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

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    THE JOURNAL
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and
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wtf SaixUr Bomlw. at Tk Joornal -
lag. ri(U and Xaaihlli llmli. JSarUaad. Or.
Kntond
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Ml BIT.
t UK paatoffl at Partlae. Or., for
, TEUEFBOKI MAIN TITS.
AD departments raarbaa' tr this
anmbar.
the mmluc tile dprtnnt jroa want.
F0MI05 iJlTKBTISINO HWBESKNTATI VI
VrlatM!-lnJmln Spartal Aflwrtlalnf ifMiff,
HrtiMW(r BalldlntV 23 fifth aTmae, Mrv
' lark; Triboaa KulMlnf. Chlrafo.
fabeeriptioa Termi by null to tar eOdraas
ta Ike Unltae State, Canada or Mexico.
DAILY.
Oaa raar ffl.00 I One atonta 9 M
fJUNIUT.
Ooa jraer II N I On month I -SB
DAILY AND SUNDAY.
Oaa year (7.80 Od month I M
The wise and prudent con
quer difficulties by daring to
attempt them. Rows.
NEGLECTED
i
OPPORTUNITIES.
the
and
NEW YORK man who for 30
j-par 8 has been the heaviest
apple exporter of the country
ays Oregon can produce
best apples In the world
that srood as Hood River
amies are those rained around
'Ashland are even better, in the
; Rogue River valley and otjbei' parti
'' of Oregon the choicest of pears and
' other fruits can also be produced In
., Immense Quantities. Besides, he
' aees, as well aa other outsiders do,
what a great dairy and poultry state
Oregon could be and ought to be,
' and wonders at the Importation of
" dairy products and at the almost
' prohibitive prices of poultry and
eggs. After noticing the abno-mally
. high prices for these products here,
lie asks: "Now with snch a market
as this, with a great and growing
; elty simply clamoring for eggs, but
. ter and milk, do you see anybody In
Oregon alive to the chance to make
' a fortune out of such a condition?"
And be answers: "No, sir. People
' move along In the same sleepy way.
: The people are too alow. The moss- j
' . back must wake tip and get busy or
go to the wall." Chicago will dump
millions of dollars' worth of prod
; ucts here Is Indeed doing so an
Dually, that Oregon can produce
cheaper and better than the country
from which Chicago obtains them
This New Tork man continues with
Unpleasant but needed and whole-
. some truth:
V ' With auch land, such a climate, such
- market. It ls almost a dlagirace that
things here should be In the condition
they are. Portland is crying- for butter,
, paying in some cases (0 per cent over
, '- the price paid in other cities and the
' farmer is roaming- leisurely along, going
fishing today and working a little to
tnorrow If it is not too hot He has
- gcrawny cattle and his chickens are half
; hawks. Portland and, in fact, the whole
tate of Oregon needs to be spurred like
a laxy horse. She has the speed and the
' strength, but she is lazy over the fact
that her oats and grass are too easy to
. :. ret.
- . We suppose this is the principal
jason for this absolutely shameful
state of affairs. Yet another reason
la that we cannot as yet get men
' enough from the east or anywhere
to come here, see and understand
these conditions, and take advantage
of them. Oregon Is all right, is
great, is resourceful almost beyond
description or Imagination, but too
many of her people are not of the
i right kind to develop a state. They
are good people otherwise, but they
lack the ambition to develop, to
tmake the most of opportunities.
'They are "easy," careless, neglect
ful, wasteful, thriftless. Of course
(there are numerous exceptions, and
.the proportion of enterprising, de
veloping people la Increasing, but
?not nearly fast enough to keep up
Wltn the times. No wonder
when auch conditions prevail as this
man. describes that outsiders point
Scornful fingers at us. The inexpli
cable wonder is that more home
eekers and opportunity seekers do
not rush to this state of unparal
leled and astonishing opportunities
to get rich off the soil.
hoods against the . state's highest
officer merely because It does not
agree with him politically.
Rev. E. W. St. Pierre, chaplain of
the prlnon, a very worthy and self-
sacrificing man, who does not "jte
neve in flogging at all, for any pur
pose, says that Albrecht was not
weak, or deformed; that' he was
stout and sound, weighing 162
pounds, and of average mentality;
that only 18 lnstoad of 48 lashes
were struck, and that he did not
faint or even murmur, but walked
away firmly to the dispensary, where
his hack was salved, after which he
went to work as usual, and has been
at work ever since.
Mr. St. Pierre does not like flog-
glng. but he says this is only the
third case under the present man
agement, each being for the same
offense, escape, the prisoner know
ing the penalty; and he says fur
ther that the warden Is "a marvel
of patience, gentleness and devotion
the interests of the prisoners,"
nd he adds, "I might as well say
the superintendent also," as he Is
the superior officer. A library, a
ball field, a band, an orchestra, and
other means of amusement are pro
vided, and the prisoners are In every
way well treated.
Now there was the Inexcusable
series of misrepresentations pub
lished with a malicious Intent; here
Is the plain, simple truth, told by
a roan whom everybody believes Im
plicitly. Looking at the two, it
seems very Improbable that the Ore
to
to be awake, alert and active, be-j not allow them to profit oft the
causa or tne possibility, not to say timidity and anxiety of depositor!,
probability, that the supreme court whom he advises not to sell at a'
vi iu unuea .states, as waa rore- discount. Mr. Devlin would scarcely
shadowed In a decision some months (take thla stand unless ha were Drettv
may D9 inclined to noia ine irn- sure mat tne depositors would event
gatlon law unconstitutional. It Is ually get all their mnnv aiwi i ,
of the greatest moment to make the lis thus sura he is doing them a val-
vasi importance and value of irrlga-1 uable favor by discouraging them
nun anown ana unaerstooa, ror even rrom selling and brokers from buy-
ur uignesi court nas sometimes i mg tne stock.
moulded Its decisions to suit public
necessities or the manifest public Weva had a littU A.r...t r.i
. "
wui. I storm, rill Innlt V . j, a. ...
. . . ... T ueoirucuon
v nope a targe numDer or aeie- caused by th element In
STANDARD OIL AND THE FRUGAL
Lttle Pcopls Don t Buy SKaras at $500 Each
gates from Orearon will attend h(aln.V t. ao.i. . . pend in one way or another
I ' - , w tuvui. luu alia. I annrAii .
ingress, mis state ougnt to be where, and hurrah for Oregon,
wcu rcpreseniea mere, uregon is
tremendously Interested In lrrlga-
Copyright. 1907, by American-Journal'
Examiner.
Mr. RockefeUer says that any at
tempt to make the Standard Oil obey
the laws,top stealing, stop blackmail
ing, stop flowing up rival oil wells, atop
rebating, stop bribery of other men's
employes, stop corruption of legisla
tures "wJll cause direct loss to thou
sands of frugal people who have In
vested small savings In the enterprise
North and injure thouaand of others who de
one way or nnumer uu tuv
of every industry.
Mr. Rockefeller's statement is abso
lutely misleading. It would be quite
proper to apply to it a shorter and more
accurate word,
uo oeauia I'OBC-intelMffnnrAP I ti,. i , .v.. wh.
A. I M a, I -,, mm a IIV IIIVVBttlll 14 I irv. JV t rt auaa
won, ana snouia Stana up In the getting opinions on What constitute managers control the Standard Oil
front rank in thla mnm.nt ,w 1. , . 1 consuiUT.es business and the business of Its
iront ranK in tDls movement along the "Seattle SDlrlt-" Evrvhnd I. allied corporations are not frugal
with California and other Pacific arreed tn atirt wtfv o.i. . I peopla who have Invested email sav-
, . 4 . . agreea 10 Start With that Seattle lS fnKa. They are John V. RockefeUer,
coast and western states. I not a dry town wmiam Kockefeiier, h. h. Rogers, and
THE
OKLAHOMA
TION.
S
CONSTITU- 7116 Burns News says the gov
ernors vetoes were "fakes." But
the mnmhcira s K . i.i.i.t
ItrHITTiTlVTlIITI.il. "" 6'''uie
I. w,r. 7 Beeme to consider them
tia ui unnuuuia inai iney tvi--- v
very real
should reject the constitution
that was framed with so much
labor and care and should elect to
office men who are opposed to It.
This may be taken as a hint that
Mr. Harrlman was disappointed In
San Francisco on his recent visit
there. He should coma to Portland
and RAM hnW Ir tlaa mwsnrn I-
tha r,M . 1 1L. I " U
F.tn.UDUl uul oi i"B of him.
constitution, and will defeat state
hood on that ground. Mr. Bryan has
said that the Oklahoma constitution
Is the best one framed for any
American state. Mr. Taft thinks It
the rest of the Standard OH managers
who own seven eights of the stork of
the company.
Frugal people of small means do not
invest in Standard Oil. It costs 1500 a
share, and frugal people are too Intel
ligent to Invest In a stock the value of
which Is liable to be cut in half and
cut in half again the minute the courts
can be found to enforce the law against
the rich as well aa against the poor.
Furthermore, Mr. Rockefeller s argu
ment Is precisely the same that was
uaed when it was proposed to suppress
piracy, in which many prominent and
godly merchants of Bristol had money
Invested, Just as many prominent and
godly merchants in New England had at
one time their money Invested in the
slave ships, and they filled the contri
bution boxes of the churches with taint
ed money wrung from the unfortunates
who sweated between decks on their
way to the southern plantations.
When the British government abol
ished slavery compensation was made
to the slave owners. Mr. Wllberforce
Small Ckance T
From no Una initva .
nr.nl " - avwugri nooi
e a
Bpeaklna of tha
. .. - -
e
A nan of Taft's si
hnTanaa I
ls needs a strong
. a
nents tn their day spoke tha truth, for
it waa ha nnatnm nf almost all Of the
people where ships were built, from the I platform.
flrat rlaaa niartianta who would take a I -
ten pound venture to the last appren- Now who la to have precedence in i
tlce who would take a five shilling ven- coming TaftT rceueno in wel-
ture. to Invest something in the flour, a a
ishlng Industry of their port. Nobody disputes that Mr. Taft t. .
Nn nM rn.lA KldA hrouaht nrofit Wide travaUr ' IS S
to many rrugai innaeepera wuuae inui
savings were invested in the wine shops
where his men registered, and no doubt
those same frugal people abhorred the
suppression of piracy, Just aa we find
high minded and honorable church mem
bers whose profit comes from the rent
ins of property to ramblers and others
even more -unfortunate, objecting to the
too tightly shutting down of tha lid.
It were better mat every dollar
owned by rich or poor, good
fruaal or speculative. Invested
dard Oil were absolutely wiped out than
flrVaiaraaLn" V"" ren
e e
i1 lZtkA V,ry !Pch..a there
a a good many Inches of. him.
are
that that the oountry should continue 2Prly unlikely that Tsl An
to be debauched by the spectacle of that w,u M,In that Flatl or Depew wUl.
the worst one. He says that fromi
gonlan's object of discrediting the statesmanlike point of view It Is
administration for a base partisan not a constitution but a code of by-
purpose will be attained.
THE STANDPATTERS' PRO
TEST.
r
other. It embraces much
other states fs accomplished or at-
HB American Protective Tariff tempted by legislation. Its makers
league Is protesting against had observed how legislatures sel
Mr. Taft's speech, and views dom are really representative of the
with alarm his prospective can- people's interests, how they often do
dldacy for president. The league Is the things that they ought not to do
the spokesman of the organized tariff and leave undone the things that
plunderers, and of course insists on they ought to do, how they trade
a Republican candidate for president and logroll and sell out and legls-
who Is a standpatter, like Foraker. late for Bpeclal interests; and they
bven Roosevelt has kept his hands attempted to make the organic law
off that colossal system of robbery, of the new state cover all important
the tariff, so its beneficiaries forgive matters, bo that legislatures need do
him for all the good he has done but little that was good and could
by whacking at the limbs of the do but little harm
TT... 1. AT.. 1 iL.i l -j i a . I
L"M "cc ne oia not It may be th.t for . PonRf!tnMnn
Htrikfl At thA rnnt' hilt Taft nrnnn. ...
v yw. mis one goes too far, covers too
to hack at a few of the roots a little. much Kround. A the Becretary of
and this must be resisted to the war BayB( t ls Bomewhat popull8tlc
uttermost. Whfct Taft is In favor an(S 8macka - rtu of nt
of. supposedly, really would not hurt ,9 what the peopIe of Oklahoma
tu pruiBcwn. inTeresu, very mucn. want and B0 long tnere ,g nothlng
1C, BU i.iiun b.1 an lest. ,n lt antaffoniHr. tn th nctltnti..
the reform movement should get be- of the Tjnlted Stateg lt j, BQt thfl
yona me comroi or me "friends of business or nrovinc nf th ..ho
the tariff." and really do something tratlon to dlBapprove of lt. What
p.uujci lue PeoP1e rrom tne pro- Bultg thn nfinnlft nt nnahm.
tected Interests. So they are against ...i nr. , .
- - ouit jui. inn nun rresiaent
Taft and will try to beat him for RoOBeTelt if their constitution does
iu uommnuon. ine democrats not confll(,t w,th that nf th tt..
could ask for no greater luck, from states, lt does not concern these two
paruaan point or view, than the gentlemen ln the leagt how
Uv.u,uawuU U) lu eyUDHcans or a Uc or socialistic It ls.
toi-lff atny(nnAM T.. A. . . I
. 7, " " OUD"cv"' Tne fact probably ls that the
iuai mere wm De a great weakening trouhlB with th nni,nn,0 f.t,.
' lue ""ape now; as soon as tion ls that it waa framed by a con
t appears that revisionists are likely ventlon the majorltjP of whlch ftre
to be the controlling element the Democrats, and If the state Is admlt
standpatters will flock over to the tfA a. it d-fr-. k-
Klo. l I.U..4.. ' " "
oiuo m iUUllllUUCB
1 laws.
T, .v 7 cu"Bl,lu"uu oeB tense of reforming the lower regions
uui-u imiuoi miu ueian man Bn" by their ruler
tnat in
The railroads can't handle the
traffic of the country; therefore lt
ls of great Importance that all possi
ble r1vre nmnul nn had to meet a great outcry from those
Die rivers be opened up to navlga- who declared that the email savings
tion. I of thousands of frugal people were In
vested in slave ships and other branches
of the trade. Mr. Wllberforce's oppo-
We still hear of "tariff revision
by its friends." That is like a ere- A Wr.Ta a AtVttrv frt
infamous corruption beside which the
dishonesty of the small dealer who
gives short weights ls a trlflina mis
demeanor. ,
The destruction of every crime and
every vice doubtless Interferes with the
frugal savings of some. The kind
hearted brugiar Is likely to have at
home a loving wife and charmlna
daughter to take to tha dry goods store
certain snare or ine burglars earn
ings, but that ls hardly given aa a
proper excuse for a failure to suppress
burglary.
The rorger is generally a loving hus
band and a liberal father but the Stan
dard Oil company would send him to
Jail lust as oulckly a though he was
a bad man without social ties.
The case against the Standard Oil Is
simple: That corporation has started
out to control the oil products of this
oountry by fair means or foul. It is
perfectly willing to win by fair means
If
iu?M.,0'Da7 w,u th at oot only
Physically, but In other respeota aa
e e
-iJjtf0" c.ar hlh though It
ratei? m th,y "hould hav cut
e e
"Q Iris will be rlrls." says he Chi.
These are days when others besides
"'V -"rt.ura.uon siocknoiders can
melon a
e e
Wall street oujrht to be so used to
a a
A surplus of 17 school teaohers In
the
cut
It ran hava tta own wav- hut If
necessary to crush the competitor It Perhaps Bonaparte talks so much tn
has never fallod to resort to foul show that he Is different from his eel e-
means. i wmiou aocestrai relative.
ror instance, in canrornia the Stan
dard OH company forced the Southern
Paclflo to refuse to haul oil cars from
the Kern river district to tidewater
because the Standard Oil wished to pur
chase the wells at one third of their
value. That Is a fair sample.
i.A.B .'""'In number of people think
that "devil wagon" ls about tha best
name for the automobile.
Mr. Sckwab
The Hague conference seems to be
mostly a farce, and what ls worse
there ls not much that ls funny
about lt.
Republicans won't sing or shout
In harmony over Taft's keynote
speech.
In tne Day's N
By Wex Jones.
"I see," said Blnka. "that a college
fellow has found out that seagulls talk
to each other. Do you think they do?"
"Sure." reDlled Jlnka. "Often hn
I'm coming over-ln the 8taten Island
By Fanny B. Clark.
C. M. Schwab's sweeping statement
concerning the Ideal man's woman In
Saturday's Journal was Justly answered
by Arthur Brisbane In the aame edition.
Thla question ls one which should be
agitated ln these days of advancement
Mr. Schwab should not be taken as
authority Just because be is high up ln
the financial world and I am sure many,
many men would re ruse to admit him
their paragon.
That woman's chief aim la life la to
feed men's stomachs and raise hla chil
dren ls too revolting a proposition for
a wise woman to consider, much less
admit
Any brainy woman, as well as a sim
ple, uneducated one, can cook a meal
and meet all the requirements which
Mr. Schwab suggests as necessary for
Tne Mind
, . Principally Important thing about
that bank affair la to see that the de
positors get their money.
a a
A tail-docked, tight-reined horse is
not only treated cruelly, but la ren
dered unnatural and ugly.
From the Wall Street Journal.
Mrs. Eddy, ln her testimony, gives
an Interesting account of her discovery
of Christian Science. She bad been ex ? n should be locked out.
perlmenting ln riving medicine to sick
persons.
of giving too much of even diluted med- Angeles Times. Portland has; not like.
icine. nor account or tne discovery
fnllowa- e
"I wanted them to stop and I took I . F.ew. yun.f mn can marry a rood
away every bit of the medicine and gave i" J DU, yr mifht get a
them a single pellet unmedicated, noth- "fi?!,000,11 '," th tAtallr by taking in the
ing but the sugar pellet, and they went nouier-ln-law.
It doesn't necessarily fnllnw k
Ail1.?.7''v.ph, Rrf tor ,T P hla
TT - .ii .
Finally she began to be afraid i,k. that VYu.r .na Lt ,"0?.5SV??
. - ' -joe
ferry 1 hear three or four of them sing- roan's happiness, and do It well
ing, A JjlrO On the Ocean W V ' " I Un nf mlnrla whn h llirln-r tinnn
h "No'tut do you th,nk they cn talk, the Intellectual plane, more than the
nonestr 1 physical, want a woman for companion-
ouro uibt ran. i taii vmi i nan
hear 'em from the ferry most any day.
This morning I heard one say to an
other. 'Why those wingless and flnleaa
things aboard the boat seem able to
talk to each other. I wonder what
they are saying.' And then the other
one said that some college gull should
spend a year ln our nesting grounds In
New York, to try to make sure we did
talk."
"I think," said Blnks, "that you're so
fond of kidding; that you kid yourself
sometimes. I don't see how you get
along In business. Here's another na
ture story about that elephant ln the
park that knocked down lta keeper
when he picked up a penny meant for
It. Do you think the elephant knew
ujhi me penny was money r
or course u aid.
ship, one they can think with aa well
as eat with and no other marriages
are ideal.
The house-wife. If a "brilliant" wom
an can function upon all these planes
dui tne woman wno can omy cook ana
sew has the four walls for her world
and can comprehend nothing beyond
lt
How soon a brainy man tires of that
and seeks his own level.
This ls one great cause for the. un
tidiness in our present state of matri
mony, lack of companionsnip, tne in
ability of the one to evolve with the
other.
A man, with any mental capacity,
should not ask of woman "how do you
do?" but how do you think?
We have all lived .upon the emotional
plane too long and are beginning to
on and gained Just the same. At last
l said to them, now you don t need any
said. ' I will.' fn three days they came J''d. Turner mJil4.-. n,lnd aa ttXU
to me and said, 'I feel some of the old &acV J-ol,maU nd womM a
ympioms. i repeated my pellet, hot
one particle of medicine, and they be-
gau 10 gain, i nere was my rn
covery of the science of mind.
It Is asserted that a
well on X56 a year. The iwrinn h.
THE IRRIGATION CONGRESS.
T
to be, It might elect two Democratic
United States senators and cast Its
electoral vote for the Democratic
candidate for president, not for Mr.
SOME LIES AND THE TRUTH.
A'
r LAST we havn tho facta
about that terrible case of
flogging at the penitentiary.
The Oregonlan published as
facts a lot of utter falsehoods, and
thus raised a storm of protest
against the cruelty practiced upon
' the prisoner Albrecht. The Oregon
' fan, it will be. remembered, posltive
t ly -stated that this prisoner was a
, -weakling, physically and mentally;
HE NATIONAL Irrigation con.
gress to be held at Sacramento art or any other Republican noml
next week, from September neo- U 18 Impossible to avoid think
to 7 Inclusive, will very llkelv lng that thIs' TthT than the constl-
be the best attended and most sue- tut,on'8 alleged intrusion upon legls-
cessful of any of these annual events. latlve grounds, ls the real reason
Sacramento has long been preparing why lt ia he,d up and criticised, and
extensively for this meeting, and y 1 WU1 ProDaD,y e rejected and
with characteristic California eener- UKlanma kept out of the union, at
osity and enterprise will give the least unt11 after tne next Presidential
delegates a reception that will dIpara eiecuon- We tn,nk this small bus!
them greatly and that they will long nesB for great men
remember. A Tuid of 150,000 was
raised for advertising and publicity 11 Is reported, and almost slmulta
expenses, and the event has been neously denied, that Secretary Taft
widely and attractively heralded. w,n resign his present office as soon
Simultaneously with the sessions as nls errand to the Philippine
of the congress there will be held lsIands is done, so as to conduct his
a competitive Interstate exposition of campaign for the presidential noml
irrigation ana forestry products, nation as a private citizen. If Mr.
There will be an irrigation pageant Taft considers it necessary to do any
and parade, after the order of the campaigning to Becure tne nomina
New Orleans Mardl Gras and the tion, it seems to us that his xeslgna
St. Louis Veiled Prophets spectacles. t,on would be in good taste, to say
In the floats of this parade will bethe lea8t- A member of the cabinet
Illustrated ln a practical manner the "hould have too much business to
most advanced achievements 0f auon1 to for the whole people to
science as directed to the advance- aamlt of his campaigning for tho
Mid Ttnlra "Tf It
KnocKen ma iraenar rinmn .vtn. .
penny, it's mighty lucky for him that realize, those of us who like to think,
the coin wasn't a half-dollar the ele- tnat tn" physical should aways be sub-
phant would have killed him then." ordinate to tho intellectual,
"Maybe so," answered Blnks. "Wi Mr. Schwab only points out an anl-
can't tell Just what animals wilr do un- mal exlstenoe for women, to feed the
less we have had the experience of stomach and raise her young, any ani-
President Roosevelt. By the way, what's mal does this, but a thoughtful woman
a chewlnk the thing that he knew realizes that it is through thought that
wasn't a catbird?" the fulness of life ls to come, and ai
"A chewlnk is a tldrtlelTw1nk wtth n ntra the Inner realm of thouirht.
wings. Say, did you read about this possibilities, apparently limitless, open
astronomer that says all the stars are
moving?"
"You bet." said Rlnka "Tt ta a r.
thought to think that all the vast star
to her vision.
Little by little the bondage Of fear,
that holds one in subjection to the ma
terial, passes away, and one becomes
bodies of the universe are moving ma- conscious, not only' of the mastery of
Jcstically ln their courses, controlled by
some mysterious law which our finite
minds cannot grasp."
"Great," said Jinks. "Great. I've
known lots of star boarders that moved
without paying their board bills, and
me unite constables couldn t grasp
them, either."
"Too bad that cop turned out that
way. It kind of puts a blot on the de
partment." "Net a bit of lt." said Jinks. "It's a
food thing to have one like that every
0 years or so, Just to call attention to
the kind of men the rest of them are."
This Date In History.
1828 Count Leo Tolstoi, Russian
novelist and reformer, born.
1833 Act for the abolition of slavery comprehend that
ment of agriculture through Irriga
tion. Notable efforts have been made
to secure the attendance of the men
most distinguished for their connec
tion with the Irrigation propaganda;
also of functionaries of states and
presidency.
Tangled Tongners of Spokane are
going to emigrate to Thibet, and
orderly and sensible people would
like to see all of that ilk follow
municipalities which, if not already i though we have no especial grudge
that h was a humpback dwarf and
ft Semf-lmbecile; that he was elven iii.tor i Ufratnst Thiht Ti,t v,
- 5 - a., c nuic cio juug tu leei .v, ,lwvc-.
48 lashes on the bare back with a
tlx-laslv whip, causing him to faint,
and indicating that he was left in
a precarious condition.
Each of these statements was ab
solutely false. The object in pub
lishing tberorwasl plainly to discredit
Governor Chamberlain'! administra
tion because, he Ja a Democrat and
not Itepubllcan.' -; A v professedly
jjreat newspaper .descends . very ,Iow
jiLa It publishes a batch of 'false-.
the Impulse of the irrigation Move
ment.
A program has been carefully pre
pared that will be not only Instruct
ive but interesting, and it Is erpectW
that better results will iTow from
this, congress than from any of its
predecessors. Wo will not enlarge
here upon the vast importance of
irrigation, but will only say that
there ls now especial reason for
verjr influential friend 6f Irrigation
is
an excellent country for them to go
to, better than any other unless lt
be one farther away. May the
Tangled Tonguers have good luck
and great success In going to
Thibet or farther.
throughout the British colonlea r.
celved the royal assent.
1840 Ira I. Sankey, evangelist born.
1842 Congress chanced the Resin.
ning of the fiscal year from Janunrv 1
to July 1.
1847 Bellamy Storer. former United
States ambassador to Austria, born.
1862 Garibaldi defeated and t a Iron
prisoner at Datue of Aspromonto,
Naples.
1864 General Sheridan resumed, nt.
fenslve operations in the Shenandoah
valley.
1 8 , 9 Cetewavo. king of Zululand.
captured by the British.
1891 Balmaceda's army finally de
feated at Vina del Mar, Chile.
1893 House of represents.! tvea vntari
to repeal the silver-purchasing clause
of the Sherman act relectln all fre
coinage amendments.
Receiver Devlin is to be com
mended for deciding and announcing
that he will pay brokers and other
buyers of the defunct bank's stock
only tha amounts they paid; he will
Croker's Secret History Disclosed.
A reader of the New. Tork Tribune
Bends to that paper the following In
teresting description of Mr. Croker,
which she found in a German paper:
Richard Croker, who won the English
Derby recently. Is a strange, character.
As a poor boy he went to America from
Ireland and made a fortune in the
mines. Then he organized a political
party to overthrow the corrupt leader,
Tweed, to whom he waa related. After
noiaing many political offices, he in
curred the fll-will of the Democrats,
who feared he would become a dictator,
and he was overthrown by a younger
set, of whom Roosevelt was one. This
destroyed his chances for the presidency
and induced him to sell most of his
property and to- return to hla native
land, where he devotes his time to
breeding horses. His former home tn
America, Tammany, in the state of New
York, ia occupied by his sons, under
whose leadership the party which he
organized is still conducted in the hope
that the founder may be Induced some
day to return.
Americans Are Meat Eaters.
From What to Eat.
It is said that Americans- are the
greatest meat eaters in the world, de
spite the fact that they have the widest
choice of vegetables. Statistics prove
that $100,000,000 more Is spent on meat
than on vegetables each, year la Amer-
their own life, but of all things below
them ln the scale of creation.
Then and then only has woman come
into her own, for she is gentleness It
self, has love for all God creates, a
love bo wide, and all embracing, that
kindness will flow to every living and
moving thing, and she is able to live
a life of non-resentment and ls cap
able of being man's mental companion
aa well as the mother of his children.
The mental woman can see her duty
and does it, as lt is needed, when lt Is
needed and because it ls needed; the
mental woman can cope with hardships
as they come in lire, ana can meet
them realizing that they perhaps, do
not overtake her to mar, but to make
her life; the mental woman Is able to
the trouble which
comes to her may be a birth of a new
condition and as the trouble weighs
heavily upon her she admits that, aa
all births are painful, she must help
bear this as a birth of a new condition
in life.
Just because a man has inherited or
attracted money upto himself, does nt
make mm great, nor wun ms money
and ease can he Dtty peace.
ill U111 f ILlUg, IM, MUL11UI j,J, V.A.C
tide of Mr. Schwab it would establish
a bad precedent for it encourages wom
an to marry simply for economio se
curity because, not being expected to
be man s mental companion, sne migm
as well neek as her ideal, tne man witn
the most money at his bank.
Do not take woman's mind from her,
let her make use and cultivate that, as
well as her hands.
Everything we do partakes of the
quality of our thoughts, if the thought
Is a perfect one, then the work also
becomes perfect; but a perfect work
can never come from an Imperfect
thought.
Don't forbid us to talk of Beethoven
and Brahms for what woman of cul
ture and refinement (and remember
these are the women rich men expect
for wives would care for a man who
could not appreciate the "Ninth Sym
phony." Schumann once wrote to Heller that
"in order to appreciate classical music
one must refine the Inner ear" and this
can only be attained by study and i
thought
It is not from lack of time that the
rich mart wishes to deprive his wife
from cultivating her mind, for the men
tal woman would take the time, for her
mental advancement, usually devoted
to "Bridge," pink teas and receptions.
So let us talk of Ibsen and Maeter
linck: their works are full of humanity
and teach us women how to live and how
to keep the rich nusband at home
truly a great art I
.an ras. "xsrss. rzr ot. "assni TMuV?"
.. . 3 rr .. .. I muio wuiina ana dtodomt nr nf t..i.
i , non i n ia rnnnnatinn nr tna nnwar nf k. i - .41 . : - -
- . ' - 1 ui uiMMivrs.
menial ugaeiuun 11 an wen rearea tne
. 11 k Tuuivg ui lui unrisiian bci- 1 .
ence church. , 1,1 ""l,rB e,tV a woman was fined
Why not apply this power of mental Ifuv'tJl .mV .n v t",car; she
suggestion to the financial situation? tfn . I'1.' "''v'0'
What w. call confidence, which 1. the ":.,,u" hu
prosecuted and fined.
Oregon Sidelights
What! Paving actually begun in Sa
lem 7
a a
Pendleton will strictly regulate bill
boards. All towns should.
basis of credit, is simply our mental
attitude toward things. In other words,
lt ls the mind at work constructively.
What we call panic, mav It not ha
simply the mind at work destructive) yT
ii is a curious tact tnat, superfici
ally, the same set of financial condi
tions may at one time produce a boom
and at another time produce a panto.
Does lt not depend In large measure
upon the way ln which the mind of
the business world looks at It Just as
a nolson that mav kill mav h hba in
cure, and as a medicine may produce haa been the coolest summer on
mi very aisease wnicn at another time " x-wwuor river vaney.
11 wouia neaiT
For Instance, at this time we regard Indian women sell huckleberries at
the exceeding firmness of money, the The Dalles for 75 cents a gallon,
vast extension of credit, the high prices a a
of commodities and labor, the activity Poultrr raisers of n.
of the government in curlna- conwira- -5r..r5JB5r!or.eotue Orove and
tion UlsT as factors worklni for d Is- Iormea an oclatlon.
tnrh.nn. I I a
Tet under a different mental attitude
the flrmnes of money and the wide ex
tension of credit would be regarded us
a sign of prosDerltv. Tha hlrh nrioea
of commodities would be regarded ss
adding to the profits of producers. It
would be said of the high prices of
labor that lt Increased the consuming
power or tne people and tnus augment
The mountains around t. t .v.
ba? .f,I?.()od..r,ver' ar literally black
with "olalles."
a a
The Clatsop county aasessor will
raise timber lands 25 to IS per cent
and next year to full value,
a a
Three years aro a xtmAnA i.
ed the activity of trade. It would be building sold for $4,000, a year ago 'or
said of the action of the government l,500 and last week for 19,000.
in curing the corporation ills that it -i
cleared the business world of sores and a rvnnv .1,1 ...
boils that would surely result In cor- was given a bag of cindy and an orangi
ruption and disease, and that lt was and left alone and now she la an anaff
uiiiuiq i'i liiv wcuviii- vi i. iiiaiacts.
TaTlaw laa 4- U A am l...na .a
one lime as progress and at another .vT... .t" i"ur"? rem; remarks
time as disaster? Why does the market ?. "T JfT ".T or wo,n In Port
at one time advance on bad news and J5fA. h.wfu ot TRo5,k Record say:
decline on good news? Is lt not largely f "V f noUUns- In Pilot Rock we hava
... .. .... I OnA Mmnn tn .van. fK . ,,
a question or tne memai attituaer 1 " - v"a.
If oeonle are disturbed over the nrrfa
ent conditions of the International mar- The last term of circuit court In liln
keta, why not get together and try the I coin county was very brief, only on
power ox moium iuKge:uni All mai unm inea. Attorney B. F.
Is wanted ls confidence.
Water Supply in Rogue River Valley.
From TJ. S. Geological Survey Bulletin.
The United States geological survey
has undertaken an investigation of the
water supply available for Irrigation
and other purposes in Rogue River val
ley. Extensive cultivation, coupled with
the judicious use or water ln portions
Jones says "a dry town is a good thing
for the taxDavera. but harH n v.
I 1. . M " " ' " "IV
lawycis.
Ja-AT
Hlllsboro will soon have an addlt
nuuiuer or new ousiness roomM! eady
for occupancy and they are quite readi
ly taken. The demand for residence
property is active, new houses being
rented before they are completed.
irrigon irrigator: Morrow eountv
of this valley where irrigation has not uSnt 10 oe pretty prosperous this fall
neretoxore Deen aeemea necessary, nas mveryinmg our people had to sell
given such excellent results as to ere- brought a big price and with a bumper
ate an ever-increasing demand for wa- wheat crop at high figures Morrow
ter. ought to be able to live well and dresa
This valley, of which Medford, Grants in fine togs for a year or two to come.
.raps, anu Asxiitina u.rc 1110 mauinH; cities.
Moro Observer: Where thrashing re
turns are in the yield is proving heavier
than most of our farmers expected when
estimating the yield from standing
grain. This is true everywhere fn tho
county this year and the reason for it
Is that the heads have filled clear to
the top and the berry ls generally
plump and hard all No. 1 and 70 centa
a bushel,
a a
Albany Democrat: Game Warden Ba-
" ' Time in Missouri.
From tne Kansas City Journal.
Somebody broke open the safe of a
JToplln. laundry tha other night The
rxaot time of the robbery Is not known
but the Joplin . Times estlmatese that
it waa "some time between the low
ering of nleht a sable mantle and tha
lifting of the purple veil that Heralds
M approacn ox roar aaws. t
has an area almost as large as the state
of Delaware, a mean annual temperature
of az degrees, and a mean annual rain
fall of 21 inches. Peaches, pears, grapes,
and berries of all kinds are grown ln
great abundance, but the valley ls espe
cially noted for the excellent quality,
color, and flavor 'of its Yellow Newton
and Spltzeitberg apples, to the produc
tion of which the soil and climate ap
pear to be particularly favorable.
The upper end of the valley is
ries. Thia stream is subject to heavy R y" the Chinese pheasants
inter nooas dux. Becomes aim out ary I r . , . "XLCTl,' very iew oiras are do
, aat.mvAe. A-nj lnnr.mn far ITir KUlAfl. hilt lirfinAaafl n ilask all tha.
Jil nuilliucii aim viiia iwn-nmTJi liwn lias I ' . ' t" v 14 etc a
beer, practically all appropriated. Any Vlftilanca possible to prevent His ex-
scheme to increase the acreage under penenee ls that men who violate the
Irrigation mast therefore Involve the Ka" law are Just those who should be
construction of storage works or long, aoove it, one of the culprits he cap-hlgh-line
ditches from the streams of I Hired once was a Methodist the most
tne lower part or me vaney, wnere there reugious man in the neighborhood.
is a greater summer now.
rteKuiar vauKinr nitiuuna nave neen nnr,na. Tt.. rrw. t
MttlSin WoX 'nnJ1"- cropTs"beglnning-to openP our people";
m'in.hlv nrf tnlj W t0 POSSlbllltlei Of OUT COUnty
well as the monthly and annual maxi- in an agricultural wav Whlla there
mum, minimum, and mean rates of flow h T T JfL.W
on Rear rreek near. Ta ent. on r.Htu .""' j-
Butte creek near Eagle Point, on Appie: n:rc"mp"rwl" .MWHIb Ki
gate creek near Grants Pass, and on
North Fork of Rogue river at Prospect
Occasional measurements will also be
made on Big Butte, Elk, Evans, Ash
land, a-fid Wagner creeks and a number
of smaller streams. The work ls under
cne general supervision or j. c Stevens,
the district hydrographer for Oregon.
A Good Idea.
From the Echo Register.
A correspondent ln the Oregon Journal
recently advocated the exemption of
manufacturing plants, houses used aa
residences, farm machinery and live
stock from taxation. That would be all
right and when the people of Oreann An
something of the kind there will be such
a- rusn or oapiiai ana nomebulldert to
Oregon aa never was seen ln this coun
y. . ,
has been made possible under better
farming methods, which are as much
responsible for the large yields as the
favorable season. A yield of from SO
to 60 bushels of wheat on our heavier
land demonstrates the possibilities vt
our soil with proper cultivation.
A Central Point man,, says te Her-
aia, is raising a new variety or SWok-
ans, wuion, n saya, win .(axe ine p
of canary birds as pets In the near
ture. The chickens, which are onl
few days old. are distinctly mn'
and can already carry any tune from
Rock , of Ages to tha Devil's Dream,
Their voices much resemble tha -soft
note of a violin, which Is not itmiM
when tha fact Is known that tha iv
of an instruction book for playing the
violin was used by the hen la making
bar neat. . x -
Her- I I
M
isloal sSl
!
f . . 4