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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 18, 1907)
emse op the som r My t: THE JOURNAL bwlS'l, cause for the great clamor intoxicant, that fa .weeping ui iNDirairoiifT nwsf Afta. I over tha aouthern .tales, . It ta moat ...mfciirtrjly. it not only when ha drinks, that 1 Batf4 at the eoateffloe at Portland, Of., ft translate mooch fee smUS as eeaaa-eUes aaltar. " ' ' " AO aapai-tmaata wtM W M fall tka near tor Cbe eavartmeat yea WaaL , TraabaJ-Banlatata anerfal Advwrtteta Aaeaer. , BronawV-k BoUdlna, S3S rtftta araBae,. Maw Tarttl Trtbaae BuIMIbs. Chlcage. a4draM aabacrlptiea Tama by mU ta tar la tke Calta Btataa, Canada or ataxia. Steele., 4 ijl a. jmai pabnabad awr aMntna (aawt BoadaM a I the negro turns murderer-or racist .U.XTu'ilRefflOTal of the drink, it, i urged. would reduce tha number of negro cnmtnala, v.. iV '.: Tha negro population of tha coun try immensely,, .well, tha criminal total.. ; Thera ara 9,000,000 of them ; roancM jtnvEartaiaa narnaaaNTATivB I and. In 1190, of .7,186 murderer, in tha country,' !,? were black. In the same . Hat,' 1.111 were foreign Dorn wnite.. . Tnese ;two groups comprising only one fourth of our population, did four seventh, of tha murder. It left three aerenths, or 8,165V homicide, to be distributed among the remaining three fourths of our population, consisting of na tire whites. ', Even these figures are bad enough, but they ara not hopeless. Crime flourishes where ignorance Is densest, and we are becoming more and 1 mora educated and edncatlre. Summary measures for those with ' i whom Mr. Jerome is dealing in New York, less rum for the southern ne groes, and the little fed schoolhouse DAILY. Oaa tair tS 00 I Ooa i Oaa ran.. It. 60 I Ona swat. M DAILY AND SUNDAY. . ' O T 0 Ona awata. M The happiness which we re ceive from ourselves la great er than that which we obtain from our surroundings.- ' Metrodorus, disciple of Epl-. curas. ' . I tTJ A USEFUL RICH MAN. s-kEASONABLEJ criticism Is not If directed ..gainst richea. but Mm"hed -WiA oW ultimately sjaasauBv , vuoa VVMUIOU IV ( - - wrong methods, by illegal or ' unjust practices, by tha tyrannical power of combines. There must be rich men In ao great a country, and would be a country of poor oppor tunities If there were not a good MOROCCO. I T LOOKS like the end of the gov ernment of Morocco, as well as of tha government of Korea. It Will be tha end soon nnleaa other many rich men in It. -The rich . Biiropm powera. jealous of Prance, wfleu.er. ne garnet ma wean ny to maintain the moribund i v.yUMi HWHMm. """- and 111-aaYored government. Ah prises or vj wnemance or iuci, wao uses and adds to It in auch a way Let the fittest survive. There is no become similar on the surface; deep- 000,000 and barley at over 16,800, plty for a nation that is knocked er down they are too different for 000 will be harvested, making a down and trampled to death because amalgamation or compromise. ,, A re- total ojt over $58,000,000 for . these It persists in trying to stand still. cent laaue of Tha Reader said: "Let three crops alone.' When we add to Germany , may cry "Halt" to the portentous question be grasped I these the many mllllona received for Prance, yet Germany knows it will by tha Caucasian race, .and the an-1 dairy products, wool, livestock, Hymns to Know : A ; A Sermon for ToJay nonfldeoce. - ' I ' , , Happiness. . . aak araaJa nrnnamai - ' x w nsnii m . .iirta. m The author of this hymn probably I ."He lhat Is of a chrful LftythtB a waa bora la Londoa la lTTt; aha died I conUnual faasfProv. xr:155-. . . a an a m -. - a tm Aa I Oaa mm AW . A M VAllS TlltHaiM Aa a U have no second to such a command. . war la anre to be an assertldn of frnlta fUb,.n lumber, the. total, J'uan ,BtV Franoe la the natural guardian, tnaiwe ngni oz eacn race to maintain conaldering the number-of lnbabl- her; ewa day ahe was koown both aa II day it read, "A merry heart is a nronar ennnnaror. of Morocco. It Is Ita racial existence, and to rerard tanta. la marvelous. And yet. stranae I a polished writer and a eapable trans-J continual feast", Wd they ex- France that has led In all progressiva Ita territory aa a cltlten regards his and r; In : .sense f almost p. painful ?'' " h tl i'V1 th! Ari. hftm.- . ..rr-i if '-fct-i, t.,.lu avi. M,An knM Political l.ader. being eoneeea at man was made anyway for fasting and mmamruu u "x'"""' - - v- vv "f Mlret hand in the . Frenoh ' revolution. I not, for faastingT Perhaps underneath France has built railroads ana re- omy inose may oe mamiuea wno auce many times ine raiua oi proa-nan we picture hr impnaonaa in claimed deserts; France has done I have the capacity, of guestshlp, the acta now produced, we Import mil- tarror and ri thii hran iB th. light nearlv all tha work of advancing the peraonallty which makes It possible I lions of dollars worth annually. : It of thOM ,T,nt" u ur w toterest. cause of so-called civilisation in Mo- to live with the host nation on terme may be aald that we caa'weU afford "my"Jn&ftuif-f0i rocco, Tunla, Tripoli and Algeria; of justice and righteousness ' aod, to buy the stuff w Import, which is A ."r this conaacratad hW ' ; s ; It is France that Is now redressing it might have added, of ease and true aa to having money enough to thy 'love 'the pwni I thought be- not only Its own but other natlona' amity. : r , ;: .; do ao; yet that we do Import ao much To 'XS thourttwouM aows grievances, and to France properly! The Japanese are a wonderfuU an I howa that we have aa yet nUliaed Thy mercy oer my life haa flowed, 1 belongs the glory and the spoils, interesting, an admlrable people. Vehn fraction of our resource. , J . . ..r' 1 pr ::' nm,iT waa nrrtnarlr antihhad atlK.ii... v. a. I ' - " 1 ' ' ' f. , inean T'n.r "e, now eiear :(,. w. " r.r.., -1 ivuvfv wai uv,v Auoiaui uv uvti -.v i 1 Tny ruiina nana i seal : the Algeclras conference last year, appreciate them. The prowess they Thr man who killed a neighbor j ch bleaaina J my eoui more dear, and will find no aid or aympathy if displayed in the great war with Rue-1 for a deer In Lane county the other J in every joy that crowns my. days, nan nna oeiif ni in praise. her emperor tries to butt In now. r A POOR COMPLIMENT. HIS Philadelphia Bulletin, com menting on the report that Sen ator Bourne "la attempting to conduct a third term campaign mall from the summer resort where he is staying," and "Is en gaged In sending out numerous cir culars and letters to many sections of the country, declaring that the national interesta Imperatively de- by Sia IS only one Bide OI uem. meir I u7 was ; a uiue jess Diamewenay Mr heart MmmarHil1 anrarnrla la annthar. than most men Who do this trick. I Or eea rtllal In r "r. They are aald to be the most artistic for according , to the report there When giadneas wlnn my favored' hour, people on the earth. And a people really waa a deer, between him and K&aTwhSa ame of eoriiiewer. of artiste must be a deeply spiritual I bU victim.- But almost as a matter people. They have refused to be I of course, tha man being in range, enchained by any form of religion, it waa he and not tha deer that was and persecute no sect. Though for killed. the most . part Buddhists, they are ! not intolerant: manv are Christiana. Pat McCarren is mentioned aa a My aoul shall meet thy will. unea ara, wunoui a xaar. 1ft. The Katharine atorm shall aee: My ateadfaat heart ahall know no fear. iui naari wiu ran on una. their austere exterior they, after all. knew aomethlng of deep Joys and un , falling aouroes of refreshing happlnees.' , In their teaching they made the mis- , ; take ef insisting that it was necessary ' to seem a ad in order to please the most high. 'We make the mistake of being sad la order to please ourselves. Their ' misery at least had the graoe at a high, ' motive; ours is born of a shortsighted selfishness that graapa at the shadow of a fleeting satisfaction and loses the substance of lasting Joy. , - Happiness ia the. highest aim of life, higher than holiness or usefulness, be cause it must Include both.' To use It' is ao unfamiliar that we do not know It from frivolity:, we seek the excitement , of some pleasing sensation, and rising -to its stimulus, we fall afterward into ' the. reaction of' misery. BaW!nees Is' ; 01,8..?lra, etrenrth andTjbtjn of . the life fully la harmony with ailtaakye good and true. . . - , THt- wotning praises God better , than Sentence Sermons 1 No nation la, perhaps no nation ever I possible Democratic candidate for waa, so patriotic Love of country governor of New York. A party that ia the hlgheat and deepeat and would nominate McCarren ought 'to J strongest part of their religion. The be beaten in that state by a minion mand that Mr. Rooaevelt ahall again - " " ::h" " " k- f.nun thM htmr n.ar.tn famlly of a Boldior klUed In battle majority unless the other party be chosen to. the chief magistracy, nominated aomebody worse, which Is tUU VJULI OeUU kill 8 WViyiCUt V. IUWO , I -aVI-.VaaK1a communication, to etart up and be- J f"1" Nippon; otherwlw unthlnkabjc iub; cvjoicvf iua guua win row or u him and bis. They work for results, gin to hustle in behalf of a third term," says that while he ia acting . as to benefit others as well as him self, who tries to do good with It though not strictly along phllan : throplcal lines, is a man to be com mended,' esteemed and appreciated, not bated or abused because of his wealth. Whether much wealth Is a discredit to a man depends entirely ' on how he acquired and uses t. Tha Journal told Thursday of an admirableorthrnrich-Tnaiir'th younger son' of John . Wanamaker, the great merchant of Philadelphia. ' Rodman-Wanamaker became a part ner of bis father and brothers, and 'aa auch went to Paris to take charge stractly, it may seem an nnjust thing entirely within hie rlghta, "It must thus to crush a government by out-1 be obvious that the Pacific coast j side force, but no nation or state I third termer ia paying a very poor can live nnto Itself alone, and Mo- compliment to the executive himself. rocco Is not fit to live; no tears need The American people have Theodore be ahed by outsiders for ita extlnc- Roosevelt's own explicit announce- tlon. ment that he would not be the presl- MnpiwA ta mmnriaat lara-a dontlal candidate next year. The and natnrallv rich tarrltorr oeennierf Inference that he did not mean what - m jt- By Henry T. Cope, Ku relng sorrow la raising ala. Ton cannot fatten folk on phrases. There are no friendships raitn, . 9 m The poverty of life ia due to the thing we miss. u v. The lore of truth sees before like ness to truth, - Ornamental piety usually adorns an empty heart Kvery life may be known by the way Tha beautiful life looking for a mirror. waetea ao time by half-clvlllzed and fanatical Moors whom a weak and allly'"emperor' makes poor pretense of governing, He la out of date In ldeaa and meth oda, and the country la a constant prey to Civil ware. chaotic conditions there can be no progress.. Morocco Is finely situated, la KA nar Mnt 1rr In traa than .V - . TTT 1 M , " O". - Tv . TTl'w? France, yet has only 8,000,000 popu (made an Innovation that compelled Imitation. But thla young man saw - ' how he could not only benefit his firm's business but the people gener ally of both countries, in spite of our fool tariff laws. Tha' atory saya that "be brought about a ' practical re ciprocity, which i never existed be fore, and which has worked to the advantage of both nations. ' By mak ing a personal atndy of the-situa tion' in' France he found a way to supply the deflclenclea of the Ameri can . market .by drawing upon the skill of the French workman. He showed the Frenchman how to make goods that America needed,, and that could not be bought at home. -At , the name time . he Introduced Into Franca gooda In which America ex- eela." ?' -i"? f vi" A "' c ' ' ' , But this was not all. . Like many .rich, men of a high type, thla man latlon against 88,000,000 In France, It borders on the Mediterranean, he aald - on - thla subject - Is hardly likely' to be acceptable either to the prealdent or to hla Intelligent frJendaV " " So it has aeemed to The Journal, Under auch hlch haa commented to the same effect, and also wondered why Sena tor Bourne persisted in this insist ence on the president's candidacy after, aa it aeemed, the senator had become a close personal friend and confidant of the president If he W. D. Haywood says Harriman is not for next year or the next genera- "the greatest'benefactor of the age." tion only, but for many generations I Yet it never has been reported that ahead. Whether tha individual Haywood was in On that Alton deal. It lead stands or falls, galna or loaes, Is or anything like that It ia certain! ood is not la the closet if he is not nothing; the country, the race, are that he hasn't tried to make a living 0B avr9n- everything. Personal happiness is off a new ranch in central Oregon. to them but a alight object to be accepted and enjoyed if It comes This time Secretary Taft la not along the line of duty, but life is coming back across the Pacific but to be lived mainly not for self but will circumnavigate the world, per for the mass, for the future. They haps to make his homecoming the believe in reincarnation, and as con-1 more noticeable and boomleh. But tidently expect to come back In other that la entirely Oegltlmal bodies . When soon la faith rata aomethlng - they expect tomorrow's sun to rise, and that these successive lives will be bleaaed or miserable according aa they have contributed to the common greatness, glory and good Seattle and Los Angelea are ad vertised about 100 times as 'much as Portland, in proportion to real population, opportunities, ad van- In these and similar ideas, tages and general merits. What are whatever creed they accept they are we going to do about ltf a unit Their; emperor la literally poroera on, tne Mediterranean, - - " ,T a descendant. of thods; their rulers Perhaps John D. Rockefeller keeps " high .mountains, protect It from the J . . tte president permU man u$, Oftenth. ht desert wlnda dn .the south, the ell- thus to nrge Roosevelt s re- Mnnftf m mvsterlous seclusion so aV to alva V' yther. . ,ia mn.v. .. I nomination! Or it he doea ao m 1 : . . . v "Z. . l.'-- rich, yet thera I. no hope ,of progre -Pif of the president', protests, why .1" ! lZ ZJ eTT nTJ ion among the people, half of whom doe. not the president manifest sign. TJZ "JZ .Z.r KZi.nV S to dreaming there doing. a A good deal of piety is only a game Of trying to dodga the Almtghtyr a If you hare faith you will aee aome thlng glorious In every face. The poorest way to make an Impres sion is to giro up to depression, a Tou may know the greatness of any man by the way be treats a child, a a " Ton cannot keep life sweet and wholeeome by taking all your salt on Sunday. Borne think they are full cf faith beoauee they turn their backs on the facts. -1 i a. .i v . iv. ii i nr flianiaaanra wit n ma union mail .v .fwuy - suv lUo 000.0Q0 people, and there will be peror." and nine tentha of whom are campalgnerf . J,,, ' . . i aaa m ' a , a : . a . . . I ' U7 Jk WAK f 1VI fAA llArf nahlljhVafa Vrlat I ar wa aw aHavH sini .imouea -wiin me notion mat ..w . Nobodv can tell what a Democrat ? dol and i n m m "There would be fewar ararere for the removal of mountains If all were called their right names. . a a on cannot hare a public life of cb to be proud when privately you ininaing wings oz I I. V . ..... . V 4 .... . . 1 I tm Ki.a ft tm ,ih 4a arrlta 11, maaV that rnnit tutfrmA mlaatnn nn aarfh the President meant JUSt What he ... .. . ... .. la to klli "dogs of ChrUtlans." From nM 1.' wIU atlck to It and one point of Mew an thla ia no -out- "W 11 repeatedly, emphaU- slde nation's business; all other peo- c"y unequivocally, ought to plea have io do la to let the Moroe- Btick to it, and that under auch clr- cana aloni; but this European people cumstance Senator Bourne is "pay them for achievement and power. So we do not despise the 1 little brown men. They are great, and ; within ' them and their descendants are great potentialities. They are are wonderfully h . II. It 1 ,.,!. II T., I " w..u lu.J ml taiuuai jiiuiuvre'i jeiicr- nravc because tner screw ud enoua aonlan principles." Probably nobody t0 poor oW 3otMh Um . i - win asa wnai tney are, A Foe of Land Monopoly. From tha Public. Dr. Taylor, the new mayor of Ban The army canteen may be a nice cans aione; out Wis European people r""""" - - - tamnaranea affair aa ia nraad bnt xayior, u 'fr w eo wont do; theyinalrt on "civilizing" lf .hlnvpoofcompllment" In tA' ' " !" U 'tl IhSJ? heppy diaposlUon. "Many have thought . give mm glory by learned treatises fi?,ii,1-u.7i"j6,tlC i mystary. But a , little child, so happy that he only can .. kick; and crow, pralsee the Almighty mo effectively and even devoutly than does the theologian who only can offer hie bloodless speculations. -Ih2 r!"t"' vee his children a World brlmmlna v., oi.t. in . w without ,u,lllln.fl,-efdwf' .wuh lUng morns. !'" i aoua, ana to man ne gives faculties of Immeasurable happl-' neae. Llfj Is learning the law of hap. , pineas and pracUclng Its uee and ssrv- 1C. TTt wht the secret of happiness? How can we learn to be happy when life has so much to make us aid? The pralsa of happlneae does not take away tne fact or aorraw a, ni. ..f. . problem. There remain . the - million ch,.B." bwts and all the griefs of a world. True. Ood forbid that we should loee our sorrows: that were to make thla a sad world indead. Our caree ara ?SiipTrt of ir' urrloulum. Learning their lesson, bearing tbalr load ia essen UV. . l'n happlnesa It le not the Ufa of the butterfly ex. peiience that is Arm, calm, serene In times of storm and stress. It is the i" n1 "j loaos or care "nas been forced to strike Its roots down to the rocka. There are some-lives that seem to run oyer with a happlnees that la ,u!J ?J vc'wblng to all who know them, and these have come out of great tribu lation. . At first the multiplication table Is a ouraen r later.- when mastered, It be- oymes wonaerrui nearer or burdene. To wear a careworn, fretful look, to go through life shedding misery, le to con fess that we have not learned our laa. on,Vtnt w ar dunces, In life's school. The secret of happlnesa Is In grasp ing the elgnlflcance of living, to learn that we live for things other and higher than those mad foil lee and fading prises for which men sell their 'bodice and aoula and fret oat their nerves and hearte. M man can. be happy whose heart Is set on the changing fashion of things or who looks for satisfaction in things. The lover le happy because he haa dis covered a prise and le enthralled by a pursuit that makes all other thinga seem mean and paltry. Men are happy In proportion aa they yield themselves to the beat, as they tune their hearts to airiice tne aey or tBeir Uvea Paul la -happier in the dungeon, where he can be true to his ideal, than Nero on the throne without One. - There Is feast in days of famine for those who have the Inner eyee for the riches of life. Tou always can find In this world what your heart la looking for. But you cannot satisfy your heart on everything you may chance to find, and until the heart Is satisfied and the deeper needs of the life are met there . Is no happlnesa The search for happiness is not alto gether selfish. Few things can we do mai wiu neip oiners more tnan the eul- THE JAPANESE. Morocco: and "of course with fanatl- isting that he must and ahall run, cal Mohammedane to deal with there la only, one way of doing that the same way that pioneers made Indians 'gooeVSiA The "elvllUed" idea is that auch a government aa that of Morocco getlo, aggressive, well educated In wa iitinari that th Vila aalnnna ' "3,lZl ' " ""n""lrenn fnc r - - i nean oi xiaaunaa miw uiuan ana vi lourseiTM. - ot ine anuu T lntraat. titmaalf tr. mn .A.m. . 1 " " very liberal patron of art" For sev-IIt9 1 ' that hW f"atl " ls onl inorance or unrfasonlng But we are of one race and atyle , .. .1.m c tribesmen are a menace to eouth- prejudice that sets up. without thor- Lf thou ht and idaala. and thev of .-r - , j-iwiu. 1T!nnPT. ti.tlnna ..4 tl.. . . " the American Art ? aasoclatlon in " . ongn mveaugauon ana mucu con- another. We need not fear one an- iwww uiuab buuuui uj luraiKU in- aMoratlnn anrh annarlnrlfv. altHar I ... v-.. . Not the aoulleai. set amlla. all aaaantiaia nnlita raaolnta eonr. WOnld be patronised about aa much the University of California, and a man but the strength and sympathy that now an essentials, pome, resoiuie, cour- n,...- -i,i, a ma from a life flxed in confidence In eternal ageoua and intensely and fanaUcally hout it aa with It enryrgeTaor'TaaoSrV.' rtht nd od and unfailing love. a a 3 a . a.- X" ' - " aia-aaaeaaaaaj lla- MaliU mtA At e1 aaka In aAMMa. ' I I 1 1 I .B Pm.."Tr "P."aCn Tea. thare is something, matter Uon thaUnf "h Klamath Lake Bl Islands. peopif mm uxau Wr ia io up- ' . " rovrcy, 10 wnicn nm coniriouta mil . a . a. .a a .a. i wit ri i irrniUa-rwn rnin rnn mnrn uofiiia iianit u in ininrauciion 10 inn nor to mem m aome ways, dui in - . ' ; iroun of chanters in defense of the "iir.T w . Bn- imporution Of tmnga we snouid pro- iommon rtght" to land: ,to'r. wU a. homaroik5Biy see the auce, ana too jnucn narriman. why heeltatef Ye are full-bearded men. With aod-implanted will, and oourage Never yet was HE OBJECTION to unrestricted Japanese immigration la not louuaea on any aBsumpuun 01 some Important respects, li we are our auperiority to the Japanese, candid, we will confess Inferiority, i It is curious how many people can Ye dare but show ft. a. ik 1. 1 Will M&ia. wu uu ullou avuub nuab n Paris. .. But he did not learn to de- fluence and ideasand trade. Varl- nnknowable to them or anybody else. nesting nl&ce of mvrl&da nt itrfni The Islands have long been famous aa the breeding place of the various kinds of birde that swarm the lakes and ftwempa of this section, and many have desired to see them, but the opportun ity wae not forthcoming. Many pic tures have been taken ahowlng verity Francis Joseph. Emperor Francis Joseph of Austrle- a ex .ui. .. . splso America. He has bought and . ,7 . v , ' reaeon or as m iaci. iieuuBr don't want tnem numerously for citi- ahlpped to thla country, many hun- ?' Inc,,den' n ' should there be any question of , or residents, and have a right dreda of fine paintinga. : From the Morocco fuard1"' "ffIcIent friendUnesor animosity between us to say so without giving them just eae. . a . . . . I v etvHvia.aUr. ai Mvaiuuia. anil TRa . RnsnMA ITITniTfln in TtlR I AAttaa ax ms?.. a a W a etAae-ja VaIIawi rana aaion 01 one year aione ne nn,... n-,m.-, -,o.,m "" " " . - " v-u" "4 ""fc is the longest reigning monarch cf the ahlpped 400 paintings to America I . . , I " I' T J, 7" Vv I esuon oi oriental immigrauon. a out their destiny, and we onra. with world, having succeeded to the throne for ;free exhibition, a atlmnlua'to - v- . uvul uv. person or family or collection or in- the Pacific ocean between us. American art students and a source wma wnen lOB moon iea me amauaiB may oe entirely menaiy to of inspiration to all beholders with cltll,l&tlon 0t 010 World' Rnd the,rf otfier" t a distance, and may have ajfrartlBtio taste. Manv af these artiauo, agricultural ana commercial friendly business . relations witn paintinga teach great and profound ,Xmpl ftad teach,ns were lt9 pr,de them- through inherent, irresistl leBsona more powerfully than could an1 top9' but the Cros" f,nally trl- ble antagonism, could not tolerate be taaeht in tha greatest e-f aermona. nmpnea bo inorougmy ana complete- them in close contiguity. ' HO it ia Thia action ia in agreeable contrast lT. 0Ter Crescent that they have with the Americana and any. very to that of Mr. J. P. Morgan who Da fri generations a prey to de- large number of orientals, partlcu fnr'Vaara has Vant. h,nArA. f tt,- cadence. . The one thing that ren- larly Japanese. Considered in 'a world's art masterpieces In Europe derr tt Morocco hopeless large number, we are not sure that able swarms of young birds, from the peiican on aown tne line to the small reed birds, and while conditions thera I nower Francis Joseph nromulaated new constitution, out tne course oi OUR PRODUCTIVE REGION. T TS irtaln nnv in hat a mn.. ... . . events caused him later to return to a , ureaaing year tor gram crops in reactionary polloy .and ror many years tha Paoffln nnrh..t ihi he ruled a a despotic) monarch. His tne Faciflc northwest both aa to has been a troublous reign. In addition Quantity Of grain harvested and .t0 a, serious rebellion In Hungary he the amount Of money received there- engage In war with France, Italy and for. The Journal', estimate of 60.- feSeof3 But found some way or means to. work It out.' Nor e'er did Fortune frown en him who dared. Shall we in presence of this grievous In thla auoMmest moment of all time. EF.fi?' '" k!? Hungary waa born August II. 1810. He JSSt 2Wrlnfc WhW W"h . ornithologistV Ind" n.turaTl.t. These -groanin-g million, might be ever SoincITh aonVee.f'n And th''one rtrok. , Just, so greatly g&f Vuch" iSSk "iSKr. . . "Tl.v .v. v i... i iruuuo urainan sysiem or ow loToi w,i m. v "", i reoiamaiion service will make Of deed. In 1148, at the age of IS. He came to the throne through the abdication of his uncle, Ferdinand I., In the midst of a revolution that threatened the founda tion of the monarchy. . On coming Into th agricultural land the 000.000 bnahela of whaat vnrfh at I been said that the venerable empe I . . . . . . . , . .. . . . . I . . .... .... I.. . . . . lis mo 111 U0 h u.iiu iiiurg auivua iituib rather than nav tha dutv on thm 100 mooa rengiou, or a aina mat tney are not more ODjectionabie tnan tne rarms wnere raised 142,000,000, sovereigns. The three greatest personal duty on art la another moBt ot eVrnize? ,worW hag abBn- the Chlnese' ,0 they aspire far high- is probably conservative, as yields fhe execution of his brStherMax! though the duty fool Item of the tariff law A Uyrio of the Llama. Burges Johnson, In the August Every body's. 1 ; Behold how from her lair the youthful llama Uopee forth and lllghtly scana the With llusty heart she Hooks upon lllfe's drama. Relying on her. llate-llearat worldly . llore. . But Dot some lied, armed wltfi a yoke lniama the richest - world. The islands so termed rfre quite ex tensive and cover a lars-a area. tk. are almost on a level with the lake and are perhaps more In th nature at swamps than Islands." A Reminder. ' Fwta 'the Washington' BUr.' ' Think," said Mr. Dustln Btax Im pressively "think of what the railways have done toward develODina the coun- "Yes." answered tha ntaln cttlaan. "But the Oblication lan't antlralv nna. elded. The country, you know, hae done doned. For .even centuries, the er, are more ambitious, crafty and are being reported even larger than imiiian, m ia ...whom Napoleon jti Boon liures her into llowly llabors alituesomethlng toward developing the . ' m a m a t - . . i . - i uuKii l li vaitiuiiou on oiuyoi m ua, juji 1 a.- ... . - IM raWea Wnrl anraan tlWAS inrn KVtain I aaaAMMMtVnl UAtevaaa 1 si an Aalna m at I fHAaiai a-(tAAAil aV s.Aia ..ila A. a. la . . . dinn & . a I We UKe to read and bear Of a I vrw wm, irjOUU.wiwi. jiwiuu .4ix-3iv,&iAof i nwo wycuicu jub ueiurv uarves. iuiico: tne vuicme in it qz mm omy mon rich man like this, and have no ob- wer th foremost of all peoplea In white and so-called Anglo-Saxon portion, of the Inland empire. The ltf. ZUnc?n.nW' oia wiS ..... .. ..... . . .. 1 rna arr.a. RiAnnna. mannrsrrnriAi ann 1 nann a ann rna nHsnttia tuava auitnt.i a ltvaiw t i. mwm ai. I tna Kmnreaa K;iiinnin. jection to ms oecommg reasonaDiyi , ... , . v.. .u w vv. mmoi uu Her wool. Is Hopped to weave Into richer In carrying on his Immense business. He ls not a "wretch, con centered all in self," hut tries to and doea aid and benefit humanity by right uses of his wealth. all the refinements of that long racial antagonisms that are neces- under the estimate, and ao will ex- Pierlod; but the blazing, advancing sarlly aroused by close contact in ceed by quite a number of million Cross crushed that civilization, only I large numbers. This Date In History, 1718 Louisbur founded by French Tha bmadent nflhnahAla tha c-raintnat wnn n Trn-1 from Newfoundland. i jt a. 1 itji I . ... . . . .1. . . .. ... . ... I 1100 ruiiuou war ivr vua aawiuiiu. Diuwij uu luiiiviiwii i,u uunu uyi ucuaus uiviae toe two peoples, aiuucea in ibis region, it win oe an Its own upon the ruins. atlon of the English in America came to R 1lfn..ll kunl VI.. . . V . . I ,1... 1. . . . ' M A. tnnd. ii.B.. u.u-u uiuv ui uavura muk nuuik lur caoioru rBBuera w bsucts . gar- raM Jaai. amnarar f as Confucianism nas lost its po- they should remain far apart, al- the numeroua Items reporting wbeat Austria-Hungary,! born. litical nower in Korea and can make I though thev mav maintain anttraiv hrlalda f R A. KR and an hn.hoii an w "f:2 Tf.LJ'Va iSS?anB7 noTi1"1' " ' ' I ' 1 .v Ka v w aaw ww awia wm I MVI II JLWl tlUUf iV ADVli no stand arainst th Pantheistic frlendlv relations at thla dfntanca. aera. bnt tbav ara 1ltral and e-nldn ..l50--Honore de.Baliao, French nov- ECENT murders by Black Hand Japanese, ao Moslemlam -must go! to their mutual advantage. I facts, so numerous this year as not! 1876 Prussians defeated the 'French a And lfanguidly she - llearns he Oees ana Jtiaws. My children, heed this Uesson from all If avoid eacn 1111 And do not lllightly lllleave, I beg, your loving mammas, . don't spelllU your iia.nauiaiiia tvwms .....iw.. . you would llflve with lUatitude, ....... . ... . 1 1 . avoid encn iiiurma limy, Ullonesome. Ulloving mammas, And llllast of allll, name in sucn aiuillly way. CAUSES OF CRIME. Eugene Haa Waked Up. societies in New York atarued Christendom. They . . , make Interesting the report , that Prosecutor Jerome haa secured ' confessions that will destroy one of theao societies. : , , , : ; Out criminal atatlatlca are already a record that ta appalling. We mur der about M00 people a year. We assassinate' 'eighty, to 25 times as many in proportion to population as do England,5'. Germany, France or Japan. There la only one European country tHat haa a blacker murder record tfcaa ours, and that la Italy. Tie very t!2cknesa7df tils record, la From the Bugehe-Ouard. There Is every evidence that Eugene has entered upon a new era of growth and prosperity. The business men are as Its political aide 1b concerned, be- enterprising and intellectual of orl- to be exceptionally good, now ; about! pennsiyvaniav ot,v"iWPeff I auua ui cuiuuniuauwu wtaia, av uuuvu m uiai iu mttj I V ceBlt U9 Mrmi, THO HOI mUCO luu vaiaR rimira, loroiar lacniarr ..i.mi.,. Wt tll bt Bf iJratttl way. tney nave largely modernized ; apparent danger of its going far be- .....!... 1 a a..i am . . - .1 .1. . . . 1 a ill tnfj uniiia ui vyinvciuLLC. nave aown in impotent ignominy, bo iari une yapanescro sy lar tee mom to be rare. The price also promises 1890-i-Toraado caueed great destruc fore, the Christianity. From across a sea, was thrust the Jlu-Jltsu-trained arm of the Jap to wrest the Korean throne from the palsied hand of lt. cum bring emperor; from across another sea the- French republic hurl. Ita modern mailed fist In the face of the degenerate descendant of the greatest people on earth when tha Crescent; flamed high and' bright in the Mediterranean heaveni, -and will crush hlmiKAhd in both case, the world;; If lt 4 care, at all, approves. themselves. They have retained what is useful ot their old customs and . ldeaa and Ideals, and adapted whatever they could make use of front western natlona. They hare made themselves like us in whatever would make them wiser and stronger, yet they remain .0 different irom u.k so antagonistic: to as, thai e fcnd; they cannot dwell together In large numbers in accord and har pony. ?j Thi two , clvlllzatlona . have. low that points This yields a big . . .1 . v . , . . . roveuuo to tue wucat iarmer wno has a good large crop. Forty bushels an acre bring him $28 an. acre, of which about fif la net profit on an average. Of course a great deal of land in this region yields far greater return, than thla, all the wiy from f 50a to , $500 ans acre, Jut the) big wheat farmer wilt do rery well him self this yean - Then oata valued at nearly $10,- of state of Kentucky, convicted of com. pllcity In the murder of William QoebeL r A . Cnrfevr ' Receipt.' .'. , From the Jacksonville Post An exchange say. every family should have a curfew, which positively should ring tonight, and every night, if needed. These currews are inexpensive and can be made at home.)' Take a piece of siding two feet long and whittle one end down to a handle; then take the child that needs the curfew and bend him over a barrel: now take the piece of aiding In f the hand and use for a clapper. Put it on hot Divide the strokes evenly and see that none miss. Good for a. boy or a girl up to the age ot is, ana applications . are war ranted to cure the most severe cases of loafing -that exlstv-jf taae r. .1.. t .t n n .k. Ill All Siuslaw railroad bonus giving an excel lent illustration of their determination Everybody seems to have, caught the spirit of the times and sentiment for street paving, good sidewalks and other Improvements of a public nature la prac tically unanimous. . f - . America's. World-Wide Influence. From tha London Daily Kews. v A Kaffir headman in the Umtata dis trict of Cape Colony bought an Ameri can broom, . and noticing that several of the fibres had seed pods attached he sowed the seed,, and now hes a quan tity of broom oorn under cultivation and growing well. The Conservator of Forests for the Colony,4 reports that thla native haa originated what mav be developed Into an Important Industry.: . , "An Bast Side Bank for East Side . . , People." The Habit of SavingMoncy . May be developed Just as easily as The ; Habit of Spending Money One leads to comfort and content: The other to continual worry. Every person should have both a COMMERCIAL . AND A Savings Bank Account Only f 1.00 is neceseary to start a SAVINGS ACCOUNT, on which . we pay 4 per cent Interest, com- pounded semi-annually 1, z..: j Commercial Savings BanV XVOTT AhTS - Wn.ZOAHS ATB. ? George W, Bates.. t . President J. B. Blrrel.,,,..,.. .,..;. Cashier i