I -" 1 1 11 a-aaaaa. HI I
THE JOURNAL
T AM IMOSFEKDIKT W8"aK.
ft S. . . . ,
.Pabllsher
PvMlk mrf evanlng (! P Snar) n4
evary n4r amalns, at Tfc JoornI Bull.
, tag. rifl aeS iaaiU atr ta. ParlUad, Or.
- Btaeatj (I Of pmtottUm at rortlaae. Or., for
lrutaM taroufB taa Mill M liU
An
rajrrH0XK-MAiN tit.
Imrtanli raacnari br tbU mi
ftU ta timk th .apartmant r" vent.
rOKBOM -DTiaTlWNO bspesscstatiti
Vr!at4.naniBht anarlal AitvartMu AfMier
ftnjnewfc-k Balldln. SCi5 Fifth na, Nw
Irt; JrUwna DuUdlua. t hing
a grand total is made tip of IB38.
000.000, Vhloh win go out aa an
authantio figure, and most readers
will think of It as applying solely
or principally to Washington, whloh
Is truly a great state, and great In
Us boomers as well aa In other
things.
v nbMTlptfeft Tern hr nU to edaraaa
IB IM (jaltM Ultra. -! ar aimice,
, , DAILI.
, Cat rear WO" I " moota -M
a. Me.... 12.60 I On month S JO
! DAII.T AND SUNDAY.
f)M tT rr.0 I On month 4 JB
Now, Is the watchword of
the wise; Now, l. on the ban
'' nor of the prudent. M. Tup-per.
I
ROOSEVELT THE ONLY ONE.
i ?
D'
R. HENRY WALDO COB Is a
progressive Republican, and a
sealous friend, admirer and
supporter of the president and
"his policies." In a speech In East
Portland Dr. Coe most emphatically
and fervently declared that Roose
velt should, could, would and must
be renominated and reelected, not
withstanding his repeated declara
tions that he would not accept a re-
nomination next year. Dr. Coe
agrees, however, with Senator
Bourne that If the people make their
r ( demand general and emphatic
' enough, he wlIL yield, and must yield,
Cor he cannot resist such a demand.
' But the reasons why this must be
bo, coming from so prominent a Re
publican, are interesting, and we
might almost say sensational. He
Intimates that of all the eminent Re
publicans who hare been mentioned I
M Roosevelt's successor there Is not
one whom the plain people dare
' trust. They do not know what any
one of them would do with reference
to the robber trusts and big crimi
nals. When the time comes they
will fling everybody else aside and
'nominate Roosevelt. "The people
HE HAD A REVOLVER.
N A CELL at The Dalles, awaiting
trial for murder, lies a bitterly
remorseful man who says he has
no recollection of the homicide,
or any of the incidents Just preceding
or following it. Out In the country
lies the body of what a few days ago
was another man, the prisoner's vie
tlm, thus cut off suddenly while yet
young and capable of enjoying life.
There were two causes of this
tragedy, the two most usual and fre
quent causes of such affairs. One
cause was whiskey. The murderer
was so drunk that, he says, he had
no knowledge and has no recollection
of what he did; the other man, ac
cording to one report, was drunk
enough to be quarrelsome, though
he was a peaceable and quiet man
when sober. Whiskey causes a mul
titude of such crimes and many of
them are far more to be deplored
than this one, for too often there
are widows and orphans to suffer.
The other cause was a revolver,
the ever-ready revolver in the hands
of a drunken man. Without the re
volver the whiskey would not have
caused xne Killing, notning more
than a fisticuff; but the man who
was lnsensately drunk had a revol
ver, and because he had, one man
lies in an untimely grave and an
other, himself, In a cell charged with
murder.
Of all the devil's Implements used
to kill and malm and disgrace man
kind, and produce death and sorrow
and suffering and remorse, these
two are the greatest, whiskey and
the revolver. Whiskey Is the great
est of these implements, no doubt,
but It would bfej-relleved of a large
fraction of Its criminal curse If there
were no revolvers to be used In con
nectlon with or as a result of drink
lng it.
with reference to this long criminal
career of the defendant of whose
guilt in numberless cases neither
the Judge nor anybody else has any
doubt whatever.
It may be that the higher court
will consider this apparent "Judicial
knowledge" of Judge Landls' as an
error, and so modify the fine, or the
case may be reversed on other
grounds; but Standard Oil will make
few people believe tHat It has not
been engaged In law-breaking dur
ing Its whole career, or that on that
account the penalty Imposed was
not well deserved.
Letter from the People
Strange Parallel tn Harder Oaeeav
Portland, Aug. ll.-To the Editor of
Th. Journal The shoo tins- of Tom if.
Connel by Thomas Hale at Shanlko lut
Monday and Halt's uttsr obUvloa of thai (Copyright. 1P0T, br Amarloan-JournaJ
vent and what led un it ....n. ..I Examiner.)
the mind of the writer a bit of elmn.il Hum" beings have always shown or-
forgotten history, but whlrh . ... WnaUty and industry In nattering the
WW Mill
Wky, Yea, of CourM,: Mr. Roosevelt h Cromwell
That It Proved in a Doaea Ways, All Convincing
"Way hack In the darknoss of history
discourage them. I wish their action
may beget thankfulneaa and humility in
all that are concerned In It He that
ventures l ie life for the liberty of his
country, I wish he truet God for the
liberty of hie conscience, and you for
the liberty he flghte for'
Isn't that exactly the Rooeevelt stylet
Small Chancfl : v ;
wh.V9,iaf!TOor,' shop..
, .. ... . e ,
winW.1L1?,!? a. that Mrs. Eddy
wmperraitted to pass her laat days
e e
.vIU Cerslll hates men. but those
be'piued? h,r 'loriM rath.rtJ
e e
Mr. W. H. Moore, president of the
late savings and trust bank, has
kept bis promise and shown that he
Is a man of honor and high princi
ple, which he values more than prop
erty, by turning over to Receiver
Devlin real estate worth more than
$260,000. perhaps over $300,000.
which will go far toward assuring
depositors of their money In full.
This, we think, was Mr. Moore's
oreated a furore among the "bad men"
of the wIM an .rw.ii. . . I w
the .hoot in, wiM on, v L T. I thV perauaded the emperor of China
- ' ' i vw jui M n. I . . . . . I K . . . . i . - . . . i i
Call at nu.i ... , inn ne waa me eon or neaven. jsvery i voeen'i n renwna you 01 any one 01 ma Russia la arAarin, v ... '
. V: I?,dw,0, nssrlylO years ago. African klnr with Dart of a etoreDloe d"r. hlatorles of the battle of Bhe better 1J hi?f .?w ""shlpei
Periodical there appear. , write-" D .-'J', V'?,,? !. L 't "- from Zf? th"a l aice
hJJLf! .",.nt,,n,,I ,,trtn dees some
think of that" 5" lot of SJT
Before rusrflng In on the ground floor
JLT.afLh" A t,p ?verybodr on hie
autl(76:o00 aye.lr:
em times, exactly like one of his m es
se goa after the nangerous visit to the
steam shovel at fanamar
Toil may aav that Mr. Roosevelt's ar-
tlolea are a little longer than those of J
Mr. Cromwell. But cannot you see the
resemblance in style, in moaest self-ef-
.M .juuivih. or nun. i ki. 1. 1 - - m i i w. i .
Amw . - I wi, A, J IIIAUV IU UOIIOTO Ul Hi BOIL
inht.yV.V.r.nrUo," lLm! Z ? . .? rrf.t ruler on earth
that "Jack McCalj waa hung at Dead-1 Uer ,n thl" country, fortunately, we
wooa, wnere his grave la vUIlA Ik. I do not flattRr or mif nrt W aim.
many ourtoue neor.Ti" tn a- I i ....
.... ' - , - - -. muuitiDij ieii uie irum.
iiln nAv -i-fu'T ln'n Buffalo And along that line a oertaln ener- facementT Surely you can.
- - iui III noniM ItUO OUSinesa man haa aaued n inrdi r i. -i r
i-v..j - . - " v.wm ' i era. ve must remai. oer aiao met Mr
Th.:. .71 .k.,...- ... n ,..-TTTT. Roosevelt .me "th.eIoquenoe of Cfeero,
Call was tried. huna mil' I rea
..8trS,nm,!"i0nri- "i1 " the .moothnTsa of Pltay"5ST wT.dom o In'Lr'.T' ta t0, "ten.ly.ly
strained 'excellent. metaphyaUlen., lATinps" W. mention these thins, not m k' v,nf- of oourw th.r. 1. or
2f-Vn" ! P,nt du tout pe- that Mr. Koosevelt cares aaythlnabSSt wW b' a 'mPbTack trust
lank ton. South Dakota tv. ..I rn n
-' v waa counsel as-1 r-.""". wuma them. Out out or ordinary falrnaaa to I
the writer wae herself i v.nwT T" unimportant thin., .bout Mr Roose- Z.t.t. k ' ' w'Trn.' HUa-hes was
did much of th. elerlnaJ wnrW Th. Lvt- They have observed fne fact Ihit n.fM . h.t thl. ,,( if- ..... v.. v-X 1,.1' "svellng around
cane, and a brother reoreaentart hi. " a greater soldier than Napoleon, a ral-born toadlea. lta maVaifn. -HiTr- --.uuroa.ing county Zaire,
burial of McCalL
The resemblance between
to
thl.
that
- . . av.vwviiivu 11)1 mlll,L . ,K 1 . , . . r . I wnutoa, IUHJI1
uVi l eaecuuon ud ij;;i V, . v" .VL na u. weu-iunpnea ".peci.i writer." I Taf ln.t vi. u - .e
r.V . i .--..iiri.' ". V'1" nve not aone nair juatlce to Mr. Rooae-I nwi.i.;. V .? lD
gym mm I . . . . ....... , Vf31 L. VY DflMl m. new WOrfl ..n T II Anil I . . . . ' . . ma
. - i . . i- . i.i . . . . wm mm mariniii . i i.r nil nr.iima er n.i i . 1 1 . . . . . . . . .
moral duty, though he was not le- ri". xirnt hi. m...."A..?i a hunter mor f wliii n4 mbU
vuuuv io ho bo, ana it will gire jo me wme ne stepped upon the gollows lata Tone """" pa.i or preaeni a. n. really 1. i Duniemporary say. Bryan I. the
mportant. The fact thet Mr R,... U,Vk. k ul -..iv "'" """""" Sim- ,"u"1 sjway. wel
a i t. i t - - . i B.nia tiiwuau uo vvuiii ilea t najftn it ir i
that' e w a .ii-Lt. ni iii . . ' . . i ..w vnwi v mi'ii it ui i na nin rnniRnan 1 1 n i aa a.
Should not be so rich as he w-aad tE "4 wer7 "con trolling thing. .bMlutflV
HnonrinsT tinr im mail k. s a.. jtiM i. tkia .!. i.l i r; . . . . i W
re te ". Ltlm "Uppsd upon tS TgoUows to7o"o.u"' "nu CK""
him an enviable place In the busi- KltLt th. Ze.mV.otM l.ut all that i. .owelf known .. to b.
nes. life of thl. city, even If h J almost ai uttVr ".traTer' "t? him l':lrf,
Inn a- a. he lived.
cashier Morris Is also to be oiH iT wi"fc S3B In therVon of
menaea ror taking similar action, Partially .ub.tanttated by the fact For Instance, have you read the re-
and for his eartimt nffnrta tn r.fn i. 71 Z I ,,r,n. not nto wildl P"" or me oaiue or Naeeby that Crom-
ana ror nis earnest efforts to bring I BUI he began firing promlcuou.ly at w bck to parliament? It waa
He even extended his
his
We accept the statement that Unnmm.
velt thus far duplicate, ex.ctlv the
son.
A Des Molnaa tvnv ....tia ...
Titl:USmMA now Z"1'1" ee(T) every
time he moves. Fortnn.i.i. .'.i.!''
gr.ph can't be .wiUowed: v a
e
the
everyooay in tne barroom, and then aa. a great natue: it arrrtl ih .mir.
rnpeci ana two (lava aftarwarrf na worm aown to our own Hv it w..
Deen ouna, in a aaxea conaitlon. in the wood. 'rveiuuiy lougnt, proved Cr
near neaawooa. m con rerence with his
counsel he maintained that If he had
means to find, and brlna- to Yankton
several men, he oould prove these facta,
but he had ive money and tha tarrltnrv
would not allow any. Public sentiment
ran so high against McCail on account of
the popularity of Wild Bill, that the
liivu w u miKni navfl iinrui nv mm's r r anr MAHaAU... m .
. . - I . H -auaia .awawaat.f , vilalUICI 1 USJ eS liU C (1 B.rsir I ST.
better for a harbor to have were afraid to come out In the open. It In the city of Foochow. where mls-
about a settlement In full of
bank s obligations. He has
subjected to much undeserved cen
sure, and gives good reasons for his
belief that the bank was In no dan
ger of falling when he went away.
It fs
.rati soiaier, ana thl. Is the exact ac
count that Cromwell sent af it in th
! iK'naer 01 me nouse or commons:
"Honest men urM wt i.
this aotlon. Sir. thav ara trnarv I K.
aeeoh you. In the name of God, not to I
. ..... Mi . . . . .
Cromwell career. It. will be TntVrV.tln. r.ota a"' !"5
10 aee wnetner ne I. to continue that they no n 7. u.irV"lOT" 'nan
' - - - --w-.-.wv. w vuiiik Li i aa. l i
.ome of the gentlemen who most strong-. m,,n , w? at a seaside reaort had
ly favor an American monarchy, with f,lm,1f locked up because hi. wife fol-
&7".V,,J. 'f thJ -,. Wa1r.tTeet 1BW "mt1, took perhai. the
for the brain, have changed around a on,Jr w'y t0 rl rest.
little
the community at large la sadly de-
too dfinn rat hot- th.r, wa. a case where publlo .entlment de- .lonarle. have been laborln. for (0
too aeep rather than too shallow manded a sacrince. and McCall paid the years, hardly one person lnTooo u an
wilt rtn In th. malaatv n thmfrl
power," aays the doctor. "A mighty
torrent of demand will come from
.over thla entire country." Because
"our country is going through its
. most critical period. The life of the
Jt nation Is at stake." There Is but
' 'one man upon whom the people know
Cthat they can depend. "No other
' 'man Uvea who has the confidence
, .ot the people as Roosevelt has. The
i . people will see that there is no other
I alternative, than that of calling him
, again. A vast multitude of Republl-
' cans are saying, too, that If Roose
t velt is not nominated they will vote
t for a Democrat."
' " Dr. Coe undoubtedly had the sym
J pathy and approval of most of his
audience, as he would have had of
. any audience. Still, we don't be-
, '. lieve Roosevelt will run. If he
doesn't, according to Dr. Coe, the
nation will be in grave peril, in im
minent danger of terrible disaster.
4 There is no other Republican like
Roosevelt, one who can be trusted
. to carry on his work. "A vast mul
y tltude of Republicans will vote for
fsV Democrat" rather than any other
''I -. .v.. 1 .....
DISRUPTED ORGANIZATIONS.
jl
ing
in
I.v Republican., And thin Inst whan t-
... W V-4ti 1 .
,Taft, with Roosevelt's credentials, is
On his westward wnv'
BIQ WASHINGTON FIGURES.
I
N AN article on the state of Wash
ington by J. P. Hartman, presl-
t . s. jl aent or the board of regents of
. t. TT.i . . .
mo uuiversuy or Washington,
f ; he gives some curious figures. In
tending them to represent the value
"'J of products and railroad building for
two years apparently this year and
next. The amount of money to be
expended In railway construction in
f , Washington alone" he places at
$120,000,000. This would build
perhaps 1.200 miles of new railroad,
ftnd if Washington is to get this
- wunm two years it will do better
than can at present be expected
v though it appears that a good deal
more railroad building will be dona
In that state than in Oregon, as
usual. The value of the grain crop
( (for two years) Mr. Hartman places
'. Bt $40,000,000, which is certainly
? much too low, as the present crops'
' I- ' n tnat 8tate are wrth nearly that
1 f much; but when he gives $40,000,
000 as the value of Washington's
fruit we are in doubt. - The dairy
; products are very modestly put at
t $10,000,000, but when It comes to
, old from Alaska. $50,000,000;
xaetal output, $80,000,000; timber
products, $158,000,000, and fiah
, product," $20,000,000, Mr. Hartman's
' estimatea ehlne. The Seattle Times
aaya ha is too low on the fish esti
mate, that it should be $30,000,000,
but this Inclodes all the Alaska fish
i ertea. ' And ao must the "metal out-
put," eren.then we don't know
-where $80,000,000, beside gold, can
''t tlguyed 4ut, The-coal product of
, . v the state la put at $10,000,000, and
HE BUFFALO TIMES savs:
"The president may force
Taft on the party, but he will
not do so without dlsrupt
the Republican organisation
at least half a dozen
pivotal states. In Ohio the matter
has now gone past mending. In
New York affairs are fast approach
ing the point where Ohio conditions
will be duplicated."
Probably the Times is right as to
"disrupting the Republican organiz
ation," but that may not hurt Taft
or the party very much. Roosevelt,
we think, will be stronger than the
organization, and It will switch over
to his side, at least ostensibly and
temporarily, to save itself. Foraker's
organization, or Boss Cox's, is al
ready a "busted community," in
Ohio, but it does not follow that
Ohio will not go for Taft if he should
be nominated. The organization In
New York has already surrendered,
in a large measure, to Hrfghes, and
while the anti-organization Repub
licans New York want Hughes
for president they will not fight Taft
if he gets The nomination.
Whether the organization will
fight Taft depends a good deal on
what he says and does In the mean-j
time; so far he has said nothing to
Indicate that he was not perfectly
"sane and safe," except that he
thought the tariff should be revised;
but his attitude on this subject is
very mild and innocuous. Tariff re
vision postponed till 1?09, 1910, or
later, and then revision by its
friends, will not alarm the protected
Interests very much.
water, 701 11 seems mat too deep . ..." ... iwny waa avuM inri.uan; nut our preaching
.., ...... . . nrm In th. conviction that McCall'. and literature and our schools and eol-
water ia a disadvantage, for it is story was true. The f.ct that went lege, and hospital., and th Tllves of the
announced that Puget sound Is not hZ hm't SllJl-0!1 iln..5h tr,al w? th coJ1,v?rt" r? exerting an Influence
v U6 duuuu i. nui ), had played a losing gam. of cards which pervade, th. svhole city undar-
favored as a rendesvous for battle- wlth wd Bill a few hours before, and mining Idolatry, moulding publlo oplti-
ship, because anchorage Is difficult them. We" .11
tuees
O'eourw RockefeUer won't read that
rP. JJ Commi,oner Herbert Kn?x
nU; would. lmot eonvlnoe vin
him of the rascality of Standard OIL
e
im,?". Delaware husband po
and kuied th. wrong man, bufi
the unwritten law just the ZJ
on account of the depth of the water.
to have forgotten and. probe hi. mem-1 number and tha nnniii, V?
ory as best he could and In the confl- In sn lnlsnd City of about 20.000 in
The solid surface of the earth main- denc f client and attorney, the latter habitant, where I have labored' for
tain, its steep descent under th. Et'.m.VfroVM
water adjacent to Puget sound ports. Mlll)pene1 for two day before the mur- place would see little evidence that any
as well as from the mountains down McCall lived under an assumed name. pie. and .hrlne. and Idols aro all the
to the shore, so that In places anchor "wuL"ui.?,u-1 ll'v.)?la. i " a ?" ' fct th PPl
"m win uvi rosea 10 tne DOllOm lawyer receivea
nt n , . v , .... over 25 letters from women In various
or tne water. A ship that turned parts of the country who thou.ht he
turtle in Tacoma harbor and sank mvht xb hubBndt brother or .on. The reconnoUerlng ha. been well
ttu Three days after the execution a little done. Now for a grand assault!
io" con agu weui UUI only OUtl W1J"'"" nrriveu in unKion ana BOtlgnt
of slirht hut nnf ..v - ai "ul mr1 lawyer. Arier a conrer-
or Slgnt Dut Out Of reach Of divers ence It was pretty clearly established
or any submarine apparatus. There's th,e m,n8 Sf.oth that McCall was
mo iiueuauu Ul Kil3 VfUlliail. in 1SCU It I
30
a
the
atry a. they did a generation aa-o.
Thl. 1. a situation full of promise,
yet fraught with danger If neglected.
(Thirty-five
China.)
year.
J. E. WALKER.
a Missionary in
too much water over there.
........ . . ...u .. ... i.u.i , ... i V. IV
was as positive as It could have been
without exhuming the body, which
Race Amalgamation Nonsense
Seattle, Wash. To th. Editor of The
would have created publicity, and for Journal The University c Chicago, for
the sake of the man s family, whloh wa. 1 ... . V . 8 '
wna.iver eise it may be noted, ha. oer-
not done. But the lawyer never ceased tsdnly secured, among It. professor.,
to regret that this woman learned too some of the rankest fanatic, that re-
mio in nor nuBua.uu a iirtaicameni, xor f cent r,r. hm-vm ....i
he heiivd with tha m.nn. mt hi. cent year, nave produced
mand he oould at least have cleared the Th9 nation .tood In awe when It wu
man of murder In the first degree. told through the pre., that Dr. Osier
th. rX? VI it .. T ,Zm ;S,k,T !f th" University advocated the chloro
lt7nHm.nt wi if 1. ??!d.tnuJ.li.b" forra rou,te 'OMnen who had lived 0
i'f 8t5tAm?.n..winn?,t vb h arbitrator, year.. It was also said that many
One reason why some public serv
ice corporations are so unpopular
with the people is that it Is so diffi
cult, if not Impossible, o collect
taxes due from them. Having se
cured their privileges, they say, Jn
effect, "the nnhllr ha A a mA
r , i ,K, ,.,,. K. .. j I ' ' r-m mat
refuse to pay any taxe. that by hook "mercy- T"
or croog tney can possibly avoid L lorr Pn"osopnicai reasoning that men
ir.n a - ... . . Result of Foreltm Missionary Work. past .40.!':no hal made no special uc-
w yaj iuacb ougai io De a I , n ... .. ' , cews in lire coun not hope to do so.
1U1 icauua oi cnarier or tor of The , Journal I have
franchise.
nut that a man with hnim nnn,i
read with secure a position aa a member of the
much ntere.t the article by William T. y Jii an ,H8Ututln Pro-
irii4. i. r-v. T i . ... ' feasor Zueblln represents should. In
Ellis In The Journal of Augu.t 18 on this enlightened a.e. advocata th.
ur.ued
Plead.
of,Lov"r!gWU,d b M reaaonabl. a. thi"
e
By Wex Jones.
It wa. on a .haded plana.
The moon was .hlnlng In th. akv and
the orchestra was softly playing "Love
Me and Tour Coin Ta Mln
"Darling," .aid Oerald Smyth, to th. orotect hlr trnnVX Mr Terke.
lovely Marianne Browne. "I love you. of Yer 'prorty'Ty .?rtrat1vd
Will you be miner friends-fno douot l?hS had hSd hi. 42?
Marlann. cast her eye. to the ground. DOna of th,m W0UW hav. got any of it.
Then, not wishing to waste two good Speaker Cannon I. credited with an
ey... ah. lifted them .gain. un-fiunday-.chool-llk. rwnark abotit the
"I have little money, Sweetheart." UayJ1.,.h'n't P'tehed this .ummer. Doe.
...ti m . .. .... i iii in inainua.isi Thar mn
" - w- v w"u uu I
lng my breakfa.t. when X work, wh.t-
ever I am doing. Say you will be my
own popp.y-wopp.y."
Xf.H.ntl. .nIT.J V. . . A.
ivuni uar WW mm, iivi in en. I a t..i .
1... ,i -i , . . 1 ryim canyon aor niiitHLf .
h.m n i a P 0n ro'"n' ,fuI Pof"1 an1 cme out of the m
them on Gerald. lee In bad shana a nh..i.i.. .a T'.lVr
"Gerald." she .aid. "I will let vou chloroform and proceeded to nick
ir . t me auillfc which numhir i-.'.u "
.vuw.ivw. a win eena you a l hunir .w m
.... - -
noie. -,
An hour later Marian na waa a thm
same plaaxa with another man.
"Marianne." said William. Ca.hpUe. "I
would like to make. you mv wir t.
got money to burn, and you can have
"William." anawarml .-t
will let vou know lomom I .m
Oregon SifjeligLta
One cau.fi of th annarant a. ... "Foreign Mls.lon. Useful but Inade- amaJgamatlon of the Caucasian and the
, , 'cooc quate." But.. everal comment, .uggest k or '"V lha negTO race
of money supply was the war be- themselves. lVi"1 ..?.nf.u.rae,w..t0. on.troi th.
tWeen KUSSia and JaDan. Th Snn I First, na io th hf.hAvlnr Af ml.. (nr.. I Carolina or filflAwhprA (. rrir--
Francisco disaster was another arle Btarae" n e foVTnln. Jha? l.S'danfefeo
tnougn smaller one, and the great 77. V " r- ciety than all the Osier, that might
Assouan dam Is worth mentioning steamers are English and social life 1. 'es.or rwould Inaugurate eome plan to
in this connection. mainiv dominate hv fii.h ih... J"lnd "!?roe" t0 country of their
rather Anglo-Indian Ideas, which are from both races but until that timi thl
rigid as to class distinction, and .m i7.Vl i. k.-.'T.A?"."1 i".1 e
TTnnr m 1 T . ... . tn . nA,tn . ..J.K i " ."f.1 ."''"' c 10 . PB" WIM tne
nnrriraan HKe to "Z""',! lu" question, ana tn the south the
mends,
WILLIAMS.
Next dav Marianne .mt . Vi. nin..
desk.
Gerald's a dear hnv ah. m . . a.
TVe ve had a nerfecUv anl.nM nn.
together this summer, and I'm
hould get along; and wouldn't the
other girl, be Jealous?"
She wrote: "Deareat T'ntn. .hi.
afternoon. I have a little word to
wiuaucr 10 you ana If. got mort than
two letters. Marianne."
one out the letter In an Mivalnn
sealed It "
What a lot nf nunin nr. r..wT.
,! iiiuu.ni to nerseii. And then
"j uum.Bg ma letter io
Guess.
K"?fK,r Lane county has
ne through the mortgage record and
theyWgTye-n
- ... uniiiiuau iia,o 101 l , ' . . 7 -o Hucat..uu, niiu in tne sol
. ... . . . , scores of American missionaries who go negro has hi. best real friend.
farm in the center of that railroad- out acb year, it would be .trange if j s wt r r i
less region he is traversing.
Is there a tune, "Hail to
chosen of the chief" to play?
the
-epl
STANDARD OIL'S PLEA.
HE JOURNAL is in receipt of a
pamphlet "from the directors
of the Standard Oil company
to its employes and stock
holders," in which it is claimed, of
course, that the Standard Oil cor
poration is an exceedingly beneficent
and entirely innocent organization,
and that the fine imposed by Judge
Landls is outrageous, and a result
of "the fury of the hour." The
president of the Indiana branch of
the octopus makes a statement of
the case, and a large number of
editorials are reprinted from "sage
and sane" newspapers.
But when all this is said, there ,
remains the history of Miss Ida Tar-
bell and the more recent report of
Commissioner Herbert Knox Smith,
showing that Standard OH has been
a persistent violator of the laws in
various ways for 35 years, by which
means it has amassed hundreds of
millions of dollars. The fine imposed
by Judge Landis was evidently in
tended not merely as a punishment
for the cases of violation of law
proved, though the law allowed this
maximum penalty, but waa imposed
Dream Maiden.
This soft flrelleht sulta w.ll ...
u. ...... "-
The low toned radiance of your chest
I will entertain you
auty.
now my happy
there were none who ignorantly blun
dered or who went too far In Independ
ence of .uch trammels. But a. a rule
ine ladle, sent out by our mission
boards are educated and refined and
snow mucn tact and good taste In
aaapting tnemselves to this Ensrllsh en
vironment. No praise is given them for
inia out wnere one does offend. th
case is bruited abroad, often with mui,
distortion and exaggeration. On the
otner hand there have been cases of
gross rudeness exDerlenced hv mission
aries, especially where there we rn a v.rv
few of them, and not one a missionary
"i uistmction. one neeas to hear both
Small viiiitnr h.it a " 01 any B"c" case or alleged rude-
Xmil ha,f loBt ,n mr guest ness. It might be found that the mis
sionary had really been the aa-erlevd
Whv la t. thmt , . lly; a"" at- tne worst nao only fal ed
wny is u tnat you eome onlv I In r-hrioti. M..kn... t 1 .
.jj - - " 1 - .i... ... v. .... . .3.1. a na.v nearu
ner .
One
Whv An vnirT.ni,.. 1 L !. " cans Desiae missionnries. One c&io
y git "Ilken lashe" we hy was that of some engineer, and the
loves and hopes a
make youth glad?
Of lovpa and t.nn.. . . . unonae apecmea against mem was that
a"d..t0E?s.n(:l Oream. that of making their finger bowl. rin. bv
Ana age that youth at least know.
r.u.,1,1 hi Borrow,
And that some eyes are .till .0 .oft
IV brown
Ah. If asre were tnd an
- - j - . . uum 10-
rubbing the edges with their fingers.
vnen 1 went out tne rirst time a
very famous American humorist had re
cently been a passenger on the same
steamer, and the first officer told us
that the conversation of the said hu
morist was so impure that th firt
The different .).. ,w. . , officer had to Interfere and put a check
write down 'Lngf1' Wt,ula on But thls arn8 flrst officer won
write down. the bet on a day. run by falBlfy,nr th(J
ice nhont n. .1. ... oieamers recora. t-ernaps, now, he dl
pearl nnned lener throat by the same thing when this humorist w.11
worth the , whnl. w-i-. 1 v . a Passenger; and said humorist maj
I but known r,d ha nave tPressed his disapproval in term.
But no; we sow the wind .nd m.Le ?.at,inan. . th? r" of
1 - i j .1 uw iiuci uiiuiu mve ma vernion or inn mar.
And Ira a littia tir.d ... . I ter to hatch after batch of passenger.
alra' ultIa "red here alone. with no one to contradict him.
And you are but a silent aw... a ' .?. 19, navlnS; the foreign missionary
m.M.. -i "un. an carnea on oy one orKanicnrinn
With Mary', evea and lhia ls a matter for the churche. at
chestnut hair """"" " consider, out In China there
Stealing in with the twillo-h. . many cases wnere two or more mts
laden twilight memory skins located In one large central cltj
sit a
chair.
little while In my guest
essamy M.
Daly.
MTien the Ships Come In.
Sh "ho1 l0n "lnCe Wlth har 0ar'0'
Well able with fortune1, tide to cone
Terw7 '1le' and 8t'n
Did anyone sight my ship 7
Full many a frailer craft came home,
Came fbadk from the leaping hungry
Rod. safely In port no more to roam
Did anyone speak my .hip?
rV throurt Md Wa"ed th ean
I've airiced of many another crew
If any on. heard or any one knew
Did any one cry my .hip?
Dinky's Eppy Grams.
By George V. Hobart
(Copyright. 1907. by American-Journal-Examlner.)
Tou cannot keep a goot t'ermometer
UUWfl.
Humidity ls someding vlch come. In at
der vlndow und goes ould at der pores.
Many a man', heart 1. vanned only
by cold cash.
A flatterer 1. a friend-maker until
he begin, to talk abouid hlm.elf.
Dis vorld vas full mit many better
ding, den money, but It takes money to
get dem.
Der most listenabla. man 1. der man
dot alvay. glf. advice.
A rich man dot ls close ml. Ma
money alvay. ha. a faravay look to his
relatives.
Der man mit der dvsDenaum tnv..
der medicine, but darn vaa no rura fnr
voi ni. vire nns to suffer.
Der ROSSln alvavs makea nlantv ana.
mies . so she vlll haf plenty to talk
abouid.
Der man dot makes der falrat afln-
cessful airship vill be able to help him
self to der stiver lining to every cloud.
Dare was nefer any chustlce In der
werdict dot goes against u..
A fault-finder la a horn, mad.
knocker.
Ven a man borrow, trouble he nefer
rorgeis to pay it back.
Der vay to find outd haa a man some
Biui puinta ib to iena nim rive aorrais.
If he stick, you he ha. der points.
Der most saddest-eyed voman vot I
erer saw dittent luff und lost Neln.
She luffed und got him.
To der pure all ding, vas pure until
dey begin to read abouid microbes, den
eferydinK is ausge.pielt.
Misery loves company, our ner com-
How dare you talk like thatr
The speaker wa. Clarence Id. Burgh,
once the heavyweight champion of Yale.
Don t dare to speak that wav before
a lady.' repeated Clarence to the low
browed man with the protruding Jaw.
The low-browed man looked at Clar
ence, who wa. quietly removing hi.
gia.se.. and then reneated hla i-.m..ir
There wa. a rush, a list shot out, and
n of the men hit the sidewalk with a
UUII W1UU.
It was
Guess.
Jefferon Review: Though all kind,
of employment at good wages 1. abun
dant a number of the hobo fratern"tV
w 1 .m'0!1 ot hombre. are a peat and
hould be worked on the ohain anr
a
. Marlon county man recently had
forty acre, of hnm an iih.
fall. At the time ha rerd.d" hi."i
a. complete, but by the aid of a lara-a
force of men he raised the fallen vine,
and now expects to harvest a partial
crop.
Pooh! said Jabea RlnrW "Tnnhi
sensible man believes In ghosts."
"T1le,n YSUu.w1n,t. m,nd tne haunted
roomr said hi. host.
"Haunted? Tut. tntt fln.h i
ruuuien to taix in this aaa! I'll fair.
any room sleep in a churchyard, and
soundly, too.'
"It's a very comfortable room, really."
.aid the host, "but ever a I nr. nna of m
ancestor, killed his brother there In k
quarrel the br.ther wa. a Tory and
wanted to come' out for the kin. dso-
le y It', been haunted. One or two
ave even declared thev aaw . .K.dn
form In a red coat.
Indigestion, of course." .aid Black.
"Mine 1. sound and I'll warrant T'll ...
no man in a red coat, and it t d v.'n
noi scare me, sir.
. "7r.. that old Jabes. Black has gone
to bed, said young Harry Vane later.
n m up a fright. I'll bet he'll
yell for help, for all of his talk."
After midnight young Vane, clad In a
white sheet and a red coat made of an
old curtain, slipped into Black's room
and began slowly to pulPthe bedclothes
wwa.ru me root or tne ned.
In a moment there came a wild yell
and two figure, burst from the room,
The one In front waa
Guess.
Roy Hill, near The Dallea, oerhana
ral.e. more melons than any other Ore
gon producer and Intend, to increase
hi. acreage each year. Thl. ye.r he
hai l whleh mean. 10 carload.
wa'1te?ln.?onn.eI,n' t0 Mr' or
a
Ehiarene Guard- Tv,. - i ......
that he .ur ,,niv:;.w"8"KLM
rJtfl .t Iy to Jam"town. Thl. la not
true, the monev t v. . '
nLih t?.rd,nitr .Vl' "" h-vlng
r-- j uusineiamen or jsru-
.rn,Id,r..B5Vr'all,i, Tr morning It
eemed as if panderaonlum had broken
l?f".a 2T! T5 Borons office. There
were half a doien cow. with bell. on.
all jingling In a different key, and half
a do.en dog. barking and yelping from
factory lnTfVblaBt.d"CUntel b0,lar
e ,
tJZlteB?L Hon3? r !tate that he listed
twenty new pupil, from Grande Ronde
valley, where last veer tha I?rS
an attendance of twenty-five from that
valley. Countlna- th. nid .d at
plls Union county will total a
"udent.. between foy-ve and fift
a
A representative nf th.
ui.iiuioii) oana is .aid to "fifve been
... ..U1B , oo.n.y ana ,0 nave been
w k?sl.quar Jn wh,ch to lodge a
Jot of his cult. Be it to the credit of
the people of the town to say that at
every point he wa. most fiercely turned
down, says the Spokesman. lua
ive and fifty-i
'Wolyjfjfftr"
to IFSve been
William nark of th.
Th. world is flat a. the ancient, said
J"h. course was long and the course was
5 - - dread,-
And she .ailed over the edge instead.
. .v-;ri"er aobody hailed my .hip. -
- r-Mcindburi Wilson,
..eve ujviucu up 1110 iiuia, eacn mission
iu nave complete cnarge or a certain
well defined portion. In-- Some casis
they are going so far as to have union
colleges and union hospitals. There 1.
very little waste of strength through
undue rivalry. ,,
As to exaggerated account, of our
successes, this 1. often the fault of h
home editors. A careful and accurate
account of some gratifying advance will
of n i. nome: nui 11 iff rnn lAnvthw
and so It ls boiled down Into eomethln'ir
f v .1. 1 j , nut uuu misieauing
Once a missionary, who was a vejv
clear and accurate writer, in talklna-
a Krt .1 ..!. - - -1 J l . . "
'"j li . Luiv uiouer win in my nearin.
'I ve quit writing home!" But in addi
tion to this, conditions are .0 differs;
oui there that the plainest, fullest -e-
iwrLB are apt to oe misunderstood. Con
dition, there which look hrls-h in
trast with the surrounding darkness
would be thought gloomy at home.
But as to the actual amount of suc
cess, it is difficult to either get or give
an accurate Impressioa. The present
number of convert, is not a true meat,
ure of the present amount of aucce?.
These convort. ar. exerting an influ
ence out Of alt Bronortlnn tn thml ...
bars. .They poese. two thing. In whloh
..'it... 11 llu uv iiiiDuiaiiiv.
Clothes doan'd make der man, but dey
make udder, men dink so, vlch Is a.
broad as it's vide.
Vun nice vay te- find ould vust vot a
vimmen. dink, abouid you I. to make
her mad at you. yet
!. uiisn.isL.afiKij.
per Georg. V. Hobart.
Sweet Vagrom Days of Life.
I know a path that lead, away
Far from the busy haunt, of men.
Where little children came to play
And frollo In the shady glen.
Ah! long ago I sung with them
The song, their children .lng today.
I know a brook that leap, along
The meadow and the paatureland;
In day. ago lta merry song
Made music; and again I stand
And listen to the meadow brook
afake music and my heart
strong. , - . - 1
I roam a vagrom as before
Beyond the valley, and tha hill.:;
While with the wanderer, of yore :4
My heart renew, the olden thrillar
I frollo In th. shady glen 1 .... v
And an a hoy with boys once more,
;-.. Horace Seymour Kallar.
This Date In History.
1B26 Turks defeated ITn
1684 New Amsterdam anrrand.r.
mo r.ngnsn ana oecame New York
1783 Nine hundred persons lost in
the sinking of the Royal George at
Portsmouth.
1805 William G. Brownlow, first re
construction governor of Tennessee,
born. Died April 29, 1877.
1809 Oliver Wendell Holmes. Ameri
can author, born. Died October 7 1894
1885 The Beaver, first ataam ....i
to ply on the Pacific ocean, left En.-
1 1. .1 ... 1J . IT ' B
1853 Sir Charles James NunUr
ijuorur 01 oinuo, aieu. iiorn 17SZ
- 1862 Forts Hattera. and Clark, on
the North Carolina coast, taken by Un
ion forces.
1864 General McClellan nominated
for president by Democratic national
convention at Chicago.
1882 William H. Allen, for many
year, president jf Girard college, died
1886 nr.t cable road began opera
tion, in nw xora uuy.
Milton Eagle:
.; r week re-
...i iur is acres of cardan
n,1Thu,.', ls about M Per ac?e and
Mr Clarki refusal to sell i. not .ur
prising when it ls known that he net.
15.10 per acre from a five acre patch of
onions, and get. nearly as much per
acre from his potato crop, to which the
remainder of the land ls seeded.
The Telegraphers' Strike.
From thjB New Tork World.
It would be herd to name a profes
sion which 1. more closely knit with
every part of th. complicated fabric
ef business than that of the telaaranh
operators. t Messages of joy and sor
row a. well a. Of bualneaa
Involving the bread and h....T-rV"""
fu'h. "u'!li" of famille. pa,
through their hands.
- Surely there should W. .'
!-i-t-V1;OASIrfontroTRr"Jr wltt the com-
7. r .-.t"'1.1 " frutai war
"An East Side Bank for Ea.t Side
People."
Wc Want Your
Checking Account
And also Invite you to- deposit a
portion of ydSir salary with our
SAVINGS DEPARTMENT; tl.OO
will open a saving, bank acoount,
ori which interest at 4 per cent
will be paid.
The Commercial
Bank
Savings
Nil
PBOOJM1SSXTB
COVSXBTATXV2I
ootrxTEorys
. : ; TMATKEHT '. TO "trTn
aOTOTT A3TP 'WXX.ZXA.ua AYS.
?e2r, J5 " Oslflent
4. b. isirrei. ,.,.. .v.Caahler
r5M