;spsggl; EDITOMAb BXGE OF THE -mwim. j THE JOURNAL iftSS " b" ? y itiiKpicKDBWT NgfyBPAPEitt When this work Is under way It C. t. JACK)! PuhUlbrr I t, nrnnnioil in oarahlloh Incal aolf- 7n 8wnnit in the 18 province.. l; Fifth vmhTii ir 1, i-uriinnd. Or. Uyich to have elective provincial par- ."SIM ffif1Jru. i. 8ubJect t0 Kovernora ap- mm bar. rant. ' frinamlwlon Uruu-B tna mall , TELEPHONE MAIM TITS. All deiMrtaiaati reached or thl Tell ttir npTtor tba Arnartment Tim F0KK1UX AUVKRTI8IK0 KEPKESBNTATI VH i Vrerlaml-rMaJaniln SparMI AdTertlsInc Agrnrf. ' Rronawlrk BulMlim. 223 Fifth dii. New " Vtwfc; Trttnin BulMlng. Oilrafo. Sobaarlptkm Tarro by mall to an addrtaa A A tl V Co fear $.1 00 Ou month I .BO SUNUAX. ' Cm IMf fJ.Bo I Ouc month f .SB DAH.T AND SUNDAY. On ar IT. 60 I On month 1 .83 pointed by the emperor. Already a council of administration has boon established, that Is to carry on the work of gradually providing the constitutional government. But there will bo other very im CHILD VICTIM OF THE LIQUOR TRAFFIC. and Montana, though showing up Is more fruitful of rood, mora nro- coasts and tha M fna '.,- , .t . w " I ' . v.u.h w U Lf 11 11 VAM Ka l!Akla YVf 1.. 1 I lij m . ' ' . . . I -v.., v uoumv vYBBmngvoQ uuu mmlious ioc me repuDiic, more auB- woum act with those of Great Brit Oregon? s plclous With-promise for the futurei aln, which wduld be at the dlsnosi It Is, further disclosed that we There is another picture. It Is tion of Spain In enso of necessity, have In this country one full grown nightfall at Canby. A dozen boys The obligation of Spain consists in ma., who cannoi read or write in rrom as many homes roam the vicln- putting its arsenals la order and every nine voters, but we suppose Hy. Though 16 years of ace and fortifvlnsr its nnrti ,, tu mm inuui inciuae tne blacks. Aside unaer, tney repair to the back door action of Soain in Mnrnnm u fn ....... lucUi iuuui iour nuns oi our 01 a saioon ana with a sum con- recognized . and If onnnsed hv anv mi. i . I ..... . . rr iinierai.es, or ineir DarentS. were triDUtea DV all. nurrhmo tan minrtu Kilrnnnnn imtln. on.in i- r i ub.wu u nm la w lliiu Dorn in the more Illiterate countries of whiskey. In their homes there Groat Britain t hr h0.ir abroad. If Will nrnrl,o .mo )n lr !..) J . V. I , ' 7. " - u w vaiouis The Correspondencia , adds that - i uuio iiiitcm; iu vuiitiuud m iu wurf uuuuiu oil Hpaln is to build six battleshlna sli portant changes and developments the country than in the cities. There those absent. The bovs drink until L-.i J.. . . . along with these. Railroads will be is also leas lllitnr.rv in ritio. nt vr Ln- u at.,n i. k .v. .. ' lorpeao aesiroers, built and rivers and harbors im- 26.000 than in those under that fle-Uide. while th rmtnrtr nH .v. u,.u, ror wwen proved, and great progress will be lire. reckless by drink, engage in acts of L . .,h I L' ..I. ...f.l.. made industrially and commercially. The United Stat nnrf. mnr. hoodlumUm At mtn)-hf ' ' An4 while this is going on It may bo money for popular education than stupefied boy Is thrown Into a hay LadIuB IT action rn lllritlLAtt mrw nn4 .fA. r t I expected that China, following the any other counfrv. vot h.a mnrh nxamniA nr tno r 1 v I n r! norinna hut I mnrA IT1tAaM v. tn 1 . n . . . - . v.. v. Uv.u,.a uuvi.u.u iiiuiiay unu aagiaau, ocui again of Japan In particular, will or- land, Holland, Switzerland. Ger .'.V i ma A itimTflnlcn fin1 troln a o-rAot armr on1 monv Qvmmsl . r.. v III LHKIH IB K 111U V Pill Mil L Bill a- - w huu Mail fivuv MA J BUU I aiAMAAV. U TV 7tl VT II III IVIIT W H V nr I H Tl H Tl over the country against the llq- bd navy. These, it will be sup- Of recruits in the German army but at the others, .what of the children dU win'bensrTn T"' D I?" uor traffic, let them read the P"1. will be needed, whether as 1 in 2,500 was found illiterate; in In the one, what of the children in rn.t .,.. - 1 f 8. . ;?e tews from Canby. A 18-year-old an I,V r toe of Japan. Surely Sweden and Norway. 1 In 1.250: In the other? If all hom . ...... L. ; .. 7 m.eucn ot boy dead from drinking, and drink- ,r lbe Japanese, now scarcely 40, I u.w . ,,n aione. in tne morn- power of armament and steel In the ing he Is dead-though only a child hull. Three of these' vessels will be or IS. murdered by drink. buIIt lo rerrol, where new .7 tZ dock hM been constructed. In Ca requires to "iay that th4 Harriman officials have always contended pub licly, for one large terminal to ac commodate all roads entering the city. It Is. f6ftunite they take this AS crmon tor lo r . JVorry. By Uenrv F. Com. Jr not thyself; It tendeth only to v.vrf, i.. lunumu iiiH m.w vuis i . noi inyaeir; it tenaetn on position,, for holding; a, majority of r oint."-p,, xxxvii.t r. V.) Iff ItRf , Is 'wlcketT bemuse Jt cuaei weakness. It robs tho llfo f Its powers; It' thwarts out possibilities. Anxiety Is WrOnAT riOt hoana If Inill. css inndellty as U the wise and loving but becausS life's forces. the stock of the Terminal company they can. at any rate accommodate other roads. ffhe United Railways will soon flaith. their Front street section knd with tions they will five the long looked Frovldonc 0verruUn fn i-iiaf i..--!" l. . criminal waste of , 4v. .v. - . I "" vur aoing our own worn, In the southern portion of the city, and it imtato. and Kinder other. " wnat a grtat cloud would be lifted Copper Stocks have ihmtiV t 'inJ?u' world If all the needles fear , . - . . . . nu "own were cnaaed away. On marked value In the New York I ?cowl"1' nn. goinr to hi work worry- stock market 1600,000,000 since the RaSpSh.-. first of the year' which iIiawi .hot 2e." Jh.rouh almost every group with . . , .7- wnicn ne mingle. Our mental health enormous Inflations . of values and ID" V raucn t0 do wlth ur ucce and . - I h PD I no aa anv nth. kin log because a saloonkeeper violated 000,000 people, within their little '.'the law. Is an Indictment of the archipelago, could in half a century ' business for which there Is no de fense. It embodies the ingredients 1 of a crime for which there Is no forgiveness, nor forgetfulriesa. There is no single mitigating circumstance ' to lessen its horror. .- The liquor that killed this boy was sold by a Canby saloon man to cither this or other minors. Most Of them were under 16. It was a sale distinctly and carefully pro hibited by law. make themselves a great world power, why cannot the Chinese, ten times as numerous and with an lm mense country, do the same? STATE CHARTERS TO CORPORA- TIOXS. r T WOULD seem that some limita tion should be placed on the power of a railroad or other cor poratlon chartered in nn atnta ine sate must nave to da whtTr it no0aA u v been, as is nearly always true of other states under that charter. The sucn cases, Knowingly and there- Rmithnm p-m. v. . .u...yuuj , t k. nil UC fore wilfully made. A dead child , of 13, murdered by violation of the sovereign law, Is the melancholy t consequence. Can liquor dealers stand face to face with this Canby Indictment and --longer wonder that sentiment for abolishment of saloons and keepers of saloons is sweeping forward with a gathering force all over the coun . try? A tragedy at Corvallis a few years ago, in which two were killed . and a third dangerously shot as a re- , suit of liquor sold by a saloon man to a boy of 18, is still remembered in Oregon. It happened in the midst of the campaign In which the local option law was first voted on . in Oregon, and to It and the wide ' - attention It attracted Is ascribed bv , many the fact that local option swept ne state a few weeks later. One . .. -i j . ..... ... iuuiuwui jiae enner maKes more votes for reform along temperance lines than all the literature and all the speeches of a hundred temper- . ence orators. It Js an argument that cannot be ' answered, and that is as impossible as the roar of the ocean to silence. When a mere child like this Is fed whiskey until he lies down on his back and dies --aa- outrage Is committed before " which humanity staggers. It Is , character of horror that tempts re taliation, and that Is sure to Invoke remedy. If not reprisal. ah over the south g movement " for temperance reform is rolling like a vast, uncheckable storm, and its thunder peals are penetrating to ' every state. One or two more tragedies like that at Canby and Oregon will muster into the march. Cannot those In the business see the omens on the horizon? Can they . not see the maelstrom into which their foolish disregard of law and 'decency Is irresistibly drawing them? can they not see the face of the dead child at Canby? remembered, tyrannized over Cali fornia for years under a charter granted by the legislature of Ken tucky, in which state the Southern Paclflo did not have a rod of rail way nor any other property. New Jersey granted charters ad libitum to corporations and trusts of all kinds, to any one that had the price. and under these charters they could operate without let or hindrance throughout the United States; and later rotten little Delaware went Into the charter-granting industry. The Union Pacific in 1897 ob tained a charter from the new state of Utah giving it the right and power to "acquire by lease, pur chase, consolidation, ownershtD of capital stock or otherwise, branches, extensions and connecting or auxil iary lines within or without this state." It Is under this provision that Harriman pleads his right to obtain control of the Illinois Central and other roads necessary to his monopolistic purposes, although such acquirement may be exceedingly harmful to the stockholders and patrons of these roads. Manifestly, this is a wrong exer else of power on the part of a state legislature. And each state should have the power to nullify and ren der inoperative, within its borders such a power granted by another and a distant state in Denmark, 1 in 600, while in France 1 out of every 16 was illiterate. One reason for Illiteracy in this country is that we are receiving so many immigrants from countries where Illiteracy is prevalent Rus sia. Austria-Hungary and Italy. An other reason Is that we have not made an elementary education really compulsory, as some foreign coun tries have. There the compulsory education laws are rigidly enforced. Here we try to teach children too much, but are not sure enough to compel all to learn the elements. It Is not important to a nation that ii very large proportion of its people ehould hate an advanced education. but It Is Important that all should be elementarily educated. mo omen ir an Homes were as the latter, what of society and whither would we drift? M' A WISE YOUNG MAN. r SMALL'S SURRENDER, R SMALL, the deposed pros! dent of the telegraphers' na tional union, says, he will not try to retain bis place, but will step down and out and will later make a statement explaining his sur render. He may have better rea sons to offer than he has so far dls closed, but if not, he will not con vince anybody that he has displayed the right qualities for a man in his position. His excuse for surrender is that the officers of the telegraph com panies refused to negotiate, so he gave up. We don't say that it was unwise to give up, but the telegraph operators don't look at it that ILLITERACY IN THE STATES. r THE NEW CHINA. c I IIINA WILL be a very inter. esting country for the student of current events to watch for an indefinite period to come , For awhile" nothing very definite in the nature of a revolutionizing move- . mem may be distinctly in sieht aa jet, old things in China are be- - ginning to pass away. All things - , there will not suddenly or rapidly Decome new, but new things there .',,,m e' a''e already beginning to t. Y "range change for China, . that, tor thousands of years has re- malned essentially the same. The'proclamaUpn by the dowager 7T8' th6 tlm 01 thl onth de claring "mrtltutional monarcty and announcing the deglgQ of tur parliamentary Bmem, la significant ot the movement tt . has begirt. To what acts; ; independently and voluntarily . is bard to determine, but the powers behind the throne, it :. : uutiub lorce, are de termined upon a revolutionl7.rt China. ? Bat ihey are not going about . . this business , hot-headedly or han fcazardly. Though they have ben : inert, the Chinese are no fools. They , , 1 lenow that if there is to be popular 1 government the people must be ed ucated; and so, following the ex- ample of the Japanese, they will sr. establish compulsory universal edu A cation, -to include principles of con stitutional ; government Already HOUGH GOVERNMENT statis tics on many subjects are not as accurate as is generally as sumed, they are all we have to go by, and so are taken as correct, and thus we consider its figures on the relative illiteracy of different states. In the official meaning, an illiterate person is one 10 years old U1 "uie who cannoi write In anv language. Reading Is not made a test, for it Is presumed that If a per son can write he can read, and though he can read he is "illiterate" if he cannot write. ine proportion of illiterates Is gradually decreasing. In 1870 there were 200 Illiterates to every 1.000 of population; in 1880, 170; In 1890, 133; In 1900, 103; at this rate the number is now probably only about 75 or 80. The latest official figures we have to rely upon, however, are those of 1900. In that year the states showing the least illiteracy were Iowa and Ne braska, 23 per 1,000. Following . rJ these came Kansas with 29, Utah and Washington with 31 with 33. The next HE DALLES Optimist publishes and almost unanimously condemn the following advertisement: Small for his action. Small helped "Wanted, by young man of 20, to bring on the strike, and If it was at present employed In clerical unwise and Ill-tlmM ha i ir.i,. capacity in Portland, Job on ranch, responsible for It. And having Has had no experience, but Is aulck brought it on. an nam 4. learner and in fairly good physical IeadershlD. he ha nn rih J..-- iv, conuuion. wisnes to get out in the it up except at the request or with cpen. Provided grub is good and the approbation of rh Btrii, surroundings fairly pleasant, wages Perhaps the telesrranh enmnnn' at present are of no object." managers would not nptiaf h. If this young man is quite in cause they nercelvprf tlt email earnest, it is very likely that he is would soon give up If they gave him uihiwub a gooa move ror himself, no enrnnrn0mor.f tk u.u,.. -o-- i ne (jiuuuui) He need not worry about the grub, saw throiieh him an .i, .... if he does good, faithful work; it correctly for a weak man. pPrhn, will taste mighty good to him, if it the strike" would have been a fall- uul vi me nnesi quality, and it ure In . any event, but the vpr, would be a rare farmer these days American doesn't like a "quitter." .w .auM. nuiwil UliitlU BtTtMUU IU UU. And, again providing he means busl- That the strike has not been as ness, he need not fear that he can successful as was hoped does not earn no wages, even at this time of prove that it was not justified, and year. And by sprine. when he eets riirht it ..mm -i . ... i--o 'v dm . cuiaiuo true mar ine ports will be built dry docks for re ceiving vessels of 20,000 tons. Tho factory for cannons in Cadiz Is to be provided with everything neces sary to enable Spain to make all hor armament at homo. It Is apparent that King Edward VII means to transform Spain Into a modern nation . with elements powerful enough to make It useful In time of need, as an ally. The German newspaper "Kol nlsche," published In Cologne, says that its Madrid correspondent as sures it of the truth of the state ments in the Correspondencia but declares that -the new fleet will be made with Enellsh monev ftnnl In kngllsh shipyards, and that 400,- 000,000 pesetas will be their price. to be paid by an appropriation of the Spanish Cortes. The press generally oi Germany gives credence to the revelations of the Spanish paper of outlook and first of all. on toughened to It, he can earn about as much as the average clerk "But think how much harder the work is," the average clerk may say, and think of the lack of oppor tunities to improve his condition." O, we don't know. We know a man here who Is not much better off now. except in not altogether pleasant ex UNITED Periences, than he was SO years ago. when, applying for congenial work, he was advised to go to eastern Ore gon ana Degm Dy Herding sheep. He felt insulted, but if he had taken the advice he might have been a sheep king or a wheat king long ago. A young man doesn't want to start out Intending to-be a farm hand always, of course, but the saved wages of a year or two will get him a tract of cheap land, the beginning r a comfortable and valuable home And to the strong, healthy young man it would be the clerk's job and not the varied outdoor work that would be hard, trying, disagreeable Every one must act according to his taste and capacity and inclina tion and promptings, but we think thfl trances are that this young man has a good Idea, and that it would be well for others like him to fol low his example telegraph ojigfiators of the ou were overworBed. .uf uink.r&Li i .2 - jr t f while thehpJyeero(etlg uuuieuae aiviaenas on watered stock The titLdfSSITmKr"k't make this right, and Small can have no Just cause of comDlalnt If h suspected 6T" "having betrayed his iruai ana soia out. REVELATIONS OP THE KINGS' CONFIDENCES. r TWO HOMES. T Ohio and Wyoming with 40, Minne sota with 41, and Illinois. Michigan and Colorado with 42. Other states below the average of 103 were. In crder: Indiana. Idaho. Wlnonnain California, South Dakota, Maine, New York, Oklahoma, North Dakota. Vermont, Massachusetts, New Jer Bey, Connecticut. Penn svlvanla Mnn- lana, New Hampshire, Missouri and Rhode Island, the latter sa t the number jumped to 111 in Mary- u na ran up to 385 in Louisiana. . There are some curiosities in this e . ,U,teraC5r ot the outh th . may be accounted for by ZL5 Population, but why 290 mt ,0" be them with Mexico with ,,m or why-should reTdaf while Wyoming ha. but 40? or why should Idaho HE PICTURE is the sitting room of a family home In the even ing. If In winter, there Is a blazing fire and the lights are and Oregon bright. With the parents, in that lowest were, room. Is every child in the hom whether one or a dozen. There Is joy for the parents in the children, and for the children in the parents. The parents learn from the children of the day's doings, enter Into their pastimes, aid in their lessons and maintain a close and complete touch with their young lives. By the as sociation the children learn of the ambitions and purposes of their elders, and mutual respect, mutual confidence and mutual love are the consequence. Sabtly and uncon sciously this family circle influence is woven Into the child character, appropriating the best-out-of-the wisdom and experience of the par ent. It is primal Influence in build Ing child character, uncontamlnated hy evil, a character rounded and blessed by the love and hopes of de voted y parents. No scene in life HE PRESS of both continents became Interested In the visit of King Edward VII to hin newly related majesty of Spain during the early summer of tho year, but failed to discover any special political result pf their friendly hob nobbing though all considered it of unusual Importance, while the In terested courts preserved a prudent reserve on the subject. XT 1 ... iow, nowever, comes tnat gos sipy sheet of Madrid "La Corre spondencia de Espana" and raises the rather transparent veil, with the statement that it has diplomatic authority for Its declarations, which. after due time, have not been de nied by the government, while Lon don papers announce emphatically that the reunion of the sovereigns resulted in important understanding concerning the ends of peace and war. In the language of modern diplo macy the title of "alliance" has been avoided and the more reserved name of "entente cordiale" .is given to the agreement, which is declared to be at bottom a real alliance and the resulting documents will dem onstrate that the interviews at Car thagena have opened a- new era for Spain under the tutelage of her powerful neighbor and friend. To the Press of Madrid, the agree ment touching Morocco seems to be of the greatest Importance, since the position of the kingdom is prom ised support. According to the Correspondencia the negotiations be gan in 1905 and the development-of the defenses of Cadiz, Ceuta and Me- lilla, marked the steps In their progress. Great Britain manifested that if Spain would permit the use -of her naval ports by the British navy, she would aid Spain in the conversion of ber public debj, and the British squadrons would guar antee the security of the Spanish It seems that even the clerk of the municipal court was in doubt whether Judge Cameron had de cided for oragalnst the notorious north end resort conducted by Fritz. The court record first showed that the decision was In favor of the dive- keeper, but 24 hours later the rec ord was changed by judicious inter lineation so as to exactly reverse its effect. There are two explanations of the change one that Clerk Hen nessy made the original entry in ad vance of the decision and on the justifiable assumption that the learned magistrate would follow his usual custom in such cases and al low the offender to go fee; the other, that Judge Cameron himself took a new view of the case after learning how it was regarded by the reea. $ During the week The Journal re vived an anti-woman suffrage pub lication from Boston, containing Bome of the usual arguments against woman suffrage, and a review of the situation showing that the antis need not be discouraged or alarmed Meanwhile preparations am hfincr made In Oregon to submit the woman suffrage amendment again next June, through Initiative petitions, and the venerable leader of the suf fragists in Oregon, Mrs. Duniway, and her coadjutors, are apparently as hopeful of success as-, ever. If the women could but all agree that they wanted to vote the matter wouia do settled In their favor at once; but since they are disagreed, what Is poor mere man to do? Dcuuous ana only nominal values The for tht both. . an had been Dumned Into thoa .tnv. carry on our face, that xt u L.. - which nufi iroia our Heart ftin Once uw iu (uioe owners are cutting nn uvea, in perpetual fear or down production and discharging at?V!U"lEX&?'g& thousand, of men in order to bring p'iACTSZ:h S3 up the price of copper and so send ?I?tht,ci with a dosen ine price oi copper stocks up again. L worry I a matter And that thla ran h a i. ,,. "'A'.1 Pnd. . .. , " " wnemer you are coin to take all th places the public at the mercy of l0 !nt0 unt and look on lire a the copper kings of frenzied finance. MiuET iFZSSfc Public ownership of copper mine. rfV'Vh.V.f $S?Z?&J$$S might anfti be a good thing. , on or ,rom inaietion until you hav thing. It was by a very large and a w."r i?vS .lh. J?,i!f "h'c.h tairiy overwnelmlng majority that LV,T.v.ine n"'"Yln' ""bit of worry, , . I wnetner we will catch the aoDroachlntf the people of Eugene decided, to r the one that will "omj I two fnln- build and own its new waterworks, wV rT& ToiZ. "or :nYnera;,her:hw It all 1. Whoever ucreeded In he want It to rain. " -J w rVM0.C JU I 1 I I a . settled so far as that city is con- l woryin- ne ni.ht "ucceeded cerned. The .Tnnrnal h,n.v J J?'"! out !.h kind of weather . ..v.,t. j I wmuiru ; more man that. It la fatal to decided wisely, and that municipal I fiff f er?ul,Iiv ccompn.hing those thing n.n.hin .in . u 1. V""" r""ln our power. . Th w"MvIDutl wan y UIO ui lUUCa ad vantage to the town. H ymns toK now Your Own Work. By Ellen Huntington Gates. Mr. Ellen Huntington Gates th au thor of . number of popular songs, wrote this when ahe waa aulte vounr. in 1880. It came to the attention nf Prl. - . ,v ... 3 ai. .;iiii. hi iii rreni' dnt Lincoln, who exoressed a trout d. ii.ii.iujm ior ii, ana mis lea to the hymn ig oecomlnK popular for a long " " mini suna- frequently in the or son time cnurches to the tune Mission 8onir " v. i "e,nav,e n ript to (five to Tore by P. P. Van Arsdale 1 bodlngs the time nnd foreo w? nofd for worry over catching a train or doing a Piece i or worn so agitates the mind and unsettles the will that It reducea th chances of efficiency. But there are lariter causes of worry than these, sickness, loss, ImpendlnK disasters. Yet how futile to help and how potent to Increase these Ills 1 worry. The darkest dnys and the deep est sorrows need thnt we should h at our bent to meet them. To yield to fear nnd fretting Is to turfi the power or neart and brain from allle to enemies. No occasion Is so great or so small thnt we can afford to meet It either with fear or without forethought. Th Imperative obligation to make the most or our lives Is not mot bv apprehending the worst, but by doing the best wa can. u e nave no rurht to a-lvn to fnr. If you cannot on the ocean Ball amonir the Htriftear finat Rocking on the highest billows. Laughing at the stormB you meet, lou can atand among th sailors. Anchored yet within the bay; Tou can lend a hand to help them As they launch their boat away. If you are too weak to Journey I'p the mountain steep and high, You can stand within the valley While the multitude go by: You can chant In happy measure. As they slowly pass along; Though they may forget the singer, They will not forget the song. If you hove not gold and silver Ever ready to command; If you cannot toward the needy Reach an ever-open hand You can visit the afflicted," O'er the erring you can weep; You can be a true disciple Sitting at the Savior's feet. If you cannot In the harvest Garner up the richest sheaf. Many a grain both ripe and golden Will the careless reapers leave; Go and glean among the briers. Growing rank against the wall. For it may be that the shadow Hides the heaviest wheat of nil. Sentence Sermons By Henry I Cope, make a better cement preparing for and actually meeting our Thfl best Cllre for worrv la n.Ati. T n the lai'B-er number nf lnalor...AU t .... but do. our work well we shall have no need to worrv over th. m-.. i - of our fearful fretting Is but a con fession Of work lltv Hnn. nnA II.. prehenalon of deserved cons equence. Then faithful work by absorbing th thought and energies cures the hahlt of worry. It Is the empty mind that fall first nrev In fnrnhnillnir i. .- easily filled with the specters of woe. Do your work with all vour tnleht: let it go at that, knowing that no amount of further thought can affect the Issua of It. No matter hniv rlnrk ih. lemrttV the Mrrirt the nhnnrfiil K.a sunshine and feasting. And this not ny a Diinu indifference, a childish optimism, hut by the blessed faculty. I of finding the riches thnt x r hv nv.n wavslde of entchini? at all ih annA , there Is In living. If you would dfspel begin to appreciate your blCHHings. Do your best, seek out the best, belleva In the best, and the best shall be. This Date Jn History. 15S7 Henry IV victorious at Cou tras 1B77 Stanislaus Leczinskl, klnr of Poland, born. 17 SI Mohawk valley. In New York, Invaded -y Indians. I 78.1 VircrtniA. cerien1 in rntifffn.. ! claims to territory north of 'th Ohio river. IMS Jerome of Weatphalla abdl- cited. 1 SI Fisheries and other dispute be tween Great Britain and United State settled by the treaty of London. 182rt Spain ratified the treaty ei lng Florida to the United States. 1827 Battle of Navarlno. 1X69 The Red River Insurrection In On his trip down tho Mississippi President Roosevelt said; "I want the governor of the territory that has become a state and the governor of the territory thnt is to be a state to ride with me." The latter ter ritory alluded to is Now Mexico, from which it is inferred that tho president will approve a bill for the admission of that territory, if con gress should pnss one next year Only Arizona and New Mexfco are row left out of the union of states The latter had in 1876 a population of .91,874, and In 1900 of 195,310, but has grown considerably since It and Arizona will make as credi table states R3 Nevada, Wyoming, Montana, Delaware and Rhode Is land. Truth make a better cement than tarry. Most of our dlfflcultie are neglected duties. When ambition weila avarfe ..ni... tlon dies. I io ine rtea ruver insurrection in The angrv man always lashes himself Canada began, for another's fault. I lf70 Michael W. Balfe, compoaer of The evil wa ramemhor ! npn.... h., I aien. corn lSUft the gopd we forget. Inclination slwnva furntahaa th mo convincing nrgument. a Watch your worka and your wing win iane care or tnemseives. IK SO I.vdla Maria ChlM author r, the first anti-slavery book printed In America, died. Born In Massachusetts. February 11. 1802. Archbishop Bruchesl'a Birthday. HI Grace Louis Joseph Napoleon jirucn'ssi, noman uatnonc Archbishop The church with a head for gold usu- f Montreal, was born in that city Octo- ally has a heart of wood. ' hor 20, 1S55. His earlier classical tud- ies were carried on at the Montreal Tile wnrM will novr Ym Artvun . n ntA oy aaveriisinK tne aevn. m Rome men hope thnt a golden crown win give mem a golden mind. Fashion leads many to starve the In mates in oraer to paint tne Mouse No man ever succeeded In walking one wuy wncn ne was looKing anotner Where the sermon in only a work of art the saints are usually artificial Witth- Hill and Harriman both se curing large tracts-of strategic and possible termfnal grounds near As toria, the people of that pre-eminently seaport city are more than ever, convinced that it is destined very, soon to become a .great rail road terminus as well. However this, may be, it Is going to grow rapidly -in importance and commerce It is very unfortunate that the terminal situation.-lit 'Portland Is not cleared up. Many months ago the public was assured that mutually satisfactory arrangements had been made whereby all Interests would be cared for In the one great termin al. , But the Kilkenny fight keens up aa usual at tho cost and discom fort of the public Justice, however. If you sell your soul you will never be able to make enough to buy It back. The preacher who trembles before the gjeat has great cause to tremble for himself. You can always get flno feathers with money, but a fine face you can not buy. " Many a man mistakes a stock of pious quotations for riches of rellgiou char acter. HjfAn rf Kit at m.u ...111 Km In K - .k.,..k when the church gives them some busi ness there. The Ideal that I, only a dream an! never a deed is always a detriment to the character. Many who think they are dernridlng the faith are only barricading truSx out of their lives. a The power of. a truth depends iss on the brilliancy of the setting than vn the character of the Bour-;?. ? Very f'lsfty. From the Missouri Meri-.y. Floyd Ewackhamme, a youth of Urlch, stepped on the head of a dead fish last summer. He felt om,e pain In the foot at the flme, but the wound noon healed. Last week the fin of the fish, half an inch in length, was taken n-uni wiv top uj. uiq iuut, Having swam clear through. . Heroic. ' TTrom the Phllrtelnhla RiiTlotlr. Said she,. "I 'shall marry a hero. Vn nllipr ntA nvr annlir . He must flinch not. whatever the danger, Be ready to dare and to die." Now, she was not young, she was ugly, .Cross looking so everyone knows. She'll marry the first one' who asks her, 'For a biro he'd be to jutodob. nnmlt.ntr aftn .1-li I Vi k. .IhIaJ kI.II '.-nil i.i. i j , " ' ' v i . 1 1 . D.uuinu l.lll- onophy at Issy. in France, and followed mo lurrvjiii-iiun. uuuiec mw numaH college. In 1878 he was ordained In Rome and-while In the holy city be at tended the enthroniiatlon of Pope Leo XIII, and later he carried off with dis tinction the degree of doctor 6f divin ity. On his return to Montreal he be came professor of dogmatic theology at Laval university. When in 1887 the IVfnai.aunl h.annh n t lha T a..T . . ..ivr, . , ... ......i.... .j n.j ..n . n . UlllVCr sitv was established Abbe Bruchesl waa called to the chair of Christian apolo getics On the death of Mgr. Fabrs In 1897 he was called to the see of Montreal, and during the 19 years of his episcopate the archdiocese has marla great progress. a small sum of money from the till of a business concern. A i i I "An East Side Bank for Eaat j Side People." The Banking Habit i la a good one to form early In life. It tends to thrift, economy, discipline nnd a general under standing of business principles, all of which are essential to success. Commercial Savings Bank X170TT AJTD WrXUAMS ATS., Invites accounts, large and small, checking and savings, and pay interest at 4 on RAVINGS AC COUNTS, compoundld aeml-annu-ally. aeorg VT. Bate..... ..President 3, B. Blrrel Cashier