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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (April 25, 1908)
THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL PORTLAND, SATURDAY EVENING APRIL: 51 803.' m CJ11I KEEP TRADE AT HOf.lE -rl fa T' J --a C.ll. fPMln mook Bay Men : , A Turn to Frisco. ? . (Bpselal tMspatra te The JoonL) . - Bay City. Or, April II. -The Mlama , Lumbtr company, which operates the .' big sawmill plant at Hobsonvllle, a . . ' mile anJ tialf north of Bay City, hat marie a proposition to the merchants of Tillamook bay point to carry their ' freight for 12.60 PT ton, providing they f purchase their storks In Ban Frenotso. The Mlama company, whlrh propoaas to operate a Una of ateamers between San ' ran lca and llobeonvllle, will ba ready to place Ita flret boat, the etaamer Winnie B. Kelton. on tha route about - Way 10. and letters have, been received ' by all tha merchanta along TlUamooic bay soliciting their patronage. It would ' ' coat tha merchanta of Bay City, about 10 canta per ton to freight their goods V from Hobsonvllle to deatlnatlon, which would mean a total freight rate of 13 from Ban rranclsco, or about half tha '. rata now being Impoaed upon them by the Peclflo Navigation company to carry their merchandlaa from Portland , and Astoria, oa tha ataamar Sua H. ,JSl- , ' B,Notwlthaiandtnt' the preposition nub mlta4 tv tha Ulunt Lumbar comoany. tha merchanta of Tillamook bay polntt have -expressed tneir determination -10 I stand by their agreement to patronise 1 tha ataamar .Anvil. If that boat la op erated from Portland, but ahould tha Frnjeet to place tha Aavti oa the route all. they declare It will be necessary to turn their trade to Ban Francisco In order Mo protect thalr own Inter eeta. All ara In hopes, however, that , . tha Anvil project will succeed,-a they firafer to give their bualneaa to Port and houaea and thereby keep tba trade ' "t home. . -, , v ; . . , .JAPAN SUFFEBS FE03I y,f ,:.. v -i VTKXNCIXTi PANIC HEWS FORECAST oFConiGim esssSBSwawM-w--v-- Many Republican State and District" ConTentlons.- V- Will Bo Held. -It WHAT MOST WOMEN WILL ' DO AND WHY THEY DO IT - (Valtad Pfaea Usee Wtra.1 .'.'. Teste, April IS. Tha flnanolal crisis In Japan haa become id acute that tha raising of tha Booth Manehurlan rail road debentures baa been auapended. Bualneaa through tha empire haa fallen off woefully and there la no Immediate prospect or . 'Improvement. ., , After Once Tastlng: ;: no one wants an old-fashioned cod liver oil prepara tion or emulsion, because Vinol is a much better body builder and strength creator for old people, weak children, and for coughs, colds, bron chitis, etc. If it does no good we will return your money. Woodard. Clark ft Co, Portland. Or. (United Frees Leuetf . Wire.) ' Washington, 'April H-The coming week holda In promla an abundanea of event that wUl Intareet newspaper readers.- Politic, .foreign happsnlngs, church celebration, convention, sport Ing events and the entertainment of tn battleship fleet on the Paclflo coast Will snare la me puoito iiwnuun. . Unr. atata anit district DolltK! Con- ntlnm will ba held nelt Weak than during, any similar period alnce tht present campaign began. Of theaa tha majority will be of tha Republican party. Secr-Ury Taft will carry off tha honora In tha moat of tha atatea, but In tha-nurabrr of deltgatea he will be beaton out by Benator- Knox, for whom tha Pennsylvania atata conven tion, to ba held at Harrlaburg tiet Wednesday, will Inatruct tha i del- gates rrom tnat aiaie, - Hepubllcan conventlona. stat and dis trict, will b held in t"o New Kngland atate .during , tba week, Vermont and Maine. From preeent -Indlcatlona both ara HkeJy to follow the example of Vlaaaanhuaatta In.aandlnS' an UBln- atruotad delegation to Chicago, with tha majority of tha Individual member presumably for TafU The Taft man agers expect to get in vr"J -mc.w-aat in anil ejan Lava hopea -of capturw ng Wast Virginia, whose: state conven tion la to meet at Parkemburg Tueeday, nt tk. .nfiihirn atalas In hlr.h Kenub' llcan tta oonventlone will - b bwld during' tha-week. Marylaad and Bouth Carolina ara regarded " a aomewhat doubtful In their chole for. the real dency. Arkansas. Mlaalsalpfl and North Carolina are plaeed in the Taft column. Tha antl-admlnlstratlon Republicans of Alabama will meet In atata eopventlon In Birmingham Wednesday and will cjiooa a delegation to Chicago that -will oppoa Taft. :.-t , The week will llkawUe ba one of groat activity for th"Dmoorata 'Chief In terest will center in tha-atata primary In Texaa, which ha already developad into on of tba most bitter political con test the Lone Star atata haa aver wit nesed. Tha point at txsue 4s whether or not Senator J. W. Bailey ahall ba one of tha delegate at large to tha Denver convention. Othar Domocratlo bappen Inga that will attract attention will ba the atata convention In Connecticut and New Jersey. In .both atata the sgln seem to point to unlnstructed delegate to the national convention. Tha presidential asplranta of both Eartle will ba heard In publio speechr.a i several part of the country. Wil liam J, Bryan will circle through tha middle west. Taft will be beard Tuesday night In New York city and Governor Johnson has accepted an Invitation 10 spenk in Detroit Wednesday night Th American battleship flaet Will spend the entlr week (ft tha harbor of Santa Barbara, where an elaborate round of festivities in honor of the. of ficer and man will ba carried out ' Tha centennial celebration of the New Tork diocese will be the cynosure of all ayea In the Catholio world, attended aa It -Will Da. oye.li or . me aignuanea oi the church . In this country and several from abroad.' ' Portugal . 1 awaiting; with some anxiety the reassembling of .parliament next Wednesday, wnen King umanuei will personally take the oath before ofPortuail, ' rour or tn soutnem states win oo aarva Monday a Confederate Memorial day. and throughout the north tha same day will ba celebrated ' In honor of the birthday of Oeneral Grant. The atate prohibition election in Norm Carolina will DO anomer event di iniercn. Br T. Claya Bhaw, M. p.. Lecturer on Psychology at gt, llartholomaw' Ho pltai.. ixindon. t What a woman will do, and .why aha doe It are question which men are always putting themselves; and, it must be confessed, tbay more frequently than not are brought to view their conclu sion w(th chagrin and disappointment. The false estimate of character arise mainly from the Idea that there I In the mind of women om faculty pecu liar to th ex. omethtng which make them an eternal riddle; whereas there 1 really no neoesslty to postulate any urn special essence. . i The mind of the woman 1. on analy sis, the same a that of the man; but the circumstance In whlfh they bav respectively bean placed ft many year even for ages have so compelled the peclallxstlon of some of the faculties ef mind that divergencies have become accentuated. These divergencies amount almoat to the creation of a different en tity, whos -mod of action is ao modi fled that it eeem fantastlo or dlstort sd, whereas It la really tha earn thing In other garments a pararirae, a port. If you will, masked, perbapa, but springing from the same base. Paradox and Monotony. - Though there la, strictly speaking, no actual men fenimlna. w Ull reoognls that there are two mind women are woman and men are men. ThI bl-sex-ual arrangement I eminently aatlafao tory. Juat think for a moment bow tame life would be If there ware not two minds, but one mind. .There would be no curiosity, no sense of effort to please or to understand, no Idea of a mystery to be unraveled. What men dlallke I that woman ahould wish to cancel their womanhood and merge It In manhood; that they should cast away what there I In them of "paradox, and should strive to assume ail that goes 'na n.Lina a hlandad Ufa. attuned ami harmonised; not fused In a dull Iden tity. When live are similar the result may be friendship or toleration, but it I not love; and that la what a man wants. He desire love. " How can he have It If mentality I merely a look IngglassT On ne devlent pa amourcux do ol-meme wTget tired of white light; we want color, and woman 1 th rainbow of life. - ' Th Secret of Emotion. There are two main factors which largely determine the conduct of wo men, vl.: Intensity and self-preservation or conservatism, th former show ing Itself In a plu amount of emotion; the latter In Impulsive action. Of these the former 1 largely responsible for the ma ( knawiedse of the na ture of emotion exists beyond that It la a mental tate associated with Ideas, and that the "emotional tone" of an la a , uncertain and changeable element At onevtlme it may be strong, at snother weak, and at still another so altered as to be the .very opposite of what it was at first- It IS JUSl IMS peculiarity oi - tur of emotion that upaeta ail our cal culations, and makes us unjust critics of conduct If marriage were deter mined, by natural selection ww suuuiu m aimnl. luMidlttnn of thlncs. It the handsome man alwaya married the handsome woman, mm mmn short girl the senior wrangler the top r a In hAitnr. fthara would ha no diffi culty In forming a sliding matrimonial scale; but the personal equation comes in and upset our orthodoxy. What Is beauty to one man I ugllnes to an other. In the face of such term as love marriages, -marriage ue cuiuto- ni." aintania marrisxe. ana mo on. we can only conclude that what 1 cer tain 1 that there l a union, ana wnai la hot certain I the nature of the prea-. teste. -, ' !' . . I have often seen young gins m whose cases the disturbing element takes the form of doubt They cannot make up their minds. They have be come "engaged, and all has done well fnr a time: when suddenly, for no rea son apparenh to other people, they have broken them again, and have' finally drifted Into -a state of mental Irrita tion, the result of aleepleasnaaa, worry, aua impaired nutrition. Tba rilii. Many of theae girls are misunder stood; they are called "flirts:" are said to be rinkie, and are generally blamed when they KUglit to be pitied. The usual notion is that they "do not know their own minds. or that they "cannot make up ttiolr minds,1 whereas,, a a matter or ract there la not much "mind ' in it. They are In an Impulsive slate, sad all their actions show It The truth Is that marriage mean a Sood deal more to the woman than It oea to the man; and 1 maintain that many girl do positively shirk when It come to the time th pert they have to piay. nence tney vacillate, ana end by a series of inconsistencies which bring Upon them the opprobrium of out siders who have not fully understood the conditions. I do naff, believe that women invariably lure men Into engage menta, and then reject them fnr th amusement of placing them in awkward and ridiculous circumstances; for It I certain that the mental change which I involved in tne term ' raiunar in love -Is of so complicated a character that though It may (and often does) pro ceed to a correct solution, it msy on the other hand, seriously affect the mental life of the Individual. Iet women be credited with this that for a long time they have been coerced and kept In sublectinn. that they have had te act on the defensive, and nave there fore been made auspicious, that It haa become a necessity for them to test the genuineness of overtures, and that if tney use tneir arts ana attractions as decoys these -means are after all the only armor and weapons which they can employ to find out whether the at tack is real. Has not one of th most astute of their sisters told them that the weddlne ring la but the token of women's folly, and men's presumption J , -. ... ryliir to y. In the true balance between th mo tional and the Intellectual we find the exact condition beat suited for happy marriages. It I Juat on this platform that th greatest number of social diffi culties arise; for the emotional Idea may be strongest at the very time when the Intellectual la in course of development The ancient truly said that "love 1 blind." . v, It I of no use to upbraid children who are In thla frame of mind. The only reawmable way to behave is to see that the physiological psychology of the whole proceeding is cl early demonstra tive of a condition which can only ba changed by a transmutation of the com ponent elements of the Idea. To tell the man that exceedingly pretty girls are often very Imbecile will not affect him. He la not for; marrying brains- the over-mastering force of his manhood I upon him. To tell the girt that the symmetrical glsnt whom she adores Is intolerable to her ' social surroundings will not deter her from her resolution to carry out the match at all risks. It Is arrogance and' Impertinence of men to cnll women "flirts" because they ise those protective faculties which have come to be .instincts. Women must go to certain lengths to prove to them selves thst they are right In acting a they finally resolve to do; and It la rather complimentary than otherwise to the man to know that he may have to pass hrough a 'period of orobatlon which eventuates in a trueajaljustment If the womsn Is to be the man's alter ego, it must be that she can supplement what Is tequired to make the married state a true ua Ion of mind and body. How Is she to do this unless she. first JirospScts the ground, and this, par te rs. not once only, but again and again? 1 r j . Iloqulam Officers Appointed. ,. (Special DIapatck to Tb Journal.) Hoqulm. Wash. April fB. Mayor Elect Frary haa annunced his appoint ments for the various . offices of tha city government which Is In his prov L. L. WHITE, CbUf of Staff GENTLE lEMTISTRY P D AVI II ft MUI Ml A oy tooth la the ufiU Willi smith we crows nn snlld Kid S-k, guaranteed the best, par fA fl ft stahapei best workmanship) far taTiUU PDfU'IJft MICIUIB-Any Poftlln linUllHu Crows toade-se matter what they are called er bow aiade. fjl fin Prettiest paganish. Orprtosl QTtUU 0 R I D G E8 r??4 fin limit, natural prtty oolor, par tooth v)TtUU , Solid dura! TEETH MlflCT MT-anywb-r la the C C I II elty. get a price oa any k lod ef m vq mu. ni ww win S set of teeth, then Ulnnii If U III. tionately duplicate that art of taeta, eioept) f Of) gold and poreaUiB, for art. . .. . . yjiUU All other work same price proper- AMoluie guarantee. PHI I end satisfy yonrmlf thst we save UMlala but eae price, end thit we do not nisrepPMeol ear work. JQ JXXTKAoV IinlinC OfBoe boar from s A.M. to M HUU IIO P.Mh KondsysA.M.tolP.M. 820i Wmmhtnwtmn Oe. torf MsNkaaai Xras t SM.Ta Oaasara-IaUy akse Met ' Fbimm Mmlm 8 7 BO Ince to fill. s follows: Chief of no tice. It. i Oliver; health officer, Dr. a W .l aawsaaaa. SB 11 VaTl f-( ft atl A Sin A . al . Jfli.AIl.Jf rv, V suireinin-vai Virgil Smith; police Justice, Beth war ren; cltv treasurer. George Robertson; city attorney. Sidney M. Heath. . ,Tbe appointment of Judge Warren was op posed by four of the councilman. i New Incrporntlonjs. R.ilem. Or.. Anril 15 Articles of In- corporstlon hsve been filed in the office of the secretary or state as zouows: The Astoria Amateur Athletic asso ciation; principal office, Astoria. Ore gon; ospltal stock. 11,600; Incorporators, J. M. B. Hawthorne, George T. Judd, B. R. Blair, Charles Oimraai, w. A. Klgner, Charles H. Abercrombie, A. V. Allen Jr., ana can w. r ranseen. The Mount Hood eompanyf principal office, Portland, Oregon; ' capital stock, i',0, 1)00; incorporators, F. C. Klnkle, Jfl. P. Clark and K. u unns. PORTLAND RAILWAY, LIGHT & POWER COMPANY . Bulle'tin llo. t ,Tht Portland RaJlwty. Light ft Powtr Comp-ny la public senric corpormtlon, and wt rUr that tha moat raiuabla asiet public-acnrica corporation can hav la tha food will of tha public. ,Wa art trjrinf to ba candid and tinctrt In all oar deallnga with tha public and with tha city, and wa frankly admit that wa ahall con. aiatcntly striva to aacura and maintain tha food will of tha people of Portland. ' ' vM-; ' '' " It la an important part of our boaineu to run a atreat railway and to run It efficiently. . Wa feel that wa can do more, ordinarily, 'by attending to our business than by entering into discussions or explanations , ' '. ' '" ' ' Tha secret ef getting along with tha other fellow in thla world 4 la to have a better understanding of hla trouble. Tha man who lg tha sharpest critic ia often the beat friend when ha onderatanda . tha other fellow. Job." 7 ' ' v . ComparatiTely few people realize tha difficulties of modern.' atreet railway operation. When anything goea wrong, ererybody noticea it whenever everything goea right, nobody notice it' Wa want to have ererything go right and everybody to notice it. Wo feel that we ara making frienda with tha people of Porta : Und, and that ear efforta to giro tha beat aenrice poaaible ara being appreciated.' Thia ia not tha accomplishment of a day. bat the result of grinding work and large expenditurea for aome years past, and wa desire to ahow tha public what wa have dona and ara doing for tha Improvement of the service ; what problem wa meet with daily, and soma of tba metboda which would ba mutually helpful and beneficial to tha railway company and tha public -.: You may take thia fact aa assured; that it will not ba possible to remove all aourcea of complaint There ia the amiable gentle man who kicka at home and growla all day at hi office. Wa cannot expect to escape him between time. He will prob ably kick at tha publication of theae articles. But, leaving him out of the question, it la atffl plain, from tha nature of tha business, " that there will frequently ba unavoidable troubles and Inconven iences, v ' '' ' W carry a large portion tha population of Portland twice a day. Counting tba transfers, people step up and down from the cara 320,000 times a day. - Tha streetcars of Portland paaa back ward and forward through crowded streets, covering about 29,000 miles, or one and one quarter timea the circumference of tha globe, in a aingle day. There will always ba accident under these circum stances. Then, too, the conductor's lot is not a happy one. : He haa to collect money from people of all aorta and disposition. He alone ia expected to keep hla temper, and it is hla duty to do so. If lie does not, upon proper complaint, he ia disciplined, and per- . haps discharged. We endeavor to eecure the highest daae of em ployea. We are proud of the character and courtesy of our men, and we believe that, as a body, they have not their superiors in the country. Still they are only human, and they make mCrtakea. Many a reasonable kick will necessarily be registered against ua. The unreaaonable kicka come hard. We feel that we can do away with many of them it the public underatanda the atreetcar business a little better. We want to present to you a eeriea of articles dis cussing some of the problems, together with a atatement of how we are meeting jthem. - ' . ' V,." " ; ; As for the reaaonable kicks, we want to hear them. They help as. We realize that we can beat aerve ourselves by serving you. An outsider can sometimes suggest rememes for existing conditions which have escaped the men engaged in the detail of the work. Suggestions sre solicited. . ' . . ' If. by telling you our story, you will understand us better. anoT the aDirit of mutual helpfulness will be advanced, we ahall feel that our work haa been weU done. We welcome honeat criticism, par- ttcuiany u 11 u gwiiiKi. .. 111 Mil I will be another event Of interest. - ' I eon apparent to otner people, tney nave 1 city government wmcn is in nis pror-- " " msSSSSSSSSSS' n - - ; - - - - ' ,mM,;,m,trjmim ,,..1a.;..WIWjli7iVi'i m.'.m I"''!' " wi iy-wi'-''"'' ' il""""- " " 1 ' f 11 , . 1 M --- 1 11 -niiillliii.il aiiri-f'ril -) - -J- - "'' " an -aa. n i i 1111 an - - IT TI to .- : v. ,.; . . t If. e M THE JOURNALS GREAT OFFER CO OPERAIOPI Wp FILERS PIANO HOUSE if - ' lf&' In Iff I m .M S .'it IH iimrmmm mill mm " 1 No home is really complete without a modern Talking Machine. :,The latest style instruments are marvelous. 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