairs and to
find riches. Whether this still be true
which the application of better meth
ods and models is long overdue.
T
and
"UNEARNED INCREMENT."
The railroads are going to advance
the rate on Pacific northwest lum
ber shipped east, so that possibly a
large market may be closed to the
coast mills, but whether in that case
ATTACKING THE PRIMARY
LAW.
T
as stated by another, to 2,000,000 is none, until a specific case arises,
pounds. This wool Is shipped by a and then perhaps Bryan would out
branch railroad to the main line at Roosevelt Roosevelt, and perhaps
La Grande, and Is thence carried to Roosevelt's Republican successor
Boston, freight being paid on the would' win applause from Judge
Parker. Yet our morning contem-
dlrt and grease, amounting to two
thirds of the weight of the unscoured
fleeces; and the woolen goods that
Wallowa county people use are
shipped back from Boston or some
other eastern manufacturing center.
7 and sold, with several profits added
to the manufacturer's price, to the
people of Wallowa county.
L Tnla ,B an old story, and applies
, to other places as well as to Wallowa
t county, but it Is In order to reiterate
on frequent occasions the question:
Why doesn't local capital, of which
there is now plenty in all parts of
, POregon for this purpose, build more
. ' woolen mills? Oregonmade woolens
- eotild be sold at a higher profit than
eastern 4 manufacturers receive, and
I yet at a less cost to the people, be-
, cause mpst of the freight expense!
, both waya could be eliminated and
a wholesaler's profit on the goods
,,s besides.
Wallowa county produces excellent
'. grades of wool; water power is abun
i dant; though the farming Industry is
. Increasing there, the wool-growing
, lndnatry will alwayi be a large and
- Important -onef- Md- the papeia up
' there) are well Justified in urging the
esrUbliahment of one or more wool-
'.fooMtef-4 . woolen tnIUa.--iJdljled to the browbeating 0f Roei-
porary directs lta readers' attention
to the resolutions of 1798! "Hark,
from the tombs a doleful sound."
It argues for a column against Dem
ocratic state rights, and in the very
next article condemns Federal Judge
Prltchard for "injuncting" a state
law. It labors toilsomely to uphold
abstractly the Republican party, yet
is almost violently opposed to that
party on the tariff, the only issue, if
there is any, that divides people into
these two parties.
The Trusts and Interests: There
will be no open, acknowledged issue
here, for the Republican party,
pounded nearly to pieces by Roose
velt, will be forced to declare against
Its forty-years' partners, and talte
substantially the same stand that
HE MORNING paper of Portland
scarcely makes any disguise
lately of Its opposition to the
primary law, though it does not
attack the law straightforwardly and
candidly, but by sinister and cynical
remarks as to what It will do to the
Republican party. Again predicting,
with a tone of discouragement and
disgust, the defeat of the Republican
party In Oregon henceforth, it says:
"The primary election law, which
creates antagonisms In the primary
that are carried on Into the electltyh,
contributes Its steady forces toward
completion of the Job."
What Is meant by this Is clear
enough, though the Oregonlan Isn't
candid and honest enough to say It
out directly, to-wlt: "You Republi
can leaders and would-be bosses and
slate-makers and grafters of high
and low degree need to take a tumble
and repeal the primary law, or else
you will be left out In the cold here
after. The people under the present
law will become so Independent and
uncontrollable that a clique of lead
ers can't safely put up and carry
through a slate at all, and If men
whom the people like, rather than
HE RENTAL for the Plttock
block, bought 50 years ago for thejr woud rals9 the prlce t0 Oregon
1300, now leased for 99 years, and Washington consumers. In order
will begin at $30,000 a year, to make up for loss of profits lost
will Increase every five years hy tni8 raise of rates, we do not
until during the last semi-decade of know. It is presumed that In any
this period it will amount to about eTent people with lots of money can
1104,000 a year. The total rental yet build a little
for the period, some one has figured
out, will amount to $6,298,426, and
Now Prnfnssnr RtArr nf Phlcae-n
when the lease runs out the prop- u'nlTer.lty not havlng seen his name
erty w i do wortn i.oo.ooo. ,n prInt late,y grti mentI d ,n
meanwhile those who receive the con8eauenC(l of .dvocatl nil(,,tv
rentals can. by Investment, without chlldren. NW8 of Profefi80I.
any labor or action, mental or other- gtarr taklnf. a Mj ,n cugtody Qf
wise, oecome millionaire asuie irom carefnl attendant. to Bloomlnrtnn.
this block of ground. The heirs 100 whwe we belleve a DUgh0U8e estab.
years nence, u neuner tney nor tneir llsnment Is located, WOuld be read
imuicuMM oycr by the nubile with satisfaction.
earnea a aonar nor Deneiuea tne
ouuul- luc "'L" ",1UD From the Detroit Free Press.
Insolence because they are worth All mothers have a tender war
$30,000,000 or $40,000,000. mirffifnKa.
We are making no criticisms to And make an awful noise.
f kSi 1 1 manv e whlnnlnv ninth,, tommmm
imo jiiuutuiai i puian i one ii s;ive ior tnat ana mis:
one as compared to some in New uaVw"!n!2J f.VJ .ni.r "P""
Vnrlr nnrl nth&r lara-nr and nlrtpr cities.) '
man roniaaa, nuiuuiy iui ui iub The boy who disobeyed,
Astor family, whose members are l"Bt."S JtV b
dents connected with the sinking of the
Columbia, I will mention one whose
name appeared day before yesterday
among the survivors Arthur St. Clair,
a little fellow, perhaps It years of age.
He was one of my waltera a year and
a half since. He was of dauntless cour
age and energy, and while with me often
expressed his love for the sea. His life
came very near belnr snuffed out in
brlct wall TrtaT lVint or not " tru trnally that In the
prica wall. After leaving me he took klnrdom of the aniritn.i i. k Z
passage on a sailing vessel, hound for Df life ever man ha. .m..i ,
Sydney. Australia, as mess boy. From r to find Md nosaetJ itRKt'
there he came back to Honolulu Chang- not be stol or loatof the
ins vessels there, ha w.nt tn Hn.,1,,... .".V.1 len or lost of the wealth of
China. In the same capacity. He then n... . '
returned to America, oomlna- back to "Ji "I? .1'w "
Portland "Ood a countrv h unramir not n we remember tnat
pressed It He wSwS luVt arr "5 " ?..th.r.
comlna Into Dort hir. lmt u.rAh' fr' "7 r"?iPa- b.u'Vh. uae tne
seemea rlad to be back from his loot ULnU.ah
-. . . w i uu iivui uiiiiAiua ui L i ) a inm ju-n nil.
"Jiu recounted to me many frnm .nil nm -i.v,m.ni iCI
things of Interest he had seen while if VI.1?!;. f nAj!5"JllVl"!:.T?L e?A
i - u - siiiivu i.iie3 imi
sonallty, that constitute true profit be-
away, ne tnen secured a position as
porter on the good ship that has Just
oeen visited with disaster. I was very
uneasy snout mm until I saw his name
among tne saved. I noticed by thli
evening's papers that he arrived in San
Francisco today. T. L. BROWN,
Cashier O. K. Coffee House.
cause they are life, by doing well our
worn, Dy aeeaing wormy and Ideal
things.
H
ymus
to Kn
ow
gee I
Song of the Serapha.
By Matthew Bridges.
Matthew Bridges, born In England
July 14. 1800, was educated In the Epis
copal church and afterward became a
TheL Fresh Air Kid.
By James J. Montague.
BUI. he's been a fresh-air kid, an'
ne gets me sore
tellln' 'bout the thlnrs he's did out
somewhere by some shore.
He says he's found out how ter swim, Roman Catholic. He wrote many beau
a an row. an' ride a horse. tifni r.nir.... nn .... ...
T...t V.IU ,K - rt A in. W,l T I U IU JOSI
know he Ilea, of course. Ku"""u uuu coniainmg xnis nymn.
If kids would frame It up to play, Bung to the tune "Dlademata," it la one
wnerever i ve oeen at. of the mmt etirrtnr .n ...
Some cop would come along an' say to the mn.f h..,.H..i v , .
beat it out o' that! ' tne moat beautiful hymns. It la used
xoaay Dy cnurcnes of every creed and
He says the birds build nests out there, in every land:
An' that - o - 1
The rabbits runnln' everywhere among Crown him with many orowna,
tk. ki. "I Tbe Lamb noon hie thmna
rm sure he Just thinks up them things Hn! Sih J1'" nthem drowns
to ten td us, ror sayi
Jt rakklt. mayn't HaA tr mtrim-m t .4
A WVV.D L ..va .V, "L. .11,., .w
He stands here swearln' up and down ATv.I.'." i?" ,."!til!J.mlonjM KIT1
that ail this ain't no bluff. .
But he can't get us kids In town to M 1K- T . ,
h'llfiva tha.t sort of stuff! Cr?1 ..'1. tt Hp t 1T
oenoia nis nanas and slda
,. -"V "".-' 1. till J
All music but its own:
I woke, my soul, and sins.
ut him who died for thee.
He claims they used to fish fer fish, an' Klf luty Vor fled
caught a lot one day No sjfsS in the ,iT '
Right off a dock. I sure do wish that I Ln 'tt ...v.
now worth hundreds of millions, and How often when she's heard him cry,
kfsi
whose heirs 100 years hence may be mi come to whip you b
t v. Mm... k..,... m rAhn men settled witn a
nui LU UliUUUD) wvnuov v a wa vuuu
and by."
sa.
Jacob Astor invested In dirt when it Full many a time I've seen her go
., . . To use the hair brush well;
was dirt cheap. The men who do I And I have waited down below.
this and their heirs who thus profit suVVS timet" mVtom..
bv it. enormously are not in the least I. l jroupiea cries i miss:
" - i
Bryan has forced the Democratic selfish politicians, do not come for-
party to take. The Question for
voters will be: Which party, candi
date, leaders, are most sincere, can
best be trusted, to carry out their
professions and redeem their prom
ises? The Democratic party has had
no chance since this question became
acute to make a record. The Repub-
ward, they are likely to be beaten
by Democrats whom the people do
like and can trust. You must get
back to old conditions and settle
matters in a convention, and shut
out these pestiferous "candidates
whom the people would prefer, else
we are done (or."
llcan party's record, except in a few I ' The plurality man of the majority
particulars in which It sullenly Tparty, It is claimed, will be defeated
tf his disappointed opponents. Why?
to blame therefor. It Is lawful; It
is our system; but is it altogether
Just and wise, and best?
Is It not clear that there Is an in
justice in the inheritance of these
vast aggregations of "unearned in
crement"? The soil is the main basis
of all wealth. It Is made valuable,
especially in a city, by the labor. In
dustry, effort, energy and enterprise
of people all around, of the com
munity as a whole. Of course a
man should have a right to what he
lawfully acquires and pays for, and
subject to an inheritance tax he
should have the right to dispose of
it by will; but the public, the people
of a city that make such blocks of
property Inxraensel valuable, ahonJdj
Her whippings always seem to be
A loving, good night kiss.
And that Is ever mother's war.
So tender and so kind -m
With' naughty boys who disobey
And will not learn to mind.
She threatens them with whippings and
She scolds for that and this:
But everywhere throughout the land
She settles with a kiss.
"'nl " u.f .'""Jt" Wlma uu" 1 Can fully bear that slant
couia lie mm way: I n... ... v,j. v, "i... ,
For when the sun's, a-shlnin' down. I "":t":7.V,:"ll'?"ur"'D
along anout juiy.
An' everything there i Is In town Is Crown him the Lord of neac
sweiterin not an dry: tx7v,. . . -
m'najUk'ldt0ca9ntdorOU,,d U From po,e7o pole that" warSlS? cease,
Ta,,M mek. vnu kln1 f wl Vtl K.t ..V'u u." .V'9r nnu Pise;
1 Think them thin w-'e 'tr',,!"" " "'f . ". "..
to think them things was true.
This Date In History.
1402 Tamerlane defeated the sultan
Bajaket near Ancyra.
1640 xnomas (jromweil. who nro-
moted the marriage of Henry VIII with
Anne of Cieves, Deneaded.
1696 Azoff taken by Caar Peter of
Russia.
1710 English and Germans defeated
Spaniards at Almenera.
1750 Johann Sebastian BscIl com
poser, died. Born March 21, 1686.
1790 Forth and Clyde oanal opened.
1794 Robespierre and 71 others gull-
ns.
And round his Dierced feet
Fair flowers of paradise extend
ineir fragrance ever sweet
Crown him the Lord of years.
The Potentate of time.
Creator of the rolling; spheres.
ineriaoiy suDiime:
All hall I Redeemer hall I
For thou hast died for met
Tfcy praise Bhall never, never fall
unrougnout eternity.
kill King Louis
sailed for the
Echoea From the Past.
From the Chicago Tribute.
Beau Brummel had asked Sheridan
the question, "Who la your fat friend?"
'"Sh!" whispered Sheridan. "It's
Taft."
The portly Prince of Wales heard
him, but he merely smiled, pulled his
lid down on his head a little tighter.
and walked on.
. A Practical View.
' From the Washington Post.
Dr. Felix Adler, who says "you can
not serve your fellow men unless you
touch them.", must be another of those
"practical man" we have been bearing
SIMHIay - -
lotlned In Par!
1885 Attempt to
PhlllDDe In Parts.
1862 The Alabama
Mersey.
1868 Act passed fixing maximum
strength of United States army at 75,
882, rank and file. '
1890 Armenian cathedral in Constan
tinople mobbed by Mohammedans.
184 Town or rnmips, Wisconsin.
destroyed by a forest fire.
Small Farmers Needed.
From the Woodburn Independent
A cannery Is needed in Woodburn. It
Is not only a shame, but a crime that so
much fruit la allowed to go to waste.
and that so much acreage Is not mads
more profitable. Give us a large num
ber of small tracts and a cannery, and
Woodburn. would prosper as she has
never prospered before. A family on
every five or ten acres means some
thing to Woodburn, and a family pros
pering on every five or ten acres on ac
count of a cannery taking the fruit,
peas, corn, etc, means much for this
cltv. No srluoose Is needed her for the
.successful canning of fruit, our pew
and oorn are sweater man elsewhere,
and conditions throughout are Ideal for
the. successful ooeratlon of a cannarv
and the making of considerable money
and fine homes oa small tracts. It Is
a pleasure to learn that both the small
tract and cannery nroleota are being
seriously considered by those who have
the means to furthar such. laudable I
"An
East Side Bank
Side People."
for East
"Gang. Warily"
The canny Scot woh thus admon
ished his sons had in mind
A Savings Bank Account
The safe road to the future load
ing to PROSPERITY. rwir.THT.
ESTEEM and PEArunrTTT. ni.n
AGE.
WHY DELAY OPENING TOUR
AJJJUX WITH
THE COMMERCIAL
SAVINGS BANK?
Interest 4 hIJ
Compounded Seml-Annually. f 1w j
rOTV AJTD WILIIAia ATI. J i
Oeorrs W Bates President
J. fl. Blrrel , ... Cashier
.... I - - s J