THE JOURNAL ' ' AN INDEPENDENT MXWSPAPIft. Y ft S. Jickao. FaMltbae jarenlna- 'arrant Bandar) mm .t fh b.u.d or. the pubI,c tere. and the. govern tnouniMioa thuh uw niiu mcooh-cUm ment Is already trying to exercise i a gooa aeai 01 ownersnlp, or con i&wuvnm-MAiH titb. tro, whfeh -mftll-t. tn ,Kf t. AH dDrtmiit naehed by this nanbtr. I .. v Tell tbt opnitor tb deiMtrtmrat roa want. same thing. ,. But in that New York roRKio advkbtisino. REPKtSBNTATiTB 1 speech Mr. Bryan said further: "I . Vrwlnd-BnJmln Special AitTrrttalnf Afaner. d.0 not knOW that the COlintrv lB BrnMwMt BalMlna. JSO Fifth Tnn. New j " , , "fc oun" lark; TrWuiio Building. Chicago. 1 ruauj ior WIS cnange; I QO not KDOW SnbarrlDtlon Terma br mill to any address I that a majority of my own oarty n aa Uollad SUtra, Canada or Mfileo. I fnvnr lr- K.. T -1 a.. i- 1 DAILY I ' BtllSIB LUAV IU IU' On ' fl.oo I One month I M creasing number of th mamhera nf Lis all parties see lnpubllc ownership .$ m the only sure remedy for discrimi nation between persons and places and for extortionate rates for the carrying of freight and passengers." Later, In writing to Mr. Whitney of Massachusetts, he said: "This however. Is not an Immediate ques tlon; at least, I am not sure tho .....PubUahar and year because the people are not in favor of it yet and want to try gov ernment control first. Railroads of right ought to be public property. whether Mr. Bryan said so or not. Sl'NDAY One rau Ilfin One month. DAILY AND SUNDAY On year ST.50 I On mouth. We do not count a man's years until he has nothing else to count. Emerso. reasons for them are quite generally understood here. But along with other facts favorable to Oregon they ought to be Impressed as much as possible upon eastern people, In the Oregon literature sent out. When they read of 102' degrees In Port land, and know that 92 degrees kills many people In New York, Chicago and other eastern cities, they natur ally conclude tbat the heat here must be deadly, unless specifically and thoroughly Informed otherwise Make the country know that 100 de- grees In Oregon Is just nice, com fort able summer weather, or at least does not cause prostrations and death. ARTIFICIAL RAINMAKINO. TTTT7 1ITT TIHTTVTW a-V ttn AXia mHiVYftUI-ia LUi). I n Ann 1a mrm Msd tn nauA. -u fwvaw v a a xa j v v wNoauvs lu v HERE IS NO rood unn question 01 puduc ownersnip, ana that nefarious gambling hell unui ney are reBay 10 con8,aer "ai question me interest is centered in regulation." What Mr. Bryan has recently said T - J, known as the Milwaukle club should be permitted to con . tlaoe in operation for another hour. It is conducted in open defiance of and publlshed ls Pr'cally a repe- the law. Everyone connected with imon 01 tneae rormer "atements the management of the place, every wU th added ,tatm,nt' due t0 a employe and every inmate is subject year's observation of the situation to arrest. The card tables, roulette that pnbl,C owner"h,P wou,d not be wheels, faro layout, and n tb. an issue nexi year., wnyi Because other gambling paraphernalia may a" he 'Staated a year ago might be confiscated at any time by the be 016 CMe' th pwpla are not ready officers of the law. The Milwaukle for don,t want u want to try clttb ls a dlseraoe to Clackamas reSUIauon meai; "d Mr. Bryan eoonty. a flannting insult to decency knowln tnl b"er than he did a and rood ninin.n year a0' simply says so. It may The sheriff of Clackamas county be that Mr Bryan ,Mued thls 8tato tars in a nublished tfttemPnf i 111001 m oraer lo ,ecuro in9 nomi hava made a determined effort to natlon: th,s cannot be e,thr af ret evidence to nrove a esse sinBt "rmea or aemea "" By a,maeir the place, but so far have been un- but U iB not fa,r to h,m to that able to do so." The utter absurdity he ha "turned turtle" or faced pf this excuse should be apparent about or ,,opped from one ""itude to' everyone. One aennlne raid. r luw notner ior mat purpose. uouDt companied by the arrest of everyone leM he 8t,n thInk, that Kvernment found on the nremlses and the con- owner8n,p w, "e me "ummate- flscation , of the gambling, imple- remeay' Dul ne 18 now Maura or ments, will close the Milwaukle club what he was in some doubt about a CENTRAL OREGON. and it will not be reopened so long ypar ag0' that the people don,t yet -as there Is the slightest prospect that want evernment ownership, and he the Jaw will be enforced. If Tom 8ays BO- Word were sheriff of Clackamas county does anyone Imagine that the Milwaukle club would continue to run? When Word undertook to close; the gambling places in Port- j land he simply served notice upon thd proprietors that at a given hour! A WAY over In south-central Oregon, In southern Crook and northern Lake, for instance ls a good place for a poor, stout vounr man who wants to rat a niara county. He wasted.no time In an tw u rhBn- mni, vt k 4uw seareu ior UTiaeuce or iacts homnatadArl nrt th. nhtoln tr,r which were aotorlous and patent. nrnpHpalIv . , tr i t xw- .,r ' ''6 v w lu ua nortlon of It 1. not rlArt anA warnea me laworeaiiers mat it hflH hfiBn MnnnnmaA Tan. nt thn would he enforced They knew Tom Lands of acre8 that have been CQn worn meant wnat ne saia. isvery Bf(,A,B(1 gamming nouse in Portland was closed at the hour Word bad named and not one of them has been re opened since that time. . "What Sheriff Word did, Sheriff B eattle can do If he has the will And If he does not do it, he will be ! derelict in his duty and false to his oath of office. BRYAN AND GOVERNMENT "lirNTT7"rC ITTTJ bfT IS BEING said by newspapers iMHMMll A HM T Yl III can and Democratic, that he has changed ground on the govern- ' inent ownership of railroads ques tlon, that he has abandoned the posl- . tlon he took less than a year ago, in order to secure the nomination for president next year. It is charged that he has completely altered his ' attitude on this question because he perceives that the Democratic party, particularly In the south, will not ' Support him in it, and that he would rather ..give up a position that he still believes to be right rather than sacrifice the nomination. "It is said," to quote a Republican paper , that believes in giving Mr. Bryan a square deal, "that Mr. Bryan has turned turtle; It ls said he has gulped down a quantity of his own rubbish to hide it from the resent ment of bis party all in fear, and all out of crazy desire to be again . named by his party for the presi dency." But the paper goes on to say, "the statements to his discredit ! are carelessly made, by Republicans in a narrow and peevish way, or by , Democrats who seek to find faults , In him." In his Madison Square Garden - speech nearly a year ago Mr. Bryan did not, as his critics assume, push .T uim Buiwumeui uwnersntp as a necessarily paramount or prominent latma next year. He said in that' speech that be had "reached the! v conclusion" that railroads mustfltl- - ; luaki yuuiiv yiKjyviLjf auu be managed by public officials in the interest of the whole community In accordance with the well-defined theory that public ownership is necessary where competition Is im- ; possible. i lie doesn't have to take any of that back la order to fay that public M.....liln kITT ia4 ft an taina navt 14WfcauauA44r v rw I w mvav will produce crops, and a few years hence, with careful, proper treatment, will be producing fairly good crops and will be worth 20 an acre and upwacds. We speak of dry, non-irrigable lands. Irrigated lands will be far more val uable, but will cost more. Those who go first Into that very sparsely settled region will have the best chances. They should select a tract If possible where they can ob tain water at a moderate depth, dig a well or make themselves pretty sure that water can be found, and the rest ls easy. No, there will be hard work, and some deprivations; but up there ls the making of many prosperous homes, on land now un occupied except by livestock. Rail roads are bound to come, and many other settlers, and thousands of farms will be developed on those now vacant plains. A yonng man with a team and wagon and, say $100, can go into that country how and by diligent. Intelligent work in a few years can have a farm worth anywhere from 2,600 to $10,000. Some young men can do better, but many do worse work for wages, save nothing, and grow old without a home or prop perty. There will be great develop ment in that country during the next few years. I T IS AN era of discoveries, inven tlons, new devices, improved ap paratus, and astonishing accom plishment of things not long ago thought beyond human power, or more llkely never thought of at all So let us not sneer at Rainmaker Hatfield. He says he can work elec trlcal apparatus on or from the top of a tower so as to produce substan tial quantities of rain over a large circumjacent area, and there Is some evidence that he Is not mistaken Down in southern California he pro duced rain in large quantlttea ac cording to contract, or at least the rain materialized and people down there gave him credit for It. Up In Sherman county nearly two Inches more than the average amount of rain fell in the two months he oper ated, and some of the farmers who were benefited by It believe he In duced It and will pay him to operate again next year. These rainfalls may be only coincidences It rained more than usual at the same time all over eastern Oregon yet Hat field's theory and practice may not be all humbug or delusion. If not; If he can convince the government that he has a ralnmaklng machine; if it should be enlarged and improved and worked on a larger scale In the arid regions, and If It succeeds, he may become one of the great bene factors of the nation. We confess to little faith In the scheme, or con fidence In the results, but are not going to scoff at It. Much more wonderful things than this have come to pass. Letter Front tLe Peopl reople ? Shall the Japs Be Excluded? -Portland, July 80. To the Editor of Ths Journal Will you permit me i to say a raw words In your columns re garding th Japanese menace to this coast? That the Japanese are a rapidly growlos: menace to the beat Interests of Americans in the Pacific coast states no Impartial observer can deny. In California it haa become critical. In Washing-ton exclusion league are be lng- organised. In Portland, it la re llably stated, there are from COOO to 10,000 Japanese, and morn arrtvlna every day. It can be safely stated that ii len unmnoered for five years there Will Hal 1 II Mil (111(1 Af thom ansAnniul along- the Pacific coast In these states in competition with white labor and a constant menace to the peace and friendship, of the two nations. is it not the duty of us all to stop those here in the least their Immigration and to get rid of mose nere In the leajit rwn hi tlmeT A friendly but firm notice from our government to their government that we no not desire Japanese to become residents of this country and that we are willing to prevent our people from becoming residents of Japan In return should be sufficient to settle the whole maiier. ir japan is tne proud, civilized, modern nation that she Is given credit for being. Bhe could not fall to agree to su.cn a rair prorrer. It la not a nnaatlnn nf etur tntaMn me Japanese as an inferior people, but n is a question or our retaining our own country for ouriwn race and for our own civilization, Which we modestly Deneve to te trie best man haa yet conceived. Wa cannot maintain It and allow tne heterogeneous masses of man aina to swarm jn. we eanot assimilate these masses, and we rin nnt r!elr tn assimilate them, for to do so would be a degradation, a downward step. Can we be expected to take auch a step? America ls a white man's country won for ua and built un bv th mlrhtv efforts of our heroic fathers. Arc we the weakllna-S to let It be desnolled and debauched by alien races who have not the least conception of or regard for an mat we noid sacred In both religion and government? I hone not. and I think not. It has been the sloean of many or our puoiic men for years that our laDoruiK men must be nrotrcteri Lt us see if now they will afford such rotectlon from the hordes of Incoming apanese and Hindus, naunera who will aurely reduce our noorer nennl tn n low a atate if means are not taken to exclude mem from our shores. We were led to believe that an ex clusion law had been enacted against me Hamming or Japanese as the price of the subjugation of tha atata nf Cali fornia to the extent of nullifying her jaws ror aeparate scnoola, and It was an act that should receive the eternal condemnation or every American. But this law doea not exclude. How many Japanese have been deported for violat ing It? Yet thousands are coming In right along. Are the people of this coast being trifled with? This problem Is like all others. If we would solve it we must aolrn it our selves. We csnnot expect the Deoole of the east to take It ud and solva It for us. It does not coneern them so vitally, and besides they wish to sell Japan marmnrrv ana cotton, and for the paltry dollar they get out of the traffic it The Ohio Republican leaders and spokesmen are a delightfully incon slstent and acrobatic lot of fellows. tbelr last convention they in dorsed Senators Foraker and Dick equally with Roosevelt, though the senators were pulling In exactly the opposite direction from Roosevelt; and now, while indorsing Taft for president, they "protest against the limination of Senators Foraker and Dick," who are at cross-purposes ith Taft. Evidently to try to se cure harmony they would in the same breath Indorse the Almighty and the hero Of Paradise Lost. The terrible death of a mother and child and the burning of a hum ble home tempt one to only sympa thetic comment, yet such a sad occa sion should serve as a warning to thousands of other people who per sist in encouraging a fire to burn by pouring kerosene on coals out of a can. If oil must be used, never use It when a spark of fire remains In the stove. seems that thosa particular lnternata would see us damned with the hni-rl of oriental coolies that are sure to over run this fair land If swift and firm action is not taken to repel them Fortunately Pacific coast people are waking to the situation. Thev a th brand of peonle that know how to taka care of themselves, and they have nerve in plenty to enrorre whatever means may he necessary to the jmd. There are 10,000 men In Portland who are reiay to league themselves together fdr exclusion ny, an lawful means. Such a leagne woum exert so powerful a pressure tnai uie hordes who are fasten ing tnemseives on this fair city like a vampire would rapidly melt away. Such an organization should be made witnout delay. It should bo composed of tho best people of the city. All of Its methods should be strlctlv fair and lawful, and would be if composed of this class of people. The Japanese would be made to understand that they are not wanted; that we are not un friendly to them, but we cannot allow them to take our country; that it ls ours, and that we intend to preserve It for our own race of people. Would not this means be much nreferable to let ting things go on from bad to worse till hard times shall strike us and war and strife become rampant between our peopie and tne invading foreigners from Asia' Let ua organize! GEORGE I. BROOKS. GREAT MEN, YOUR HOPE OF GLORY IS IN YOUR DAUGHTERS v ; Jmaii, Change Are blind tla and hiimt nature fakes! .7 7 a Lesve Them Your Money, For Daughters, Not Sons. Hand On ; a Fathers Qualitua. i .' By Arthur Brisbane. If you want a thing dona in this world you must present an argument Tha most effective arguments usually appeal to human vanity. , Hence our appeal to the rich man's vanity, in trying to make him leave plenty of money to his daughters in stead of leaving it chiefly to one or mure Doys. What a man looks for In his children even if he la not aware of the fact is a continuation of himself and his own excellenclea on earth. We crave Immortality. Many of ua feel uncertain about the unknown; we hope for the next oeai ining in our cnildren. The average selfish father winti to see himself continued on earth. There fore he takes deepest Interest in hla boys, and therefore, too often, the mother, anxloua to Dleaae har huahand. attaches too much Importance to the boys also. The boy mav look Ilka tha fa thai- on the outside, but the daughter ls like him Inside the brain. It nraotlrallv never- happens that a man s greatness descends to his son. But the daughter lnherlta it and hands It on to her son. Statistics prove this abaolutely. Fathers that want proofs of this oua-ht to raid Galton'a remarkable book on heredity. There were two big philoaophere named Arlstlppus, but proud fathera will note that thev were a-randfathr and grandson; not father and aon. The ounger Arlstlppus waa called "Metro ldakotas." which means "mother-1 he ' got his grand rSlVtiiJ?0lr.mobn:Ma, lv? th A Utah tiaar hM . i 1- . bull might' do th.; thing. "V wisdom and brain, from" that ,fhWrt e lhers daughter Areto. year It ls. But haa taught," because father's grandfa Nurl. atara.. I K. V.1. man's brain, If it aver cornea on to earth. FoaC' Trr appears in the skull of the sop of the cratlo party. o tne oerao- great man's daughter. . , ' ' Every one of the world's big men as a rule, a woman In a sudden crisis might properly be oalled "Metrodl- lk shipwreck Is calmer and more daktos," for their brain power is given sensible than a man. 7 by the mother; ahe teaches the son to , , think, gives him the thinking machine. A Pennsylvania cow ate some shirt Many fathers worry because they have waista, and now lawyers Instead of tha no aon, only daughters. Yet that fact, cow are chewing the rag. arlvea (ham tha .haat nnaalhla ohanea of I a a Feeing their magnificent selves repro-1 An Indiana preacher says klselna a on sarin one generation later. I , u"? man annaing wntskey. ie man 01 means snouia uroviae 1 w mtu uriiiunr wnisaevr generously for his daughters, at least I as well as for the boys. And if there This is also the time of year when be not plenty for all. the boys should I the chicken wishes it waa a dimu n be out down and the girls should get I would If it had sense enough, more. I Thi girls have the harder time of It, I A clam found In Iowa had a pearl the world gives tbem leas of a chance. I worth $66,000. Fake! Falca! How dl.t Therefore the father, responsible for a live clam ever get to Iowa? their existence, should make up for the world's unfairness. If Uncle Jimmy Wilson will go up to Provide well for the girls, fie up their Umatilla county he will see a great money so that their future husbands croo that ha and tha tariff hivSav. cannot gei ac n, ana arrange, ir you can, I auoea. ao that the Income will be made a little viBKcr "Tcry iimo anuiner granaenna I ii present aavisea Foraker Is not of yours arrives on the scene. That is for Taft for president, it la suspected the way to give your glorious name of I that Taft len'rfor Foraker. Horae and Smith, or Brown, or Snooks "the mil- horse. . llonalre." a chance to be heard of again I , on earth, after you go, to crawl under! The girl who with an oar knocked your expensive gravestone and leave all overboard the Idiot who rocked the boat the money. New King of Finance President Roosevelt ls receiving thousands of postal cards, all printed alike, asking him to serve another term. "Who originated this scheme is not known, but it looks a little like our Jonathan's style. The re port that Harrlman started It is not generally credited. WARMTH NOT DEADLY. aJl UESDAT the mercury rose In the official thermometer to 102 degrees in Portland. Other heat measuring instruments along the streets recorded more. This was a " very rare extreme of heat in this city. Since an Official record was kept it has never been exceeded and but once or twice equaled. But there are seasons when for several days the mercury goes up beyond 90, perhaps beyond 95, as happened last summer. Yet there is seldom a case of prostration. on account of heat here. When the temperature rises beyond 80 In east ern cities, some prostrations follow; if it rises above 90, people die from heat by scores. A temperature of 102 there would be fatal to many, and a multitude would be rendered Incapable of exertion, would have suffered extremely. Here people suffered but slightly if At all. These are oft-told tact., and the, The "Tongues of Fire" lunatics should be sent to the asylum or to Jail, the adult males being put to work on the rockplle. Experience with the "Holy Rollers" should be worth something. There ought to be bounds even to so-called religious liberty. What Causes a Lnnar Eclipse? Portland, July 29. To the Editor of The Journal To settle a dispute will you kindly answer these questions through The Journal: 1. What causes the ecllose of the moon? 2. Is it a shadow of the earth or Is It a body passing between the earth nnd the moon, and how many miles la the moon irom ine earm? SUBSCRIBER. 1. Tne moon Is eclipsed when the earin passes Detween It and the sun But this must not be confused with an eclipse of the sun by the moon, which results when the moon passes between ine nun ana me earin. 2. The mean distance of the moon irom tne eartn is 240,000 miles. Writing on the rise of Thomaa F. Kyan In the Auguat Everybody's, Charles Edward Ruaaell says: Here is a man whose career has been the romance of success, who haa climbed to the heights of wealth and almost Imperial power, a king of finance, a marvel of enterprise and commercial wisdom. He began poor, he Is very rich; be began obscure, he a the partner of a king and the con fldant of rulers; he was a servitor at a pittance, he la the employer of mll- liona; he waa an obscure and nameleai molecule in the human tide, now he ictatea legislation and controls poli- les, he commands enormous enter prises, he is known about the world. e is to the hlstorv of commerrn .u famous strategist la to the history of war. "Surely this ls a wonderful story. The boy boy starting upon his career with no help but his own will and his two hands, with no advantage but the free field before him: and do but ob serve the fortune, estimated at hun dreds of millions of doUara, the endless range of profitable Investments., the huge Industries that are now hlsl With no extravagance we may think that scarcely anotner man in the commercial world atands in a position so command ing, on the affairs of the nation lie cimuMi a poieni ana constant in fluence. His own attorney la secretary of state; he haa hla own teen in the senate and the house of representatives. Until very lately he .was a director or trustee in 32 great corporations. He owns ine insurance companies, banks, trust companies, .railroads, mines, gas companies, electric light companies, traction companies; he owns the tobacco trust, ne owns tne seaboard Air Line. "He lives most quietly in a great unpretentious house at '60 Fifth avenue. In the mad rush to shower and splash the golden flood he has no interest His life ls business. Ha a-oea tn hla office early; he remains late; he works in hla study at night. A tall, erect, powerfully built man. In tha beat if his strength; a very silent man. with no confidants nor close associates; a secretive man or whose plans and in tentions nothing Is surmised until they are recorded In eventa; a cool and self mastered man that never saya a word in heat nor does an act without con-1 slderatlon Wall street fears him and puzzles over him, but never under stands him. He has a great square Jaw and face as relentless as an ax and yet his characteristic policy ls to win by indirection. With hands and arma and skill to wield a broadsword his fancy ls for the finest rapier. No man has more caution; no man will thrust more boldly when the time comes, and for skill in extricating himself from a threatened position he has no equal in tne wan street game. to scare her deserves something better than a Carnegie raedal. A fossil 114 feet lone- has been dis covered in Wyoming. What a chance there muat have been for nature fakers in those good old daya. a This is the season when the married Importance of rVaterwaya W. H. Flnley, president of the South ern Railway company. In an address be- fore the millers mass convention held man whose family is at the beach aays in St. Louis, Missouri, May 20, 1907, 1 he ls awful lonesome, and everybody is among other things, said: , uppoeeo. 10 amueTisioiy. "I believe that everything that tends As soon as Cortelyou became a can to the development of any section and dlaste for president abour 10.000,000 to tha are.t.r nm,rii i. voters would yell: . "Where did you to the greater prosperity of its people get u? What forT What M you do benefits every business enterprise In with it?" that section, including its railways. For . . . . thi r...n r ,. . The same people that have been de- this reason I am an earnest advocate of claiming agalnat Bryan for obstinacy the improvement of water transporta- and never changing his attitude now tlon. But the waterways are not suf- clamor against tiim ror an alleged modl- "Even where they are available, they must be supplemented by rail trans- Sometimes Mark Twain says some thing serious and sensible. A rumor hlvlnv inr.iil that h waa ahmtt a portatlon. There ls a comparatively lit- marry again, he aald: "I have not tie wheat that can find lta wav to the known and shall never know anyone final consumer altogether by water. 7f Tih.n'L ma'r i.." W'f 1 ' Either In the form of grain or flour, by ,oat- 1 ,na" not ,mrry gln-. , far the greater Dart muat move bv rail . i-,- .-...- tn tha Knnmmin. ...... ,k. ' . a xjiaino, HMOinjion, man aoia nia to tne consuming; center or the seaport, -.hiakera fnr ti a st T,ii man t miand"".; by ,0 " ,rm n 'hlsf0ris$n:t thlsanndustK? ""Bt TairrTransnorUtion ha. nlaved .h..,: an important part in the development there be a duty on whls'kera, to protect of the wheat-growing and milling in- American hoboes against the pauper uuniiioo ui mi u in ica oiai. ob. in a i whiskers of Europe 7 wwvii.s iviuiuijr a.uu iiuiii many 01 ma 1 O 1 1 1 in. .nils uciuoiB, taiiway ruiea an innu-i arr .-s4aiw nr.4 h. .ntn.l , .,..11.1 V1UU klUWlalUS "-'a V 1IUVDIII ICS. A WBICI w petition. Here In St. Louis, for In stance, tl.e railways are obliged, bv the Grain and hops all right around) economic law of water competition, to uervaie recognise the Influence on their charges of the Mississippi river, which Is a Hubbard haa three general merchant mgnway 10 tne sea ana to tne markets aise stores. of the world." . Irrlgon already has fuel enough to) last tin spring. What Oregon Needs. From the Pendleton Tribune. It cannot be said too often that Ore gon should produce more of an In creased variety of products. Every day In the year we Import a carload of food products bacon, but ter, cheese, eggs, vinegar, canned ber ries and vegetables. These articles of consumption, which great fair August 23-25. will grow, and do grow In limited A fair association has been organised, in Coos county. a Freewater Is to have a new brick tlS.000 building. i a Woodburn haa ordered 1,200 gallon of oil for its streets. a a Get ready to go over to Tillamook' g spraying material will River Industry. Senator Bourne long ago gained a reputation as a "stayer," and he seems to bo living up to It, for h is staying back; in Washington, or out of Oregon, for a long time. But he ls also known as a liberal patron of Uncle Sam's malls. An Ideal Beauty Contest. writing- on tne recent newspaper beauty contest In the August Every body's, James Huneker says: 1 confess I prefer the old-fashionei: beauty contests of St Louia or New Orleans, of Vienna or Aries, where the woman, life size, radiant, smiling, vital, walks before the enraptured eyes of the Judges. .Picture to yourselves this wholly human fashion of deciding such a momentous Question and what -an be more momentous for the human race man ine Deauiy or women 7 trans posed to America, and. In soma lntl. mate amphitheatre, where one would not have to use a celestial evenleca to an uyora fjiass, 101 us assetnule 600 or 1,000 beautiful women. Pagan as is the proceeding it would attract an audience bigger than a Wagner muato araraa at aayreutn. Then let an ideal jury oe selected to render Judgment, a Jury composed of master Dalntera and writers who are noted for their pre dilection In matters feminine, g-enuino fiucs ana aamirera or tne sex. Henry Jran, ueorgu aaoore, u Annunilo. Paul aourgei, jr-aui Mervieu all femlnlstea, aa the literary slang has it; John Sar gent, Boldlni, Zuloaga, Zorn. Renoir. Degas, for the painters, six men who nave interpreted tne charms and Pacific railroads may have to pay the government some $40,000 for delays In carrying the mails. The traveling and business public can take their damages out in cussing. Fairbanks received a great ova tion In Boston. But that always was celebrated as a chilly town, and it naturally likes Fairbanks. Government ownership of rail roads certainly couldn't result In more Wretched train service as to maintaining schedule time. If Anna Gould-Castellane marries another spendthrift and gets into trouble, she won't get awe By.ftathx. Ilia defects of women of many climes, each according to his temDerament Anri as foreman of this extraordinary Jury President Theodore Roosevelt, conserva tor of the hearth and cradle. (Little danger of the anemic woman being a winner under his eagle gase; Brun hlldes and Wait Whltmanic amazons would have a sure chance of victory ) Are you doubtful that the result would be magnificent?" Bennett and Jonathan. From The Dalles Optimist The rumor that Jonathan la at more hill pitching hay with the presi dent la unfounded and untrue. Jonathan aoes not pitch hay. He sometimes makes nay, but he performs the labor vicariously, the newsDanera aa a mi auing tne actual cutting, raking, haul ing and stacking. However, this paper never took any activeypart In his hay- iii vinrauuiu, exuepi io try ana get the mules to balk and run away and upset a load now and then. But we are free to admit we have never done any damage to speak of up to 'date. But we have had a lot of fun and expect to have a lot more, for Just as sure aa you are born Jonathan's Jjay makers are going to desert him and go over to the aoeguf kttun Mathe hvtm la rip. , Politics and Politicians. Congressman Wesley L. Jones of the state of Washington has announced that he will be a candidate for the United States senate in 1909, to succeed Levi Ankeny. The Republicans of Massachusetts are to meet in state convention in Boston on October 8to name candidates for gov ernor and other state officers. '. Ex-Senator Henry G. Davis of West Virginia, who was Democratic candidate for vice-president on the ticket with Judge Parker, l about to erect in the town that bears his name a church as a memorial to ills late wife. Sam Murnhv. who waa tha flrat tar. ritorial treasurer of Oklahoma arid who aarvea unaer tnree governors, has an- nouncea nis candidacy ior state treas urer on the Republican ticket. Beryl Carroll, who has formallv announced himself as a candidate for governor or lowa. has Been active in politics since 1890 and haa campaigned In nearly all the congressional districts Of the State. He haa been a mamhar of the state senate, and is now serving nis third term as state auditor, receiv ing the nomination each time bv ae- clamation. Six thousand nneerhea dallvarad al- niultaneously in 2,000 cities, towns and villages in Pennsylvania on the text "Thou Shalt Not Steal" Is the Droaram arranged on behalf of the Democratic fight for the state treasurership. It la the desire of the Democratic orean- lzatloh'to make a striking issue of the state capltol graft exposure.-. J. Eugene Harding or Ohio is the youngest member of the coming con gress. He ls but 29 years old, and ls the son of one of the richest members elected last year. In October he is to be married to. the daughter -of a mil lionaire tobacco magnate, Captain Wil son of Mlddletown. Ohio. Mr. Hard ing's marriage will leave two bachelors in the Ohio delegation In congress Burton or Cleveland ana cole or Find lay. This Date In' History. - 1291 Founding of the Swiss confed- ration. 1085 Marauls de Dononvllle entered on nis duties as governor or Canada. 1743 James Blair, first president of William and Mary college, died. Born 1656. 1749 Samuel Doak. the "apostle of learning and religion in tne west," born In Virginia. Died la Tennessee De cember 12. 1829. 1770 Governor Robert Dinwiddle of Virginia died. Born about 1(90. 1798 Battle of the Nile. 1801 Jonathan Edwards Jr., cele brated theologian, died. Born May IS, 1831 London bridge Inaugurated by William IV. . ' 1834 lavey ceased throughout Brit ish possessions. 1864-r-General Sherman began the siege of Atlanta. , ' , llsMta MAUtea to tat union, i nimntlt!.. aa H v.. i ...-. luanuiaciurin .... ... .it be a new Hood in mo union, cost our people millions l or oouars every year end we should not I Many wheat fields around Weston are) only cease to import them, but should yielding over 60 busneis an acre, raise them to export. The trOUble With tnanv Drairnnlana I XT hnkni hnthar UlllikiiM o,h. t. " iot aomora in any part or i would nave to worn on tne streets. vim cuwuijf Dram raising some one ar- n,oQHnCvThC1'ur,,l,lat l W2U "ot Sheep ticks., are rapidly increasing comers fo7 i?o the.. n7d."d'; arouna "viue. say. tne Review. , eunnlim?tPedrent that th P0Mlblll" A rancher near Condon ha. sold 26 Umatilla county will ultimately be ,ton, of nay at 110 ton and na lot" "Ing 'rults and vegetables on its lert . . fit onlS Vrhawheat Tt ftMrn? ft CorvalH. will punish severely sny- faV Ltch.." ofound'h.la"6-. '3 ody found drunk tn that should-b? sober iaci, patcnes- of ground here nd ?"' there nn tha hill. n t. . . fL!Vi" I town ton are producing potatoes, beans and other vegetables as good in quality as are grown on the lower nds. Thirty years ago Grand Rnnd ley was thought worthless for fruit A New'berg spring nullet has already laid a. setting of eggs and is ready for setting. save In a few favored looilltiV. fnll isfnatn county win ne wen. repre- day it is rapidly growing into a con- Ji&rnto ,rrlauon congress in sac- the most flattering possibilities estimates 009 All over Oregon tha damanVi T, t ' I Tne "outnern oregonian estlma moll' KsV&n Mrtcul rnrr00o" PPUlatl0n " "''"J"1 tural lines, the prhne re.lt dealrad h. ana B,00- - . ouf se'ves' wFth therdfnarv SSf JJ",!. i". W ir lire nutter, eggs, bacon etc i " o..Jm.iC., ma u. .A simple objeef'to hlveln view. vetMPnt. onthiat wlU av to our"elves millions " ini ii worth look lng after and reiterating bv the nw. rur after and relteratlna- h . i.. " nanera and rln,,.lv h..7, W a people? . A Washington county hen is a ill doubtless come and lays no eggs, so w tad end. Gloire de Dijon. ' From the Pall Mall Gasette Something of dawn Went to thy making, Something of night; Fairy and faun Watched for thy waking. Brought thee delight. Came this fair maid. Gathered thee, peerless. Wore thee a day, TherK unafraid, Petulant, careless Threw thee away. When thou didst rest In sweet possession a Thr'"et by he? breath Swsyed on her breast, Did thy dim passion Warn thee of death? Poor, wistful flower. Doomed by thy splendour. Caught in Love's net, Thou hadst thy hour Death will be tender, Love will forget! The Spy.' By James O. Tryon. v This ls the silent fortress of her heart; I came unbidden and the gate's ajar. How was It I, who'd never played tho In so far? Repentance grips me as I steal away; Oh, 'tis a very dastard's game I've played i Better, a traitor to my cause, to stay And live forever the sweet masquerade. Many Umatilla county fields are Yielding 40 bushels an acre, soma" 60. and one yielded 66. a a Sclo now has the most wretched msll service she has had for the past fifteen years, says the News. The Elder, thinks the Albany Demo crat, has atoned for all the seasickness she has ever caused. Woodburn Independent: We will have a distillery. We will (ret that cannery. We will get more than one or two motor lines. Just keep your eye on Woodburn. part, Love's disguise could nenetrato Better Burdocks. From The Dalles Optimist. We seriously Object to "the name tha Portland people have given their ball team. They call them Beavers . Thai word belongs to the state, and Portland is not the whole state by a long shot. If, the Portland people are content to have a lot Of misfits, like the nreaent club to represent them, ail right But for heaven's sake dron the name na. vers and call them aomethlna" nna RostUnd, toses,. tot Instance . v , , "An East Side Bank for East Side People." INITIATIVE QUALITIES BRING SUCCESS But "INITIATIVE" is often handi. capped by lack of money. TAKE THE INITIATIVE TODAT By opening a SAVINGS BANK ACCOUNT with even $1.00 left from your week's salary or saved from household expenses, with THE Commercial Savings Bank XWOTT AITS WlXtXAlfS ATX. INTEREST 4 PER CENT SEMI-ANNUALLY George W. Bates t. a. Blrrel. President Casnier I ; ..