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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 29, 1908)
I: mm. 1W 1 TO0K3Ab TAQE OF THE JOUKMLi 1 OH ! 1 1 THE JOURNAL AS IN'DEPEKPiCNT KBWSPAPKE. a . JACKSON.. , .PoblUtor PablUhM rr.ry nlnf (cpt Randaj) anil . wj PBiMar loorninir, at in 1, ruib eaa Vaaihill sU-Mta, fortUnd, Or. Entered at The iwatofflee it Portland, Or., fur ' tramoilMloa throufU tb mUi seeood-claa. ' BtatUr. . TtUEPHONKS MAIN V173. IiOMB. ' AH danartaitnta nirM br thM nnmbr. TM We operator Hie arprtmrni - JCast Kid oirlra. B-2444; Kt rOHKIUN ADTEUTIHINQ BEPBESEKTAT1 VE . . Rlnmnvl.'k Mullilltia 225 KUlb attain). Mew York; Tribune HuflIing1Cjdraf", -.nhacrlntlon Term br mull to ibt eddreei J -i. - i . . J ... '-...4a kl 1 lrt) DAILY. One year 13.90 I Dae Booth.. SCNDAT. 4 Oat rear 12.10 I ln moots.. DAILY AND Mt'MiAi . On year I7.1W I One mouth.. Mtxlro. I I $ i -a If that thou sfekest thoa flndost not within tbee, thou wilt never find It without thee. Arabian. k.i HENEY'S CHARGES FULTON. AGAINST cratlc party bai been and la under going a regenerating process, which cannot stop, nor should it cease, un til when It does come into power again, If it ever does, it can be a real People's party. The Republican party, under Roosevelt's cudgelling, Is being beaten to pieces In an ef fort to accomplish a like result. The progressive element of one party or the other will win, if not this year, then four years hence. The Demo cratic party cannot turn back to take in McCarren and T. F. Ryan; it doesn't want them. The party name isn't much any more. As between Dryan and La Follette the people need not care greatly. But It will not pay for the Democrats to nomi nate any cowardly or doubtful man. Letters From tLc People this system and we doubt not that In a few years tens and perhaps nun- M M - ml - . VUVK.(n ureas miiiioni ui crr " ImnpoTtoff the Rivers. so-cauea ana or semi-ariu au win Baiera 0r JmJU 25Xo th, EdWor ct D producing rair crops oi grain ana The journal In your luu of yester- hay, better crops than can be raised I day appears an editorial headed, "What on the average land of the Atlantic I Is Statesmanship T" and under this head ing- you go on to discuss the Fulton bill ABSOLUTE f LOVE WITHOUT IT; MARRIAGE IS IMMORAL i Hi states. THE WEST AND WALL STREET, By Ella Wheeler Wilcox. Copyright lus, br Amerlcao-Journal-Examlner ) "Mrs. Wilcox X thought you were for 'the purchase of the Oregon City woman of broad, liberal, views, but you locks and Improvement of the Wfllnm- sy a man who loves a woman wants ette river, and argue that this proposed! to own her in everyway In the eyes 1 tmriMVamant vmTlsi anl 1m aa ' arraa I - . s RIOR TO and during the early V7nV to theeo stages of the recent financial I ,ln tne southern Pacino railway, rjjJ' Vi wm not mimna aucn stringency, It was frequently dent along these lines for several years , 'T .b.k Jn the'early. part of the boasted by western new that the west was now so P SDaDerSlsno have tried to treat tms queition or " v"u; . "'"" '""i , i,,vi iiiiyruvAiniviii lain iiu ll,B,J n- v.... z: . ' ; . -. w Vn..w- Strong tably. and I And myself yet unable to but not ap today. . I i ,b. ......l. i .An..n, i we are irrinar ta nn awiv with ENFORCE THE LAWS T '1 r HESE ARE new days in gov eminent. It Is the twentieth century, and the world Is mov ing. ine sweep or progress has discredited some of the old Ideas Here is Mayor Johns waiting for the people of llaker City to show him that they want gambling stopped Mr. Roosevelt did not wait to be GRAVITY of the charges shown. He assumed leadership and 1 r 1 4 . t r HE made by F. J. Heney against crystallized sentiment that was only Senator Fulton cannot be de-1 waiting to be touched into life. The nled nor Questioned. While best executive of a nation, a state or ' HeiteF does not profess to have proof a city, is one that leads to civic bet- of acta which would at this time sub- terment. La Follette. did not wait , ject the senator to criminal prosecu- to be Bhown. He Bhowed his people, ' tlon, .he does charge that Fulton, led them, they followed, and Wlscon- while, a member of the legislature, sl,n has become one of the best gov '..was a party to the grossest bribery erned states in the union. and corruption. He charges also I Mayor Johns could lead, and be that Fnlton, after his election to the ought to lead. Laws have been made United States senate, used his Influ- and they are made, not to be nulli ' ence for the purpose of shielding tied, not to be laughed at, but to be men who had been guilty of crime, obeyed. If it is not Mayor Johns' and that. In one case at least, he did duty to enforce laws, what is his this In the Interest of the Astoria duty? What is he in office for, if railroad, which was seeking to grab not to lead in demonstrating the thousands of acres of valuable tim- majesty and sovereignty of the law, ' ber land. The charges are fortified whether It be against gambling or " by affidavits and by letters which, to for payment of his salary? If he Bay the least, make a prima facie were mayor of a town where a ma case, Even Senator. Fulton's friends jorlty of the people favored horse cannot deny that the accusations are stealing, would he favor it, too? of the gravest importance and that District Attorney Lomax is walt . unless they are successfully contro- ing for the citizens of Baker City to ) verted he is unworthy to retain the give him evidence before he prose- Office which he holds. Mere asser- cutes. Mr. Folk did not wait for tlon of innocence will not suffice, people to bring him evidence. He . Senator Fulton" must prove himself hunted it. He found It where r'iti ' guiltless if be would keep any hold tens were trying to prevent him 'from . on tfce respect and confidence of the finding It. Big citizens demanded , people of Oregon. . that he should not prosecute, but But Senator Fulton is entitled to that did not deter him. Nor does it f be heard in his own defense, and as deter Heney. It did deter Hall, and a matter of common fairness, the Hall Is on trial. public should withhold final judg- Mr. Lomax Is paid to prosecute as i ment until he has had opportunity Folk prosecuted. If it is not his fto state Ma case. He has declared duty to find evidence, the law should frepeatedly that his record is clean, make It his duty. It is not the pri- ! The time has come when he must es-1 vate citizen's duty to discover and tablisb his integrity to the satlsfac-1 report gambling to the district at- Uon of the people of the state. torney. It is the district attorney, not the private citizen, that draws a n v. "MINNltt HAMM EH8M ARK." Chicago, Illinois. A 1 11 1 . tJ .I. . . , .. . . .v a . n, n I nor can I conecienciouely advocate the I S'avery in every cense of the word. Love of Wall street; that panics in Wall nurcliilie of the locks at Oregon City, needs no legal aeaL Where two really street could no longer throw the rest Ihe facts about the Southern Paclnc r..i.J.'. VJL"'- u ministers and i i . i i t . mtt l j i. i juei u. a ui ana kjm im in vna wnrin - a n, of the country, and esnecially the "i ' lr,. J ." not bind closer or hold love ' mfldIA an fa, nArtf Intn o nan , I WMt.rn I Irr irtin a nH It I r tlA rcl fl cr flll . ,4V u. iimii WHIIVM ill i doopib uduui iwii't as jnuun lor in i : . . . " . v - tea wers .rrvice It ourht to be nermlt- only , rue ana neces- nfTppfurf nrA tnr n itm noflniiHlv tH tn pharirn. ami I urn of thai onlnlon I Bar u.?l- ?"rl respectful! embarrassed, ana were rorcea to th railwava divide with the political adopt clearing house certificates and I machine as now. This is much more bank holidays hd to hn declared 1,18 "uu 01 our BIte aaministration Dana noiiaajs naa to De aeciarea. th it , th r.iirOHd MmDinv'i. it Still, the boast was in large raeas-1 is the duty of the tate to supervise her ure true. The sources, if money dlately coming due, had not been ft"" tied up in New York. This exact E.iwK mnt".d by'TriS SSTnhSr' "th common lftW 1 condition, at least In such an ex- JP?0' LP"v",Kt." l"!l,.5ip .g-onica I" the course of my experience I nsve moi. Known or ana noatra rrom was in large raeas- is me auty or tne utaie to supervise ner uOCiul.e I clamor tar lovai west had ample re- lfl"." Une". Vpt-'te ba-" " M and' dectare' .ey due or imme- ThTs'tn. S ha". Vyer?Il?yXAonl: "i?."""?, . . . . vv.n.,ii. m.k. . inti. a.ii.hnut peopw nave at various times lmi I am very alad to undeceive m v cor respondent regarding my "broad and lib eral mino. liocause I clamor for love as the that many imagined treme degree, Is not likely to hap- for some, and the robbery goes on. now, ( ine irwHKuurns oi ureKvn can i a(,,IMa hann ,i ..A. i... uen again. The west must of f.ver get wise enough to understand that honor .nd orotected bv their husbands - . , , , . j . i . inoir raurouas are puDiio nignways, op- inlo 0M ae- course do business with and through erated under a charter by a corporation. i have never met, known of nor heard ixew xorK, me great clearing nan . , uu.i.uuau, ,u 1.... .. u. contract, between the public and the ui iub tuuuirj, liu I win uui ub imo- corporation, the corporation agreeing: to ly to suffer so great an inconvenience do 'rtatn valuable things, for the pub- 1 tin in the wiv gt trnnennrlal lm mi Iha again. The Wall street stock panics pUbiio agreeing to pay a reasonable and local money shortaees do not Prlce tor thl valuable acrviee, and un , . I til the state steps in and determines in iaci appreciauiy aueci ine weai, What this reasonable prlco Is the rob- but when In consequence of such a bery will be continued, and we need ex- I nai v a&lamaA Vmi ontim apb at In stock debacle the money circulating you editorial that this contemplated machinery Stops, western Cities must purchase of locks and Improvement of feelly happy for the first tlmo tn her 1 w a. I., "mitt ,n V. .. .. . . In nwlAA n . I II.. r 1 1 . I 1 I . . . I . tnci nuuiu nuu iu uiq nmo yi iijie. one nua uvea wun ner inver iur a every bushel of wheat, every bale of year. But nor face belled her words, hay. every bale or Hops, every box or for It spoke of restlessness and anxiety. from one "common-law wife" (or mis tress) whose happiness lasted lhrouch a score of years. I nave met. heard of. and received let ters from scores of them who were very wretched, fend who were eatlns; tholr hearts out with a fcvershl unrest and dissatisfaction, mlnrled with fear of losing the man they loved, and resent ment at tne world ior its attitude to ward them. One I met who declared aha was per- necessarily be affected. On this subject the Denver Mining Record says: It is to be noticed that the voices of Wall street have a way of dragging apples or other product of the farm, or- iha 1 mm rra rdnn " vetKliVt la rtrAhnhlir Viiiu u amuuiie n ii I 1 1 10 u tu ui j true. But In my opinion this would be only a few crumbs thrown the long suffering public In a way that suits the contem- the whole country Into the troubles of railways themselves. This that financial section. Time and again Plate? purchase and Improvement might I l t in a ' IX. i roil Inn rfr 1 II II has the argument been repeated that pounds along the Willamette river for snd her words were so rull of bitter ness that it proved happiness to be far from her heart. It seems difficult for some of my readers to understand the position I take In this matter, yet it Is very slm nlaa. I believe the woman wbo resigns her self to a man throagn love, without marriage. Is a much better woman mor allv than the woman who marries I man she doea not love. But I insist that this is very foolish and unwise person, and that her happiness irt her love lire cannot laat. It cannot last because It Is man's na ture to "turn his face toward respect ahllitv" aa he rrowa older, lust as sure ly aa a tired horse turns toward his stable. And X repeat that the man who ahaoiut-lv loves a. woman ' will move earth (and heaven, too, if In Tils power) to maka her his own In the eyes of so ciety as well as In the eyea of God. When he cannot do this, he eventually leaves ber. It la the history of nine "common-la" wives out of ten. Any one who chooses to Investigate such casee can prove the truth or my asser tion. When I speak of a man's "own- Inar" a woman. I use love's lanfruttre. think the woman of today will "stand auch talk" when she knows what I am talking about. What woman ever loved, and was loved fully, who has not looked at the man or ner neari ana saia 10 nersnu, "lie is mine! I am hist" It Is the heart's exultant cry. The woman who in not anie to ana, 'He la mine, and I am his. In the eyea of Heaven and of earth, by (ha luwa of anl , n . ' k.. ... , a t k .1 kn full cup of Joy. She has not known lnva'a nnrfprtton until aha can ssv: Our love looks boldly In the noon's bold eyea; He walks always serene, without dis guise. And if the world stands far, or Jostles near. He walks always serene, without dis guise, Naked and not ashamed, beneath the sklaa. He doea not need dark backgrounds to a d Dear Radiant, for ever cImv b near Effulgence his supernal beauties rise. Oh, there be loves that hide till day is doue. Nocturnal loves, like silent birds of nrov: Secretive loves, that do not dare rejoice. Ours Is an eagle that can face the sun, wholoHome love mat glories in tne And finds a rapture In Its own glad voice. thougn the broad Tic REALM rEnlNINE t a T what affects Wall street must affect the nation. Granted that there Is an Intimate connection between the finan cial marts of New York city and the industries and trades of the whole Unl- cd States, the .argument seems to be used less with the intent to prove a truth :han to convict the country of Its obligations to that domain of activity. Had the banks of the west not been forced Into the universal ac ceptance of the clearing house certifi cate plan, it Is doubtful whether tho great majority of western citizens would have noticed anything wrong. It Is undoubtedly true that the bank- a distance or a little over luu miles. What the public is entitled to Is com plete regulation and a limitation of charges for their entire railway serv ice, and they should be satisfied with nothing less. The highest charge for service Is Portland to Eugene 45c per 100 pounds. being for first-class freight. JSow we are asked to expend millions in the purchase of locks and improvement of river to save 2 4c per 100 pounds, or to reduce this rate to M He and other rates In like proportion for a distance of a lit tle over 100 miles. In my opinion this rate should be reduced from 4bc to 2bc. The big overcharge conies in the service south of Eugene. From Eugene to the California line the rates advance very rapidly. Theso people will not share the benefits of the river panacea. Small Change Never let up on the pull for open rlv ers. Bird and Word would rhyme, any way. It looks a little ns If Mr. Taft were trying to Intimate that he is sane and safe. The antl-treatlng societies deserve to grow. Harriman Is tyrant over millions of people. ng network of the nation constitutes They will pay the old rates. When we THE NEW YORK WORLD AND salary i BRIAN. THE NEW YORK WORLD con tinues to oppose with much ve hemence the nomination of Bryan, but with all Its lengthy screeds on this subject it gives no reasons why he should not be nomi nated except that he has been twice . beaten. It says Governor Johnson would get hundreds of thousands iEiore votes than Bryan, and might carry some northern states, whereas Bryan would have no chance what ever to carry a single northern state. AU this may be true, but nobody knows lt'to be so, and a New York clty paper's views of national poli tics are usually very narrow. As ;goes Wall street, Broadway and Fifth avenue, the New York papers Sheriff Rand of Baker Is also wait ing for the people to show him vio lations of law. The statement Is that gambling is wide open in Baker, where it is Been of all men. Gam bling is prohibited by state law, and fabric which can readily enfold the ntlre financial body, if a hitch Is taken at any particular point, but there Is nothing peculiar about Wall street except Its size by virtue of which the nation should fall Irretrievably Into the meshes of disaster. During the recent crisis. Wall street was at the bottom and the west was on top. Conditions preceding a panic are: A surcharge of bock profits which cannot be liquidated. usually accompanied by a stretching of credit, based upon these book profits. The degree of necessity in behalf of the liquidating process Is reflected in the credit market. The need of liquidation was centrally felt In New York city to the extent that the rest of the country had to go to her relief. Except for sporadic Instances, the need Sheriff Rand is an officer of that law. If It is not his duty to seek was not felt in the west Drior to No- violations and bring the violators to vcmber. The necessity is not grevlous bar, whose duty is it? If it is neither at the present moment. Money and his duty, nor District Attorney Lo- money-capital were and are relatively max's duty, nor Mayor Johns' duty, then indeed, are the laws of the state full of frailties. plentiful, although It cannot be denied thai the strain imposed by Wall street upon the west has produced some effect DRY LAND FARMING. T It seems that Colonel George B M. Harvey and a few of his high financiering friends thought they could induce Bryan to decline to be a candidate. Which shows what a HE Dry Land Farming congress held last week In Salt Lake City met to consider a sublect nf ereater imDortance than east- ve"y narrow view of men and things Imagine, so must go the country. I ern people, or perhaps than even we tne colonel and his Wall street , We don't know of a New York news- of western Oregon realize. The dry Irlenas nave- iney Beem really t paper, unless it is the American, land farming movement, as the term nave supposed mar. ne wouia minK - whoBe owner was raised in Callfor- Implies, is entirely different from the that they BPke for Bome of tne nla, tnat can see beyond tne bound- Irrigation movement, it is an cl aries of that town. fort to produce profitable crops on The World predicts that if Taft semi-arid land without irrigation, cannot get the nomination, Roose- where water for irrigation cannot velt will seize it. It makes this as-! be obtained. Not many years ago - sertlon very positively; yet it may this would have appeared to every- 1e auite mistaken. But suppose that body chimerical, impossible; yet it , happens; isn't Bryan the best man is being done, and If the expert the Democrats can run even against mental stage has not yet entirely Roosevelt? What would Johnson or passed, many experiments have been Harmon or any other candidate do so successful as to be very encourag- agalnst Roosevelt? ing to the increasing army of dry Apparently Bryan has not worn land farmers. himself out with the people. He Any one can see at a glance the seems to be stronger and more popu- vast importance of this movement, lar with them than ever. Great if it can be made to succeed largely, numbers of them who doubted and Where there is one acre of arid land - distrusted hlni years ago perceive that can be Irrigated and so brought , now that neatly everything Roose- under cultivation, there are several, velt has done which the people com- perhaps many acres,, of dry uplands, - mend and applaud Is just what hitherto regarded as totally unfit for ;-. Bryan has been advocating for years, agriculture, that it is hoped to make vi and for whiah he was called a pop- fairly profitable agricultural lands ulist and a demagogue. by this process. This will give ad- The World admits that it doesn't ditional homes to hundreds of thou- ,want Parker, but It Beems to want sands of people, and add immensely Jl .1 ..(.. in ... . . , . ,- , , isuuit. ""'u" " m noi oe or- to tne country voiume ui ugncui- The developments of the Hall tensive to the elements of the tural products. M< BO far a8 Senator Fulton is , weuiocmtH. vv-j ".n supported The movement was sianea, bo iar d seem 8carceiy to corres raw, -Du.y uurvuu.i.mi,i, color- as we know, Dy a eorasita larmer pond to Heney's prolonged and jess man, yeruaps, wnom the "in- named Campbell, and the system flas ommou8 "thundering in the index, lereaia mi&ui. oupyun. as a choice taken his name, tnougn proDaDiy u r ueiween two eviis ior tfiem. We has been improved on. The govern- Prvan aeema to have nronosed th don't think; . Governor Johnson is ment took hold of the matter by way Llmplest, safest and beBt plan of inai ama oi a man, me men whose of experimentation, wltn good re- currency reform, but of course the first choice is Bryan would for the Uults. And within five years or so headers in congress cannot adopt It 'rank and file." If all the workingmen's unions and granges, as well as all com mercial bodies, would say to the dlf ferent memberB of congress: "If that Inland waterways bill and a river and harbor bill don't pass, we will vote against you," Czar Cannon might not keep his cattle In leash so easily, Mr. Harriman has men at work building a road through western Washington, where there is no ur gent need of one, and also from the southern edge of Oregon to connect with his road to San Francisco, but not a lick of work in Oregon, Occasionally there is. something new under the sun; a Seattle of ficial, the health officer, petitioned to have his salary cut down one half. The exposition should secure that man for an exhibit next year. most; part cheerfully support John. son, and he might be thejy-onger candidate; yet .no one can arouse tha enthnslasnl that Bryan can; the people ? know - no''-fine so well, and depend" on no nd so much; so that there -are no real, solid foundations !n ascertained facts for the World's assertions..-' '.' ; The World goes' oo to ehowv that the Democratic party has been pretty wHl eliminated 'except In tho ponth and ' New; Pork V city and ; blames urvMB for; it, K:-Why, .not blame Verier, and JIcCarreaT , The' Pemo- the movement has so grown that there is an annual dry land farmers' congress, second only In Interest arid importance, in the west, to the Irri gation congress. The central point of the system is the conservation of . all available moisture in the ground. ,- Experi ments as to how best to accomplish this are still in progress, though the Campbell System has accomplished much and has been the basis of all other experimenters. Already, ' in portions of central and eastern Ore jgon,Cfalr crops . are being ."raised ,by because it was suggested by Bryan. get as far south as Medrord the rate Is 11.18, $1.03, 95o and !Sc for first, second, third and fourth-class, less than carloads. These people will not thank the officers of state or nation for throwing the north end of the Willam ette only a few crumbs to the extent of 2V4c per 100 pounds, that will be an advantage to so small part of the state. These people are entitled to flat 60 per cent reduction. Instead of a 244 per 100 pounds reduction that these southern Oregon people will de rive no benefit from, they should have 6c on nrst-cliiss, D1V4C on second-class, 474c on third and 44c on fourth-class per 100 pounds, and this they will get when we get wise enough to retire our politicians who are corrupt and delegate our law-making and law-enforcing to honest statesmen. One of my greatest reasons for con eluding that the river Improvement "panacea" should not meet with the ap probation or the public is the racx that every politician that has always trav eled with the corporation class Is favor ing river Improvement; all the railway politicians, from the western senators to Jim Hill, favor river Improvement To me It is clearly evident that the In tention in politics is to divert the peo ple from appropriate regulation of our railways to that of river competition, and this will permit the railway lines to go on with their high-handed robbery unu enauie ins janwuy lines iu con tinue to divide with the politician Should we give up our effort to regu late and turn to river competition, the above comparison of the present condi tions between the north and south end of the Southern Pacific line In Oregon amply illustrates what we will be com pelled to suffer. We should Insist on complete regulation, irrespective of any other force whatever. Permit me In closing to say I hope the day is not distant when, in nominat ing our candidates for public service, we will not permit a political party to be named, neither in initiating our nominees nor in the campaign for election. This Step will do more to prevent the cor rupt machine Intrenching Itself behind farty fealty and party prejudice, and hereby make it possible to get corrupt men Into office than any other at pres ent to be considered. F. W. GAINES. Look gerous. Don't be dead. out for free silver men dan- orry; think how long you will A Woodsman Wants Work. Portland, Jan. 27. To the Editor of The Journal Through the columns of your valuable paper I take the liberty of asking a favor. I am a married man with a family and wish to locate In a good logging county in Oregon. I am a stranger in Oregon, having recently arrived from California and have had a practical experience in the Redwood logging camps. 1 find mv- seir in desperate straits ana must nave work. Hoping you can favor my re quest, A WOODSMAN. Newton C. Blanchard's Birthday. Newton C. Blanchard, governor of Louisiana and whose successor was chosen at the Democratic primary In that state yesterday, was born in RaDl dea pariah, Louisiana, January 29, 1849. ins education was received In Louisi ana State university and in the law de partment of Tulane university. After graduating from the last named institu tion in is o ne entered upon the prac tica of law in the city of Shreveport He entered upon his political career as a member of the constitutional conven tion of 187. The next year he was elected a representative In congress from the Fourth district of Louisiana and was reelected to the office six times. In fact, his membership In the lower l6use of congress did not come to an end until he was elected to the United States senate In lHlJ.i. Upon the expira tion of his term In the senate he be. came a, justice of the supreme court of Louisiana, which position he resigned in 1904 upon being elected governor. Good news for hotel clerks diamonds cheaper. WW Government is a failure, but it might be worse. Mr. Bird will try, try, try. try. try. tfy again. The Hall trial will beat the Thaw trial out a little. business pays for The reforming some people. Nearly every lawyer la "Judge," with some people. Cuba has to stay good, on the surface ror a year vet. Oregon Sidelights The Count and the Countess. hero may ; be , reason in th storm of criticism and centui that has fallen upon Gladys Vat aernnt ana the Hungarian couH and it may . seem an unhol alliance to the raasa of the Amer can people: vet . are we not roin rather far In -predlotlng wlthV aUC preternatural wisdom a speedy sudlm or the romance and a notorious divorce Is It not quite possible that the ma uu woman moii concerned in tne ca are sincerely attached to each othe IS It not DOBSlbla that ha la attract. by her youthful rhnrm nd tram at culture ana tnat sne nnos in him man who satisfies her with his dlgnlt ma uraeuing, nut oia-woria courtesy I Personally we of Port In nd ara n well acquainted with either of the De sons most concerned, but that is a po reason for assuming that they mi notoriously mercenary. It Is true thif we nave had many European-America " ma'-a naiauii uaw iiui lurntra v well. The marital trial nf Pnnanip vanaerout, the Duchess of Marlboioug and of Anna Gould, that (Viunteaa i Caateliane, are still fresh in the puu lie mind, And yet many American arlrla haxf married men from the old world ail nave lived so happily and quietly the World ha a fnrarnrtan ahmit h Not to CO farther ahold, tharaa la Matt Mitchell Of Portland vhn mnrrlad tl uuna ue ja itocnerocauirt about zo yea ago and who has not vet made any sl or discontent. And there Is Mail Anderson, who became Countess isavarro and who hxa hn hoard since only as a hannv wife Aside from the amount of money co cernco in mis marriage or one America's richest stria and tha Szecht-nyl does It differ in any lr portant particular from the kind marriages that so on all tha tlmo wit out attracting attention? i A man rrowa wearv nf travaldl aooui wun no nettled abiding place. II oonslders seriously whether he woul not De happier married and settled In I home of his own. He then casta abol oyer tne list or his acquaintances ail Picks Out the llkellnat arlrla and HaldJ . . . . " - - - - i inai ne win see whether they bear ta test of his scrutiny. How much of compliment is It that Is oald to tl woman he selects? In the same mannl exactly ne buys a horse. ur a girl nnds after several seas J association. Sea flshfn off the Gold Beach wharf I has been fine. a "Watch i ufur grow apples and pears," li that town's slogan. There were 91 marriages and 21 di vorces in Josephine county last year. a Jacksonville's new school building Is nne of tho best and handsomest in the I state. Evelyn still loves Harry; isn't all gone yet. his mone Get a microscope If you want to see the Cortelyou boom. a. Ellis vs. Geer: tho old Mitchell vs. Simon right renewed. a Well, what's tho matter with Bryan's currency rerorm rian ; Possibly Csar Cannon might let us have that aubtreasury. a But the woman who proposes may be expected to support tne ramuy. w Foraker feels like a man who has butted his head against a stone wall The next dictionary maker may have an appendix ror it entitled "Lawson- tena." Got your garden seeds yet? If not punch up your congressman. What's he there for.? a An Indianapolis preacher Insinuates that the Jonah story was the work of a nature ianor. a Whoa the rheumatism bites Admiral Bob doubtless wishes he had an enemy's If Bryan should be nominated, he Isn't going around asking people to vote for him no-sir-ee. . , Portland baa lately been cleaner than most cities in the matter of of ficial graf,t, but it looks as If there were a job here for a muckraker. Foraker was always regarded as a smart man, but it seems he was overestimated, flis "fight" is a piti ful fizzle. Cannot Corvallis have an industry, Just - one? asks The Times. Cannot Corvallis do as well asMonroe? Tnat town naa fruit annery, , ., . -- V--" t r. v ' ..-'" :--v.. -'-:.; -;;;-v Irish Hits. From the Argonaut. Was there ever a more mordant and sardonic stroke of description than that O'Connell gave of Peel's blood lessness? 'His smile was like a silver prate on a conin. uess scathing, but less witty, also, was his description of a lady of a similarly repellent temper ament. "She had all the characteris tics of a poker, except Its occasional warmth." i ' Brewery News. From the Washington Post. Carrie Nation Is reported to have said, "I expect to meet every brewer in the hereafter." Under' the circum stances the brewers should not he blamed for wanting to stay On earth V long as possible, Charles Emory Smith, who rerantlw aieu bi me ne ui oo, married a young wuuiiijj jut unuutr. a Now it Is "manlac-denresslve Innan. ny. Any oia name wm do. it Is a cneap alienist who can t invent a name, a a Indianapolis Star: Wow! Think of the degrees below we'll -get In February and March to pay for this premature spring. a a When a woman' insists that she is a perfect lady, she shows that she has sense enough to realize that people don't think so. a A copper mine Is swallowing up a Spanish town. Copper was the dyna mite that opened up a cavern that swal lowed Wall street. Trnmphlnn nat raisers will form an I "pdal gaiety and an endless rau jospchlno goat raisers win rorm an of dlnner8 Hnd tcag and tht ,t ufti'ia linn iii .. . .. hii a wearisome and unsatlsrvlnar 11 and that she would be reallv hannier she married some one of the many mJ who pay her attentions, and then al thinks them over carefully and decldl wmcn couio give her the most. whH can support her In the "style to whli she has been accustomed" and si graciously permits his attentions to hi to crowd out those of the rest of tl men that she knows. Is their marrlal a noiy alliance? The people who know them bol agree mat it is a most sulUtl marriage. She has done well. By 1 ffrAfflr inaloflt., 0 L I . a Rnm. lending nltln nf fjrnnta Pfl HI K l"?'"' 1 1 . ' 1 mr m-qumniaiiri - . ...... . . . . - - -. , i 1 1 m ,-rrii 1 1 , r nmn am. i hi, , ..,,. !.,.. . .., hmM ... ----- i um a. aim b J w.v. riage Dnngs are totally Ignored, to plant shade trees. na8 he the heroic nualitles that make him a stanch, steadfast nrntectl The Pons Ttav "On root" Is a unlnue and a loval hushand? Una ah tl monthly publication of that region, womanly qualities of mind and heal which seems to run to Literature and mat maac a true wife and a wll Art. moiner.' Are they mutually suited eacn otner in temperament and syn Gold Keach . Globe: K. Dodge, the . . popular blacksmith, is a solitary bach- no tanes the trouble to ask? elor. Hnnnv la the man who keena I bachelor hall! No woman to scold or '1 ab.ilt, u" and every day peorj any kids to squall. , , 10 Know Detier drift Into juiuti .!. luuunie un aa muctv se nna t h n 1 1 r K r a .. , i . - . , i wui.i..... ...v , , . . . . . v. v . " , , . mj i vrpB linn eT m ri a , i ,.,.. i'" .. 7. J wm., m.in(! al lne tneatre. They exn iur ine nne sciioui uunuings mey are that somehow by the mysterlo d-vtlllX " ' I 1.111113 IU llllic:. mail Hif'l flmV 11 r in, n-1fli-rl,,a finron, v. countries tha have been fully developed will be united, when If they wou ior years cannot snow as good scnooi really consider they would know th uuumnKs as are now rounu in several mey would mix I lite nil and sota, , of the districts In this part of the ever and always. county. For It takes more than position fortune or even mutual ennui tn ma rrinevnie journal winter red peer a marriage, and it is aa often nnh for the Portland and Puget sound mar- and unhallowed in the clasaea of kets has become an Important and prof-ciety tnat we know as In those th ltaoie industry for the cattlemen and ueyona our usu-il observation. alfalfa ranchers of Crook county. The Industry has grown from small begin nings until this year the ranchers of mis vicinity will market no less than 2.000 head of finished beef. This beats tne output of any previous year. W. A. Kentner of Kent was troubled with a K K H More About Sour Milk. From the Milk Reporter. HE latest producer of long life da covered by 'European physloll gists Is soghurt, a preparation sour milk. Professor Ellas Metehnlkn1 found It to be no one dreartind. Tha mall service from Roseburg to Marsh field Is fierce but the service from Marshfleld to this city is a roaring savage In comparison. Three miles from center, and 16 hours average for 46 days to deliver the mall. Rise un and howl, citizens of North Bend, and let's get this straightened tout. Old Indian Lvman anil hi Jane, who for manv veara Tind livnd on Coos bay, occupying two little huts were found dead recently. Thn hnd nf Jane was outside the hut. It was her custom to take a bath every morning in the slough, and It lspresumed she was returning from her bath nn thn Dooy was nucie, when" she dropped down ana aiea. it is supposed that Lyman found her dead, as his coat covered hn, body. His own body was lust Inside the door of the hut. where he had nn. Japan continues to declare that ha I Vr " '"q ana raiien. i ne In doesn't want to flcht the United State. "I8."8 JlfF,6 eacn ,?ver ..10 7 old pain in one font thnuirh thorn I . .. was no sore, and he had It amnutated. ra"eur institute was me H but blood poisoning set In and later I to direct attention to It, but no soon ihlr! L ,2a1 aKTe,n. rr fi ,thtnl5n- and had he done so than Professor Rel then he died. It Is -aid that when the hardt of Vienna announced that he h h i if '"l ; , unown an aDout it ror years and th 1.1,3 nuitcKiio an ic- ui wus in general use in country na ported as saying that it is the first case of HnlHn " country pa of the kind in their experience. Professor Metchlnkow's theory Is th I mc lerment contained in the milk Silver Lake Leader: The Antelnne tacks certain bacteria which d ovolnn Herald is giving the saloon men a rlD the human system and have poiaono .1 1 , . . 1 . . I II. 1. , . , - up too oacK at mat piace, as wen as l "lcl-i u proven py experimei the city council for not seeing that the J18 says, mat tne soghurt has an abs laws are enforced. Keep at it brother, Jutely disinfecting influence and th ror lr you have not got officials now " oeisroying tne poisonous germs wno win see your laws enforced the prevents nisease out also time la com) no- and ramln tr annn I rests the Process of aa-ina-. men with enough backbone will be In, a Paper puhllshetl In the Austri placed In positions to see they are en- f:ey,aw, lJr- einnarot tells how t forced. Officials will enforce the law uignans prepare tne roghurt. Coi when the people's demands are strong or. KOaA ? mi.llt boiled In an open v enough. sei until reduced to about half its oril a - I lima viuime. The Coos Eav Harbor mnkaa tha fnl- I Then it is cooledand when it reach lowing loud kick: That the city of ? temperature of about 115 degre North Bend has the worst mall service ?i 5"2,i,H,re,iay, .Prepared is stlrrj In the United States has been generally LnA ' a"d. " ls -left to ferment - T aumittea ror some time. That tt was aa bad as the committee appointed by the chamber of commerce to investigate and for once at least Japan probably tells the truth, y a Judge Greenbaum of New York says the cooking Of many women Is vile, and drives their husbands to drink. But this was only an obiter dictum. a a If Governor Folk can beat Oumnhon Bill Stone for the senate In Missouri. not only that stale but the whole country win nave made a gain this Date in History. 1888 'France declared war against England. 1712 Conference for peace opened at Utrecht. 1737 Thomas Paine, author of "The Age of Reason," bdVn. Died June 8, 1809. - 1754 Moses Cleveland, founder of the city of Cleveland, Ohio, born.' . , 1822 Adelaide Ristorl, famous Ital ian actress,, born. Died October 9, 106. 1843 William McKinley, twenty-nfth president of the United States, born. Died September. 14, 1901. 1861 Kansas admitted to the- uniowr 188G Japanese caDtured Wel-Hal-Wel from the Chinese. 1906 Christian IX of Denmark died. Born April 8, 818 cany wjvuero aiming mat they were past miaaie age wnen the whites first carao to tne oay in isoz. Not a Moving Picture Machine, From the Newark Sunday Call. A careless child caused tho death of nearly 200 people at Boyertown, Penn sylvania, last week and a careless cor respondent did Incalculable damage by sending out to the newspapers the story that the fire was caused by the "ex nloslon" of a moving nlntnra manhii,. The ohlld upset a row of keresana lamps on mo eiagu wiiite trying to pull the curtain aside to learn the cause of the nissmg wnicn came rrom a broken needle-valve on a tank of hydrogen used In operating the stereopticlon'wlth cal cium light There was no moving pic ture machine in the building. An illus trated lecture was being given with old fashion glass lantern slides, but the damage was done Irreparably when the report was printed that an explosion of a film machine caused the calamity. The result has been to keep hundreds of thousands of admirers of the mov Ing pictures away from the nickel dromes and halls in which they had tom-n enjoying the innocent cleastira at watching the , "motion pictures." No amount of publicity -can now overcome the damage which has been done to this popular form of entertainlnav ., . , germ, which the doctor calls maya ful bus acts quicKiy ana the soghurt ready for use in a dv Dr. Relnhardt thinks the health gil vi"'i."-b m me preparation al ainpiy proved Dy the Tact that Bulgarl In a population of 4,000.000 has 3,0 KUKimri eaters or j on years age mi upwaro wnne in the whole German eH pire wun tn.uou.ooo people there iiij ii vcuieiiunufis. m m m Daily Mono. T IS ONE of the axioms of phi ology thot the majority of tl diseases of mankind are du or ron-nectea wun, perversions of nl innon. i-roressor Chittenden. BREAKFAST. Fruit. Oatmeal and cream. Turkish Pilaf. German fried potatoes. French rolls, Coffee. LUNCHEON. Halibut Souffle, oyster sauce. veiery. Potatoes scalloped with onions. Anchovy toast. Coffee. Roasted chestnuts. DINNER. Green onions; radishes. Turnln sotm. Oysters baked in the half shelL urusseis sprouts; string beans. Roast Teal duck. Fried Hominy. Waldorf Salad. Ico cream. Cafe Nolr. i urKisn riiai une cud stewnd ai fitraiiinrl tomatoea nn inn .iivnl, .1 . . - , "v ..vMwrt. boiibu niKinv wun sail ana oenner mi minced onion. When boiling add one ci well washed rice. 'stir liehtlv with I fork until the liouor is absorhed: thl add One half cupful butter. Set on tl Daca or tne stove and add an mm cooked meat out Into half inch plecl and siireoaea very nne. steam 20 mlf iitaa - n,,mivA thA n n a . i 1 1 i ,1 j - . .no . v, . i , our 1 1M II I II then cover with a tnwat and i- Bteam escape. ar. m. J. Lincoln. Narrating the testlna- of a ri f if engine, tne isanoon Recorder sajl When the stream was turned, E. j Furman was struck and his eye glass uruH.ua aim nia zao Riirnriv nn r n'w Doara was rwen satlsncd with." the uit of the test,, . w.:---,-,..--,.-; ; t .v,;i,;, v?v